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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.
BRUNSWICK COUNTY, NC (WWAY) — A newly filed bill in the North Carolina General Assembly could change who has the final say over development decisions in Brunswick County.
House Bill 1222, introduced Tuesday by Rep. Charles Miller, would shift approval authority for new developments from the county’s planning board back to the Brunswick County Board of Commissioners.
“The proposed bill, I do support that change,” said Brunswick Planning Board Chairman Clifton Cheek.
If approved, the legislation would remove final decision-making power from the planning board and return it to elected commissioners. Brunswick County is currently one of the few counties in North Carolina where the planning board holds final approval authority — a structure put in place in 2024 when commissioners voted to transfer that responsibility away from themselves.
“I have always thought that the final approval authority should lie with the county commissioners and not with the planning board,” Cheek said.
The proposed change comes as the Brunswick County Planning Board faces recent turnover and criticism. In March, members Jason Gaver and Jim Board resigned.
Board said one reason for his resignation was what he described as “a broken process,” citing concerns about rapid growth and infrastructure limitations.
“There is a huge concern about unchecked overdevelopment in Brunswick County,” Board said. “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.”
Those concerns intensified following the planning board’s approval of the Cherry Tree tract, a roughly 1,000-unit development that passed in a 4-1 vote after being previously denied in September. Board was the one dissenting vote against the development.
Board said those in charge of development decisions must carefully weigh long-term impacts.
“The planning board, in my opinion, has to bring in public sentiment, common sense, an educated view to the future and conceptually look at all of the development around the potential development to see how it all might interact with each other,” he said.
A similar proposal is expected in the state Senate from Sen. Bill Rabon.
A request for comment from Miller’s office was not immediately returned.
WILMINGTON, N.C. (WWAY) — Communities across the Cape Fear region are celebrating Cinco de Mayo, a holiday that commemorates Mexico’s victory over French forces at the Battle of Puebla on May 5, 1862.
In Wilmington, El Cerro Grande Mexican Restaurant is among the local businesses marking the occasion with food and entertainment.
El Cerro Grande Mexican Restaurant is offering specials, live music and other festivities throughout the day. Owner Emmanuel Ibarra said the restaurant has celebrated Cinco de Mayo annually since 1991, featuring discounted margaritas and Mexican beer.
The restaurant is also partnering with Zocalo Street Food and Tequila to host a Cinco de Mayo block party at The Pointe at Barclay.
“It’s very special so we can come together. Cinco de Mayo especially is the day that we can share our food, our culture, our family,” Ibarra said.
Organizers said celebrations are expected to continue throughout the day and into the evening.

(WWAY) — Snake sightings are becoming more common across North Carolina as warmer spring temperatures bring the reptiles out in search of food and shelter, according to wildlife experts.
Specialists say seasonal changes are a primary driver of increased snake activity, but other environmental factors may also be contributing. Jeff Hall, a herpetologist with the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission, said prescribed fires and controlled burns can make snakes easier to spot.
“Holes in the ground are a little bit more obvious, and so many of the species that I work with, such as various snake species, some lizards, occasionally turtles, will be a little bit easier to see because they’re near or at those holes in the ground, usually left behind by trees, stump holes essentially,” said Hall.
Hall said there are several reasons snakes may be more active this time of year, including searching for food, water or potential mates.
“Whether it’s they’re trying to look for a mate if it’s breeding time for some of those species, although we’re a little early for that, it may be that they’re looking for prey, and then you may have animals that either are hunkering down because they’re at a good water source, or they may be moving because the area they are in is too dry and so they’re seeking out a water source, so you have a lot of reasons that snakes might be moving around,” said Hall.
North Carolina is home to 38 snake species, most of which are non-venomous, including the garter snake, rat snake, and green snake. The state also has six venomous species, with the eastern copperhead among the most common and found in all 100 counties. Copperheads are often identified by a distinct hourglass pattern, sometimes described as resembling Hershey’s Kisses, while juveniles have a bright yellow-tipped tail.
Hall said the safest response when encountering a snake is to give it space and allow it to move on.
“If someone’s out in their yard and they’re walking around and they encounter a snake, they can back up a little bit, give it some space, and if you give any kind of wildlife, but snakes are no different, if you give them time and space, they’re going to move on and continue about what their business is. They have no interest in interacting with a person; they would see us as a giant predator, you know, that wants to eat them, and so they would want to retreat from that as best that they can,” said Hall.
Officials say learning how to identify snake species can help residents respond appropriately and stay safe during encounters, and a helpful field guide resource can be found at https://herpsofnc.org/

WILMINGTON, NC (WWAY) — Wilmington Police Department is investigating a reported shooting Tuesday afternoon.
Officers responded just after 3:30 p.m. to the 500 block of Conley Drive, which is the area of Starway Village Apartments, following reports of shots fired.
When officers arrived, they located evidence consistent with a shooting, including property damage.
Police say no injuries have been reported at this time.
The investigation remains ongoing.
Anyone with information is encouraged to contact the Wilmington Police Department at 910-343-3600 or submit a tip anonymously through Tip 411.

BOLIVIA, NC (WWAY) — Brunswick County residents had a chance to learn how to prepare for emergencies ahead of hurricane season during a community readiness expo held Tuesday.
The event took place on the lawn of the Brunswick County Government Center, where dozens of local agencies and first responders shared information on disaster response, everyday safety, and emergency preparedness.
Organizers said the goal is to connect residents with resources and tools they need to stay safe, particularly in a coastal community vulnerable to hurricanes and flooding. This year marked the third time the county has hosted the event.
Diana Hills with Brunswick County Health Services said the expo is designed to educate residents before emergencies occur.
“We want to make sure that we provide that information and education to our residents of how they can make sure that they can be prepared because we are in the coast, and certainly hurricanes is a big issue as well as flooding, but just in general, we want to make sure that people understand the complexities that we have in our coastal communities and how do we keep them safe,” said Hills.
Organizers said they hope events like the readiness expo help residents stay informed as hurricane season begins June 1.

