21 10, 2015

Inside the Academic Mind: Antonio Tillis

By |2015-10-21T13:09:00-04:00October 21, 2015|College of Charleston Magazine|2 Comments

Since coming to the College in 2014 to lead the School of Languages, Cultures, and World Affairs, Dean Antonio D. Tillis has been an impassioned advocate for greater cultural awareness and the importance of international experiences. We caught up with the globetrotting dean to find out more about his literary influences, his taste in music

21 10, 2015

Changing His State of Mind

By |2017-02-13T15:32:28-05:00October 21, 2015|College of Charleston Magazine|Comments Off on Changing His State of Mind

Last May, Zach Sturman stepped off a plane and into an Eastern European city rife with palpable political tension. Just a little earlier that month, the three Baltic members of NATO – Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania – had asked the organization to send them each thousands of ground troops to prevent further hostility from Russia. This

21 10, 2015

Turning Up the Heat

By |2015-10-21T13:06:39-04:00October 21, 2015|College of Charleston Magazine|Comments Off on Turning Up the Heat

Matt “Heater” Heath has this anecdote he likes to tell. It’s about fleas. “It’s a long story,” warns the new Cougars head baseball coach. It goes like this: Fleas are known for jumping – they’ll jump out of almost anything, and they can jump 100 times their height. But if you put a flea in

21 10, 2015

The Final Hurdle

By |2015-10-21T13:06:01-04:00October 21, 2015|College of Charleston Magazine|1 Comment

Imagine running down the track, clearing hurdle after hurdle and being in first place and mere meters away from becoming the Colonial Athletic Association 400-meter hurdles champion. Now, imagine approaching that final hurdle and jumping over it only to have your leg buckle underneath you. Consider the physical and emotional pain as you lie there and watch your

21 10, 2015

Little by Little

By |2020-01-16T09:49:08-05:00October 21, 2015|Alumni, College of Charleston Magazine|Comments Off on Little by Little

Tiny is huge right now. In fact, there’s a whole movement of people looking to minimize their spaces in order to maximize their lives. For one alumna, she discovered firsthand that big things can come in small packages. by Maura Hogan ’87 I landed a spot on national television for the smallest thing I have

21 10, 2015

The Compassion Gap

By |2015-10-21T12:55:45-04:00October 21, 2015|College of Charleston Magazine|Comments Off on The Compassion Gap

As more women enter the political arena as elected officials and secure positions of power, one economics professor breaks down the numbers to determine how gender may influence legislative decision-making and what that may mean for international relations. by Beatriz Maldonado-Bird A common quip is that in order to be successful in politics women need to

21 10, 2015

Pulling Back the Curtain

By |2015-10-21T12:54:52-04:00October 21, 2015|College of Charleston Magazine|1 Comment

Russia holds an interesting place in the American imagination – a country viewed suspiciously by many through the lens of Cold War rivalries. One student put her graduation on hold in order to learn more about this world and better understand its differences and its commonalities. by Kathleen Holden ’15 I came to the College knowing

21 10, 2015

Double Date

By |2017-02-10T08:23:36-05:00October 21, 2015|College of Charleston Magazine|Comments Off on Double Date

Anniversaries, by definition, only come around once a year. Unless, it seems, you’re the Avery Research Center for African American History and Culture, which this year celebrates two important ones: its 30th and 150th. Let’s start with the latter. The American Missionary Association established the center in 1865 as Charleston’s first free secondary school for

21 10, 2015

Guten Tag, Opportunity

By |2020-02-06T15:40:18-05:00October 21, 2015|College of Charleston Magazine|Comments Off on Guten Tag, Opportunity

#Opportunity: it’d be a fitting hashtag for one of the College’s most effective – and least known – internship programs. Listed formally as the Summer Internship Program in Germany, this three-month excursion is part immersion experience, part on-the-job training – and all impact when it comes to students’ post-graduation employment prospects. “The cultural exposure that these

21 10, 2015

Child’s Play

By |2015-10-21T12:21:41-04:00October 21, 2015|College of Charleston Magazine|Comments Off on Child’s Play

If the experiment is a bit of a tease, at least it’s all in the name of science. Psychology professor Amy Kolak will walk into a room, place a few toys on a table and prepare to leave. But before walking out, she says one thing to the 2-year-old and his or her parents: “We’re going to play