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Apr 19, 2024
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the south carolina board of education released results south carolina college and career ready assessment in reading and mathematics 22 -- 23. the first time in recent history at least half of the students in grades three through eight. this is good news but not enough. we must do more, we must continue to invest in early literacy and personal development and science of reading. if they cannot read, they cannot drive. this will ensure all children read on grade level by third grade. we know students who cannot read proficiently by third grade or four times more likely to drop out of high school. ... in addition, , this executive budget provides $30 million for the education scholarship trust fund. starting this year these funds will allow low income parents to choose the type of education environment and construction that best suits their child's unique needs. regarding teachers, regarding teachers, we must continue our remarkable progress to raise teacher pay. in school year year 2017-1e minimum starting salary for teaching south carolina was $30,113. that is not enough. today it is $42,
the south carolina board of education released results south carolina college and career ready assessment in reading and mathematics 22 -- 23. the first time in recent history at least half of the students in grades three through eight. this is good news but not enough. we must do more, we must continue to invest in early literacy and personal development and science of reading. if they cannot read, they cannot drive. this will ensure all children read on grade level by third grade. we know...
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Apr 18, 2024
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in september of 2023, south carolina department of education released the results of the south carolina college and career ready assessments in reading and mathematics for school year 2022-23. for the first time in recent history, at least half of the students in grades three through eight met or exceeded grade level standards in reading. this is good news, but it is not nearly enough. we must do more. we must continue to invest in early literacy and professional development in the science of reading. if they cannot read, they cannot thrive. this will ensure that all children can be reading on grade level by the end of the third grade. we know that students who cannot read proficiently, by the third grade, are four times more likely to drop out of high school. unfortunately, the assessment revealed that only 41% of students in grades three through eight in school your 22- 23 met or exceeded grade level standards in mathematics. therefore, my executive budget recommends an additional $10 million to improve the teaching and learning of mathematics. in addition, this executive budget provi
in september of 2023, south carolina department of education released the results of the south carolina college and career ready assessments in reading and mathematics for school year 2022-23. for the first time in recent history, at least half of the students in grades three through eight met or exceeded grade level standards in reading. this is good news, but it is not nearly enough. we must do more. we must continue to invest in early literacy and professional development in the science of...
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Apr 1, 2024
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i am actually from south carolina, from georgetown, south carolina. so am gullah. and this is definitely a story that i never heard. so i appreciate you for bringing this to light. thank you. my pleasure. thank you. and that raid that i talked on the santee river was pretty close to georgetown. yeah. there's a you know, santee river is like southern georgetown county. yeah. yeah. thank. good evening. my name is delany. i'm a student. morgan state university. my very question. i just wanted to ask what you want to research. harriet tubman so intensely to the point where you found a document was not found or inmates a public eye before? that is a good question. you know, sometimes find the best projects when. you're just minding your business and was minding my business in my rice fields and i was working on two projects one of which was mentioned in the introduction i collaborate a classical music composer by john by the name of john wineglass, who is from georgetown. his dad's from georgetown and john had won three emmy awards. he is an amazing contemporary classic
i am actually from south carolina, from georgetown, south carolina. so am gullah. and this is definitely a story that i never heard. so i appreciate you for bringing this to light. thank you. my pleasure. thank you. and that raid that i talked on the santee river was pretty close to georgetown. yeah. there's a you know, santee river is like southern georgetown county. yeah. yeah. thank. good evening. my name is delany. i'm a student. morgan state university. my very question. i just wanted to...
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Apr 26, 2024
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and so he terrorized the state of south carolina for three years. and at eventually it came to a head when he walked onto the governor's plantation and shot the slave overseer in broad daylight because it was like y'all know forest or don't play and so that i love that story of course so because it's the story of not just like we talk about, you know, slavery and in terms of the underground railroad. but we this was telling the story of maroon communities where people would escape and it's like, yeah, we all stay here and like they say, there's a part of the great dismal swamp between virginia and north carolina that they think maybe hundreds of thousands or maybe even a million enslaved people lived in. and so that's i love that story, too. i think the way tell the story is really interesting and indicative of. the book, because you're giving us history and knowledge research, but you and it's harrowing stories. black history is quite often traumatizing, right? but then you because you're who you are mixing in comedy, right? and just leavening and
and so he terrorized the state of south carolina for three years. and at eventually it came to a head when he walked onto the governor's plantation and shot the slave overseer in broad daylight because it was like y'all know forest or don't play and so that i love that story of course so because it's the story of not just like we talk about, you know, slavery and in terms of the underground railroad. but we this was telling the story of maroon communities where people would escape and it's...