WILMINGTON, NC (WWAY) — A Brunswick County 911 communications team is being recognized statewide for its response during last year’s Southport mass shooting.
The Brunswick County 911 Communications Center C-Shift was named the North Carolina NENA Communications Team of the Year during the North Carolina Public Safety Communications Conference in Wilmington.
Officials say the recognition highlights the team’s performance during last year’s Southport mass shooting incident, where telecommunicators played a critical role during a high-pressure emergency.
According to officials, the team demonstrated professionalism, composure and dedication while serving as a vital link between callers in need and first responders.
Leaders say the award also reflects the daily work of the entire communications center, whose efforts often happen behind the scenes to help keep the community safe.
The Brunswick County Sheriff’s Office Honor Guard also participated in the ceremony, presenting the colors ahead of the award presentation.

WILMINGTON, NC (WWAY) — Cape Fear River Watch says more than 1,300 pounds of trash and recyclables were removed from local waterways during a series of Earth Month cleanups.
The organization coordinated eight cleanup events from Wilmington to Burgaw, with more than 180 volunteers participating. Groups involved included Keep New Hanover Beautiful, Pender County Parks and Recreation, community members from Riverlights and Grand Bay, and students from UNCW Health Equity Bonner Fellowship.
Organizers say the effort helped remove debris from creeks, wetlands and tributaries before it could reach the Cape Fear River.
Cleanup efforts will continue this month as part of an ongoing initiative held on the second Saturday of each month.
The next event is scheduled for 9 to 11 a.m. Saturday, May 9, and will focus on the Smith Creek watershed. Volunteers will meet at the intersection of Princess Place Drive and Evans Street in Wilmington.
If you would like to volunteer, click here.

RALEIGH, NC (WWAY) — The North Carolina Department of Natural and Cultural Resources announced the appointment of Dr. Mark Penning as the new director of the North Carolina Zoo.
Penning recently announced his retirement as vice president of animals, science and environment for Disney Experiences, where he oversaw animal care, conservation and environmental initiatives at multiple parks, including Disney’s Animal Kingdom, Animal Kingdom Lodge and The Seas with Nemo and Friends at Epcot, as well as Disney parks worldwide.
“I am excited that Dr. Mark Penning will soon be joining the North Carolina Zoo,” said Governor Josh Stein. “His leadership, experience, and vision will enable him to take the North Carolina Zoo, the world’s largest natural habitat zoo, to the next level and enhance the visitor experience.”
DNCR Secretary Pamela B. Cashwell said Penning brings extensive expertise in animal care and conservation.
“He is a world leader in animal care and conservation and truly understands and supports the zoo’s mission,” Cashwell said.
A veterinarian with a focus on wildlife, Penning previously served as CEO of the South African Association for Marine Biological Research in Durban, South Africa. He has also been president of the World Association of Zoos and Aquariums and served on the board of the Association of Zoos and Aquariums. He currently serves on the board of the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund International and is a trustee of Wild Welfare.
“I am very excited to be moving to the beautiful state of North Carolina and joining the fabulous team at the North Carolina Zoo,” Penning said. “They have created a world-class destination where families can connect with nature and with each other.”
Penning is expected to begin his role as director this summer.


Phil Strach, attorney for the legislative defendants in a racial gerrymandering case, carries a box of files out of the federal courthouse in Greensboro in 2018. (Photo by Melissa Boughton/NC Newsline)
by Lynn Bonner, NC Newsline
May 4, 2026
State elections director Sam Hayes hired one of North Carolina Republicans’ go-to lawyers to defend the state Board of Elections in a lawsuit this year, even though that lawyer was representing clients with active lawsuits against the board in four other cases in state and federal court.
Phil Strach represents Republican legislators, the Republican National Committee and the state Republican party in redistricting and election cases.
As Hayes sought to hire Strach, Strach asked Hayes to sign a waiver acknowledging that his firm was representing board adversaries in other cases.
“Your consent signifies a waiver of any and all conflicts on behalf of other Firm clients which may exist in present unrelated matters or could arise in future unrelated matters due to this representation,” Strach’s January 30 letter said. “You agree to not use our representation in the New Engagement as a ground for seeking our disqualification in such matters,” Strach’s letter said.
Strach did not return a phone call Monday seeking comment.
In an email Friday, the board’s director of external affairs, Jason Tyson, said there aren’t many lawyers in the state “who know election law to the extent required to handle these cases. We knew Mr. Strach would provide us the representation needed for this case.”
The News & Observer first reported on the waiver letter.
The state board in January denied requests to open early voting sites for the primary at UNC-Greensboro, NC A&T State University, and Western Carolina University.
Hayes hired Strach to represent the state board as college Democrats’ groups and students sued. A federal judge declined to force the campuses to open early voting sites.
Democrats on the state elections board said they did not know in advance about the waiver and sought Monday to try to keep another from being signed without their input.
North Carolina college students lose court battle to open early voting sites on campus
The state board agreed Monday to an Anson Board of Elections’ request for legal assistance in a dispute with the Anson County Board of Commissioners. The state Attorney General’s office advised the board to use someone other than state lawyers, state Board Secretary Stacy “Four” Eggers IV, said.
Board member Siobhan Millen, a Democrat, tried to add a stipulation that each board member would need to sign the conflict of interest waiver if the lawyer Hayes chooses is representing other clients in cases against the board
“I think that’s a personal right,” she said. “No one else can waive that for me.”
The board rejected that request along party lines. Eggers said lawyers representing board members do so in their official capacity, not as individuals.
The board approved hiring a lawyer for the Anson elections board with a 4-1 vote, with Democrat Jeff Carmon opposed.
In an interview after the meeting, Carmon said he didn’t think Strach should have represented the board at the same time he was suing it.
“We can sign that waiver, knowing there’s a conflict,” Carmon said in an interview. “We’d like an opportunity to address that conflict rather than have it be arbitrarily waived.”
The North Carolina Bar Association conflict of interest rule says that lawyers must have written consent if they are defending clients in one case while opposing them in a different case. Lawyers must also believe they “will be able to provide competent and diligent representation to each affected client.”
In the four lawsuits Strach mentioned in his waiver letter, he was representing the Republican National Committee, the NC GOP, individual voters, or members of the Justice For All Party.
The Justice for All Party sued the state board in 2024 when its then-Democratic majority voted against certifying it as a political party. The board reversed itself after a loss in federal court. That case was recently closed.
Two other cases over a requirement that voters supply government identification numbers with their registration have been settled. One was in federal court and the other in state court. In the state court case, Strach represented the Republican National Committee, the state Republican Party, the Wake County Republican Party and individual voters. In the federal court case, he represented the RNC and the state Republican Party.
A case concerning overseas and military voters who may have never lived in the state is still pending in Wake County Superior Court. Strach is representing the RNC, the state Republican Party and individual voters.
NC Newsline is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. NC Newsline maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Laura Leslie for questions: info@ncnewsline.com.

