College of Charleston News Stories

September 2005

 

September 30, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

 

C of C group plans trip to help out in Mississippi

College of Charleston students, faculty and staff will travel to Mississippi during fall break to help victims of Hurricane Katrina.

From Oct. 14 until Oct. 18, they'll assist with debris removal, minor repairs and providing food and water to hurricane victims in Hattiesburg and Pass Christian.

They will accept donations of non-perishable food, bottled water, blankets and clothing at the College of Charleston North Campus main office, 5300 International Blvd., Building B, North Charleston.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=42385&section=localnews

 

 

September 30, 2005

 

The State Newspaper

Sanford deputy to leave post

“The communications director is one of the closest relationships a politician has, besides his campaign manager,” said Jamie McKown, a former Democratic activist who teaches political communication at the College of Charleston. “When you change communications directors, it does take a feeling-out period.”

 

http://www.thestate.com/mld/thestate/news/local/12778947.htm

 

 

September 30, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

 

Student robberies continue

Skateboarder seventh C of C victim this month

 

If only John Himmelsbach had kept rolling Wednesday night.

Instead, the College of Charleston student who stopped skateboarding when a man greeted him became the seventh victim this month in a string of armed robberies targeting students.

College of Charleston Police Chief Paul Verrecchia and his officers are trying to make students more aware of the robberies.

Articles about the robberies have been published in the college paper, and college officials provide safety tips to students on a regular basis.

"People have to be on their toes," Verrecchia said. "The way you overcome is to eliminate any sort of opportunity for a robbery."

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=42389&section=localnews

 

 

September 29, 2005

 

The State Newspaper

Some back Orangeburg woman for high court

But legal scholars don’t expect Williams has made the jump from Bush’s long list to the short list of potential nominees.

“Unlikely,” said David Mann, a political science professor at the College of Charleston who studies the judiciary.

http://www.thestate.com/mld/thestate/news/12768486.htm

 

 

September 28, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

Cross-culture cooking

Kinda McGowan, a College of Charleston senior from Trinidad, mixes a lot of diversity into her Caribbean cuisine.

My long-term dream would probably be a chef," says McGowan, a College of Charleston senior from Trinidad. "If I had a 'perfect' dream, it would be to have a restaurant."

Meanwhile, she is not as focused on "perfect" as she is on finding a good job in the hospitality industry when she finishes school. She would like to see a bit more of the United States and the world, and she's already well on her way.

McGowan is the first recipient of the Patrick E. Ringwald Scholarship, named for the former Boathouse restaurant manager who was fatally shot in 2003. The scholarship, a project of the Patrick E. Ringwald Memorial Foundation, was established at Patrick's alma mater and will be given annually to a student in the hospitality and tourism field.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=42198&section=food

 

 

September 28, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

C of C student robbed in 6th case in 15 days

A College of Charleston student walking along a downtown street at 2:40 a.m. with two beers in his pocket and $20 in his wallet is the latest victim in a string of robberies targeting students, police said.

This time the student was able to provide detectives with a good description of the robber.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=42174&section=localnews

 

 

September 27, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

 

THE DEEP BLUE SEA

Fifty-five scientists from the United States and Canada are aboard a University of Washington research vessel.

They are using underwater robots and high-definition video cameras to explore, sample, monitor and map one of the most extreme environments on Earth.

Where are they? At the bottom of the ocean ... 1.5 miles deep ... at the openings of deep sea vents, hydrothermal vents into the Earth's crust that are pouring black smoke and ash into the ocean.

Among the critters who live in this remote and extreme environment are microbes, bacteria, tubeworms, scaleworms, snails, limpets and vent clams. They live on the hydrogen sulfide in the flow. Preying on them are octopi, spider crabs, squat lobsters, brittle stars and rattail fish.

Most of the critters are in water where the temperature ranges from 36 degrees to 86 degrees Fahrenheit. But some species of microbes are found in the walls of chimneys where fluid in the vent can reach temperatures up to 700 degrees. Scientists are studying how these organisms make it in super-hot environments.

They will broadcast their findings in high definition and real-time video from the sea floor Wednesday. The broadcasts are being shown live in several countries and in many marine science institutions, including the College of Charleston.

