The organization released a picture of several people walking in the dunes very near a group of the wild horses – including children.
-
One sailor was flown to a Virginia Naval Hospital and remains in stable condition after a training exercise involving the U.S.S. Wasp and Marines from Camp Lejeune.
-
Governor Cooper signed the bill into law last year that allows municipalities to employ civilians to investigate traffic crashes involving only property damage.
-
With construction underway on the future site of a behavioral health hospital in Greenville, ECU Health’s Behavioral Health team visited the site to talk about mental health safety with the construction team building the facility.
-
Senators Ted Budd and Joni Ernst of Iowa received first-hand updates on the state of the hostage negotiations from top U.S. and Israeli officials including Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
-
Haley Hernandez is a student at Early College East, a high school program that allows students to take classes on the Havelock campus during high school to graduate with a degree and their diploma simultaneously.
-
The measure championed by North Carolina U.S. Congressman Don Davis is a legislative response to Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin failing to tell the White House that he was hospitalized earlier this year.
-
Base officials say a unit that is preparing for deployment will be performing live fire training on Sunday during normally quiet hours.
-
Beaufort County Community College plans to partner with Open Door Women's Shelter to establish the Navigation Room at the shelter, to address the limited privacy available and empower families to access resources and progress toward independence.
-
East Carolina University’s College of Nursing will have Service League Scholars starting next school year, thanks to a $1 million gift from the Service League of Greenville.
-
North Carolina U.S. Senator Thom Tillis and his fellow Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee are calling for a hearing on the civil rights violations of Jewish students and the proliferation of terrorist ideology on college campuses.
Local Features
Latest from NPR
-
During a Senate hearing Wednesday on antisemitism in K-12 schools, superintendents were unapologetic as they faced tough questions about discipline and accountability.
-
Morning Edition host Steve Inskeep knocks on doors in Pennsylvania and Arizona, to hear the views of voters on immigration.
-
Three of Donald Trump's criminal trials are on hold indefinitely, and may not move forward before the November election.
-
France has officially welcomed the Olympic flame in a ceremony in the southern port city of Marseille. The event featured fighter jets and fireworks, and some 200,000 spectators.
-
One of the most important figures in shaping the sounds the '80s and '90s has died. Steve Albini fronted the bands Big Black and Shellac and engineered albums for Nirvana, the Pixies and PJ Harvey.
-
The Washington National Opera prepares to premiere a new ending to Giacomo Puccini's unfinished opera Turandot, subverting the traditional male-dominated narrative.
-
Republicans have raised the alarm about a migrant crime wave. Nationally, crime is down even as immigration has surged, but the concerns are real in some neighborhoods.
-
The House voted overwhelmingly to set aside a motion by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., to remove Johnson as speaker
-
A month after fast food workers in California started earning at least $20 an hour, how is the financial picture for them and franchise owners shaping up?
-
A drug company will voluntarily stop selling a medicine that was bringing in hundreds of millions of dollars, keeping a promise the business made years earlier to people with the fatal condition ALS.