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The paper was renamed the Tabor-Loris Tribune by 2007. [ 1 ] [ 17 ] Rusty Carter was fined $5,000 and barred for two years from contributing to political campaigns, after having dispensed hundreds of thousands of dollars as bonuses to Atlantic Corp. employees with the understanding that some of them would be used as poli [ 16 ] tical campaign ...
After a few decades of fishing and writing about the outdoors [6] (the Library of Congress catalogs 12 books published 1980 to 2001), Carter returned to Tabor City and returned to The Tribune. [ 4 ] The newspaper is still in circulation today, now called The Tabor-Loris Tribune , and it is owned and operated by parent company Atlantic Packaging ...
The News Reporter won the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service in 1953, shared with the Tabor City Tribune, for reporting of Ku Klux Klan activities in Columbus County, NC. [1] [2] [3] The News Reporter had been owned by the Thompson/High family since 1938. [4] Les High and Stuart High Rogers sold the paper in 2021 to Justin Smith, the paper's ...
The leader of Temple University suddenly died Tuesday after falling ill at a memorial service, officials at the Philadelphia school said. Acting President JoAnne A. Epps, 72, was attending a ...
Tabor City (/ ˈ t eɪ b ɜːr / TAY-bur) [4] is a town in Columbus County, North Carolina, United States.It is the southernmost town in the county. It is located just north of the North Carolina/South Carolina line, about 39 miles (63 km) north of Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, and is just north of Loris, South Carolina.
John S. Carroll was born in New York City on January 23, 1942, to Wallace Carroll, the editor and publisher of the Winston-Salem Journal and Sentinel, and the former Margaret Sawyer. The family lived in Winston-Salem, North Carolina , until John was about 13, when they moved to Washington, D.C., where his father began working with the New York ...
The Twin-City Sentinel was the name of the afternoon newspaper published in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. The Sentinel ' s masthead was dropped in 1985 when operations were absorbed into its sister paper, the morning Winston-Salem Journal. Twin City derived from the fact that Winston and Salem began as separate cities.
The Winston-Salem Journal, started by Charles Landon Knight, began publishing in the afternoons on April 3, 1897. The area's other newspaper, the Twin City Sentinel , also was an afternoon paper. Knight moved out of the area and the Journal had several owners before publisher D.A. Fawcett made it a morning paper starting January 2, 1902.