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Recent Blog Posts
Alabama Gov. Robert Bentley declares General Fund proration cuts by AnnistonStar
Apr 01, 2011 |  0 comments | 6 6 recommendations | email to a friend
After weeks of warning about it, Gov. Robert Bentley on Thursday declared proration in the state General Fund, cutting this year's budgeted spending from the fund for some agencies by 15 percent but leaving prisons, Medicaid and a few other areas of state government largely untouched. "In ...
Alabama House of Representatives passes bill that would ban texting while driving by AnnistonStar
Apr 01, 2011 |  1 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend
The Alabama House of Representatives voted 86-2 Thursday to make it illegal to send text messages while driving. House members said the bill will keep drivers, particularly teens, safer. But a few legislators questioned how enforceable it would be. "Everybody knows we are going to save live...
Military overseas voting bill passes Alabama Senate by AnnistonStar
Apr 01, 2011 |  0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend
It’s hard for overseas servicemen and -women to vote back home in Alabama, but bills in the House and Senate will change that, the sponsor of a Senate bill said. The Senate by a 30-1 margin on Thursday approved a bill by Sen. Gerald Dial, R-Lineville, to create a 13-member Alabama Electroni...
Officials think they know scope of problem with tainted IV bags made in Birmingham by AnnistonStar
Mar 31, 2011 |  0 comments | 6 6 recommendations | email to a friend
Health officials said Wednesday they think they know the scope of a lethal bacterial infection linked to tainted IV bags made in Birmingham, but they also said the cases started well before this month's recall. In addition, an attorney representing the family of a patient who died after bei...
Woman accuses Tuscaloosa police officer of rape by AnnistonStar
Mar 31, 2011 |  0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend
A woman has accused a Tuscaloosa Police Officer of raping her early Sunday morning. The Tuscaloosa Police officer, whose name was not released, saw the 42-year-old woman walking along Alabama Highway 216 at 1 a.m. Sunday, Tuscaloosa Police Chief Steven Anderson said. Read the full story f...
DeKalb County shooting suspects in custody by AnnistonStar
Mar 31, 2011 |  0 comments | 6 6 recommendations | email to a friend
A man and woman wanted for questioning in the shooting of a Fort Payne man were taken into custody Wednesday morning after a two-day search, DeKalb County Sheriff Jimmy Harris said. Shawn Ray Willis and Jennifer Noel Lawson will be charged with first-degree assault and possibly will face ot...
Fort Payne shooting victim wrecks driving to hospital by AnnistonStar
Mar 30, 2011 |  0 comments | 6 6 recommendations | email to a friend
The DeKalb County Sheriff's Office is looking for a man wanted for questioning in the shooting of a Fort Payne man who wrecked his car when he lost consciousness while driving himself to the hospital. Jeffery Steven Williams, 33, apparently lost consciousness from blood loss when he wrecked on...
Fairhope mayor, police chief accuse each other of using private account for parties by AnnistonStar
Mar 30, 2011 |  2 comments | 6 6 recommendations | email to a friend
After the city’s police chief accused Mayor Tim Kant on Monday of using a private bank account called Friends of Fairhope Police to hold parties for “political friends,” Kant said he had filed a state ethics complaint against the police chief months ago about the same account.  “The real issue...
Alabama House passes bill to spare Medicaid, few other agencies from looming cuts by AnnistonStar
Mar 30, 2011 |  0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend
Medicaid and a few other agencies would be shielded from looming cuts in budgeted General Fund spending under a bill passed Tuesday by the House of Representatives. The House voted 97-1 for the bill, which passed the Senate last week. But the House made a change to the bill, and the Senate adj...
Etowah County Courthouse evacuated after bomb scare by AnnistonStar
Mar 29, 2011 |  0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend
The Etowah County Courthouse was evacuated after a bomb threat was called in at 9 a.m. More than a dozen law enforcement officers searched the building, and the Gadsden Fire Department responded. The Gadsden Bomb Squad did not respond. The Judicial building and Sheriff’s Office remained open...

Today's Events
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Wednesday, 19, 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...
Hip Hop Hope Vacation ... 12:00 AM to 11:59 PM
$0 The Living by Faith Ministry will host Vac...
Film students learn the business of storytelling
by Laura Gaddy
lbjohnson@annistonstar.com
Jun 19, 2013 | 74 views |  0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print
A group of students listen as instructor Jeffrey Nichols talks to them about how to properly set up a camera at the Longleaf Studios in Jacksonville. Photo by Trent Penny.
A group of students listen as instructor Jeffrey Nichols talks to them about how to properly set up a camera at the Longleaf Studios in Jacksonville. Photo by Trent Penny.
