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The Student News Site of Clemson University

The Tiger

The Student News Site of Clemson University

The Tiger

The Student News Site of Clemson University

The Tiger

Blake Mauro

Blake Mauro, Editor-in-Chief

All content by Blake Mauro
Pickle juice and vodka is all it takes to make the best drink in downtown Clemson.

Best Signature Dink: Triple’s Pickletini

Blake Mauro, Editor-in-Chief March 7, 2024

Pickle juice and vodka — it’s that simple. That’s all it took for Tiger Town Tavern’s Pickletini to claim the best signature drink in downtown Clemson. Served in a typical martini glass with...

The two employees who run Triple's trivia game on Wednesday are what make the game so special, according to one of the bar's owners.

Best Trivia: Tiger Town Tavern

Blake Mauro, Editor-in-Chief March 7, 2024

In downtown Clemson, humpday is trivia day. Almost every downtown bar offers a variation of trivia on Wednesday night, but Tiger Town Tavern’s trivia game stands above the best. For the second year...

The Best of Clemson edition brings the Clemson community together together like no other.

From the Editor’s Desk: Best of Clemson

Blake Mauro, Editor-in-Chief March 7, 2024

Nothing makes me remember how lucky I am to go to Clemson quite like The Tiger’s Best of Clemson edition. The excitement of watching the thousands of votes roll in, seeing our winners’ faces light...

Next time you need an updo, visit Tiger Lily Beauty Co., this year's Best Hair Salon.

Best Hair Salon: Tiger Lily Beauty Co.

Blake Mauro, Editor-in-Chief March 7, 2024

Having a bad hair day? We’ve all been there, but lucky for you, Tiger Lily Beauty Co. is located just off campus, on Tiger Boulevard, and is the best place for all things hair and beauty. Topping...

Tillman Hall is one of the most well-known buildings on Clemson's campus.

It’s ‘Clemson Day’ in South Carolina

Blake Mauro, Editor-in-Chief February 28, 2024

Today, Tiger fans across the Palmetto State are celebrating "Clemson Day." Clemson Day is an annual South Carolina holiday meant to celebrate Clemson's research and education achievements, as well as...

GOP presidential primary and Clemson alumna Nikki Haley addressed the Clemson community on Tuesday night.

Haley suffers key loss in home state primary

Blake Mauro, Editor-in-Chief February 25, 2024

Despite Nikki Haley's strong campaigning efforts and her legacy in South Carolina, voters denied their former governor any home-field advantage in the state's GOP primary race on Saturday. Haley finished...

Clemson YAF will host Michael Knowles  on campus this week.

Clemson YAF to host Michael Knowles

Blake Mauro, Editor-in-Chief December 4, 2023

Daily Wire personality Michael Knowles is set to speak live on campus this Wednesday on the topic “MEN ARE NOT WOMEN.” Clemson’s chapter of Young Americans for Freedom, which is new to campus...

The Blood Connection will be at Death Valley from noon-5 p.m. today taking donations.

Clemson wins Blood Bowl for 5th straight year

Blake Mauro, Editor-in-Chief November 23, 2023

For the past week leading up to the Clemson-South Carolina rivalry football game, blood donation trucks have been scattered around Clemson's and South Carolina's campuses to see which school could collect...

Clemson Firefighters, dressed in full gear, climb more than 100 flights of stairs at Clemson University's 2023 9/11 memorial stair climb event.

Clemson Firefighters, dressed in full gear, climb more than 100 flights of stairs at Clemson University's 2023 9/11 memorial stair climb event.

