Wednesday April 24th, 2024 11:54AM

Ken Stanford

Contributing Editor
Ken  Stanford
NC farmers lead country on legal foreign workers
As a push to change U.S. immigration laws stalls, North Carolina farmers have proven adept at legally bringing thousands of temporary agricultural laborers into the United States using a specialized visa program.
7:50AM ( 10 years ago )
Couple: Truck was on fire before deadly bus crash
A couple said a FedEx tractor-trailer was already on fire when it careened across a median, sideswiped their car and slammed into a bus carrying high school students, adding a new twist to the investigation of a crash that killed 10 people.
5:30PM ( 10 years ago )
Ga. parents say GM knew of defect in daughter' car
Parents of a Georgia teenager who suffered a severe brain injury in a 2009 car crash say in a new federal lawsuit that General Motors knew of a defect in her car but took steps to conceal it.
5:25PM ( 10 years ago )
Finance officials: Global economy turns the corner
The world's top finance officials expressed confidence Saturday that the global economy finally has turned the corner to stronger growth. This time, they may be right.
5:20PM ( 10 years ago )
'Obamacare' under attack as conservatives eye 2016
Republicans eyeing the 2016 White House race battered President Barack Obama's health care law and nicked each other Saturday, auditioning before a high-profile gathering of conservatives that some political veterans said marked the campaign's unofficial start.
5:15PM ( 10 years ago )
Work planned next week on two northeast Georgia interstates
If you'll be heading north anytime on I-85 through northeast Georgia next week, better plan ahead for some delays.
11:03AM ( 10 years ago )
Work planned next week on two NE Ga. interestates
If you'll be heading north anytime on I-85 through northeast Georgia next week, better plan ahead for some delays.
7:40AM ( 10 years ago )
NGHS welcomes new doctors
7:37AM ( 10 years ago )
GM slow to act on recalls, House documents show
Documents released by a House subcommittee show that managers and employees at General Motors were often slow to react to safety problems - and that one part of GM often didn't know what another was doing.
7:32AM ( 10 years ago )