dailygamecock.com UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2016
VOL. 108, NO. 23 ● SINCE 1908
2016 BASKETBALL PREVIEW ~ SEE INSIDE ~
NPHC brings back Step Show T. Michael Boddie
@THEHUMANBODDIE
A f ter hav i ng to w it hd raw from the lineup of Homecoming events and activities in 2015, the National Pan-Hellenic Council is set to host its step show for Homecoming Week 2016. A year ago, the NPHC released a st atement a n nou nci ng t he cancellation of the step show. This cancellation had followed the organization changing the step show to a stroll-off due to the Homecoming Commission’s failure to book a venue. Members of the historically black fraternities and sororities u nder N PHC , t heir of f icers and other students have since expressed their disappointment with the cancellation. “It’s ver y important to our c u l t u r e ,” s a i d B r i M e a n s , NPHC co-vice president and third-year international studies a nd econom ics st udent. “So we wanted to make sure that it actually happened.” In June, Student Government responded w it h a st atement pledging to bring the step show
Trump holds onto SC lead
Illustration by Stephanie Orr
Mary Ramsey File Photo: Marshall Harkness / THE DAILY GAMECOCK
Past Step Shows drew large crowds as part of Homecoming Week. back to campus. “As your elected officials, we understand how vital these events are to cultivating and maintaining the fabric of the university — both undergraduates and alumni — i n order to celebrate t he inclusive, diverse, and spirited campus we call home,” student body president Michael Parks said in the statement. A not her event t hat was cancelled in 2015 was Spurs and Struts. The event returned to
USC on Tuesday evening on Greene Street. The step show is scheduled for Thursday at 6 p.m. Means said that she met with Homecom i ng Com m ission representatives over the summer. The commission pitched t he idea of an “inclusive” event that would combine elements of both Spurs and Struts and NPHC’s step show and potentially include non-members of Greek l ife. SEENPHCPAGE4A
@MCOLLEEN1996
Donald Trump will probably car r y t he Palmetto State, at least based on recent polling models. Despite some earlier pol l i ng i nd ic at i ng a c lo s er t h a n aver ag e general elect ion race in South Carolina, the seven most recent polls shows the Republican nominee up over Democrat ic nominee Hillary Clinton.
Tr u m p h a s a n 8 8 percent cha nce of keeping the Palmetto State red, per FiveThirtyEight’s most recent election forecast. He’s expected to carry ab out 51 p ercent of the vote. Additionally, Libertarian candidate Gar y Johnson is expected to earn just over 3 percent of the vote in South Carolina. Clinton is projected to garner about 44 percent of the vote. SEEELECTIONPAGE2A
Civil rights icon to address Dec. graduates
Chess whiz looks ahead to nationals
Courtesy of Tribune News Service
Lewis will be USC’s final commencement speaker. Victoria Richman / THE DAILY GAMECOCK
After winning at the state level in October, Caiello has two major competitions in November and December.
Taylor Palmer
@THEGAMECOCK
Before Benja m i n Caiello won the South Carolina Chess A s s o c i a t i o n’s 2 016 championsh ip event held this October in Columbia, he was an eight-year-old inspired by t he fast chess featured in the 1993 movie “Searching for Bobby Fischer.”
Now a second-year biochemistry student, t he Sout h Ca rol i na s t at e c h a mpion f or 2016 is a member of U S C ’s G a m e c o c k Chess Club. R ade Mu s u l i n , a fou r t hyear mat hemat ics P h . D. s t u d e nt a n d vice president of the Gamecock Chess and G o Club, descr ibed t he group as a “free play club.”
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“Ben’s our top level right now, he’s what we would call an expert, so we’ve got all levels,” Musulin explained. Caiello was taught to play chess by h is fat her and older brother, with whom he competed throughout his childhood. As he improved, he bega n to use book s and Chess.com to hone his strategies.
“It’s really based on calculat ion and how well you can see ahead. If you can clearly see that the move is going to be good for you, t hen you go for it . Somet i me s t hough, it’s not so clear, and you just have to weigh t he r isk s,” Ca iel lo s a i d . “A l s o , e v e n visualizing the board SEECHESSPAGE4A
November
Gamecocks Eat Well Cooking Demo: Southern Food with Soul Noon to 1:30 p.m. in Maxcy Kitchen
Deadline to register for Student Leadership Seminar Carolina Women’s Health Research forum 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m at the My Carolina Alumni Center
Luke Yengo / THE DAILY GAMECOCK
T. Michael Boddie
@THEHUMANBODDIE
United States congressman and civil r ight s leader Joh n Lew is w ill be t he guest speaker at USC’s winter commencement ceremony in December. Rep. Lewis has been a prominent figurehead
for civ i l r ight s i n America for decades; he worked closely with the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and was one of the 13 Freedom Riders. The congressman was also a keynote speaker at the 1963 March on Washington. SEELEWISPAGE2A
Renovations spark traffic concerns Britany Franceschina @BRITTA_FRAN
Renovations to south campus will mean changes to the f low of t raf f ic in and arou nd parts of campus, leaving some students concerned ab out t he ef fec t s on parking. Approximately a year a f t e r t h e u n i v e r s it y introduced the proposed Campus Village project, the university reached the agreement with the
Cit y of Columbia and leadership from nearby neighborhoods to reduce o n - s it e p a r k i n g a nd el i m i n at e c o m mut er pa rk i ng to moder ate traff ic and crime prevention. The agreement includes reducing the number of proposed onsite parking spaces from 3,000 to 945 in a garage at Whaley and Sumter streets. SEETRAFFICPAGE4A