Pastides at home
Humans of USC
Football metamorphosis
PG 4
PG 8
PG 12
Weekender Friday, February 20, 2015
A Portrait of
WEEK ENDER
2
Contents Briefing
3
Humans of USC
8
President Pastides at home
4
Calendar
11
A look at the historic Horseshoe
5
Wynkoop looks for redemption
12
Protecting history at Caroliniana
6
The change in USC football culture
12
SG vice president race sees runoff
7
Classifieds
15
Cover and contents photos by Amelia Dupont, Madison MacDonald and Maisie Gibb | Weekender
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Briefing “If there was any example of a person whose name doesn’t deserve to be on a building, Ben Tillman is that person.” — Chenjerai Kumanyika, assistant professor of communications studies at Clemson, after the Faculty Senate voted to rename the university’s iconic hall
Ayi Eta | Weekender
“I want to encourage us all to come together, not just as history’s descendants, but history’s inheritors and rise higher than any phoenix before us to build a brighter and better tomorrow.”
— Columbia Mayor Steve Benjamin at the burning of Columbia’s sesquicentennial commemoration
“It’s not a secret left-wing plot to inculcate American youth with seditious ideas, just a hard class for bright kids.” — Editorial from Tulsa World newspaper following a proposal to eliminate AP U.S. History on the grounds t hat it promotes a negative image of America
“The past is not merely a chronicle of all of the events that came before this moment but rather is about telling and retelling stories about the past.” — Ehren Foley of the South Carolina Department of Archives and History, on the unveiling of the city’s newest historical marker
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President Pastides at home Madeleine Collins @MADDY_COLLINS37
President Harris Pastides has a definite Pavlovian response to the sound of the President’s House doorbell. And it has to do with cookies. “Students ring the bell ... a little bit too late at night,” Pastides said. “[And they] would bring a tray of warm cookies and say, ‘Got milk?’” Pastides and his wife, Patricia, have hosted too many late-night visitors bearing baked goods for them to count collectively. It’s a neighborly notion that the president speaks of with fondness. Familiarity with students is something Pastides aims for. He understands that, for many students, the transition onto USC’s campus can prove to be a journey. Pastides and his family moved from Amherst, Massachusetts, for his new position as dean of the Norman J. Arnold School of Public Health in 1998, completely uprooting their family, who had only ever lived in Amherst. “My daughter was a rising senior in high school — that was particularly hard — and my son was a middle schooler,” Pastides said. “But they knew it was important for me professionally, and they supported me. I’ve never forgotten that.” Andrew, Pastides’s son, found
his own niche in South Carolina at the Governor’s School for the Arts and Humanities, a residential high school for emerging artists in Greenville, North Carolina. Because Catherine, the then-dean’s daughter, had already moved out and into college, the Pastides’ were faced for the first time with an empty nest. “It was hard, particularly at night not knowing if all was well,” Pastides said. “And we didn’t want to be calling every hour or even every evening.” So when he addresses thousands of parents at the beginning of every school year, Pastides understands exactly what they’re going through. “The relationships with the students, the student body makes me feel like this is my home,” Pastides said. He works just as hard to make students feel the same. Last year, when classes were canceled for days after the Valentine’s Day snowfall, Pastides sent out a tweet inviting students to tour the President’s House. “I figured or I anticipated around 20, 30, 40, maybe 50,” he said. “But we got several hundred students who came.” For a president who invests so much into face time with the student body, the unexpected turnout was a heart-warming surprise. “It was one of the most memorable times that I’ve ever had
living in the President’s House,” he said. When thinking about the presidency, Pastides likened the experience to “being a parent but, obviously, in a more community way.” He loves to hear about the accomplishments of individual students and of the student body as a whole, and admits that “when they get into trouble” his natural reaction is that of a dismayed parent. But spending time with students is what he enjoys most. “I like to be greeted by them. I like to high fi ve them,” he said. “That makes me feel like I’m home
or I belong here.” That’s the legacy Pastides hoped to leave at USC. “I would like my legacy to be first and foremost something personal about how I interact with people, especially students,” he said. “For students who would have graduated or attended USC during my tenure to say ‘He was a good guy. He was a good president.’” Features editor Lois Carlisle contributed to this article.
