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Families, students, faculty, staff and administrators came together to celebrate the college, student achievement, and larger community.
U.S. Air Force Maj. Brock Lusk, Clemson University assistant professor of aerospace studies, holds his 11-month-old daughter, Annabelle,on Clemson’s Military Heritage Plaza, Nov. 3, 2017. Lusk was adopted as a baby and he and his wife adopted Annabelle. (Photo by Ken Scar)
Die Emeis, containing a collection of Lenten sermons, was the first book on witchcraft printed in German. For a broad audience, the book’s woodcut illustration of three witches around a cauldron epitomized witchcraft like no other image, and it influenced artists throughout the 16th century.
Clemson University doctoral candidate A.D. Carson defends his dissertation to a standing-room only crowd in the Watt Family Innovation Center auditorium, Feb. 24, 2017. Carson, a candidate in Clemson’s Rhetorics, Communication, and Information Design (RCID) Ph.D. program, produced a 34-track rap album titled “Owning my Masters: The Rhetorics of Rhymes and Revolutions” as opposed to the traditional written dissertation. (Photo by Ken Scar)
Bob, Sarah, Rose, Henrey and George Rettew at their home in Anderson, S.C. Dec. 20, 2017. (Photo by Ken Scar)
Families, students, faculty, staff and administrators came together to celebrate the college, student achievement, and larger community.
Three Clemson University Reserve Officers’ Training Corps cadets chat with U.S. Marine Corps veteran Ray Crocker, 89, who fought in WWII, at the Richard M. Campbell Veterans Nursing Home in Anderson, S.C., Oct. 21, 2017. The cadets were there with the Clemson University Student Veterans Association delivering more than 200 care packages to veterans in the home. Each box contained a hand-written note from a member of the Clemson Family. (Photo by Ken Scar)
Richie Parker uses his lips to navigate his smart phone in his home in Charlotte, N.C. (Photo by Ken Scar)
Patricia Klaren and her granddaughter Katie Lumpkin hold medals and a certificate for Klaren’s husband, Airman 2nd Class Charles William “Bill” Klaren, for his service in Vietnam, Feb. 16, 2017. Clemson University’s Air Force Reserve Officers’ Training Corps presented the awards after Maj. Brock Lusk, the unit’s assistant professor of aerospace studies, discovered Klaren never recieved the awards due to oversights by the Air Force. Klaren passed away in 2015. (Photo by Ken Scar)
Students gather under the Clemson Univeristy Century Oak, the largest Bur Oak in South Carolina, July 3, 2017. (Photo by Ken Scar)
The cast of Clemson University’s production of The Diviners, a play by Jim Leonard Jr., run through the show during a tech rehearsal in the courtyard of the Brooks Center for the Performing Arts, April 13, 2018. The production was originally slated to run in the blackbox theater inside the center, but was forced to tear down, reconstruct and hold performances outside in the courtyard when a colony of bats was discovered in the building. (Photo by Ken Scar)
U.S. Army 2nd Lt. Allison Spagnoletti’s parents pin her rank onto her shoulder during her commissioning ceremony, Dec. 20, 2017. Clemson University's Army and Air Force Reserve Officer's Training Corps units held a joint commissioning ceremony in the Tillman Hall auditorium. U.S. Army Brig. Gen. Stephen B. Owens, director of the joint staff, South Carolina National Guard, was the featured speaker. (Photo by Ken Scar)
The woodcut shown illustrates torture methods used in Germany in 1527, including burning, hanging, beheading, disemboweling, breaking with the wheel, trussing, gouging out the eyes, cutting off the ear or hand, and flogging.
Clemson University student Autumn Brown, of Charleston, S.C., a sophomore studying environmental engineering and nonprofit leadership, gets a surprise pre-Valentine’s Day serenade from TigeRoar, Clemson’s all-male a cappella ensemble, while trying to study in the R.M. Cooper Library, Feb. 10, 2017. (Photo by Ken Scar)
Clemson University Reserve Officers’ Training Corps cadets practice combat carry techniques during a community outreach training day on the Clemson campus, March 16, 2017. (U.S. Army Reserve photo by Staff Sgt. Ken Scar)
The visually stunning poster is more interesting than the plot of the movie, which revolves around A witch-finder general who falls in love with the village beauty. Unfortunately for him, she has made a pact with the devil to seduce him and prevent the killing of Satan’s servants.
Engraving of witch swimming. The first evidence of swimming as a test for suspected witches in England appeared in 1612.
Clemson University alumnus Andrew Whitley and performing arts professor Kerrie Seymour share a laugh backstage in front of the fly lines of the Brooks Center for the Performing Arts, June 19, 2017. Seymour was Whitley’s theater professor and the two were both cast in a production of “Spring Awakening” at the Warehouse Theater in Greenville after Whitley graduated. (Photo by Ken Scar)
Families, students, faculty, staff and administrators came together to celebrate the college, student achievement, and larger community.
Clemson University's Army and Air Force Reserve Officer's Training Corps units held a joint commissioning ceremony in the Tillman Hall auditorium. U.S. Army Brig. Gen. Stephen B. Owens, director of the joint staff, South Carolina National Guard, was the featured speaker. (Photo by Ken Scar)
Seven authors participate in a round table discussion during Clemson University’s 10th annual Literary Festival, March 31, 2017. (Photo by Ken Scar)
Col. Ben Skardon, 100, cracks up some friends at the Clemson University Class of 2018 project reveal, Dec. 7, 2017. (Photo by Ken Scar)
Some elementary school boys expend some energy after attending a celebration of the Tigers Read! initiative at the Clemson Indoor Practice Facility, June 9, 2017. The initiative is sponsored by Dabo Swinney’s All In Team Foundation and has delivered customized Scholastic book packs to nearly 1,200 students across South Carolina that help prevent the decline in reading skills many students experience during summer months. (Photo by Ken Scar)
The Clemson Tiger leads a group of veterans into Memorial Park as part of an Honoring Their Service event, June 22, 2017. (Photo by Ken Scar)
The author is Richard Burton, a pseudonym of Nathaniel Crouch, who pioneered the publishing of paperbacks. Only two copies of this book are known to exist in the United States. The woodcut depicts witches and familiars, including a dog, cat, and owl.
Clemson University sophomore Talia Pekari chats with U.S. Navy veteran Gloria Mangrum at the Richard M. Campbell Veterans Nursing Home in Anderson, S.C., Oct. 21, 2017. Pakari was with a group of student veterans, military family members, and staff from Clemson who delivered care packages to the veterans in the home. Each box contained a hand-written note from a member of the Clemson Family. (Photo by Ken Scar)