Friday, December 24, 2010

Keep on scrolling

Keep on scrolling

Posted by Max Brantley on Thu, Dec 23, 2010 at 2:10 PM

On the off chance you don't scroll on down the page on a regular basis, I'd encourage you scroll on down to Rock Candy, where John Tarpley and Lindsey Millar have reviewed the Arkansas year in culture from A to Z. The back-to-back photos of Charles Portis (under P) and Beth Ditto (under Q for her quotability) are a study in Arkansas cultural contrasts for sure.

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Early is the night

Cato, thanks for telling me about the additional lotto scholarships. Have been out of pocket and was unaware. I’m thrilled for your granddaughter and the 34,839 other Arkansas young people who’ve received this financial boost to help with college expenses. A better-educated people will make for a better state. Count the ways.

And now for a titillating “Woman Tells All” tale sent to me by a ladyfriend earlier today:
---------------------------
He grasped me firmly but gently just above my elbow and guided me into a room, his room. Then he quietly shut the door and we were alone. He approached me soundlessly, from behind, and spoke in a low, reassuring voice close to my ear. "Just relax," he said.

Without warning, he reached down and I felt his strong, calloused hands start at my ankles, gently probing, and moving upward along my calves slowly but steadily. My breath caught in my throat. I knew I should be afraid, but somehow I didn't care. His touch was so experienced, so sure.

When his hands moved up onto my thighs, I gave a slight shudder, and partly closed my eyes. My pulse was pounding. I felt his knowing fingers caress my abdomen, my ribcage. And then, as he cupped my firm, full breasts in his hands, I inhaled sharply. Probing, searching, knowing what he wanted, he brought his hands to my shoulders, slid them down my tingling spine and into my panties.

Although I knew nothing about this man, I felt oddly trusting and expectant. This is a man, I thought. A man used to taking charge. A man not used to taking “no” for an answer. A man who would tell me what he wanted. A man who would look into my soul and say ... "Okay, ma'am, all done."

My eyes snapped open and he was standing in front of me, smiling, holding out my purse. "You can board your flight now."

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A tale of two candymakers

The history of chocolate and candy in the state of Arkansas really starts with one man — Martin L. Greer. Since 1924 there's been a Greer makin' sweets here in our state. Today, two different companies carry on his traditions. Learn more about the operations put together by Greer's sons, Martin and Tommy, over at Tie Dye Travels.

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Baldwin occupancy, retail sales increased during fall concert series, latest figures show

Published: Friday, December 24, 2010, 5:34 AM

ORANGE BEACH, Ala. — Two months ago, as coastal leaders were working to win back visitors with a series of high-profile concerts, a married couple from Marshall, Texas, left a note in a condominium guest book.

They had been coming to the area for 25 years, they wrote, but had decided to travel to Mexico during the summer because of the BP PLC oil spill.

Curious about how Alabama’s beaches were faring, they returned for a Brad Paisley show in Gulf Shores.

“October was great — less crowds — more laid back,” their note stated. “We were happy to see that Gulf Shores and Orange Beach haven’t changed.”

They promised to return.

Comments like that one have delivered a boost of confidence for coastal communities trying to revive tourism after a summer wrecked by the Gulf of Mexico disaster.

“In one little note is exactly what we’ve been trying to do,” said Mike Foster, vice president of marketing for Gulf Shores & Orange Beach Tourism. “We’re trying to create almost a viral campaign — that Gulf Shores and Orange Beach are OK.”

New data, released this week, show that the concert series helped spark bigger crowds this fall than a year ago. October’s retail sales jumped 9 percent from last year, while lodging revenue rose by more than 5 percent.

Hotel occupancy kept moving upward in November, increasing almost 6.5 percent.

Still, room costs were much less expensive, on average, than before, down 44 percent. November’s actual lodging revenue figures were not yet available.

Orange Beach Mayor Tony Kennon described the concert series as “tremendous” and said that plans were in motion to launch an eight- or nine-month run of musical shows starting in March.

Gulf Shores Mayor Robert Craft has been pushing oil giant BP to continue marketing the clean beach. He said that the fall events not only generated needed revenue, but showed off the coast’s recovery from the spill.

“It’s very important that we get the word out early so that we can try to build momentum,” Kennon said. “We need a big summer next year to help our merchants get out of the deep hole that was dug for them by BP.”

Foster said he believes that more and more tourists will start to return in 2011. “We feel very, very confident we will re-win the hearts and minds of those people who have loved us for years and years and years,” he said.

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Man accused in Eight Mile Paradise Lounge shooting free on bail

Published: Friday, December 24, 2010, 5:34 AM
MOBILE, Alabama -- While Andy Harvey’s family spends this Christmas mourning his death, the man accused of shooting and beating him to death is free on bail.

Harvey was shot this month outside the Paradise Lounge in the Eight Mile area, where he liked to play pool.

“We had Christmas presents under the tree for him,” said Harvey’s daughter in-law, Tosha Harvey. “He won’t ever get them.”

Jerry Dwayne Bohannon, 48, was released from Mobile County Metro Jail on $250,000 through a bonding company on Dec. 13, two days after police say he gunned down Harvey and Jerry DuBoise, 24, outside Paradise.

Prichard police said that the shooting was captured entirely on a surveillance camera. A family member of one of the victims said that the shooter also beat the men with his handgun until it broke.

Tosha Harvey of Satsuma said that her father-in-law loved his family, which included his wife, five children and seven grandchildren. She said her family’s pain has been worsened by Bohannon’s release from jail.

“It’s just really a tragic situation,” Tosha Harvey said. “I know our constitution says innocent until proven guilty, but it’s on surveillance tape. What more do they need?”

Prichard Police Chief Jimmie Gardner, concerned about Bohannon’s release, said prosecutors had sought a $500,000 bail. They then asked that the lower bail be paid in cash, he said, but District Judge George Hardesty denied the request.

Gardner said, “My responsibility is for the public safety. And I just think the guy is a threat to himself and the public.”

With the help of a bonding company, Bohannon paid no more than $25,000 to be freed with no monitoring, Gardner said.

He said the shooting was recorded “from start to finish,” but he declined to describe the events because of the ongoing investigation.

Defense lawyer Bob Clark said that Bohannon maintains his innocence and that evidence is still being gathered. “He has a right — a constitutional right — to bail,” Clark said.

According to the bartender that night, DuBoise and Harvey started playing pool about 2 a.m., mostly keeping to themselves. Harvey might have had one drink, the bartender said, but he didn’t finish it. DuBoise drank nothing but Coke.

Bohannon, who had been in and out of the bar since midnight, consumed a number of beers, according to the bartender.

Bohannon is scheduled to appear in Mobile County District Court for a preliminary hearing on Jan. 27.

(Staff reporter David Ferrara contributed to this report.)

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Thursday, December 23, 2010

The “Delta”: Better than the Best


The Delta Exhibition has returned to its rightful place at the Arkansas Arts Center — in the Townsend Wolfe Gallery, now that “World of the Pharaohs” has made its exodus — and it’s a good thing, because there’s much work here that deserves the space and setting the Wolfe Gallery can give it. This year’s show — the 53rd annual — is even better than the 2008 show, which I labeled “Best.Show.Ever.”

You might expect the show to be filled with conceptual art, thanks to “Keeping the Faith,” the grass upholstered bench in the lobby that is so tempting to sit on (but you mustn’t). (It’s by Brandon Mathis of Conway, winner of a Delta Award.) And there is some good three-dimensional work here that sneaks up on but doesn’t quite qualify as installation, including a couple of pieces by Missouri artists: Rand Smith’s small terra cotta heads hung from strings (“Two Sides”) and Andrew Van der Tuin’s “Wrapped Tetrahedron,” large wire balls wrapped with stretch wrap. The best of it is Kansas artist’s Joelle Ford’s “What’s Next?” in which three-dimensional objects, fastidiously arranged and painted with thick white house paint, are hung in panels from the wall. She’s rolled up and coated in white crocheted doilies and men’s socks and monopoly money, made a pyramid of poker chips, put balls of string on nails, lined up belts, filled a pouch with tennis balls, all to create unexpected textures. (The work may remind you, and make you miss, that by Jonesboro artist and Delta regular John Salvest.)

