6 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
(04/10/17 12:46pm)
Women, men and children in outrageous high heels of all colors and kinds, as well as some dogs with shoes of their own, took on the challenge of walking a mile in less-than-comfortable shoes to raise awareness and funds to fight sexual assault.
(03/29/17 3:23pm)
USC’s Annette Hoover and her wedding
planning class annually choose one lucky couple to give a free wedding and
honeymoon. This year’s event at Senate's End was not actually a wedding, but the first vow
renewal in the Love Story tradition’s 26 years. The wedding planning class
chose this little first and everything else by voting for John and Nicole
Dozier to be this year’s lucky couple, the theme to be “Garden of Love,” and
everything in between.
(03/20/17 2:55am)
There was experience to be gained for all at Friday's Edit-a-thon, an annual nationwide event
founded by the organization Art+Feminism and hosted at USC by Professors Anna
Swartwood House, Amanda Wangwright, Susan Felleman and Evan Meaney of the
School of Visual Art and Design. Held in the multimedia classroom on the third floor
of Thomas Cooper Library, the event gave students the
chance to learn how to edit and author Wikipedia pages while contributing to
the site’s limited information on female artists, a topic which concerns art
historians to no small degree, Professor Laura Kissel informed the Daily
Gamecock.
(03/02/17 5:00am)
The State of the Student Body Address presented by Student Body President Michael Parks featured praise of fellow Student Government members' achievements, traditions and awards on Wednesday
(02/21/17 7:29pm)
The Green Career Fair may not sound like something for just anyone, but everyone is invited to check out the various opportunities it offers. Sustainability Carolina orchestrates the Green Career Fair, an annual gathering of diverse organizations whose focus is and whose goals include sustainability and protection of the environment.
(02/16/17 5:07am)
Photographer, author, historian and inventor Cecil Williams spoke in the Hollings Program Room of Thomas Cooper Library about his experiences in the Civil Rights Movement and his corresponding art Wednesday. The presentation was something to behold, featuring a number of his photographs in PowerPoint format, with Williams taking time to describe each one.