Students get their fix at Starbucks grand opening
By T. Michael Boddie | Jan. 16, 2018Students and spectators gathered Tuesday for the grand opening of a new, full-service Starbucks in Thomas Cooper Library.
Students and spectators gathered Tuesday for the grand opening of a new, full-service Starbucks in Thomas Cooper Library.
The university is forming a student Steering Committee to help plan the changes to the Carolina Coliseum, which will be renovated into a new student union.
Events are hosted throughout the week of MLK Day in order to help students celebrate the life of Martin Luther King Jr. and serve the community.
Student Health Services aims to help students through one of the most stressful times of year: final exams.
Farris Awni Kaloti, 28, came to the attention of USC students Tuesday when it was announced that he was a suspect in a CPD case involving a fake rideshare driver.
Leaders of the International Justice Mission accepted an acknowledgement of human trafficking as an issue from the Student Government Senate.
Women leaders in the Columbia area hosted a discussion forum at Richland Library about sexual harassment culture.
USC unveiled two new plaques on the Horseshoe recognizing the contributions of slaves to South Carolina College, giving university officials the chance to reconcile with the school's complicated past.
Columbia Police are searching for a suspect who has reportedly been seen in around campus.
A pedestrian required EMS attention after an accident at the intersection of Sumter and College streets.
USC spent $7,835,156 on out-of-state travel in the last fiscal year, largely on trips to promote international programs the university offers.
Professors, alumni and students work together to help refugees settled in Columbia through the Carolina Survivor Clinic.
Shaped by years of watching patients struggle through treatment, one USC researcher is leading a team in the fight against cancer.
Two new plaques recognizing the contributions of slaves during USC's early years will be unveiled on the Horseshoe this week.
The GOP tax plan, which includes major changes to the taxation of grad school tuition, will face a vote in the House of Representatives this week.
Under the proposed GOP tax bill, graduate students will be required to pay income tax on tuition waivers.
On the impact from RHA President Turner Johnson's resignation, Patterson president McKenzie Norris believes new leadership could bring more "fiscally conservative" input on senate legislation while Maxcy-Thornwell's Mateo Pierce-Mosquera simply expects "business as usual" to follow.