LELAND, NC (WWAY) — We want to hear your thoughts on the latest top news topics!
Click HERE to cast your vote and let your voice be heard.
Tune in to WWAY to see how the rest of the community votes.

WASHINGTON, DC (WWAY) — The Smithsonian National Museum of American History wants copies of your trips to Walt Disney World in Florida and Disneyland in California.
The museum is looking for pictures for all decades to show how the parks has changed over time.
Candid photos, posed phots, and even blurry photos are all OK and the museum wants your story behind the photos too.
Not all photos will be used due to limited space and privacy and permissions rules will be in place, but a great number are expected to be catalogued and kept for posterity.
To send your photos click here. Don’t forget to include contact information!
WILMINGTON, NC (WWAY) — The Omicron variant is making an already challenging year even harder for restaurants across the Cape Fear. Even the most successful shops in Wilmington say supply shortages, staffing issues, and price increases are burning local eateries.
Molly Kurnyn, co-owner of Cheesesmith says they close the restaurant Mondays to give staff a break. Though crowds are back, prices for basic supplies like to-go containers and food have gone up 25 percent.
“Everything. Cheese, bread. All the things we use in our food,” Kurnyn said.
Supply chain shortages also pushed back the brick and mortar’s opening.
She continued, “We literally were waiting to open to get refrigerators because they’re not manufacturing them.”
Kurnyn and her husband applied to the Restaurant Revitalization Fund, which according to NC Restaurant and Lodging Association’s Lynn Minges quickly ran dry last year.
“During that time, we saw about 2,500 restaurants in North Carolina receive funds,” Minges said. “But essentially there were about 6,000 that were eligible, that have not yet received funding.”
Congress will consider renewing the Restaurant Revitalization Fund (RRF) this February. In the meantime, Kurnyn and her husband take on multiple shifts to make up for labor shortages. They hope customers will support local businesses more and complain about cost less.
“A lot of people come in and think that it’s insane there’s a 13 dollar grilled cheese,” the business owner explained. “But we just take a number of what it costs for us to make it, add in labor, and come up with this little sliver that’s left. And that’s what we keep. And as soon as a pipe breaks or our heat breaks, or whatever, that profit margin gets chipped away.”
Without grants, she worries hundreds of local restaurants could shut down by winter’s end. According to the National Restaurant Association, replenishing the RRF could save 1.6 million jobs.
Kurnyn hopes in spite of COVID-19 and the typical slowdown that comes with winter, people will step up and help out.
“It’s time for a beer and a grilled cheese,” she grinned. “Right now.”