The first one is Wednesday at 5 p.m., Physician's Auditorium. The second one is Thursday, 5 p.m., in Education Center Room 118. Both are open to the public at Our Favorite Price.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=42017&section=localnews

 

 

September 27, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

C of C twins haunted by Katrina, aftermath

The first thing Millard Mulé saw when he returned to his old neighborhood were firefighters using spray paint to mark the houses with corpses inside. Keys would no longer open the front door to his boyhood home in the Broadmoor section of New Orleans, so he used a crowbar to get in. He was handed a mask, a weak defense against the overpowering stench of mold and sewage and death.

Eleven feet of water had been in the street. Seven feet of it had flooded the raised two-story house, which had been in the family for more than a century. The walls now are coated with mildew and dirt. To get inside, the College of Charleston senior had to crawl over a refrigerator that blocked the front door. When he and his family tried to move it, it spilled its rotten contents. Mulé had to go outside and throw up.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=42049&section=localnews

 

 

September 27, 2005

 

The State Newspaper

 

Myrtle Beach Sun News

Thurmond’s record may be eclipsed

Jack Bass, the College of Charleston professor who co-authored “Strom,” a biography of the senator, imagines Thurmond — were he still alive — would react as competitively as ever to a challenge from Byrd.

“Thurmond would think, ‘Well, at least he won’t break my filibuster record, and I bet nobody else does either!’” Bass said.

http://www.thestate.com/mld/thestate/news/local/12750403.htm

 

 

September 26, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

Visitors to warships, athletic fields account for economic impact of $49M

The 241,000 or so visitors to the Patriots Point warships and athletic fields last year had a $49 million impact on Charleston County, according to an economic impact study released by the College of Charleston last week.

College of Charleston professor John Crotts, the lead author of the study, said he expected the numbers to be lower.

"I think that a lot of people that live in Charleston don't really understand and appreciate all that they do there," Crotts said.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=41919&section=businessreview

 

 

September 26, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

Distinctions

College of Charleston chemistry professor Charles F. Beam has won the American Chemical Society 2006 award for undergraduate research.

 

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=41879&section=businessreview

 

 

September 26, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

Colleges Rock the Block to fight abuse of alcohol

The college effect, explained Elizabeth Walker, a substance abuse counselor at the College of Charleston, means students come to college assuming alcohol is easy to get and therefore seek it out. Easy access to alcohol becomes a concrete goal leading to destructive behavior

So Walker, along with colleagues from Trident Technical College, The Citadel and Charleston Southern University, formed the College Community Coalition to address the issue of underage drinking and promote alcohol- and drug-free student activities.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=41915&section=localnews

 

 

September 25, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

Piano Series opens Tuesday at the Sottile

The International Piano Series, directed by Enrique Graf, will open its 16th season at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the College of Charleston's Sottile Theatre, 44 George St.

Performing will be Ciro Fodere, a pianist with the New York Symphony who has performed in Rome and Carnegie Hall. Having begun his piano studies at age 4 in his native Uruguay, Fodere went on to receive a scholarship provided by College of Charleston supporter John Zeigler. He studied piano with Graf, the college's artist-in-residence, and after graduating from the college, received a graduate assistantship from Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=41766&section=artstravel

 

 

September 25, 2005

 

The State Newspaper

 

Magazine likes C of C’s education school

The College of Charleston’s School of Education received high marks from the editors of Seventeen Magazine, according to the school.

In the October issue, the College of Charleston is one of three schools the magazine recommends for students wanting to major in education. The magazine noted “its respected school of education also has a top-ranked athletic-training education program.”

“It’s wonderful publicity for us to be recognized among the best schools to become a teacher,” said Frances Welch, dean of the education school at the College of Charleston.

The College of Charleston is the only school in South Carolina to be cited by the magazine.

http://www.thestate.com/mld/thestate/news/local/12735858.htm

 

 

September 25, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

Researcher writes history of Jewish life in Charleston

Solomon Breibart did not set out to write another book.

His reticence had nothing to do with time, the trouble involved, or age. Certainly not age. Only 90, and a robust 90 at that, the Charleston native didn't see any particular need to gather his various writings into a single volume. Though these articles and pieces for varied periodicals had not been assembled previously, he already had produced six books.

Then his wife, Sarah, went to work on him. As did local friends Robert Rosen, Jack Bass, Dale Rosengarten and everyone else who, for years, had savored his perspectives on the history of Jews in Charleston.

