College of Charleston News Stories

August 2005

 

August 31, 2005

 

Charleston City Paper

 

House of 1,000 Corpses

 

One thing is certain: the CofC Shakespeare Project’s current production is an exciting one. And this is a production where the design elements are at least as good as the acting, if not on a higher level. Rarely do you see the technical aspects of a production synthesize so well.

Excellent sound design by Mark Landis keeps a creepy ambience running like a trickle of blood throughout the entire play. Quiet, discreetly haunting music underlies a scene and then builds to a dramatic crescendo. The music starts while the house lights are still up, creating an effectively uncomfortable atmosphere as people feel sucked into the performance. (The characters on the Chapel Theatre stage often address the audience as fellow Romans, asking for their support or opinion.) We hear gongs clanging, swords slashing, and, I could swear, blood splashing as well, on what could almost be used as a Halloween sound effects CD.

 

http://www.charlestoncitypaper.com/layout.asp?id=47079&action=detail&catID=1254&parentID=1254

 

 

August 31, 2005

 

Myrtle Beach Sun News

S.C. Democrats lost without Tenenbaum

Experts stop short of declaring the party dead, but they don't hold out much hope for recovery any time soon.

"The outlook certainly is not bright," says College of Charleston political scientist Bill Moore.

When one looks down the road, things don't look that promising for the Democrats. They have no reserves. In fact, they have no starting lineup to speak of. The bench is empty. And they have no star. Tenenbaum was it.

http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/mld/myrtlebeachonline/news/opinion/12520489.htm

 

 

August 31, 2005

 

The State Newspaper

 

WHAT S.C. SCHOOLS EXPECT ON THE SAT

While the average SAT score in South Carolina is 993 in 2005, both public and private colleges in the state typically seek higher scores.

 

Clemson University

1205 average

 

University of South Carolina

1060-1240

 

Furman University

1220-1360

 

College of Charleston

1100-1240

 

Coker College

1050 average

 

Presbyterian College

1040-1240

 

http://www.thestate.com/mld/thestate/12519672.htm

 

 

August 30, 2005

 

Charlotte Observer

Worries this school year

 

Sam Spence, 19, College of Charleston, Charleston, S.C.: As I and millions of students nationwide return to school, many thoughts rush into my head. While I will be a sophomore in college, my sisters will be a freshman and senior in high school. My biggest concerns after getting moved in and unpacked are beginning the semester solidly so as to not fall behind right away, and prioritizing my days effectively to minimize later stress and to save time for myself. Being at college does present opportunities and temptations different from those encountered in high school, but with the right blend of self-accountability and character, one can have fun without befalling the consequences of reckless behavior.

 

http://www.charlotte.com/mld/observer/12514504.htm

 

 

August 29, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

The pound takes a pounding

Kids who used to be handed rulers have been taught metrics for two decades; it's second nature to them. Frysinger, who teaches physics at the College of Charleston, used to give his introductory class students a choice: Measure in standard and metrics or just metrics. He quit asking.

 

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=38114&section=localnews

 

 

August 29, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

Fire on C of C building's roof sends plume of smoke into sky

A large tar kettle left on the roof of the College of Charleston's Harry M. Lightsey Center somehow ignited at about 5:30 p.m. Sunday, sending a cloud of smoke over one of the city's busiest blocks, fire officials said.

Workers have been repairing the roof of the building that houses the College of Charleston's bookstore and apparently left a barrel of tar behind, with a spreading mop leaning against it, O'Donald said. No one was on the roof at the time.

"It was just scary, really," O'Donald said.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=38099&section=localnews

 

 

August 28, 2005

 

Charlotte Observer

 

The State Newspaper

Dems face dark future as party's lone star fades

Experts stop short of declaring the party dead, but they don't hold out much hope for recovery any time soon.

"The outlook certainly is not bright," says College of Charleston political scientist Bill Moore.

http://www.charlotte.com/mld/observer/news/local/states/south_carolina/counties/york/12496958.htm

 

 

August 27, 2005

Charleston Post and Courier

College book costs soaring

Earlier this week, Amanda and Becky Nace hit the College of Charleston Bookstore to pick up the required reading for their fall classes. A few minutes later, they walked out with a half-dozen books and a credit card slip for $448.