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Apr 4, 2024
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the university of south carolina. we can say how we got here today, but in a bigger, broader sense, this song is asking some of those questions that the writer or writers ecclesiastes was asking a few things here, water flowing underground into the blue again, the money's gone. so what happens after the money? what? after the thing. that's so important to human beings. what's left? this water's left. what does this water have? if you take the human meaning away from it. water dissolving. water, removing. and then these lines here. time holding up. time is an asterisks. time isn't holding up time is an aspect. there's water at bottom of the ocean. where does that highway go? am i right? am i wrong my god, what have i done? right. so this is the talking heads. this song came out around time that i was a fifth grade. sixth grade. i spent most of my life thinking that the lyrics of this song said, these days would go by eating water chestnuts right? so for much of my life, i sing this song in my head. i think these days g
the university of south carolina. we can say how we got here today, but in a bigger, broader sense, this song is asking some of those questions that the writer or writers ecclesiastes was asking a few things here, water flowing underground into the blue again, the money's gone. so what happens after the money? what? after the thing. that's so important to human beings. what's left? this water's left. what does this water have? if you take the human meaning away from it. water dissolving. water,...
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Apr 14, 2024
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what happened in south carolina? yes, boston was very strange it was the only city that had a big fight over the tea that it couldn't resolve all the other places the tea ships went. they found a resolution, some sort of coming to terms between the local customs officials, the and the governor, the tea merchants that were set to receive it, and the sons of liberty and the patriot organization in south carolina. the tea shipped arrived christopher gadsden, the sons of liberty campaigned against it and they had a huge meeting in the exchange, which was large building that housed customs house facilities on the ground floor and above was the main meeting hall. it served the same political purposes this old southwood and they resolved that they were definitely going to let the tea in and wow, the firebrands and politicians signs were yakking away upstairs in the great hall of the exchange south carolina merchants unloaded duty british tea off of the that had these india company tea so not the company's tea but other priv
what happened in south carolina? yes, boston was very strange it was the only city that had a big fight over the tea that it couldn't resolve all the other places the tea ships went. they found a resolution, some sort of coming to terms between the local customs officials, the and the governor, the tea merchants that were set to receive it, and the sons of liberty and the patriot organization in south carolina. the tea shipped arrived christopher gadsden, the sons of liberty campaigned against...
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Apr 16, 2024
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you have been leading in south carolina. south carolina has been crucial to the movement. some very important items there. you have been there working for many generations. help us, give us a perspective how you think about this moment. >> thank you very much. first of all, greetings from south carolina. south carolina is a home of african people that came to america. south carolina is very unique. we believe that we have to have resiliency and we must be able to do like our ancestors. we must be able to see it. once we see it we must be able to claim it. we can claim it by putting forth efforts. once you claim it you've got to achieve it. sometimes we stop at achievement. we added another factor. you've got to maintain it. that is what happened throughout the country. we have a situation in south carolina. we are one of the few states that the confederate flag. we got a call in october from someone who said to us, we need the urban league to bring the flag down because it is a distraction, it sends the message that we are not welcome and we are second-class citizens. i th
you have been leading in south carolina. south carolina has been crucial to the movement. some very important items there. you have been there working for many generations. help us, give us a perspective how you think about this moment. >> thank you very much. first of all, greetings from south carolina. south carolina is a home of african people that came to america. south carolina is very unique. we believe that we have to have resiliency and we must be able to do like our ancestors. we...
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Apr 17, 2024
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first about i bring greetings from south carolina. [applause] south carolina is the home of african people who came to america we are unique as you know. we believe we have to have resiliency and we must be able to do like our ancestors. we must walk back we must be able to see it. we must be able to claim it and we are going to claim it by putting forth efforts not through us most us you have got to work. once you claim you have got to achieve it. sometimes we stop at achievement. we added another factor you got to maintain it. that is what happened throughout this country. we had a situation in south carolina where one of the few states that flew the confederate flag. we got calls in october 1999 from someone who said to us we need the urban league. we need the urban league to bring this flag down and says that we are not welcome we are second-class citizens. i thank god he was the president wrote in black america under jordan. he was from harvard university don't count to south carolina every corporate leader wanted him on the boar
first about i bring greetings from south carolina. [applause] south carolina is the home of african people who came to america we are unique as you know. we believe we have to have resiliency and we must be able to do like our ancestors. we must walk back we must be able to see it. we must be able to claim it and we are going to claim it by putting forth efforts not through us most us you have got to work. once you claim you have got to achieve it. sometimes we stop at achievement. we added...