A former high school teacher, Breibart took on a second career after retirement, doing research. He invested 25 years in the pursuit and has been a key player in maintaining and preserving many of the records that became part of the Jewish Heritage Collection, a consolidation of city and state archival synagogue documents stored at the College of Charleston. Dale Rosengarten is its curator.

 

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=41724&section=artstravel

 

 

September 24, 2005

 

Miami Herald

Cirque du Soleil or banquet hall?

Critics liken this push for bigger and better convention centers to an arms race, with each improvement justified by the fact that other cities are doing the same thing. They say the spending build-up comes amid signs the convention industry on a whole has either flattened out or is declining, creating a shrinking pie of business for an expanding roster of expo halls.

''Collectively, there is so much space being built that there has to be losers,'' said Steven Litvin, a tourism professor at the College of Charleston in South Carolina. ``It may not be Miami. But there has to be losers.''

http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/business/12727514.htm

 

 

September 24, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

Police try to 'think like a criminal' to thwart robberies around C of C

Charleston police Sgt. Karl Smith was patrolling downtown after midnight when he spied a middle-aged couple walking along a dark part of Meeting Street.

It took him only seconds to size them up.

"This is who I'd rob," he said. "You have to think like a criminal."

Smith and 14 other officers were patrolling a patch of downtown Charleston early Thursday morning as part of a special police detail. For more than a week they've tried to stem a tide of robberies, most of which targeted students near the College of Charleston.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=41558&section=localnews

 

 

September 23, 2005

 

Myrtle Beach Sun News

 Lovelace launches gubernatorial campaign

Lovelace remains "a distinct underdog and it's unlikely he could win the Republican primary," College of Charleston political science professor Bill Moore said, adding that Sanford has significant financial resources and is popular with voters.

Lovelace's "greatest impact would be to perhaps embarrass the governor or a wake-up call if he gets 25 (percent) to 30 percent of the vote in the primary," the professor said.

http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/mld/myrtlebeachonline/12714215.htm

 

 

September 22, 2005

 

Men’s Fitness

 

In our first report on the health of America's college campuses, we partnered with the Princeton Review, one of America's premier research organizations and an expert on tracking the fickle interests and habits of college students. Together, we surveyed nearly 10,000 students from more than 660 of the nation's top colleges and universities, asking them everything from the personal ("How many pounds have you gained or lost since you started going to school?" "How often do you work out?") to their thoughts on the big-picture issues ("How would you rate the fitness facilities on your campus?" "Does your school appear to care about how fit you are?").

 

Top 25 Fittest 2005 Ranking   1. Brigham Young University   2. University of California, Santa Barbara   3. Boston University   4. University of Vermont   5. Northwestern University (Ill.)   6. University of Colorado, Boulder   7. University of Notre Dame (Ind.)   8. University of California, Santa Cruz   9. University of Wisconsin, Madison   10. University of Wisconsin, La Crosse   11. Boston College   12. Texas Christian University   13. University of California, Davis   14. Georgia Institute of Technology   15. Salisbury University (Md.)   16. Georgetown University (D.C.)   17. College of William and mary (Va.)   18. College of Charleston (S.C.)   19. East Carolina University (N.C.)   20. California State University, Long Beach

 

 

College of Charleston
18th Fittest

 

REPORT CARD: College of Charleston

Student Bodies

 

A-

Exercise

 

B+

Bad Habits

 

C+

Other Lifestyle Choices

 

B-

Culture of Fitness

 

D-

Final

 

B-

Enrollment

 

9,479

 

http://www.mensfitness.com/college_rankings/53.

 

 

September 22, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

CORRECTION

Because of a reporter's error, a story on Page 1B of Wednesday's editions of The Post and Courier about fleas in College of Charleston housing contained incorrect information about pest-control methods. When using anti-flea products with a growth regulator to kill eggs, exterminators do not always have to return within a week. With many other products, however, exterminators do have to return after more fleas hatch, usually after a week. Also, the story incorrectly stated the location of Lowcountry Pest Management. The business is in Mount Pleasant.

 

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=41283&section=localnews

 

 

September 21, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

Patrols increased near C of C

An extra 15 Charleston police officers are patrolling downtown streets at night in an effort to nab robbers preying upon college students over the past month, authorities said Tuesday.

Interim Police Chief Ned Hethington said police are taking the holdups seriously, and he is confident they will make arrests.

"We're working on it, and we're giving it every effort," he said. "We're going to catch somebody for it."

