Wednesday, May 22 2013 9:38 PM EDT2013-05-23 01:38:14 GMT
MOORE, OK - The trembling, mud-spattered dog whose photo went viral on Tuesday was not actually standing watch over her owner's body - her name is Susie, her owner is named Curtis Collins, and he's alive.ThanksMore >>
There's a happy ending to the story of the little dog who was found standing guard over a body after the EF-5 tornado that decimated her neighborhood in Moore, OK. Her owner is alive, and they have been reunited thanks to the viral photo. More >>
Wednesday, May 22 2013 11:19 PM EDT2013-05-23 03:19:07 GMT
Based on an inspection done by an independant auto technician contracted by WTOL, some repair shops missed necessary repairs altogether, while others recommended unnecessary fixes.More >>
Based on an inspection done by an independant auto technician contracted by WTOL, some repair shops missed necessary repairs altogether, while others recommended unnecessary fixes.More >>
The Fostoria police department received a report of an attempted child abduction occurring on South Town Street near the railroad crossing Wednesday morning.More >>
Barbara Garcia says she's been preparing for a tornado ever since she moved to the Moore, Oklahoma area 45 years ago. More >>
Barbara Garcia says she's been preparing for a tornado ever since she moved to the Moore, Oklahoma area 45 years ago.More >>
(Toledo News Now) -
A
man in the United Kingdom experienced a terrifying fall when mountain climbing
last month. He has since shared the point-of-view footage captured by his head
camera.
Mark
Roberts, 47, said he was climbing the snowy Parsley Fern Lefthand Gully in
Wales February 24 with two others when a chunk of ice hit his head and caused him to fall.
In
an interview
with The BMC, Roberts explained what was going through his head as he fell.
"The
speed at which events took hold meant I knew it was going to go some distance,"
he said. "There was no feeling of panic, more a concerted effort to protect my
head and neck and be aware of what was below me, where I was heading and what I
could do to slow and stop myself before I got to the more serious rocky
outcrops."
Roberts' fall was seen by fellow climbers and he was rescued quickly.