In September of last year, lights, cameras and a lot of action filled the Tilley’s North Charleston home. For five days Eddie and Susan Tilley and their two children lived with a camera crew from Los Angeles and two teenagers they had never met. They were all part of a Country Music Television (CMT) reality show, World’s Strictest Parents.
1971 Jennifer Carpenter recently retired as the head reference librarian at Campbell University’s Wiggins Memorial Library. 1977 Kenneth Sandifer has retired as pastor of First Baptist Church, Darlington. He is a member of the CSU board of trustees, and he and his wife, Beverly, live in Bamberg, S.C. 1982 John F. Peek was elected president of the 700-member South Carolina [...]
Saturday, November 6, marked the 8th Annual Shopping Scholars Auction sponsored by CSU Women’s Council. The ladies-only event included donated and handmade gifts and offered something for everyone – from gift baskets, jewelry and beach vacations to a golf cart sporting a huge red bow. After the bidders studied the silent and live auction items, the bidding began. For the [...]
I began calling on CSU from a banking standpoint three years ago and have continued visiting regularly ever since. I have been very impressed with the strong management and fiscal responsibility of CSU, the variety and scope of programs offered and the foundational principles of the University.
Lexington County Sheriff James R. Metts presented a check in the amount of $7,000 to President Dr. Jairy C. Hunter, Jr., for a scholarship fund that Metts endowed at the university. The presentation was made during a special scholarship dinner on the campus of Charleston Southern University.
My official title is Law Enforcement Specialist, and I am currently employed by L-3 Communications, Inc. in support of the United States Coast Guard as an instructor at their Maritime Law Enforcement Academy located at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center in North Charleston.
Dedicating a Habitat house in Moncks Corner on a beautiful Sunday afternoon was the perfect way to begin the week of Thanksgiving.
In 2008, a group of Charleston Southern graduates packed up households and families to move to a completely new and uncharted life.
When David Cuttino was a child he battled a serious illness. In fact, his parents were worried he wouldn’t live. The family turned to God in prayer. “Lord, if you save him, I’ll make sure he works for You,” his father prayed.
Attending a new program at a university may not seem like a big deal, but the degree Bill Younginer ’77 earned at CSU opened up doors for him in the Air Force and his career.