Omega Psi Phi draws crowds with hip hop
By Lauren Shirley | Feb. 11, 2015The rumble of bass could be heard all across campus. Any students who followed the sound found themselves at a thumping party on Green Street: Hip Hop Wednesday.
The rumble of bass could be heard all across campus. Any students who followed the sound found themselves at a thumping party on Green Street: Hip Hop Wednesday.
A timeline of the events that occurred on Thursday Feb. 5, 2015.
The debate on whether to open the gates or keep them shut raged on in student senate Wednesday night, when Sen. Brian Samples announced he was assembling a coalition to support opening the gates back up.
The 12th annual Carolina Day brought faculty, students and alumni together to lobby at the Statehouse Wednesday morning for higher education funding.
The U.S. Department of Justice is contemplating ending its 20-year lease of USC’s old business school building, The State reported.
Today's In Brief features a resolved Amber Alert, and a new 'Art Village,' and a fire behind Granby Mill Apartments.
The library is a constant in every college student’s life. It’s a place for students to cram for upcoming exams and the popular hangout for pulling all-nighters but, for JaVakeiu Duckett, a third-year early childhood education major, it’s also the place she calls work.
On Super Bowl Sunday, a hundred students’ voices swelled as they ate, laughed and waited for the big game to begin.
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.
Greene Street was the key topic Wednesday night at the weekly meeting of USC’s Student Senate.
Tuesday, the Columbia Metropolitan Convention Center was crowded with USC students and employers for the Spring Job Fair.
The new Leadership and Service Center will be open this spring and is designed to engage students.
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.
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.
On Wednesday night, USC’s 106th Student Senate held their weekly meeting.