BOLIVIA, NC (WWAY) — Coastal Cosmetic Family Dentistry will host its 12th annual “Dentistry from the Heart” event, providing free dental care to the community.
The event is scheduled for Friday, May 15 at the practice’s Bolivia office. Doctors and staff plan to provide free dental services to more than 200 patients on a first-come, first-served basis.
“We love this community,” said Dr. Aaron Wilharm. “When I walk across our parking lot on the morning of the event and see so many people ready to help others, it warms my heart.”
Dr. Harrington said the event has grown significantly over the years.
“We support the community in many ways throughout the year hosting events like Freedom Day and others, but Dentistry from the Heart is something very special,” Harrington said. “It has grown a lot in the past 11 years and the heart of this event is beating louder than ever.”
According to the practice, Coastal Cosmetic Family Dentistry has donated more than $500,000 in free dental care over the past 10 years to more than 2,500 Brunswick County residents through the annual event.
The event will run from 7:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. at the office located at 3071 Southport-Supply Road in Bolivia.

WILMINGTON, NC (WWAY) — The Wilmington Symphony Orchestra and DREAMS Center for Arts Education are partnering with Ben Folds’ Keys for Kids initiative to expand access to music education for students across the region.
The collaboration, also supported by the North Carolina Arts Council and the North Carolina Arts Foundation, aims to create a pathway for young musicians from beginner instruction to more advanced performance opportunities.
Keys for Kids, founded by Folds, supports nonprofits in North Carolina that provide music education opportunities for young people.
Under the program, students will begin their musical training at the DREAMS Center for Arts Education, where they will receive foundational instruction in an afterschool setting. As they advance, students will transition into programs with the Wilmington Symphony Orchestra for expanded instruction and performance experience.
Participants will also have the opportunity to join the Wilmington Symphony Youth Orchestras chamber ensembles, allowing them to develop ensemble skills and perform at a higher level.
Students in the program and their families will receive free tickets to Wilmington Symphony Orchestra and youth orchestra concerts, providing additional exposure to live performances.
“This partnership represents a shared commitment to making music education accessible, inclusive, and inspiring,” said Liz Scanlon, executive director of the Wilmington Symphony Orchestra.
Folds said the collaboration aligns with his initiative’s mission to bring music education to young people who might not otherwise have access.
“Speaking from first-hand experience, my middle school field trips to museums and the symphony, as well as having a chance to perform in the youth orchestra, greatly influenced my own creative journey to becoming a music artist,” he said.
Organizers say the partnership is designed to expand access to afterschool programming that supports creativity, discipline and self-expression.
The organizations are also inviting the public to attend a performance by Folds on May 30 at the Martin Marietta Center for the Performing Arts in Raleigh. A portion of ticket sales will benefit the Keys for Kids program.

WASHINGTON (AP) — White House economists estimate that President Donald Trump’s deals with pharmaceutical companies to drop some of their U.S. prescription drug prices to what they charge in other countries could save $529 billion over the next 10 years.
The analysis obtained by The Associated Press includes the first economy-wide projections behind a policy at the core of Trump’s pitch to voters going into November’s midterm elections for control of the House and Senate. Democratic lawmakers have been doubtful about the savings claimed by Trump and these new numbers are likely to trigger additional questions about the data.
Cost-of-living issues are at the forefront of voters’ concerns and higher energy prices tied to the Iran war have deepened the public’s anxiety. Trump has tried in part to address affordability concerns by focusing on his efforts to cut deals with companies so that the cost of prescription drugs in the U.S. would no longer be dramatically higher than in other affluent nations.
“Now you have the lowest drug prices anywhere in the world,” Trump said at a Friday rally before a crowd of seniors in Florida. “And that alone should win us the midterms.”
The analysis was done by administration officials for the White House Council of Economic Advisers. They also estimated that federal and state governments could save a combined $64.3 billion on Medicaid during the next decade because of what Trump calls his “most favored nation” policy on drug prices.
Few of the details of the deals struck by the Trump administration and 17 leading pharmaceutical companies have been made public, making it hard to independently verify the projected savings. The White House analysis sought to estimate the prospective savings as more medications come onto the market and fall under Trump’s framework — with one model in the report tallying the possible savings at $733 billion over a decade.
Trump and his Department of Health and Human Services have touted his drug-pricing deals as transformative and urged Congress to codify their principles into law. Democratic lawmakers have challenged the administration’s claims of savings. Senate Finance Committee Ranking Member Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and 17 Senate Democrats in April proposed a measure requiring the administration to disclose the terms of the agreements signed by pharmaceutical companies.
“If these deals are so great, why is the Trump administration afraid of showing them to the public?” Wyden said when announcing the measure. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said his team would share details that didn’t include proprietary information or trade secrets.
The potential savings estimated by the Trump administration would be substantial as Americans spent $467 billion on prescription drugs in 2024, according to the most recent government data available. The analysis is premised on the idea that foreign countries would also pay more for their prescription drugs, which would diversify drugmakers’ sources of revenue and preserve their ability to innovate with new treatments.
The Congressional Budget Office in October 2024 estimated that a plan similar to what Trump ended up adopting could reduce prescription drug prices by more than 5%, though the decrease “would probably diminish over time as manufacturers adjusted to the new policy by altering prices or distribution of drugs in other countries.”
The scope of the savings claimed by the Trump administration are likely to intensify the scrutiny by Democrats, who counter that any price reductions would be offset by higher costs for prescription drugs not covered by the “most favored nation” framework. One of their main critiques is that pharmaceutical companies have increased their profit margins while working with the administration.
In April, staff working for Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., released an analysis that looked at 15 of the companies that have agreed to this drug-pricing plan and found that their combined profits jumped 66% over the past year to $177 billion. The report noted that the tax cuts Trump signed into law last year “exempted or delayed many of the most expensive drugs” from price negotiations with Medicare.
The Trump administration has countered that they consider Sanders’ critique to be flawed, saying that it’s based on the list prices for pharmaceutical drugs instead the actual price that patients pay.

CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — In 1985, a 13-year-old girl in New Zealand spotted a pair of purple, lip-shaped sunglasses in “Young Miss” magazine. In March, I traveled 9,000 miles from New Hampshire to deliver them to her, finally fulfilling my pen pal’s decades-old request.
International Youth Service, the agency that matched us up 40 years ago, has long since folded, but other pen pal programs have survived — or even began during — the internet age. And even though New Zealand’s postal system has reduced home delivery days, Denmark has stopped delivering letters altogether and Canada is moving in that direction, some see signs of a letter-writing resurgence.
“The hunger is there,” said Rachel Syme, a writer for The New Yorker magazine who created a pen pal program during the COVID-19 pandemic and later published a book encouraging others to take up handwritten correspondence.
More than 15,000 people signed up for Syme’s Penpalooza project in 2020, and she still gets hundreds of takers when she coordinates a new round of matchmaking every few months. She also gets requests for pen pals at book signings for “Syme’s Letter Writer – A Guide to Modern Correspondence,” and the stationery stores she frequents in New York City are always crowded with customers.
“People are very interested in physical, analog things right now,” she said. “I think it really has an appeal especially to a younger generation who grew up with a phone glued to their hand, to do something that’s more tactile, slower, more intentional, more mindful, but also just disconnected from the internet in every way.”
“Yours (hopefully)”
I was still 10 years away from connecting to the internet when I opened my first aerogramme from New Zealand, a sheet of pale blue paper that served as both writing surface and envelope adorned with a 45-cent stamp. That missive ended with a formal “Yours (hopefully) Molly Nunns,” but within a year, she was signing off with “Lots and lots of love” or “Your friend forever.”
In letter after letter, Molly drew little hearts on the tails of y’s in both of our first names, asked for updates on my middle school crushes and shared stories about her classmates and family. I could clearly picture her life, though it was hard in snowy New Hampshire to imagine celebrating Christmas during the summer.
“I am thinking of you heaps and I wonder what you are doing because you’re a SUPER pen friend and I hope that we never stop writing to each other and that one day we will get to meet each other,” she wrote in early 1986.
Julie Delbridge, 65, fostered similar friendships after joining International Pen Friends as a teenager in 1979. Writing to pen pals in more than a dozen countries from her home in Australia was such a positive experience that she began working for the organization as an adult and took over as its president in 2001. While she loved sharing photos, postcards and treats with her pen friends, it also was a therapeutic experience at a time when her parents were going through a bitter divorce.
“It was a pastime that I totally immersed myself into in a positive way and gained a lot of enjoyment from,” she said. “There was an abundance of non-judgmental friendship, fun and different perspectives.”
Over its 59-year history, IPF has provided pen pals to more than 2 million people ages 8 to 80+, she said. Membership peaked in the late 1990s but surged again during the pandemic, and this year, there’s been an increase in people ages 21-26 joining.
Pen pals in the classroom
In 2021, the U.S. Postal Service sent cards and envelopes to 25,000 elementary school classrooms for a pen pal project, but older students also are putting pen to paper.
In Texas, a group of medical students created an anonymous pen pal program to promote peer support and personal reflection. At Villanova University, professor Kamran Javadizadeh requires students to send letters to each other as part of a literature class called “Letters, Texts, Twitter” that examines different forms of epistolary communication in literature.
“I make them put pieces of paper in envelopes and take them to the post office and send them to each other even though they could just as easily hand it to the person in class,” he said. “Something is lost when you have instantaneous communication. So I’m interested in the relationship between synchronous kinds of intimacy and asynchronous forms of intimacy.”
Gordon Alley-Young, dean of communications at New York’s Kingsborough Community College, believes letters are like vinyl records — they’re coming back into fashion as young people explore a tangible medium from the past. He has both studied the history of letter writing and used it to teach students empathy.
In an interpersonal communication class, he noticed that students analyzing case studies about relationship problems offered matter-of-fact, almost insensitive diagnoses. But when he re-wrote the case studies in the form of letters from friends and had students respond in kind, they began sharing their own feelings and offering more open-ended advice.
“We really want students to connect to what they’re looking at,” he said. “And letter writing encourages that.”
Pen pals in the digital age
An app called Slowly seeks to combine modern technology with the old-fashioned anticipation inherent to the pen pal relationship. Users send messages digitally, but delivery is delayed from an hour to several days to mimic snail mail.
“This delay naturally encourages longer, more thoughtful messages because you wouldn’t just say ‘hi’ if you know you have to wait days for a reply,” said cofounder JoJo Chan.
Since 2017, the app has gained 10 million users in more than 160 countries, most in their 20s and 30s. One user said he was curious about pen pals after hearing about them from his grandparents, Chan said.
“Slowly offers a convenient way and a modern way for them to try that experience,” she said.
Syme, however, is all about the tangible aspects of letter writing. Her book includes advice on paper and pens plus all kinds of goodies that can be tucked into envelopes.
“There is joy to be had once you fully embrace the medium’s outdated extravagance,” she writes.
But letter writing, she said in an interview, is like a swimming pool, both shiny and deep. The frippery and embellishments don’t matter in comparison to what you actually put on the page.
“That’s where I think it can get very real, very quickly,” she said.
A special connection
Molly and I had been writing for 15 years by the time we met in person, spending a day together in New York when she toured the U.S. in May 2000. We crossed paths in London a few years later, and in 2018, she and her family visited New Hampshire.
“Who would have thought when we started writing in 1985 that one day you’d be sitting here? It’s quite amazing,” she said during my recent visit. “We’ll always have a special connection, I’m sure.”
In addition to the sunglasses, I also gave Molly a bound book of 200 pages of her letters that I scanned and printed. At age 13, I never could have imagined that someday I’d have searchable PDFs of our teenage scribblings that could be summarized in 10 seconds by artificial intelligence. But what amazes me more is the depth of the connection I felt during our tearful airport goodbye.
We will for sure meet again. Until then, lots and lots of love, Holly.