She wears the South Carolina coat of arms on one side and the US shield on the other. She carries the Clemson “C” and the South Carolina palmetto tree on her face. She is more than just a piece of metal. She is the Clemson ring, and she is a part of who Clemson students are and what they have experienced. “The hard work, late nights with friends, and all the milestones of college are all represented by that ring,” Hana Bernik, a 2021 Clemson Alumna, says. The tradition of the Clemson ring goes back to legacy, according to Grant Wilkins, the Clemson ring director. While other universities often change their graduation ring from year to year so that each class has a distinct nuance, at Clemson, the historic Clemson ring has seen no change in appearance since 1939. The ring is widely worn and celebrated by undergraduates, graduate students and alums, says Bubba Britton, Clemson’s Senior Director of Alumni Engagement. Out of the thousands of colleges and universities nationwide, Clemson University has the second-highest ring purchase rate, falling second only to Texas A&M, which has more than triple the number of students. As Bernik describes her Clemson ring, she looks down at the symbol of the last four years of her life, brushes its surface and twists it just enough so the sunlight perfectly reflects off the gold finish and illuminates her sandy brown eyes. Her cheeks turn a pale pink color, and her eyes begin to water as she explains what the ring means to her. “To me, the ring symbolizes my four years at Clemson and everything that came with it.” The Clemson ring requires 90 credits or approximately three years, and countless hours of hard work, which is accompanied by innumerable “memories that will last a lifetime,” Bernik says. Britton equates the ring to a living embodiment of Joe Sherman’s 1943 essay, “Something In These Hills.” Just like Sherman’s piece, the Clemson ring ties everything together. “[It] connects everyone that studied at Clemson back to Clemson; it truly is something special. The ring is an emblem of equality, excellence and family,” Britton said. The Clemson ring symbolizes more than just academic achievement. The ring embodies a “lifelong commitment to Clemson,” Wilkins says. For Brooke Enloe, a senior communications major, the Clemson ring symbolizes the time she’s spent at Clemson and all the memories she’s had here so far. It also represents the Clemson family. To Veronica Negrete, a senior psychology major, her ring links her to “the best university in South Carolina.”  The ring connects students tightly to each other and Clemson in its entirety; it becomes a part of their representative identity; students who get their ring wear it every day, even after graduation; they claim they “feel naked without it.” The physical ring is just the beginning of the historic tradition unique to Clemson and receiving the ring is now part of that tradition. It happens at the Clemson Ring Ceremony. Although the ring has been around since the 1800s, the ceremony is relatively new. It began in the Spring of 2000. Attendance at the first Ring Ceremony totaled approximately 30 students. Twenty-two years later, that number has increased by more than 700%, as 2,200 Clemson students will receive their ring this fall on Oct. 30, according to Britton. As students gather in Littlejohn Coliseum to receive their ring, they are “overwhelmed with nostalgia, happiness and excitement,” a feeling of “bittersweet anticipation” because they know their time at Clemson is nearing its end,” Bernik says. Receiving your ring is a “wholesome feeling of being a part of something bigger than yourself.” Clemson holds two Ring Ceremonies every year, one in the fall semester and another in the spring. Clemson students who have completed 90 credit hours at the end of the fall 2022 semester will receive their rings this upcoming spring on April 2, 2023. When students receive their ring, they wear it so that their graduation year faces them. Once the student graduates from the university, the ring’s orientation is flipped. The ring is taken off and turned around so that it faces the rest of the world ahead just like the Clemson student now does. Clemson students are not to flip the ring themselves. The individual who flips the ring is meant to be someone who has significantly impacted their time at Clemson, like a friend, family member or even a professor who truly made a difference in the student’s experience. Even the box the ring comes in is unique and special to Clemson. Each one is handmade from trees that once shaded Clemson’s campus. Britton states that these trees have usually either fallen with age or have been removed due to new campus developments. Artistic Wood LLC produces the ring boxes. According to the company’s website, Artistic Wood LLC was founded by Ken Dunlap SR. in 2013 to assist Clemson University in recycling the trees from its campus into “long lasting and beautifully crafted mementos for students and alumni.” According to Wilkins, the ring and all of the Clemson traditions that come with it are “a milestone in the transitional phase: ‘I am going to Clemson, I go to Clemson and I went to Clemson. It is a soon-to-be alum's way of representing their education and Clemson pride to the world.” Bernik is confident the Ring Ceremony will become a “core memory that will last a lifetime.” She proudly wears her ring every day, stating, “it brings me pride to show people I graduated from Clemson.”

Tiger Briefs: Aug. 23

Blake Mauro, Editor-in-Chief August 23, 2023

Clemson makes stark changes to attendance policies  Clemson University released significant changes to its attendance policy this fall. The changes include new federal participation requirements and...

Tillman Hall is one of the most well-known buildings on Clemson's campus.

From the Editor’s desk: Welcome home, Tigers!

Blake Mauro, Editor-in-Chief August 23, 2023

Welcome home, Tigers!  Whether you’re a returning Tiger, transferring Tiger or freshman Tiger, Clemson, South Carolina, and The Tiger welcomes you home!  This is my final year here at Clemson...

The Clemson Tiger points at the camera during a Clemson football game in Memorial Stadium. 

Your game day playbook

Blake Mauro, Editor-in-Chief July 6, 2023

Saturdays in the fall at Clemson are a spectacle like no other. Game days are an all-day affair, and although extremely fun and exciting, they can be pretty exhausting and overwhelming at times. Hopefully,...

Students can win up to $500 in CoffeeCandy Raffle 

CoffeeCandy holds raffle for students

Blake Mauro, Editor-in-Chief April 27, 2023

With finals quickly approaching, CoffeeCandy, a convenient pick-me-up for late-night studying and a Clemson University lab-tested product, is hosting a raffle unique to students, in which they can win...

Blake Mauro // Editor-in-Chief 

From the Editor’s Desk: Meet your new EIC

Blake Mauro, Editor-in-Chief April 6, 2023

Hi! This is the first time in over two years you are hearing from a new editor-in-chief, so let me introduce myself. I am a senior political science major from your most-beloved state, New Jersey. I have...

Hot sub with melted Swiss from Groucho's Deli, Clemson.

Best Sandwich Shop: Groucho’s Deli

Blake Mauro, Associate Editor February 23, 2023

Clemson has spoken; there is no better place for a between-the-bread classic than Groucho’s Deli.  No matter what you’re craving, Groucho’s has got you covered. Their menu consists...

Taz of Triple T's pours fan-favorite margarita.

Best Bartender: Taz of Triple T’s

Blake Mauro, Associate Editor February 23, 2023

The votes are in, and everyone loves Taz! Clemson is home to many bartenders, but no one knows how to pour a classic cocktail quite like Taz of Triple T’s. Taz started bartending at Triple...

The University has strived to repurpose wood from trees torn down in the area.

Clemson keeps campus growth sustainable

Blake Mauro, Associate Editor February 9, 2023

As Clemson continues to grow in student population and infrastructure, developers are committed to keeping the expansion as sustainable as possible.  Since 2018, the University has added a million...

Nathan Dumlao -unsplash

Affirmative action has to go

Blake Mauro, Associate Editor January 11, 2023

Affirmative action is the most discriminatory initiative in the college admissions process. Tipping the scales to favor one race over another directly contradicts what America has been fighting to...

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