Morning News Briefs: Tuesday, August 9, 2016
Guilford Election Board Approves New Early Voting Plan
At one of its rowdiest meetings in recent
At one of its rowdiest meetings in recent
As the world's population continues to grow, some North Carolina scientists are doing research on how to feed a larger number of people. The answer, they say, could be found in bacteria.
At one of its rowdiest meetings in recent memory, the Guilford County Board of Elections approved an early voting plan Monday.
The 2016 Games are underway in Rio de Janeiro, but some local soccer players didn't have to go to Brazil to get close to Olympics stars.
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Radio 101 is WFDD's education program for high school students. Radio 101 reporter, Peyton Watson, tells his story.
Forsyth County Commissioners are discussing several projects at a public hearing Monday for a fall bond referendum.
This week's Across the Blue Ridge features a concert set and a visit with Sam Gleaves and Tyler Hughes, two of a new generation of roots musicians steeped in tradition and seeking new expressive pa
Rock, once a seafloor of mud, sand, and pebbles, towers into the sky, only to erode away, becoming a new and different seafloor, layered like pages in a book.
Appalachian State University's Dr. Ellen Cowan reads these pages, most recently off the coast of Alaska. They tell the full story of geological changes on the continent, as written by glaciers over millions of years.
There are plenty of questions swirling after testimony emerged this week from a state toxicologist who disagreed with how the state handled water safety in 2015.