Omega Psi Phi draws crowds with hip hop
The rumble of bass could be heard all across campus. Any students who followed the sound found themselves at a thumping party on Greene Street: Hip Hop Wednesday.
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The rumble of bass could be heard all across campus. Any students who followed the sound found themselves at a thumping party on Greene Street: Hip Hop Wednesday.
— On Feb. 2, an officer made contact with a man who appeared intoxicated and smelled of alcohol on Greene Street. The officer tried to talk to the man, but realized that the man was deaf — he continued to communicate with him by writing on his notepad. Another officer arrived on scene and ran the man’s information, finding that he had previously trespassed on USC property. After the man stepped off the sidewalk and proceeded to urinate on the ground, the officer arrested him for public disorderly conduct. Once he was under arrest, the man became “uncooperative and forcefully sat on the ground," and the officers had to carry him to the police vehicle. He continued to act uncooperatively and banged his head on the counter and wall of the Alvin S. Glenn Detention Center.
Man in custody after biting woman’s nose
Annual support retreat planned by army widow
Impressing college students can be trying for a professor.
“Here’s a health, Carolina,” the crowd sang as they raised their candles. “Forever to thee.”
There is nowhere on campus quite like the Caroliniana Library.
Last year, Carolina Day was all about the tuition timeout. But when USC lobbyists took to the Statehouse Wednesday, they had their eyes on a different prize.
The U.S. Department of Justice is negotiating ending its 20-year lease of USC’s old business school building, The State reported Monday.
Crime Blotter: January 26 – January 30
Amber Alert cancelled, missing girl found
Clemson urged to increase diversity
The library is a constant in every college student’s — it’s a place for students to cram for exams and pull all-nighters. But for JaVakeiu Duckett, third-year early childhood education student, it’s also the place she calls work.
With benefits of lots of followers, potential internet celebrity fame and hundreds of pop-up notifications a day, anonymous social media accounts seem to have become all the rage. But for one lucky USC student, his anonymous twitter account has become both a way of life and a source of income.
Baby koala out of the pouch at Riverbanks Zoo
Columbia, SC surrendered to Union General Sherman’s Union Army on Feb. 17, 1865, and the Confederate calvary retreated. Fires were started in the city under Union occupation and much of the state’s capital was destroyed.
Columbia shooting causes school lockdowns
Columbia Mayor Steve Benjamin spoke of the city’s advancements in 2014 to a nearly full ballroom Tuesday night. Columbia has seen an extreme cut in total crime over the past four years, he said in the annual State of the City Address, and police salaries have been increased.
On Jan. 15 at the historic Seibels House, Ed Madden was officially announced as the city’s first poet laureate for the city of Columbia. Madden is an associate professor of English and the director of the Women’s and Gender Studies Program at USC.
The cold didn’t stop a large crowd from gathering in front of the Statehouse Wednesday afternoon for the inauguration of Gov. Nikki Haley. With iPhones raised to capture the moment, applause from the crowd greeted Haley as she descended the steps of the Columbia Statehouse for her inaugural program.