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14Oct/10Off

Donated Replacement For Stolen Wheelchair

Huntsville, AL - We have an update to a story we brought you two weeks ago.

12Oct/10Off

How to submit an article to an article directory

An article directory is a form of Search Engine Optimization (SEO). Article directories allow people to submit articles based on specific context to different directories and websites. They contain an abundance of information and help you find other data quickly and easily. These directories can be found just about anywhere and can be used to research things like music, golf, food etc. Because the directories contain a innumerable amount of topics, articles can be written by just about anyone-whether or not the articles are accepted, is a different story. People of all ages, working typical jobs, can all add different content to these directories and can be a great way for them to get themselves noticed, or to make themselves extra money.

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To submit articles to a directory, find a directory you would like to submit to and follow their requirements. Most of the most common requirements you would see are as follows:

1.    Articles must be original. Submitting articles written by another author or person is not allowed unless under the circumstances that an author(s) give you the permission to do so. It must be stated in your article somewhere that it is not your own work, and have copyright permission from the writer. Articles in which are ghostwritten for you can be used, again as long as the work is your own.

2.    You grant the right to publish. Directories that you submit to are allowed to use your articles on their websites and blogs, and can vary and change in terms of where it can be located. The article that you submit to them will be published as you send it unless specified that someone, or you, yourself will edit it.

3.    You grant others the right to publish. By submitting an article to a directory, other websites are granted permission to publish them in ezines or online magazines. The articles will be left in its original form, and must credit you, the author, to that article.

4.    Compensation is optional (the directory owners make that decision. Certain directories can pay you for your articles given you meet their criteria. Some directories can state that you must be an approved contributor and if your articles are original, they can offer you compensation. Most directories, however, will not provide you with compensation. If you are looking to get paid for your writing, it is best to submit and write elsewhere.

5.    Submitting doesn’t mean publish. Article directories have every right to refuse an article for any reason. The article could contain information irrelevant to the topic of choice or inappropriate.

6.    You’re responsible for what you write. If an article you submit gets published, there may or may not be a copy editor to proof your article. If a published article of yours contains a typo or a misspelling of some kind, the directory is not liable for your writing reputation. Directories can also reject articles due to these errors if they have the resources available to check them.

13Sep/10Off

Northside High student killed in weekend crash

24Aug/10Off

Rain doesn’t get Northern Little League fans down

23Aug/10Off

Breaking Down Barriers

In 1968, a group of local churches realized there was an unmet need in Madison County. International residents were struggling to fit in, hampered by their inability to speak English. Judith Moon says, "they couldn't go to the grocery store and decide which cut of meat, or why there were so many choices of chicken, or you know, the cans of food, if there wasn't a picture on it, they didn't know what can to get." That realization started an effort that's led to the education of more than 6,000 people from 100 countries, and the free classes continue today.

More than 40 years after first offering the ESL classes, First Baptist Church of Huntsville is still involved in helping international residents improve their language skills. Moon, a longtime volunteer teacher, says the classes range from introductory, "this is a table. This is a chair," all the way to highly advanced.

However, the purpose of each class is the same - helping the students meet their individual goals. Flora Tapia-Johnson, a native of Panama, speaks English fluently. She is taking a level five course, "to learn how to write English well, perfectly, that I can go to college." Classmate Claudia Arriaga says, "I want to be able to speak English fluently and to communicate with others and I, also in the future, I would like to work like a translator and help other people that came from Mexico." Mineko Ikehata of Japan simply wants to improve her conversational skills.

Because the teachers are volunteers and the program is run by the church, the only cost to these students is their workbook. While Moon has never drawn a paycheck, she finds the work itself rewarding, saying, "The reason I do this is because God has helped me to learn and be a better person, so I want to help someone else to learn, and if they meet God while I'm teaching them, that's wonderful."

The classes are provided every Thursday during the school year, and free childcare is provided. The church also offers International Sunday School classes. For more information, call 256-428-9400.

Breaking Down Barriers

18Aug/10Off

Discovery Middle School Shooting Suspect Moved

WAAY 31 News has confirmed that Hammad Memon, the 15 year old boy accused in the shooting death of Todd Brown at Discovery Middle School, is no longer in the Madison County Jail.

According to our sources at the Madison County Sheriff's Department, Memon was transferred from the jail to a mental health facility in Tuscaloosa on Wednesday.