Walking along Calhoun Street, Amanda held the books while Becky called Dad.

"We need money in our account," Amanda, a senior from New Jersey, said. "This card has a $500 limit."

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=37781&section=localnews

 

 

August 25, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

 

Avery Research Center receives $250,000

Two foundations have awarded $250,000 to the Avery Research Center for African American History and Culture at the College of Charleston.

The Gaylord and Dorothy Donnelley Foundation in Chicago gave $200,000 to help it finish a three-year project of cataloging its collection.

The center will use the money to hire additional staff, expedite processing and publish a guide for researching resources relating to black history and culture.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=37490&section=localnews\

 

 

August 25, 2005

 

Greenville News

 

Washington Times

 

Baseball changed forever when Robinson stepped up (Editorial)

 

Chris Lamb is associate professor of communication at the College of Charleston and the author of the book "Blackout: The Untold Story of Jackie Robinson and Baseball's First Spring Training." Dr. Lamb can be reached at lambc@cofc.edu.

 

http://greenvilleonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050825/OPINION/508250304&SearchID=73218432749224

 

 

August 25, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

Blurred Reality

Faye Steuer, College of Charleston professor of psychology, has for several years studied the effects of television on children and has tracked families who choose not to have televisions in their homes.

She is not a fan of reality TV, either, but has watched a smattering of shows to try to keep up with current trends.

"I've tried to watch them, but I just can't stand them," she says. "I find them intolerable. I can't let the channel rest there for five minutes."

Steuer says there are many reasons parents should ban their children from watching these shows.

"Generally, people learn from television," she says. "There was some research years ago that showed if children thought what they saw on television was real, they were more influenced by it.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=37566&section=familylife

 

 

August 25, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

 

C of C radio to go back on the air after major upgrade

 

That's no minor improvement as far as [Dan Gamble] is concerned. Making the station's music library easily available to dozens of volunteer DJs, in the broadcast booth and in preview stations where they can prepare for their shows, is a big step.

The station's most vexing problem has yet to be resolved. Thanks in part to deregulation of the radio industry, WCOC has never been able to get an FM broadcast license, not even an educational one, because all the available frequencies have been sold.

Consequently, WCOC has turned its focus to the Internet. WCOC has been offering its programming online as streaming audio since 2000 (at www.cofc radio.com), and thanks to the boom in broadband Internet access, the technology is beginning to mature.

 

August 25, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

Back to school (profile)

TOM HERRION

OCCUPATION: Head coach, College of Charleston men's basketball team

ALMA MATER: Merrimack College, North Andover, Mass.

MAJOR: Psychology

GPA: "Um, the amnesia's setting in. Let's just say I was a solid student."

GRADUATED IN?: "Miraculously, just four years."

ADVICE TO INCOMING FRESHMEN: "Simply go in with an open mind because we all think we know what we want to major in. ... I'm a perfect example, I changed majors three times. Go in with your eyes wide open, enjoy the process and be flexible."

CRAZIEST COLLEGE EXPERIENCE: "That's a tough answer for me because all my kids are going to read the paper, and I will become the biggest hypocrite in the world." Pleading the Fifth. Very savvy, coach.

 http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=37547&section=preview

 

August 25, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

Horrors abound in Shakespeare's 'Titus' at C of C

The College of Charleston's Shakespeare Project presented "Titus Andronicus" Wednesday night at the Chapel Theatre, a too-intimate setting for such a grisly melodrama.