WILMINGTON, NC (WWAY) — Orton is conducting a permitted prescribed burn on 565 acres Tuesday as part of its ongoing land management plan to improve forest health and restore longleaf pine habitat.
Officials say strict criteria, including optimal weather conditions, were considered before moving forward with the burn. The operation is being carried out under an approved plan designed to ensure the safety of people and property in the surrounding area.
Orton officials say experienced local fire and safety professionals are on site throughout the process.
Burning began around 10:30 a.m. and is expected to be completed around 6 p.m.
According to a news release, the prescribed burn is part of Orton’s annual fire management program, which, along with efforts from local partners, contributes to a broader public-private initiative aimed at building resilience in longleaf pine ecosystems.

(AP)–Wall Street rebounded and oil prices retreated early Tuesday despite an exchange of fire between the U.S. and Iran near the Strait of Hormuz.
Futures for the S&P 500 rose 0.3%, while futures for the Dow Jones Industrial Average inched up 0.1%. Nasdaq futures climbed 0.5%.
Tensions in the Middle East escalated when the United Arab Emirates, a U.S. ally, said it came under attack from Iran for the first time since the ceasefire last month.
The fragile ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran was tested after the U.S. military said it had sank six Iranian small boats targeting civilian ships, while two U.S.-flagged ships successfully passed through the Strait of Hormuz as part of U.S. President Donald Trump’s “Project Freedom” plan under which the United States attempts to guide stranded ships through the strait.
The key waterway for oil and gas transport remains largely closed despite repeated demands from the U.S. for Iran to reopen the strait and as the United States imposed a sea blockade on Iranian ports.
“We are seeing the first signs of the ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran breaking down amid a re-escalation in the Persian Gulf,” ING Bank analysts Warren Patterson and Ewa Manthey wrote in a note Tuesday.
“Continuation of ‘Project Freedom’ risks further escalation,” they wrote. “Any relief from stranded vessels making their way through the Strait will be temporary, with very few inbound vessels moving into the Persian Gulf.”
Oil prices came back down slightly after surging on Monday.
Brent crude, the international standard, fell $1.14 to $113.30 per barrel. Before the war began in late February, it was trading near $70. Benchmark U.S. crude slipped $1.84 to $104.58 per barrel.
Outside of the war, markets are focused on the U.S. earnings season.
Pinterest soared 17.5% after the online bulletin board topped Wall Street’s first-quarter sales and profit targets as its active monthly users jumped 11% to 631 million. It was the tenth straight quarter of double-digit user growth for the San Francisco company.
Budweiser maker Anheuser-Busch Inbev also topped analyst sales and profit forecasts on strong beer sales. Its shares jumped more than 6% in premarket.
Coinbase jumped 3.6% after the cryptocurrency trading platform said in a regulatory filing that it was letting go of 700 employees, about 14% of its workforce.
Elsewhere, in Europe at midday, Britain’s FTSE 100 fell 1.2%, France’s CAC 40 was up 0.5%, and Germany’s DAX gained 1.2%.
Asian regional trading was thin, with markets in Japan, South Korea and mainland China closed for holidays.
Hong Kong’s Hang Seng fell 0.8% to 25,898.61, while Taiwan’s Taiex gained 0.2%.
Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 lost 0.2% to 8,680.50 after the central bank raised its benchmark interest rate to 4.35%, saying conflict in the Middle East had sharply increased fuel and commodity prices that were already adding to inflation. The cash rate hike on Tuesday was the Reserve Bank of Australia’s third quarter percentage point rise this year.
The bank said Australia’s inflation for the year through March was 4.6%. The bank manipulates interest rates to steer inflation toward a target band of 2% to 3%.
India’s Sensex lost 0.4%.