But most of the work is two-dimensional, and few wrong notes are struck. Ford’s composition is echoed in LaDawna Whiteside’s wall-covering Grand Award winner, “Animal Architecture Drawing Installation,” 12 sheets of paper (four across, three down) on which the Fayetteville artist has drawn precise graphite lines of varying intensity; she lets the lines twist and tangle on three sheets and made plaid-like lines with the others. The work also won the Contemporaries Delta Award. The Contemporaries Honorable Mention went to Kat Wilson’s strangely engrossing “Artist, Fayetteville, Arkansas,” a digital print in which lined-up scissors and paint in the foreground point to the artist in the central part of the picture; it’s a busy but not messy print with areas of yellow wall acting as relief. (FYI: The Fort Smith photographer has a show of portraits coming up at the University of Central Arkansas at Conway in January.)

Ross McLean of Tennessee gets Art Notes’ Best Angle award for his work “The Peel,” a huge oil, from the floor’s perspective, of a man crouching in a room to peel paper off a wall; beside him is a bottle labeled BOOMBOOM. I’m not going to make any attempt to make sense of the work, but the painting is a treat to look at (though I’m having a little trouble with one of the man’s arms). Kristin Musgnug of Fayetteville gets Art Notes’ Irony award for her painting “Tallow Tree, Texas City,” a muted green and yellow painting of a flowering tree (which happens to be useful in the production of biodiesel) is set against an oil refinery in the hazy, distant background. Anne Davey of Tennessee gets the AN’s Gestalt award for her charcoal on gessoed paper drawing, “Girl Underwater”; it invites study and is deftly drawn.

There is much more worthy work here, such as Lydia Bodnar-Balahutrak’s “Hearts-A-Bustin’,” an oil and resin collage in which a thin wash of the plant is painted against newspaper reports on war; Kate Rivers’ “Victory,” a maelstrom of thin strips of paper atop photographs of victims of crime. And while I think it’s almost cheating to use photography as the basis of what looks like a painting, I really liked Cindy Arsaga’s “Clothesline — Southern Louisiana,” whose lines etched in encaustic, for reasons I can’t explain, made me think of Marcel Duchamp’s “The Bride Stripped Bare by her Bachelors, Even.”

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Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Wednesday To-Do: Movies in the Park presents "National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation"


MOVIES IN THE PARK: 'NATIONAL LAMPOON'S CHRISTMAS VACATION'
6 p.m., River Market Pavilions. Free.

In the triptych of great '80s holiday movies, "National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation" may play third fiddle to "A Christmas Story" and "Scrooged," but it sports one of the greatest holiday rallying cries ever captured on film, compliments of the perpetually hapless Clark Griswold. "When Santa squeezes his fat white ass down that chimney tonight, he's gonna find the jolliest bunch of assholes this side of the nuthouse!"

This Wednesday, the perpetually successful Movies in the Park series teams up with Christmas in Little Rock to screen the crowned jewel of dysfunctional holiday fare.

You won't find renegade squirrels, full "shitters" and Cousin Eddie's dog "yackin' on a bone" in The Nutcracker. It's an outdoor screening, so bring a blanket for the brisk weather. If the cold starts to hurt, there's always Clark Griswold being thrown through yet another window or getting a broken ornament stuck in his butt to take the edge off.

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2-alarm blaze strikes Best Western on the Causeway; Press-Register photographer spots fire

Published: Tuesday, December 21, 2010, 6:34 AM ??? Updated: Tuesday, December 21, 2010, 1:48 PM
MOBILE, Alabama -- A 2-alarm fire was reported at 4:04 this morning at the Best Western Battleship Inn on the Causeway that runs across Mobile Bay.

Firefighters were able to bring the fire under control quickly. The blaze first was reported by John David Mercer, a Press-Register photographer who was returning home on the Bayway after shooting photos of the lunar eclipse.

Mercer saw flames shooting about 20 feet in the air from the motel, got off the Bayway onto the Causeway, returned to the hotel, ran into the front lobby and told the on-duty manager that there was fire coming from the roof and to call 911, according to Mobile Fire-Rescue spokesman Steve Huffman.

Mercer then ran to the building, pulled the electronic alarm and began going door to door, waking the hotel guests and notifying them of the fire. Everyone was evacuated without incident or injury, Huffman said.

The cause of the fire remains under investigation, Huffman said. All the fire damage appears to be in the attic and roof and no rooms suffered fire damage, though there was water damage from firefighting activities.

Twelve units, including the city's fireboat. responded to the call.

This is the second fire at the motel this year. On Feb. 26, dozens of guests were evacuated from their rooms? after a fire swept through the east building's breezeway. That blaze was extinguished in about 10 minutes, Huffman said at the time, and no one was injured.

Evidence collected from that fire showed it was set on purpose, fire officials said. The February fire started in 2 outside storage units and never reached inside the hotel or any rooms, Huffman said.

___

Post updated at 7:08 a.m. to include information regarding previous fire at the motel. Updated again at 7:37 a.m. to include a gallery of photos from today's fire. Last updated 8:52 a.m. to include more details of the fire and its discovery by Press-Register photographer John David Mercer.

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Experts say Baldwin prosecutors likely to try Stephen Nodine again on murder, stalking charges

Published: Wednesday, December 22, 2010, 5:30 AM

BAY MINETTE, Ala. — A Baldwin County judge Tuesday set a new trial date for former Mobile County Commissioner Stephen Nodine on murder and stalking charges, but it will be up to the new district attorney to decide if the state moves forward.

A jury on Monday convicted Nodine of a misdemeanor ethics violation but could not reach a unanimous verdict on charges that he stalked and killed his girlfriend, Angel Downs.

Circuit Judge Charles Partin scheduled the possible retrial for Feb. 28. Hallie Dixon, who defeated Baldwin County District Attorney Judy Newcomb in the Republican primary, will take office next month.

Newcomb said Monday that she believes the new administration should try the case again. Dixon said that she wants a chance to review the case and talk to Downs’ family before making a decision.

The Feb. 28 date keeps the case in the system but is not a hard date. Either side could request a delay. Since Newcomb prosecuted the case herself, several experts suggested, Dixon would need more than two months to put a new case together.

Jurors have said they split 9-3 in favor of conviction, which experts said is an important factor in a decision to retry a case.

“I’d say if it was a 9-3 split the other way, I’d go home,” said Mobile County District Attorney John Tyson Jr.

Tyson, who leaves office next month, said he believes it is likely Baldwin prosecutors will give it another try. The split, the strength of the evidence and the type of crime are all factors to consider, he said.

“The more serious the charge, the more seriously you have to take a look at the evidence, and the more seriously you have to think about the decision to do it or not,” he said.

Dixon said that deadlocked juries sometimes can spur plea bargains. But defense attorney Dennis Knizley said his client has maintained his innocence from the beginning and that a plea deal has been “off the table” from the start.

Dixon said that in any case that ends with a deadlocked jury, she will re-evaluate the entire case to gauge how likely it is that a second trial will end in conviction. How the first jury divided is a factor, she said.

“It’s not a mathematical equation by any means,” she said. “But in a general sense, I think it does affect the likelihood of success in the future.”

If there is a second trial, Knizley said Tuesday, he anticipates asking that it be moved to another jurisdiction. Although Knizley did not ask for a change of venue before the first trial, he said media coverage would make it extremely difficult to get a fair jury.

“There was absolute saturation during the trial, including the Twitter,” he said, referring to blow-by-blow accounts provided by TV reporters through the social networking site.