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Apr 21, 2024
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john calhoun sought south carolina's lead in slave holding voice in the senate captured. the political significance of the event. here he said in congress, there's but one question that can destroy this union and our institutions and that is this very same slave question. within two years congress would pass a new fugitive slave law. ten years later. black wilderness artists and members of the black community of philadelphia and harrisburg, pennsylvania played a critical role in the release of a man with the interest. a black man with the interest, the name of daniel webster. at the time, webster was living with family in harrisburg, where was arrested on a warrant issued by a local commissioner. webster was accused of escaping from his owner in virginia five years earlier. words of his arrest was telegraphed to friends in philadelphia and a number of opponents of slavery in the state house of pennsylvania began in search of witnesses, testify in webster's behalf. five african-american witnesses traveled from harrisburg, including in the 60 year old dr. william jones and
john calhoun sought south carolina's lead in slave holding voice in the senate captured. the political significance of the event. here he said in congress, there's but one question that can destroy this union and our institutions and that is this very same slave question. within two years congress would pass a new fugitive slave law. ten years later. black wilderness artists and members of the black community of philadelphia and harrisburg, pennsylvania played a critical role in the release of...
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Apr 11, 2024
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in south carolina over 70% have left their post since 2020. i'm often asked why am i still in this profession? if it is really a simple answer for me, then i believe in the united states of america and the freedoms we enjoy. i'm able to serve this great country by providing the mechanism by which the country was founded. the ability to give everyone a voice in shaping the future and direction for voting. the administrators need the support of congress now more than ever to protect and fund our elections. >> very good. thank you, mr. cramer. mr. kruse? >> chairwoman klobuchar and ranking members, i appreciate the invitation before the committee this afternoon. my name is brian kruse, i'm the douglas county election commissioner. one of the most important aspects of election administration is trust and fairness in conducting and managing elections. in nebraska we have the gold standard for election administration. first and foremost, we use paper ballots. voters receive a paper ballot whether it will be for election day voting. the tabulating ma
in south carolina over 70% have left their post since 2020. i'm often asked why am i still in this profession? if it is really a simple answer for me, then i believe in the united states of america and the freedoms we enjoy. i'm able to serve this great country by providing the mechanism by which the country was founded. the ability to give everyone a voice in shaping the future and direction for voting. the administrators need the support of congress now more than ever to protect and fund our...
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Apr 10, 2024
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in south carolina, we are losing a wealth of knowledge. hard-working men and women who served this country by performing this duty. they are leaving. that wealth of knowledge leaving is a bad thing for the united states. these are people who swear to uphold the constitution of the state -- of the united states. no. it is a bad thing. it is one thing that -- what keeps me up at night? it is the protection of these workers. when they wake up in the morning and they get a threat to their safety, that concerns me. it should concern everyone. >> thank you, mr. cramer point --. he was hired by the trump campaign to find fraud in georgia. he wrote an editorial about it. on the basis of those, they passed a law that, for example, cuts the available time for runoff elections and have, driving up wait times in runoff elections. what is the impact of that kind of policy on ensuring access to the ballot for all eligible voters? >> georgia passed a very harmful on the bus's voter suppression law. it exacerbates the shoes that black voters face. we know
in south carolina, we are losing a wealth of knowledge. hard-working men and women who served this country by performing this duty. they are leaving. that wealth of knowledge leaving is a bad thing for the united states. these are people who swear to uphold the constitution of the state -- of the united states. no. it is a bad thing. it is one thing that -- what keeps me up at night? it is the protection of these workers. when they wake up in the morning and they get a threat to their safety,...