One of Shakespeare's earlier plays, "Titus" follows the pattern of other late 16th century revenge plays of sudden death and ferocious vengeance, such as Thomas Kyd's "The Spanish Tragedy." Popular in its day, "Titus" is strong material, even compared with today's horror and slasher films.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=37527&section=localnews

 

 

August 24, 2005

 

Charleston City Paper

 

Unscripted

 

HBO’s 2004 film Iron Jawed Angels told the story of brave suffragettes in a fierce battle for the 19th Amendment, which eventually gave them the right to vote. In Charleston, three sisters faced similar battles. In honor of Women’s Equality Day on August 25, Anita, Carrie, and Mabel Pollitzer are being celebrated in The Pollitzer Sisters: Charleston’s Own Iron Jawed Angels, a dramatic reading hosted by the College of Charleston’s Women’s Studies Department and the Charleston Center for Women. Anita Pollitzer was a member of the National Women’s Party and was a key figure in the amendment’s ratification. Mabel was a driving force behind the coeducation of the College of Charleston, and Carrie was instrumental in opening the first public library in Charleston in a time when women were strongly discouraged from becoming public figures.

 

http://www.charlestoncitypaper.com/layout.asp?id=46949&action=detail&catID=10153&parentID=1254

 

 

August 24, 2005

 

Charleston City Paper

 

Jack Bass on the Record

Jack Bass is at the top of his game, taking a recent turn on C-SPAN 2, where he spoke about his latest book, Strom: The Complicated Personal and Political Life of Strom Thurmond. It’s the seventh volume Bass has authored or co-authored (this one with veteran journalist Marilyn Thompson), and he shows no signs of slowing down.

I talked to Bass recently and felt right at home in his cluttered office with papers piled high around his computer and on the floor around his chair.

An Orangeburg County native, Bass has spent his professional life unraveling the politics, culture, and psyche of the South, first as a journalist, now as an author and professor of communications in the Humanities Department at the College of Charleston. All of his books have dealt with the theme of the South in transition, including one on the Orangeburg Massacre and now two on Thurmond. In the works is an updated and expanded edition of his classic work from 1972, Porgy Comes Home, which he will co-author with CofC historian Scott Poole.

http://www.charlestoncitypaper.com/layout.asp?id=46956&action=detail&catID=1253&parentID=1253

 

 

August 24, 2005

 

Charleston City Paper

 

Sturm und Drang in Drag

 

The fall performing arts season’s first offering this year arrived — as it does every year — with the College of Charleston’s annual Shakespeare Project, which last week opened The Tempest at Emmett Robinson Theatre (followed by Titus Andronicus at the Chapel Theatre this week). CofC’s Tempest maintains the tradition of The Shakespeare Project approaching works from an angle, but in this case the angle ends up hindering the production.

 

http://www.charlestoncitypaper.com/layout.asp?id=46946&action=detail&catID=1254&parentID=1254

 

 

August 24, 2005

 

Charleston City Paper

 

The Art of Noise

 

Beginning Wednesday and continuing through most of September, the College of Charleston’s Addlestone Library will host a massive multimedia exhibit dedicated to the life, works, and influence of Arnold Schoenberg. The exhibit, on loan from the Arnold Schoenberg Center in Vienna, Austria, until recently was on view at Arizona State University, and will travel from here to Washington, D.C., where it will take up temporary residence at the Austrian Embassy. In the meantime, it will be on view to all comers in the rotunda at the Addlestone Library until September 26, when its visit will end with an all- Schoenberg concert from professor Douglas Ashley, a music faculty member who’s largely responsible for bringing the exhibit — and Dr. Christian Meyer, director of the Schoenberg Center — to Charleston. The concert will also feature Deanna McBroom, Lee-Chin Siow, and Robin Zemp, and Viennese baritone Benno Schollum will perform with the support of the Austrian Cultural Forum in New York.

 

http://www.charlestoncitypaper.com/layout.asp?id=46945&action=detail&catID=1254&parentID=1254

 

 

August 24, 2005

 

Charleston City Paper

 

Drawing Room

The flooding that hit downtown last week during Wednesday’s downpour was a pain in the ass for anyone in an automobile, but for Halsey Gallery exhibiting artist Sara Frankel, those overflowing drains doubtless provided a welcome source of inspiration for her next piece. Water is a recurring motif in her recent work, with figures floating in a fluid limbo awash with significant meaning.