Since prosecutors are elected, outside influences sometimes can enter the decision to retry a high-profile case, some said.

“Politics can be a factor,” said. Deborah Young, a former federal prosecutor who followed the Nodine case. “And public opinion can be a factor.”

Young, who now teaches at Samford University’s Cumberland School of Law in Birmingham, said part of a prosecutor’s decision springs from how strong he or she feels the case is.

“Prosecutors always retry a case when they’re surprised by the result,” she said.

Experts said a second trial gives both sides an opportunity to address shortcomings exposed by the first trial. Which side benefits more? Experts said that depends on the case.

“Often, only the prosecutor puts on real evidence,” said Young.

Others said the prosecutors usually have less knowledge about the defense strategy than vice versa before the first trial, which means prosecutors have the upper hand in a retrial.

“Conventional wisdom is that a hung jury is a victory for the defense because there’s no conviction,” said Don Cochran, a Cumberland professor who previously worked as a state and federal prosecutor in Jefferson County. “I never really viewed it that way as a prosecutor.”

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Nodine on trial: Five key moments that helped shape the outcome of murder, stalking charges

Published: Wednesday, December 22, 2010, 5:30 AM

BAY MINETTE, Ala. — In any high-stakes trial that lasts two weeks, there are bound to be turning points or dramatic moments that leave an indelible mark.

Here are five from the trial of former Mobile County Commissioner Stephen Nodine, which resulted in a Monday conviction for improper use of his government-issued truck and a hung jury on charges of murder and stalking in the death of Angel Downs:

  • Stepehen nodine is here.” Those words, which Downs wrote via text message to her sister in Georgia, served as a chilling accusation directed straight at the defendant.

It was as if Downs were testifying from the grave, prosecutors suggested.

Jurors saw the text projected onto the wall of Baldwin County Circuit Judge Charles Partin’s courtroom. District Attorney Judy Newcomb argued that the misspelled name and lack of punctuation — in contrast to other text messages that day — showed that the victim was frantically trying to get the message out.

Downs’ sister, Susan Bloodworth, testified that the victim sent the text message in response to a question about what was happening outside the victim’s Gulf Shores home. According to Bloodworth, Downs had called asking whether she should shoot an intruder in the head, chest or legs.

  • Dueling forensics. The key question of the trial was whether Downs was shot by somebody else or shot herself. The medical examiner who conducted the autopsy, Dr. Eugene Hart, ruled the manner of death inconclusive.

But he testified that it was consistent with suicide and told jurors that he held to that opinion even after law enforcement investigators asked him to re-examine the body.

An expert witness hired by the state, Dr. James Downs, sat on the courtroom floor and demonstrated that he thought the victim was sitting on her driveway, her legs crossed or bent, leaning toward the left as a gun was pressed to her right temple.

After the victim collapsed, Dr. Downs said, someone moved her body, leaving drag marks. During an intense cross-examination by defense attorney Dennis Knizley, Dr. Downs testified that he was not saying his re-enactment was definitely the way the shooting happened. He told jurors that it was one way it could have happened.

  • Nodine’s explanations. Nodine told Baldwin County sheriff’s investigators several different reasons why he was headed home after spending the day of May 9 at Pensacola Beach with Downs, with whom he had had a long affair. Newcomb used all of them to accuse him of inconsistency.

At various points in a long interview with investigators, Nodine said he needed to get home because it was Mother’s Day, because he had work related to the BP PLC oil spill, because he had not been home all day and because he wanted to watch a Yankees-Red Sox game.

Nodine also told authorities that he realized he had forgotten his wallet at Downs’ home and called three times as he was returning to retrieve it. He told investigators that he reached Downs on the third try, according to testimony.

In fact, according to cell phone records, the longest call was the first call, lasting 20 seconds. Another call lasted just four seconds while the other two went to voicemail, according to testimony.

  • Strange couple. Throughout the trial, prosecutors tried to prove that Nodine was stalking Downs, and they put on witnesses who testified about seeing Nodine throw an object at her, yell at her and bang on her door and window.

But defense lawyers countered with testimony that Nodine and Downs spent time with each other as recently as the week before her death. Jurors also saw a photo taken that day of a shirtless Nodine, sitting in a beach chair, holding her hand.

Trial observers strained to understand why Downs stayed with a married man for six often-tumultuous years. Perhaps harder to understand was how Nodine managed to spend holidays like Mother’s Day and Easter with his girlfriend — including, according to testimony, taking his teenage son on sleepovers at her house — without his wife taking action.

  • Newcomb’s O.J. moment. Several law enforcement officials and Dr. Downs testified about the great significance of Angel Downs’ hair at the scene, which appeared to be pulled straight back from her head like a fan.

The prosecution witnesses pointed to the hair as evidence that the killer had partially staged the scene.

But Knizley pointed out that the lead investigator never mentioned the hair in his report, and a retired Alabama medical examiner testified that the hair position was not significant. Under cross-examination from Newcomb, Dr. James Lauridson testified that the victim’s hair easily could have ended up in that position.

Newcomb tried to challenge that assertion with a dramatic courtroom re-enactment. She kneeled down and flung herself backward, her head hitting a pillow she had placed on the floor.

But in doing so, the prosecutor’s own hair flared up and back in front of a stunned courtroom.

“When you first came down on the pillow, your hair fanned out,” Lauridson testified.

The maneuver called to mind prosecutor Christopher Darden’s famous request that O.J. Simpson put on a pair of bloodstained gloves in his 1995 murder trial. It backfired when Simpson could not get the gloves over his hands, prompting defense lawyer Johnnie Cochran’s memorable line, “If it doesn’t fit, you must acquit.”

(Staff Reporter Katherine Sayre contributed to this report.)

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Bob Dorough and Miles Davis - "Blue Xmas (To Whom It May Concern)"

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Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Playing the oil spill claims game

Published: Monday, December 20, 2010, 5:00 AM

MOBILE, Ala. -- As the oil spill claims operation enters its final stage, many business owners along the Gulf coast are preparing to play a game of Deal or No Deal, with billions of dollars and perhaps the survival of hundreds of ventures at stake.

For most larger businesses, the claims process will come down to a choice between taking a one-time, lump sum payment or continuing to take smaller, quarterly checks, giving owners and managers more time to judge the future impact of the spill.

Both claims require financial documentation. Either choice has pros and cons.

A business that accepts a lump sum to cover projected losses — and signs the required waiver promising not to sue or return to the claims process — won’t be able to get additional compensation if the oil continues to harm the coastal ecosystem or economy.

If the economy returns to normal faster than expected, the lump sum becomes a windfall that won’t be seen by businesses that opted for interim payments. But interim payments provide a hedge if future impacts are worse than anticipated.

Businesses that accept the lump sum also rid themselves of dealings with Ken Feinberg’s Gulf Coast Claims Facility, no small benefit for many who have spent dozens of hours since the summer collecting financial documents and talking to adjusters.

Sheila Hodges, owner of Meyer Real Estate, one of the coast’s largest condominium rental firms, said the uncertainty is too large to take a lump sum payment.

"When the majority of your income comes during a small time in the middle of the year, you can’t have a dialogue without going through at least one summer," she said.

Others said that if Feinberg can make it worth their while, they’ll be happy to take one final check and move on.

"If it’s worth enough for me to survive for a while, I’ll take the final offer," said David Wright, who owns a construction firm that lost home-building contracts after the spill hit. "I don’t want to drag this out any longer than they do."

Feinberg is also offering quick, no-proof-necessary payments of $5,000 for individuals and $25,000 for businesses to anyone who was approved for an emergency claim. Those payments are geared more toward individual workers or small business, Feinberg has said.

Feinberg said he hopes the quick-pay option will clear a lot of claimants from a system that got some 466,000 requests for money and has paid 168,000 claims.

For those who eschew the quick-pay option, Feinberg’s operation will review financial documentation on losses to date and consult with experts to try and gauge the length and severity of spill impacts.

