245 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
(09/10/15 3:50am)
On June 26, 2015, the Supreme Court of the United States held that the right of same-sex couples to marry was enshrined in the Constitution. No sooner had the ruling passed than a litany of presidential candidates vowed to fight it, civil servants and judges considered defiance and rallies were planned to express disapproval. Two of those candidates recently headlined one such rally in Columbia that showed the increasingly blurred line between politics and religion. One of the last civil servants holding out was imprisoned shortly after the Sept. 3 Weekender went to print and released the week of Sept. 14.
(09/10/15 3:53am)
When the lights go down Saturday, all eyes will
be on the football game against Kentucky. However, spectators and students should pause while those lights are still on to admire some of the new upgrades at Williams-Brice Stadium for the 2015-2016 season.
(09/10/15 3:50am)
Last Thursday, South Carolina used timely defensive stands and a potent rushing attack to squeeze by North Carolina and move to 10-1 in season openers under head coach Steve Spurrier.
(08/27/15 3:15am)
Wednesday evening saw the first fall session of the Student Senate.
(08/27/15 2:30am)
An outsider might look at South Carolina and only see what jumps out at them: an intense football rivalry, longstanding traditions of sweet tea and seersucker and a bit more than a few political uh-ohs. But to immerse oneself in South Carolina’s culture is to see the variety of it. From scenic mountains to world-famous beaches, one-stoplight towns to tourist destinations like Charleston, this state covers more ground than its size might suggest. The content of South Carolina is the content of its people: rich, diverse and still changing.
(08/20/15 1:39am)
In 2006, the editors of The Gamecock made a decision which
bucked 100 years of tradition — they changed the paper’s
name.
(08/20/15 1:43am)
Minor League Baseball welcomes the Columbia Fireflies to the field in the upcoming 2016 MiLB season.
(08/20/15 2:54am)
Whether you’re a freshman walking around campus for the first time or a returning student already familiar with the ins and outs of college life, it’s undeniable — there’s something in the air. Maybe it’s the new grass on the Horseshoe
or the crisp pages in new textbooks, but there’s something about August and the first days of the semester that smells like a fresh start.
(08/20/15 3:55am)
Legislators have toyed with the idea, and now the decision has been made to give student athletes a little extra spending money.
(08/20/15 3:42am)
Formed in 2009 in Copenhagen, New Politics is a rock band
that has managed to fly just below the radar for some time now.
(08/20/15 1:49am)
The beauty of college football often lies in the higher rate of turnover teams experience when compared to their professional counterparts. Despite an underwhelming 2014 campaign, South Carolina will have to replace a number of key players heading into the season.
(08/14/15 4:14pm)
From the desk of President Harris Pastides
(04/17/15 1:25am)
Charleston native Julie Henson warns viewers of her art show at Indie Grits to steer themselves for "some confusing images." Her display, Parallel Horizons, explores interpretations of the future by using a spread of magazines from the '60s, '70s and '80s. Each of Henson's pieces aims to show how past generations of Americans envisioned the future, giving today's viewers an interesting mix of déjà vu and clairvoyance — she uses things from the past to depict her view of future.
(04/17/15 12:09am)
South Carolina’s No. 2 women’s golf team travels to compete in the SEC Championships this weekend with its first tee off early Friday.
(04/17/15 12:44am)
Antoine William’s mixed media art is visually appealing, but that's not all it is.
(04/17/15 1:38am)
It's “more than just a movie theater.”
(04/16/15 11:57pm)
For the ninth year in a row, Indie Grits has brought the Columbia community many new experiences, films, events, digital apps and this time, visual artists.
(04/17/15 12:00am)
Matt Tenenbaum, an intern at the Nickelodeon Theatre and USC alumnus, was getting increasingly frustrated with Columbia’s public transportation.
(04/16/15 11:46pm)
Cynthia Boiter is a writer, editor, publisher and arts advocate.
(04/16/15 10:59pm)
FRIDAY