South Carolina State to resume in-person classes on February 8
In-person classes will resume at South Carolina State University in just over a week. A university spokesperson says classes will resume on campus on February 8.
COLUMBIA, SC (WOLO)– The South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control released the State’s latest Coronavirus numbers. DHEC reported Friday 3,112 new confirmed cases of COVID-19 and 37 additional deaths in the Palmetto State. This brings the total number of confirmed cases to 390,977 with 6,271 total deaths. Click here for a summary of cases by county. DHEC says…
In-person classes will resume at South Carolina State University in just over a week. A university spokesperson says classes will resume on campus on February 8.
The Lexington County Sheriff’s Department says they arrested a man on Thursday, after they found more than 90 pounds of marijuana in his home.
Just after 3 p.m. on Friday, crews with the Columbia Fire Department say they responded to a two alarm fire at Willow Run Apartments off Alcott Drive.
The Lexington Police Department is asking for the public’s help in identifying an individual who, they say, likely cut a catalytic converter out of a white Izuzu box truck.
Officials with Fort Jackson say a trainee was evacuated by Emergency Medical Services after suffering a gunshot wound while preparing for training on Friday.
Richland School District One is entering a hybrid learning model on February 1.
The Gamecock baseball team announced several non-conference games on its 2021 schedule Friday morning, including the annual three-game series with in-state rival Clemson.
NTSP: A Greenville pilot missed the runway before fatally crashing into a home in the Rosewood area earlier this month.
NEW YORK (AP) — It’s not just you. What’s going on with GameStop’s stock doesn’t make sense to a lot of people. The struggling video game retailer’s stock has been making stupefying moves this month, wild enough to raise concerns from professional investors on Wall Street to the hallways of regulators and the White House in Washington. The frenzy hit…