Alum’s Theater Troupe Brings Art to the Masses
Alum Luke Cleveland '01 created Coastal Stage Productions to make theater more accessible. His troupe recently performed "The Great American Trailer Park Musical" in Mount Pleasant.
Alum Luke Cleveland '01 created Coastal Stage Productions to make theater more accessible. His troupe recently performed "The Great American Trailer Park Musical" in Mount Pleasant.
Watch and read about Charleston entrepreneur and florist Anne Bowen Dabney '05, who's equally adept arranging flowers or opening a downtown restaurant and event space.
On Nov. 11, 2015, archivists, historians and others will discuss ways to preserve and manage the thousands of gifts and memorabilia that mourners and others left at Emanuel AME Church in the wake of the shootings.
Television heartthrob Matt Czuchry '99, playwright Brennen Reeves '14, and Charleston's response to the Emanuel AME Church tragedy are all highlighted in the newest College of Charleston Magazine.
Alum Ed Macy '91 reveals the three most haunted buildings on the College of Charleston campus – and the story behind the spooks inside.
Former student-athletes and international business majors Alexis Carrico ’03 and Julio González Piera ’10 help oversee supply chain logistics in the athletic shoe and apparel industry.
The former Maryland governor, Democratic presidential candidate and father of CofC alumna Tara O'Malley '14 showed off his musical abilities during his campus visit.
As a star and mainstay on The Good Wife, Matt Czuchry ’99 is perhaps one of the most recognizable faces in school history. His breakout performance last season on the critically hailed drama staked his claim for being one of the top talents in this new golden age of television. by Mark Berry photos by
Inhale. There’s a lot to take in – too much, even – when every breath – every lame, rackety, strained breath you’ve ever taken – could be your last. When you can’t breathe without your nightly “tappies,” your parents thumping your sides like a ketchup bottle. When your two-week-long tuneups at the hospital go
It was the late 1980s, and Tony Harold was in the thick of research for his dissertation on phylogeny and taxonomy of deep-sea hatchetfishes at Memorial University of Newfoundland. He had been working with a sample of hatchetfish when he noticed some specimens had a unique pattern of dark skin down the sides of their bodies, resembling