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Russian drone and missile strikes targeting Ukraine’s power grid during the night killed at least five people and wounded 39 others, Ukrainian authorities said Tuesday, less than a day before Kyiv said it would enact a ceasefire and three days before Moscow promised its own truce.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy rebuked Moscow for what he said was its “utter cynicism” in launching the attacks after Russia announced a unilateral truce over two days later this week while it marks the 81st anniversary of the defeat of Nazi Germany in World War II.
“Russia could cease fire at any moment, and this would stop the war and our responses,” Zelenskyy said in a post on X. “Peace is needed, and real steps are needed to achieve it. Ukraine will act in kind.”
The truce proposal follows a familiar pattern of Russia declaring short unilateral ceasefires during the war timed to various holidays — most recently Orthodox Easter — that don’t produce any tangible results amid deep mistrust between Moscow and Kyiv more than four years after Russia launched an all-out invasion of its neighbor. U.S.-led diplomatic efforts to stop the war have come to nothing.
The Russian Defense Ministry declared a unilateral ceasefire in Ukraine for Friday and Saturday, but said that it would strike back at the country if it tries to disrupt the festivities on Victory Day, which Russia marks annually on May 9.
Zelenskyy replied that Ukraine would observe a truce beginning at the end of Tuesday and would respond in kind to Russia’s actions from that moment on. He didn’t put an end date on the truce.
Russian drones and missiles pound Ukraine’s power grid again
Russian forces fired 11 Iskander-M ballistic missiles and 164 strike drones at Ukraine overnight from Monday to Tuesday, including a jet-powered Shahed drone variant, the Ukrainian Air Force said.
Air defense units stopped 149 drones and one missile, but others got through, it said. Two ballistic missiles failed to reach their targets, the air force said without elaborating.
Russia has repeatedly hammered Ukraine’s energy infrastructure during the war, which began on Feb. 24, 2022. It hit natural gas production facilities in Ukraine’s central Poltava and northeastern Kharkiv regions, state energy company Naftogaz Group said.
Since the start of the year, Naftogaz facilities have come under attack 107 times, the company said.
Zelenskyy said that the Poltava attack was “especially vile,” because Russia launched a second missile at the same target when emergency rescuers were working at the scene.
Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko said that Russia’s main targets were energy facilities, oil and gas infrastructure, railways and industrial sites, although the attacks also damaged homes, businesses and the transportation network.
Russia’s ceasefire proposals “remain only statements,” Svyrydenko said.
Ukrainian cruise missiles strikes deep inside Russia
Ukraine also kept up the pace of its long-range attacks on Russian rear areas, apparently aiming at more oil facilities in an effort to further disrupt Moscow’s war economy.
Russia’s Defense Ministry said that its forces destroyed 289 Ukrainian drones overnight in 18 Russian regions. Drones were also intercepted over the occupied Crimean Peninsula, which Russia annexed from Ukraine in 2014, and over the Azov Sea, it said.
Ukraine during the night launched its F-5 Flamingo cruise missiles at targets including military-industrial complex facilities in Cheboksary, located more than 1,500 kilometers (900 miles) away, Zelenskyy said.
The plant supplied navigation components for the Russian Navy, the missile industry, aviation and armored vehicles, he said.
The regional health ministry said a Ukrainian drone attack wounded three people in the city of Cheboksary.
Ukrainian drones also attacked the Kirishi oil refinery in the Leningrad region close to St. Petersburg, sparking a blaze in the town’s industrial zone, local Gov. Alexander Drozdenko said.
Drozdenko said on social media that 29 Ukrainian drones had been shot down during the attack. No casualties were reported.
Ukraine steps up its midrange strikes and ground robot operations
Ukraine doubled its midrange strikes on Russia in April compared to March and quadrupled them compared to February, according to a monthly battlefield report from Ukraine’s Defense Minister Mykhailo Fedorov published Tuesday.
The midrange attacks were focused on enemy warehouses, command posts, air defense systems and supply lines up to about 100 miles (160 kilometers) behind the front line.
Also, Ukrainian ground robots completed 10,281 resupply and evacuation missions in April, an average of almost 343 per day, according to Fedorov.
It was not possible to independently confirm the claims.a

(CBS) — The commonwealth of Pennsylvania is suing Character AI to stop the artificial intelligence platform’s chatbots from representing themselves as licensed medical professionals and providing medical advice.
According to a lawsuit, a Character AI chatbot falsely claimed to be a licensed psychiatrist in Pennsylvania and provided an invalid license number. The state accused the company of violating the Medical Practice Act, which regulates the medical profession and defines license requirements.
“We will not allow companies to deploy AI tools that mislead people into believing they are receiving advice from a licensed medical professional,” Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro said in a statement.
The lawsuit describes a conversation between a state investigator who created a Character AI account and a chatbot named “Emilie,” which allegedly described itself as a psychology specialist who attended Imperial College London’s medical school.
CBS News has reached out to Character AI for comment.
The investigator told the chatbot that he had felt sad and empty, and the chatbot then allegedly “mentioned depression and asked if the [investigator] wanted to book an assessment.” Asked if the chatbot could assess whether medication could help, it allegedly said it could because it’s “within my remit as a Doctor,” according to the lawsuit.
The state wants a court to order an immediate stop to the conduct.
Al Schmidt, the secretary of the Pennsylvania Department of State, said the state’s law is clear, and that “you cannot hold yourself out as a licensed medical professional without proper credentials.”
Founded in 2021, Character AI allows users to chat with personalized AI-powered chatbots. It describes its goal as “empower[ing] people to connect, learn, and tell stories through interactive entertainment.”
Multiple families across the U.S. sued Character AI last year, alleging the platform contributed to their teens’ suicides or mental health crises. The company agreed to settle several of the lawsuits earlier this year.
“60 Minutes” spoke with some of the parents who sued Character AI last year, including the parents of a 13-year-old who died by suicide after allegedly developing an addiction to the platform. Chat logs showed the 13-year-old had confided in one chatbot that she was feeling suicidal, and her parents said they discovered she had been sent sexually explicit content.
Last fall, Character AI announced new safety measures, saying it would not allow users under 18 to engage in back-and-forth conversations with its chatbots. It also said it would direct distressed users to mental health resources.

