logo
Pet of the Day: Adopting Kismet is your destiny

Pet of the Day: Adopting Kismet is your destiny

Yahoo19-03-2025

GREENSBORO, N.C. (WGHP) — Meet Kismet, our FOX8 Pet of the Day!
If you're interested in adopting this pet or any other pets at Guilford County Animal Services, please call (336) 641-3401 or visit the .
Guilford County Animal Services is located at 980 Guilford College Road in Greensboro.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pilot attempted to avoid turtle on runway before deadly NC plane crash, NTSB report says
Pilot attempted to avoid turtle on runway before deadly NC plane crash, NTSB report says

The Hill

time3 days ago

  • The Hill

Pilot attempted to avoid turtle on runway before deadly NC plane crash, NTSB report says

MOCKSVILLE, N.C. (WGHP) – The pilot of a plane that crashed in North Carolina earlier this month had attempted to avoid a turtle on the runway just before the deadly accident, according to a preliminary report from the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). On June 3, a Stinson 108 Voyager carrying a pilot and two passengers crashed at Sugar Valley Airport in Mocksville. The pilot and one passenger were fatally injured; the other passenger suffered serious injuries. Earlier findings from the NTSB indicated that the crash occurred during a go-around. 'A go-around would be an attempt to land … then break off the landing and turn it into a takeoff and just continue flying up the runway to try again or go somewhere else,' Robert Katz, a commercial pilot and flight instructor, explained. In its latest preliminary report, the NTSB said a UNICOM operator informed the pilot of a turtle on the runway during the maneuver, causing the pilot to lift 'the right main wheel.' Another witness, doing landscaping work at the airport, had also seen the turtle. 'A man cutting the grass at the end of runway 2 reported that he saw the turtle on the runway and the pilot raised the right wheel to avoid the turtle. After that, the wings began to rock back and forth. Then the airplane took off again, but he lost [sight] of the airplane when it passed behind a hangar,' the report reads. 'The airplane disappeared just over the trees on the northeast side of the runway and then he heard a loud crash and saw smoke.' The pilot and a passenger were killed when the plane crashed into a 'heavily forested area' about 250 feet away from the runway, sparking a fire. The plane, parts of which were melted or destroyed by fire, was collected for the investigation. Justyn Araya DeBusk and Celeste Smith of Nexstar's WGHP contributed to this report.

Triad teachers, students preparing for once-in-a-lifetime trip abroad to learn about Holocaust
Triad teachers, students preparing for once-in-a-lifetime trip abroad to learn about Holocaust

Yahoo

time13-06-2025

  • Yahoo

Triad teachers, students preparing for once-in-a-lifetime trip abroad to learn about Holocaust

(WGHP) — By now, most teachers across the country have said goodbye to their students, turned out the lights in their classrooms and started a well-deserved summer vacation. But there are dozens of North Carolina public school teachers from the coast to the mountains preparing for what will likely be a once-in-a-lifetime experience abroad learning about the Holocaust. That includes Damian Adame, who just finished his fourth year teaching World History to ninth-grade and tenth-grade students at Page High School in Greensboro. 'It's a mixed bag. There are a lot of emotions that go into it,' Adame said. 'There's excitement because this is honestly something that I've wanted to do. But, at the same time, it's also a little daunting.' Adame is one of nearly 40 North Carolina public middle and high school educators selected to travel to Poland to learn about the Holocaust in the very places where much of it happened. Led by retired Greensboro Rabbi Fred Guttman, they'll spend eight days visiting death camps, ghettos, communities and museums and eventually bring it all home to their students. 'One of the cool things about this trip is it's not just a tour of the camps. It's not just a tour of these areas where the events occurred,' Adame said. 'It's a walking classroom. We're going to learn and take all these things and implement them in our classroom in a brand-new way.' The trip is funded by many organizations and private donors, including longtime Holocaust education advocates Zev and Bernice Harel of Greensboro. Zev is a Holocaust survivor who was sent to several death camps as a teen, including Auschwitz and Ebensee. He spent decades sharing his story all over the world. 'I felt comfortable doing that because the Holocaust was an experience that not too many survive,' Harel said. 'Each time [I was] speaking about human adaptation and what survivors did in order to make it possible to survive.' 'At some point, the survivors realized that if they didn't start talking, everything that happened and everything they witnessed would disappear with them eventually,' Bernice said. Now, at 95 years old, Zev isn't able to share his story like he used to. So in a lot of ways, this Holocaust education trip is picking up where survivors left off, ensuring stories such as Zev's continue to get told. 'Every person that goes on this trip is hopefully going to have a deeper understanding, but it's also going to give them a deeper connection,' Adame said. 'It's going to make us more motivated to give a better scope of what's going on with this event.' The teachers leave for Poland on Monday, and FOX8's Katie Nordeen and McKenzie Lewis have been invited to join them. You can expect their special stories on Teaching the Holocaust in September. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Randolph County neighbors upset about local gun range
Randolph County neighbors upset about local gun range

Yahoo

time07-06-2025

  • Yahoo

Randolph County neighbors upset about local gun range

RANDOLPH COUNTY, N.C. (WGHP) — For months, neighbors of the Triad Action Shooting Club in Randolph County have voiced concerns about the noise. Isaac Hoffman said he demanded that the gun range put up sound barriers or that the county remove the gun range altogether, and neighbors have made that very clear with signs. It all started one day in 2001. 'It was on a Sunday morning around 7:30, and I hear somebody shooting, and I'm like, 'Who would be shooting on a Sunday morning at 7:30?'' Hoffman said. This was only the beginning. Now, 24 years later, Hoffman said the gunfire is as bad as ever. 'In 2015 … they built these shelters to get out of the weather, and that's when it became World War III … Just shooting all the time. High-powered weapons. Large-caliber weapons,' Hoffman said. Hoffman has lived in his home since 1987. He said his peace is disturbed daily now. 'This is not about guns. I'm a gun owner … They bring a gun range, put it in my back yard and tell me they're going to shoot 365 days a year, and there's nothing we can do about it,' Hoffman said. Hoffman has attended every Randolph County Board of Commissioners meeting for eight months, demanding that the county get involved. According to county leaders, they can't do much. 'They basically said we had more power to stop this than they did,' Hoffman said. What that power is or how the residents can use it to see the changes they want hasn't been made clear. A few years ago, Hoffman tried to sell his house to get away from the disturbance. 'And I talked to a couple of realtors, and they both told me the same thing. They couldn't sell my property because of the gun range … If I did sell it, I would have to take a heck of a loss,' Hoffman said. Hoffman said the gunfire can be heard at all hours of the day, every day of the year. Hoffman and other residents decided that they would make every effort to make sure their demands are heard through signs. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store