WILMINGTON, NC (WWAY) — The Cameron Art Museum in Wilmington is kicking off the new year with a huge list of programming for children and adults. The events include Martin Luther King holiday programming for kids, homeschooling help, painting classes, readings, yoga, and the return of Jazz@cam.
Here is the complete list:
January 2022
Saturday and Sunday January 15th and 16th
KIDS @ CAM – I Have A Dream Peace Flag weekend
In-Person: Saturday, January 15th or Sunday, January 16th
Cameron Art Museum honors the life and work of civil rights activist Martin Luther King with the “I Have a Dream” Peace Flag Project. We invite the community to take inspiration from King’s iconic speech from 1963 and think deeply about our own hopes and dreams for ourselves, our city, our nation, and the world. These dreams will be written on squares of cloth, emblematic of the peace prayer flags created for centuries in Tibet. Your peace flag will be included in a community installation that will be displayed around the CAM pond. Together, these flags represent our collective desire for racial unity, community healing, and peace.
Packages for classes will be available. Please check our website for registration and participation details, or email education@cameronartmuseum.org to find out ways to involve your students!
Sunday, January 16
2 pm
Members: $16 Nonmembers: $20 Students: $12
USCT Public Programs Series: Mary D. Williams
Join us as musician, educator, and historian Mary D. Williams explores the legacy of the USCT through song. Williams has performed and provided her voice to the soundtrack of Blood Done Sign My Name (February 2010). She has also performed at the North Carolina State Capitol and has been featured on Dick Gordon’s The Story, as well as on National Public Radio. Williams is both a scholar and a musician, whose breathtaking voice takes listeners on a journey through time.
Tuesdays, January 18 – February 8
10am – 12pm
Homeschool Tuesdays
Instructor: Renato Abbate
CAM member price: $108; non-member: $120
This clay class will cover all the basic hand building techniques: pinch, coil, and slab. Students will also discuss 3-D design elements as well as bisque and glaze firing.
Tuesdays, January 18 – February 22
10am – 1pm
Principles of Drawing
Instructor: Todd Carignan
CAM member price: $234; non-member price: $260
The foundation of all representational art is drawing. This class covers how to start a drawing, measuring, mark-making, arranging your subject and lighting, creating texture and depth.
Tuesday, January 18 – February 8
4pm – 5:30pm
Create a Story
Instructor: Carolyn Faulkner
CAM member price: $85.50; non-member: $95
Draw an outline using your favorite bird, insect, animal or whatever you choose. Even an anime character that you create! Then draw a story inside using designs and/or memories. This can be make believe or something personal you wish to express. You will then color with markers or colored pencil. Your story can be hidden, by attaching another cutout layer (such as a wing on the bird). It will be like opening a book! We will continue to explore more pieces and movement on your art as time permits.
Wednesday, January 19
9 – 10 am
Gentle Yoga with Steve Unger
Donation $5
Wednesday, January 19
1:30 pm
Public Tour
Free with admission
Wednesday, January 19
Capturing our Colorful Coastal Skies
Instructor: Carolyn Faulkner
CAM member price: $153; non-member: $170
Living in coastal Carolina you most likely have witnessed the variety of skies; from brilliant sunrises/sunsets to threatening thunder skies and everything in between. This course will provide you with the basic concepts of achieving some of those classic features found in our colorful skies. In this class you will learn the balance between soft and hard edges while creating beautiful multi-colored sunrises, sunsets, and storm clouds, using acrylic paints. This course will provide you with the confidence to be bold with your brush and colors as you softly blend colors to achieve that memorable look. Some key features of this course are understanding that nothing is truly white in the sky and the use of a variety of colors becomes an asset. Both sky and clouds have some of the softest edges found in nature. A balance between soft and hard edges are important to the painter to describe the volume of the clouds and their translucency.
Thursday, January 20
All Day
Member Preview of Confluence
Member tours at 11:00 am, 1:00 pm, 5:00 pm, and 7:00 pm
Friday, January 21
Public Opening of Confluence
11:00 am Gallery Talk with Artist Gene Felice
CAM Member $15/ NonMember $20
Thursday, January 20
10am – 4pm
Watercolor Fresh Market workshop
Instructor: Janice Castiglione
CAM member price: $171; non-member: $190
Spend two days painting still lives. There’s something to be said about painting from life and having it right in front of you. Each participant will be asked to bring in a fresh fruit or vegetable to add to existing backdrops. What fun! On Day Two, we will change places to work on new compositions, so bring a camera.
Educators Night
Thursday, January 20th
4pm to 7pm
FREE for teachers
Spend a fun and relaxing evening at CAM with free admission during an exclusive event for educators and view our new exhibitions. Docents in the galleries will answer your questions and provide information about the exhibitions. Our Educators Night will provide information and materials about tours, workshops, and other free resources for area educators. All educators and administrators – from Pre-K to College – welcome and encouraged to attend and explore fun ways to bring art into your classroom and spark creativity in your students.
Thursdays, January 20 – February 24
6 – 9pm
Thursday Night Clay
Instructor: Renato Abbate
CAM member price: $225; nonmember: $250
A fun class for all skill levels. Make your own custom plates or mugs. Work on some wild sculpture. Explore how clay can work for you and gain a new appreciation for handmade pottery.
Gallery Talk: Antoinette Vogt
Saturday, January 22
1pm-2pm
Artist Toni Vogt will discuss the prints by Willy Cole in the Shadow We Create exhibition. His printing process is akin to a collagraph, where found objects are used to create a printing plate. By using ironing boards, Cole finds a new means to explore a familiar motif.
Antoinette Angela Vogt received a B.F.A. with a concentration in Drawing from the State University of New York at Purchase and a Master of Architecture from New Jersey Institute of Technology. She worked in Architecture for several years while teaching drawing at night through Wake Technical Community College in Raleigh, NC. After moving to Norman, Oklahoma in 2011, she began volunteering at Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art assisting in the classroom for their educational programs. Antoinette also taught drawing at a small art school in Norman before moving on to teach Drawing and Art Appreciation at Oklahoma City Community College.
Sunday, January 23
2 pm
Reading: Jason Mott, Hell of a Book, winner of the 2021 National Book Award
CAM members $10/ Nonmembers: $15
Free for students
Admission includes entry to the galleries
***2021 NATIONAL BOOK AWARD WINNER***
Winner of the 2021 Sir Walter Raleigh Award for Fiction
Longlisted for the 2022 Carnegie Medal Fiction, the 2021 Joyce Carol Oates Prize and the 2021 Aspen Words Literary Prize
A Read With Jenna Today Show Book Club Pick!
One of Washington Post‘s 50 Notable Works of Fiction | One of Philadelphia Inquirer‘s Best Books of 2021 | One of Shelf Awareness’s Top Ten Fiction Titles of the Year | One of TIME Magazine’s 100 Must-Read Books | One of NPR.org’s “Books We Love” | EW’s “Guide to the Biggest and Buzziest Books of 2021” | One of the New York Public Library’s Best Books for Adults | One of Entertainment Weekly‘s 15 Books you Need to Read This June | On Entertainment Weekly’s “Must List” | One of The NY Post‘s Best Summer Reading books | One of GMA’s 27 Books for June | One of USA Today‘s 5 Books Not to Miss | One of Fortune‘s 21 Most Anticipated Books Coming out in the Second Half of 2021 | One of The Root‘s PageTurners: It’s Getting Hot in Here | One of Real Simple‘s Best New Books to Read in 2021 |One of The Philadelphia Inquirer‘s Best of 2021
Join National Book Award Winner Jason Mott for a reading from Hell of a Book. Hell of a Book is an astounding work of fiction from a New York Times bestselling author Jason Mott, always deeply honest, at times electrically funny, that goes to the heart of racism, police violence, and the hidden costs exacted upon Black Americans, and America as a whole. Jason Mott has published four novels. His first novel, The Returned, was a New York Times bestseller and was turned into a TV series that ran for two seasons. He has a BFA in Fiction and an MFA in Poetry, both from the University of North Carolina at Wilmington. His poetry and fiction have appeared in various literary journals, and his most recent novel, Hell of a Book, was named the winner of the National Book Award for Fiction, 2021.
Wednesday, January 26
9 – 10 am
Gentle Yoga with Steve Unger
Donation $5
Wednesday, January 26
1:30 pm
Public Tour
Free with admission
Thursday, January 27
10 am – 11 am
Art Explorers with Airlie Gardens
Thursday, January 27
10am – 1pm
The Power of Pastels Returns to CAM!
Instructor: Jerri Greenberg
CAM member price: $171; non-member: $190
Come along and explore the sheer joy of painting in pastels, learn to use different brands, softness, papers, and lighting to make the “ordinary EXTRAordinary”. Each week we will work from a still life setup or a model, to expand your repertoire and your comfort zones, working with this wonderful, immediate medium.
Thursday, January 27
6pm – 8:30pm
Art Buzz- Mixed Media Fashion Illustration
Instructor: Jennifer Gironda
CAM member price: $45; non-member: $50
Join us for a fashion sketching session featuring mixed media collage materials. We will work from various images from fashion magazines (feel free to bring images from YOUR favorite runway looks!) and we will go over how to do a quick croquis and then add the garments using a variety of 2D collage materials. An assortment of papers and adhesives will be available, but please feel free to bring any scrap papers, magazine pages or other materials for your looks!
Thursday, January 27
7 pm
Exhibitions After Dark: Gallery Talk with Zedrick Applin
Learn about Stephen Hayes’s exhibition Voices of Future’s Past from the unique perspective of community member Zedrick Applin, Program Manager, Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Community Involvement at nCino. Join Zedrick for this interaction conversation and grab dinner and a cocktail from CAM Café before or after. Free with admission.
Fridays, January 28 – March 4
10am – 12pm
Interactive color
Instructor: Lois DeWitt
CAM member price: $153; non-member: $170
Interaction of Color by Josef Albers was published by Yale University in 1963. A seminal study, it provided new perspectives on color and how it is perceived visually. Through a series of visual projects using Color-aid papers, students develop new cognitive and visual skills towards seeing and analyzing the perception of color. These skills can transfer easily to other artistic skills like painting, drawing and printmaking. Keeping close to Alber’s instruction and projects, this six-week course leads students through a series of fascinating, unique and informative color theory using Color-aid and found papers.
Saturday, January 29
11– 4pm
Memory Jar – Capturing Your Past through Narrative and Assemblage
Instructor: Fritzi Huber and Dina Greenberg
CAM member price: $72; non-member: $80
Why is it so difficult to throw away all the “stuff” we accumulate? Perhaps these objects carry meaning beyond simple explanation. In this five-hour workshop: (1) We’ll first use (your chosen) objects to spark a brief work of creative writing: poetry, prose, or hybrid (2) create a three-dimensional “memory jar” to capture the meaning of your treasures.
February 2022
Wednesday, February 2 – 23
6pm – 8pm
VIRTUAL- Winter Words on Paper – Telling our Stories in Memoir
Instructor: Dina Greenberg
CAM member price: $108; non-member price: $120
You, dear writer, are uniquely qualified to tell the stories of your past, present, and perhaps even an imagined future. This creative writing workshop in memoir for adult writers is open to community participants with varying degrees of writing expertise. The workshop follows a traditional format where group members critique one another’s work with the instructor’s guidance. Literature and craft articles will also be presented for discussion. The goal is to instill respect and compassion in the critique process while helping participants improve their writing and literary analysis.
Thursdays, February 3 – March 10
4:30 – 6:30pm
Foundations of Drawing: Teen and Young Adult
Instructor: Antoinette Vogt
CAM member price: $148.50; non-member: $165
Learn how to draw realistically through the study of still life. Students will develop drawing skills by understanding and improving ability to see objects in space to better represent them on the page. Learn how to see and draw objects in proportion and understand perspective. Topics covered will include working with line; blind and modified contour drawing; seeing and drawing negative space (the space around objects); visual perspective (perceiving angles using sighting technique); proportion (objects in relations to one another).
Friday, February 4th
12pm
‘Resilience’ Community Screening
View the award-winning documentary ‘Resilience: The Biology of Stress and the Science of Hope’. The film screens in our spacious reception hall from 12 PM to 1 PM, followed by an optional brief discussion with other community members. Learn about the New Hanover County Resiliency Task Force. https://www.nhcbouncesback.org/
The CAM offers free screenings of ‘Resilience’ on the first Friday of each month (unless there is a holiday and then it moves to the second Friday). Feel free to grab lunch at the CAM café, or bring your own lunch!
No fee and no registration necessary.
Fridays, February 4 – 25
1pm – 3pm
Introduction to Ikebana
Instructor: Karen Chevrotee
CAM member price: $117; non-member: $130
IKEBANA, the Art of Japanese Flower Arranging. Originally used in Temples, simple, elegant, at once meditative. Following prescribed rules to create Beauty for your home or office with natural flowers, leaves and branches.
Friday, February 4
8-9am
All Levels Flow Yoga with Kim Gargiulo
Saturday & Sunday, February 5 – 6
10am – 4pm & noon – 4pm
Rock, Paper Stitches – Joomchi & Embroidery – Virtual
CAM member price: $144; non-member: $160
‘Rock’ two slow-process crafts in one unique class! Day 1 will concentrate on learning an ancient Korean paper craft to create a ‘felted’ paper called joomchi. Joomchi utilizes layers of thin hanji papers that, through agitation and manipulation, create a sturdy piece that can be used alone or in other artistic endeavors. One such endeavor will be achieved on Day 2. Taking the previous day’s joomchi pieces, you’ll use simple hand stitches for mark making, to add found objects, or to stitch several joomchi together for a larger, dramatic piece of finished paper art. (This is not a paper making class.)
Thursday, February 10
7pm-8pm
Exhibitions After Dark: Gallery Talk with Cedric Harrison
Cedric Harrison, a Wilmington native, is the founder of both Support the Port and wilmingtoNColor. Harrison has dedicated his professional career to supporting and creating opportunities for economic growth and advancement for African Americans in the Wilmington area. He is a local historian (in his own right) and passionate about the rich history of African Americans in Wilmington, NC.
Due to his impactful efforts and work, Harrison has earned several accolades and much recognition in this space. Most recently, Harrison was a recipient of the 40 under 40 award presented by StarNews meds and Wilmington Chamber of Commerce – an award which recognizes professionals who are high performers in their field.
In 2019, Harrison was selected out of over 400 applicants to be part of the inaugural cohort of the All for NC Fellows. Since the fellowship, Harrison has seized the opportunity to continue his journey of bringing transformational change to his local community.
Cedric Harrison also had the opportunity to deliver his first TEDx talk in 2019 at the TEDx Airlie event in Wilmington, NC. His speech, Bridging the Racial Gap of Socio-Economics, provided viewers with a compelling history lesson on Wilmington in conversation with his personal experiences and journey.
Friday, February 11
8-9am
All Levels Flow Yoga with Kim Gargiulo
Saturday, February 12 & February 19
10 – 1pm
Collagraph Printmaking Workshop
Instructor: Antoinette Vogt
CAM member price: 81; non-member: $90
A two-day workshop to learn the art of collagraph printmaking using plates created by collage. In this workshop students will create printing plates by gluing elements onto the printing surface to create an image. Students are asked to gather collage supplies ahead of time and bring them to the first-class session. Collage items should not be more than 1/8″ thick and can include scraps of cardboard; textured item such as sandpaper, fabric, burlap or lace; string or twine, leaves. seeds, buttons, etc. Students will create their plates during the first session and print them during the second session.
Saturday, February 12
1pm – 2:30pm
CAM Members $20/ Nonmembers $25
Book Buzz- Women Who Misbehave
Instructor: Sayantani Dasgupta with Heather Wilson
Join author Sayantani Dasgupta for a discussion of her new novel, “Women Who Misbehave”. Dasgupta states, “Well-behaved or not, woman or not, each of our lives is made up of stories. How you tell it is where the art lies. Each of us lives through historic moments every day, and ends up with thousands of stories. Now who gets to tell stories, whose stories are valued and heard is another matter altogether.” Registration includes a glass of wine or sparkling water. Studio dinner and half-priced bottles of wine available from the CAM Cafe.
Sayantani Dasgupta has taught creative writing in the United States, India, Italy, and Mexico. She is an essayist, a short story writer, and the author of Fire Girl: Essays On India, America, & The In-Between- a finalist for the 2016 Foreword Indies Award for Essays- and the chapbook The House Of Nails: Memories Of A New Delhi Childhood. Born in Calcutta and raised in New Delhi, Sayantani received a BA in History from St. Stephen’s College, Delhi, an MA in Medieval History from Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, and an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Idaho.
Saturday, February 12
11am – 2pm
Woven Hand built Ceramic Basket
Instructor: Shannon Gehen
CAM member price: $50; non-member: $55
Learn how to make a woven ceramic basket, combining the tradition of basket weaving with the ease of a glazed surface for your kitchen, coffee table, or special event.
Sunday, February 13
WSO Sunday Concert Series
2-3pm
Thursday, February 17
Jazz@ CAM
6:30-8:00pm
$25 for CAM and CFJS members, $30 for non-members, $15 for students and military
The John Brown Quintet
The multi-talented John Brown brings his quintet to the CAM on February 3. The performance is part of our ongoing concert series, which begins at 6:30 PM.
A successful bassist, composer, educator and actor, John currently serves as Vice Provost for the Arts at Duke University. He has a long history of performance excellence. At the age of 13, he began performing with the Fayetteville Symphony Orchestra. He was playing Principal Bass with that orchestra and performing with the Florence Symphony in South Carolina while still in high school.
John has performed in the United States and abroad with artists that include Wynton Marsalis, Ellis Marsalis, Delfeayo Marsalis, Elvin Jones, Nnenna Freelon, Diahann Carroll, Rosemary Clooney, Nell Carter, Lou Donaldson, Slide Hampton, Nicholas Payton, Frank Foster, Larry Coryell, Cedar Walton, Fred Wesley and Mark Whitfield. He also has a Grammy nomination for his performance and co-writing on Nnenna Freelon’s 1996 Concord release, Shaking Free. His extensive experience includes performances at notable venues like Carnegie Hall, the Kennedy Center, the Blue Note, Blues Alley, and the Hollywood Bowl and at major jazz festivals like the Playboy Jazz Festival, the JVC Jazz Festival, the Montreal Jazz Festival, the Free Jazz Festival (Brazil) and Jazz e Vienne (France).
For more information on any of these events click here.

WILMINGTON, NC (WWAY) — The Cameron Art Musuem’s Floating Lantern Ceremony is Sunday, January 9 on the museum’s grounds.
This year it returns to an in-person event at the Reflection Pond. It is called an expression of remembrance, reflection, and gratitude.
CAM admission lets you into all the indoor exhibitions, but the Lantern Ceremony is free. There will be live music near the pond, hot chocolates, beverages, and light food service from the CAM Cafe.
Lantern sales are happening now for you to decorate for $12 at the CAM Museum Shop. The ceremony is from 4 – 7pm.
Click here for more information.

BOLIVIA, NC (WWAY) — Country music megastars Shenandoah will bring ‘The Every Road Tour’ to Brunswick Community College’s Odell Williamson Auditorium on January 15.
Led by Marty Raybon’s distinctive vocals, the group is celebrated for hits like “Two Dozen Roses,” “Church on Cumberland Road,” and the Grammy winning “Somewhere in the Vicinity of the Heart.” The band’s latest album includes collaborations with Blake Shelton, Dierks Bentley, Lady A, and Brad Paisley.
The stop in Bolivia comes just days before the band returns to the Grand Ole Opry stage on January 21.
Tickets are available by clicking here.

RUTHERFORD COUNTY, NC (WWAY) — Two people including a state highway patrol trooper were killed in a traffic crash Monday night.
The accident occurred around 8:58 p.m. in Boiling Springs near the intersection of High Shoals Church Road and Goodes Grove Church Road.
Trooper John S. Horton had pulled over a driver and both of were standing alongside the road prior to the deadly crash.
The trooper’s brother, Trooper James N. Horton, also responded to the scene to assist. According to the North Carolina State Highway Patrol, Horton collided with his brother’s patrol vehicle striking Trooper John Horton and the detained driver.
Trooper John Horton was taken to a hospital in Spartanburg, SC, where he later died from his injuries. He was a 15-year veteran assigned to Rutherford County.
The detained driver died at the scene and the highway patrol has not released that person’s identity at this time.
Trooper James Horton was treated for minor injuries at a local hospital and released.
“Our hearts are broken with the loss of our friend and our brother, Trooper John Horton” said Colonel Freddy L. Johnson Jr., commander of the State Highway Patrol. “For all involved in this tragic event, the coming days will undoubtedly be difficult but we are committed to stand alongside with them with our thoughts, prayers and unwavering support.”
The North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation is investigating the crash along with assistance from the NC State Highway Patrol Collision Reconstruction Unit.

