Triad News
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The Justice Department said FNB will pay $13.5 million to settle the redlining charges, of which the bulk will go into a fund to help subsidize loans for Black and Latino borrowers in Charlotte and Winston-Salem, two housing markets where the DOJ found discrimination.
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The department dean’s recommendations include 19 programs, majors and minors total — affecting about 194 students.
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The Workman School of Dental Medicine is only one of three dental schools in North Carolina.
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UNC Greensboro's chancellor and provost will share department deans' recommendations for which programs should be cut.
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The town of Star’s leaders want to build on the success of an arts facility by finding new uses for the other shuttered textile buildings and historic structures that line Main Street. But while most of Star’s historic buildings are standing strong, the town’s water and sewer infrastructure is showing its age.
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Davidson County commissioners will hold a hearing in January on a controversial new Dollar General store.
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UNC-Greensboro is conducting an academic program review, which could lead to program cuts. Students, faculty and the UNCG community are worried humanities programs might be the first to go.
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Artist TiaCorine discusses growth and impact within her artistry and her life.
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The location near Greensboro will serve as Toyota’s epicenter of lithium-ion battery production in North America. It will be a key supplier for the Kentucky-based plant tasked with building Toyota's first U.S.-made electric vehicles.
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Carson talked about her new role as the ACC's senior associate commissioner for women's basketball, the transfer portal, conference realignment, and Greensboro's future as the conference tournament's home.
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Only 4% of universities in the U.S. hold an elite research designation called R1 and they are all historically white. North Carolina A&T State University, a Historically Black College and University, is working to change that.
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A veteran North Carolina trial lawyer has entered the Republican primary campaign for governor. Bill Graham said Wednesday that he's got the “resources, discipline and character" to break a dominant stretch of Democrats living in the Executive Mansion dating back to the 1990s.