“She however persevered, turning her lemons into lemonade.”
Opinions Editor Lynnsey McAllister analyzes religion and liberal arts opposing perspectives through the literary lens of “The Damnation of Theron Ware” by Harold Fredrick.
Head Copy Editor Alaine Sullivan gives a recap one of USCA National Pan-Hellenic Council’s events from last month.
Opinions Editor Lynnsey McAllister addresses the national emergency declared by President Trump.
Columnist Naomi Allen discusses the Red Table Talk event hosted by the Office of Diversity Initiatives and the Wom(x)n’s History Month Planning Committee.
Opinions Editor Lynnsey McAllister discusses the value of liberal arts education.
The political science club has recently started back up. Read to find out what they’re about and when their next meeting is.
A rainy day didn’t deter students from attending the biggest career fair USCA has ever hosted.
The Pacer Times is looking for advertisers through developing healthy and reciprocal business relationships in Aiken and the surrounding areas. For more information on advertising, contact Business Manager Chandler Strama at cstrama@usca.edu
Noelle Kriegal and Miller Williams ask students about their feelings on President Trump declaring a national emergency because of the border.
Staff writer, Deborah Jackson, discusses the movie “Brain On Fire.”
Inside the theater, the 12 person acoustic band drew from crowd interaction, raised hands urging audience members to stand, dance, clap, and sing. Hands pressed to chests, the singers closed their eyes and turned their faces to the lights, expressing the emotion the music evoked.
This past week in sports here at USCA, our teams were all in action and came away with some close games.
A&E Editor Eric Sanders polled students to see what their top 3 favorite black movies were. Here are the results.
Business Manager Chandler Strama gives his take on the Jussie Smollett case and the impact that he believes media bias has had.
“The main goal was to educate students on where natural hair styles came from in the black community and to encourage students to embrace their hair because it is natural. “
Opinions Editor Lynnsey McAllister continues a double-feature review of “The Haunting of Hill House” with the Netflix adaptation of Shirley Jackson’s novel directed by Mike Flanagan.
Students were not only encouraged to work toward success, but they were also emboldened to be proud of the university and the community that surrounds it.