LOS ANGELES (AP) — John Madden, the Hall of Fame coach turned broadcaster whose exuberant calls combined with simple explanations provided a weekly soundtrack to NFL games for three decades, died Tuesday morning, the league said. He was 85.
The NFL said he died unexpectedly and did not detail a cause.
Madden gained fame in a decade-long stint as the coach of the renegade Oakland Raiders, making it to seven AFC title games and winning the Super Bowl following the 1976 season. He compiled a 103-32-7 regular-season record, and his .759 winning percentage is the best among NFL coaches with more than 100 games.
But it was his work after prematurely retiring as coach at age 42 that made Madden truly a household name. He educated a football nation with his use of the telestrator on broadcasts; entertained millions with his interjections of “Boom!” and “Doink!” throughout games; was an omnipresent pitchman selling restaurants, hardware stores and beer; became the face of “Madden NFL Football,” one of the most successful sports video games of all-time; and was a best-selling author.
Most of all, he was the preeminent television sports analyst for most of his three decades calling games, winning an unprecedented 16 Emmy Awards for outstanding sports analyst/personality, and covering 11 Super Bowls for four networks from 1979-2009.
“People always ask, are you a coach or a broadcaster or a video game guy?” he said when was elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. “I’m a coach, always been a coach.”
He started his broadcasting career at CBS after leaving coaching in great part because of his fear of flying. He and Pat Summerall became the network’s top announcing duo. Madden then helped give Fox credibility as a major network when he moved there in 1994, and went on to call prime-time games at ABC and NBC before retiring following Pittsburgh’s thrilling 27-23 win over Arizona in the 2009 Super Bowl.
“I am not aware of anyone who has made a more meaningful impact on the National Football League than John Madden, and I know of no one who loved the game more,” Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said in a statement.
Burly and a little unkempt, Madden earned a place in America’s heart with a likable, unpretentious style that was refreshing in a sports world of spiraling salaries and prima donna stars. He rode from game to game in his own bus because he suffered from claustrophobia and had stopped flying. For a time, Madden gave out a “turducken” — a chicken stuffed inside a duck stuffed inside a turkey — to the outstanding player in the Thanksgiving game that he called.
“Nobody loved football more than Coach. He was football,” NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said in a statement. “He was an incredible sounding board to me and so many others. There will never be another John Madden, and we will forever be indebted to him for all he did to make football and the NFL what it is today.”
When he finally retired from the broadcast booth, leaving NBC’s “Sunday Night Football,” colleagues universally praised Madden’s passion for the sport, his preparation, and his ability to explain an often-complicated game in down-to-earth terms.
“No one has made the sport more interesting, more relevant and more enjoyable to watch and listen to than John,” play-by-play announcer Al Michaels said at the time.
For anyone who heard Madden exclaim “Boom!” while breaking down a play, his love of the game was obvious.
“For me, TV is really an extension of coaching,” Madden wrote in “Hey, Wait a Minute! (I Wrote a Book!).”
“My knowledge of football has come from coaching. And on TV, all I’m trying to do is pass on some of that knowledge to viewers.”
Madden was raised in Daly City, California. He played on both the offensive and defensive lines for Cal Poly in 1957-58 and earned his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from the school.
Madden was chosen to the all-conference team and was drafted by the Philadelphia Eagles, but a knee injury ended his hopes of a pro playing career. Instead, Madden got into coaching, first at Hancock Junior College and then as defensive coordinator at San Diego State.
Al Davis brought him to the Raiders as a linebackers coach in 1967, and Oakland went to the Super Bowl in his first year in the pros. He replaced John Rauch as head coach after the 1968 season at age 32, beginning a remarkable 10-year run.
With his demonstrative demeanor on the sideline and disheveled look, Madden was the ideal coach for the collection of castoffs and misfits that made up those Raiders teams.
“Sometimes guys were disciplinarians in things that didn’t make any difference. I was a disciplinarian in jumping offsides; I hated that,” Madden once said. “Being in bad position and missing tackles, those things. I wasn’t, ‘Your hair has to be combed.’”
The Raiders responded.
“I always thought his strong suit was his style of coaching,” quarterback Ken Stabler once said. “John just had a great knack for letting us be what we wanted to be, on the field and off the field. … How do you repay him for being that way? You win for him.”
And boy, did they ever. Many years, the only problem was the playoffs.
Madden went 12-1-1 in his first season, losing the AFL title game 17-7 to Kansas City. That pattern repeated itself during his tenure; the Raiders won the division title in seven of his first eight seasons, but went 1-6 in conference title games during that span.
Still, Madden’s Raiders played in some of the sport’s most memorable games of the 1970s, games that helped change rules in the NFL. There was the “Holy Roller” in 1978, when Stabler purposely fumbled forward before being sacked on the final play. The ball rolled and was batted to the end zone before Dave Casper recovered it for the winning touchdown against San Diego.
The most famous of those games went against the Raiders in the 1972 playoffs at Pittsburgh. With the Raiders leading 7-6 and 22 seconds left, the Steelers had a fourth-and-10 from their 40. Terry Bradshaw’s desperation pass deflected off either Oakland’s Jack Tatum or Pittsburgh’s Frenchy Fuqua to Franco Harris, who caught it at his shoe tops and ran in for a TD.
In those days, a pass that bounced off an offensive player directly to a teammate was illegal, and the debate continues to this day over which player it hit. The catch, of course, was dubbed the “Immaculate Reception.”
Oakland finally broke through with a loaded team in 1976 that had Stabler at quarterback; Fred Biletnikoff and Cliff Branch at receiver; tight end Dave Casper; Hall of Fame offensive linemen Gene Upshaw and Art Shell; and a defense that included Willie Brown, Ted Hendricks, Tatum, John Matuszak, Otis Sistrunk and George Atkinson.
The Raiders went 13-1, losing only a blowout at New England in Week 4. They paid the Patriots back with a 24-21 win in their first playoff game and got over the AFC title game hump with a 24-7 win over the hated Steelers, who were crippled by injuries.
Oakland won it all with a 32-14 Super Bowl romp against Minnesota.
“Players loved playing for him,” Shell said. “He made it fun for us in camp and fun for us in the regular season. All he asked is that we be on time and play like hell when it was time to play.”
Madden battled an ulcer the following season, when the Raiders once again lost in the AFC title game. He retired from coaching at age 42 after a 9-7 season in 1978.
Survivors include his wife, Virginia, and two sons, Joseph and Michael. John and Virginia Madden’s 62nd wedding anniversary was two days before his death.

WILMINGTON, NC (WWAY) — Cape Fear Public Utility Authority will be closed for New Year’s Eve on Friday, December 31.
The Customer Service Centers at 235 Government Center Drive and 305 Chestnut Street will reopen for regular business at 8am Monday, January 3.
Customers may manage their accounts using the Interactive Voice-Response system by calling 910-332-6550 or online via the Customer Self-Service portal by clicking here.
To report a water or sewer emergency during the holiday, call CFPUA’s emergency hotline at 910-332-6565.

WILMINGTON, NC (WWAY) — Nobody won the Powerball or Mega Millions drawings this week, so there a lot of money on the line right now.
Tonight you have a chance to win more than 378 million dollars in the Powerball drawing. It has a cash value of nearly 276 million.
If you don’t win tonight you have another chance on Friday. The Mega Millions Jackpot stands at 187 million dollars. It has a cash value of more than 134 million.
Your chances of winning are estimated to be about 1 in nearly 14 million.

WILMINGTON, NC (WWAY) — The holidays can be difficult for military members, veterans, and military families. Festive events can trigger feelings of loneliness, isolation, grief, survivor’s guilt, and sadness. Large crowds and loud noises can bring on PTSD symptoms.
Coastal Horizons and the nonprofit Save A Vet Now (SAVN) are working to help veterans and military members get outpatient treatment services. SAVN has a special account to cover any co-pay or self-pay costs for treatment at its Brunswick, New Hanover, or Pender outpatient locations.
Coastal Horizons offers services to promote healthier lives, stronger families and safer communities. Telemental Health Therapist and veteran Justin Gibson says “there is no need for them to ‘go it alone.’ Help is just a phone call away.”
If you need help reach out to Coastal Horizons at the following numbers:
- New Hanover County 910-343-0145
- Brunswick County 910-754-4515
- Pender County 910-259-0668
For immediate help call Mobile Crisis at 1-866-437-1821.
The National Suicide Prevention Lifeline is 1-800-273-8255.
WILMINGTON, NC (WWAY) — The Saint Nicholas Foundation is spreading cheer near and far to make sure no child or elderly person is forgotten at the holidays. The foundation gives toys and gifts to more than 500 people in six states.
Founder Nicholas Newell was born on Christmas day and is lovingly referred to as St. Nick. The organization says it’s goal is to “Spread holiday cheer near and far. Making sure no child or elder in need is forgotten. Everyone makes our nice list.”
Newell says the pandemic changed how things were done the past two years but now he is “happy that we can at least bring them gifts.” He adds that he “started this organization informally 8 years ago asking family and friends to donate so I could purchase stuffed animals for kids in hospitals. In 2018 we expanded to those in assisted living facilities.”
The foundation is accepting donations in various ways. You can donate through Facebook, Instagram, Amazon, and Corning Credit Union as well as other options.
Learn all you options by visiting here.

SOUTHPORT, NC (WWAY) — It’s a candy cane Christmas in Southport! The Southport Garden Club displaying dozens of handmade candy canes in Keziah Park as part of Winterfest and to support a more beautiful and green city.
The Candy Cane Garden Party kicks off at 6 p.m. Tuesday at Keziah Park in downtown Southport. It features candy canes decorated by local businesses, organizations, and individuals. The event is free and includes hot chocolate and entertainment.
Other Winterfest events this week:
- Annual Cookie Contest, December 8, 3 – 5:30pm, Community Building
- Supper with Santa’s Elves, December 8, 5-7pm, 209 Atlantic Ave., beside Southport Gym
- Christmas movie ‘Polar Express,’ December 9, dusk, Garrison Lawn
- Costumed Holiday History Tour, December 10, 3pm, 204 E. Moore St.
- Caroling with The Sea Notes, December 10, 5:30pm, Franklin Square Park Stage
- Light Up the Night Christmas Parade, December 10, 6:30pm, Howe St.
- Winter Craft Festival, December 11, 9am – 4pm, Franklin Square Park
- Winterfest Performing Arts, December 11, 9am – 4pm, Franklin Square Park
- Book Sale, December 11, 9am – noon, 727 N. Howe St.
- Santa’s Workshop, December 11, 10 – 11am, 209 Atlantic Ave., beside Southport Gym
- Southport Christmas Flotilla, December 11, 7pm, Southport Waterfront
For more information click here.
WILMINGTON, NC (WWAY) — Family Promise of the Lower Cape Fear looks to a world in which every family has a home, a livelihood, and the chance to build a better future. It is celebrating 25 years of providing case management, transitional housing, and emergency shelter to families in need.
The 25th Anniversary Celebration Low Country Boil has a happy hour, dinner, and entertainment from comedian Orlando Jones.
Board member Karon Tunis says the event is about “educating people about Family Promise and letting them know that we have been active in the Lower Cape Fear for 25 years.”
The event is at Plaza on Princess in downtown Wilmington Tuesday, December 7, 2021, and kicks off at 6pm.
For tickets or more information click here.

