
Lisa Worf
Lisa Worf traded the Midwest for Charlotte in 2006 to take a job at WFAE. She worked with public TV in Detroit and taught English in Austria before making her way to radio. Lisa graduated from University of Chicago with a bachelor’s degree in English.
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Many Mecklenburg County functions have come to a halt after a ransomware attack encrypted files on at least 30 county servers. The hackers have given...
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UNC System President Margaret Spellings and her community college counterpart shared a stage in Charlotte last night with House Speaker Tim Moore. They...
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Charlotte School of Law is closed after eight months of fighting to stay open. The North Carolina Attorney General's Office said Tuesday the for-profit...
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The domestic furniture manufacturing industry collapsed when U.S. companies shifted jobs to China. But in North Carolina, a new training course teaches the skills for much needed upholsterers.
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It's one of the loudest debates in education: whether spending more money adds up to better test scores and graduation rates.
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To get, and keep, students on track, teachers are trying a different method of classroom management called no-nonsense nurturing.
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In the aftermath of several police shootings of unarmed black men, many police departments are holding community forums to talk to residents about policing.
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Charlotte commemorated a civil rights heavy-weight Thursday. Julius Chambers fought for equality through the courts and argued some of the cases that…
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Duke Energy has reached a tentative settlement with state regulators regarding lawsuits over leaks from its coal ash ponds in Asheville and on the Catawba…
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There's a new cyberbullying law in North Carolina — but it's not for students who torment other students. It's one of the first of its kind that punishes students who target teachers online. Teachers groups and free speech organizations are split on what the law hopes to accomplish.