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Apr 2, 2024
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look, i left it up to charleston, south carolina, 1823. that's an oil painting of charleston antebellum. charleston. and i want to put you on board one of these ships that would be sailing into charleston harbor in the summer of 1823. a vessel that looked like one of those, the homer sailed into charleston harbor from its home port of liverpool as it moored and local officials boarded the ship. that's a sort of standard fare for for customs agents, etc. and they interrogated a man by the name of henry ellison. henry albertson was then arrested, put in chains, escorted from the ship to the middle of charleston, where the city jail is. and he was basically incarcerated. the law that caused him to be incarcerated was a brand new port regulation. and when the captain asked about what was going on, the deputy sheriff who arrested him said, well, henry albertson is being arrested because he is a free black man. that was that was his crime. the crime of being of being black and not being enslaved. the captain was absolutely aghast, as many of you
look, i left it up to charleston, south carolina, 1823. that's an oil painting of charleston antebellum. charleston. and i want to put you on board one of these ships that would be sailing into charleston harbor in the summer of 1823. a vessel that looked like one of those, the homer sailed into charleston harbor from its home port of liverpool as it moored and local officials boarded the ship. that's a sort of standard fare for for customs agents, etc. and they interrogated a man by the name...
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Apr 30, 2024
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south carolina is the same way. that lack of access to care and then you have these schools which are violently miss educating our children. it is a recipe to keep people in the social economic situation that they are in. >> we will go to michael in north carolina. >> good morning. thank you for your guest today. i believe that we are in the reconstruction. the first one when was murdered. the third when i think is now. what are your thoughts on that, sir? >> i do not disagree with you. i think that we are in -- actually, that is one of the directions i wrote the book area did you hit the nail on the head. i think we had an opportunity to make more progress than we did in i think that period of growth is over. i think that period of growth -- i think that we are in that dark period. we are in that dark period where you see the erosion of our rights. you see many of the policies that we are so used to having being repealed and those policies that we fought for. the voting rights act of 1964- 65 has been gutted. i thi
south carolina is the same way. that lack of access to care and then you have these schools which are violently miss educating our children. it is a recipe to keep people in the social economic situation that they are in. >> we will go to michael in north carolina. >> good morning. thank you for your guest today. i believe that we are in the reconstruction. the first one when was murdered. the third when i think is now. what are your thoughts on that, sir? >> i do not disagree...
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Apr 6, 2024
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, south carolina. and she tells the committee the details about being attacked by a group of individuals that come to her residency to attack her, as well as her her husband. and we will jump into her testimony with the question from the individual saying, what did they do? and she says that it was the second time they came. they came back after the first time on sunday night, after my old man again. and the second time the crowd was bigger. did they call for your old man? yes, sir. they called for him and told him he wasn't. i told them he wasn't here. then they argued me down and told me where he was. i told them no, sir, he wasn't here. they asked me where was my old man? i told them i couldn't tell when he went away. he didn't tell me where he was going. they searched about the house a long time and stayed with me an hour. that time searched it long. a long time and made me make up a light. and after i got the light made, then they began to search again and questioned me again about the ol man. and
, south carolina. and she tells the committee the details about being attacked by a group of individuals that come to her residency to attack her, as well as her her husband. and we will jump into her testimony with the question from the individual saying, what did they do? and she says that it was the second time they came. they came back after the first time on sunday night, after my old man again. and the second time the crowd was bigger. did they call for your old man? yes, sir. they called...
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Apr 1, 2024
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, south carolina. and she tells the committee the details about being attacked by a group of individuals that come to her residency to attack her, as well as her her husband. and we will jump into her testimony with the question from the individual saying, what did they do? and she says that it was the second time they came. they came back after the first time on sunday night, after my old man again. and the second time the crowd was bigger. did they call for your old man? yes, sir. they called for him and told him he wasn't. i told them he wasn't here. then they argued me down and told me where he was. i told them no, sir, he wasn't here. they asked me where was my old man? i told them i couldn't tell when he went away. he didn't tell me where he was going. they searched about the house a long time and stayed with me an hour. that time searched it long. a long time and made me make up a light. and after i got the light made, then they began to search again and questioned mega about the old man. and i
, south carolina. and she tells the committee the details about being attacked by a group of individuals that come to her residency to attack her, as well as her her husband. and we will jump into her testimony with the question from the individual saying, what did they do? and she says that it was the second time they came. they came back after the first time on sunday night, after my old man again. and the second time the crowd was bigger. did they call for your old man? yes, sir. they called...
