Chicken wings are always a hit.
Starting today, January 14, Davidson-Davie Community College will transition to virtual learning for most classes through Sunday, January 30. Most labs will continue in-person.
Experts predict a major icing event could take shape across the Carolinas and Virginia, leaving millions without power and impossible travel conditions.
Dear Diary,
I didn’t journal yesterday because I was really busy. Wednesday morning, I woke up like usual, but there was a strange light tapping sound
The Davidson-Davie Community College Small Business Center is one of two Piedmont Regional recipients of the NC Idea Regional Impact ECOSYSTEM grant.
A Thomasville elementary teacher is on a mission to provide students with a chance to experience international travel via virtual reality.
Lexington City Schools will host a spirit rally Friday at the Lexington Senior High School basketball games vs. Thomasville High School.
Detailed information about COVID-19 testing and vaccination site in Thomasville.
Explore STEM programming and put your engineering skills up against others from around the Triad! Bridging the Triad is a FREE event, designed to get kids and adults interested and engaged through a bridge building contest.
The Lexington City Schools Board of Education voted unanimously Tuesday evening, at their monthly meeting, to keep their current mask mandate in place
Here is the latest COVID-19 case updates from the local school systems.
The Lexington City Council held their first meeting of the new year on January 10. Kicking off the meeting were statements of hope for the new year from Councilor Donald Holt and City Manager Terra Greene.
On Monday, January 10, the Davidson County Schools (DCS) Board of Education held its regularly scheduled meeting for the month virtually.
“We all have a moral obligation to speak truth to power, even in the midst of those who strive to maintain the status quo and suppress dissent in any form. The greatness of King resides in his fearlessness to stand alone on the right side of history.” Dr. George B. Jackson Martin Luther King Social Action Committee, Chairman
On the second day of the 1960 Greensboro sit-in, Clarence Henderson sat at the Woolworth lunch counter in downtown Greensboro to protest segregation.
On January 5, local blues/rock band, from the small community of Churchland, in Davidson County, dropped its first highly anticipated self-titled EP.