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NYT's selling its regional newspapers, including three in North Carolina

The New York Times is in discussions to sell its 16 regional newspapers, including three publications in North Carolina -- The Wilmington Star-News, the Hendersonville Times-News and the Lexington Dispatch.

The company confirmed the talks with Halifax Media Holdings in a release.

The Times has made a number of cost-cutting moves in recent years, including selling its headquarters building and its ownership stake in the Boston Red Sox.

The Times, along with the entire newspaper industry, has been pummeled in recent years by a dramatic downturn in advertising spending and the ongoing shift to online.

The Times recently instituted a pay wall on its website whereby readers can read a certain number of stories for free each month before they are asked to subsribe.

Smaller regional newspapers have been hit particularly hard by the decline in classified ads.
 

'One Tree Hill' wrap sale in Wilmington

The CW series "One Tree Hill" will wrap next week after nine seasons of production in Wilmington.

What happens next will be a huge "wrap sale," and your chance to own some of the clothing and other items used on the show.

The Wilmington Star-News wrote about the wrap sale, which will begin with a tag sale of about 15,000 pieces of wardrobe items, artwork and linens with fixed prices available for purchase December 2-4. The next weekend, December 9-11, furniture and appliances will be auctioned. They quote a marketer of the event, managed by Auction Company of Wilmington, as saying the more in-demand items will be auctioned the afternoon of December 10.

Screen Gems Studios is located at 1223 23rd Street in Wilmington. There's more detailed information about the auction items (including photos) and times at the Auction Company of Wilmington website.

Go get some stuff!

Bringing the battleship home

Fifty years ago this week, the first of more than 10 million visitors boarded the newly docked USS North Carolina in its new home on the Wilmington riverfront.

Thanks to the efforts of Jimmy Craig and Hugh Morton, along with 700,000 school children across North Carolina, the battleship was saved from the scrapyard. Bringing it home, however, was no easy matter.

The move, originally scheduled for October 1, 1961, had to be delayed for a day because of the weather and problems with some of the tug boats.

At nearly 729 feet, the North Carolina  was the longest ship to navigate the river, which was only 500 feet wide at the time. Also, the ship drew 30 feet of water, and the channel was only 32 feet deep.

After 10 hours of intricate maneuvering with a fleet of tugs pushing and pulling, the huge, 35,000 ton battlewagon was edged into a slip here at 5:37 p.m.

Thousands of persons lined the Wilmington waterfront and had a grandstand view as the ticklish maneuver of edging the ship from the Cape Fear River into her slip was executed.

The bow of the North Carolina apparently went aground at one time during the move into the slip. The only other mishap to mar the big ship's final voyage came when gunmounts at the very end of her stern crunched into the topside of a floating restaurant, the Ark, moored at the end of Princess Street.

This was not the first time the Ark had been on the losing end of such an encounter.

On prominent display inside the restaurant has been a Navy submarine plaque in honor of the fact that the Ark some years ago was involved in the only recorded collision between a "man-of-war and a restaurant." The man-of-war was the Navy sub USS Crusher. -- The News & Observer 10/3/1961

The USS North Carolina's service in World War II included downing 24 planes, fighting in every major offensive in the Pacific, and earning 15 battle stars. Six times the Japanese reporting sinking it.

The Japanese couldn't sink the battleship, but a history book nearly did. In 1971, Sandy Bunn, a high school junior from Rocky Mount wrote to the staff of the Battleship Memorial, asking if the ship had been recovered or if the memorial was a replica. He had read in a library book, The Story of Submarines by George Weller that the USS North Carolina had been sunk.

Weller's book was published by Random House, Inc., as part of it "Landmark Books" for children in the middle grades of school. On page 121 it tells of submarine attacks sinking the battleship North Carolina and the cruiser Indianapolis.

But the North Carolina was never sunk, only damaged by a torpedo in September 1943, memorial officials said. The memorial organization reported it will set the record straight.