Frankel is one of two College of Charleston School of the Arts assistant professors of drawing providing work for a new Halsey Gallery show starting this month. Although she joined the College in an additional post created in fall 2003, she appears under a New Faculty banner with fellow faculty member and exhibiting artist Kara Hammond, here since August 2004 in the retired John Michel’s stead.

“The water’s about a state of mind,” says Frankel. “The figures are deep in contemplation, floating, as if they’re in another world. Some of them are children, in which case the water’s about a pubescent state, a crossing over into adulthood.” The artist cites her move to Charleston as another reason for the ongoing theme. After being landlocked for many years, most recently in Worcester, Mass., she finds herself affected by her environment.

http://www.charlestoncitypaper.com/layout.asp?id=46944&action=detail&catID=1254&parentID=1254

 

 

August 23, 2005

 

The Oregonian

 

Etiquette lessons? Yes, please

 

Many colleges and universities are offering seminars and workshops on the art of dining and other niceties of etiquette so that students can be more presentable and competitive in the job market. The College of Charleston in South Carolina offers seminars like "First Impressions" and "Power Etiquette."

 

August 23, 2005

 

Charlotte Observer

Would you join the military?

 

Sam Spence, 19, College of Charleston: While serving is admirable, the prospect of having a few months of training before being sent overseas is a little more than overwhelming. To increase enlistment rates, a more optimistic mood surrounding the military and its duties is needed to raise the morale of potential recruits. Regardless of the opinion of military service, for many it is an impractical alternative to more promising and secure careers.

 

http://www.charlotte.com/mld/observer/news/opinion/12450699.htm

 

 

August 22, 2005

 

Charleston Regional Business Journal

 

Communications, business majors top list for college students

 

The department of communication will begin the fall semester with at least 550 communications majors but by the end of the spring term that number will have likely increased to about 850, says chairman Brian McGee.

Between the 1999-2000 school years and 2003-2004 term, the number of communication degrees awarded has increased 37%, from 250 to 344.

Within the communications department, the most popular area of concentration is corporate and organization communication.

“That can be used in a variety of careers,” McGee says. “From public relations to sales and marketing or management.”

http://www.charlestonbusiness.com/current/11_17/news/4718-1.html

 

 

August 22, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

S.C. colleges earn high marks (Editorial)

But USC isn't the only state school getting strong national marks. The U.S. News & World Report guide ranked The Citadel No. 2 and the College of Charleston No. 4 among "public universities" (schools offering masters but not doctorates) in the South, Clemson No. 34 and USC No. 52 among "national universities" (schools offering doctorates), and Clemson's undergraduate engineering program No. 57 among schools (public and private) with doctoral programs.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=37217&section=editorials

 

 

August 21, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

America's not perfect, but there's plenty to love

In Charleston's Muslim community, there is a sort of ambivalence when it comes to the so-called tolerance directed toward Muslims. Abdul Aziz, a business professor at the College of Charleston, offered a mixed reaction when told about the Pew poll results.

"It's very good," he said. "But it's surprising, and at the same time, not surprising."

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=37061&section=faithvalues

 

 

August 21, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

Intelligent design

A few blocks away at the College of Charleston, Rob Dillon has taught biology for 15 years. Evolution is among his research interests.

You'll also find him Sundays at First (Scots) Presbyterian, where he sings in the choir.

They are, to him, separate domains. Science aims to figure out how the natural world works, not whether God created it.

"Science and religion are two different ways of looking at the world," Dillon insists. "I have no problem confessing God the Father created heaven and Earth. But I don't favor taking it to the second floor of the Science Center."

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=37057&section=faithvalues

 

 

August 21, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

In annual ritual, college students launch their invasion of downtown

They're back! College of Charles-ton students, that is, and their arrival sparked the usual blend of anxiety, anticipation and teary-eyed parents Saturday in front of campus dormitories downtown.