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Apr 3, 2024
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morris island, south carolina carolina. many of the 200,000 black soldiers who fought had families but unfortunate the lack of equality caused suffering that was well. dr. medford, what were some of the inequitable that created hardship for soldiers and their families? well, certainly not being able to get any pay or getting and getting unequal pay did affect families because black men, soldiers were usually by the the only means of support for these families. and it wasn't just their wives and children who suffered. their parents suffered, too. so a lot of these men were supporting elderly parents as well. so when they didn't get paid or they got paid far less than white men, then everyone, the family suffered as a consequence. now, if you're talking about the black men who had been recently freed, whose wives and children were still in the south, even in those areas that were under control, you have a situation where these men go off to war and the owners, these men and their families do not want to support the families a
morris island, south carolina carolina. many of the 200,000 black soldiers who fought had families but unfortunate the lack of equality caused suffering that was well. dr. medford, what were some of the inequitable that created hardship for soldiers and their families? well, certainly not being able to get any pay or getting and getting unequal pay did affect families because black men, soldiers were usually by the the only means of support for these families. and it wasn't just their wives and...
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Apr 8, 2024
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. >> the gentleman from south carolina is back. >> mr. hur, why did officials go looking in the first place? >> why did they do it? >> what we identified during investigation is that at a certain date, members of the presidential staff went to the biden center to get a better handle on what kinds of evidence -- what kind of evidence was that the biden center. >> were they looking for documents that were classified? or was it a broader initial look? >> my understanding is it was a broader initial look and i am looking at chapter 14 of my report about a visit from march 2021 to the biden center. >> in march 2021 -- was this after the justice department began their investigation into president trump? >> i confess, i do not have the date of the beginning of the investigation at hand. >> i believe it was the same month. >> one thing that i think it is important for people to understand as president biden has this information everywhere. which location was that it at? was it at the transocean office ? was it at the temporary center in chinatown
. >> the gentleman from south carolina is back. >> mr. hur, why did officials go looking in the first place? >> why did they do it? >> what we identified during investigation is that at a certain date, members of the presidential staff went to the biden center to get a better handle on what kinds of evidence -- what kind of evidence was that the biden center. >> were they looking for documents that were classified? or was it a broader initial look? >> my...
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Apr 28, 2024
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and cindy smith is of the people can i focus on right so she was from south carolina, a small town, south carolina, piedmont. she came to bennett college as a student after the uprising in greensboro. and so let me go to that. so greensboro uprising happens may of 1969. claude barnes, a student at all black high school, he's radical. he's part of these multiple growing black power movements organizations. he wants to be body president. he was already like junior body president, but he wanted to be senior student body president, the black administration, this allowed him from being a candidate because of his radicalism. the students protested and still voted for him. right. despite it being this allowed. so they protested. use the police because laws and starts attacking harassing both students and teachers. they run to einstein's campus for support at his campus a student organization of black unity kind of being founded one of the key leaders is nelson johnson. and so they run to this campus to get help. so blue and ethel jackson comes back and goes to support them, they they say you're
and cindy smith is of the people can i focus on right so she was from south carolina, a small town, south carolina, piedmont. she came to bennett college as a student after the uprising in greensboro. and so let me go to that. so greensboro uprising happens may of 1969. claude barnes, a student at all black high school, he's radical. he's part of these multiple growing black power movements organizations. he wants to be body president. he was already like junior body president, but he wanted to...
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Apr 22, 2024
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south carolina and the vietnam war, 1965 to 1973. in keeping with that theme we have lately presented a number of live programs such as this, in which vietnam veterans join us to tell their stories. please welcome our speaker, dennis depuy. thank you, brad. i'm proud to be here today and thank them for giving me this opportunity. i want to thank everybody that came, especially the vietnam veterans. welcome home, guys. for family members that served at home while we were away. thank you for what you did and all the citizens that are here. thank you for coming. and today, i'm honored. talk a little bit about what inspired me to be a helicopter pilot. i went to flight school and then my tours in vietnam, particularly the first tour of my inspiration was my father saying here on the left picture on the far right, starting at age 24. and this picture was taken the day that general westmoreland, colonel westmoreland became a general and went to the nco club to celebrate with him in the picture on the right is a some cousins and i'm very pr
south carolina and the vietnam war, 1965 to 1973. in keeping with that theme we have lately presented a number of live programs such as this, in which vietnam veterans join us to tell their stories. please welcome our speaker, dennis depuy. thank you, brad. i'm proud to be here today and thank them for giving me this opportunity. i want to thank everybody that came, especially the vietnam veterans. welcome home, guys. for family members that served at home while we were away. thank you for what...