Since Aug. 27, seven students have been robbed near the College of Charleston in an area also popular with tourists. The most violent robbery occurred early Friday when a man stabbed a 20-year-old student and stole her purse after she left a King Street restaurant.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=41222&section=localnews

 

 

September 21, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

C of C language students flee fleas

The Spanish and French houses at the College of Charleston need one serious flea bomb.

Eighteen language students were forced to move from their Bull Street homes into the Hampton Inn on Meeting Street three weeks after school started because their homes became infested with the parasites.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=41186&section=localnews

 

 

September 20, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

Robberies near campus unnerve C of C students

A spate of robberies targeting College of Charleston students since school began has left students uneasy and some of them afraid to walk the streets at night.

Women now walk in pairs. Officers have increased patrol in the area. A robbery victim looks over his shoulder as he walks alone.

The number of robberies is unusually high, said College of Charleston Police Chief Paul Verrecchia.

"We are concerned," Verrecchia said. "The city has taken this very seriously, and they are taking action."

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=41122&section=localnews

 

 

September 20, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

 

Turn up the heat (letter to the editor)

 

The Goody Shoppe has been an amazing undertaking with enormous support. Thanks to Dr. John Clarkin of the College of Charleston for awarding $5,000 to our entrepreneurship program. Thanks to Jimmy Bailey for introducing NFTE (National Foundation for Teaching Entrepreneurship) to the Charleston area. This three-day seminar taught teachers the fundamentals of entrepreneurship and provided valuable resources in the form of books, videos and supplements. A big thank you for the support we have from our principal, Bob Olson, who gave us $400 to start our business idea and to my department head, Sandy Pennekamp, who allows teachers to try things that are different than the norm.

 

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=41137&section=letters

 

 

September 19, 2005

 

Charleston Regional Business Journal

 

Prices at the pump fail to put brakes on tourism

 

“Supply isn’t so much a problem because Charleston gets its gas from barges, not pipelines,” explained John Crotts, director of the College of Charleston’s hospitality and tourism management program. “Even though the rise in gasoline prices has been a psychological jolt to everyone, when you back up and look at it, driving is still affordable.”

 

http://www.charlestonbusiness.com/current/11_19/news/4779-1.html

 

 

September 19, 2005

 

Charleston Regional Business Journal

 

Rising gas prices eat at restaurants’ profits

Researchers at the College of Charleston are compiling consumer-spending statistics for Lowcountry restaurants, said Robert Frash, a professor in the college’s Hospitality and Tourism Management department.

Nevertheless, Frash suspects Charleston restaurants are withstanding the gasoline price increase better than restaurants in many other U.S. cities. Peninsular Charleston’s restaurants are driven by tourism traffic and located within walking distance from one another, making driving unnecessary, he noted.

http://www.charlestonbusiness.com/current/11_19/news/4778-1.html

 

September 19, 2005

 

USA Today

 

Displaced collegians get reoriented

CHARLESTON, S.C. — How quickly can young adults recover when their lives are thrown off course? For the estimated 100,000 students who were supposed to be at a college in New Orleans this fall, that question cannot yet be answered.

The College of Charleston, one of the many colleges to open its doors to displaced students (it took 29), is no stranger to hurricanes. Memories of Hugo, which ravaged the campus 16 years ago this month, are still fresh. “There's no way you can really understand what they've gone through unless you've been through it yourself,” says political science professor William Moore. He says he recognizes that shell-shocked look on some faces.

http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/20050919/studentsdisplaced19.art.htm

 

 

September 18, 2005

 

The State Newspaper

A life lost to time

Sadly, his story is one that few know, and that is wrong, says Andy Abrams, an amateur baseball historian who uses the game’s lore in teaching a class at the College of Charleston called Baseball, Mythology, and the Meaning of Life.

“Cal Drummond is such a terrific story, and I had never heard it,” Abrams says. “It’s really remarkable. He had a real commitment and willed himself back onto the field for the game he loved.

“I saw an article and thought, ‘Wow, this guy is a hero.’ He showed dedication, a caring and passion. He showed courage and self-sacrifice. He was willing to give up his life for what he believed in.”

http://www.thestate.com/mld/thestate/sports/12676127.htm

 

 

September 18, 2005

Charleston Post and Courier

'Celebrate Discovery' to open symphony season

Also on the opening program will be Camille Saint-Saens' "Havanaise" Opus 83, which was composed in 1885 originally for violin and piano, according to William Gudger, music professor at the College of Charleston.