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JACKSONVILLE — On the floor of a converted warehouse Wednesday, Jana Tolliver steadied a light on a long, metal pole so it shone on an expanse of green-painted plywood. Also pointing at the green walls and floor were about a dozen other lights and one camera, waiting for action. Tolliver, 24, was one of a dozen teens and young adults in the warehouse to learn the basics of film production in a week-long camp hosted by the Northeast Alabama Film Initiative, a nonprofit established by Jacksonville State University to train a workforce to staff a local film industry. It’s hoped the effort will help attract filmmakers to take advantage of a 2009 tax-incentives law aimed at movie and television projects. For Tolliver, who hopes to become an animator, the camp is a chance to get her hands on movie-making equipment and learn how to tell stories through film. “I’m building an extra skill that might help me get a job related to what I want to do,” she said. The converted warehouse is the home of Longleaf Studios, the initiative’s facility in western Jacksonville. The green-painted plywood, according to program director Pete Conroy, is the largest green screen in an Alabama studio. Actors are filmed performing in front of the screen, and producers later replace the images of the green surfaces with other images so the actors can be made to appear anywhere in the finished film. Conroy said he hopes the program encourages some of the students to consider enrolling in film classes at Jacksonville State University being taught by Jeffrey Nichols, an artist in residence there. Nichols and Louisiana native Chuck Bush were leading the instruction at the camp on Wednesday. “This is round one,” said Bush, who broke into the entertainment industry as an actor in the 1985 film “Fandango.” “I teach them whatever they need to know.” On Wednesday, the students learned the basic framework of visual storytelling. Earlier in the week, they learned to use digital video cameras and how to set up studio lighting. By the week’s end they’ll have produced short films with help from the instructors. “It gives students a big heads up,” said one participant, 32-year-old Jonathan Garland, who has worked behind the scenes at WJXS-TV 24. “It amazes me that it’s in Jacksonville.” The Northeast Alabama Entertainment Initiative is being supported with state tax money routed through JSU. The 2014 Education Trust Fund budget includes $226,194 for the program, down from $426,194 in 2013. The cost for each student to attend this week’s film camp was $650, $300 of which is paid by the initiative, leaving the students to pay $350. The funding is intended to help the local economy cash in on the 2009 tax incentives bill, modeled on a Louisiana law that has grown a film industry in that state. According to the Motion Picture Association of America, 8,655 people have jobs directly related to the film industry in Louisiana, 3,400 of them in production-related work. The state has provided filming locations for movies including the 2013 releases “Now You See Me,” “This Is the End” and “Snitch.” In Alabama, 3,529 people work in the industry, according to the MPAA, 540 of them in production jobs. While some of the students in Jacksonville this week, including Tolliver, said they were drawn to filmmaking as a form of creative expression, the focus at Longleaf this week has been on the basic skills for workers behind the scenes. “It’s called show business, not show art,” Bush told a reporter Wednesday. Staff writer Laura Gaddy: 256-235-3544. On Twitter @LJohnson_Star.
Oxford retail project progressing
by Eddie Burkhalter
eburkhalter@annistonstar.com
Jun 19, 2013 | 496 views |  0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print
OXFORD – The Oxford Commercial Development Authority agreed Wednesday to transfer land where a Bojangles’ restaurant may soon be built to the developer of the project. Holmes Properties, the developer, originally owned the land at the intersection of Alabama 21 and Hamric, but transferred ownership to the CDA in May so that site preparation work could be done. That work included grading and installation of water and sewer lines. The CDA agreed in May to pay $2.3 million toward that work; it makes a practice of only spending money on land it owns, said Dwight Rice, attorney with Rice, Rice and Smith, which represents the city. “Once everything is done, then we transfer it back,” Rice said, adding that Bojangles’ might take ownership of the land from Holmes Properties as early as Friday. The city often pays money to developers through the CDA to entice commercial development, something the city cannot legally do on its own. There are four tracts of land at that retail project, and only one was transferred Wednesday back to Holmes Properties. Work remains to be done on the others before the CDA will transfer those plots back to the developer, Rice said. Located where a Holiday Inn once stood, the site will have a grocery store and drugstore in addition to Bojangles. Bojangles’ is the only company to have announced plans to open at the site. The two remaining companies will announce their plans in the future, said Stacie Holmes, owner of Holmes Properties. Staff writer Eddie Burkhalter: 256-235-3563. On Twitter @Burkhalter_Star.
Dennis Datarvis Tippins
Dennis Datarvis Tippins
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Man charged with stabbing victim in shoulder
by Rachael Brown
rgriffin@annistonstar.com
Jun 19, 2013 | 497 views |  0 comments | 16 16 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Dennis Datarvis Tippins
Dennis Datarvis Tippins
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Anniston police charged a man Tuesday night with stabbing a man with a kitchen knife earlier this month. Dennis Datarvis Tippins, 36, of Anniston, was charged with felony second-degree assault, according to a police report. Anniston police Capt. Allen George said the assault occurred on June 1 between 10:05 and 10:15 a.m. at the home of a 47-year-old man on the 600 block of East 22nd Street. George said the victim was in his living room drinking with friends when Tippins began hitting a woman in the room. The victim tried to intervene, George said, when Tippins grabbed a six-inch knife from the kitchen and stabbed the man in the shoulder. Tippins fled the home before police arrived, George said. The victim was treated at Regional Medical Center for a two-inch stab wound and was expected to recover from his injuries, the captain said. The victim and female witness were able to name Tippins, George said, and officers filed a warrant for his arrest on June 4. Police arrested Tippins Tuesday at 8 p.m. on East 22nd Street, according to a police report. George said he believes Tippins lives somewhere near East 22nd Street. Tippins was in the Anniston City Jail this morning, George said. Bond is set at $5,000. A court appearance is scheduled for July 11. Staff Writer Rachael Brown: 256-235-3562. On Twitter @RBrown_Star.
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