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Recent Blog Posts
by GaryInnes
Jun 18, 2013 |  0 comments | 10 10 recommendations | email to a friend
Resume strategies are necessary to know before writing a resume. Mostly, people are unaware of such strategies. Resume strategies are the task of strategist. It is surprising that resume writer is different to strategist. Resume services flourish, and range from an overvalued typing service up ...
8JV2_Photo_Jun_05__8_47_39_AM.jpg Resurrection by JanCase
Jun 13, 2013 |  0 comments | 120 120 recommendations | email to a friend
My grandparents always planted their garden on Good Friday. I never asked why. It was just one of those things like the Frigidaire or the chester drawers. I was grown before I realized that it was pronounced “frigid air” and was a brand name, not a synonym for refrigerator. I’ll blame the preval...
Scumbags by eddie50cool
Jun 09, 2013 |  0 comments | 36 36 recommendations | email to a friend
All gays are cowards ,liars and deciveful people God needs to clean up this city
L57X_snorkeling_pulau_tidung.jpg by opiektidungcom
Jun 04, 2013 |  0 comments | 36 36 recommendations | email to a friend
Pulau Tidung is a new paradise in North of jakarta. With exotics beach panoramic, and also beatiful floral reef. We can also take snorkeling activity there. For more details: New Paradise Pulau Tidung
LUNCH AND LEARN, JUNE 26, 2013 by SherryBlanton
Jun 03, 2013 |  0 comments | 128 128 recommendations | email to a friend
Please join the Calhoun County Master Gardeners for Lunch and Learn on Wednesday, June 26th at noon at Cane Creek Community Gardens at McClellan. Our speaker will be Hayes Jackson and his topic will be "A Simple Water Feature for the Garden." The program is free. Bring your lunch and come! 
HYDRANGEAS ARE FINALLY IN BLOOM! Spring by SherryBlanton
Jun 03, 2013 |  0 comments | 82 82 recommendations | email to a friend
This has been the strangest spring (and it is not officially over for three weeks). I might call it the spring that almost did not happen. It was chilly one day; then the monsoons struck, and now the heat and humidity have set in. Farmers shook their heads as they worked to get gardens plowed an...
The Great Pretenders by JohnBagwell
May 26, 2013 |  0 comments | 45 45 recommendations | email to a friend
I was walking through my living room when I noticed an upside-down cardboard box moving kind of awkward-like down the hall.  Two pairs of legs from the calf down were visible.  The box bumped and bungled its way around as the two occupants inside giggled and talked.  Watching my daughter's play...
TIME by JohnBagwell
May 20, 2013 |  0 comments | 45 45 recommendations | email to a friend
One word. A tremendous amount of power and significance behind it. The last few weeks I've not had much TIME to do anything more than work, study, work some more, and try to find TIME for family in there somewhere.  As the weeks of my studies drew to a close, TIME became more and more...
8TLB_IMG_4916.JPG Lunch and Learn, May 22, 2013 by SherryBlanton
May 18, 2013 |  0 comments | 42 42 recommendations | email to a friend
Please join the Master Gardeners for our May Lunch and Learn program, May 22, 2013 from noon until 1 PM. The program is held the fourth Wednesday of the month at Cane Creek Community Gardens at McClellan from April through September. Our May speaker is Lisa Harris of Scenic Alabama and her progra...
Golf - The Other Four-Letter Word by CalicoHawk
May 05, 2013 |  0 comments | 40 40 recommendations | email to a friend
Have you played Golf?  It’s a lot of fun, and quite stressful all at the same time.  Unless your name is posted on one of the leader boards at major golf tournaments, that is.  It’s called “golf” because all of the other four-letter words were taken.  I started playing the game when Tiger Woods ...

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...
HOT BLAST: Colleges, money and 'unworthy sports'
Jun 19, 2013 | 0 views |  0 comments | 0 0 recommendations | email to a friend | print
It's no secret that philosophical differences exist on college campuses as they relate to sports. Some have no problem with sports' fiscal realities; others want a semblance of equality between athletics and academics. The two sides rarely agree.

That said, a Bloomberg.com report this week is fascinating. In short, it details how, as it describes the issue, that "poor students subsidize unworthy college sports."