The move isn't a surprise. Earlier this month, a judge ruled that Memon should be moved from the jail to the Bryce Psychiatric Hospital, where he could undergo more evaluation and treatment before his trial begins.

In early July, a judge ruled that Memon should be tried as an adult for the February 5th shooting. Memon's attorney, Bruce Gardner, says the boy suffers from hallucinations and that some doctors believe he may be suffering from the on set of schizophrenia.

12Aug/10Off

Phenix City schools overcrowding

5Aug/10Off

New Madison High Already the Talk of the Town

In two years, the city of Madison will open a new high school. The project has been a long time coming, as enrollment at Bob Jones has swelled in the last decade. However, as much as the new school is needed, some worry it may end up causing just as many problems as it solves.

"I think traffic is gonna be a nightmare, I really do" said Madison resident Michelle Moyer. "It's already a nightmare in the mornings and evenings. So unless they do some road expansions, they're gonna have a lot of problems."

However, several other folks we spoke with say they're willing to put up with that problem to alleviate the overcrowding. "I am all for it, because I know our middle schools are crowded with 9th graders" said Amy Walton.

Dr. Dee Fowler, the superintendent of Madison's City Schools agrees. "Bob Jones (High School) is reaching critical stages, with 22 hundred children in grades 10, 11 and 12." Fowler told WAAY 31's Tim Reid on Thursday. "We're also critical at our middle schools that house grades 7, 8 and 9."

The new high school site, located along County Line Road, is expected to house 2,000 students. Work has already begun on the 83 acre site.

Meanwhile, several other school projects are moving along around the Valley. Earlier this week, officials in Albertville held a ribbon cutting ceremony for a new facility. Hartselle school leaders tell us that their plans for a new high school are also moving along. Funding for that project was secured this spring, and a project manager was recently hired. Hartselle School Superintendent Mike Reed tells us that a final design could be done soon, though no construction date has been set yet.

In New Market, work continues on the new Buckhorn Middle School, which is adjacent to the high school along Winchester Road. However, due to the cold conditions last winter, the project is running behind and it will not open on time.

Pope John Paul II Catholic High School on Old Madison Pike is also almost complete. It expects to open in October.

And in Huntsville, the work on the new Lee High is moving along on schedule.

Reporter : Tim Reid, treid@waaytv.com

New Madison High Already the Talk of the Town

28Jul/10Off

Phenix City Marine injured by IED, celebrated at home

2Jul/10Off

Shooting Suspect Certified as Adult

The 14 year old boy accused of shooting a classmate to death in February was certified as adult today.

Hamad Memon, who was 14 at the time of the deadly shooting of Todd Brown, had a hearing Friday morning at the Neaves Davis Juvenile Facility in Huntsville. Judge Lynn Sherrod, Memon's attorney Bruce Gardner and prosecutors held the hearing at the facility, behind closed doors.

Memon has a bond hearing Friday afternoon at 4pm. A trial date has not been set.

