Win a Wild Wing Cafe Office Party
From 12:00am on 4/5/21 to 11:59pm on 4/11/21, listeners will be directed to FM99.com to the “Win an Office Party” contest page to complete a registration for a chance to win an office party on 4/16/21 at 12pm. One winner will receive food for 10 people courtesy of Wild Wing Cafe (ARV: $100 per Wild Wing Café). 1 winner will be randomly chosen from all eligible entrants on 4/12/21 by a WNOR staffer and notified by phone. Winner will receive food at the office party on 4/16/21 at delivered to workplace at approximately 12pm. No purchase necessary. Entrants and winners are to be chosen at the sole discretion of WNOR.
The old Ruby Tuesday restaurant building, which sat empty for years, was torn down at the Willingboro Town Center in recent months to prepare for a new resident: A Chase Bank.
The building next door is also empty. Half of it once housed a Starbucks, then a Hardee’s Restaurant, but now just looks lonely in the Town Center, a mixed-used development which includes a satellite campus of Rowan College at Burlington County, retail stores, restaurants, the library and multiple other businesses.
Willingboro, like some other South Jersey towns, can’t seem to get sit-down restaurant chains as opposed to fast-food chains to put roots down.
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By allowing ads to appear on this site, you support the local businesses who, in turn, support great journalism. Statesboro family seeks answers in murder ‘Cherry Head’ Howard shot to death Jan. 28 After sharing stories and information with local news media about her son John Trivonne Howard, who was shot to death, on Friday, Sherman Lewis, center, is consoled by niece Jessica Howard while brother Michael Howard continues to plead for information about the shooting. - photo by By SCOTT BRYANT/staff
Close family members of John Trivonne Deondre Howard faced journalists at the Statesboro Police Department headquarters Friday morning to issue a public appeal to anyone who knows who shot him to death to provide that information to police.
In the music industry, 2020 will be remembered as a bleak year, thanks to COVID-19.
Touring has been shut down since March. Venues across the country have closed their doors. Even those that have managed to hang on have gone through lockdowns and mandatory closures that have darkened their stages, leaving artists who depend on steady gigs scrambling to make alternative arrangements to pay the bills. In many ways, most musicians are glad to see it go â but not Johnathen Clayton.
For 21-year-old âJohno,â as heâs known around Blount County, 2020 marked a turning point. It was the year he cut the safety line tying him to a civilian 9-to-5 and took the plunge into making music as a career. It was the year he began making inroads into Nashville, the city that undoubtedly will play a role in his country music future.