Religious Studies Professor Examines Black Lives Matter Movement
Religious studies professor Matthew Cressler will discuss religion and Black Lives Matter as part of the Faculty Lecture Series at the library.
Religious studies professor Matthew Cressler will discuss religion and Black Lives Matter as part of the Faculty Lecture Series at the library.
Images of an interesting look at the upcoming solar eclipse, a group promoting natural hair and fellowship and early signs of spring (complete with wildlife).
Owilender K. Grant and Eugene Hunt opened the doors for diversity among the faculty as the College's first black professors.
Cassandra Runyon hopes to help blind and visually impaired students learn more about a major solar eclipse that will occur late this summer.
While hair might have been a starting point for the group to come together, it's the immense sense of community that allows Collegiate Curls to resonate with so many minority students on campus.
Starting Friday, Feb. 24, Addlestone Library will display Forms and Motifs in African Art: Works from the John R. Dupree Collection.
The College of Charleston was recognized recently by the U.S. State Department as a top producer of Fulbright Students.
The fifth annual "Yes! I'm a Feminist" Party will encourage connections and raise funds for the Women's and Gender Studies Program's new Alison Piepmeier Scholarship.
Participants in this year's event spent 13 hours on their feet beneath multicolored strobe lights and raised a grand total of $51,076.52 for the Medical University of South Carolina's Shawn Jenkins Children Hospital and the Children's Miracle Network hospitals.
Author Christopher Dickey will recount the wild tale of socialite Gertrude Sanford Legendre at an upcoming event hosted by the Friends of the Library at the College of Charleston.