Nickelodeon Theatre exceptional in the South
By Isabelle Khurshudyan | Feb. 4, 2014Local movie theater unique in prestige and opportunities
Local movie theater unique in prestige and opportunities
Singer/songwriter announces performance in Columbia set for June 13
The Retreat at Columbia will be participating in a nationwide fundraising program this year to help support the Boys & Girls Clubs of The Midlands by raising $5,000 and giving 500 volunteer hours.
14 students from the USC School of Music performed in a 30-member ensemble directed by Greg Stuart, USC clinical assistant professor of music, on Nov. 18 at the Columbia Museum of Art. This concert received national recognition in The New York Times on Jan. 15.
If you’ve been to Jillian’s on a Thursday night over the last few weeks, you may have seen Ashlyn Bassett and Patrick Rogers practicing their moves.
The main responsibility of any community is easier to sum up than you might think: “It takes a village to raise a child.”
Mayor Steve Benjamin sure had a lot to say in his annual State of the City address, but we’re not sure if the focus was where we’d have liked it.
After a year of lower unemployment rates, an improved credit rating and a decrease in violent crimes, Columbia Mayor Steve Benjamin said he still isn’t satisfied.
With an overflow of animals, a lack of space and an ever-growing debt, Pets Inc. looked to the public for help. Over 3,000 donations, totaling around $117,000, poured in.
This week’s in briefs include Richland officials worrying about growing discovery of meth labs, the Columbia Bully Walk supports dogs and owners’ rights and protestors working to remove Confederate flag from public property.
This week’s crime blotter includes a possession of marijuana citation in West Quad, a disorderly conduct citation and an altered ID citation.
More than 360 USC students spent their day off from classes volunteering at the largest campus-wide service event of the year, the Martin Luther King Jr. Day of Service.
The Columbia residents and visitors came together Wednesday to celebrate pivotal moments in history at the opening reception for “Freedom Now: Columbia, S.C., and the Modern Civil Rights Movement.”
While state legislators were inside gaveling in the first session of the new year, protesters on both sides of the Statehouse flooded the grounds Tuesday, demanding representation that lined up with their views.
Ethics violations allegations, charges dropped and a traveling dog.
Pulaski Street — an area west of campus dotted with warehouses and undeveloped lots — is set to see a wave of development in the next few years, fueled by a surge in student housing.
Myrtle Beach, an escaped man and Rick Perry are in today’s In Brief.