Meanwhile, Sandy was brought to the memorial to visit the battleship and see for himself that it is the real thing. -- The News & Observer 2/14/1971

Read more about the campaign to save the battleship.

See video about moving the USS North Carolina into Wilmington and read more about Sandy Bunn from Rocky Mount.

 

Clayton Price (left), a crewmember of the USS North Carolina during World War II, reassures Sandy Bunn of Rocky Mount that the ship is authentic. (File Photo)

THE NEW FALL SEASON: "Hart of Dixie"

In "Hart of Dixie" (9 tonight, CW) Zoe Hart (Rachel Bilson) wants to be a big-time New York doctor like her dad, and is on the fast track to her goal. But Hart is cold-hearted, (get it?!) and on TV that means she needs to get some humility -- pronto.

Zoe's trip to being a better person begins with her accepting a mysterious offer to join a small-town Southern practice. She rolls into town in high heels and a Chanel jacket, of course, to show just how much she does not belong with these fine simple people who will eventually transform her. While the Southerness often goes over the top,  the fish-out-of-water, romance vibe (yes, of course, there's a cute guy waiting there!) is kinda sweet, if not awfully original.

The pilot was shot in Wilmington, so look for familiar sites. (Production has since moved to L.A.)

Clash of the Carolinas this Saturday

The fifth annual Clash of the Carolinas all-star soccer games will be played this Saturday on Daniels Island, near Charleston, S.C., where UNC's Farrell Sweeney, an East Chapel Hill alumna, UNC Asheville goalie Dan Jackson (East Chapel Hill '11) and UNC Wilmington midfielder Jamie Dell (Chapel Hill '11) will be on the N.C.  teams.

Group plans to create oyster reefs near Wilmington

The environmental group PenderWatch & Conservancy wants to create 12 oyster reefs on the Intracoastal Waterway near Wilmington to help clean the water flowing through the area and prevent erosion. The group hopes to have permits by March.

Read more about it here.

Manufacturer to expand in Duplin County, add 89 jobs

A Duplin County manufacturer plans to expand its production facility and add 89 jobs over the next three years.

Wilmington-based Precision Hydraulic Cylinders will add the jobs at its Beulaville factory, located about 100 southeast of Raleigh. The private company was founded in 2002 and also has factories in Wallace, N.C., Cramlington, England, and Chennai, India.

The Rock coming to Wilmington

Gov. Bev Perdue can deliver the rock.

Dwayne Johnson that is.

Perdue's office announced today that New Line Cinemas will begin filming Journey 2: The Mysterious Island, starring Dwayne Johnson and Michael Caine, later this month in Wilmington.

The shooting is expected to last for five months, with an economic impact "in the millions of dollars," according to a release.

Here's a summary of the plot from comingsoon.net:

"Dwayne Johnson will play the boyfriend of Josh Hutcherson's mom, who Hutcherson is forced to bring on a trip  to a mythical and monstrous island to find his missing grandfather. The script is loosely based on Jules Verne's "The Mysterious Island."

Why did the filmmakers choose Wilmington? Because of our water tank.
 

Triangle softball teams win medals at Senior Games

The JoJammers won the silver medal in the women’s softball 55-plus division at the Senior Games of North Carolina State Finals played Sept. 13-15 at the Walnut Creek Softball Complex in Raleigh.

The JoJammers, from the Raleigh Wake Senior Games, finished second to the Why Nots, who advanced from the Alamance Burlington Senior Games.

Results from other divisions are below.

Virginias team rallies past Carolinas team for junior golf title

The Carolinas narrowly won the final-day singles competition, but the Virginias rallied late and took a two-point overall victory on Sunday at the 28th Virginias-Carolinas Junior Matches.

The eight-golfer Virginias team won three of the final four singles matches to win the championship at the Country Club of Landfall’s Pete Dye course in Wilmington.

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