Adjusters will tabulate both a final settlement offer and an interim check amount, then let people choose, Feinberg said.

"If you’re satisfied, we will cut the check," he said. "If you’re not satisfied, here’s the interim payment, come back in three months if you want."

Feinberg told the Press-Register that he knows he has to pay a premium to get claimants to bear the risk that comes with accepting a lump sum and signing the lawsuit waiver.

"They’re going to say, ‘If you want me to sign a piece of paper that says I won’t be back, what are you offering me?’ That’s a fair question," he said. "Generosity is going to have to be a major part of this."?

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Smoke alarm allows sleeping woman to escape burning apartment

Published: Sunday, December 19, 2010, 6:18 PM ??? Updated: Sunday, December 19, 2010, 6:31 PM

MOBILE, Ala. -- A smoke alarm awoke a woman this afternoon from a nap in her west Mobile apartment, allowing her to escape as flames severely damaged the unit, officials said.
?
The fire at Warren Inn, 6501 Airport Blvd., was contained to the woman’s first-floor apartment, with minor smoke damage in the apartment directly above it, according to Mobile Fire-Rescue department spokesman Steve Huffman.

No one was injured. The fire was reported shortly before 2:25 p.m.

Warren Inn is an apartment complex converted from an extended-stay hotel about a quarter-mile west of Hillcrest Road. Neighbors told the Press-Register all the units at Warren In have one entrance, directly to the outside.

Huffman said the occupant, Jeanette Previto, told fire investigators she awoke to discover a fire in her kitchen. He said she was sleeping in the front of the apartment, so she did not have to fight her way through the fire to escape.

Huffman added, “With the amount of damage in that room and the fact she was asleep, she’s very fortunate to get out of that room.”

Investigators said the fire started on the stove, according to Huffman. He added that Previto had been cooking earlier in the day and did not remember what time she lay down to take her nap.

The first crews to arrive reported heavy smoke and flames from the unit; a second alarm was sounded but canceled about 10 minutes later.

The destroyed unit was on the far left on the first floor in the three-story building facing Airport Boulevard. Several other similar structures at Warren Inn run down a drive south of the boulevard.

A neighbor, Bobby Bairefield, expressed surprise at how quickly the fire grew. “By the time we got around to the front, the fire was shooting up about to the third floor,” he said.

Bairefield also said the fire department’s response was very fast. “In two minutes, maybe three minutes, the fire department was here. I’ve never seen them get anywhere this quick.

Bairefield said a red Ford pickup truck parked near Previto’s apartment received damage to its paint, but the truck was quickly moved as the firefighting operation unfolded.
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Monday, December 20, 2010

The high moral integrity of physicians who won’t accept ARKids insurance

There are those in the world who applaud doctors who take what they believe to be a “principled” stand and refuse to accept Medicare patients, as if somehow they are taking a stand for Truth, Justice and the American Way against the forces of encroaching socialism and all-around moral-decay.

Oh, they might accept the human beings as patients, but they make a big to-do about not having anything to do with Medicare. This usually finds them lauded by conservative columnists who aren’t on Medicare themselves, who would have us believe that these doctors are on the front-lines of some moral patriotic battlefield.

Less is written - when it is written at all - about the stalwarts in the medical community who refuse to accept patients covered by ARKids health insurance. Some parents report having a terrible time finding adequate medical/dental care for their children.

ARKIds provides coverage for over 70,000 children in Arkansas who would have otherwise gone without insurance. It has been a lifesaver for many parents and, obviously, their children.

It seems to me that these same columnists should be telling us all about the high moral integrity of these physicians who would turn children away. And yet, they are curiously silent on this issue.

******

Quote of the Day

When a man says he approves of something in principle, it means he hasn't the slightest intention of carrying it out in practice. — Otto von Bismarck

rsdrake@cox.net

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Sunday open line

Quiet day, except for:

* Petulant Republicans, who'd rather kill a nuclear treaty than let the Senate run on a timetable other than their own. Here, of course, a mere 34 (sorry, wrote 35 incorrectly originally) senators can block action.

* And did anybody else hear about the staid Little Rock professional firm that brought in a midget and a stripper for the office Christmas party last week? I'm not sure even the 1960s gang on "Mad Men" would have come up with that.

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All in the family: Texas charter schools UPDATE

The Dallas Morning News has been doing a series of articles on charter schools, the last one here. It's a pro/con project. But today's is worth a read — about nepotism in charter schools. It happens in conventional public schools, too. I do think the watchdogging will be harder when the conventional districts are carved up — as charter backers hope — into dozens, if not hundreds, of what are essentially independent school districts. From the most recent Dallas article (it includes links to earlier articles):

Focus Learning Academy, a charter school tucked in a strip mall in Dallas' Red Bird area, takes pride in teaching students with learning disabilities. For founder and Superintendent Leroy McClure, whose brother struggled with a learning disability, it's a personal mission.

McClure earns $146,000 to run the school of about 700 students, about $50,000 more than the typical superintendent of a traditional Texas school district that size.

In addition, McClure's wife, Yvette, receives $100,000 from the school for consulting work and sits on the school board. His brother serves as Focus Academy's facilities manager, and his sister is a teacher there.

The hope is that grass-roots nonprofit groups can create niche public schools that provide new and exciting educational choices for parents and students. And many have.

The fear is that the freedoms granted to charter schools allow hefty salaries, nepotism and potential abuse of the public's money.

UPDATE: Local note. A Conway reader says Leroy McClure is a 1978 graduate of Conway High School and his brother followed him a year later. He made a stab at establishing a school in Conway some years back, reader says.

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Tomorrow's forecast today for coastal Alabama: Highs near 60 for Monday

Published: Sunday, December 19, 2010, 6:07 PM ??? Updated: Sunday, December 19, 2010, 6:12 PM
Today's low was 34. The record for Dec. 19 is 17, recorded in 1981.
?
Monday: Sunny, patchy fog late. Highs in the mid-50s to low 60s. Lows in the mid-40s to low 50s. Chance of rain 10 percent or less.
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Tuesday: Patchy fog, mostly cloudy. Highs in the mid- to upper 60s. Lows in the mid-50s. Chance of rain 10 percent.
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(For a complete forecast, see Monday's Press-Register. For other Alabama weather news, visit al.com/weather.)

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Baldwin schools, Coalition set to draft 'Yes We Can' strategic plan

Published: Sunday, December 19, 2010, 6:49 AM

BAY MINETTE, Alabama — Within minutes of the school board vote to approve the "Yes We Can" community agreement on Thursday, Baldwin County Education Coalition members were already buzzing about a January launch date for strategic plan development.

"Now, we start working on the strategic plan," said Terry Burkle, a spokeswoman for the coalition. "This puts us halfway through the initiative’s steps."

And as members have said over and over, "this is where the real work starts," Burkle said.

Board President Angie Swiger said the county is "blessed" because education is at the forefront of community interest. The agreement is a good place to start to establish goals supported by a broad base of stakeholders, she said, and the partnership with the coalition "gives us a basis on which to build."

Thursday’s vote was a starting place, Swiger said, with a great deal of hard work to come.

Coalition members with expertise in various areas will form task forces in each of the five areas set as priorities for reform and improvement in the school system.

The priorities are:

  • Funding to meet community expectations and priorities.
  • Data-driven accountability.
  • Leadership at all levels.
  • Every student college or work force ready.
  • Communication to inform, engage and connect all citizens as shareholders of the public schools.

With the priorities identified, coalition members and school representatives will draft a plan to accomplish needed changes, Burkle said.

Denise D’Oliveira, another outspoken leader in the coalition, said that teams should be in place by February and will meet one night a week to discuss ideas and outline plans. The idea is to find the best practices in school systems around the country that work and get them in place in Baldwin, she said.

