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Recent Blog Posts
Dog-fighting ring busted in Montgomery County by AnnistonStar
May 25, 2010 |  0 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend
Montgomery County sheriff's deputies are looking for 20 to 30 suspects involved in a dog-fight­ing ring near Ramer. Deputies found a dog-fighting event in progress about mid­night Sunday after receiving an anonymous tip, said Humane Deputy Scott Hill. The event was held near the dead end of Ni...
Athens resident questions scarcity of black police officers by AnnistonStar
May 25, 2010 |  3 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend
A local resident questioned Athens City Council members Monday on why there are not more African-American officers in the Police Department. Dr. Eugene C. English called for a citywide recruitment effort to increase the numbers of black officers. Read the full story from The Athens News Cou...
Legal action on Etowah County bingo to resume soon by AnnistonStar
May 25, 2010 |  0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend
Legal action on the Etowah County electronic bingo case should soon resume, according to District Attorney Jimmie Harp. A ruling Friday by the Alabama Supreme Court said Gov. Bob Riley's Task Force on Illegal Gambling had the authority to continue its legal efforts to shut down electronic bingo...
Child porn suspect flees Florida on ice cream truck found in Mobile by AnnistonStar
May 25, 2010 |  0 comments | 6 6 recommendations | email to a friend
Authorities say a man wanted on charges of possessing child pornography and placing his wife in a brothel has been captured in Louisiana after fleeing the Pensacola, Fla., area in an ice cream truck later found abandoned in Mobile, Ala. U.S. marshals arrested Martin Lyle Christianson without in...
Businessman puts pressure on lawmakers over free Iron Bowl tickets by AnnistonStar
May 25, 2010 |  0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend
A Birmingham activist is getting an early start in his campaign to dissuade Alabama legislators and public officials from accepting free tickets to the 2010 Iron Bowl game. Jim Metrock of Obligation, Inc., whose mission is to "remove marketers from public schools," has been badgering lawmakers...
Montgomery robbery victims turn on tormentors when they realize the gun's unloaded by AnnistonStar
May 24, 2010 |  0 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend
Victims of a home invasion robbery fought back, eventually hog-tying two suspects until officers could arrive, police said. The seven victims told police that the two suspects entered their residence through an unlocked door and demanded money early Saturday morning. Read the full stor...
Georgia man arrested in Huntsville for kidnapping warrants, kids found safe by AnnistonStar
May 24, 2010 |  0 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend
A man police say kidnapped four children in Rome, Ga., Sunday afternoon was picked up by Huntsville police Sunday night, authorities said. Walter Antonio Ventura Torres, 27, is wanted in Georgia on four kidnapping charges, said Huntsville Sgt. Mark Roberts. Police said someone called autho...
Eufaula teacher now facing sex crime charges in Dothan by AnnistonStar
May 24, 2010 |  0 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend
A Eufaula school teacher charged in Eufaula earlier this week with multiple counts of rape and sodomy involving a 15-year-old student is now facing similar charges in Dothan. Carrie Smith Perkins, 29, of Eufaula, has now been charged by the Dothan Police Department with second-degree rap...
Pell City student bitten by bat at school by AnnistonStar
May 21, 2010 |  4 comments | 6 6 recommendations | email to a friend
A student was bitten by a bat at the high school Thursday afternoon. “The bat was outside the perimeter of the school,” said Michael Barber, assistant superintendent, of Pell City schools. “Somehow this child came in contact with a bat.” Read the full story from The Daily Home.
Springville High School teacher faces trial next week on charges of sex abuse of former student by AnnistonStar
May 21, 2010 |  0 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend
The trial of a teacher charged with two counts of sodomy and one count of enticing a child is expected to begin next week. St. Clair County Assistant District Attorney Lamar Williamson said a jury is expected to be selected Monday for the trial of Springville High School teacher Randall Fra...

