New Leadership and Service Center will engage students
The new Leadership and Service Center is set to open this semester designed to engage students just steps away from Einstein Bros. Bagels on the second floor of Russell House.
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The new Leadership and Service Center is set to open this semester designed to engage students just steps away from Einstein Bros. Bagels on the second floor of Russell House.
Tuesday, the Columbia Metropolitan Convention Center was crowded with USC students and employers for the Spring Career Fest. Students dressed in business attire and clutched copies of their resumes as they waited in line to meet potential employers.
As USC’s campus slowly expands towards the Congaree River, private companies have been quick to capitalize on the growing need for student living space close to campus.
On Wednesday night, USC’s 106th Student Senate held their weekly meeting.
The Global Café is packed with students during lunchtime. The air is buzzing with conversation and students stand in line, eager to get their food. Others sit at tables, eating their meals as they review notes and talk to friends.
After a year as a tobacco-free campus, Dennis Pruitt, vice president for student affairs and vice provost and dean of students, is planning to move into the assessment phase to see how this policy change has impacted the university community and to see “how our culture has changed.”
The Office of Leadership and Service Center is celebrating the life of Martin Luther King Jr. through the MLK Jr. Days of Service and event series.
Phi Gamma Delta will colonize on USC's campus this semester after the fraternity was selected to join the Greek community two years ago.
There were four 5 1/2 month old PAALS service dogs sprawled on the floor, eagerly wagging their tails at students who walked past them. The dogs and their handlers came to USC’s campus as a part of the Pet-a-PAALS Service Dog program to help students deal with the stress of the start of the semester.
After serving seven years in the Air Force, coming to USC was a strange experience for Danielle Goodreau.
The CarolinaCard Office will now be offering rewards to students for using Carolina Cash on campus.
The most expensive event Carolina Productions is bringing to campus this semester is the annual Campus MovieFest, in which students are provided with all of the equipment to produce a movie in one week. At the end of the week, the movies are shown in the Russell House Theater.
BP America recently donated $25,000 to Cocky’s Reading Express, the literacy outreach program organized at USC. Traveling to elementary schools across the state, student volunteers from USC promote literacy and a love of books and reading through the program.
Coming back to school less than two weeks into January, many students are focused on keeping their New Year's resolutions. They’re planning on eating healthier, exercising more and losing weight — at least for the first week or two that is.
On Oct. 16, 2014, Christian Allen Matthews of Cayce joined the USC thread on Yik Yak and posted the comment, “Downvote me all you want. People will still die.”
Charles Bierbauer, dean of the College of Mass Communications and Information Studies, took a step into what will open as the school’s new building in fall 2015.
After USC's Kappa Sigma chapter's charter was withdrawn earlier this month, Judge Casey Manning ruled this week that the 30 students living in the fraternity house must find alternative living arrangements before the start of next semester.
USC is asking state lawmakers for $51.3 million in new money for the Columbia campus for the upcoming year, according to The State. The money could potentially raise the number of in-state students on the campus, which has already seen enrollment increase by 25 percent over the last 10 years.
There are a few sure-fire developments that we like to see on campus: more beds, less drunk driving accidents and a variety in terms of where students can choose to live.
Mayor Steve Benjamin and the City Council addressed the City of Columbia at the Zoning Public Hearing Tuesday at 7 p.m. regarding an amendment to allow C-3 commercial zoning districts to permit the building of private student housing.