Plane site in new jersey. First, well check with the forecast with Chelsey Ingram with chelsey and the roads. Jimmy, welcome back. Did you enjoy your weekend . I did. I knew you did. A lot of construction, no accidents to report yet. Good. Yet. Chelsey, is it going to stay dry . It will for extended periods, in fact, you know what, fall is here. Here we go. You just got to go step outside and we have a frost advisory in effect. So thats just a testament to the chilly temperatures in the air as youre waking up this morning. So all of the areas in the blue that includes areas north and west of philadelphia, this is until 9 00 a. M. , also portions of south jersey, for these chilly temperatures. Look across the region, 44 degrees right now in philadelphia, here in the upper 30s, in reading, 42 lancaster, down the shore, 44 in wildwood, right around 40 degrees in atlantic city. You dont need me to tell you this, but compared to 24 hours ago, look at the temperature change, 22 degrees colde
Lots of sun as we move forward. Well talk about how long the dry spell lasts coming up. Right now, well go to traffic and jessica boyington. Thanks. Starting off on the roosevelt boulevard, the cameras around 17th street. So far, so good. No problems or delays here. The southbound side moving up toward the schuylkill. You see a little more traffic heading that direction than we typically see for the morning commute. Any commute. Also watching the crash out in hatfield township on bethlehem pike around orville road. In horsham, the clearing of the fire should be out by now. Either way, there could be lane restrictions in place. Sorgum way at horsham road. Back to you. And flames jumped through a unit at a cherry hill apartment complex forcing neighbors to run from their homes. One neighbor told us their cat helped them escape. Matt delucia is live at the Colonial Park apartments with that story. Matt . Yeah. People thanking their pets this morning. Also thanking their neighbors for help
Difficult it was for africanamericans all across the country to receive an educational a good education in their community. Here in topeka, though, if you looked at the schools just standing outside, youd be very hard pressed to determine whether white students or africanamerican students attend attended because the school board really did provide all of the same materials that the white schools offered. And what is even more interesting for most people whether they come to visit is they find out after visiting elementary school, africanamerican students attended integrated middle and high school schools. Because the law in kansas only permitted segregation in Elementary Schools. So you had separate schools in topeka and about a dozen other communities in the early 1950s. Communities and what they adore, while they certainly were no supporters of segregation and, obviously, saw the injustice of having to attend separate Elementary Schools the Africanamerican Community also was very pro
Communities. In 1856 when this house was built, ritchies idea was to make this house as solid as he possibly could. Its kind of like a fort in that sense. The house has become known as somebodys port, whether you are on one side or another. That will result in ritchies arrest for his involvement in rating stores and he will be arrested and incarcerated in the proslavery jail. And managed to escape in the fall of 1856 and find his way back to franklin, indiana where he spent time with his family, his father and his family in indiana, leaving a wife and children here into bego topeka. When he comes back to topeka in the spring of 1857, the free soil people have gained control of the territorial legislature. They begin to institute, rather than pro slavery legislation, they enact a free soil anti slavery legislation. That pretty well seals the deal that kansas is ultimately going to be a free state rather than a pro slavery state. The result is pretty clear. The free people have become a
Difficult it was for africanamericans all across the country to receive an educational a good education in their community. Here in topeka, though, if you looked at the schools just standing outside, youd be very hard pressed to determine whether white students or africanamerican students attend attended because the school board really did provide all of the same materials that the white schools offered. And what is even more interesting for most people whether they come to visit is they find out after visiting elementary school, africanamerican students attended integrated middle and high school schools. Because the law in kansas only permitted segregation in Elementary Schools. So you had separate schools in topeka and about a dozen other communities in the early 1950s. Communities and what they adore, while they certainly were no supporters of segregation and, obviously, saw the injustice of having to attend separate Elementary Schools the Africanamerican Community also was very pro