(AP) — Dolly Parton has canceled her previously postponed Las Vegas residency due to health challenges that leave her feeling “swimmy headed” — but has assured fans her ailments are treatable.
“The good news is I’m responding really well to meds and treatments and I’m improving every day,” the 80-year-old country superstar said in a short video posted to her official Instagram account. “Now the bad news is, it’s going to take me a little while before I’m up to stage-performance level because some of the meds and treatments make me a lit bit swimmy headed, as my grandma used to say.”
“And of course, I can’t be dizzy carrying around banjos, guitars, and such on five-inch heels — and you know that I’m going to be wearing them,” she joked. “Not to mention, all those heavy rhinestone outfits, the big hair, my big … uh, personality. Lord, those — that would make anybody swimmy headed!”
She didn’t share too many details about her health but clarified that she’s always “had problems with my kidney stones,” and that her immune system and digestive system “got all out of whack over the past couple three years and they’re working real hard on rebuilding and strengthening those.”
She also clarified that her doctors have assured her “that everything I have is treatable, so I’m going with that.”
She said that she is still working on opening her museum and hotel in Nashville as well as her forthcoming Broadway musical, “Dolly: A True Original Musical,” opening in New York later this year.
Parton’s previous health challenges
In September, Parton announced her first Las Vegas residency in 32 years was going to be postponed due to “health challenges.” She was scheduled to perform six shows at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace for “Dolly: Live in Las Vegas” in December, overlapping with the National Finals Rodeo. Her dates were moved to this September, before being canceled on Monday.
“Don’t worry about me quittin’ the business because God hasn’t said anything about stopping yet,” she said at the time of the postponement. “But I believe he is telling me to slow down right now so I can be ready for more big adventures with all of you.”
Last September, Parton also was unable to attend the announcement of a new ride at her Tennessee theme park Dollywood due to health issues. “I had a kidney stone that was causing me a lot of problems, turned out it’d given me an infection, and the doctor said, ‘You don’t need to be traveling right this minute, so you need a few days to get better,’” Parton said in a video announcement at the time.
“There are just a lot of rumors flying around. But I figured if you heard it from me, you’d know that I was OK,” she said in a two-minute video posted on Instagram. “I’m not ready to die yet. I don’t think God is through with me. And I ain’t done working.”
Parton performs on occasion but hasn’t toured since her “Pure & Simple Tour” ended in 2016.
A representative directed The Associated Press’ back to Parton’s video message when asked for comment.

SPRINGFIELD, IL (ABC News) — You’re standing in the middle of an empty highway, staring off into the fading, golden light of Arizona’s high desert. The soundtrack playing in your mind? Depeche Mode.
Industrial-leaning synth-pop strains might seem incongruous with such a vista, but it was the alternative rock band’s homage to Route 66 that seduced David J. Schwartz. With camera in hand he has made 42 trips over two decades along the celebrated highway, qualifying himself for the job of creating postage stamps commemorating the Mother Road’s centennial.
The U.S. Postal Service on Tuesday is releasing eight stamps marking significant parts of the road in each of the states it traverses, passing by vintage diners, gas stations and motels — many since preserved or restored — along with breathtaking vistas and wide horizons of the open road.
Route 66 is paved with history, from its early days as an escape from the Dust Bowl and the Great Depression, through serving as a vital supply route during World War II, to its mid-century role as an antidote for wanderlust. A symbol of freedom and mobility, it has evolved into a time capsule of Americana, steeped in nostalgia and neon.
As teenagers in 1988, Schwartz and his best friend had planned a road trip after girlfriends introduced them to Depeche Mode, where they discovered a cover of Bobby Troup’s 1946 pop standard, “(Get Your Kicks on) Route 66.” Schwartz’s mother nixed his participation, delaying his first taste of the open road until 2004.
To Schwartz, the road — stretching 2,448 miles (3,940 kilometers) — represents a significant piece of a newly mobile 20th century America, from its debut in 1926 to its decommissioning in 1985: “Road trips, big cars, neon signs.” Though retired from the federal highway system, vast stretches of the route are still in use and a favorite of road warriors and tourists to this day.
“So much to explore. You start here in Illinois on 66 and you’re cruising through prairie land,” Schwartz said during a recent interview in Springfield. “By the time you get out west, you’re in the desert or you’re in mountains through hairpin turns. It’s just an incredible journey and you just get such a beautiful slice of America going through it.”
Tired of retail management, Schwartz went back to school to study photography and had the idea of Route 66 stamps as early as a decade ago. He was tapped for the project in 2023. He recalls thinking, “Here is my moment to bring Route 66 to the masses.”
Greg Breeding, a USPS art director for stamp design, was working on a graphic showing a map of the road when he discovered Schwartz’s photos. They were beautifully photographed, not commercial and slick.
“They’re as if you were there,” he said, “which makes them especially useful for stamps.”
The USPS plate contains 16 stamps, two of each one representing Route 66 host states. A ninth photo serves as selvage, or the image surrounding the block. It’s the scene of that empty Arizona highway, shot in 2023 near Seligman, Arizona, when Schwartz and his high school friend finally took that trip 35 years in the making.
But a road is a road, isn’t it? Why can’t a traveler get the same view standing on one of the interstate highways that ultimately bypassed Route 66?
“You’d probably get run over,” Schwartz said dryly.
“Interstates are designed to move traffic quickly. They cut through the sides of mountains, they do not follow the contour of the land …,” he added. “On Route 66, you’re actually part of the landscape as you move through it. You feel the land as you’re traveling.”
Breeding and Schwartz steered clear of the fabled highway’s most popular spots, not only because those are tougher to get permission to use, but also because they wanted to give people a “fresh look,” Breeding said. The stamps are devoid of people, he said, in part to create a sense of allure rather tourist trap vibes.
To that end, the blocks capture both the continuing commerce and the roadside relics that hint at their former vibrancy. Take for example the Conoco Tower Station and U-Drop Inn in Shamrock, Texas, a neon-adorned Art Deco beauty whose luminous lights come alive at dusk.
In Yucca, Arizona, Schwartz photographed the dilapidated “Motel” sign in the relentless noonday sun, revealing desert desolation but also “the enduring pulse of the open road.”
Among his favorites is the Illinois entry, a friend’s 1929 Model A Ford rumbling down the only remaining section of Route 66 composed of hand-laid brick in Auburn, just south of Springfield. The goal? Create an image that would make viewers feel as if they were there for the birth of Route 66.
“We wanted to show it to be colorful. We wanted to show the quirkiness. We wanted to show the age,” Breeding said. “It’s like a sort of show, the idea that Route 66 is a living history of the United States, from the past to the present.”
Schwartz said he’s amazed that the stamps boasting his work will “travel all over the United States and end up in people’s mailboxes.”
He added: “I hope they really inspire people to get out there and travel the road and support the Mom and Pop businesses and keep Route 66 alive for another 100 years.”

