After more than seven decades running the Outer Banks Motel in Buxton, North Carolina, Carol Dillion knowns a thing or two about storms. The 96-year-old says one thing she still worries about is whether Hurricane Erin will chip away at the shoreline where her business is located. Rob Marciano reports and Lonnie Quinn has the forecast. Lawmakers in Texas Wednesday heard from the families of those who died in the July 4th flood at Camp Mystic. More than two dozen campers and counselors were among 135 people killed in the floods. Jason Allen reports. National Guard troops from six Republican-led states continue to arrive on the streets of Washington, D.C., as part of President Trump's federal takeover of the D.C. police department. Scott MacFarlane reports the troops were visited by Vice President JD Vance. After months of missing the bullseye on sales, the CEO of Target is headed for the exit. The company said that CEO Brian Cornell will be replaced in February. Jo Ling Kent has more. With roughly 400,000 trade jobs unfilled in the U.S., data centers powering the artificial intelligence boom face a staffing crisis. Mark Strassmann reports. On this day in 1920, representatives from four football teams met in an automobile dealership in Canton, Ohio, and agreed to form the American Professional Football Conference. Two years later, that football conference became the National Football League, and it has continued to evolve ever since.
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