News

ORLANDO, Fla. – As Hurricane Erin remains well offshore, the powerful Category 2 storm is stirring up trouble along the entire East Coast from Florida to Maine. As of early Thursday, Erin was located ...
On Thursday, Hurricane Erin was several hundred miles off the coast of North Carolina and pushing storm surge and deadly rip ...
The National Hurricane Center warned that roads in the low-lying barrier islands will become impassable, with waves of 15 to 20 feet crashing ashore.
Hurricane Erin began strengthening again Wednesday as it crept closer to the mid-Atlantic coast, its outer bands brushing North Carolina’s Outer Banks as beaches closed across much of the U.S. East ...
The outer bands of Hurricane Erin are approaching the North Carolina Outer Banks on Wednesday evening. Erin is a Category 2 storm with maximum sustained winds of 110 mph. Sign up for our NewslettersAs ...
Hurricane Erin battered North Carolina’s Outer Banks with strong winds and waves that flooded part of the main highway and surged under beachfront homes as the monster storm slowly began to move away ...
Hurricane Erin is just over 200 miles off the North Carolina coast early Thursday morning. There are tropical storm warnings up and down the Carolina coast ahead of the nearby pass from the storm.
Virginia Wesleyan University will be renamed Batten University in 2026 in honor of the contributions of Jane Batten and her family, the university announced on Wednesday.
Hurricane Erin's path will not bring its strongest winds ashore. However, it continues to grow in size, and its impacts from ...
A powerful and sprawling Hurricane Erin continued lashing hundreds of miles of coastline along the Eastern Seaboard with its outer bands Thursday morning, proving a storm of such size doesn't need to ...
Hurricane Erin has battered North Carolina’s Outer Banks with strong winds and waves that flooded part of the main highway ...
The International Space Station captured the unusually large storm as it swirled near the East Coast of the United States.