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Courtesy of Harris Pastides | Weekender
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Home sweet Horseshoe Chelsea Morris @CHELSEA0MORRIS
DESAUSSURE Completed 1809 — designed to mirror Rutledge as dormitory and academic facilities
FIRST PRESIDENT’S HOUSE Completed 1807 — converted into offices in the 1920s, torn down 1939
RUTLEDGE Completed 1805 — contained the college chapel, library, chemistry and physics laboratory, and lecture rooms — became student housing in 1817 LIEBER Completed 1837 — built as faculty residence
CURRENT PRESIDENT’S HOUSE Completed 1810 — became the president’s house in 1939 after original was razed
CAROLINIANA Completed 1840 — first free-standing undergrad library in the country
Photos courtesy of USC Archives | Weekender
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Protecting history at Caroliniana Lauren Shirley @SURELYLAUREN
There is nowhere on campus quite like the Caroliniana Library. The structure was designed in 1838 by Robert Mills, the architectural mind behind the Washington Monument and the Bull Street Asylum, was completed in 1840. Caroliniana was the first freestanding undergraduate library in the country and currently holds the largest collection of state-specific archives in South Carolina. The reading room at the top of the stairs is a replica of Thomas Jefferson’s at the Library of Congress and the wings hold five floors of wall to wall manuscripts, books, newspapers, newspaper and other two dimensional ephemera. Caroliniana is a place that houses the history of the people of South Carolina, both political and personal. Moreover, it holds the history of the university itself. The personal papers of university presidents are kept in the Caroliniana as well as issues of the Garnet and Black yearbook, handbooks from Student Government’s inaugural year and Donald Russell’s speech notes advocating for a student union and exams that date back to 1854. Family papers (thousands of feet of them) in Caroliniana document wartime tales from the South Pacific, bucolic letters from traveling sons and daughters and appeals to state government from dissatisfied citizens. Perhaps the most-viewed collection in the building (aside from the allencompassing geological records) is the Works Progress Administration’s Federal Writers Project, which documented hundreds of oral histories, former slave narratives and other folklore traditions of the state. And this year the Caroliniana will celebrate its 175th anniversary. H e n r y F u l m e r, D i r e c t o r o f Caroliniana, has been with the university since the 1970s.
“It’s unique to realize that we connect on this campus to American history,” Fulmer said. “Everything in here is a treasure. This truly is the library of the state of South Carolina.” It remained the university’s library until 1940, when former university president, J. Rion McKissick ordered a new structure (now the McKissick Museum) to be built at the head of the Horseshoe. Currently, Caroliniana is closed to the public as the university begins renovations to fix standing problems with the building’s infrastructure. Until all changes are completed, the books will remain in three off-site locations where they will be housed to ensure their protection — the library annex in North East Columbia, the Graniteville Room in Thomas Cooper and the old South Carolina State Archives building. The library is set to re-open the first week of March, but with some noticeable changes. According to Fulmer, books will have to be requested from the off-site archives in advance of visits. Twice daily, trucks will deliver from these off-site areas to the Caroliniana, and the materials will be returned at the end of the day. “The schedule for using the collection will be a bit different. It’s as if you have a public library that has no books on the shelves,” Fulmer said. “The materials will have to all be brought back from remote storage.” It’s sort of like a Popemobile for South Carolina’s most-valued documents. “We’re in the process of moving the collection from the building. These are materials that are published, unpublished, visual materials, university archives,” Fulmer said. “Basically everything that is in the building that is unique and irreplaceable, which is the line-share of the collection.” When the wings were built in 1927, they did not provide the adequate storage requirements that were
necessary for storing the types of materials that Fulmer deals with in the South Caroliniana. “There is no acceptable level of climate control, humidity control, in that space,” he said, regarding the wings where most of the books are stored. “The materials have different storage requirements from those that are most comfortable to people.” The manuscripts prefer a cool space with drier air, usually a tad less than room temperature with 35 percent humidity. They do best in a dimlylit space with a steady circulation of clean air. In other words, they’re high maintenance. “We’re trying to store artifacts, not in the way of museum artifacts, but original, irreplaceable manuscript items, in shelving that was meant