Some upperclassmen moved back to campus last weekend, but the big freshmen move-in hit its stride Saturday. By the end of the weekend, some 2,837 students will have returned to college housing, 2,000 of whom are incoming freshmen. They'll settle in with the help of their parents and friends, setting up their miniature homes away from home in time for the Tuesday start of the 2005 fall semester.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=37021&section=localnews

 

 

August 20 , 2005

 

Atlanta Journal Constitution

 

Sales of Boortz book spike as interest in fair tax increases

 

Michael Morgan, a professor of economics at the College of Charleston, also is there for the event. He often listens to Boortz's show and favors some kind of change in the nation's tax system, but he says, "I wouldn't base any conclusion just on what's in this book."

 

Still, Morgan says he's not uneasy about potentially far-reaching tax reform being championed by a radio talk show host.

 

"Why not?"

http://www.ajc.com/news/content/business/0805/20boortz.html

 

August 20, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

Coastal quirks make weather a crazy patchwork

"You're just creating a thunderstorm factory," said Jim Frysinger, a College of Charleston lecturer who has studied sea breezes. "You can look at the radar and see a line of thunderstorms inland parallel to the coast."

 

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=36902&section=localnews

 

 

August 19, 2005

The State Newspaper

Longtime congressman had progressive streak

 

You don’t see the blatant appeals to race; it’s much more subtle,” College of Charleston professor Bill Moore says. “Southern politicians today equate crime with minorities, equate welfare reform with minorities, equate affirmative action with minorities, and equate an inferior education with minorities.”

 

http://www.thestate.com/mld/thestate/news/12421152.htm

 

 

August 18, 2005

 

Myrtle Beach Sun News

Colleges promote alcohol education

The College of Charleston requires all incoming freshmen to take AlcoholEdu, a three-hour online workshop offered by Outside the Classroom Inc.

This marks the second year that the college has had all its incoming freshmen take the course.  Previously, the course had been required for students who were disciplined for alcohol abuse.

"The program has been very well-received by college administrators, parents, students and health educators," said Jeri Cabot, the College of Charleston's dean of students.

Last year, there was a 5 percent decrease in binge drinking at the college, said Elizabeth Walker, a substance-abuse official.

http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/mld/myrtlebeachonline/news/local/12411820.htm

 

 

August 18, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

 

LECTURE SEASON OPENS

 

The return of college students means more to the Lowcountry than traffic jams. It means free lectures that are open to all. "Jeopardy" phenom Ken Jennings will talk Tuesday night at 8 in Sottile Theatre at College of Charleston, and "Saturday Night Live" cast member Finesse Mitchell will do standup there Wednesday night at 8.

 

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=36662&section=localnews

 

 

August 17, 2005

 

Charleston City Paper

 

Yo! Unwraps New Space

Six months ago, Nick Powers was practically despondent. Forced to close his Yo Burrito! restaurant at the corner of Wentworth and St. Philip streets, he was losing money like an over-stuffed burrito oozes sour cream.

Since April of 2002, Powers has been in a constant battle with the College of Charleston, which had purchased the building his eatery was located in. Using the state power of “eminent domain,” the college severed Powers’ lease several years early in order to convert the building into a new home for its School of Education.

http://www.charlestoncitypaper.com/layout.asp?id=46771&action=detail&catID=1252&parentID=1252

 

 

August 16, 2005

 

The State Newspaper

 

Myrtle Beach Sun News

GIs came home and pushed South Carolina toward change

One of the leaders for change was Strom Thurmond, a decorated war hero, said Jack Bass, a biographer of the late senator.

Among the planks in Thurmond’s 1946 gubernatorial campaign platform were calls to end the poll tax and to create a state minimum wage, stronger child-labor laws and the current system of county governments, said Bass, a professor of humanities and social sciences at the College of Charleston.

Thurmond, who later became the nation’s longest-serving senator, also advocated free textbooks, federal aid for education and better schools to raise the literacy rate among the state’s black residents, Bass said.

Thurmond’s education plans were aimed at correcting problems that showed up during World War II’s military draft.

http://www.thestate.com/mld/thestate/news/12393094.htm

 

 

August 16, 2005

 

The State Newspaper

Saving the stories of the struggle for equality

In 2003, Marvin Lare thought he had retired. When a friend asked about his plans, Lare joked that he would spend a third of his time reading, a third gardening, a third writing and a third traveling.

