As Halloween approaches, the Ledonia Wright Cultural Center (LWCC) at East Carolina University continues its annual campaign series, “My Culture is Not a Costume,” in effort to generate a campus-led
East Carolina University Student Government Association (SGA) celebrates past and present members with The SGA Wall of Student Body Presidents located at the Main Campus Student Center on Oct. 3.
East Carolina University on-campus organizations and departments plan to hold more in-person events throughout the fall 2021 semester after over a year of events being impacted by the pandemic.
Mark Rasdorf, senior associate director for the Dr. Jesse R. Peel LGBTQ Center, said Student Affairs will work to support students in experiences outside the classrooms. He said the LGBTQ Center offers a range of opportunities for students to be involved with the center through socializing in the space, attending events or getting involved as volunteers.
The LGBTQ center has a fall calendar of events planned for the fall, with most of the programs free and open to the public, Rasdorf said. The center will follow university COVID-19 guidelines.
ECU, City of Greenville brings Juneteenth awareness piratemedia1.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from piratemedia1.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
As East Carolina University approaches the end of the spring 2021 semester, ECU Chancellor Philip Rogers reflects on the challenges the ECU community has faced throughout the year.
In an email sent to ECU students, Rogers said although thereâs optimism for summer vacations and continued vaccine availability, students shouldnât forget struggles endured âas a country, as Pirate Nation, as families and as individuals.â He said the COVID-19 pandemic presented challenges for the year, while racial injustice has existed for centuries.
Rogers said, prior to the verdict of the Derek Chauvin trial, as the nation anticipates the outcome of the Chauvin trial, pain is evident in Minneapolis, Atlanta and other communities as well as North Carolina. On April 20, Chauvin was found guilty on charges of second-degree unintentional murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter for the death of George Floyd.