to house regular book collections,” Fulmer said. It’s been 175 years, so what brought about these changes now? Caroliniana’s staff found themselves worried about disasters that could befall the library, especially in a year celebrating the 150th anniversary of Columbia’s burning. “Coming to understand the irreplaceable nature of the collection, there certainly have been concerns about potential for fire,” Fulmer said. “We’ve been quite lucky in not having any type of disaster of that sort. But, without adequate fire protection and suppression, it’s a matter of time ultimately. The probability is against us.” Features editor Lois Carlisle contributed to this story. WE
Madeleine Collins | Weekender
WEEK ENDER
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Vice president race goes to runoff Hannah Jeffrey @HANNAHJEFFREY34
Avadh Rana | Weekender
There was an air of disbelief after Student Government Elections Commissioner Danielle Padgett read off the results of the student body vice presidential race. “With 48.98 percent of the votes, we have Lee Goble, who will be facing Brian Samples in a runoff, who had 47.47 percent of the votes. You may resume campaigning—” Padgett went on to say the runoff will be held Feb. 24 and 25, but she was drown out by the gasps, chuckles and groans from several SG members gathered in the Leadership and Service Center Thursday afternoon. Neither Samples, nor Goble appeared pleased with the results, either. After a violation back-
and-forth between the pair over the last two weeks, both were looking forward to the election’s end. “I would really just like to move on from all of this, so the runoff is the worst possible scenario, really,” Samples said after the announcement. “We’ll see what happens.” Goble didn’t have much to say either. “Didn’t lose. Didn’t win,” he said. “Had a good percentage of the votes.” The results were announced Thursday after both the outstanding violation and appeal filed against Goble were dropped earlier in the day. At that point a hearing with the Constitutional Council was no longer needed,
Caleb Franklin | Weekender
and the Elections Commission decided to announce. “Of course, a candidate does have to get 50 percent plus one vote,” Padgett said, “so if a lot of people voted for neither, then it wouldn’t allow either of them to get to 50 percent.” Turns out, a lot of people voted for neither. In fact, 146 different writein candidates showed up on the results sheet, including several other executive office candidates, “Turd Ferguson” and former Editor-in-Chief of The Daily Gamecock, Thad Moore. Both the race for student body president and the race for student body treasurer saw 56 write-in candidates apiece. This was the first year students
had an online write-in option, making the opportunity to write in a random name much easier. In the past, those looking to cast a write-in vote had to do so by hand in the SG office in Russell House. “Having [the write-ins] online, it gives students more of an option to vote for whoever they want,” Padgett said, “whereas before it was either this person, this person or you have to walk all the way somewhere in the Russell House to make a different vote, which kind of discourages you from doing that.” With all votes from the student body vice presidential race tallied, the number of voters rose to 4,081, about 1,000 votes shy of SG’s goal. WE
WEEK ENDER
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“I went to Barbados to study abroad. I went there to “study abroad,” but I was actually going to train under the leader of the church out there, a sister church of ours, the late Damien Jean-Baptiste ... But while I was in Barbados ... I get an email from the rest of the crew here, from Campus Advance, and they’re like, ‘We’re in trouble.’ And I’m like, ‘Why are we in trouble?’ And they’re like, ‘Because, apparently, you’re not allowed to knock on doors and invite people out to something related to the Bible’ — or to anything for that matter, because apparently it’s soliciting. ... Our organization was put on probation for an entire year. ...You know you’re doing the right thing when you’re getting persecuted. So, it was an awesome semester, and that was an awesome moment in Barbados because I had flown the coop! I was gone so they had to take the heat, but I came back and reaped the consequences because we couldn’t do anything even for the next semester after that ... It might sound weird, but Jesus is good.” Perrie Keev Graduated in 2012 with a B.A. in English Irmo, South Carolina
Madison MacDonald| Weekender
“My freshman year, I did not intend to, but I unintentionally ... I had a name. I was Bathrobe Guy. I would wear my bathrobe and ride around on a small blue longboard, like a tiny little cruiser, and people would recognize me...and it became not a very big thing, but a solidly big thing, considering that all I did was wear a bathrobe and ride around on a longboard. And that was just because it was cold! It was winter and the robe was incredibly warm and soft ... It’s funny when, like, a stranger comes up and says it, but I want to get to know you ... After that, I had to force myself to stop wearing my bathrobe despite how warm it was.”
