College Education
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Dalton, McCrory seek support from business community
Two weeks after primaries set North Carolina's gubernatorial match this fall, Republican Pat McCrory has grabbed an early lead over Democrat Walter Dalton, according to a WRAL News poll released Tuesday.
registered voters opposed at three quarters cent sales tax increase to restore education funding . While 42%. Support it. -
Romney Woman 2012
FILE - In this May 2, 2012 file photo, Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney speaks in Chantilly, Va. Romney's courtship of female voters in his speeches sounds a bit like a movie casting call: Woman Whose Husband Took an Upholstery Class. Woman Who Is Back in College to Dodge Her Student Loans . Woman Who Owns Duplexes. Romney's campaign won't identify these women, making it impossible to check on his accounts. But they're serving an important role as Romney looks to narrow the advantage President Barack Obama has with women. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File)
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House Dems outline agenda
House Democrats laid out their agenda for the 2012 session, focused on fighting what they claim are Republican efforts to move the state backward.
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Right on Crime Initiative press conference
Leaders from Right on Crime, a conservative criminal justice reform initiative, discuss a bill that would raise the age for treating teens as adults in court.
the rest of our life -- can't pursue employment housing. We're student loans or at least it's very difficult to do so. And frankly we live in an age with the advances in technology we're -
NC Spin: May 13, 2012
Expert panelists hold a spin-free discussion of the most urgent issues facing North Carolian.
numbers this week. Three quarters cent sales tax increase more teachers more education funding any surprise there -- number one number two as it did. -
Out of the Shadows
In this Tuesday, April 5, 2011 photo, illegal immigrant Virdiana Martinez, right, is comforted by activist Mohammad Abdollahi, as Major K. E. Williams, left, of the Atlanta Police Department warns her of arrest unless she moves while protesting for rights for higher education for illegal immigrants in Atlanta. When Williams informed her she could get up now and that she's made her point, Martinez asked him if his ancestors had that opportunity. (AP Photo/David Goldman)
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Out of the Shadows
In this Tuesday, April 5, 2011 photo, a police officer instructs illegal immigrant Georgina Perez to move or face arrest for blocking traffic with other demonstraotrs in Atlanta during a protest calling for rights for illegal immigrants for higher education . Across the country, children of families who live here illegally are "coming out" publicly. In "outing" their families as well as themselves, they know they risk being deported. But as states pass ever more stringent anti-illegal immigration laws - and critics denounce their parents as criminals - these young people say they have no choice. (AP Photo/David Goldman)
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Out of the Shadows
In this Tuesday, April 5, 2011 photo, a tear runs down the cheek of illegal immigrant Dayanna Rebolledo, 21, before her arrest for blocking traffic in Atlanta during a protest calling for rights for illegal immigrants for higher education . (AP Photo/David Goldman)
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Out of the Shadows
FILE - In this Nov. 15, 2011 file photo, 17-year-old Diane Martell of Bessemer, Ala., center, leads protesters in a march outside the Alabama Capitol in Montgomery, Ala. during a demonstration against the state's immigration laws. Diane says she is tired of watching the fear in her father's face every time he drives, tired of her mother begging her not to walk to school on the days the ICE van is parked down the street, tired of being told that she cannot get a driver's license, or a job or maybe even a college education because she doesn't have a Social Security number. "We are human beings," Martell says. "We are not criminals, and we are not aliens and we cannot just stay silent." (AP Photo/Dave Martin)
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Out of the Shadows
In this Thursday, April 13, 2012 photo, Diane Martell, 17, right, leans on her parents Maurcio and Guadalupe on the porch of their home in Bessemer, Ala. The Martells are illegal immigrants, as are most of the residents of this trailer park, and they live in fear of Alabama's harsh immigration laws. From left are her sisters Monserrat, 11, and Alexa, 12. Diane says she is tired of watching the fear in her father's face every time he drives, tired of her mother begging her not to walk to school on the days the ICE van is parked down the street, tired of being told that she cannot get a driver's license, or a job or maybe even a college education because she doesn't have a Social Security number. "We are human beings," Martell says. "We are not criminals, and we are not aliens and we cannot just stay silent." (AP Photo/Dave Martin)
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