Hurricane Matthew wreaks havoc along East Coast
Hurricane Matthew took three lives in South Carolina, and as of Sunday morning, nearly 750,000 people statewide were still without power.
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Hurricane Matthew took three lives in South Carolina, and as of Sunday morning, nearly 750,000 people statewide were still without power.
Update:
With rain and heavy winds forecast for this weekend, Hurricane Matthew poses yet another natural threat to South Carolinian homes, businesses and, potentially, lives.
Students and activists gathered on South Carolina Statehouse grounds Saturday evening to peacefully protest and mourn the loss of black lives across the United States.
Thursday, Oct. 1, 2015
A man was been arrested on the Horseshoe late Wednesday afternoon. The man is the suspect in an attempted robbery of a local restaurant that occurred minutes before. An employee of the restaurant called the police and gave chase to the suspect. The employee is unsure if the man was in possession of a weapon.
New York Times best-selling author Austin Kleon visited the Richland County Library on Monday to discuss creative communities, sign stacks of his books and answer a few questions from the audience.
USC students and alumni, eager to discuss their future with potential employers, gathered at the Columbia Metropolitan Convention Center for the Career Fest and the Science, Engineering and Technology Fair on Tuesday.
Greenville's Malcolm X Center for Self-Determination served as a voice for the Black Lives Matter movement at a teach-in on Saturday.
At a regularly scheduled meeting on Friday, the USC Board of Trustees considered Bull Street development land for a new medical school building. The new campus, which would be a $200 million project, could use a 16-acre portion of the downtown Columbia development space.
A male pedestrian who was struck by a vehicle on S. Assembly Street late Wednesday night has died, according to the Columbia Police Department.
The Famously Hot SC Pride parade and festival returned to Main Street on Saturday, offering attendees a packed day of events centered around promoting and celebrating Columbia’s LGBTQ community.
The rapid growth of Zapp Scooters, a new rideshare company that opened in Columbia this summer, has brought about some questions of safety as well as general curiosity from students about what those bright green scooters all around campus are all about.
Thousands will take to the street Saturday to celebrate and fight for the rights of LGBT South Carolinians as part of the annual South Carolina Pride Parade, but Pride Week's events will stretch far beyond the walk down Main and Sumter.
One of the most celebrated writers in Southern literature, William Faulkner, will be recognized with an exhibit in the Ernest F. Hollings Special Collections library thanks to rare donated items from local residents according to WIS news.
With the recent shooting of a deaf Charlotte motorist, police departments across the U.S. are coming under scrutiny for their treatment of deaf and hard-of-hearing civilians.
Leaders in the scientific, academic and political communities of South Carolina are connecting this week for a third annual aerospace conference.
Columbia Fire Department responds to reports of the historic Horry-Guignard House near USC's law school catching fire.
The Horry-Guignard House, one of Columbia's oldest homes, caught fire on Thursday morning.
Spirit Communications Park, home of the Columbia Fireflies, has already shattered the attendance record for professional baseball in the Palmetto State capital, and come June 2017, fans will have another exciting event to watch.