Column: The hypocrisy of protesting against free speech
This article is a response to the editorial board article titled Missouri case shows ignoring campus racism no longer an option.
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This article is a response to the editorial board article titled Missouri case shows ignoring campus racism no longer an option.
The relative pay of high school teachers has been debated in opinion columns, at legislative assemblies and around the dinner table for years. What is widely understood is that for the educational attainment necessary to hold the job and unique stresses of it, teachers make very little money. Now nationwide, their benefits, pay and job security are being rolled back.
USC and the Columbia area has a lot more to offer than meets the eye when it comes to culture. Here are a few methods to make the most of your time here.
This letter is a response to the editorial cartoon that ran in the September 9, 2015 issue.
With the trial of Michael Smith coming to a resolution on Aug. 17 and the start of another school year comes the revival of the age-old argument for USC students and Columbia residents alike: How safe am I when spending time in Five Points?
In April, USC was thrust into infamy after a screenshotted Snapchat of a student listing a racial slur as one of the “Reasons why USC WiFi blows” circulated on multiple social media platforms. In response, the university suspended the student and is planning to rework the Carolinian Creed as a contract rather than an ethics-based document. And now, the decision has been made to improve Wi-Fi connection and make it more secure through a number of policy changes and upgrades.
Finals week is on its way, which means that Thomas Cooper Library is about to get a lot more crowded.
Roger Sawyer of USC’s biology department has been named the new interim dean of the College of Arts and Sciences.
With Rasta-colored signs, brownies for sale and the constant chant of "Legalize it," there wasn't any question as to what the College Libertarians were advocating for: marijuana.
The rain didn’t stop a large crowd from gathering for USC’s Relay For Life at Blatt Fields Friday at 7 p.m. to support the American Cancer Society in their goal to raise money to fund cancer research.
The Daily Gamecock took home 28 awards for their work in 2014 at the annual South Carolina Press Association Collegiate Awards Presentation on April 10 at Bob Jones University.
The men sporting brightly colored heels and tights at Richland Mall Wednesday were show stoppers, but thanks to the Walk A Mile In Their Shoes event, they were also a way to discuss the issues of sexual assault and abuse in Columbia.
Human trafficking can be an underground issue, but according to Katie Shelgren and Will Boggs, it doesn't have to be. Shelgren, a fourth-year public relations student, and her fiancé Boggs, a USC alumnus, founded Raising a Voice, to educate the public about human trafficking and help bring it to and end.
Come Friday, members of the USC community will walk and run around Blatt Fields for 12 hours to show their support for Relay For Life. But the week leading up to the main event has been a chance for students to put the word out and to show why they Relay."
Bill Press will visit USC on Tuesday to address both the public and students by invitation from Professor Donald Fowler of the department of political science.
There were an unusual number of green shirts on campus Monday worn by students.
The final event of the Muslim Student Association's week to raise awareness about Islamic culture at USC will be held Thursday at 7 p.m.
Registration for orientation for the summer months was slightly delayed on Monday, according to USC’s Office of New Student Orientation that tweeted that their system was down.
Yik Yak is the most popular, interactive social media application to arise since Instagram or Twitter. It is also an accurate representation of our generation’s acceptance of disturbing societal norms. In other words, Yik Yak is one of the worst (but most reflective) trends that has ever come to college campuses.
The creative talent that has passed through the Ernest F. Hollings Special Collections Library as a result of The Open Book series would rival even the most prestigious literary conferences.