Archive for January, 2019

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivering a speech.

1/21: King’s principles; 2020 presidential race; Neglecting history

IN THIS ISSUE |  Jan. 21, 2019

FOCUS: Remembering Dr. King and the 6 principles that guided his work
COMMENTARY, Brack: S.C.’s role in 2020 presidential process is big, really big
IN THE SPOTLIGHT:  Charleston RiverDogs
PHOTO ESSAY: Neglecting part of our history
GOOD NEWS:  Food bank helps workers impacted by shutdown
FEEDBACK: Send us a good, snippy letter
MYSTERY PHOTO:  It’s not a beach resort
S.C. ENCYCLOPEDIA: Gov. Martin F. Ansel
CALENDAR: Parade, breakfast are highlights for MLK celebration

by · 01/21/2019 · Comments are Disabled · Full issue, Uncategorized
FOCUS: King Day events in Charleston to continue Jan. 17

FOCUS: King Day events in Charleston to continue Jan. 17

Staff reports  | While area churches held services commemorating Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and his legacy on Sunday, community events and celebrations get started in earnest Thursday, Jan. 17, with the MLK Racial Equity Institute.

The nationally-recognized sessions will be held 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Jan. 17 and Jan. 18 at the College of Charleston’s North Charleston campus, 3800 Paramount Drive, just off Interstate 526.  Leaders and others who attend will work to understand institutional racism and will ““come away with dramatically changed worldviews,” according to YWCA Greater Charleston.

Click the headline above to learn about more events.

by · 01/14/2019 · Comments are Disabled · Focus, Good news
Scene from Bowen's Island looking toward Folly Beach, S.C.

BRACK: New “Beach” read offers critical conservation, political insights

By Andy Brack, editor and publisher  | Conservationist Dana Beach years ago described how to keep development from mauling everything into a mess of sprawl.

Don’t, he said, talk or write about merely “protecting land.”  Instead, use words to conceptualize protecting “special places” in South Carolina.  The first approach is kind of clinical and vanilla. It outlines what one wants, but doesn’t link to what someone else may really care about.  But the second method connects conservation with a reader’s innate definition of keeping safe …

by · 01/14/2019 · Comments are Disabled · Andy Brack, Views
GOOD NEWS: Chamber offers six priority areas for state legislature

GOOD NEWS: Chamber offers six priority areas for state legislature

Staff reports  |  The Charleston Metro Chamber of Commerce recently unveiled its 2019 legislative agenda with six priority issue areas ranging from taxes and education to workforce housing and the state’s fiscal health.  

by · 01/14/2019 · Comments are Disabled · Good news, News briefs
MYSTERY:  Maybe this one will be easier

MYSTERY:  Maybe this one will be easier

Whew.  The last mystery was so tough that only two people even guessed.  So maybe this one will be easier. Send your guess to:  editor@charlestoncurrents.com.  And don’t forget to include your name and the town in which you live.

Our previous Mystery Photo: Only the super photo sleuth, George Graf of Palmyra, Va., had the stick-to-it dedication to identify last week’s mystery as the new Baxter Patrick James Island Public Library currently under construction.  

by · 01/14/2019 · Comments are Disabled · Mystery Photo, Photos
Image via Charleston VA

1/14, full issue: King Day events; a great “Beach” read; More

IN THIS ISSUE #11.10  | Jan. 714 2019

FOCUS: King Day events in Charleston to continue Jan. 17
COMMENTARY, Brack: New “Beach” read offers critical conservation, political insights
IN THE SPOTLIGHT:  
GOOD NEWS:  Chamber offers six priority areas for state legislature
FEEDBACK: Send us a good, snippy letter
MYSTERY PHOTO:  Maybe this one will be easier
S.C. ENCYCLOPEDIA: Artist Jonathan Green
CALENDAR: Charleston Jazz Festival starts Jan. 24

by · 01/14/2019 · Comments are Disabled · Full issue
FOCUS: Neighborhoods should benefit from Lowcountry Rapid Transit

FOCUS: Neighborhoods should benefit from Lowcountry Rapid Transit

By Kyra Morris, contributing editor  | Lowcountry Rapid Transit (LRT), a proposed dedicated bus system between Summerville and Charleston, should not be just a metro system for transportation.  It should also be the focal point for comprehensive community redevelopment, especially for stations along Rivers Avenue in North Charleston.

Now is the time for the planning and fund-raising.   All of the benefits and barriers should be considered.  We need to seize this opportunity for all of the Tri-county community and create neighborhoods where there are green spaces, safe areas for pedestrians and cyclists, creative mixed use environments for housing and businesses, and social networking centers.

A lot of research has been done showing that improving the environment often provides the nudge for individuals to lead healthier more productive lives.  A lot of research also has been done showing that the Charleston area needs to mitigate sprawl and develop blueprints that show desirable urban in-fill.

by · 01/07/2019 · Comments are Disabled · Focus, Good news
BRACK: Don’t play verbal shell games with tax reform

BRACK: Don’t play verbal shell games with tax reform

By Andy Brack, editor and publisher  | Two people can look at a painting or watch the same football game and see two completely different things.

One person, for example, might see little more than an abstracted bull, horse and people in Picasso’s Guernica.  Another might be moved to tears over human suffering.

by · 01/07/2019 · Comments are Disabled · Andy Brack, Views
PALMETTO POEM: One River, One Boat

PALMETTO POEM: One River, One Boat

By Marjory Wentworth
Because our history is a knot
we try to unravel, while others
try to tighten it, we tire easily
and fray the cords that bind us.

by · 01/07/2019 · Comments are Disabled · Features, Palmetto Poem
GOOD NEWS: CofC cloud study, new United Way CEO, more

GOOD NEWS: CofC cloud study, new United Way CEO, more

Staff reports  |  A new study by a College of Charleston professor could tell us more about the shape of water. Physics professor Mike Larsen is working on a project that has allowed him to measure the three-dimensional statistical structure of water drops in clouds, according to a press release. These cloud droplets grow by the diffusion of water vapor before collisional growth turns the tiny droplets into drizzle and rain.

Also inside: Chloe Knight Tonney has been selected as Trident United Way’s next president and CEO, the organization announced early this morning.

by · 01/07/2019 · Comments are Disabled · Good news, News briefs