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More children getting drunk on hand sanitizer

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Atlanta (CNN)Six-year-old Nhaijah Russell swallowed three or four squirts of seemingly innocuous liquid hand sanitizer at school. It tasted good, she said, like strawberry.

It also contained enough alcohol to make her dangerously drunk. She arrived at the emergency room slurring her words and unable to walk.

Since 2010, poison control center hotlines across the United States have seen a nearly 400% increase in calls related to children younger than 12 ingesting hand sanitizer, according to new analysis by the Georgia Poison Center.

“Kids are getting into these products more frequently, and unfortunately, there’s a percentage of them going to the emergency room,” said Dr. Gaylord Lopez, the center’s director.

The amount of alcohol in hand sanitizer ranges from 45% to 95%. Ingesting even small amounts — as little as two or three squirts in some cases — can cause alcohol poisoning. By comparison, wine and beer contain about 12% and 5% alcohol, Lopez said.

Nhaijah’s blood-alcohol level was .179, twice what’s considered legally drunk in an adult, according to Dr. Chris Ritchey, who treated her in the emergency room at Gwinnett Medical Center near Atlanta. Doctors had to watch Nhaijah overnight at a nearby children’s hospital for signs of brain trauma, since the alcohol had caused her to fall and hit her head, he said.

“That was very scary,” Nhaijah’s mother, Ortoria Scott, said. “It could have been very lethal for my child.”

Laundry detergent pods are ‘real risk’ to children

Alcohol poisoning can cause confusion, vomiting and drowsiness. In severe cases, a child can stop breathing.

Lopez said 3,266 hand sanitizer cases related to young children were reported to poison control centers in 2010. In 2014, the number increased to 16,117 cases.

Last week, Lopez sent a letter to Georgia’s school systems warning about children drinking hand sanitizer. He explained that some children do it intentionally in order to get drunk, while others do it on a dare from friends. Still others, he said, drink sanitizer because it looks tasty.

“A kid is not thinking this is bad for them,” Lopez said. “A lot of the more attractive (hand sanitizers) are the ones that are scented. There are strawberry, grape, orange-flavored hand sanitizers that are very appealing to kids.”

Lopez recommends parents and teachers store hand sanitizer out of reach of children and monitor its use. He said nonalcohol based products or sanitizing wipes can also be used.

On Sept. 11 anniversary, appeals to remember as time passes

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NEW YORK (AP) — During years of going to ground zero every Sept. 11, Paul Acquaviva has seen crowds diminish at the ceremonies commemorating the terror attacks. But his determination to participate hasn’t.

“As long as I’m breathing, I’ll be here,” Acquaviva, 81, said Friday as he arrived to pay tribute to his late son, Paul.

More than 1,000 victims’ relatives, survivors and recovery workers marked the 14th anniversary at ground zero with grief, gratitude and appeals to keep the toll front of mind as years pass. “It’s a hard day. But it’s an important day. I’ll come every year that I can,” recovery worker Robert Matticola said.

But if the private ceremony is smaller than in its early years, the date also has become an occasion for the public to revisit ground zero, where the memorial plaza now opens to everyone on the anniversary.

Around the country, the date was marked with what has become a tradition of lowered flags, wreath-laying, bell-tolling and, in New York, reading the names of the nearly 3,000 people killed in the terror strikes at the World Trade Center, the Pentagon and a field near Shanksville, Pennsylvania. One woman at ground zero collapsed during the ceremony, apparently overcome by grief; bystanders helped her to her feet.

Family members praised first responders, thanked the armed forces and prayed for unity and security. They also sent personal messages to their lost loved ones.

“You are the reason that I wear this uniform and stand here today,” Air Force Technical Sgt. Sparkle Thompson said of her uncle, Louie Anthony Williams.

In Washington, President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama stepped out of the White House for a moment of silence at 8:46 a.m., when the first of four hijacked planes hit on Sept. 11, 2001, striking the World Trade Center’s north tower. Later Friday, the president was observing the anniversary with a visit to the Army installation at Fort Meade, Maryland.

The Flight 93 National Memorial near Shanksville marked the completion of its $26 million visitor center, which opened to the public Thursday. At the Pentagon, Defense Secretary Ash Carter and other officials joined in remembrances for victims’ relatives and Pentagon employees.

Sacramento, California, commemorated 9/11 in conjunction with a parade honoring three friends who tackled a heavily armed gunman on a Paris-bound high-speed train last month. Two tunnels in Idaho Springs, Colorado, were renamed the Veterans Memorial Tunnels, and a cross-shaped steel sculpture taken from the rubble of the World Trade Center went on display at Dallas Love Field airport.

Some Americans honored the anniversary in their own ways.

“I don’t go to the memorial. I don’t watch it on TV. But I make sure, every year, I observe a moment of silence at 8:46,” electrician Jeff Doran said as he stood across the street from the trade center, where the signature, 1,776-foot One World Trade Center tower has opened since last Sept. 11.

