CityView Magazine - Fayetteville, NC
Issue link: http://www.epageflip.net/i/1002707
Discover CityViewNC.com's fresh updated look! | 21 FABRIC for LIFE 20% off Papa always loved a great sale... THE MILL END STORE E s t . 1 9 3 6 NEW HOURS: Tuesday - Saturday 10 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Closed July 3 - July 9 Eutaw Shopping Center 2706 Bragg Blvd., Fayetteville, N.C. 910-483-2375 themillendstore.org GUNTHER AUGUSTIN July 1, 1927 January 30, 2018 It was a wonderful life... Brother, cavalry officer, radiologist, teacher, woodworker, stone mason, gardener, equestrian, philanthropist, bibliophile, world traveler, caregiver, antiquarian, cuisinier, linguist, immigrant, good neighbor, animal lover, Fabrics & trims — July 10 through August 31 Specializing in custom drapery & upholstery With Love, Babette husband & father. Find Concerts, Children's Activities, Marathons, Fundraisers, and Other Local Events INSTANTLY! Just text the word EVENTS to the number 88000 Local Events Will Display On Your Phone. USE IT ANYTIME & ANYWHERE W hen you invite people into your home regularly, it's usually because you trust them and like them. at's so even or maybe especially if they're entering by way of your TV screen. So you tend to miss them if they go away. What you may not know then is they may miss you, too. Aer 34 years with WRAL-TV, news anchor Bill Leslie sure wasn't going to retire without saying goodbye to his faithful viewers. But he went a step beyond most departing TV journalists. In June, he visited five cities in the station's view- ing area as part of what was billed as a Farewell Tour. In Cary, Durham, Ra- leigh, Smithfield and, yes, Fayetteville, people lined up to say hello to Leslie - and goodbye. And thanks. During an extra-long lunch break at e Arts Council, people packed inside to meet the 67-year-old Leslie, whose award-winning work at WRAL over the years included reporting, anchor- ing and hosting the popular "Tar Heel Traveler" series. In recent years, he co- anchored the morning and noon news. At the stop in Fayetteville, the crowd included plenty of locals, but also a few who'd driven more than a few miles. One woman drove from Goldsboro to shake Leslie's hand. Some gave him a hug. Many came with presents - everything from a framed drawing of downtown Fay- etteville from City Center Gallery & Books to a gi basket from the A Bit of Carolina shop to some "snake oil" from Dunrovin Country Store in Vass. David Salmon, who brought the latter gi, told Leslie it would help relieve his aches and pains in retirement.