Monthly Archives: January 2016

Coming attractions February 2nd, 2016

1:00
Who Was Richard T. Greener?
Katherine Chaddock, retired chair of USC’s Education, Leadership and Policies Department, will discuss the truly amazing story of Richard Greener, USC’s first African-American faculty member, first Black graduate of Phillips Academy and Harvard and first Black diplomat to Russia. Katherine will be accompanied by Carolyn Matalene with whom she has collaborated in writing a biography of Richard Greener which is due to be published in the spring.

2:30
Saving the Oceans
Gorka Sancho is a Professor of Biology at the Grice Marine Laboratory of the College of Charleston. His research on fish behavioral ecology has taken him to remote and pristine waters of the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans. He is keenly aware of the conflict between the need to feed a growing human population and the need to preserve the pristine viability of great portions of our oceans for future generations.

Coming attractions January 26th, 2016

1:00
Poverty in South Carolina: Meet the S.C. Lowcountry Promise Zone
Andy Brack, columnist and publisher, returns to CCR to explore poverty statewide, but his focus will be on what’s being done at the southern tip of the state.

2:30
Antarctic Adventure
Paul Nolan, Professor of Biology at The Citadel, will focus on his research dealing with the impact of climate change on penguins in Antarctica. His presentation will include spectacular photographs of the majestic northern coast of Antarctica.

Coming attractions January 19th, 2016

Note new time and place for this week only.

January 19th at 1:30

With this concert CCR resumes its tradition of including live musical performance in its schedule.

Paul Thomas, Organist and Choir Director of the Cathedral Church of St. Luke and St. Paul, will present a recital of organ music for us on site at the historic Cathedral Church, 126 Coming Street on the Peninsula.   Paul earned degrees in organ performance from Furman and Yale University as well as the Certificate in Church Music Studies from the Yale Institute of Sacred Music. He received the Cathedral’s call to serve as organist in 2014. He says, “I look forward to engaging midtown Charleston with this living tradition as we seek glimpses of God’s beauty in our offerings of praise.”

Although we have been unable to make arrangements for such a large group to eat at a single nearby restaurant, we suggest that members carpool and arrive at a restaurant of their choice about noon.

The parking garage on St. Philip Street between Calhoun and Vanderhorst Streets is two blocks from the church.

 

Coming Attractions January 12th, 2016

1:00
Vision for the College of Charleston’s School of Languages, Cultures & World Affairs (LCWA)
Dean Antonio Tillis will give an overview of LCWA and its role at the College of Charleston. He will address how the mission of the school meets the needs of an increasingly interconnected world. He will specifically address globalization as it relates to world affairs and a shrinking economy.

2:30
Fort Sumter 1829-1947
Rick Hatcher, Fort Sumter Historian Emeritus, will discuss the famous fort in Charleston’s harbor. The April 12-13, 1861 bombardment of Fort Sumter marked a defining moment in American History – the beginning of the Civil War. Sumter was one of the coastal fortifications built after the War of 1812. During the 1863 to 1865 Siege of Charleston (the longest military operation of the war) the fort was the focal point; more than 7 million pounds of artillery rounds were fired at the installation. After the war, Fort Sumter continued to operate as one of the nation’s coastal defenses through the end of the Second World War.