WILMINGTON, NC (WWAY) — The 2022 North Carolina Azalea Festival has a signature event before spring arrives. The 2022 Chef’s Showcase will bring together five chefs from around the state to the Hotel Ballast in January.
The Showcase is a seated culinary adventure consisting of a 5-course meal with fine wine pairings, light entertainment, high-end silent auction items, and a luxury vacation raffle. Notable chefs from our region (and beyond!) work together to prepare the dishes.
The chefs this year are:
- Sheri Castle, host of The Key Ingredient with Sheri Castle, on PBS North Carolina
- Tiesha Lewis, the 2021 North Carolina Restaurant & Lodging Association Chef Showdown Pastry Chef of the Year
- Saif Rahman, the 2021 North Carolina Restaurant & Lodging Association Chef Showdown Chef of the Year
- Nathan Sims, Hotel Ballast Executive Chef
- Fabio Capparelli, Bluewater Grill Executive Chef
The event is Saturday, January 29, 2022, from 1 – 4pm at The Hotel Ballast in downtown Wilmington.
For more information and tickets click here.
OCEAN ISLE, NC (WWAY)– In the weekend of having faith, one restaurant gives back hope to a family that lost so much.
On Saturday, “Pirate’s Deck” a local restaurant in Ocean Isle, helped raise a fundraiser event for the Presnell family.
Last month, Dustin Presnell and Jessica Clarke lost their two youngest children, 3-year-old Paisley and 1-year-old Landon, in the fire on Grist Creek Wynd.
Dustin and the oldest daughter, Letty Moore, both suffered third-degree burns and were sent to the North Carolina Jaycee Burn Center at UNC Chapel Hill.
Jessica Clarke escaped uninjured.
One month later, the family is still trying to get back on their feet. With the help of the community, and “Pirate’s Deck”, they are receiving support and donations to help them fund their new home.
From 1-4pm, The restaurant held raffles, silent auctions, sold food, and even sweet treats, to help the family in any way they can. Each dollar earned, went back to the family, in hopes of getting enough to get a new home, and any other thing.
Brooke Cartrette is Dustin Presnell’s sister, and she gives us an update on how they are doing.
“Honestly, their healing has been nothing short of miraculous. The doctors anticipated it was going to be a minimum of two months,” said Cartrette. “My brother was discharged before even the two-week marker, and Letty didn’t even make it to the four-week marker. They have been doing very well. Letty has been walking so well, she is doing great with her occupational therapist.”
After the immense amount of support that Cartrette is seeing, she is now working on her own way to help, by making an organization that helps others. Cartrette says she plans to name it after Paisley and Landon, to honor them.

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The economic fallout from the war with Iran is driving up the cost of buying a home, even as other housing market trends in many parts of the country favor home shoppers this spring.
Mortgage rates have been rising since the war began, as surging energy prices heighten worries about higher inflation, pushing up the yield on U.S. 10-year Treasury bonds, which lenders use as a guide to pricing home loans.
As recently as the last week of February, the average rate on a 30-year mortgage dropped to just under 6%, its lowest level in more than three and a half years. It climbed this week to 6.46%, its highest level in nearly seven months.
The conflict is also injecting more uncertainty into the U.S. economic outlook at a time when the job market is sputtering.
While rates are still down from a year ago, their recent upward trend has already led to a slowdown in mortgage applications. Further increases threaten to put a damper on home sales during what’s traditionally the busiest time of the year for the housing market.
“The war in Iran has seriously complicated the spring buying season,” said Joel Berner, senior economist at Realtor.com. “I expect that many buyers will be put off by rising rates and mounting economic uncertainty, choosing to bide their time rather than jumping on board for a purchase before rates go up.”
Home shoppers who can afford to buy at current mortgage rates this spring are likely to find a more buyer-friendly housing market than this time last year. That means they’ll have more leverage when negotiating with sellers, who in many cases are watching their property go unsold for weeks, potentially making them more willing to lower their initial asking price or offer buyers money for closing costs, repairs or other concessions in order to get a deal done, real estate agents say.
In the Dallas-Fort Worth metro area, lower listing prices and more homes on the market are forcing many sellers to price their home more competitively or consider offering some incentives to land a buyer, said Matthew Crites, an agent with Coldwell Banker Realty.
“It’s been a really good buyer’s market to kind of start the year off with,” he said.
The trends helped give home shopper Anne King a strong hand when she set her sights on a three-bedroom, two-bath ranch-style house in Fort Worth listed at $275,000.
The contract administrator offered $10,000 below the listing price. She also asked that the seller kick in $5,000 toward closing costs. The seller accepted, and later agreed to throw in another $12,000 for repairs after a home inspection revealed roof damage.
“Fortunately for me, the seller was in a position they needed to sell,” said King, 57. The purchase was finalized in late February, just before the start of the conflict in the Middle East.
King had hoped mortgage rates would ease further before she bought the home, but decided it made sense to buy sooner, rather than risk having to compete this spring against more homebuyers who could potentially trigger a bidding war — something she experienced last May when she bought a two-bedroom, two-bath townhouse in Arlington, Texas.
She locked in a 6% rate on her mortgage and plans to refinance to a lower rate whenever rates drop.
“I feel like I got a good deal on this property, and that’s all that matters,” she said.
Home shoppers gain more leverage
While the inventory of homes for sale nationally is still low by historical standards, active listings — a tally that encompasses all homes on the market except those pending a finalized sale — jumped nearly 8% in February from a year earlier, according to data from Realtor.com.
The increase varies across the U.S., with the West, Midwest and South far outpacing the Northeast. Still, some 43 of the 50 largest metro areas had more homes for sale in February than a year earlier, with listings up between 10% and 38.5% in many markets, including Seattle, Indianapolis, Las Vegas and Houston and Denver.
As homes take longer to sell, prices have started falling. The median listing price was down in February from a year earlier in just over half of the nation’s biggest 50 metro areas, including a nearly 9% drop in Austin and Memphis, and declines of more than 5% in Washington D.C., San Diego and Los Angeles.
In another sign that buyers may have the edge negotiating with sellers this spring, an analysis by Redfin estimates that there were about 46% more sellers than prospective buyers in the market nationally in February. That’s up from about 30% a year earlier and represents the largest gap between buyers and sellers on records going back to 2013, according to Redfin.
Miami, Nashville and Austin are among the metro areas where sellers most outnumber buyers, Redfin found.
A buyer’s market, if you can afford it
The U.S. housing market has been in a sales slump since 2022, when mortgage rates began to climb from pandemic-era lows. Sales of previously occupied U.S. homes were essentially flat last year, stuck at a 30-year low. They have remained sluggish so far this year, declining in January and February versus a year earlier.
While the pace of home price growth has slowed or fallen in many metro areas, affordability hurdles remain daunting for many aspiring homebuyers because wage growth has not kept up with home prices.
Consider, the median price of an existing home sold in February was $398,000, according to the National Association of Realtors. That’s nearly five times the median household income. A historic rule of thumb was that homes generally cost three times the household income.
The recent increase in mortgage rates adds slightly to the affordability challenge. On a $400,000 home near downtown Dallas, for example, factoring in a 20% down payment and a 30-year mortgage at 6%, the buyer’s monthly payment would be about $2,248. At a 6.4% rate, that payment would climb to $2,331.
And while mortgage rates are still lower than a year ago, making monthly payments more manageable, rates are still much higher than the sub-3% averages available to homebuyers during most of 2020 and 2021 as the weakened economy dealt with the coronavirus pandemic and its aftermath.
Sellers under pressure
The housing market has cooled considerably since earlier this decade, when rock-bottom mortgage rates set off a frenzy that sent home prices soaring. Back then, it wasn’t uncommon for a home to fetch well above the seller’s asking price after receiving offers from multiple buyers.
While some sellers are still receiving multiple offers now, it’s far from the norm.
Jo Chavez, a Redfin agent in Kansas City, tells clients looking to sell to expect that their home probably won’t sell right away. She also advises them to be “reasonable” with how they price their home.
“We have a lot of sellers who have that idea of like, ‘well, my neighbors sold for this much, and so I think I should price $10,000 above them,’” said Chavez. “And that’s obviously not a logical approach, because there were less sales last year.”
Kansas City is among the few metro areas where the median listing price isn’t falling. It rose 4.1% in February from a year earlier, according to Realtor.com. However, the number of homes on the market soared by nearly 20%.
Gail Sanders and her husband, David, put their four-bedroom, three-bath home in Olathe, Kansas, on the market in late February. But even after hosting a couple of open houses, and after lowering their asking price from $535,000 to $525,000, the couple had yet to receive any offers as March drew to a close.
The couple wants to sell the house and buy a home in another Kansas City suburb closer to their three adult children and grandchildren. But until they find a buyer, those plans are on hold.

(CBS) — President Donald Trump is likely to make leadership changes involving two more top roles at the Justice Department, sources told CBS News on Saturday.
The changes are most likely to affect Associate Attorney General Stanley Woodward, the No. 3 official at the Justice Department and Harmeet Dhillon, the Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division.
Senior officials have discussed promoting Dhillon to one of the top department roles, while demoting Woodward, the sources added. It was unclear if final decisions had been made yet.
The discussions of a possible promotion for Dhillon come shortly after Mr. Trump ousted Attorney General Pam Bondi earlier this week, after frustrations that she had not aggressively pursued criminal charges against his political enemies.
A Justice Department spokesperson declined to comment on personnel matters.
Mr. Trump named Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche as acting attorney general earlier this week. It is unclear whether he will eventually be the permanent replacement. Other front-runners include Lee Zeldin, a former congressman who currently leads the Environmental Protection Agency, CBS previously reported.
Woodward previously served as a defense attorney representing many prominent Trump allies in the past, including White House adviser Peter Navarro, FBI Director Kash Patel and Walt Nauta, who was charged by Special Counsel Jack Smith in the classified documents case.
He also represented Kelly Meggs, one of the Oath Keepers who was convicted for seditious conspiracy in connection with the Jan. 6 Capitol attack, before Mr. Trump later commuted his sentence.
He has come under attack from some of Mr. Trump’s allies, notably far-right influencer Laura Loomer, over his wife’s support for progressive causes.
The Associate Attorney General position oversees the Civil Rights Division, the Antitrust Division, the Civil Division, and the Environment and Natural Resources Division, as well as the department’s grant-making offices and the trustee program.
Dhillon currently serves as Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division and is known as a staunch loyalist to the president.
The Civil Rights Division has undergone a major shift under Dhillon’s leadership. More than 75% of its attorneys left over the past year, with most of them accepting buy-outs or early retirements, some due to concerns over new mission statements she issued for the office.
Dhillon has hewed closely to Mr. Trump’s policy directives, taking actions that have included launching investigations into diversity, equity and inclusion policies at universities, filing lawsuits to prohibit transgender athletes from playing on girls’ and women’s sports teams, and litigating against dozens of states in an effort to access unredacted copies of their voter registration lists.
She also created a new section within the division that is focused on gun rights. Last year, she upended efforts to reach consent decrees with police departments in Minneapolis and Louisville, after previous Biden-era investigations found both departments were engaged in systemic constitutional abuses.
In an open letter last year, more than 200 former Civil Rights Division attorneys alleged Dhillon was destroying the Civil Rights Division, an office created by the 1957 Civil Rights Act. The law was originally enacted to help undo discriminatory Jim Crow racial segregation and protect the voting rights of Black people.