HUMANS We saw his shirt and asked what his most heroic moment on campus had been. “We just hosted the Junior Science and Humanities Symposium here [Jan. 24] in the Russell House. It was the 44th annual one, so it’s been going on for 44 years, so I’m glad I could be a part of that.” Jackiah Talford Third-year biology student Chester, South Carolina
Finn Smyth Fourth-year French student Richmond, Virginia “I love to bring the Eno out here and just hang out with friends when it’s sunny. Study out on the Horseshoe.”
Lois Carlisle @LOISCARLISILE
Maisie Gibb | Weekender
Brooke Blair First-year international business student Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
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“[Last spring] was my first time seeing snow. I’m from Miami and Haiti, and this is freaking cold.”
Madison MacDonald | Weekender
Marsha Samson Second-year Ph.D. epidemiology student Haiti by way of Miami, Florida
“When I walked onto campus, my eyes started tearing up. I just knew. It’s kind of cliche, but it was one of those things where I don’t know how you couldn’t love this place.” Sallye Sullivan Second-year public relations student Atlanta, Georgia
S OF USC
Maisie Gibb | Weekender
When we stopped him, he was swaggering down the Horseshoe, listening to Oliver Heldens.
Maisie Gibb | Weekender
Benjamin Leitner Fourth-year inter national business student Austria
TDG: Your bag, it’s from the Strand, right? Did you go recently? DRC: Yes, I went recently. I go every time I go back home. I’m a New Yorker. TDG: What did you buy the last time you were there? DRC: We bought about a carton of books that we had shipped back to here. My husband’s a professor too, and so we always go and buy a ton of stuff. TDG: What’s the deal with your jacket? DRC: The deal with my jacket is that my sister is a Martial Arts instructor and this is the place that she teaches, so I have a totally undeserved reputation for coldness and for being strong, which I have not earned.
Madison MacDonald | Weekender
Debra Rae Cohen Associate Professor in the Department of English Language and Literature
Madison MacDonald | Weekender
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WEEK ENDER
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JUSTIN TOWNES EARLE / GILL LANDRY Music Farm Columbia, 1022 Senate St. Fri, 8 p.m., $15 Standing / $20 Seated Americana, rockabilly artist Justin Townes Earle will take the stage at Music Farm in The Vista Friday. Louisiana-born singersongwriter Gill Landry will open.
KNOX HAMILTON / GHOSTS OF THE KODIAK / DAVID A. New Brookland Tavern, 122 State St. Sat, 7 p.m., $10 Knox Hamilton, an indie, neo-soul group out of Little Rock, Arkansas, is set to perform at New Brookland Tavern Saturday night. Ghosts of the Kodiak and David A will open.
GORDON LIGHTFOOT Koger Center for the Arts, 1051 Greene St. Sun, 8 p.m., $39 - $64 The Canadian singer-songwriter will perform at the Koger Center Sunday as part of his cross-country tour. Lightfoot is known for his influence on the ‘60s and ‘70s sound.
BEAUTY SLAP Conundrum Music Hall Fri, 10 p.m., $15 Beauty Slap is an electronic-brass-thunderfolk group consisting of horns, saxophone, guitar and more. This Friday night, the event will take place at Conundrum Music Hall and is presented by USC School of Music and bigSphinx Productions.