 

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=40820&section=artstravel

 

 

September 18, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

Clean sweep

Karen Chandler's housekeeping skills would pass muster with most visitors to her James Island home. Art, books, cosmetics and dishes are exactly where you would expect them to be. And for the most part, they are well-organized.

But Chandler isn't as satisfied with the condition of her house as visitors are. She knows where the dust bunnies hide. She frets about getting the floors polished. And she wishes for window panes so clean they seem to have vanished.

To Chandler, a College of Charleston associate professor, her house may deserve a good grade, but not an "A." Her situation is similar to those of many busy people.

"The nature of my work is that I'm out and about," she says. "On weekends, I don't want to be cleaning."

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=40838&section=garden

 

 

September 16, 2005

 

London Guardian Unlimited

 

Coffins are so last century for Britons seeking life after death

George Dickinson, a sociologist at the College of Charleston, South Carolina, agrees. With an estimated 77 million American baby boomers reaching the age of 50 between 1966 and 2015, he predicts that dying will soon become a major obsession.

He says Americans prefer burial to cremation by a factor of about two to one. But whether it's having a solar-powered video screen embedded in your tombstone or arranging for your pallbearers to be dressed as Elvis Presley, traditional funerals are becoming more elaborate.

By 2025 Mr. Dickinson expects more and more Americans will follow the lead of Hunter S Thompson. His "cremains", at his request, were last month were packed inside a firework and blasted from a cannon to a height of 500 feet above his home in Colorado.

http://education.guardian.co.uk/higher/news/story/0,9830,1571693,00.html

 

 

September 14, 2005

 

Charleston City Paper

Chain Reaction

CofC grad shifts gears with an
interactive exhibition

“I didn’t want to use anything too contemporary,” says Bump, who used generic army men in WWII garb. “It’s not about Iraq or Afghanistan. It’s all about voyeurism.” A local artist who graduated from the College of Charleston in 2002, Bump’s previous pieces were full of “big gears.” They were driven by their mechanics rather than the ideas they were trying to convey. Now the hand-cast gears in a work like the “The Idiot Box” are concealed, and it’s the subject that really matters.

 

http://www.charlestoncitypaper.com/layout.asp?id=47361&action=detail&catID=1254&parentID=1254

 

 

September 13, 2005

 

Seventeen Magazine

 

College/The Best Major

 

 

 

 

September 13, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

 

HIGH PROFILE

Case-in-point: "Insider's Charleston" in the September issue of National Geographic Traveler. We usually like National Geographic ... its recent covers on hurricane science and its special issue on Africa, for example, were great.

And we don't object to National Geographic Traveler promot-ing Charleston as a walking city or noticing its eccentricities. But their leading with a reference to Rhett Butler is unfortunate.

Traveler gives nods to Moo Roo handbags, Fort Sumter, the Powder Magazine (one of GMLc's favorite buildings), Market Hall, the Battery, the Aiken-Rhett House, Marion Square, King Street, Middleton Place, Spoleto Festival USA, pirates, the Yorktown, the Gibbes Museum of Art, College of Charleston's Cistern and Avery Research Center for African-American History & Culture, a bunch of restaurants ... and even the remains of the original walled city of Charles Town.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=40216&section=localnews

 

 

September 12, 2005

 

Miami Herald

Hurricane worries: Is this the new normal?

Steve Litvin, a professor of hospitality and tourism management at the College of Charleston in South Carolina, noted Charleston's tourism industry has pressed the National Weather Service to drop its five-day forecast for hurricane tracks because its broad swath needlessly implicates such a large area.

While Litvin said he didn't agree with the bureau's strategy, he sees the hurricane tracks fueling traveler worries. Busy hurricane seasons will naturally compound that factor.

''I think it's going to dramatically increase the nervousness about it ahead of time, and the seriousness with which people will take warnings,'' Litvin said. ``From a vacation point of view, it just means if you're anywhere near that cone, you're just going to cancel.''

http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/business/special_packages/business_monday/12605803.htm

 

 

September 11, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

WHY? Reconciling God and catastrophe

Catastrophe will strike. And human beings, endowed with consciousness and curiosity, capable of compassion and cruelty, invariably will ask,  Why? Those who believe in the Western concept of a benevolent and merciful God might wonder how such a God could permit human disaster of the magnitude we have seen the past two weeks in the wake of Hurricane Katrina.