The author writes, "Worse yet, institutions with high proportions of poorer students carrying substantial education debt appeared to be charging the highest fees. While all students must pay the costs of maintaining athletic programs, few actually benefit from the services they subsidize. In this sense, the fees are comparable to a regressive tax -- and one that is more onerous for lower-income students than for the more affluent, who are able to attend schools where athletic fees are lower." 

Even if you vehemently disagree, it's still worth a healthy discussion.

-- Phillip Tutor


RMC opening critical care clinic in Piedmont
by Laura Gaddy
lbjohnson@annistonstar.com
Jun 19, 2013 | 2903 views |  0 comments | 26 26 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Regional Medical Center is expanding its reach into Piedmont, where the hospital plans to open a critical care clinic this summer. The hospital is partnering with the Piedmont Healthcare Authority to develop the clinic, being built adjacent to the Piedmont Nursing Home. The facility will become a key component of an emerging senior care campus there, but it will be open to everyone, said Benjamin Ingram, president of the authority. “It allows us to get some things done in Piedmont that normally we would have to go to Jacksonville, Anniston or Gadsden to have done,” Ingram said. The new facility will be staffed with a physician, at least one nurse practitioner, other nurses and office staff. It will offer a range of services, including treatment for general ailments such as colds and treatment for more urgent matters, said David McCormack, the chief executive of RMC. “It’s sort of like an emergency room, but not quite to that level,” McCormack said. The location of the facility is intended in part to help the Piedmont Healthcare Authority develop a more complete senior care center. RMC, meanwhile, is expanding its regional footprint in an effort to remain competitive as federal health care reform is fully implemented. “Now as health care is changing, we need to go out to the community,” McCormack said. “We have to cover the whole region.” RMC recently expanded to Jacksonville, where it bought the hospital there in December, as well as to Talladega, where it opened a clinic; it has plans to open facilities in Weaver and Roanoke. Piedmont Mayor Rick Freeman said the new facility will help the hospital and the authority meet their goals, as well as help residents of Piedmont and the communities that surround it. Ingram and Freeman said Piedmont has a shortage of physicians. Currently two physicians work in the city part time, and two others work full time. Of the two full-time doctors, one exclusively treats children and the other holds a second full-time job as the medical director at the nursing home, Ingram said. “We felt like we needed that,” Freeman said of the new center. “The impact is going to be very big for us.” Staff writer Laura Gaddy: 256-235-3544. On Twitter @LJohnson_Star.
Ohatchee council wants to know what’s underground before accepting land from county
by Brian Anderson
banderson@annistonstar.com
Jun 19, 2013 | 823 views |  0 comments | 24 24 recommendations | email to a friend | print
OHATCHEE — The Ohatchee Town Council is holding up a land transfer with Calhoun County until it can determine the extent of possible contamination in the area. While the Calhoun County Commission has already approved handing over to the town seven acres of land along Alabama 77, Ohatchee Mayor Steve Baswell said at a council meeting Tuesday he needs to talk to the Alabama Department of Environmental Management to make sure contamination from former underground storage tanks won’t cost the town money down the line. The town currently uses a building on the property as a maintenance storage facility and pays the commission $1 annually to rent the building. “Obviously I’d like to just own the property,” Baswell said. “But we got to make sure it’s not going to be more trouble than it's worth.” The property is close to another seven-acre parcel of land owned by the Ohatchee Volunteer Fire Department. Once the department completes a proposed storm shelter, it’ll give the land to the town, Baswell said. Also at the meeting Tuesday, Councilman J.M. “Butch” Mitchell suggested the council think about pushing for alcohol sales on Sundays for off-premises consumption. “If we look at what Anniston and Weaver have successfully done, maybe we should think about it, too,” Mitchell said. “I’m not talking about bars and hangouts, but people on the river who want to buy a six-pack. That’s money in our pocket.” Baswell said he was neither for nor against Sunday sales, but told council members if they were interested they would need to start thinking about pushing for legislation as early as possible. “It’s not just calling them up down there and saying we want to do it,” Baswell said. “It takes a lot of planning.” Staff Writer Brian Anderson: 256-235-3546. On Twitter @BAnderson_Star.
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