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Recent Blog Posts
Alabama peaches, strawberries to be ready earlier than normal by AnnistonStar
Mar 21, 2011 |  0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend
Henry Williams flicked a pink bloom off a peach no bigger than a BB pellet one day last week.  Williams hopes his peaches will be fully grown and delivered to Durbin Farms Market in Clanton the first few days of May -- about a week earlier than normal. Read the full story from The Birmingh...
Buried cash, drugs, big dog and vehicles seized in Athens today by AnnistonStar
Mar 18, 2011 |  4 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend
Law-enforcement officers from Limestone County, Madison County and the city of Madison have unearthed more than $100,000 in buried cash and arrested three people on drug charges this morning on Plato Jones Street in Athens. About 20 officers stormed the home and confiscated drugs and cash, ...
Funding problems delay Etowah County highway projects by AnnistonStar
Mar 18, 2011 |  0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend
Funding problems have delayed the bid openings of two local highway projects, according to the Alabama Department of Transportation. ALDOT officials at Thursday’s meeting of the Gadsden-Etowah Metropolitan Planning Organization said the bid opening for the five-laning of Alabama Highway...
Animal Rescue Foundation of Sylacauga hopes to turn bus into a 'Mobile Adoption Center' by AnnistonStar
Mar 18, 2011 |  0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend
The Animal Rescue Foundation of Sylacauga and a local donor are teaming up to turn an old bus into a new “Mobile Adoption Center.” John Floyd, owner of the vehicle, and his daughter Beth Caine, foundation board secretary, came up with the idea to increase the group’s visibility and help fin...
9 dead dolphins found since Saturday in Alabama and Mississippi by AnnistonStar
Mar 18, 2011 |  0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend
Despite what she called an “unusual mortality event” killing dolphins in the Gulf of Mexico, the top federal scientist investigating the deaths, revealed Wednesday that the government has yet to send any tissue samples for laboratory testing to determine a cause. The National Oceanic and Atm...
Extreme proration? Bevill State cuts all athletics to save money by AnnistonStar
Mar 17, 2011 |  2 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend
Bevill State Community College announced on Tuesday it will discontinue all its athletic programs. The decision comes in the wake of Gov. Robert Bentley’s recent declaration of a 3 percent proration in the Education Trust Fund. Read more: Daily Mountain Eagle - College cutting athletics
Who's stealing eggs from emus at the Mobile Zoo? by AnnistonStar
Mar 17, 2011 |  0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend
Whoever is stealing eggs from nesting emus at the Mobile Zoo, the staff there wants you to stop.  Curator Lacey Clark said at least two or three of the big, emerald-green eggs have recently been taken by people coming over the fence into an area where the giant birds are incubating their futur...
EPA pushes for new pollution standards that may affect Alabama Power by AnnistonStar
Mar 17, 2011 |  0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend
The Environmental Protection Agency on Wednesday proposed new limits on the pollutants that coal-fired power plants emit, long-awaited regulations that health advocates said would clear the air and save lives. Eventually, the Power Plant Mercury and Air Toxic Standards would prevent 91 per...
Gov. Bentley planning overhaul of State Health Plan by AnnistonStar
Mar 16, 2011 |  0 comments | 6 6 recommendations | email to a friend
Gov. Robert Bentley is planning a "substantial" overhaul of the State Health Plan in a bid to lower health care costs and promote free-market competition, a spokeswoman said Tuesday. Details of the governor's proposal are still being determined, but it likely will include the elimination of...
Etowah couple sentenced in embezzling case by AnnistonStar
Mar 16, 2011 |  0 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend
An Etowah County couple has been sentenced to 18 months in prison for hacking into their employer’s computer and embezzling more than $120,000. U.S. District Judge Inge P. Johnson sentenced Charles Allen Elliott, 38, and Carol Ann Elliott, 43, on forgery and computer fraud charges and orde...

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...
Man charged with stabbing victim in shoulder
by Rachael Brown
rgriffin@annistonstar.com
Jun 19, 2013 | 363 views |  0 comments | 15 15 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.