(CBS) — A federal judge on Friday halted efforts by the Trump administration to collect data that proves higher education institutions aren’t considering race in admissions.
The ruling from U.S. District Court Judge F. Dennis Saylor IV in Boston granting the preliminary injunction follows a lawsuit filed earlier this month by a coalition of 17 Democratic state attorneys general. It will only apply to public universities in plaintiffs’ states.
The federal judge said the federal government likely has the authority to collect the data, but the demand was rolled out to universities in a “rushed and chaotic” manner.
“The 120-day deadline imposed by the President led directly to the failure of NCES (National Center for Education Statistics) to engage meaningfully with the institutions during the notice-and-comment process to address the multitude of problems presented by the new requirements,” Saylor wrote.
President Donald Trump ordered the data collection in August after he raised concerns that colleges and universities were using personal statements and other proxies to consider race, which he views as illegal discrimination.
In 2023, the Supreme Court ruled against the use of affirmative action in admissions but said colleges could still consider how race has shaped students’ lives if applicants share that information in their admissions essays.
The states argue the data collection risks invading student privacy and leading to baseless investigations of colleges and universities. They also argued that universities have not been given enough time to collect the data.
“The data has been sought in such a hasty and irresponsible way that it will create problems for universities,” a lawyer for the plaintiffs, Michelle Pascucci, told the court, adding that the effort seem was aimed at uncovering unlawful practices.
The Education Department has defended the effort, arguing taxpayers deserve transparency on how money is spent at institutions that receive federal funding.
The administration’s policy echoes settlement agreements the government negotiated with Brown University and Columbia University, restoring their federal research money. The universities agreed to give the government data on the race, grade-point average and standardized test scores of applicants, admitted students and enrolled students. The schools also agreed to be audited by the government and to release admissions statistics to the public.
The National Center for Education Statistics is to collect the new data, including the race and sex of colleges’ applicants, admitted students and enrolled students. Education Secretary Linda McMahon has said the data, which was originally due by March 18, must be disaggregated by race and sex and retroactively reported for the past seven years.
If colleges fail to submit timely, complete and accurate data, the administration has said McMahon can take action under Title IV of the Higher Education Act of 1965, which outlines requirements for colleges receiving federal financial aid for students.
The Trump administration separately has sued Harvard University over similar data, saying it refused to provide admissions records the Justice Department demanded to ensure the school stopped using affirmative action. Harvard has said the university has been responding to the government’s requests and is in compliance with the high court ruling against affirmative action. On Monday, the Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights directed Harvard to comply with the data requests within 20 days for face referral to the U.S. Justice Department.

GRAHAM, WA (CBS) — A 68-year-old man was arrested at a Washington nursing home after being charged with first-degree murder in the 1992 death of his wife.
Janice Randle was found dead in her bed in November 1992, the Pierce County Sheriff’s Office said on social media, with her toddler daughter Katie in a crib nearby. Her estranged husband, James Robert Randle, told police that she had likely overdosed and said she had a history of using painkillers. The couple was going through a divorce and living separately, the sheriff’s office said.
Initially, police investigated the death as a possible overdose. When later autopsy results showed no drugs in her system at the time of death, the case became a homicide investigation, but “only breadcrumbs of information could be pieced together, with nothing substantial to establish probable cause for an arrest,” the sheriff’s office said.
The case remained unsolved until family members came forward with new information, including “witnessed confessions” from Randle, the sheriff’s office said. CBS affiliate KIRO reported that Randle had confessed to killing his wife in conversations with his siblings and one of his children.
“He actually talked to his brother about how he staged the crime scene,” a deputy prosecutor said in court, according to KIRO. “He also confessed to this murder to one of his daughters later on as well. He told her that he had had to put a pillow over his wife Janice’s head and said, with regards to the murder, quote, ‘Just know it was me.'”
The sheriff’s office said the tips and new information “led to a thorough investigation with a new perspective.” The sheriff’s office said it is now believed that Janice Randle “died as a result of a violent struggle” with Randle, and that evidence gathered in the new investigation “contradicted the original account given in 1992.” Police were able to establish probable cause on which to arrest Randle, who was living in a retirement facility in Everett, Washington.
Body camera video shows police arresting Randle, now 68, at the facility. He can be heard asking, “What’s this about?” before being handcuffed and led to a waiting vehicle.
Randle was arraigned on Thursday and pleaded not guilty to a charge of first-degree murder, KIRO reported. He is being held on a $1 million bail, KIRO said. The sheriff’s office said the case “stands as a powerful example of how advancements in technology and investigative practices can bring justice, even decades later.”
Katie Wakin, Janice Randle’s daughter and Randle’s stepdaughter, told KIRO that “no one in our family ever doubted” that Randle was responsible for her mother’s death.
“We just had no way to prove it back then,” Wakin said.
Wakin said she and her siblings, including the sister who was found in the crib near Janice Randle’s body, are still healing from their mother’s death and the new investigation into their father. Wakin told KIRO she plans to attend all court hearings.
“Our mom was taken from her; she has no memories of her. My mom loved her very much. Very, very much,” Wakin said. “She loves (her father), but she knows that he needs to be accountable, and she’s willing to put aside all of that to make sure justice is met and that our mom’s story is told.”

WASHINGTON (AP) — A California dairy producer that health authorities have been investigating amid an ongoing outbreak of E. coli is recalling some of its raw cheese products, after initially refusing to do so.
Raw Farm of Fresno, California, said Thursday it is voluntarily recalling more than a half-dozen varieties of its cheddar cheese made from raw milk. The recalled batches carry expiration dates spanning from May 2026 to September 2026.
Interest in and sales of raw milk have been rising in recent years, fueled by social media and growing support from the Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s Make America Healthy Again movement. Raw milk has not been pasteurized, which kills germs like E. coli, salmonella, listeria and campylobacter.
The Food and Drug Administration began investigating cases of E. coli food poisoning among people who had reportedly consumed the company’s products last month and previously requested a recall.
In an update last week, the FDA said it was conducting an inspection of the company’s facilities but had not found positive testing for E. coli bacteria among the company’s products.
Raw Farm reiterated that point in its announcement Thursday and added that it was conducting its recall “under protest” and in order to chart “a path forward.”
“This voluntary recall is limited to Raw Farm-brand cheddar cheese, and no other products are being voluntarily recalled,” the company said.
The FDA has the authority to order food companies to recall their products when there is a reasonable risk of serious injury or death, but the agency must first give the company the opportunity to voluntarily comply.
The FDA said last week that nine people, including children, have been sickened in the expanding outbreak.
Of eight people interviewed by health officials, seven reported consuming Raw Farm-brand products, according to the FDA. Two people in 2025 reported drinking Raw Farm milk and five people in 2026 said they ate or were served Raw Farm raw cheddar cheese.
Genetic sequencing of E. coli strains from sick people show that they are all closely related, indicating people in the outbreak “share a common source of infection,” the FDA said.
The federal government does not allow the sale of unpasteurized milk across state lines for human consumption. States have widely varying regulations regarding raw milk, with some allowing retail sales in stores and others allowing sale only at farms. Some states allow so-called cowshares, where people pay for milk from designated animals, and some allow consumption only by farm owners, employees or “non-paying guests.”

(AP) — Most travelers flying with United Airlines will pay $10 more to check their luggage, as higher jet fuel costs driven by the war in the Middle East push another major U.S. carrier to increase fees.
The first piece of checked luggage will now cost customers $45 on flights within the United States, Mexico, Canada and Latin America, according to United. A second bag will cost $55.
“This is the first time in two years the airline has raised bag fees,” United said in a statement.
Speaking to investors last month, United CEO Scott Kirby said the rising costs for jet fuel since the conflict began on Feb. 28 had already added roughly $400 million to operating costs. The CEOs for Delta Air Lines and American Airlines reported similar figures.
Some United passengers will still receive a free first checked bag, including co-branded credit card holders, certain loyalty-tier members, active military personnel and travelers in premium cabins. Customers who check bags less than 24 hours before departure will pay an additional $5.
United joins JetBlue, which raised its checked baggage fees earlier this week by $9 for peak travel periods. JetBlue said that charging more for optional services used by select customers helps keep base fares competitive. Like United, it will continue offering a free first checked bag to some customers.
The war, now in its second month, has severely disrupted global oil supplies, particularly near the narrow Strait of Hormuz where a fifth of the world’s oil typically passes. That has caused crude prices to fluctuate wildly, which affects airlines’ operating costs because the fuel their aircraft rely on is refined from crude oil.
Fuel is typically the second biggest expense for airlines after labor.
The average price for a gallon of jet fuel in Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles and New York reached $4.88 on Thursday, up from $2.50 just before the war, according to Argus Media. The energy market intelligence company’s U.S. Jet Fuel Index tracks the average prices across those major hubs.
Airlines are under increasing pressure to find new sources of revenue as fuel costs climb. A number of non-U.S. carriers have already responded by adding fuel surcharges or raising ticket prices. Industry experts say U.S. airlines will boost fares as well, but since they don’t typically rely on fuel surcharges, they’re also expected to pass on higher fuel costs to travelers by raising — or introducing — add-on fees.
United announced another pricing change on Friday that brings the “pay for what you want” approach already standard in economy to its premium cabins. On long-haul international routes, transcontinental U.S. flights and certain Hawaii services, seats in the front cabin will now be divided into three fare types.
At the bottom, a new base fare will carry the lowest upfront price but removes some of the extras that travelers often expect with premium tickets — including advance seat selection and refunds. In practice, that could mean a cheaper entry point to the front cabin but fewer perks.
The middle option, labeled standard, adds back common perks such as seat selection, extra checked bags and the ability to make itinerary changes. At the top end, the flexible tier includes all of those features and is fully refundable, offering the most flexibility for travelers willing to pay more.
United said it plans to introduce the new fare structure in select markets this month and expand it across more routes later this year.

RIVERSIDE, CA (AP) — Crews battled a smoky and fast-growing wildfire Friday in windy Southern California that forced some residents to evacuate and a community college to temporarily close its doors.
The Springs Fire broke out around 11 a.m. Friday and by the evening had grown to about 6.5 square miles (16.8 square kilometers). The cause of the fire east of Moreno Valley in Riverside County is under investigation. It was not immediately known how many households were under evacuation warnings or orders.
With hundreds of people battling the blaze — using helicopters, engines and water tenders — crews started to contain the blaze by Friday night.
The fire was burning in a populated — but not densely so — unincorporated part of Riverside County in a recreational area near the city of Moreno Valley, which has a population of roughly 200,000. The city is 10 miles (16 kilometers) southeast of Riverside and 64 miles (103 kilometers) east of Los Angeles.
“It’s windy out there,” said Maggie Cline De La Rosa, a public information officer for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection in Riverside County.
Alex Izaguirre, a spokesperson for the Cal Fire Riverside County, said the wind is “spreading the smoke,” prompting concerned calls from residents in neighboring cities who can see and smell it.
Moreno Valley College’s main campus was shuttered Friday and Saturday due to the fire impacting the air quality.
“All students, faculty, and staff are being directed to leave campus immediately,” the school said in a post on Instagram.
California U.S. Rep. Raul Ruiz said in a social media post that he was closely monitoring the blaze.
“If you are under an evacuation order, please leave immediately,” he said.
The National Weather Service issued a wind advisory for San Bernardino and Riverside County valleys through Saturday afternoon, with gusts of up to 50 mph (80 kph) expected.
“Tree limbs could be blown down and a few power outages may result,” the advisory read.

