Sale marks the second time Carolina Oaks has been sold in the past 3½ years.
“It was kind of a shocker to us all as we were on the air (Tuesday) and we’re like, ‘Oh, my gosh, we're halfway finished. Are you kidding me?’”
A planned downtown Winston-Salem outdoor pavilion and upgrades to Historic Bethabara Park and Bowman Gray Stadium would receive more than $1 million in state funding in a N.C. House bill focused on Triad socioeconomic initiatives.
Read through the obituaries published today in Greensboro News and Record.
Singer-songwriter John Legend is interviewed by entertainment journalist Segun Oduolowu during Wake Forest University’s Face to Face Speaker Forum on Tuesday at Joel Coliseum.
Autopsies showed that a 27-year-old man shot and killed a 26-year-old woman in a murder-suicide on March 30 in the 3600 block of McConnell Road, police said.
The driver of a Guilford County Schools bus and one passenger sustained minor injuries Monday afternoon when the bus and a sedan collided, first responders said
As economic dark clouds gather and slash-and-burn federal budget cuts pick up steam, community activists take aim at local economic development.
"It's pay-to-play politics," one critic said Monday night.
The first wave of nine reopened Big Lots stores to commence Thursday. The next wave is scheduled to launch May 1 with 55 stores, while the remaining 155 of the 219 locations that Variety acquired in December to reopen by early June.
The International Civil Aviation Organization aligned on a recommended new standard for supersonic aircraft landing and takeoff noise that takes into account advanced noise reduction procedures.
Between 2018 and 2021, Dr. Wendell Lewis Randall prescribed opioids and other controlled substances to patients even if these medications were not necessary for the patients’ treatments, the attorney general’s office said in a news release.
The fanatical appeal of March Madness led to a record sports wagering month of $685 million in North Carolina, the state Lottery Commission reported Monday.
Read through the obituaries published today in Greensboro News and Record.
Commissioner Melvin "Skip" Alston said schools and county departments are asking for an additional $93 million for the next fiscal year.
By November, monthly monitoring by the North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality detected discharges into Rich Fork Creek with average daily levels of fecal matter that were 12 times higher than the legal limit.
Richard Dean Jordan, 31, is being held in Alexander County on a $1.5 million bond.
The Rockingham County School District has fired Gloria Holloway of Sandy Ridge, a bus driver and custodian for McMichael High School, who is under investigation by the county sheriff's office. McMichael's AFJROTC instructor Andy Mercer is under investigation by the sheriff's office in an unrelated incident and has been suspended with pay by the district, school officials said
"Most of the time, it's used to monitor the crowd, but it can be used to gauge the size of it," GPD public information coordinator Patrick DeSota said of drones.
Lumos, formerly known as NorthState, provides high-speed business and residential telecommunications services to portions of the Triad, including Kernersville and northern Winston-Salem.
"Most of my staff work a second job either in the afternoons or the weekend," Principal of Besser Elementary Jonathan Brooks said.
Cone Health announced Monday the hiring of Chad Boore as president of affiliated hospitals Alamance Regional Medical Center and Annie Penn Hospital.
Protests across the nation - Greensboro and Winston-Salem - over the weekend showed the level of frustration.
Don't lose sight of the obstacles ahead, however.
“You were promised that you will be taken care of and then they say, ‘You know what? We need to check some stuff. So just hold on. Breathe in and don't breathe out. We will check everything, and then maybe we'll come back to you, and maybe not.’”
On March 13, the North Carolina Senate passed Senate Bill 261, with Republican senators touting projected savings of up to $13 billion — an estimate based on modeling by the Public Staff.
Read through the obituaries published today in Greensboro News and Record.
Read through the obituaries published today in Greensboro News and Record.
Protestors shared concerns ranging from lack of due process in immigration proceedings to cut to medical research and the future of Social Security.
Read through the obituaries published today in Greensboro News and Record.