Organizers listed partnerships with the county system and local schools, board members and other elected officials, educators, school staff and parents as key to the initiative’s success. Business community members, faith-based organizations, civic and professional organizations and news outlets were others that have major roles in achieving positive change, according to the plan.

The idea behind the "Yes We Can" model is engaging the public. When systems improve and meet public expectations, schools garner much broader support because people are invested in the results, according to organizers. That includes improving graduation rates, making courses more challenging and relevant and having transparency in decision making among other issues.

"We want our students to be able to compete with the best in the nation, and ultimately with their peers around the world," D’Oliveira said.

In other action at Thursday’s meeting, board members gave letters of commendation to coaches and players on the 6A state champion football team at Daphne High and the 5A state champion team from Spanish Fort High.?

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Sunday, December 19, 2010

For some, 'tis better to receive

Gail Collins of the New York Times assesses the Republican presidential contenders by their books. I sense she's gotten an accurate measure of the Florida tax fugitive who once resided in Arkansas.

Mike Huckabee has written eight books — quite an output, even though his latest, “Can’t Wait Till Christmas,” is only 32 pages. Some people will find that kind of brevity really attractive, particularly since in it Huckabee has nothing whatsoever to say about the federal budget.

Instead, we learn that when he was a youngster (spoiler alert) Huckabee prematurely opened up a gift that he correctly intuited was a football. It was only a hop, skip and a jump from there to understanding the true meaning of Christmas and becoming governor of Arkansas. Then Huckabee lived out his holiday fantasies by collecting a record $112,000 in presents in a single year, including $48,000 in clothing and a chainsaw.

That last part is not in the book.

But it is in the public record.

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Ban on gay military service repealed UPDATE

History is made. After a critical vote to prevent a filibuster, the Senate today repealed the law discriminating against gays in military service 65-31. Eight Republicans supported the bill, as did both of Arkansas's senators. The vote came sooner than originally expected and now goes to President Obama for his signature.

Wow. Thanks is due in some part to the Republican obstruction of the omnibus spending bill earlier this week. That took a huge time killer off the lame duck session's calendar.

The Senate earlier Saturday voted 63-33 to defeat the Republican filibuster. Six Republicans voted to bring the issue to the floor. The roll call confirms that Sens. Mark Pryor and Blanche Lincoln voted to end debate as they had promised to do.

The votes were expected to be in hand this morning, but some Republicans threatened to kill the nuclear arms treaty to block passage. John McCain, Bob Corker and Lindsey Graham, kept it classy to the end with this unbelievable threat. "Either keep discriminating against gay people or I'll let nuclear weapons proliferate," they effectively said. Supporters of the repeal called their bluff.

This is an enormous and dramatic step on a journey that began uneasily in 1993 with the Clinton administration's don't-ask-don't-tell. policy. The new policy won't take effect immediately. Military leaders have 60 days to plan for the transition. But removal of a discriminatory statute from the books is a watershed moment, a symbolic victory that will stretch far beyond gay military service. If gay people can fight and die for their country — and they already do — why can they not otherwise fully participate in the American promise? From the debate:

"I don't care who you love, if you love this country enough to risk your life for it, you shouldn't have to hide who you are. You ought to be able to serve," said Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), who plans to stay in Washington this weekend before undergoing surgery for early stage prostate cancer next week.

It was already written before today that Arkansas congressmen Mike Ross, Marion Berry and John Boozman had joined the inglorious roster of American politicians who've stood in the way of human dignity and equal rights down through the years. May they be appropriately remembered.

Sen. John McCain called this a "sad day." Mike Ross should issue a statement of sorrow in solidarity in keeping with his political strategy to never cast a vote in support of gay people. They're wrong of course. A super-majority vote for equality is anything but cause for unhappiness.

Sadly, the Senate could not overcome the filibuster on the DREAM Act, to provide a path to citizenship to aliens brought to the U.S. as children. The cloture vote was 55-41, with 60 needed. Sen. Mark Pryor joined mostly Republicans in defeating the effort to reward scholarship and military service of long-time American residents with full participation in our democracy. Sen. Blanche Lincoln was a sponsor of the legislation.

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Sand Island Lighthouse to get island back

Published: Sunday, December 19, 2010, 6:35 AM

Sand Island Lighthouse will be getting its island back.

Decades ago, the island that gave Mobile’s signature lighthouse its name disappeared below the waves, with erosion blamed in part on the dredging of the Mobile Ship Channel.

Now, thanks to $6 million in federal funds aimed at mitigating BP’s Deepwater Horizon spill, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has received approval to heap millions of cubic yards of sand around the lighthouse, beginning in March.

The lighthouse has essentially been an island unto itself — a tall, narrow column of brick standing atop a heap of rocks surrounded by open water — for as long as most people can remember. But it wasn’t always so.

In the 1800s, Sand Island was more than 400 acres, according to historical records. Early lighthouse keepers had a two-story house and livestock that grazed on the island.

In the intervening years, Sand Island and Dauphin Island both experienced heavy erosion that Scott Douglass, a University of South Alabama coastal engineer, links to the creation of the Mobile Ship Channel. The channel, Douglas said, disrupts the natural movement of sand along the Alabama coastline, starving both Sand and Dauphin islands.

"The funds we got were to use (sand dredged) from existing federal navigation channels located on the Gulf Coast to mitigate the Deepwater Horizon spill," said Susan Rees, an environmental engineer with the Mobile corps district. "We designed a project that begins around the lighthouse and goes as far west as the money will carry us."

The remnants of Sand Island are still present in the form of a large shallow area that stretches west from the lighthouse toward the Dauphin Island pier. The corps intends to use that shoal as the backbone of the new island. A long, narrow ridge of sand will be built up to a height of about 6 feet above the high tide line.

"This is a step in the right direction. They are putting sand where Mother Nature would have put it if the ship channel weren’t there," said Douglass. "This project will help restore the natural movement of sand."

Rees said officials hope the island will ultimately be more than a mile long.

Hal Pierce, with the Alabama Lighthouse Association, said the project was a major step toward saving the lighthouse for the long term.

"We are delighted. It will give us the first safe docking at the lighthouse that we've had in years, so people will finally be able to visit," said Pierce, whose group has long advocated restoring the island. "If we're ever going to properly fix the lighthouse this will be a big help."

Dauphin Island mayor Jeff Collier said the project had multiple benefits.

"Not only is it going to help the lighthouse directly by stabilizing the foundation, but it is also going to benefit Dauphin Island, both as a wave break and by putting sand into the system," said Collier. "It is a common sense type thing to do. People will be able to slide their boats up on the island and visit the lighthouse. I just can’t see a downside."

Corps officials said a public notice for the project should be posted in a matter of days. A public comment period will follow.

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Former insurance commissioner addresses Impact 2010

Published: Sunday, December 19, 2010, 6:55 AM

ELBERTA, Alabama -- The response to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill has helped focus statewide attention on the insurance crisis affecting Mobile and Baldwin counties, former Alabama Insurance Commissioner Walter Bell said.

Bell said the "Roadmap to Resilience" report by the Coastal Recovery Coalition includes recommendations intended to improve insurance coverage and lower rates for residents.

"The BP oil spill was the catalyst to look at this whole thing again and say how can we protect ourselves living here in the Gulf Coast area, because, quite frankly, we’ve got substantial risks and those risks aren’t going to go away," Bell said. "We live with them every day, There’s nothing that’s going to be able to put up a barrier in the Gulf and stop hurricanes from coming onshore. Nothing. It’s been doing that for thousands of years and none of us are going to be able to stop it."

The report was presented to Gov. Bob Riley and Gov.-elect Robert Bentley on Wednesday, he told members of the South Baldwin Chamber of Commerce. Bell spoke at the chamber’s December Impact 2010 luncheon at the Elberta Civic Center.

Bell was Alabama insurance commissioner from 2003 to 2008. Since 2008, he has been the chairman of the Swiss Re America Holding Corp., a major re-insurance company in the area.