PENDER COUNTY, NC (WWAY) — Families across southeastern North Carolina are invited to celebrate Easter at the Tate Farm Easter Extravaganza, happening Saturday in rural western Pender County. The family-friendly event offers an afternoon of entertainment, outdoor activities, and community fun for all ages.
Set on the grounds of Tate Farm, the event features a variety of attractions aimed at creating a memorable experience for both children and adults.
Event highlights include the following:
- Airplane egg drop: More than 1,000 Easter eggs will be released from above in an aerial display.
- Nature trail Easter egg hunt: Children can participate in an egg hunt along a scenic nature trail.
- Live music: The EZ-Livin Band will perform near the pond, providing live entertainment throughout the event.
- Local vendors: Attendees can browse and support a variety of local businesses and artisans.
- Food and treats: A selection of food and refreshments will be available on-site.
Event Schedule:
- 1:30 PM – Gates Open
- 2:00 PM – Easter Egg Hunt
- 4:00 PM – Airplane Egg Drop
- 6:00 PM – Live Band Performance
Organizers describe the event as more than just an Easter gathering—it’s a community celebration designed to bring families together in a fun and welcoming rural setting.
“This is a one-of-a-kind experience for our area,” organizers said. “We’re excited to offer something special where families can spend quality time together and celebrate Easter in a memorable way.”
For additional information, call 910-552-5013.

(CBS) — Three women were taken to the hospital after a bus and vehicle collided in Washington, D.C., sending the bus crashing into a closed restaurant, according to first responders.
It’s not clear what led to the collision. CBS affiliate WUSA reported that the bus, part of Washington, D.C.’s public transit system, hit the vehicle. First responders were dispatched to the site around 7:13 a.m., the D.C. Fire and Emergency Medical Services Department told CBS News.
The restaurant was closed when the bus crashed through its facade, the department said on X. Photos show the front of the bus surrounded by debris. Another image shows a dark-car van with significant damage on the rear driver’s side. A video shows the first responders breaking up the concrete at the restaurant’s entrance to facilitate the bus’s removal.
Four patients were evaluated, the department said on X, and three adult female patients were transported to a local hospital with minor injuries. Metro Transit Police said on X that the bus driver sustained minor injuries. A photo shows one person being wheeled towards an ambulance on a stretcher.
WUSA reported that the restaurant, called Ambar, was empty at the time of the crash, but was set to open for brunch at 9:20 a.m. Ambar serves Balkan food and has two locations in Washington, D.C., one in Virginia, and one in Chicago, Illinois. The crash occurred at the 7th St. & Q St. NW location, according to the department.
Firefighters searched the building as a precaution and secured its utilities, said the D.C. Fire and Emergency Medical Services Department. The department said crews are still working to get the bus out of the building. Once it is removed, the building’s structural integrity will be assessed. An initial evaluation found no significant structural issues, the department told CBS News.
The crash is being investigated by the department and by police, WUSA reported.

PLAINVIEW, NY (ABC NEWS) — Before Stu Goldberg begins his night shift driving for Uber, he pulls out a notebook to read a handwritten list of reminders. “No tickets. Full stops,” he’d scrawled in the book. “Careful backing up. Watch for pedestrians and bikes.”
With a Ph.D in neuropsychology and decades of experience running his own business, Goldberg, 74, didn’t picture chauffeuring strangers around when he retired. But financially, things didn’t go as planned. So he makes the best of his situation shuttling passengers through New York City at night.
“I like the freedom. I like the flexibility. I like meeting people,” Goldberg said. “I like that most of the time I can get, once or twice a day, a good conversation with somebody.”
Goldberg is one of a growing number of Americans who have “unretired” in recent years. After concluding decades-long careers at hospitals, universities and corporations, they returned to the workforce due to insufficient retirement savings, rising living costs and a desire to stay active.
Some are finding gig work, or contract jobs, through apps or digital platforms. Delivering people and parcels, taking care of pets or folding other people’s laundry suits them because they can set their own hours and work, or not, when they choose.
“We’re living longer, so people are working longer because they have to fund those extra years,” said Carly Roszkowski, vice president of financial resilience at the nonprofit organization AARP. “And this concept of retirement for most people as like a cliff or a day they’re working towards really isn’t a reality for most.”
Goldberg wanted to teach after winding down his software and telemarketing company. But he needed to earn more money than what the occasional adjunct professor job teaching statistics would pay.
“Uber came up, and it was not a bad choice for me because I was comfortable driving people,” he said. “I felt it could be a good way to make money and keep most of it.”
About 1 in 5 Americans over age 50 who aren’t retired say they have no retirement savings, according to a survey the AARP conducted in January 2025.
Retirees and employment experts say gig work has advantages and downsides, including limited job protections and wages that may be insufficient to cover on-the-job expenses. Here are some factors to consider.
Barbara Baratta, 72, retired as a pediatric nurse in 2018. But she got restless after a few years and signed up with the pet care app Rover, which connected her to jobs walking dogs and using her nursing skills to administer medications to cats.
The work keeps her active. “I get my steps in and do hill climbing,” she said.
In a leafy New Jersey suburb, Baratta set out to coax Barley, a mix of pit bull, beagle and shepherd, into the afternoon air with a wind chill pushing the temperature down into the 20s.
“Barley, if you turn this way, the wind will be blowing behind you,” she said gently, leading the dog down a wide street.
Baratta likes the physical nature of dog walking. She ran two half-marathons in the past year but notices that “being older and not having knees that are totally great” makes steep or uneven terrain a challenge even for her. She advises people in her age group to be careful about which pets they agree to walk.
“Some dogs are big and strong, which can be an issue, a lesson I learned very early on,” Baratta said. “An 80-pound dog, … they’re going to pull, they’re going to run away.”
Driving can be hard on the back and legs, and the challenge of finding restrooms to use on the go becomes difficult to deal with as you age, Goldberg cautioned.
Baruch Schwartz, 78, was a wedding photographer for decades until the work became too physically demanding to do full-time. He started driving for Uber and Lyft and derives satisfaction from feeling needed. “I feel like I’m on a mission,” he said after taking a passenger home from a kidney dialysis appointment.
Driving for Uber gives Goldberg a chance to meet a variety of people. One night he spoke with a Scottish historian about the movie “Braveheart.” Another night a passenger asked him how to know whether it was the right time to propose to his girlfriend.
“I’m amazed at what people will tell me about their relationships,” Goldberg said.
One of the draws of working for gig platforms is the ability to set your own hours. Baratta’s schedule allowed her to babysit her grandchildren.
Goldberg appreciated the flexibility of setting his own hours when there was a recent death in his family. But between that unplanned trip and a root canal, and no vacation or sick days offered by his job, he went several days without income.
“When that happens, even though you have the flexibility, which you like, and you don’t have to call anybody and say ‘I’m not driving today,’ you still don’t make the money that day. And you’re still paying insurance,” Goldberg said.
Before investing time into gig work, research what percentage the company takes from workers’ earnings.
“The house always wins, so the amount of money you are going to get as a driver or delivery worker is very much controlled by the platform,” said Alexandrea Ravenelle, a sociologist and gig economy researcher at The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. “There are no workplace protections, so if you get injured on the job, if you have any types of problems, if you have a car accident, for instance, you are entirely out of luck.”
Uber maintains commercial auto insurance coverage on behalf of its drivers, although New York City requires drivers to hold that insurance themselves, said Uber spokesman Ryan Thornton.
Goldberg hit three nasty potholes in three weeks, paying $144 each time to replace the tires. He lost money those weeks, despite working, he said.
“I’d say most drivers are not happy with the money that they’re making, unless they’re working more hours than I’m willing to do,” Goldberg said.
LisaKay “LK” Foyle, 64, of Orange, Texas, found a way to maximize her earnings on Poplin, an app which connects her with clients who need help with laundry. She has seniority among workers on the app so chooses to accept express orders, which pay the highest rate, and declines lower-paying jobs.
Foyle marvels at the state of some families’ dirty laundry: “all the socks are inside-out, all the underwear is in the pants, and you’ve got to check every single pocket, or you’re washing marbles or frogs or the snacks they had that day.”
Baratta’s dog-walking income supplements several small pensions and Social Security benefits. She charges $20 for a half-hour walk, not including her driving time to and from the location. Rover keeps about 20%, she said. The $1,000 to $2,000 she makes per month helps pay the bills, she said.
“The dogs and cats are delights,” Baratta said. “I’m not becoming rich doing this, … but I’ve met a lot of great families doing it.”

NEW YORK (ABC NEWS) — Amazon is slapping a 3.5% fuel and logistics surcharge on third-party sellers using its platform starting later this month amid a spike in fuel prices since the war in Iran started.
The temporary charge is effective April 17 for many of the sellers who use Amazon’s fulfillment services, the online behemoth confirmed to The Associated Press in an email Thursday.
“Elevated costs in fuel and logistics have increased the cost of operating across the industry,” Amazon said in the emailed statement.
The Seattle-based company said it has absorbed these increases so far but similar to other major carriers, when costs remain elevated, it implements temporary surcharges to partially recover these costs. It noted the charge is “meaningfully” lower than surcharges applied by other major carriers.
“We remain committed to our selling partners’ success and to maintaining broad selection and low prices for customers,” Amazon added.
Amazon’s fuel and logistics-related surcharge will apply to U.S. and Canadian sellers using its Fulfillment by Amazon option. Starting May 2, the surcharge will take effect with sellers using the Buy with Prime and Multi-Channel Fulfillment options.
Amazon joins a growing list of carriers imposing surcharges to recoup rising energy costs as the Iran war drags on.
United Parcel Service and FedEx have increased their fuel surcharges. The United States Postal Service announced last week it was imposing an 8% fuel surcharge that would apply to packages to be shipped starting April 26. The surcharge would remain in place until Jan. 17 2027, it said.
CAROLINA BEACH, NC (WWAY)– For more than half a century, one Carolina Beach landmark has marked the moment locals and visitors alike know warm season has truly arrived.
Generations have lined up– year after year– drawn by tradition and the promise of a coastal experience that never goes out of style.
Warm sunshine and clear skies marked the arrival of spring at Carolina Beach, where long lines formed Friday evening outside the popular “Britt’s Donut Shop”.
“This place here will bring people to the area. Once they get the food, they eat it and go wherever they want. They got night life, they got the beaches, they also they also have fireworks in the summertime, that start every Thursday night,” said Bill Willis, a Carolina Beach Resident.
The shop, which first opened in 1939 and moved to its current location along Carolina Beach Avenue in 1969, has been owned by the Nivens family for more than 50 years. Over the decades, it has built a national reputation and frequently ranks among the top donut shops in the United States.
Mayor Lynn Barbee said the reopening signals the unofficial start of the tourism season.
“It’s become a ritual for us,” Barbee said. “It happens to correlate with spring break for many schools, so you get these large crowds. It’s like the green light has turned on for us for the season.”
Several visitors turned out Friday, with many continuing along the boardwalk to shop at local businesses or spend time on the beach.
Town officials say the influx of visitors comes as Carolina Beach continues work on two major projects: a new public restroom facility on the boardwalk and a beach renourishment effort along the shoreline. Both projects are expected to be completed by the end of the month.
The new two-story restroom facility is designed to serve both beachgoers and boardwalk visitors, with access points on different levels.
“We have not had new bathrooms for quite a while,” Barbee said. “We’re really excited for that to open at the end of the month. I think it will be great for tourists.”
Business owners say the increased foot traffic benefits the entire area. Lynn Prusa, manager of Britt’s Donut Shop, said the goal is to support the broader business community.
“There are family members who are shopping the boardwalk and enjoying other things while they’re here,” Prusa said. “We like to see that. We want all the businesses to be successful.”
“Britt’s Donut Shop” will be open on weekends from 8:30 A.M. to 10 P-M.