“He went right past the joke to ‘What are you going to write?’ ” Lare recalls.

Driving home, “thinking and reflecting,” Lare pulled onto the emergency lane of the interstate and wrote down “anthology of civil rights in South Carolina.”

Lare realized this was turning into an oral-history project. Students from Furman, USC-Columbia, USC-Aiken and the College of Charleston joined the effort, doing interviews.

Saunders was interviewed by Felice Knight, a graduate student at the College of Charleston and a Charleston native. Knight has completed 10 interviews.

“I’ve observed a strong legacy of African-American history here, and whenever I get an opportunity, I jump at the chance to learn more,” she says.

http://www.thestate.com/mld/thestate/living/12390047.htm

 

 

August 16, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

Local reaction mixed as Gaza pullout starts

Not everyone thinks the withdrawal is motivated solely by politics. John Creed, a College of Charleston political science professor, said leaving Gaza has much more to do with the logistics of maintaining relatively small Jewish settlements in an area that's mostly Palestinian.

Israeli leaders have described the presence of a few thousand Jews among 1.3 million Palestinians as an unwanted and untenable security risk.

"I'm not so sure how much of an olive branch this is," Creed said. "The Sharon government has a vision of what a final settlement with the Palestinians will look like. It will never include Gaza."

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=36450&section=localnews

 

August 15, 2005

Hilton Head Island Packet

 

Spartanburg Herald Journal

 

Greenville News

Colleges promote alcohol education

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) - As college students head back to school, they prepare by buying books and setting up dorm rooms. But now, for many students, that preparation includes learning how to deal with alcohol use on campus.

There are about 1,400 alcohol-related deaths each year among college students, according to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.

As a result, some universities are requiring their students to take alcohol education courses before they arrive on campus.

The College of Charleston requires all incoming freshmen to take AlcoholEdu, a three-hour online workshop offered by Outside the Classroom Inc.

This marks the second year that the college has had all its incoming freshmen take the course. Previously, the course had been required for students who were disciplined for alcohol abuse.

"The program has been very well-received by college administrators, parents, students and health educators," said Jeri Cabot, the College of Charleston's dean of students.

http://www.islandpacket.com/news/state/regional/story/5102811p-4646964c.html

 

 

August 15, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

College to crunch numbers that track performance of tourism businesses

The College of Charleston is gaining momentum in its push to track Charleston's major tourism metrics starting in January.

In May, the college inked a $40,000-a-year deal with the Charleston Area Convention & Visitors Bureau to measure performance at area hotels, including occupancy rates, average daily rates, revenue per available room and future bookings. The job had long been the province of the Charleston Metro Chamber of Commerce.

The college just hired a post-doc from Cornell University to head research and it's on the hunt for someone to handle industry-outreach. Last week, John Crotts, director of the college's hospitality department, met with CVB backers, mostly hotels, attractions and restaurants, and walked them through how to use the new system, which will require local businesses to log onto a database every week and enter their numbers. The college's computer science department is putting the final tweaks on the software this month.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=36370&section=businessreview

 

 

August 15, 2005

 

The State Newspaper

Colleges promote alcohol education

 

Before Destiny Lantz goes to the College of Charleston later this week, she will have to buy things for her apartment, meet her roommates, read “River Town” by Peter Hessler and take an alcohol education course.

The College of Charleston is requiring all incoming freshmen to take AlcoholEdu, a three-hour online workshop offered by Outside the Classroom Inc.

This is the second year the college has had its incoming freshmen take the course. Previously, the school required the course for students disciplined for alcohol abuse.

“The program has been very well-received by college administrators, parents, students and health educators,” said Jeri Cabot, the college’s dean of students.

http://www.thestate.com/mld/thestate/news/local/12385472.htm

 

 

August 14, 2005

Charleston Post and Courier

A comedy and a tragedy

The College of Charleston's Shakespeare Festival starts this week and things are looking good. Everything is in place for the plays in this year's series, "The Tempest" and "Titus Andronicus."

