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Ferguson v. City of Charleston, 532 U.S. 67 (2001), is a United States Supreme Court decision that found Medical University of South Carolina's policy regarding involuntary drug testing of pregnant women to violate the Fourth Amendment. The Court held that the search in question was unreasonable. [1]
The Charleston sanitation strike was a more than two-month movement in Charleston, South Carolina that protested the pay and working conditions of Charleston's overwhelmingly African-American sanitation workers. From March to June 1969, the 1969 Charleston hospital strike had brought several national leaders of the Civil Rights Movement to ...
The Charleston hospital strike was a two-month movement in Charleston, South Carolina that protested the unfair and unequal treatment of African American hospital workers. . Protests began after twelve black employees were fired for voicing their concerns to the president of Medical College Hospital, which is now the Medical University of South Carol
Formerly Regional Medical Center MUSC Health University Medical Center [12] Charleston: Charleston: 728 [9] Level I: MUSC: Formerly Medical University of South Carolina Hospital Newberry County Memorial Hospital: Newberry: Newberry: 90 — — Pelham Medical Center: Greer: Spartanburg: 48 — SRHS: Piedmont Medical Center: Rock Hill: York: 288 ...
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Hundreds of abandoned and derelict boats litter South Carolina’s pretty shorelines and fish-filled waterways across eight coastal counties. But the state’s chief environmental agency aims to ...
MUSC Shawn Jenkins Children's Hospital is a nationally ranked, freestanding acute care women's and children's hospital in Charleston, South Carolina. It is affiliated with the Medical University of South Carolina. The hospital features all private rooms that consist of 250 pediatric beds and 29 beds for women. [15]
South Carolina’s beach management law, approved in 1988, for decades focused on moving new development farther back from the shore because of hazards and public costs of building near the ocean.