MIAMI (AP) — Good Friday is a unique — and uniquely solemn — day in the Christian calendar.
It commemorates the crucifixion and death of Jesus, ahead of what’s a central tenet of faith for believers — his resurrection two days later on Easter Sunday, according to the Gospels.
This year, it falls on April 3 for Catholics and Protestants, and April 10 for Orthodox Christians.
Across Christian denominations, Good Friday services are unlike those on most other days. They often include centuries-old, once-a-year traditions both during the liturgy and out in the streets, where elaborate processions and other rituals of fervent popular piety are held.
While Catholics gather, it’s the only day without an actual Mass, because there’s no sacrament of the Eucharist, which is the transformation of bread and wine into Jesus’ body and blood according to the church. Orthodox Christians don’t celebrate the Eucharist either on what they call Great and Holy Friday.
Most mainline Protestant denominations and Evangelicals also hold unique services, like the Lutheran devotion focused on the biblical accounts of Jesus’ last words on the cross, though they are not as strict on fasting as Catholics and Orthodox Christians.
Church services tend to last more than an hour, usually starting at 3 p.m., when tradition says Jesus died. But even though it’s not a day of obligation, and it’s a workday in the United States, churches tend to be packed.
“The time leading up to Good Friday is a big reflection on sacrifice — what he did for me and what I am doing in return,” said Manuel León, 22.
A member of Miami’s Corpus Christi Catholic Church youth group, he will carry a grimly realistic statue of Jesus crucified in procession through a hip central neighborhood on Good Friday.
“Pushing that statue from the back and seeing how torn up he is, what he did for us really becomes real,” León added.
Ancient forms of liturgy mark Good Friday
Some of the most ancient liturgical practices define Good Friday service for Catholics, said the Rev. John Baldovin, a professor of historical and liturgical theology at Boston College.
“The most solemn days tend to retain the oldest ceremonies,” he added, including as example the fact that the priests and ministers prostrate themselves in front of the altar at the beginning of the service.
Another ancient tradition is the extensive prayers of the faithful, interspersed with genuflections, which today include intentions as varied as praying for the pope, for the Jewish people, and for those who do not believe in God.
Up until Holy Week reforms introduced by the Vatican in the 1950s, Communion wasn’t distributed on Good Friday, though now it is with hosts consecrated a day earlier on Holy Thursday, Baldovin said.
But the highlight of the ceremony is the adoration of the cross, which in many cases is held up near the altar as the faithful line up to kiss it or touch it in reverence.
Among the earliest documents of this practice is the diary of pilgrim who in the 4th century went from what’s today Spain to Jerusalem, Baldovin said. There, at the present-day Church of the Holy Sepulchre, a bishop held up the cross for several hours as the faithful venerated it.
Processions with sacred images make Jesus’ passion real for global faithful
Life-sized statues of Jesus crucified, the weeping Virgin Mary, and representations of scenes from the Gospels’ accounts of Jesus’ torture and death on a cross are carried in large processions in different parts of the world.
Some of the oldest and most awe-inspiring are in southern Spain’s Seville, where tens of thousands of people watch much-venerated images of Jesus and Mary being carried in hourslong processions throughout Holy Week.
“Not all of us have the ability to look at the sky and feel fulfilled. Others like me need the images,” said Manolo Gobea.
He moved from Seville to Miami three decades ago and now heads the brotherhood that organizes the Good Friday procession starting from Corpus Christi church and winding its way through the graffiti-splashed neighborhood of Wynwood.
As the main, Seville-made statues exit the palm-fringed church, they’re carried over intricate carpets made of colored sawdust and flowers. That’s a nod to another tradition that’s perhaps most exuberantly followed in the colonial city of Antigua, Guatemala, where miles of these carpets are created for Holy Week — twice on Good Friday.
“On Good Friday, we feel the pain of Mary, Jesus’ pain, his surrender for love,” said Silvia Armira, as she prepared the carpet drawings for the procession in Miami, where she arrived from Guatemala in the 1990s. “It’s the great love of God, who gave up his only son for us.”
Faithful’s devotion sees past Good Friday’s pain to Easter joy
Solemn and popular rituals on Good Friday vary from the pope’s traditional “way of the cross” in Rome to a trek to the adobe sanctuary of Chimayo in New Mexico to self-flagellation and even crucifixion in the Philippines.
For many priests, they are all opportunities to take faith out of church and into streets to evangelize — and to point out that the gruesome death on the cross isn’t the end of the story.
“Our procession is a cry to the world — ‘get out, look at what is the way, the truth, the life,’” said the Rev. José Luis Menéndez.
“May your entire attitude be a living prayer,” the Cuban-born, Spanish-raised pastor at Corpus Christi in Miami told more than 100 faithful at the last rehearsal for this year’s procession.
Carefully watching over the SUV-sized float covered in silver-plated ornaments, flower vases and candlesticks, Gobea said the main appeal of Good Friday celebrations is that they lead from death to Easter joy.
“To the weeping Mary, we put flowers, we sing hymns, and that’s because we know how it ends — which is the resurrection,” he said.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Iran shot down two U.S. military planes in separate attacks Friday, with one service member rescued and at least one missing, in a dramatic escalation since the war began nearly five weeks ago.
It was the first time U.S. aircraft have been downed in the conflict and came just two days after President Donald Trump said in a national address that the U.S. has “beaten and completely decimated Iran” and was “going to finish the job, and we’re going to finish it very fast.”
One fighter jet was shot down in Iran, officials said. A U.S. crew member from that plane was rescued, but a second was missing, and a U.S. military search-and-rescue operation was underway.
Neither the White House nor Pentagon released public information about the downed planes. In a brief telephone interview with NBC News, Trump declined to discuss the search-and-rescue efforts but said what happened would not affect negotiations with Iran.
“No, not at all. No, it’s war,” he said.
Separately, Iranian state media said a U.S. A-10 attack aircraft crashed in the Persian Gulf after being struck by Iranian defense forces.
A U.S. official who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive military situation said earlier that it was not clear if the aircraft crashed or was shot down or whether Iran was involved. Neither the status of the crew nor exactly where it went down was immediately known.
Those incidents came as Iran fired on targets across the Middle East on Friday, keeping the pressure on Israel and its Gulf Arab neighbors despite U.S. and Israeli insistence that Iran’s military capabilities have been all but destroyed.
Second service member’s status unknown
Neither the White House nor the Pentagon released public information about the downed planes. But the Pentagon notified the House Armed Services Committee that the status of a second service member from the fighter jet was not known.
In an email from the Pentagon that obtained by The Associated Press, meanwhile, the military said it received notification of “an aircraft being shot down” in the Middle East, without providing more details.
Iran’s attacks on Gulf energy infrastructure and its tight grip on the Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the world’s oil and natural gas transits in peacetime, have roiled stock markets, sent oil prices skyrocketing, and threatened to raise the cost of many basic goods, including food.
Downed jet could mark a new level of pressure on the US
Prior to word of the rescue, social media footage showed American drones, aircraft and helicopters flying over the mountainous region where a TV channel affiliated with Iranian state television said earlier that at least one pilot bailed out of the fighter jet.
An anchor urged residents to hand over any “enemy pilot” to police and promised a reward.
It was the first time the U.S. has lost aircraft in Iranian territory during the conflict and could mark a new level of pressure on the U.S. military.
Throughout the war, Iran has made a series of claims about shooting down piloted enemy aircraft that turned out not to be true. Friday was the first time that Iran went on television urging the public to look for a downed pilot.
Iranian state media said in a post on the social platform X that the military shot down a U.S. F-15E Strike Eagle. The aircraft is a variation of the Air Force fighter jet that carries a pilot and weapons system officer.
Alan Diehl, a former investigator for the Air Force Safety Center, said the Strike Eagle has an emergency locator beacon in a survival kit that can be set to activate automatically or manually.
Iran targets a desalination plant and a refinery
News about the downed planes came after Iran attacked Kuwait’s Mina al-Ahmadi oil refinery. The state-run Kuwait Petroleum Corp. said firefighters were working to control several blazes.
Kuwait also said an Iranian attack caused “material damage” to a desalination plant. Such plants are responsible for most of the drinking water for Gulf states, and they have become a major target in the war.
Also sirens sounded in Bahrain, Saudi Arabia said it destroyed several Iranian drones and Israel reported incoming missiles.
Authorities in the United Arab Emirates shut down a gas field after a missile interception reportedly rained debris on it and started a fire.
Activists reported strikes around Tehran and the central city of Isfahan, but it was not immediately clear what was hit.
In Lebanon, where Israel has launched a ground invasion in its fight with the pro-Iranian Hezbollah militant group, an Israeli drone strike on worshippers leaving Friday prayers near Beirut killed two people, according to the state‑run National News Agency
More than 1,900 people have been killed in Iran since the war began on Feb. 28 with U.S. and Israeli strikes. In a review released Friday, the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data, a U.S.-based group, said it found that civilian casualties were clustered around strikes on security and state-linked sites “rather than indiscriminate bombardment” of urban areas.
More than two dozen people have died in Gulf states and the occupied West Bank, 19 have been reported dead in Israel and 13 U.S. service members have been killed.
More than 1,300 people have been killed and more than 1 million displaced in Lebanon. Ten Israeli soldiers have also died there.
Iran keeps a chokehold on the Strait of Hormuz
World leaders, meanwhile, have struggled to end Iran’s stranglehold on the waterway, which has had far-reaching consequences for the global economy and has proved to be its greatest strategic advantage in the war.
The U.N. Security Council was expected to take up the matter Saturday.
Trump has vacillated on America’s role in the strait, alternately threatening Iran if it does not open the strait and telling other nations to “go get your own oil.” On Friday he said in a post on social media that, “With a little more time, we can easily OPEN THE HORMUZ STRAIT, TAKE THE OIL, & MAKE A FORTUNE.”
Spot prices of Brent crude, the international standard, were around $109, up more than 50% since the start of the war, when Iran began restricting traffic through the strait.