Coalition recommendations include improving buildings, increasing competition among insurance companies and making insurance coverage more understandable, he said.

"We’ve got to think about mitigating, adapting and finding competitive enough market forces that can hold the premiums down, finding enough discounts that we can give for the mitigation of property," he said.

Bell said Alabama officials should learn from the responses by Florida and Mississippi after hurricanes Ivan and Katrina and not try to subsidize insurance premiums or coverage. One lesson learned from hurricanes was that when the emergency funds were gone, so is the money to pay for insurance.

"After Hurricane Katrina, (Mississippi) Gov. Haley Barbour got some government money and he put $20 million a year toward some hurricane initiatives and tried to hold premiums down in the wind pool over there," Bell said. "You can’t continue to do that. He said last year ‘I think we can’t continue to do that any more,’ so now there’s going to be premium shock on the folks in Mississippi."

Instead, Alabama officials should use money to provide grants or low-interest loans to home and business owners who are willing to make their property more resistant to storms.

Work such as strengthening buildings will lower payments for insurance companies and premiums for property owners, he said.

Building codes have improved on the coast, but a statewide standard is needed for structures, he said. Inspections should also be improved.

"If the codes are there and people are not getting the roofs tied down or if they’re not putting enough nails in the shingles, they’re just going to blow off anyway," Bell said.

Bell said he met Bentley for the first time Wednesday and felt that the new governor understands the needs of the coastal area.

"He understands the driving force of Mobile and Baldwin County as being more than 20 percent of the tax revenues that go to the state, of being more than a third of the tourism dollars that are generated in the state," Bell said. "Not only that, I found out he’s got a home on Fort Morgan Road so he’s down here. He loves the area, too."

Bell said local support is also needed to put the plan into place.

"I don’t mean Montgomery, I mean the South Baldwin County Chamber, (local political action committee) GUMBO, Foley, Orange Beach, Mobile, Prichard, every other community in this two-county area, has to get behind this, build support for it, put work into it," he said. "This is the beginning. This is certainly not the end."

Bell told chamber members that he owns a condominium on Fort Morgan Road and understands the difficulties faced by property owners needing insurance.

"State Farm dropped me when I was the insurance commissioner for my condo down at the beach," he said. "They were not discriminating against anybody; certainly not me. I think they wanted to make an example of me and they did."

To see the complete 198-page "Roadmap to Resilience" report, go to http://media.al.com/live/other/CRC-Book-Download.pdf.

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Saturday night line

It's your time. An item of note:

* Rep. John Boozman joined many House Republicans in defeating a bipartisan bill that passed the Senate unanimously to recognize child marriage as a human rights violation, and develop comprehensive strategies to prevent such marriages around the world. As Blue Arkansas notes, this adds to Boozman's dim record on children's issues. Better child nutrition: Dr. No said no. A bill to prevent use of harmful restraints on school children: Dr. No said no. He truly may prove, as Blue Arkansas suggests, a Dickensian character before his day is done. Hurry that day. It will be a long six years of darkness.

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Friday, December 17, 2010

Fairhope man dies on hunting trip; companion charged

Published: Wednesday, December 15, 2010, 10:32 PM ??? Updated: Wednesday, December 15, 2010, 10:34 PM

A Fairhope man is dead, his brother wounded and Grand Bay man in jail after a weekend hunting trip in Conecuh County turned deadly, Local 15 reported Wednesday night.

Kenneth Dueitt, 37 was charged with murder and attempted murder in connection with the shooting, online court records show.

Conecuh County District Attorney Tommy Chapman was not available for comment late Wednesday night.

Richard Styron, 60, was killed, and his younger brother Clifford Styron, 56, wounded, when Dueitt turned his gun on them Sunday night, Local 15 reported.

Styron was in serious condition at a Pensacola hospital Wednesday night.

All three men were friends and members of a local electrical workers union, according to the report. ?

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'Roadmap to Resilience' urges restoring coastal Alabama seafood brand, stabilizing coastal insurance market

Published: Wednesday, December 15, 2010, 8:06 PM ??? Updated: Wednesday, December 15, 2010, 8:06 PM

MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Members of the Alabama Coastal Recovery Commission on Wednesday presented state leaders with a report that detailed the impact of the BP oil spill on south Alabama and offered a series of recommendations on how to protect the coast from future catastrophes.

The 198-page “Roadmap to Resilience” report was the product of three months of work by the 80-plus member commission, created by Gov. Bob Riley on Sept. 27. The report included nearly 300 proposals designed to strengthen the region’s social, environmental and economic vitality.

Commission chairman Ricky Mathews handed bound copies of the report to Riley and Gov.-elect Robert Bentley before a packed room at the Old House Chamber in the state Capitol.

Mathews, the publisher of the Press-Register, was tapped by Riley to lead the commission after heading a similar effort in south Mississippi following Hurricane Katrina.

Mathews emphasized the importance of Mobile and Baldwin counties to the rest of the state, noting that the two counties together account for more than 20 percent of Alabama’s general fund revenue.

“Coastal Alabama is the economic engine that drives our entire state,” Mathews said. “It’s critical to all of us that we build a better coastal Alabama.”

The report’s overarching recommendations included fixing the claims process for people and businesses affected by the spill, restoring the Gulf brand for seafood and tourism and ensuring that BP penalty funds are directed to areas where the most spill damage occurred.

Its specific proposals included an array of ideas, ranging from renourishing beaches and oyster beds to establishing a concert series to building a new beachfront convention center near Gulf State Park.

The report offered a comprehensive examination of the coastal insurance crisis. Participants said one of their top priorities was the creation of a trust fund to provide incentives and financing for homeowners to fortify their houses against storms.

“The coastal economy cannot thrive unless we stabilize the cost of insurance and even lower insurance premiums,” said Walter Bell, a former Alabama Insurance commissioner tapped to lead the commission’s insurance committee. “We believe we came up with some good solutions on how to sustain the coast by improving the availability and affordability of insurance.”

Riley announced he was taking immediate action to implement at least one of the commission’s recommendations, issuing an executive order Wednesday to create the Alabama Fisheries Marketing Board.

With an “I Love Gulf Seafood” sticker fixed to his lapel, Riley said the board will be charged with developing a plan to promote Alabama seafood and educating consumers about its quality.

Riley said the seafood promotion board was just the first of many good ideas to come out of the commission. He said the report will serve as a valuable resource for state leaders as they decide how best to spend the billions of dollars Alabama could receive from federal fines levied against BP.

“It may be years before we know the long-term impact, but the recovery process can’t wait,” Riley said. “This gives us a clear plan so that we can come back better than we were before the spill.”

Bentley, who takes office Jan. 17, commended the commission for its work and said he was eager to review the report.

“I look forward to studying these plans and helping you implement them,” he said. “If we can put these plans in place, we can improve the lives of the people who were affected by this tragedy.”

Commission members said the delivery of the report should be viewed as the first step toward a stronger, more resilient coastal Alabama.

“While no one would have ever wished for the Deepwater Horizon tragedy, this opportunity to bring various individuals and communities together was one of the good things that came about as a result of something so bad,” said U.S. Rep. Jo Bonner, R-Mobile. ?

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Baldwin prosecutors wrap up murder case against Nodine; defense pushes suicide theory

Published: Thursday, December 16, 2010, 5:00 AM

BAY MINETTE, Ala. — Baldwin County prosecutors wrapped up their murder case against Stephen Nodine on Wednesday with testimony from the victim’s neighbors and two men who said they had dated her during the last year of her life.

The former Mobile County commissioner’s attorneys, meanwhile, opened their defense by attempting to depict Angel Downs as a woman with reasons to kill herself and a suicide attempt in her past.

In addition to murder, prosecutors have charged Nodine with stalking and an ethics violation related to his alleged misuse of a government-issued pickup truck. The trial, which continues today in Baldwin County Circuit Court, likely will hinge on whether jurors believe the prosecution theory that Downs’ death from a gunshot to the head May 9 was a homicide, or the defense contention that it was a suicide.