29Jun/10Off

Kagan insists she didn’t block military at Harvard

WASHINGTON -Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan clashed Tuesday with a Republican senator over the limits she ordered on military recruiters while dean of Harvard Law School, repeatedly denying she blocked them as she sought to deflect foes' efforts to slow her apparently smooth road to confirmation.
Despite a testy exchange with the top Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, President Barack Obama's nominee soldiered through her second day of public testimony on Capitol Hill apparently in good shape to win Senate approval — barring a major gaffe — in time to take her seat before the court opens a new term in October. If confirmed, Kagan, 50, would succeed retiring Justice John Paul Stevens
Republican foes weren't giving up quietly. Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama said he emerged from the long day of questioning more "troubled" about Kagan's nomination than he had been previously. During his sometimes heated back-and-forth with Kagan, Sessions said her decision to bar recruiters from the law school's career services office over the Pentagon's prohibition on openly gay soldiers was "punishing" the military at Harvard, treating them in a "second-class way" and creating a hostile environment for the military on campus.
Kagan said she was trying to balance Harvard's nondiscrimination policy, which she believed "don't ask, don't tell" violated, with a federal law that required schools to give military recruiters equal access as a condition of eligibility for federal funds. She said she welcomed the military, and believed her policy of requiring recruiters to work through a student veterans group — first set by a predecessor — was a valid compromise.
"We were trying to make sure that military recruiters had full and complete access to our students, but we were also trying to protect our own antidiscrimination policy and to protect the students whom it is ... supposed to protect, which in this case were our gay and lesbian students," Kagan said.
Sessions rejected her version of events and accused Kagan of defying federal law because of her strong opposition to the military's treatment of homosexuals.
"I know what happened at Harvard. I know you were an outspoken leader against the military policy," Sessions said "I know you acted without legal authority to reverse Harvard's policy and deny those military equal access to campus until you were threatened by the United States government of loss of federal funds."
Kagan was less willing to mix it up with Republicans who closely questioned her on controversial legal topics.
The nominee, who once wrote a strongly worded article denouncing Supreme Court nominees for dodging questions at confirmation hearings, herself refused repeatedly to be pinned down on specific legal issues, her political views or even the passions that animate her to seek a place on the court.
She did call recent Supreme Court rulings upholding gun rights "binding precedent," and she said the court's rulings mandate that in any law regulating abortion "the woman's life and the woman's health have to be protected." She said a 5-4 decision this year that said corporations and unions were free to spend their own funds on political activity was "settled law."
But she was less forthcoming when asked whether she thought that campaign finance case, which she argued for the Obama administration and lost, had been wrongly decided.
"I did believe we had a strong case to make. I tried to make it to the best of my ability," she told Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, who questioned her in detail about Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission.
She also said none of her work arguing the government's cases before the Supreme Court — she was Obama's solicitor general until last month — should be interpreted as reflecting her own positions.
"I want to make a clear distinction between my views as an advocate and any views I might have as a judge," Kagan said.
Across hours of testimony before the committee, Kagan declined to weigh in on virtually any substantive question posed to her, eluding GOP efforts to label her ideology as well as one Democrat's seemingly friendly bid to get her to open up about why she wants to be a justice.
"What motivates me is the opportunity to safeguard the rule of law," Kagan said under questioning by a visibly frustrated Sen. Herb Kohl of Wisconsin, who asked her about her passions. "I think I will take this one case at a time if I'm a judge. It would not be right for a judge to come in and say, 'I have a passion for this or that. ...' This isn't a job, I think, where somebody should come in with a substantive agenda."
Later, asked to talk about the justices she most admires, Kagan again dodged, saying it would be a "bad idea" to talk about those currently on the bench. "My oh my oh my," Kohl said, deprived again of an answer as the hearing room erupted in laughter.
Kagan did, however, express admiration for the late Justice Thurgood Marshall, the court's first African-American, whom Republicans have held up as a prime example of a judicial activist.
"I love Justice Marshall. He did an enormous amount for me," Kagan said of the man for whom she once clerked. "But if you confirm me to this position, you will get Justice Kagan. You won't get Justice Marshall, and that's an important thing."
Kohl also failed to persuade Kagan to say whether she agreed with Justice Antonin Scalia's view that the Constitution should be interpreted solely based on its text or with former Justice David Souter's contention that it should be viewed in terms of its words' "meaning for living people."
"I don't really think that this is an either-or choice," Kagan responded.
Asked by Sessions whether she considered herself "a progressive in the mold of" Obama or a "legal progressive," as one of his top aides has called her, Kagan said she'd rather choose her own labels, but declined to give herself one.
"I'm not quite sure how I would characterize my politics, but one thing I know is that my politics would be, must be, have to be separate from my judging," Kagan said. "I've served in two Democratic administrations. You can tell something about me and my political views from that."
Kagan stayed mostly calm throughout hours at a witness table, showing glimmers of humor but hardly ever veering off-script as she fielded questions on sometimes uncomfortable topics.
"You're doing well," Hatch assured her after her intense debate with Sessions on military recruitment. "Relax as much as you can."
Asked by Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., for a "heart-to-heart talk," Kagan gamely replied, "Just you and me," to laughter from a hearing room filled with spectators, reporters and news cameras.
Kagan, the former law school dean, sometimes seemed to be teaching an introductory course in constitutional law.
She called the Constitution an "enduring document."
It has some "very specific provisions — it just says what you're supposed to do and how things are supposed to work," she said. But she added that other provisions "were meant to be interpreted over time to be applied to new situations and new contexts."

Kagan insists she didn't block military at Harvard