(AP) — Most travelers flying with United Airlines will pay $10 more to check their luggage beginning on Friday, as higher jet fuel costs driven by the war in the Middle East push another major U.S. carrier to increase fees.
The first piece of checked luggage will now cost customers $45 on flights within the United States, Mexico, Canada and Latin America, according to United. A second bag will cost $55.
“This is the first time in two years the airline has raised bag fees,” United said in a statement.
Speaking to investors last month, United CEO Scott Kirby said the rising costs for jet fuel since the conflict began on Feb. 28 had already added roughly $400 million to operating costs. The CEOs for Delta Air Lines and American Airlines reported similar figures.
Some United passengers will still receive a free first checked bag, including co-branded credit card holders, certain loyalty-tier members, active military personnel and travelers in premium cabins. Customers who check bags less than 24 hours before departure will pay an additional $5.
United joins JetBlue, which raised its checked baggage fees earlier this week by $9 for peak travel periods. JetBlue said that charging more for optional services used by select customers helps keep base fares competitive. Like United, it will continue offering a free first checked bag to some customers.
The war, now in its second month, has severely disrupted global oil supplies, particularly near the narrow Strait of Hormuz where a fifth of the world’s oil typically passes. That has caused crude prices to fluctuate wildly, which affects airlines’ operating costs because the fuel their aircraft rely on is refined from crude oil.
Fuel is typically the second biggest expense for airlines after labor.
The average price for a gallon of jet fuel in Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles and New York reached $4.88 on Thursday, up from $2.50 just before the war, according to Argus Media. The energy market intelligence company’s U.S. Jet Fuel Index tracks the average prices across those major hubs.
Airlines are under increasing pressure to find new sources of revenue as fuel costs climb. A number of non-U.S. carriers have already responded by adding fuel surcharges or raising ticket prices. Industry experts say U.S. airlines will boost fares as well, but since they don’t typically rely on fuel surcharges, they’re also expected to pass on higher fuel costs to travelers by raising — or introducing — add-on fees.
United announced another pricing change on Friday that brings the “pay for what you want” approach already standard in economy to its premium cabins. On long-haul international routes, transcontinental U.S. flights and certain Hawaii services, seats in the front cabin will now be divided into three fare types.
At the bottom, a new base fare will carry the lowest upfront price but removes some of the extras that travelers often expect with premium tickets — including advance seat selection and refunds. In practice, that could mean a cheaper entry point to the front cabin but fewer perks.
The middle option, labeled standard, adds back common perks such as seat selection, extra checked bags and the ability to make itinerary changes. At the top end, the flexible tier includes all of those features and is fully refundable, offering the most flexibility for travelers willing to pay more.
United said it plans to introduce the new fare structure in select markets this month and expand it across more routes later this year.
WILMINGTON, N.C. (WWAY) — A popular bar in Wilmington is about to be hit with a wrecking ball and will be closing up.
On state owned property, no trespassing signs are posted adjacent to the Greenfield Yacht Club on the busy Carolina Beach Road, one that’s travelled often by Wilmington resident Tommy Milligan.
“In the morning and the evening, traffic gets really congested and we have a hard time getting back and forth to work,” said Milligan.
For that reason, the bar formerly known as the Dubliner will soon be demolished, as part of a North Carolina D.O.T. road widening project which will extend Carolina Beach Road into the yacht club’s property.
Owner of Greenfield Yacht Club Billy Mellon says this place has left so many memories, and it’s hard to let it go.
“We’ve been trying to turn it around from what we took it from, and we had great plans on continuing to expand and build on what we’ve done, it looks like the future could be dim,” said Mellon.
Although memories at this location will soon come to an end, all hope is not lost.
“Current plans are trying to finish this month strong, we are in the process of trying to find a new location, it’s not easy,” said Mellon.
The grand finale of the Greenfield Yacht Club celebrating with live music will be Sunday April 26th.
The time is still to be determined.

PENDER COUNTY, NC (WWAY) — The Pender County Fire Marshal’s Office said at approximately 2:07 p.m. on Friday, Pender County 911 received a call reporting an out-of-control brush fire in the Atkinson area.
Multiple agencies responded to the scene, including Atkinson Fire Department, Pender EMS & Fire, Penderlea Fire Department, Pender County Fire Marshal’s Office, Pender County Emergency Management, and the North Carolina Forest Service.
Officials said the North Carolina Forest Service deployed significant resources for containment efforts, including helicopters and five tractor plow units.
Fire crews are actively working to protect nearby structures while forestry resources continue containment operations.
Officials said additional support has been provided by units from New Hanover County and Wallace Fire Department, which are assisting with backfill coverage to ensure continued emergency response across the region.
Residents are urged to use caution and avoid the area of Tuckahoe Road, Shiloh Road, and Halfway Branch School Road to allow emergency personnel to operate safely and efficiently.
The fire is near 100% containment at this time. Residents in the nearby area may smell smoke over the next few days.
This story will be updated when more details are available.
LELAND, NC (WWAY) — Peeps are the most popular Easter candy in the United States, with billions produced annually.
Each year, new flavors come out.
In January, the company unveiled several new flavors, including Pop-Tarts Frosted Strawberry.
Dr. Pepper flavored Peeps chicks debuted in 2023.
WWAY’s Jeff Rivenbark, Tomika Jackson and Chief Meteorologist Lee Haywood tasted both Peeps flavors on Friday evening during Good Evening Wilmington.
BRUNSWICK COUNTY, N.C. (WWAY) — The Brunswick County Planning Board is working to fill two vacant seats following the recent resignations of a board member and its vice chairman.
Board member Jim Board and Vice Chairman Jason Gaver stepped down weeks apart last month. Gaver resigned after moving out of the county, while Board cited ongoing frustration with what he described as the planning board’s limited authority to manage rapid growth.
The departures come as Brunswick County continues to experience significant development and population increases.
Board, who was appointed in 2024, said he took the role hoping to help guide responsible growth.
“That it was going to be a position where I could use common sense and look at how are we going to support all of this development?” Board said.
He said his concerns grew over time, particularly after the approval of the Cherry Tree tract, a proposed development of about 1,000 units. The planning board had previously voted against the project, citing concerns about flooding and traffic safety, but it was later approved in a 5-1 vote on March 9.
Board said he had previously submitted a resignation letter in August 2025.
“I wrote my letter of resignation the first time in August of 2025. I was very disheartened and very overwhelmed with frustration,” he said.
He also raised concerns about the county’s Unified Development Ordinance (UDO), which governs development standards including land use, water, lot size and density. Board said the ordinance, adopted in 2015, does not reflect current conditions or adequately address issues such as storm water management.
“The county’s UDO up until very recently only required the developers to have storm water capabilities to withstand a 25-year flood level… well in the last few years… we’ve had more than our share of events that are much bigger than that,” Board said.
He pointed to broader infrastructure challenges tied to growth, including limited access to grocery stores, health care and schools.
“There’s not enough grocery stores to service this many people, there’s not enough doctors and nurses and hospital facilities to service all these new people, there’s not enough schools to educate our children,” he said.
A county spokesperson said the planning board will continue operating as long as a quorum of four members is maintained. The remaining board members may vote to appoint a new vice chairman, and the Brunswick County Board of Commissioners is expected to appoint replacements for the vacant District 3 and District 4 seats at a future meeting.
Board’s term was set to expire in late June. He said he plans to focus on his role as mayor pro tem of the Town of St. James.
“Don’t give up the fight, don’t let politics get in the way of reasonableness and common sense in voting your heart,” Board said of his message to future board members.
NEW HANOVER COUNTY (WWAY) — A Wilmington boy is back on his feet and riding again after a frightening bicycle accident, thanks to a gesture from local first responders.
On March 23, 7-year-old Karter Johnson was riding his bike with a friend when he lost control and crashed.
“I was riding my bike with my friend, and then it started to wobble a lot, and my bike fell over on top of this (left) leg, and then it got skinned,” said Karter.
The crash left him with more than scrapes. A handlebar brake became lodged in his right thigh, alarming his mother, Kimberly Johnson.
“I have never seen that before, never heard of it, and now that’s a new fear unlocked,” said Johnson.
First responders left the handlebars in place and transported Karter to the hospital. Battalion Chief Benjamin Bobzien said the child remained calm throughout the ordeal.
“We talked about football, we talked about school, we talked about a lot of things other than what was going on at the present moment and, you know, he probably did better than most of us would,” said Bobzien.
Karter underwent emergency surgery and is now recovering. His mother said he was eager to return to normal activities soon after leaving the hospital.
“Once we came home from the hospital, he just wanted to run outside and play,” said Johnson.
That determination extended to getting back on his bike. New Hanover County Fire Rescue stepped in, surprising Karter with a new bike and helmet.
Bobzien said the moment was a reminder of how resilient children can be.
“I think doing something like this really shows, you know, shows that injuries don’t necessarily have to mean limitations, and so it’s great to see him back walking around, and running around, and ready to get rolling on his bike,” said Bobzien.
Karter quickly put his new bike to use, riding again with excitement. His mother said the gift meant a great deal to their family.
“He’s very excited to be on a bike again. That’s all we’ve heard. He wanted a new bike, and we’re very happy that they were able to help us,” said Johnson.
New Hanover County Fire Rescue said Jimmy’s at Wrightsville Beach donated the bike and helmet that were given to Karter.
WILMINGTON, NC (WWAY) — The North Carolina Azalea Festival returns next week, bringing a slate of events including the street fair, parade, and the annual Garden Party.
As the festival approaches, a Wilmington boutique is helping attendees prepare for one of its most fashion-forward traditions.
Large hats and fascinators, floral headbands, are staples of the Garden Party, an event known for its elaborate spring style.
Meadowlark Boutique, located on Military Cutoff Road, is stocked with handcrafted hats and fascinators designed for the occasion.
The pieces feature silk and organza details and are created by New York City milliner Christine A. Moore, an official hat designer for the Kentucky Derby.
Shop owner Kendall Hurt said the headpieces give people a chance to express their creativity and have become a seasonal favorite.
“I think elevate is a really great way to put it, elevate your look and a hat, they kind of go in and out of style right, but you can really kind of bank on every time this year, Easter, the Derby, and our North Carolina Azalea Festival, that’s the time that you get to pull out that cherry on top and adorn your outfit with a great hat,” said Hurt.
The Airlie Luncheon Garden Party is scheduled for Friday, April 10.

WILMINGTON, NC (WWAY) — The YWCA Lower Cape Fear is set to host its 5th annual Maternal Health Summit later this month, bringing together healthcare leaders, advocates and community members to address maternal health outcomes across southeastern North Carolina.

(AP) — Most travelers flying with United Airlines will now pay $10 more to check their luggage beginning on Friday, as rising jet fuel costs driven by the war in the Middle East pushes another major U.S. carrier to increase fees.
Customers traveling in the United States, Mexico, Canada and Latin America will now pay $45 for their first piece of luggage and $55 for their second bag, according to United.
“This is the first time in two years the airline has raised bag fees,” United said in a statement.
Some passengers will still receive a free first checked bag, including co-branded credit card holders, certain loyalty-tier members, active military personnel and travelers in premium cabins. Customers who check bags less than 24 hours before departure will pay an additional $5.
United joins JetBlue, which raised checked baggage fees on Monday by up to $9 during peak travel periods, as the war in the Middle East continues to severely disrupt global oil supplies, particularly near the narrow Strait of Hormuz where a fifth of the world’s oil typically passes. That has caused crude prices to fluctuate wildly, which affects airlines’ operating costs because the fuel their aircraft rely on is refined from crude oil.
JetBlue said charging more for optional services used by select customers helps keep base fares competitive. Like United, it will continue offering a free first checked bag to some customers.
The average price for a gallon of jet fuel in Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles and New York reached $4.88 on Thursday, up from $2.50 before the conflict began on Feb. 28, according to Argus Media. The energy market intelligence company’s U.S. Jet Fuel Index tracks the average prices across those major hubs.
Speaking to investors last month at a conference, United CEO Scott Kirby said the higher jet fuel costs had already added roughly $400 million to operating costs. The CEOs for Delta Air Lines and American Airlines reported similar figures.
Fuel is typically the second biggest expense for airlines after labor. Analysts expect U.S. airlines to pass higher fuel costs on to travelers by increasing add-on fees or ticket prices since they don’t usually have fuel surcharges, while a number of non-U.S. carriers already have added fuel surcharges.