Bolstering the prosecution’s assertions that Downs, 45, was trying to end her often-tumultuous relationship with Nodine, two men testified that they had dated her in recent months.

Scott Bedford, a financial planner from Gulf Shores, testified that he met Downs on April 2 through an online dating service and began seeing her. He told jurors that he met Nodine on May 4 in Gulf Shores at a news conference related to the BP PLC oil spill.

During their brief conversation, Bedford said, Nodine made a derogatory comment about Downs. “I found it offensive,” he said.

Bedford said Downs did not seem depressed in the weeks before her death.

Roland Naseman, who told jurors that he dated Downs in 2009, testified that Nodine on April 1 of that year alternately banged on the door and back window of the condo in Fairhope where Downs was living at the time.

Naseman testified that the banging went on for about an hour before Nodine finally passed out in his truck.

On cross-examination, Naseman acknowledged that he stopped dating Downs, in part, because he questioned whether her relationship with Nodine was over.

“He had come up several times in the relationship,” he said. “Until she was finished with him, I didn’t want to date her.”

Defense attorney Dennis Knizley used a letter that Downs wrote days before her death to contradict testimony from her friends that she was done with Nodine.

Knizley said Downs’ letter, a reply she apparently had written to a seven-page letter she received from Nodine the Thursday before she died, expresses her love for Nodine and her desire to spend the rest of her life with him. She also expressed her desire for Nodine to divorce his wife, Knizley said.

Several of Downs’ neighbors in The Ridge condominiums off Fort Morgan Road testified they heard a gunshot shortly before 8 p.m. on May 9. Lannie Hill that he heard the gunshot and went to Downs’ house after a neighbor knocked on his door. He testified that he called 911 after he saw Downs lying in the driveway.

That contradicted the statement to the 911 operator, in which Hill said he heard a gunshot and saw a red pickup leaving the subdivision. In fact, it was other residents who had mentioned seeing the truck.

One of those who did see the truck, Roger Whitehead, testified that he heard a gunshot and quickly walked outside to investigate. When he got outside, he testified, he saw a red pickup truck with a blue county license plate driving toward the exit of the subdivision. The vehicle blocked his view of Downs’ home, he said.

Questioned by Knizley, Whitehead testified that he believes there was some delay from the time he heard the gunshot to when he walked out and saw the vehicle. Knizley played a videotaped interview with a Gulf Shores police officer on the day of the shooting in which Whitehead said he saw the truck go by right after the gunshot.

The first person to arrive at Downs’ home after the shooting, Nancy Hill, testified that there was not nearly as much blood as is shown in a crime scene photo taken later by Gulf Shores police. She said that Downs’ blonde hair was beginning to darken with blood.

Hill’s testimony could help explain why investigators never found any blood on Nodine, on his clothes or in his truck. It also is consistent with testimony from Dr. James Downs, a medical examiner hired as a private consultant by the District Attorney’s Office. Downs told jurors that the blood would have oozed out of Downs’ body rather than spurted.

Ann Myers, a nurse who lives in the neighborhood, testified that she saw Downs’ long, blonde hair “fanned out, like a halo” from the top of her head.

“It was the most unusual thing, as a nurse, I’ve ever seen, as far as gunshot victims go,” she testified.

The defense introduced records showing that Angel Downs’ income from her job as a sales manager at Benchmark Homes was on track to drop from $83,754 in 2008 to about $45,000 this year.

On the day Downs died, an acquaintance testified, she complained about her financial problems.

“She told me that she could not pay her bills. She told me she was not making enough money to pay her bills,” said Patricia Callahan Owens, who knew Downs and Nodine from beach outings in Pensacola. “She told me she was working more and making less money.”

Testifying about a suicide call he was sent on in October 2006, former Gulf Shores police Officer Timothy Dennis told jurors that he found Downs naked and unconscious on her bed, with shallow breathing and a yellowish tint to her skin.

Dennis testified that he saw empty pill bottles and a suicide note that read, in part, “I’m sorry for all that I’ve hurt.”

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Raffle falls flat

Raffle falls flat

The Arkansas Lottery's Million Dollar Raffle game has had its share of bumps and bruises. Within a few days of the game's release a glitch caused retailers to pay 42 $20 prizes to the wrong players.

Now the problem is slow sales. A drawing for the big prize was slated to be held in September but that has been delayed. No drawing will be held until 500,000 tickets have been sold. As of last week, barely more than 200,000 had been sold.

Julie Baldridge, director of public affairs for the Arkansas Lottery, says getting the raffle going has been somewhat "star-crossed," but lottery officials are plugging along and looking forward to handing out prizes. She said, "The lottery will definitely meet their obligations with the tickets, with the terms that are stated on the ticket." Prizes for the raffle will include two $1 million winners and 540 $1,000 winners.

Baldridge says the raffle game has been a learning experience.

"The Raffle promises to be a fairly profitable game, not just for the players, but for the state," she says. "You never know until you try and it's likely there will be a different structure in the future. But things that work in other states sometimes don't work here and the things that work here don't always work in other states, or at least not as quickly."

Green and a gunner

Sen. Denny Altes of Fort Smith is term-limited, but he's managed to extend legislative service by jumping to the House. He's among the most reliably extreme right-wingers in the legislature, so he surprised a few people with some of his legislation for the coming session, particularly an environmentally sensitive measure to require retail stores to use only paper sacks or reusable shopping bags. Plastic bags would be outlawed. Walmart alone should nip this idea in the bud.

Altes lived more up to history with a bill to allow open carry of handguns in Arkansas in all "public places."

Will write for food

Times are definitely tough for college graduates recently released into a lackluster job market. Some have moved back in with mom and pop. Others have taken jobs as bartenders and baristas. One purported honors graduate from the University of Central Arkansas has taken a different path.

An advertisement on Craigslist announces "Need a Paper? I WILL WRITE IT FOR YOU!" The author of the post says all you have to do is "e-mail me with the specifics of your assignment (topic, length requirement, due date, etc.) and we will discuss prices. I will respond within twelve hours."

The post claims that all work is "original research (plagiarism free)," although that wouldn't be true for the student who turns it in.

Donna Bowman, associate director of the Honors College at the UCA, saw the post and took to Twitter to encourage her followers to "Identify and shame" the freelance research paper writer. ??

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Thursday, December 16, 2010

Bring it on

It was supposed to be a surprise, but somebody broke the embargo — a WikiLeak maybe — and billboards went up. "Second Coming — May 21, 2011."

So everybody's heard now, and with the suspense gone, replaced by dread or denial, the Son of Man and I have been out doing promos.

I mean, there's no way it won't be the top news story of that last cycle, so there's no real point, but this is Century 21 and you have to do garish advances on upcoming BFDs from a long time out. I don't know why you do but you do. So we did.

I think our best one was when I took Jesus by for a brief photo op with TR.

Me: "TR, Jesus. Jesus, TR."

TR: ?"How's it hanging, Hunch? You gettin' any?"

Jesus shoots me a quizzical look and I shrug and tell Him, "That's TR."

TR [to Jesus]:? "I kick ass and take names. What line are you in?

Me:? "Aw, c'mon TR. He's the King of Glory."

TR: ?"I thought that was Sheffield. I know Sheffield thought it was Sheffield."

Me:? "Don't act like you never heard of the Good Shepherd, the Prince of Peace. You'll be standing before Him in judgment inside of six months."

TR : "Aw, I'm used to that. But you better watch out. Even in the courtroom I'll open a can of whupass. [To Jesus] You'll need to camo that raiment if you're here long. Old boys'll think you're a fag. I got some waders you can put on."

TR again : "Well, what can I do y'all for? We need to get on with it, whatever it is. Bud Lite traffic's just about dried up with y'all here."