THE PADLLADIUM SOCIETY CHILI COOK-OFF Music Farm Columbia, 1022 Senate St. Sat, 5 p.m., $30 To honor 150th anniversary of the burning of Columbia, the Palladium Society is hosting a chili cook-off at Music Farm, and all proceeds will be donated to Historic Columbia. A ticket in includes all-you-can-eat chili.
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RED CARPET AWARDS PARTY Nickelodeon Theater, 1607 Main St. Sun, 7:30 p.m., $50 / $35 members The Nickelodeon Theatre is dressing up and partying to celebrate Sunday night’s award show. It’ll be catered by DiPrato’s, The Oak Table, Groucho’s and more, and includes two drinks with the ticket. Crowd favorites Patti O’Furniture and Anne Postic will commentate the event.
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WEEK ENDER
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Wynkoop looks for redemption David Roberts @DAVIDJAYROBERTS
Junior pitcher Jack Wynkoop paid his dues last season. He won seven games as a key component of South Carolina’s three-man rotation— a unit that accumulated a 3.03 ERA over the season. Wynkoop proved his worth as a serviceable Saturday starter; however, he lacked the power that Friday starter Jordan Montgomery packed, which helped Montgomery to a 95-strikeout season. Despite not having the same baseball m a k e u p a s M o n t g o m e r y, Wynkoop found a way to stick around, substituting deadly accuracy in lieu of a ferocious four-seam fastball. Even though Wynkoop issued fewer walks and recorded a lower ERA than his counterpart, much of the attention was often directed toward Montgomery. However, when Montgomery was selected in the fourth round of the MLB Draft by the New York Yankees, it left head coach Chad Holbrook looking for a pitcher to plug in to the front end of his rotation. Wynkoop found a way to the top of the rotation. But through one game as the Gamecocks’ No. 1 pitcher, Wynkoop has racked up a loss and already owns a steep 7.20 ERA. Wynkoop gave up four earned runs over five innings to a tough-hitting College of Charleston team to open the season, which is the same run total that he allowed over 27 innings to start last season.
His rocky start has Holbrook holding steady with the veteran, but the head coach is considering a change-up in the starting rotation. “You can’t base important decisions like that on one outing,” Holbrook said. “There’s a lot of factors to consider ... I know you didn’t see the real Jack Wynkoop last Friday.” Wynkoop will take the mound Saturday against Northeastern (2-1), since cold weather forced South Carolina to cancel Friday’s game. Instead, the Gamecocks (3-1) will play a doubleheader on Saturday and finish the series on Sunday. The Huskies finished 2014 with a 26-29 record but managed to snag a two out of three games from College of WE Charleston last season.
Change in culture Brennan Doherty @BRENNAN_DOHERTY
Four straight bowl wins, a 4-1 mark in its last five games against Clemson and a humongous home stadium in Williams-Brice Stadium. Those are a few things that may come to South Carolina fans’ minds when thinking about the Gamecock football program. But that being said, things haven’t always been the way they are now. Here we reflect on the ‘then and now’ of South Carolina football.
Tigers get the Spur
It’s no secret how much disdain both fanbases and programs have for each other in the South Carolina-Clemson rivalry. Beating the Tigers is such a big deal to Gamecock fans, and that’s one of the reasons why Spurrier is so well-liked around Columbia. Clemson holds the all-time series record against South Carolina (66-42-4) and went 8-2 against the Gamecocks in the ten seasons before Spurrier arrived. But since taking over as the Gamecocks’ head coach in 2004, Spurrier is 6-4 against the Tigers.
Williams-Brice grows larger
Today, Williams-Brice Stadium has an official capacity of 80,250 on gamedays, that wasn’t always the case. Like most old stadiums across the country, WilliamsBrice has increased astronomically in size since its inception. When South Carolina hosted its first game in then-named Municipal Stadium, only 10,000 folks watched the Gamecocks win 25-0 against Erskine. Through the years, WilliamsBrice has undergone several renovations and has seen its seating capacity change on numerous occasions.
