Crime Blotter: Jan. 16 – Jan. 30
By Lauren Shirley | Feb. 3, 2015Crime Blotter for January 26 through February 1.
Crime Blotter for January 26 through February 1.
On Super Bowl Sunday, a hundred students’ voices swelled as they ate, laughed and waited for the big game to begin.
Today's In Brief features McMaster's chief of staff's DUI charge, a five-person murder in Georgia and a call to increase diversity at Clemson.
Last semester after the controversial Ferguson decision, some student leaders unified under the opinion that they did not want things to the way they are now.
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 on the social media.
Today's in brief features a fifth arrest in a sex ring case, the death of a South Carolina native Nobel prize winner, and the clearing of civil rights demonstrators' sentences.
Greene Street was the key topic Wednesday night at the weekly meeting of USC’s Student Senate.
Last year, USC President Harris Pastides offered the state legislature a bargain: USC’s tuition would freeze if the university system were to receive $10.1 million in state funding, the equivalent to the previous year’s tuition increase and benefit increases.
This week's briefs include a new baby koala at the zoo, a missing Craigslist couple found dead and a denied rehearing of a landmark education case.
500 Huger St Housing will be at an all time high over the next few years for Columbia.
This week's briefs include two juveniles being charged with arson, a man charged with having an explosive device in his home and a new conduct code for state employees.
When Shahan Din saw restaurant employees throwing out all of the leftover food last summer, he knew there was a better use for it.
On Feb. 17th, 1865, Columbia, SC surrendered to Union General Sherman’s Union Army and the Confederate calvary retreated.
Students were evacuated from the Honors Residence Hall Saturday night, after someone burnt food in a microwave, CFD confirmed.
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 Global Café is packed with students during lunchtime.
Today's briefs are about a Columbia shooting, a bike-share program and new parole officers.