So we talked briefly about the need for a few more ivorybill peckerwoods to bring back the gay-looking birdbrain tourists who drink a lot of expensive brandy and s—t like that, and then we left.

We went on over to see Loy Mauch, and I remember a couple of things he said to Jesus. One was, "Sorry about what them Jews done to you the first time." And the other: "I got me a Confederate battle flag in yonder ... be mighty obliged if you'd ortagraph it for me. I wouldn't sell it or nothing."

Hank wanted to sell Him some fiiiine furniture, and Ron Sherman some windows. "What would he do with windows?" I asked Ron. "I mean, this is Jesus Christ."

"We'd make him a better deal than anybody else," Ron said.

?It takes some brass to tell the Lord of Hosts that if He scratches your back you'll scratch His. But that was the gist of Jerry Jones' proposition when we stopped by the crystal palace: Jesus would get ?a victory lap around the Jerry Bowl in the Popemobile on Super Bowl Sunday, with full fireworks and a Blue Angel flyover, and in return on May 21 Jerry would get eternal life with no questions asked.

When Jesus didn't bite, he offered to throw in a skybox on timeshare, and not a dinky one either.

People just don't understand the gravity of this end-of-the-world business. Back in the Dark Ages they did, but not now.

Larry King to Jesus:? "Now what it is you do again?"

Maury Povich wanted to give Him a DNA test to settle the paternity questions that have lingered 2,000 years. "It'll be like Obama getting a real birth certificate," Maury said.

Wrangler wanted to bump Brett Favre in favor of Jesus for its Real. Comfortable. Jeans. campaign. But Jesus nixed that one too. People don't want to see their Savior in blue jeans. He was a carpenter during his sojourn; he didn't ride rodeo bulls.

Huckabee hasn't been able to get an audience. Jesus will break bread with publicans and sinners — and strange little tree-climbers like Zaccheus — but he draws a tight line with graspers, chameleons, the self-absorbed, and the professionally pious.

Mark Steines on ET wanted to know if Tom Cruise and John Travolta will be sent straight to Hell because of their Scientology. The idea that they might caused Mark great anguish, you could tell. ?But Jesus doesn't answer questions like that. He just looks at such questioners in a way that makes them ashamed of what sad little f--kfaces they are.

?"This is giving me the creeps," one of these birds said in one of the promos, whereupon the Lord glanced at me and I thought I saw the tiniest of ethereal smiles. It's said He never laughs in the Good Book. That got Him the nickname of Man of Sorrows. But I don't know. I bet He laughs at Pat Robertson pretending to have chitchats with Him. At "Blazing Saddles" on the Blu-Ray.

I might tell you I advised strongly against this "Second Coming — Bring it on!" media campaign. False bravado, I thought. I thought everybody would just give up if they knew the date exactly. I worry there'll be panic in the streets as the time approaches. But then I wonder why I worry. If there's panic it won't last long. Nothing will last long.

If we got through that last election with a scrap of hope and our wits still about us, we ought to be able to handle this.

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LCS contract proposal draws sharp criticism from John McCain

Published: Tuesday, December 14, 2010, 8:24 PM ??? Updated: Tuesday, December 14, 2010, 8:24 PM

WASHINGTON — During a Tuesday Senate hearing, the Navy’s top officials faced skepticism from government watchdog agencies and blistering criticism from Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., over a $10 billion warship purchase plan.

Oversight officials described the proposal to split the purchase of 20 littoral combat ships, or LCS, between vendors building in Mobile and Wisconsin as rushed, potentially risky and lacking important information.

"It’s obvious that this is a rush to judgment on a program that has been plagued with billions and billions of cost overruns and wastes of taxpayers’ dollars, and I obviously am deeply concerned about that," McCain told the Senate Armed Services Committee.

Other lawmakers on the panel offered praise or milder criticism of the dual-buy strategy, which was first proposed just a month ago. Sen. Carl Levin, the Michigan Democrat who chairs the committee, endorsed the Navy’s plan.

The Navy proudly championed the plan as crucial for national defense and a good deal that would yield 20 ships for the cost of 19. Navy leaders pressed lawmakers for quick approval.

"This is good for the Navy, good for the taxpayers, good for industry, good for workers and good for our country," Navy Secretary Ray Mabus said.

Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Mobile, spoke similarly in favor of the plan, which could double the 1,800-person workforce in Austal USA’s Mobile shipyard.

But he expressed uncertainty about the chances for Senate approval in the few remaining days Congress will be in session this year — a necessity to make the Navy’s Dec. 30 deadline.

"Probably, it will be difficult for that to clear the Senate if Senator McCain fails to give consent," Sessions said about the chances of a bill containing only the LCS approval. But there’s "a realistic chance" for fast congressional approval of LCS amendments added to budget bills, he said.

One such bill, called a continuing resolution, last week cleared the House by a thin margin and awaits Senate action.

Congress is scheduled to adjourn for the year on Friday. The Navy’s initial deadline for approval was Tuesday, but on Monday that was extended by more than two weeks to give lawmakers more time to act.

"I understand that the two very generous offers have been extended to Dec. 30," McCain said. "I see no reason why those offers could not be extended to January or February or March, so that this committee could at least address the concerns that the GAO (Government Accountability Office), CBO (Congressional Budget Office) and the Congressional Research Service have raised."

The Navy said that if congressional authorization doesn’t come this year, Austal and Lockheed Martin Corp. likely will increase their asking prices for the ships. To lock in the lower prices, the Navy has said it would likely proceed with a previously approved winner-take-all shipbuilding contract and abandon the dual buy.

Austal and Lockheed declined to comment.

The hearing was called hastily at the request of McCain, with notice going out Monday night. Only eight of the committee’s 28 members attended, and most — including McCain, the panel’s ranking Republican — came late or left early.

Lawmakers, Navy leaders and oversight officials agreed on at least one point: the LCS program had a troubled past.

"The cost of the LCS, from 2005 to 2010 was 8 billion of the taxpayers’ dollars, and what have we got to show for it?" McCain asked. "$8 billion for four ships."

Navy officials said they learned from past mistakes and that the dual buy offers substantial savings. The worst-case scenario for ship costs, on average, is $460 million per vessel, well below the limit set for the project, according to Sean Stackley, assistant secretary of the Navy. The fixed-cost project will only hold the government accountable for a limited amount of unanticipated expenses.

The Navy did not give specific cost details because the information is proprietary to the companies, which frustrated the efforts of lawmakers and oversight officials to understand the likely near-term and long-term expenses.

Navy officials said they would not ask Congress to approve a bad deal, adding that the new vessels are fast, flexible and can operate near shore.

"Having commanded the Atlantic and Pacific fleets, I know the value of such a ship," said Adm. Gary Roughead, chief of naval operations.

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The night is young

The night is young

Posted by Max Brantley on Tue, Dec 14, 2010 at 4:11 PM

But I need to get away early to get in good order to the special early showing of "True Grit" at Rave tonight. The line is open, but some final items:

* Speaking of Charles Portis, the Little Rock writer whose best-selling novel is the basis for the movie: His "Dog of the South" has been optioned for a movie. By Bill Hader and Greg Mottola.

* House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has called a vote tomorrow on repeal of the law that discriminates against gay people in military service. Vic Snyder will be there one more time. I asked Reps. Mike Ross and Marion Berry if they intended to vote for or against discrimination. No response. Didn't waste the dime on Dr. No.

* A devoted reader asks: Why the heck did Yarnell's not make peppermint ice cream for the Christmas season this year? Ditto me on that.

* PS — Stay tuned. The Airport expense saga is not over. And I'm informed the Little Rock Regional Chamber of Commerce has agreed to meet tomorrow with city officials on my Freedom of Information Act request to know why the names of Chamber employees paid by taxpayers and water customers are being kept secret. Why they can't just turn over the names, I don't know.

* PPS — Can somebody tell me what that series of booms around 6:20 or so signified? Artillery practice at Camp Robinson? Invasion? What?

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