The students worked hard and finished the race but it all came down to who had the most points and the winners ended up being Kimberly Gautier and Libby Smith. They seemed to have made a good team which led them to victory.
NGU’s first world culture race
The Department of Modern Languages and Linguistics, NGU’s chapter of Sigma Delta Pi (the national Spanish honor society) and the Office of Student Life sponsored an event called “The World Culture Race” on October 26, 2018 from 2:00-4:00 p.m.
Lecture in theology: Race and the promise of the gospel
It is time that we consider our racial climate and have a “helpful and hopeful” conversation on what the interracial Gospel means. Join the conversation with Dr. John Mark Yeats on March 20 at North Greenville University as he speaks on “Race and the Promise of the Gospel.”
Loving: A glimpse into the racial inequalities of America’s past
Loving follows the 1967 Supreme Court verdict of Loving v. Virginia, which replaced prior laws or judicial code that had made it illegal for interracial marriages to exist and beautifully depicts the peaks and valleys that the Loving family had to traverse, in a film that truly captures the imagination.
Jury’s in: Separate trials set to begin in Charleston, heightening racial tensions within city, surrounding area
The separate trials of 22 year old Dylann Roof and Charleston police officer Michael Slager are set to begin, following the massacre of African American churchgoers and the fatal shooting of an unarmed black civilian that both took place in Charleston last year.
Between Two Worlds: A look at the Contrasting Policy Positions of the 2016 Presidential Front-Runners
If you are one of the millions of Americans who have tuned in to the presidential debates and followed the banter surrounding the two major party front-runners, it is possible that you have begun to ask yourself where each candidate stands on the issues and what they believe needs to be accomplished if they found themselves sitting in the Oval Office.
The Race Factor: Incidents of racism popping up across college campuses
“The lack of diversity in a fraternity certainly encourages racial expressions. Whatever the group or issue is, if everybody is one, it’s easy to make fun of the other.”