The memorial plaza opened in 2011 but was closed to the public on the anniversary until last year, when an estimated 20,000 people flocked there to pay respects in the evening. Moved by the influx, organizers decided to open it more quickly after the ceremony this year.

Some victims’ relatives welcome the sense of openness at the site, where construction fences that once limited access came down last year. “It’s a little more comfortable for people to be here,” said Alexandria Perez, who attends the anniversary ceremony annually in memory of her aunt, Ana Centeno.

But to Erick Jimenez, a brother of 9/11 victim Eliezer Jimenez Jr., “every year, it’s a little less personal. … But it’s still nice to come and share with other people who lost loved ones.”

This year’s anniversary comes as Congress is weighing whether to start providing financing for the memorial plaza and whether to extend programs that promised billions of dollars in compensation and medical care to Sept. 11 responders and survivors. They’re set to expire next year.

“People are still dying because of what happened,” both on battlefields and from illnesses that some responders have developed after exposure to toxic dust, Army Sgt. Edwin Morales said as he arrived at ground zero in remembrance of a cousin, firefighter Ruben “Dave” Correa.

Jyothi Shah read names of victims in memory of her husband, Jayesh Shantitlal Shah, then paused with a message for the public.

“My kids and I would like to humbly thank everyone who has helped us, through the last 14 years, to be able to gently go through the sorrows, the suffering, the pain,” she said. “Thank you all very much – the city, the nation, the friends, the family.”

Associated Press writer Karen Matthews contributed to this report.

 

Two Delaware teens recovering from pesticide poisoning struggle to eat, walk and sit up on their own

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(CNN)As two Delaware teens recovering from pesticide poisoning struggle to eat, walk and sit up on their own, an investigation into what went wrong highlights failures on several levels, including lax oversight and a history of corruption at the U.S. Virgin Islands government agency in charge of exterminators.

The teens and their parents fell gravely ill and suffered seizures during a March vacation to St. John. The family was exposed to methyl bromide, a restricted-use pesticide. Recovery from their nerve damage has been slow and agonizing for the whole family, but it’s been the worst for the boys. The brothers were in medically induced comas for weeks. They are now conscious, family attorney James Maron said, but they are barely able to move.

Six months after the horrifying incident, their father, Steve Esmond, is slowly getting better as well, but suffers from severe tremors, struggles to speak and can’t turn the pages of a book, Maron said.

“Neurologically, it’s like being in a torture chamber,” Maron said.

Esmond and his boys are mentally “strong as an ox” and “100% cognizant,” but they are trapped in bodies badly damaged by the nerve agent, Maron said.

Prior to the incident, the boys were athletic stars at their schools. The older brother had big prospects playing lacrosse and was already touring colleges.

Their mother, Teresa Devine, had less exposure to the toxic gas than the rest of the family and has made the strongest recovery, but she spends her days and nights keeping vigil over her boys.

What is methyl bromide?

Methyl bromide is a restricted-use pesticide that the U.S. EPA has considered “highly toxic” for more than two decades. Inhalation of methyl bromide, even short-term, can cause severe lung damage, while long-term inhalation can lead to “neurological effects.” Studies on lab animals caused degenerative lesions in the nasal cavity and had effects on the testicles of male animals.

Source: EPA

“They’re extreme fighters, and that’s why they’re hanging on,” Maron said.

The family was on vacation at the Sirenusa resort on St. John when two employees of the local Terminix fumigated the villa below theirs March 18 with methyl bromide, even though it is not approved for residential use. After the family became ill, the Environmental Protection Agency found traces of the lethal gas in their villa.

The exposure was so significant inside the treated unit that 6 weeks after the family fell ill, dangerous amounts of methyl bromide were still being detected inside the rental villa, according to EPA documents.

Methyl bromide is incredibly toxic to humans, said Dr. Reynold Panettieri Jr., the deputy director for the Center of Excellence in Environmental Toxicology.

“I would say the prognosis, at best, is guarded,” said Panettieri, who has not personally treated the family. “As we know the victims have been off ventilators and they’ve been improved. But if that dose, even though it appeared to be acute, was over (a period of) hours, the damage to the nerves and to the brain itself may render it irreversibly damaged.”

Delaware boys in critical condition after resort illness, possibly from pesticide

Maron said Terminix has agreed to enter mediation, done by Ken Feinberg, who negotiated the settlements for the victims of the September 11 attacks. Mediation begins September 28.

What went wrong

New details are emerging about the incident that so drastically sickened the Esmonds. Six others on the islands had mild symptoms of methyl bromide exposure — headache, fatigue, cough and shortness of breath — after the botched March fumigation of the Sirenusa resort. Four of those were emergency workers who helped the Esmond family, according to the EPA.

CNN has also learned that the day the pesticide was applied, an exterminator tented and taped off the treated area of the resort villa with 6-millimeter plastic that the gas should not have been able to penetrate.

A source familiar with the investigation speculated that the plastic could have come loose, and the chemical perhaps traveled through the air-conditioning system. Even so, methyl bromide should not have been used on a residential building in the first place.

