A profile of The Citadel Class of 2017
The total number of 2017 graduates from The Citadel South Carolina Corps of Cadets and The Citadel Graduate College is 953.
Read MoreThe total number of 2017 graduates from The Citadel South Carolina Corps of Cadets and The Citadel Graduate College is 953.
Read MoreA discussion held at the site of one of the nation’s most horrific hate crimes was held as a component of Prof. Joseph P. Riley Jr.’s course at The Citadel.
Read MoreAs the city approaches the second anniversary of the mass shooting at Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, Citadel Prof. Joseph P. Riley, Jr. takes his class of cadets and students to the church for a discussion on race in America that will be open to the public.
Read MorePreparing graduates to serve their communities is part of The Citadel’s mission, and the Swain Department of Nursing is helping to achieve that goal in a direct and meaningful way.
Read MoreA Citadel professor who spends much of his time teaching engineering on campus, spends the remainder of his time working with a team of researchers at the U.S. Army Research Laboratory (ARL) in Adelphi, Maryland. Gregory Mazzaro, Ph.D., is a faculty member in The Citadel’s Electrical Engineering Department.
Read MoreResearch conducted by Citadel English professor, Michael Livingston, Ph.D., is changing the way scholars view an infamous battle that occurred centuries ago. The findings are published in Livingston’s latest book, The Battle of Crécy: A Casebook.
Read MoreThe Citadel’s new Swain Department of Nursing is being established through the generosity of a gift from the Swain family.
Read MoreThe S.C. Board of Nursing has approved a nursing program at The Citadel, according to a news release.
Read MoreAustin Gray has always been inquisitive. As the youngest of five boys, Gray was always asking – or pestering – his older brothers with questions. Now as an adult, that same curiosity has led him to pursue a PhD in environmental health science at UNCG.
Read MoreThe Citadel plans to launch a new nursing program in January with a $4 million anonymous gift.
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