106 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
(08/29/15 8:37pm)
Thousands of people — including presidential hopefuls former Texas Governor Rick Perry and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and with South Carolina Senator Tim Scott — gathered on the steps of the Statehouse lawn Saturday afternoon to "encourage and empower God-fearing citizens to stand in this evil day," according to the Pro-Family Rally group which sponsored the event.
(08/27/15 3:42am)
A USC student, Zachary Burrage-Goodwin, died in an automobile accident Tuesday night when his motorcycle crashed into two vehicles, according to Richland County Coroner Gary Watts.
(08/27/15 3:15am)
Wednesday evening saw the first fall session of the Student Senate.
(08/26/15 3:46am)
In dining halls across campus, the rivalry between the
south’s two great soda giants — Coca-Cola and Pepsi — has a decisive winner
in Pepsi, as the line of blue drink dispensers in Russell House firmly attest.
(08/25/15 4:41pm)
Sen. Marco Rubio, one of the myriad contenders for the
Republican presidential nomination, will speak at a Student Government
sponsored event at the Russell House on Thursday at 4:00 p.m.
(08/25/15 1:32pm)
For Student Government, this year’s overarching goal is a familiar one — improving the way the university and students interact with each other.
(08/24/15 3:29am)
Republican presidential candidate Ben Carson will visit Columbia Monday to register for the South Carolina GOP presidential primary in February, according to The State.
(08/24/15 3:30am)
A large crowd formed outside Columbia's Planned Parenthood Saturday to voice unified protests against the organization's' practice of providing abortions, according to The State.
(08/24/15 3:31am)
The city of Columbia has once again granted public money to the annual Gay Pride Parade to the tune of just under $50,000, according to The State.
(08/22/15 1:03am)
A recently released email exchange between USC Professor Raja Fayad and his ex-wife Sunghee Kwon — who murdered him in the USC's Public Health Research Center this February — show that Fayad had apparently relinquished his share of their jointly-owned Columbia house to Kwon two weeks before the shooting.
(08/21/15 11:07pm)
An institutional review investigating the university's actions immediately after the February shooting of Professor Raja Fayad concluded "that the University's immediate reactions of the shooting . . . were appropriate."
(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.
(08/18/15 1:18am)
Michael Juan Smith was found guilty Monday evening on all counts in the shooting that paralyzed first-year management student Martha Childress two years ago, according to The State.
(08/19/15 6:55pm)
As more students return to USC for the 2015 fall semester — and campus dining halls once again hum with activity — one question seems unavoidable: “Where did my Bonus Bucks go?”
(08/14/15 7:33pm)
Because this is the last column I will write for some time, I wanted to use this opportunity to sit down, take a deep breath and think about the enterprise as a whole.
(07/15/15 2:45am)
The Internet is uniquely adept at contributing to the death of the people who use it. I am not talking about the health problems that come from sitting in one place too long, nor am I using “death” as some kind of metaphor for screen addiction.
(06/25/15 2:46am)
In 1962, an all-white South Carolina legislature decided to raise the symbol of a slave state to a place of prominence above its copper dome.
(06/17/15 12:45am)
Everyone who has read 1984 knows, in an abstract way, what it is like to live in North Korea.
(06/03/15 4:29am)
The “free speech” protest (and counter-protest) outside of a mosque in Phoenix, Arizona on Friday threw an old question back into the public square: Is drawing cartoons of the prophet Muhammad necessarily a hateful act?
(04/23/15 3:39am)
There are exactly two places on a college campus that are
unequivocally private: bedrooms and bathrooms. They are places of respite,
designed in part to catch one’s breath before diving back into society.