RALEIGH, N.C. AP The 10 a.m. service at Calvary Chapel in Apex is mobbed. People sit in folding chairs at the edges of the aisles, on the floor and in the lobby where they watch the service on a TV feed.
NEW ORLEANS, La. - The Tulane University baseball team returns to action on Friday, May 9, when the Green Wave open a three-game weekend series against Conference USA foe East Carolina at 6 p.m. (CDT) at Clark LeClair Stadium in Greenville, N.C.
Two women married to the same man teamed up this week to turn him over to police, one of the wives said Wednesday. Police charged Keron Lamont Wilkins, 30, of Clayton, N.C., with one felony count of bigamy, according to an arrest warrant filed at the Wake County Magistrate's Office early Tuesday morning. Bigamy is a Class 1 felony, punishable by 4 to 10 months in prison, according to state law.
RALEIGH -- Caps, gowns, and tassles are a rite of passage for graduates and so is the rigorous job search. “Getting a job isn't as easy as I thought it was going to be,” said Jasmine Stringer, a graduating senior from N.C. State.
GREENVILLE, N.C. - Junior right-hander Shooter Hunt struck out nine in a 7.0-inning start and the Green Wave survived a furious Pirate comeback as the Tulane University baseball team defeated Conference USA foe East Carolina, 5-4, Friday evening at Clark LeClair Stadium.
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -- North Carolina voters made their choices Tuesday in the state's first meaningful presidential primary in 20 years, casting million of ballots on what was expected to be a record-setting day for turnout. Nearly all of polls closed at 7:30 p.m., and there was a winner right away: Barack Obama captured the Democratic presidential primary over Hillary Rodham Clinton.
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -- North Carolina voters have made their choices in the state's first meaningful presidential primary in 20 years, casting million of ballots on what is expected to be a record-setting day for turnout. Nearly all of polls closed at 7:30 p.m., and there was a winner right away: Barack Obama captured the Democratic presidential primary over Hillary Rodham Clinton.
MARRIAGE LICENSES -- Allan M. Blevins, 19, and Casey R. Holub, 18, both of Salina; Charles N. Sharp, 55, and Eleanor A. Vering, 53, both of Salina; Keith C. Charlson, 25, and Rita M. Haring, 30, both of Lindsborg; Douglas T. Bond, 43, Yukon, Okla., and Kerry L. Farr, 38, Salina; Joshua Travelstead, 31, and Emily M. Patterson, 27, both of Lindsborg; Amon L. Tidmore III, 30, and Janese M. Ellis,
Fri, May 9, 2008 (2:29 a.m.) Barack Obama swept to a convincing victory in the North Carolina primary Tuesday night and declared he was closing in on the Democratic presidential nomination. Hillary Rodham Clinton eked out a win in Indiana as she struggled to halt her rival's march into history.
Fri, May 9, 2008 (1:22 a.m.) Hillary Rodham Clinton lost North Carolina on Tuesday and with it her last best chance at the White House. The results dented if not doomed her hopes of convincing superdelegates to disregard Obama's lead in delegates, states won and popular vote to nominate her.