East Carolina University will move undergraduate courses online for the remainder of the fall semester, beginning Wednesday, Aug. 26, Interim Chancellor Ron Mitchelson announced today.
The Wake Tech Board of Trustees is pleased to welcome three notable new members. “Rock Star” Raleigh chef Cheetie Kumar, former St. Augustine’s University CFO Walter C. Davenport and biopharma executive Dr. Juan Torres were sworn in today.
The two bedroom, one bathroom home at 1909 Herrin Ave., Charlotte was sold on Aug. 25, 2020 by Better Path Homes LLC and Heather A. Stiefel for $252,500. The buyer was Kathleen B. Flaherty.
The home at 1707 Deer St., Charlotte was sold on Aug. 25, 2020 by J. Salomon Aguilar Zamora, Jazmin Vega Becerril and J Salomon Aguilar Z. for $40,000. The buyer was Looby Construction LLC.
On Aug. 25, 2020, 4019 Glenwood Land Trust and Kayla Maxwell sold their home at 4019 Glenwood Drive, Charlotte to Athena Trang Nguyen and Bentley Pham for $51,000.
The two bedroom, one bathroom home at 3225 Erskine Drive, Charlotte was sold on Aug. 25, 2020 by Logical Properties LLC for $254,000. The buyers were David A. and Adrianne Rodwell Henderson and Adrianne Rodwell-Henderson.
On Aug. 24, 2020, James Allen and Keisha Conrine Pearson purchased a three bedroom, one bathroom home at 301 Eastway Ave., Kannapolis from Dempsey E. Gibson for $186,000.
The home at 10108 Greenwood Court, Charlotte was sold on Aug. 24, 2020 by Maria Elena Gonzalez and Martin Nunez Mora for $345,000. The buyers were Richard Walter III and Tory Strider Grooms.
The home at 5912 Plainfield Drive, Charlotte was sold on Aug. 24, 2020 by Lion Enterprise LLC for $268,000. The buyers were Wing Oi Lau and Eric W. Caruthers.
The commercial property at 2817 Brook Ridge Drive, Gastonia was sold on Aug. 24, 2020 by Richard A. and Margaret P. Wing for $149,000. The buyer was Development Solutions Group LLC.
Between $1.5 billion to $3 billion in additional transportation funding in North Carolina is needed if the state ever wants to raise its infrastructure ranking from a C-grade, the NC Chamber said in August.
After a 17-year career in the U.S. Marine Corps that took him to 43 different countries and eight deployments – including three combat tours and two dangerous peacekeeping missions – Jeremiah Caudill decided to pursue a degree from East Carolina University.