This guy came out with like a black eye and bloody nose. He was just messed up. Reporter this woman was hit by pepper spray and treated by par medics as was this young man, targeted by the mob. He said the people that came after him were not Berkeley High students but we dont know that for sure. We had a pretty scared little kid there. Reporter its unknown what sparked all of this. Why hundreds of students gathered from other schools and converged around his campus. Police say there may be a pattern. This is the third friday weve had more and more kids showing up on shaddick. But the most have been more water blooms and youthful exuberance. Reporter a lot more happened than tossing water balloons today. Social media likely brought all of these people together. But social media is also helping. Hes getting video to track down who was behind all of this. Developing news now out of san jose where a small plane had a rough landing at the airport tonight. But the pilot and the two passenger
At 7 00 tonight you would have been wondering what was going on. There were police everywhere trying to contain a riled up crowd but what exactly motivated all of this, that still remains unknown. Police cars screaming by, hundreds of High School Kids roaming. They were screaming. There were fights, several people were pepper sprayed. All of this after rumors spread among students on social media on a fight that took place near Berkeley High. I heard there was going to be a fight earl littler today. From this girl. Reporter Police Responded to those rumors but the fights broke out any way. It looks like its been a combination of kids from oakland tech, berkeley technical and Berkeley High school. Reporter after Police Arrived the kids spread out to shattick avenue with several fighting breaking out there. This guy came out with like a black eye and bloody nose. He was just messed up. Reporter this woman was hit by pepper spray and treated by par medics as was this young man, targeted b
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John Caldwell Calhoun (1782-1850), the South Carolina senator who was slavery’s most vociferous defender (he called it a “positive good”) and whose espousal of state “nullification” of federal laws is said to have led directly to Southern secession and the Civil War, is probably today’s most canceled U.S. historical figure. A statue of Calhoun in downtown Charleston, erected by Confederacy sentimentalists during the late 19th century and standing 115 feet tall in its longest-lasting version, was one of the first of the many Confederate monuments in the South to be toppled during the race-related urban turmoil of the summer of 2020. Meanwhile, in 2017, Yale University, from which Calhoun graduated with high honors in 1804, renamed a residential college that had been named after him in 1933.
The Lower Cherokee Town of Esseneca was built on both sides of the Keowee River, now Lake Hartwell. In 1775, naturalist William Bartram described the village and its size in detail, including “the number of inhabitants is now estimated at about five hundred, and they are able to muster about one hundred warriors.”
After the Revolutionary War, the former South Carolina Cherokee lands were being developed, and the first Hopewell-Keowee Church opened in 1791. Rev. James McElhenney of Johns Island served as the Presbyterian minister from 1803-1812, living in a four-room house known as Clergy Hall in the summers and fall. At this time, only 12 white men owned more enslaved persons than McElhenney did in the Pendleton District.