Capacity of Williams-Brice Stadium throughout the years
Jeffrey Davis | Weekender
Attendance holds steady
The South Carolina football program has undergone drastic changes ever since Spurrier took over as head coach in November 2004. Still, the Gamecock faithful showed out, even in Holtz’ last season in Columbia. Despite only going 6-5 in 2004, South Carolina had over 80,367 spectators on average at Williams-Brice Stadium that season. That’s just slightly less than what the Gamecocks averaged at home this past year (81,381).
Gamecocks pick up bowl wins
Like it or not, the South Carolina football program lacks a lot of historical significance compared to most of its fellow SEC members. Case in point: the Gamecocks didn’t win their first bowl game in program history until 1994 when they defeated West Virginia in the Carquest Bowl. However, South Carolina is 7-4 in bowl games in the 21st Century and has won four bowls over the past four years.
Pay day increase
When former Lou Holtz began coaching the Gamecocks in 1999, the legendary head coach made $650,000 during his first year in Columbia. Fast forward several seasons later and Steve Spurrier is making a bit more. The Head Ball Coach was paid $4 million as his base salary in 2014, the eleventh highest amount in the country. 33 years between first-round picks It’s safe to say that both George Rogers and Jadeveon Clowney both made marks at South Carolina. Rogers, who has a street in Columbia named after him, was the first Gamecock to be the No. 1 overall selection in the NFL Draft when the New Orleans Saints made him their top choice in 1981. Thirty-three years later, Clowney, most famous for ‘the hit’ against Michigan in the 2013 Outback Bowl, joined the club when he was the first player taken in the 2014 NFL Draft by the Houston Texans. WE
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ACROSS 1 AOL and NetZero 5 Alley biters 9 Like some questions 14 Medieval defense 15 Slim woodwind 16 Having a designated assignment 17 Intangible quality 18 Rise dramatically 19 Capital name derived from an Arabic term for “the conqueror” 20 Catch that’s burnt sienna and cerulean? 23 “Platoon” war zone 24 Peevish mood 25 Battery terminal 27 Not just search for 30 Adenoid, e.g. 31 Reclassification of 2006 32 Soufflé recipe word 33 One of the Smurfs 36 The world total was approx. $70 trillion in 2011 37 Paid endorsement, in slang, and an apt title for this puzzle 40 Say nothing good about 41 Dating from 43 “__ uncertain world ...” 44 Hit on the head 46 Napery 48 Charley, in Steinbeck’s “Travels With Charley” 49 Tax-exempt entity, usually 51 Ergo 52 “__ So Fine”: Chiffons hit 53 Result of Pepsi shortages? 58 Roll out of bed 60 Dollar alternative 61 Airline with bluestriped jets
62 Slips through the cracks 63 They may be loaded 64 Rest area rester 65 Dog in a horned helmet 66 Chatty bovines? 67 Nailed obliquely DOWN 1 Eye-catching Apple 2 Grow displeased 3 Normal beginning? 4 Patronizes, in a way 5 Herding dog 6 Member of the Kaiser’s fleet 7 Heliport site 8 Wink without batting an eye? 9 Marina Del Rey craft 10 Author LeShan 11 Bootblack’s buffer? 12 “WarGames” org. 13 Carol start 21 Victorious 22 Common ’80s’90s failure 26 Cool
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27 Stacy Lewis’s org. 28 Auto pioneer 29 Spec on an architect’s blueprint? 30 Senate wear 32 1975 film sequel 34 Water holder 35 Fantasy author McCaffrey 38 Deceive 39 Near 42 Cone home 45 Least pessimistic
47 Superlatively sweet 48 Stages 49 Opposite of order 50 Shoebill’s cousin 51 Ruse 54 New Balance rival 55 Dairy bar 56 Identify 57 Decreased 59 Msg. from the Bible