Today's Events
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Tuesday, 18, 2013
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Pond Spring- The Gener... 3:50 PM
Oxford Farmers market 12:00 AM to 11:59 PM
Join us for the kick-off of Oxford's first...
Oxford Farmers market 12:00 AM to 11:59 PM
Join us for the kick-off of Oxford's first...
Braves drop first game of doubleheader to Mets
by Associated Press
Jun 18, 2013 | 0 views |  0 comments | 0 0 recommendations | email to a friend | print
New York Mets shortstop Omar Quintanilla (3) holds up the ball after tagging out Atlanta Braves Jason Heyward trying to steal second base. (AP Photo/Todd Kirkland)
New York Mets shortstop Omar Quintanilla (3) holds up the ball after tagging out Atlanta Braves Jason Heyward trying to steal second base. (AP Photo/Todd Kirkland)
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ATLANTA — Matt Harvey pitched six hitless innings, John Buck homered and the New York Mets held off another Atlanta comeback, beating the Braves 4-3 today in the first game of a doubleheader. Harvey (6-1) didn't allow a hit until Jason Heyward's fluke infield single leading off the seventh but tired in the eighth as the Braves tried to rally for the second straight game. Trailing 4-0, Atlanta scored three runs and had the bases loaded before Bobby Parnell, the fourth Mets pitcher of the inning, fanned Chris Johnson to end the threat. Parnell earned his 10th save with a scoreless ninth. Harvey had a career-high 13 strikeouts and surrendered just three hits. Buck homered in the fourth. Braves rookie Alex Wood (0-1) took the loss in his first career start. The Braves opened the five-game series against their NL East rival with the team's 21st comeback win of the season, a rain-delayed 2-1 victory that ended at 12:22 a.m. — less than 12 hours before the start of the start of the day-night doubleheader. Dillon Gee took a 1-0 lead to the ninth, but Freddie Freeman won it for the Braves with a two-run homer. The Braves didn't come close to a hit off Harvey through six innings, their only baserunners on a pair of walks in the third. Finally, Heyward reached safely on perhaps the weakest ball hit off the New York starter all day — a weak dribbler up the first-base line. Harvey came off the mound to field it and flipped to first base, but there was no one there to catch it. Lucas Duda, making just his second start of the season at first, charged in and left the bag uncovered. New York padded its lead with two runs in the eighth, just enough to hold off the Braves. In the bottom half, Gerald Laird led off with a walk, Dan Uggla reached on a bad-hop single and Andrelton Simmons knocked out Harvey with Atlanta's first clean hit, a sharp single between shortstop and third base. Pinch-hitter Brian McCann struck out against LaTroy Hawkins, but Jordan Schafer singled in two runs to make it 4-2. Another pinch-hitter, Justin Upton, grounded into a forceout to leave runners at first and third before the Mets made another pitching change, bringing on towering lefty Scott Rice to face Heyward. Heyward lined a double off Duda's glove to make it 4-3. After Rice intentionally walked Freeman, Parnell struck out Johnson. The Braves struck out 16 times in all. Harvey finally got a little run support from the Mets, who had scored only 18 runs in his previous 10 starts while he was in the game. Largely because of that, he had eight no-decisions in a stretch of nine appearances before the hard-luck 2-1 loss to the St. Louis Cardinals in his previous appearance, snapping a stretch of 14 consecutive starts without a loss dating to his final appearance of 2012. New York stretched its lead to 4-0 with a pair of runs in the eighth off David Carpenter. Pinch hitter Jordany Valdespin walked with the bases loaded, and Omar Quintanilla followed with a sacrifice fly. Another touted Mets prospect, Zack Wheeler, was scheduled to make his debut in the nightcap as New York showed off what it hopes will be the future cornerstones of its long rebuilding job. While Wheeler is expected to head back to the minors for more seasoning, Harvey is already one of the NL's most dominant starters in his first full season. He eclipsed his previous career high of 12 strikeouts in a May 7 game against the Chicago White Sox. The free-swinging Braves couldn't do against Harvey, looking especially feeble during a stretch that began when Reid Johnson struck out to end the third. Harvey fanned the side in the fourth — Heyward, Freeman and Chris Johnson — before starting the fifth with two more Ks by Laird and Dan Uggla. Simmons finally ended the streak of six straight strikeouts with a groundout. All six hitters in the stretch went down swinging. The Mets broke through in the third against Wood after the rookie struck out the first two hitters. Daniel Murphy singled to left and moved to second on a balk. David Wright walked and Marlon Byrd hit a grounder to Chris Johnson at third. After making a nifty grab on a tricky hop, Johnson looked toward second for a split second before throwing to first. Byrd beat the throw and Murphy never stopped running, coming all the way around to score from second on what ruled an infield hit. Wood, who had been pitching out of the Atlanta bullpen, struggled a bit with his control. He was lifted after throwing 73 pitches in just three innings, having allowed just two hits with three walks and five strikeouts. Cory Rasmus took over in the fourth, and the Mets quickly extended their lead. Buck led off with his 12th homer of the season into the left-field seats.
Crime Bulletin for June 18, 2013
Jun 18, 2013 | 381 views |  0 comments | 9 9 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Anniston Middle School
Anniston Middle School
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Editorial: The shattered world of Anniston Middle School
by The editorial board of The Anniston Star
Jun 18, 2013 | 391 views |  0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Anniston Middle School
Anniston Middle School
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Any cocoon of stability that may have surrounded Anniston Middle School is now shattered.
Last month, after decades of debate, the Anniston Board of Education voted to close the school on Alabama 21 and move its students to other campuses as part of a system-wide reorganization and cost-cutting measure.

Last week, Superintendent Joan Frazier announced her retirement for June 2014, meaning someone else -- possibly from outside the system hierarchy -- will shepherd the system through the middle school’s closure.

And Tuesday, the state Board of Education included Anniston Middle on its list of “failing” schools that, as part of the Alabama Accountability Act, will allow parents zoned for AMS to receive tax credits if they transfer elsewhere.

For the Anniston Board of Education, the state board’s list of 78 “failing” schools represents two different headlines -- both significant. No other Anniston schools made the list. (For that matter, Anniston Middle was the only school in Calhoun County to be deemed “failing” by the state board.)

Anniston High School, whose dropout and graduation rates have long been serious civic concerns, and the system’s five elementary schools are free of both the stigma and the practicality of being considered “failing” institutions. We are glad that’s the case.

But the other headline didn’t bring a sigh of relief to a city desperate to use public education in its efforts to reinvent the city’s outlook on vital matters such as job creation, economic growth and crime reduction. A city without vibrant and well-supported public schools is a city that struggles to educate its children and sustain its future. A city without successful public schools is a city that faces stagnation and decline, not prosperity.

That is Anniston’s struggle today.

Our advice is to consider Anniston Middle School’s label as a “failing” school as part old news and part opportunity. Don’t overreact.

Instead, see Anniston Middle as what it is -- a school already destined for closure. That’s not a rationalization; it’s a fact. What’s important now is the system’s still-developing reorganization that, once completed, is expected to lessen the system’s fiscal concerns.

More important, still, is this community’s understanding that the education of the children within Anniston’s public schools must be a grade-A priority. It is not the priority solely of the city’s educators or its black community, whose children are overwhelmingly the majority of the city’s schools. It must be a priority for all who want Anniston to prosper.

Make no mistake: We are disappointed that the state considers Anniston Middle School a “failing” school. But we cannot lose focus on the larger, vital picture -- the reinvention of Anniston’s school system and the improvement of its public education. The ailments are well known. Repairing them with hard work and rational decisions is the key.
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