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Topic: Diversity

Displaying 469 - 486 of 803
  • Appalachian earns FIRE’S highest rating for protecting free speech
    Appalachian earns FIRE’S highest rating for protecting free speech
    Sep. 5, 2017

    Appalachian State University has earned the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education’s highest “green light” rating for protecting student and faculty free speech, a distinction held by only 35 institutions nationwide.

  • Appalachian students accepted in Japanese exchange program
    Appalachian students accepted in Japanese exchange program
    Sep. 1, 2017

    Five Appalachian students have been chosen to participate in the Japan Exchange and Teaching (JET) program for 2017-18. JET is a competitive employment program that gives young professionals a chance to live and work in Japan while representing the United States as cultural ambassadors.

  • Meeting and Working with Nelson Mandela: Politics and Memory in a Democratic State
    Meeting and Working with Nelson Mandela: Politics and Memory in a Democratic State
    Aug. 31, 2017

    Robert Haswell, geographer, political activist and former member of the Democratic Party of Parliament in South Africa, will present a lecture entitled, “Meeting and Working with Nelson Mandela: Politics and Memory in a Democratic State.”

  • The Edible and Visual South: UNC scholars visit Appalachian Sept. 15
    The Edible and Visual South: UNC scholars visit Appalachian Sept. 15
    Aug. 30, 2017

    Southern scholars Marcie Cohen Ferris and William R. Ferris of University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill will be on campus for two events. Cohen Ferris will speak about how food – as cuisine and as commodity – has expressed and shaped southern identity. William Ferris’s talk will focus on his photography and documentary film work.

  • UNC Wilmington, Appalachian State earn FIRE’s highest rating for free speech
    UNC Wilmington, Appalachian State earn FIRE’s highest rating for free speech
    thefire.org
    Aug. 29, 2017

    The University of North Carolina Wilmington and Appalachian State University have both earned the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education’s highest, “green light” rating for protecting student and faculty free speech, a distinction held by only 35 institutions in the country.

  • Descendant Of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee Denounces Racism At VMA’s
    Descendant Of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee Denounces Racism At VMA’s
    Ebony
    Aug. 28, 2017

    “We have made my ancestor an idol of white supremacy, racism and hate,” Reverend Robert W. Lee said.

  • Winston-Salem names new police chief
    Winston-Salem names new police chief
    Winston-Salem Journal
    Aug. 25, 2017

    Catrina Amelia Thompson says she has big shoes to fill as the city's new police chief but feels more than up to the task. Thompson holds a master’s in public administration from Appalachian State University.

  • ‘Boone doesn’t want to be the next Charlottesville’: Supremacists hang banner at App State
    ‘Boone doesn’t want to be the next Charlottesville’: Supremacists hang banner at App State
    News & Observer
    Aug. 24, 2017

    The white supremacy group Identity Evropa hung a banner at Appalachian State University in Boone, N.C. It didn’t stay up long.

  • Lt. Gen. Ashley to become 21st Defense Intelligence Agency director
    Lt. Gen. Ashley to become 21st Defense Intelligence Agency director
    Homeland Preparedness News
    Aug. 24, 2017

    Lt. Gen. Robert P. Ashley, Jr., U.S. Army, was recently confirmed by the U.S. Senate as the 21st Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA). Robert P. Ashley, Jr. Currently serving as deputy chief of staff, G-2, for the U.S.

  • English major presents at American Literature Association
    English major presents at American Literature Association
    Aug. 23, 2017

    As a member of the Gertrude Stein Society, English major Tommy Young was one of four scholars to present a paper on a panel titled “New Directions in Stein Studies.”

  • Girls on the Run-High Country kicks off fall programs
    Girls on the Run-High Country kicks off fall programs
    Aug. 21, 2017

    Girls on the Run of the High Country (GOTR-HC) announces the start of the fall 2017 season. Approximately 200 girls in third through eighth grade will participate this fall in GOTR-HC programs, which inspire girls to be joyful, healthy and confident using a fun, experience-based curriculum that creatively integrates running, according to Council Director Mary Sheryl Horine.

  • Author of ‘One Amazing Thing’ headlines convocation Aug. 21
    Author of ‘One Amazing Thing’ headlines convocation Aug. 21
    Aug. 15, 2017

    Author Dr. Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni is the keynote speaker at Appalachian State University’s Black and Gold Convocation. Divarkaruni is the author of the novel, “One Amazing Thing,” the 2017-18 Common Reading Program selection.

  • African Americans in Appalachia fight to be seen as a part of coal country
    African Americans in Appalachia fight to be seen as a part of coal country
    Washington Post
    Aug. 10, 2017

    Dubbed “Affrilachians” by one academic, black residents of these mountain towns say they've been overlooked in the growing focus on rural, working-class Americans.

  • Living like you mean it
    Living like you mean it

    Meet some Mountaineers who are living intentional lives, and making a difference for others

    Aug. 4, 2017

    Meet some Mountaineers who are living intentional lives, and making a difference for others.

  • Communicating can ease everyone’s stress
    Communicating can ease everyone’s stress
    The Elkin Tribune
    Aug. 3, 2017

    Communication makes everyone’s lives easier. That was the message at a media summit held in Boone at Appalachian on Tuesday, Aug. 1, 2017. Attendees included police and health care providers, educational institutions and media outlets. The main message, from every direction, was communication is key.

  • Nascar diversity program no longer stuck in neutral
    Nascar diversity program no longer stuck in neutral

    Appalachian alumnus Richie Williams pursued the opportunity to participate in the NASCAR Drive for Diversity program

    Indianapolis Recorder
    Aug. 3, 2017

    Williams flourished quickly and found employment initially in 2010 with Germain Racing in the NASCAR Truck Series before joining Jack Roush Racing in 2012 for both the Cup series and the Xfinity series. Williams accepted his current position with Ganassi as a crewmember for driver Jamie McMurray’s car.

  • Visual history archive with 55,000 testimonies of genocide survivors and witnesses will be accessible this fall through Appalachian’s Belk Library and Information Commons
    Visual history archive with 55,000 testimonies of genocide survivors and witnesses will be accessible this fall through Appalachian’s Belk Library and Information Commons
    Aug. 2, 2017

    This fall semester, Appalachian State University will become one of 79 sites to provide full access to the USC Shoah Foundation Visual History Archive. The archive contains 55,000 testimonies of survivors and witnesses of the Holocaust, the Genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda (1994), the Nanjing Massacre (1937), the Guatemalan Genocide (1978-1996), the Armenian Genocide (1915-1923) and the Cambodian Genocide (1975-1979).

  • High Country Half Marathon Announces New Route for 2017 Race
    High Country Half Marathon Announces New Route for 2017 Race
    July 28, 2017

    As the second race in the High Country Triple Crown series, the High Country Half Marathon is celebrating its seventh annual race. All proceeds benefit Girls on the Run of the High Country, a self-confidence building program for girls in the third through eighth grades.

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