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news-article - Coastal Carolina University
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news-article - Coastal Carolina University
coastal.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from coastal.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
CCU Women 2021
March is Women’s History Month, and Coastal Carolina University’s history is rich with strong and impactful women who have helped build this University from the ground up. To recognize and honor their contributions to this institution, region and state, we will highlight some of these women throughout the month of March!
Images and videos captured prior to COVID-19 unless otherwise noted.
Stephanie Southworth
CCU Women
Carolyn Dillian, Ph.D.
Monica Gray
Amy Hall
CCU alumna Amy Hall, owner of The Barber Shop Marketing agency in Dallas, Texas, has established the Amy Hall Student and Alumni Program Fund in Visual Arts in the University’s Edwards College of Humanities and Fine Arts. Her recent donation to the Edwards College will create a networking series that promotes interaction between CCU alumni and students within the Department of Visual Arts.
Misadventures in Archaeology: The Life and Career of Charles Conrad Abbott, Tulpehaking Nature Center
Misadventures In Archaeology The Life And Career Of Charles Conrad
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6:00 PM
Join us for a presentation by Carolyn Dillian, who along with Charles Bello, authored the recently published “Misadventures in Archaeology: The Life and Career of Charles Conrad Abbott”. According to the Penn Press website, “Through various sources including archival letters and diaries, this book provides the most complete picture of the quirky and curmudgeonly, C. C. Abbott.” If you’ve ever wondered about why this amateur archaeologist who seems best remembered for being “wrong” still captures the interest and imagination of many, you’ll want to attend.
Chief Harold âBusterâ Hatcher of the Waccamaw Indian People sends up prayers during a Winter Solstice fire ceremony Saturday Dec. 19, 2020, in Aynor. He has spent 30 years trying to gain official federal acknowledgment of his tribe. Grace Beahm Alford/Staff Grace Beahm Alford gbeahm@postandcourier.com
Chief Harold âBusterâ Hatcher of the Waccamaw Indian People is a friendly and determined man. Heâs happy to talk about the history and status of the Waccamaw, and about Native American traditions, cultures and challenges in South Carolina.
But heâs wont to insert a few epithets and some profanity into the conversation. After 30 years trying to gain official federal acknowledgment of his tribe, the 71-year-old Aynor resident said he continues to encounter obstacles, some of which donât entirely make sense.
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