 

The Post and Courier invited religious leaders and scholars in the community to reflect on this question. Here is what they had to say:

 

Professor Lee Irwin

Chairman, religious studies department, College of Charleston

From the point of view of the comparative study of religions, suffering is an aspect of human life that is common to all humanity. Natural disasters are largely impersonal events that reflect potential imbalance and loss of harmony on a global scale. What drives this imbalance? Many religions address this question, and the most common answer to the question of suffering is human ignorance, not divine displeasure.

Human beings are not simply passive agents within nature, but active co-creators in the process of maintaining values which can support harmony and balance. If we choose exploitation, create ecological disaster, pollute the Earth and fail to deal successfully with the consequences of over-industrialization, excessive population growth and massive consumption of all resources, we also ignore the responsibilities of good stewardship. The consequences of human action may well contribute to global imbalance.

Dr. June McDaniel

Religious Studies Department, College of Charleston

Why did God destroy New Orleans? This is the classic question of theodicy: Why is there evil if we have a good God? The question is often phrased in this way: If God wants innocent people to suffer, then he is not good but evil; and if he allows evil to occur but does not want it to happen, then he is weak. In either case, God lacks either goodness or omnipotence. Religious skeptics have long used this argument.

Sometimes we see the argument that descendants are punished for the sins of their ancestors. As the Ten Commandments say in Exodus 20:5, "I the Lord your God, am a jealous god. I punish the children for the sins of the fathers to the third and fourth generations ."

In this argument, people are not punished for their own sins, but for the sins of their relatives.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=39937&section=faithvalues

 

 

September 11, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

Youth rally promotes clean fun without being preachy

Robert Westerfelhaus, an assistant professor at the College of Charleston who focuses on religious communications, said it shouldn't come as a surprise that rap is morphing to meet social needs.

"Rap started out as social commentary on conditions of poverty, marginalization, prejudice and oppression," Westerfelhaus said. "Only later was it co-opted by gangs and used in this gangsta form. Now, the music is being co-opted again in some of the same socially positive ways we saw at its roots."

 http://www.charleston.net/stories/?newsID=39961&section=faithvalues

 

September 11, 2005

 

Washington Post

 

Good Old Boys

Strom Thurmond and Jesse Helms helped create an unsettling brand of politics.

 

In telling the story of their fellow South Carolinian, Jack Bass and Marilyn W. Thompson show how the South helped to shape modern America by shaping Thurmond. In 1947, the New York Times had published an editorial entitled "Strom Thurmond, Hope of the South," praising South Carolina's then governor for his progressive programs.

 

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/09/08/AR2005090801620.html

 

 

September 11, 2005

 

Charleston Post and Courier

 

Accept aid (letter to the editor)

As I read the news following the destruction caused by Katrina, I see numerous reports of nations around the world offering aid in the form of monetary and material or personal-effort contributions.

The United States has long been a donor to nations in need, usually in a fairly gracious manner. It would be foolish of us at this time to be less gracious as a

recipient. In fact, it would be a mark of inflated pride to brush them off.

JAMES R. FRYSINGER

Physics Lab Manager

Dept. of Physics and Astronomy

College of Charleston

66 George St.

http://www.charleston.net/stories/Default.aspx?newsID=39969&section=letters

 

 

September 9, 2005

 

Peer Review

 

The Practical Side of Liberal Education: An Overview of

Liberal Education and Entrepreneurship

By Samuel M. Hines Jr., dean, School of Humanities and Social Sciences, College of Charleston

 

Many campuses are experimenting with introducing entrepreneurship into their curriculum in addition to empowering students through campus leadership programs and civic engagement projects that cast students and faculty in entrepreneurial roles. Leadership studies, student programs for responsible civic engagement and service learning, and entrepreneurship programs provide a nexus for new initiatives that will enrich both liberal education and the study and practice of entrepreneurship.

The following assumptions underlie my analysis. First, entrepreneurship is a legitimate area of scholarly inquiry and a curricular component that need not be limited to certain departments or schools or to colleges of business. Second, the fundamental elements of a liberal education are essential to the development of an “entrepreneurial mindset.” And third, both the study of entrepreneurship and the goals of liberal education can derive mutual benefit from curricular and extracurricular initiatives that seek to link the two enterprises.