Athletics, University of South Carolina
The university offers club, intramural, and varsity sports. Its 19 varsity sports teams compete in the Southeastern Conference (except for men’s soccer which competes in the Sun Belt Conference and women’s sand volleyball which competes as an independent) and are known as the Gamecocks.
Fight song
The university’s band director James Pritchard obtained a band arrangement of the Elmer Bernstein-penned song “Step to the Rear” from the Broadway musical How Now, Dow Jones in 1968 and the marching band played the song at the first game of the 1968 season.
It caught the ear of Coach Paul Dietzel who contacted Pritchard about making it the official fight song of the university to replace the original “Carolina Fight Song” (or “Carolina Let Your Voices Ring,” now called the “Old Fight Song”). Dietzel wrote the lyrics for the song, but asked that he remain anonymous because knowledge that the football coach wrote the lyrics might render it unacceptable to the basketball program.
The song was officially introduced on November 16, 1968, prior to the football game against Virginia Tech and has been the fight song since the fall of 1969.
Alma mater
The Gamecock reported in its March 1911 issue that very little progress had been made on the alma mater for the university despite a reward of $50 by the faculty. English professor, George A. Wauchope, took it upon himself and wrote the lyrics for the alma mater in 1911 set to the tune Flow Gently, Sweet Afton by Robert Burns. Other songs were written and sung, but Wauchope’s song proved to be the most popular and it was adopted by the university in 1912.
The tradition has developed that alumni raise their right hand as though raising a cup for the phrase “Here’s A Health, Carolina” as if offering a toast.
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See also:
Montana State University – Profile, Rankings and Costs
Loyola University Chicago – Profile, Ranking and Costs