Viral Tweet Sparks Debate About Rescuing Pets From Hot Cars
A viral tweet has ignited an important debate about dogs being left in hot cars. Should bystanders break the window and rescue the dog? Or keep walking?
A viral tweet has ignited an important debate about dogs being left in hot cars. Should bystanders break the window and rescue the dog? Or keep walking?
Jim From Treasure Fine Jewelers joins Abbi at the studio to tell viewers what they have in store.
Protocol at North Carolina Zoo says that if a human life is at risk, the zoo will kill the animal, an official said Monday as debate raged over the weekend shooting of a Cincinnati zoo gorilla after a child tumbled into the animal’s moat.
As the National Park Service celebrates its 100th anniversary this summer, record crowds are expected to pack the system’s national park sites. In 2015, a record 307.2 million people visited national parks, monuments, lakeshores and more, according to NPS data. That’s a whopping 14.5 million person increase from just the year before. As a solution, park managers say, it might be…
Local researchers are taking to the sky to keep beach-goers safe in the water. The research is a collaboration between Duke and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and is funded by the North Carolina Aquariums.
Stephanie of Tupelo Honey Cafe joins Greg at the studio to tell viewers more about a special upcoming event.
Nancy of Dockside Realty joins Abbi at the studio to tell viewers about today’s Listing of the Week. For more information, you can contact Nancy at 843-318-1838 or email her at njatthebeach@yahoo.com.
Zoo officials at the Cincinnati Zoo shot and killed a 17-year old gorilla that was manhandling a small boy who had fallen into its enclosure on Saturday afternoon.
If you’re looking for a simple way to be more productive at work, just stand up. Productivity among employees with desks that allow them to stand or sit is 46% higher than that of their perennially seated peers, according to a study of call-center workers conducted by Texas A&M Health Science Center
Microsoft and Facebook are building a giant cable across the Atlantic: 4,100-mile-long subsea network will provide faster services.