William Shakespeare himself would probably be proud of what professors Evan Parry and Todd McNerney, co-founders of the festival in 1997, have put together for the 2005 edition.

Parry is directing "The Tempest" while Wayne Wilson leads the way for "Titus Andronicus." McNerney chairs the theater department in the college's School of the Arts.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=36230&section=artstravel

 

 

August 14, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

Unsung hero

Though she's busy teaching college English courses, Caroline Hunt still finds time for a pet project. Hunt puts smiles on faces and hope in hearts when she brings her 5-year-old German shepherd, Sabrina, to visit patients and medical staff at hospitals in Charleston and West Ashley.

About 20 people who train animals together are involved in three tri-county-area pet therapy programs, Hunt said. Hunt got involved about 10 years ago and has not only seen her dogs bring joy to the faces of the sick but has seen lives changed by furry encounters.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=36173&section=localnews

 

 

August 14, 2005

 

New York Times

A Minder to Mind Your Manners

 

Many colleges and universities are offering seminars and workshops on the art of dining and other niceties of etiquette so that students can be more presentable, and competitive, in the labor market. The College of Charleston in South Carolina offers seminars like "First Impressions" and "Power Etiquette."

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/14/fashion/sundaystyles/14ETIQUETTE.html?pagewanted=print

 

 

August 14, 2005

 

The State Newspaper

 

Myrtle Beach Sun News

 

Charlotte Observer

Wilson’s guest raises eyebrows

“I don’t think it has any significant liability for him. If it had, Wilson would have distanced himself from DeLay,” said College of Charleston analyst Bill Moore.

“Joe is in a safe district. Those who dislike Tom DeLay the most are obviously Democrats. I don’t see it having any negative impact on Wilson.”

http://www.thestate.com/mld/thestate/news/columnists/lee_bandy/12379290.htm

 

 

August 11, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

 

Schoenberg exhibit, concert set at C of C

Schoenberg's musical works will be presented as part of the college's School of the Arts Monday Night Concert Series on Sept. 26 at 8 p.m. in the Recital Hall, Simons Center for the Arts, 54 St. Philip St. The exhibition is free, and admission to the concert is $5 at the door.

Arnold Schoenberg (1874-1951) was a lifelong nonconformist as a person and artist. He transformed music, art and philosophy with his sardonic humor and love of paradox. His works were the topic of discussion and often heatedly debated in the cultural capitals of Europe and the Americas during the World War I era and after.

 

August 11, 2005

 

Charleston City Paper

 

Blood & Magic

 

The surest herald that the fall arts season is about to begin, though, comes from the College of Charleston’s theatre department, whose annual Shakespeare Project is dependably the first local producing organization to rouse itself from summer slumber and dust off the seats. The nine-year-old brainchild of longtime department faculty members Todd McNerney and Evan Parry, the Shakespeare Project allows existing theatre students to work with CofC instructors, as well as seasoned amateur and semi-professional actors, on some of the world’s best works. Each fall they present a pair of plays in CofC’s two theatre facilities — sometimes with a common theme, as often as not without one, and without regard for popularity, IMDB movie version ranking, or where they fall on the Olivier-Wells-Branagh Index.

 

http://www.charlestoncitypaper.com/layout.asp?id=46701&action=detail&catID=1254&parentID=1254

 

 

August 10, 2005

Charleston Post and Courier

The Evolution of Dorm Decor

College housing officials offer various reasons for the evolution of dorm decor from simple to sophisticated.

For one, a wider variety of products is available to today's students, said John Campbell, dean of residence life and housing at the College of Charleston.

Electronics also have become more affordable, he said, noting that a typical student's room might have a laptop computer, a CD player, a TV and a video game station.

It's a far cry from Campbell's college days.

"We came with a radio, and we were happy," he said.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=35664&section=business

 

 

August 8, 2005

Charleston Post and Courier

Education

Dennis Foster has been promoted to director of physical plant for the College of Charleston. Previously, Foster was deputy director of physical plant. Before joining the college, Foster spent 26 years in the Navy in the Civil Engineer Corps.