Ohatchee coach Nathan Wehunt works out some of his players at practice this week. (Photo by Stephen Gross/Anniston Star)
Ohatchee coach Nathan Wehunt works out some of his players at practice this week. (Photo by Stephen Gross/Anniston Star)
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Ohatchee's Wehunt appreciates having the full off-season for work this time
by Brandon Miller
Jun 19, 2013 | 365 views |  0 comments | 12 12 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Ohatchee coach Nathan Wehunt works out some of his players at practice this week. (Photo by Stephen Gross/Anniston Star)
Ohatchee coach Nathan Wehunt works out some of his players at practice this week. (Photo by Stephen Gross/Anniston Star)
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OHATCHEE -- Nathan Wehunt always has believed off-season work is what gets high school football teams where they need to be, “then the fall will take care of itself.” After serving as Cherokee County’s defensive coordinator, including for the Warriors 2009 Class 4A state championship season, Wehunt certainly knows success. However, when he was hired to take over Ohatchee’s head coaching job only six days before the Indians’ 2012 spring game against Weaver, he faced immediate challenges. He didn’t have that long off-season he wanted that would help build his team. Now, as Wehunt works toward his second season at Ohatchee, he has the time to develop his players -- and it is yielding a bit of optimism for the coach. “It’s night and day from when we took over,” he said Tuesday. “I tell them if we’re getting outworked then we’re getting beat. We’ve come a long way, but we have a ways to go.” This is much different from a year ago when Wehunt was trying to prepare his team to face Weaver in the spring game. “We were kind of behind the 8-ball to begin with,” Wehunt said. “We played Weaver and played a good first half. Although it was 21-0 at the end of the first half, it was only 7-0 with about four minutes left in the half, but we have some turnovers that they turned into scores.” Despite the obvious letdown of losing the game, it was a new era at Ohatchee, and over the summer last year Wehunt saw the defense pick up quickly. However, there were still difficulties him entering a new county and school. “Not knowing any of the kids at all, we wanted to figure out who could play,” he said. “You kind of get a different look at them because when you know somebody coming in you may know the kid or his parents, but coming here and not knowing anybody it gave us a chance to just look at them from an athletic standpoint. It was the only factor.” Once Wehunt figured out his depth chart and the Indians hit the field, wins didn’t come quickly or easily in the fall. Ohatchee finished the year 2-8. The long journey included losses in its first eight games, but Ohatchee started competing more and more from Week 6 on. Finally, in Week 9, Ohatchee not only won its first game of the season, a 67-6 final against Class 2A, Region 6 opponent Victory Christian, but also set the school record for most points scored in a game. “We were competing a lot more than we had been,” running back Tristan Allen said. “Everyone was looking forward to playing even after we had some tough losses.” After Ohatchee ended the 2012 season with a win over Gaylesville, the winning continued. Ohatchee scored a 20-7 win over region opponent Pleasant Valley at the 2013 JSU Spring Jamboree in April. “We didn’t change anything as far as how we approached the game,” Wehunt said. “Last year, after we finished the year against Gaylesville on a Thursday, we gave them off Friday and went back to work that Monday. I think we would have one off day a week, so nothing changed. We’ve been hitting it as hard as we are right now.” Considering the work Ohatchee is putting in November through August with Wehunt on campus, there are high hopes for the Indians’ program despite the seventh-place finish in the eight-team region last year. Wehunt having a year on the job has made “all the difference in the world” off the field, and the strides on the field may show in the fall. “Our motto this year is ÔExpect to Win.’ When a team comes here or we go on the road, I want our mentality to be we are winning, not wondering how bad we’re going to get beat,” Wehunt said. “After winning the last two last year and the spring game this year, we’re preaching this three-game winning streak, and we don’t want that to stop.” Brandon Miller covers prep sports for The Star. He can be reached at 256-235-3575 or follow him on Twitter @bmiller_star.
Kelly Tatum
Kelly Tatum
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