WILMINGTON, NC (WWAY) — The Landfall Foundation’s 2026 annual gala brought a festive flair to philanthropy on Friday, raising more than $460,000 to support nonprofit organizations and schools across the greater Wilmington area.
WILMINGTON, NC (WWAY) –This week’s Pet Pals are Rita and Julian, two 4-month-old cats.
Feline Matchmakers calls Rita an adorable tabby kitten with a gentle spirit and a playful spark that makes her truly special.
They say she would thrive in a home that enjoys interactive play and bonding time, provides a safe and loving environment where she can explore and grow, and wants a sweet kitten with a playful personality.
Feline Matchmakers call Julian is a handsome tabby kitten with a relaxed, easygoing personality that instantly puts you at ease.
They say he would thrive in a home that appreciates a calm and affectionate kitten with a relaxed temperament, enjoys both playtime and quiet bonding moments, and wants a loving companion who brings a sense of ease and comfort.
They can be seen by appointment after filling in an application from felinematchmakers.org. You must be over 21 and live in the Wilmington, NC area to adopt.

(ABC) — Twenty-year-old Edith from Guatemala has remained in her home with her 1-year-old baby Justin for weeks after selling her only means of transportation.
“Being stuck at home, locked up inside, is very, very difficult for us,” she told ABC News.
Edith, a U.S. citizen who was raised in Guatemala and requested she only be referred to by her first name out of concern over her privacy, sold her car and spent her life savings to pay someone who she thought was an attorney to help her husband Dimas, who was arrested and placed in immigration custody in March.
After Dimas, the undocumented breadwinner of the family, was quickly sent to a detention center in Georgia, Edith sought an immigration lawyer on social media, where a stranger recommended a supposed Florida-based attorney.
“I was scheduled for a video call, and the woman who said she was a lawyer said that to get someone out of immigration detention, a habeas corpus needed to be filed,” Edith told ABC News.
Edith retained the woman and began communicating with her frequently. She completed documents the woman sent her, and began sending the woman payments. She even received documents that appeared to be from U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), the federal agency that oversees immigration services.
“She began asking for money, $500, $600, $1,750, $4,000 for the bond, petition, copies [of forms],” Edith said.
But last month, when the woman was scheduled to participate in a video call for Dimas’ initial hearing before an immigration judge, she never appeared on the call. Edith’s husband later told her that the judge said that the attorney wasn’t registered in the court system.
“He said, ‘They’re scamming you,'” Edith said. “I said, ‘But why? Why me?’ I started to feel really bad and I didn’t know what to do.”
After confronting the woman she had hired, Edith realized she had been scammed out of more than $10,000 — her life savings. And with all her money gone, she was unable to pay for a legitimate lawyer to represent her husband, who last month was ordered deported by an immigration judge.
‘A billion-dollar industry’
Edith is one of many victims across the country that law enforcement and immigration lawyers say are being targeted by bad actors seizing on the Trump administration’s mass deportation agenda.
Some scammers, according to officials, are using artificial intelligence to hold fake immigration court proceedings with scammers wearing judicial robes and law enforcement uniforms, using fake documents that appear to be from federal agencies.
“In my experience, this is a billion-dollar industry,” said Jorge Rivera, an immigration lawyer in Florida.
Rivera told ABC News that scammers, including the woman who Edith hired, have used his credentials and his law firm’s information to target immigrants.
“[Victims] have shown up to our office and they say, ‘What happened to my case?'” he said.
ABC News found cases of sophisticated immigration scams across the country, including in New York, where five defendants pleaded not guilty to charges accusing them of holding “sham immigration proceedings” including asylum interviews and court appearances.
According to the complaint, one victim ended up missing their real immigration hearing and was deported.
“In doing so, the defendants demonstrated a complete and utter disregard for the potentially life-altering consequences that their actions inflicted on their victims — vulnerable individuals who not only lost significant funds, but also missed their actual immigration court appearances,” prosecutors said.
And last month, four people in Orlando, Florida, were charged with setting up a fake immigration law firm and extorting millions from victims. They have not yet entered formal pleas.
‘It’s heartbreaking’
Rivera said immigration scams have gotten “exponentially worse” during the second Trump administration, because more pathways for immigration relief “have closed.”
“There’s been pauses, there’s more denials, undoubtedly, it’s more difficult to be able to resolve your immigration status,” he said. “So this is a perfect storm for the criminals.”
Rivera said that if those seeking help are “talking to a legitimate attorney and they’re talking to a fraudster, and the fraudster is giving them hope and giving them possibilities, they’re going to go with the person that’s giving them the hope.”
Rivera said he has been working with law enforcement across the country to send them information on alleged scammers, and has been reaching out to social media companies to take down fake profiles.
In a statement to ABC News, the Department of Homeland Security said scammers are also “pretending to be ICE and USCIS to trick people into giving them money or personal information.”
The DHS said that officials will never call out of the blue, demand money, or accept payments using gift cards or crypto currency.
Scammers are also targeting immigrant advocacy groups like Catholic Charities, Kevin Brennan, Catholic Charities’ vice president, told ABC News.
“It’s really been over the past year or so that we started hearing reports of people claiming to be Catholic Charities and other organizations that provide legal services to immigrants and refugees and using social media to fraudulently offer services, express urgency, ask for money,” Brennan told ABC News.
“It’s heartbreaking to see people who are in need and looking for help and being taken advantage of in such a terrible way by these fraudsters and criminals,” he said.
In Edith’s case, the possibility of getting legitimate legal help to try to get her husband released before he’s deported is slipping away. After an immigration judge ordered her husband deported on April 28, he is currently in ICE custody awaiting removal to Guatemala.
Edith said she will likely go to Guatemala to remain with her husband.
“It’s very ugly, and I don’t wish it on anyone else — to a person who is alone and without support,” she said. “This is not easy.”
Katie Sasser sits down with Melinda McKinsey to chat about Plexaderm.