 

August 8, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

Charleston professors study tombs of Egypt without leaving campus

Anyone seeking proof about how the world is still shrinking should drop by the GIS Laboratory in Room 116 of the College of Charleston's Hollings Science Center.

When Peter Piccione, Norm Levine and Ken Fronabarger are inside playing with the center's computers, they are manipulating geographic and satellite data to unravel secrets of some of the world's oldest building sites.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=35430&section=localnews

 

 

August 8, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

 

CANNON STREET ALL-STARS

The College of Charleston's Avery Research Center will welcome members of the 1955 Cannon Street All-Star team Aug. 13 for a panel discussion on their history.

In 1955, the Cannon Street All-Stars of Charleston won the state and regional Little League tournaments by default. None of the 61 all-white Little League teams would play the all-black team locally, statewide or regionally.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=35453&section=localnews

 

 

August 7, 2005

 

C-Span

 

Strom: The Complicated Personal and Political Life of Strom Thurmond
Jack Bass

 

 Strom Thurmond began his career in public office in 1929, was the Dixiecrat candidate for president in 1948, filibustered the 1957 Civil Rights Bill, and left the Senate in 2003 at the age of 100. Mr. Thurmond's life is the topic of "Strom: The Complicated Personal and Political Life of Strom Thurmond," a new book by authors Jack Bass and Marilyn Thompson. In it, the authors chronicle the historic events in Mr. Thurmond's life both personally and professionally and the influence he had in American politics in the south. Co-author Jack Bass spoke about the book at the Charleston Public Library in Charleston, South Carolina.

 

http://www.booktv.org/PublicLives/index.asp?segID=6053&schedID=368

 

 

August 7, 2005

 

The State Newspaper

GOP sets its sights on ousting Tenenbaum

“If you were to put the governor’s plans for education up against Tenenbaum’s, she’d have a distinct advantage among the voters,” says College of Charleston analyst Bill Moore. “Most families send their kids to public schools.

“If Republicans take a position similar to Sanford’s on education, it will be a liability. It could become an albatross around the neck of their candidate.”

http://www.thestate.com/mld/thestate/news/columnists/lee_bandy/12322912.htm

 

 

August 5, 2005

 

Hilton Head Island Packet

As an undergraduate in anthropology at the College of Charleston, she worked on both 18th and 19th century sites. At the Charleston Museum as a field and lab technician, she conducted fieldwork at Willtown Plantation in Ravenel and at the gardens of 14 Legare St. in Charleston, as well as at other South Carolina sites.

http://www.islandpacket.com/features/story/5071419p-4622206c.html

 

 

August 3, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

Noisette offers to pay off debt

Arthur Felts, director of the Riley Institute for Urban Affairs and Policy Studies at the College of Charleston, said the issue boils down to where Noisette stands financially.

"That seems to be what's lurking behind this all the time," he said. "They've been fairly closed about that, whether they have enough backers in hand to proceed with their plans for development or not."

"There's no question there's a high frustration factor on everybody's part at this point," he added.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=34814&section=localnews

 

 

August 1, 2005

 

Myrtle Beach Sun News

Democrats may see fight for last pivotal post

"If you were to put the governor's plans for education up against Tenenbaum's, she'd have a distinct advantage among the voters," College of Charleston analyst Bill Moore says. "Most families send their kids to public schools.

"If Republicans take a position similar to Sanford's on education, it will be a liability. It could become an albatross around the neck of their candidate."

http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/mld/myrtlebeachonline/news/opinion/12274278.htm

 

 

August 1, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

Sunny Rivers Green enriches college as the anti-Cistern

Charleston's best new public space has multiple fathers, three of whom served as president of the College of Charleston.

It's called Rivers Green, and it's a handsome mix of more than 100 trees, benches and a raised lawn behind the college's new library.

Monica Scott, the college's vice president of facilities planning, notes that DesignWorks' plan -- particularly the terrace and moveable tables and chairs near Coming Street -- is fashioned after Bryant Park, a well-known Manhattan park behind the New York Public Library.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=34588&section=localnews