Video

More Video
heffalump
|
June 18, 2013
DrPepper: The poor, or anyone else seeking gov't money to live on should all have to be subject to pre-benefit and random drug tests just like most of us working people are. I don't pass a drug test, I lose my job, which means I lose my income. It's not the government's responsibility to pay for illegal drugs with welfare or food stamp dollars, now is it? I'm not a right winger nor a lefty so don't label me. I don't mind my tax dollars going to programs to help the poor. I just don't want to support addicts.
Sprint sues to stop Dish Clearwire buyout
by Associated Press
Jun 18, 2013 | 21 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print
OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — Sprint is suing to stop Dish Network's buyout of wireless data network operator Clearwire. The nation's third-largest cellphone carrier said the proposed deal violates the rights of Sprint and other Clearwire shareholders. Dish has offered to pay $4.40 per share for Clearwire, which has recommended that its shareholders approve the offer. That reverses its earlier stance in support of a takeover bid by Sprint, its majority shareholder. Sprint, headquartered in Overland Park, Kan., has bid $3.40 per share for the minority stake in Clearwire it doesn't already own. Dish Network Corp., based in Englewood, Colo., a satellite broadcaster, has said its offer is contingent on being able to buy 25 percent of the company. But Sprint Nextel Corp. said late Monday that Dish cannot complete its offer without the approval of holders of at least 75 percent of Clearwire's shares. Sprint also contends that the deal violates shareholder rights under Clearwire's charter and an equity holders' agreement. Sprint's complaint, filed in the Delaware Court of Chancery, asks the court to prevent Dish's offer from being consummated. Clearwire is incorporated in Delaware. Representatives with Dish and Clearwire did not immediately return calls seeking comment Tuesday morning from The Associated Press. Earlier this month, Sprint had sent an open letter to Clearwire's board saying the conditions of Dish's offer are illegal and violate Clearwire Corp.'s shareholder agreement. But Dish said in a separate letter that its offer was "carefully designed to comply with applicable law and the existing rights of Clearwire stockholders including Sprint." Clearwire Corp. is based in Bellevue, Wash.
Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Family of slain law grad want farm searched
by Associated Press
Jun 18, 2013 | 135 views | 0 0 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend | print
MACON, Ga. (AP) — Parents of a slain Mercer University law school graduate want investigators to search farmland in central Georgia in hopes of finding her remains. The parents of 27-year-old Lauren Giddings are asking a federal judge to allow them to search farmland that belonged to a relative of murder suspect Stephen McDaniel. The federal wrongful death lawsuit was filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Macon, The Telegraph newspaper reported. McDaniel is charged with the June 2011 slaying and dismemberment of Giddings, who was from Laurel, Md. Her torso was found in a trash bin near her apartment and police have said the rest of her remains have not been found. McDaniel has pleaded not guilty. His attorney Floyd Buford declined to comment until he's reviewed the lawsuit. From early on in the murder investigation, the Giddings family has wanted to thoroughly search a 63-acre tract where a relative of McDaniel's lived until his death last year. The lawsuit alleges that McDaniel visited the Pike County farm, about an hour west of Macon, the weekend before Giddings was killed. The lawsuit contends that McDaniel went there looking for locations where he could "scatter dismembered body parts through the woods." The Macon newspaper reports that investigators never searched the property. Giddings father, Billy Giddings of Maryland, said in an interview that he wants cadaver dogs to search the area.
Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Report: US adult smoking rate dips to 18 percent
by MIKE STOBBE, AP Medical Writer
Jun 18, 2013 | 118 views | 0 0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print
ATLANTA (AP) — Fewer U.S. adults are smoking, a new government report says. Last year, about 18 percent of adults participating in a national health survey described themselves as current smokers. The nation's smoking rate generally has been falling for decades, but had seemed to stall at around 20 to 21 percent for about seven years. In 2011, the rate fell to 19 percent, but that might have been a statistical blip. Health officials are analyzing the 2012 findings and have not yet concluded why the rate dropped, a spokesman for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said. The CDC released its study Tuesday. Smoking is the leading cause of preventable illness and death in the United States. It's responsible for the majority of lung cancer deaths and is a deadly factor in heart attacks and a variety of other illnesses. Concerned about the stalled smoking rate, the CDC launched a graphic advertising campaign last year that was the agency's largest and starkest anti-smoking push. The campaign triggered an increase of 200,000 calls to quit lines, and CDC officials said thousands of smokers probably went on to kick the habit. The CDC did a second wave of the ads earlier this year. The new report is from a survey of about 35,000 U.S. adults. Current smokers were identified as those who said they had smoked more than 100 cigarettes in their lifetime and now smoke every day or some days. The rate was only 9 percent for people ages 65 and older, but about 20 percent for younger adults. More men than women described themselves as current smokers. The report did not include teens. About 16 percent of high school students were smokers in 2011, according to an earlier CDC report. Patrick Reynolds, executive director of the Foundation for a SmokeFree America, told The Associated Press that he was elated that the adult smoking rate, for years at about 20 percent, had dropped below that longstanding plateau. He said factors he thinks have contributed to fewer adults smoking include rising state and federal tobacco taxes, more spending on prevention and cessation programs, and more laws banning smoking in public. "This is a real decline in smoking in America. I'm ecstatic about it. It's proof that we are winning the battle against tobacco," he said by telephone from Los Angeles.
Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
On Friday and Saturday nights in Ringgold, movers and shakers take to the dance floor of the old Legion building on Emberson Drive. (Catoosa News photo/Adam Cook)
On Friday and Saturday nights in Ringgold, movers and shakers take to the dance floor of the old Legion building on Emberson Drive. (Catoosa News photo/Adam Cook)
slideshow
Latest Videos
heffalump
|
June 18, 2013
DrPepper: The poor, or anyone else seeking gov't money to live on should all have to be subject to pre-benefit and random drug tests just like most of us working people are. I don't pass a drug test, I lose my job, which means I lose my income. It's not the government's responsibility to pay for illegal drugs with welfare or food stamp dollars, now is it? I'm not a right winger nor a lefty so don't label me. I don't mind my tax dollars going to programs to help the poor. I just don't want to support addicts.
Sprint sues to stop Dish Clearwire buyout
by Associated Press
Jun 18, 2013 | 21 views | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print
OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — Sprint is suing to stop Dish Network's buyout of wireless data network operator Clearwire. The nation's third-largest cellphone carrier said the proposed deal violates the rights of Sprint and other Clearwire shareholders. Dish has offered to pay $4.40 per share for Clearwire, which has recommended that its shareholders approve the offer. That reverses its earlier stance in support of a takeover bid by Sprint, its majority shareholder. Sprint, headquartered in Overland Park, Kan., has bid $3.40 per share for the minority stake in Clearwire it doesn't already own. Dish Network Corp., based in Englewood, Colo., a satellite broadcaster, has said its offer is contingent on being able to buy 25 percent of the company. But Sprint Nextel Corp. said late Monday that Dish cannot complete its offer without the approval of holders of at least 75 percent of Clearwire's shares. Sprint also contends that the deal violates shareholder rights under Clearwire's charter and an equity holders' agreement. Sprint's complaint, filed in the Delaware Court of Chancery, asks the court to prevent Dish's offer from being consummated. Clearwire is incorporated in Delaware. Representatives with Dish and Clearwire did not immediately return calls seeking comment Tuesday morning from The Associated Press. Earlier this month, Sprint had sent an open letter to Clearwire's board saying the conditions of Dish's offer are illegal and violate Clearwire Corp.'s shareholder agreement. But Dish said in a separate letter that its offer was "carefully designed to comply with applicable law and the existing rights of Clearwire stockholders including Sprint." Clearwire Corp. is based in Bellevue, Wash.
Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Family of slain law grad want farm searched
by Associated Press
Jun 18, 2013 | 135 views | 0 0 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend | print
MACON, Ga. (AP) — Parents of a slain Mercer University law school graduate want investigators to search farmland in central Georgia in hopes of finding her remains. The parents of 27-year-old Lauren Giddings are asking a federal judge to allow them to search farmland that belonged to a relative of murder suspect Stephen McDaniel. The federal wrongful death lawsuit was filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Macon, The Telegraph newspaper reported. McDaniel is charged with the June 2011 slaying and dismemberment of Giddings, who was from Laurel, Md. Her torso was found in a trash bin near her apartment and police have said the rest of her remains have not been found. McDaniel has pleaded not guilty. His attorney Floyd Buford declined to comment until he's reviewed the lawsuit. From early on in the murder investigation, the Giddings family has wanted to thoroughly search a 63-acre tract where a relative of McDaniel's lived until his death last year. The lawsuit alleges that McDaniel visited the Pike County farm, about an hour west of Macon, the weekend before Giddings was killed. The lawsuit contends that McDaniel went there looking for locations where he could "scatter dismembered body parts through the woods." The Macon newspaper reports that investigators never searched the property. Giddings father, Billy Giddings of Maryland, said in an interview that he wants cadaver dogs to search the area.
Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Report: US adult smoking rate dips to 18 percent
by MIKE STOBBE, AP Medical Writer
Jun 18, 2013 | 118 views | 0 0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print
ATLANTA (AP) — Fewer U.S. adults are smoking, a new government report says. Last year, about 18 percent of adults participating in a national health survey described themselves as current smokers. The nation's smoking rate generally has been falling for decades, but had seemed to stall at around 20 to 21 percent for about seven years. In 2011, the rate fell to 19 percent, but that might have been a statistical blip. Health officials are analyzing the 2012 findings and have not yet concluded why the rate dropped, a spokesman for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said. The CDC released its study Tuesday. Smoking is the leading cause of preventable illness and death in the United States. It's responsible for the majority of lung cancer deaths and is a deadly factor in heart attacks and a variety of other illnesses. Concerned about the stalled smoking rate, the CDC launched a graphic advertising campaign last year that was the agency's largest and starkest anti-smoking push. The campaign triggered an increase of 200,000 calls to quit lines, and CDC officials said thousands of smokers probably went on to kick the habit. The CDC did a second wave of the ads earlier this year. The new report is from a survey of about 35,000 U.S. adults. Current smokers were identified as those who said they had smoked more than 100 cigarettes in their lifetime and now smoke every day or some days. The rate was only 9 percent for people ages 65 and older, but about 20 percent for younger adults. More men than women described themselves as current smokers. The report did not include teens. About 16 percent of high school students were smokers in 2011, according to an earlier CDC report. Patrick Reynolds, executive director of the Foundation for a SmokeFree America, told The Associated Press that he was elated that the adult smoking rate, for years at about 20 percent, had dropped below that longstanding plateau. He said factors he thinks have contributed to fewer adults smoking include rising state and federal tobacco taxes, more spending on prevention and cessation programs, and more laws banning smoking in public. "This is a real decline in smoking in America. I'm ecstatic about it. It's proof that we are winning the battle against tobacco," he said by telephone from Los Angeles.
Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
On Friday and Saturday nights in Ringgold, movers and shakers take to the dance floor of the old Legion building on Emberson Drive. (Catoosa News photo/Adam Cook)
On Friday and Saturday nights in Ringgold, movers and shakers take to the dance floor of the old Legion building on Emberson Drive. (Catoosa News photo/Adam Cook)
slideshow