Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Harold L. Martin Sr. (born October 22, 1951) is an American engineer and educator who is Chancelor Emeritus of North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University and former chancellor of Winston-Salem State University. A graduate of North Carolina A&T in electrical engineering, he was the first alumnus to serve as Chancellor of the ...
Founded in 1891 as the "Agricultural and Mechanical college for the Colored Race," N.C. A&T was the first land grant college for people of color in the state of North Carolina. [2] Over the 100 plus years of the university's existence, the academic scope expanded to encompass other disciplines. The North Carolina General Assembly redefined N.C ...
North Carolina A&T's main campus, often referred to as "Aggieland", is located approximately nine blocks east of downtown Greensboro, North Carolina, a city that supports a population of approximately 284,816 [31] and is one of three principal cities that forms the Greensboro-Winston-Salem-High Point Combined Statistical Area (CSA), also ...
Krishana Polite is recovering after the Jan. 1 incident that Winston-Salem police are still investigating. The chief of staff to former North Carolina Lt. Governor Mark Robinson is recovering ...
His lawyer, William Scott Harkey of Winston-Salem, said he was prohibited by N.C. Rules of Professional Conduct from commenting on an active case. The case is active because Edwards hasn’t been ...
Moranda Smith was a black labor organizer and unionist who served as the first regional director of Winston-Salem, North Carolina's local 22 of the Food, Tobacco, Agricultural and Allied Workers of America (FTA) in the 1930 and 1940s.
Harold L. Martin, chancellor of North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University; William T. Miller, professor of organic chemistry at Cornell University; Virginia Newell, math professor at Winston-Salem State University and alderman of Winston-Salem; Len Preslar, business educator and Distinguished Professor of Practice at Wake ...
Velma Hopkins (February 24, 1909 – March 19, 1996) was an American labor rights activist. In 1943 she helped organize a strike against R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, which attracted over 10,000 participants from Winston-Salem, North Carolina and led to the founding of the only union to be formed by Reynolds Tobacco employees.