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Published: May 9, 2008
Patty McQuillan, a spokeswoman for the N.C. Department of Crime Control and Public Safety, said that emergency officials reported that the pilot said he had icing on the wings. The plane disappeared from radar and lost radio contact, she said.
The accident happened about 1:30 p.m, said Kathleen Bergen, a spokeswoman for the Federal Aviation Administration in Atlanta. The plane crashed in a farm field several hundred feet from a residential area near Snow Hill, about 20 miles southwest of Greenville.
It was headed from Page Field in Fort Myers, Fla., to Hartford-Brainard Airport in Connecticut, Bergen said.
The FAA Web site indicates that the plane was a Lancair IV-P, a homebuilt, amateur plane completed in 2003.
Both the FAA and the National Transportation Safety Board will investigate the crash, Bergen said.
The N.C. School of the Arts in Winston-Salem has moved another step closer to getting a "U" in front of its name.
The UNC board of governors' committee on university governance voted unanimously yesterday to recommend changing the school's name to the University of North Carolina School of the Arts. The full board will consider the matter today. If it approves the name change, the General Assembly will consider it. The board of governors will meet at 9 a.m. in the Spangler Center in Chapel Hill.
WILKESBORO -- A Wilkes County family has been named the 2008 Outstanding Conservation Farm Family for North Carolina.
The N.C. Association of Soil and Water Conservation Districts will honor the Dwayne and Alan Sidden family at a ceremony today at the farm. Scheduled to attend are Bill Ross, the secretary of the N.C. Department of Environment and Nature Resources, and Agriculture Commissioner Steve Troxler.
The Siddens have had a conservation plan since 1975 and earned the award for numerous conservation practices, including rotational grazing, nutrient and pest-management programs, and construction of a 4,900-foot-long fence that protects a stream.
A man robbed the Wilco gas station on Sprague Street Wednesday night, Winston-Salem police said.
Just after 10:30, the man walked into the station, grabbed an item and went to pay for it. When the clerk opened the cash register, the man pulled out a gun and demanded money, police said.
The robber was described as black, in his mid-20s, 6 feet 1 inch tall, weighing 180 pounds, with dreadlocks. He wore blue jeans, tan boots, a black hooded sweatshirt and a black baseball cap.
Anyone with information can call Crime Stoppers at 727-2800.
The eastbound lanes of Interstate 40 were closed for several hours yesterday at U.S. 52 in Forsyth County because of an overturned tractor-trailer, Winston-Salem police said.
The wreck occurred about 11:30 p.m. Wednesday when a truck overturned as the driver tried to take the ramp from U.S. 52 to I-40.
"His load tipped over, and he lost it," police Sgt. Howard Brown said. The truck appeared to be carrying some type of bedding materials.
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