Banned pesticide allegedly sickens family at resort

Banned pesticide allegedly sickens family at resort 01:37

The pesticide manufacturer, Chemtura, told CNN that an odor is supposed to be added to methyl bromide before any use, much like the artificial odor added to natural gas so that people can detect it. But family attorney Maron said no odor was added in this instance. Terminix will not comment on that part of the investigation.

CNN previously reported that methyl bromide was used across the islands on different occasions by Terminix. Other pest control companies on the Virgin Islands were found in possession of methyl bromide and officials said they are checking records to see whether it was used improperly. Ken Mapp, the governor of the Virgin Islands, said it was.

“What these companies did or appear to have been doing is clearly a violation of the law, and they’ll be held accountable for it,” Mapp said. He said he learned his own complex was fumigated with methyl bromide in 2013.

CNN Investigations

Email your story ideas and tips to CNNtips@cnn.com.

Methyl bromide is highly restricted because it’s dangerous to the environment. It’s only legal to use for agriculture. But pesticide experts tell CNN it’s very effective on the powderpost beetle, which bores into wood and is prevalent throughout the islands. So even though it’s not legal to use it in residences, some pesticide companies apparently fumigated with it anyway, according to Mapp.

Sources tell CNN that there were two Terminix employees on the job at Sirenusa the day the Esmond family was poisoned. One, who was a Terminix salesman, has left the company. His job that day, sources say, was simply to help carry supplies.

Pesticide probed in resort illness of Delaware family

Jose Rivera, the applicator who used methyl bromide, was the branch manager of the corporate-owned location, and had been in the pest control business for at least a decade. He is on administrative leave. Neither employee has been charged with any crime, and neither would comment to CNN on the case.

Workers who fumigate with methyl bromide are supposed to have special training, and they’re supposed to file paperwork with the EPA, detailing how they plan to apply it, every time methyl bromide is purchased.

But the key section of those EPA documents was left blank in this case, according to the family’s attorney. The EPA says the forms stay with the distributor, who reports back to the EPA on how much methyl bromide has been sold on a quarterly basis. The EPA says this particular distributor “was not to our knowledge collecting applicator certifications and certainly was not reporting to EPA as a distributor.” The distributor has not responded to CNN’s requests for comment.

The EPA, Terminix, and the local Department of Planning and Natural Resources all declined to specifically respond to that allegation, citing an ongoing investigation.

A pattern of problems

In the U.S. Virgin Islands, allegations of lax oversight by the Department of Planning and Natural Resources surfaced long before the Esmond family fell ill. The DPNR is the local environmental agency, which receives funding from and is regulated by the EPA.

The DPNR has been riddled with corruption for years, and the EPA inspector general recently found deficiencies with the department related to management and oversight in several areas.

In May of 2014, the EPA designated it “high risk,” saying the agency “does not meet management standards.”

In addition, nearly $100,000 in federal funding that the DPNR received to train local pest control workers did not go toward training. That meant there were no classes whatsoever on the island of St. Thomas, where Terminix is based, according to the former director of the USVI Pesticide Safety Education Program, Joe Williamson.

Pesticide’s dangerous history

The EPA has long known of the toxic effects of methyl bromide, and in 2005 banned it except for certain agricultural applications; before the ban took effect, there were several serious incidents involving Terminix.

  • A Pennsylvania woman sued, alleging her 57-year-old son was killed after Terminix fumigated his Lancaster, Pennsylvania, apartment in April 2004. Court papers from the case show that Terminix said it lost the paperwork recording which chemicals were used. Terminix fought the case, saying his death was unrelated, that he had a pre-existing condition, and that no methyl bromide was used. The case settled in 2008.
  • Also in 2006, Terminix pleaded guilty to a criminal assault charge after nine employees in New Jersey were overcome by methyl bromide fumes. The attorney general said Terminix was negligent for not giving the workers proper protective gear or training for removing tarps from stacks of cocoa bean pallets that had been fumigated. Terminix had to pay a $300,000 criminal fine, on top of a $80,000 civil fine.

Pesticide applicators are supposed to be retrained every year in order to keep their certification. But because there were no available classes on the island, pest control workers were being recertified without being retrained, Williamson said.

That was the case with Rivera, who applied the pesticide at Sirenusa. He was recertified in 2014 without taking additional training — though Williamson says that even if the classes had been available, Rivera would not have been trained to use methyl bromide, because it’s not supposed to be used indoors.

The EPA said it was assured by the DPNR that the funds are in the process of being allocated correctly. The EPA also said that Rivera’s certification history is under review by the DPNR.

But this is just the latest problem with the DPNR. According to the Department of Justice, three DPNR officials — a former commissioner and two directors — have been sentenced to jail terms since 2008. That year, former Commissioner Dean C. Plaskett was sentenced to nine years for receiving kickbacks in awarding local government contracts.

And in 2014, a director pleaded guilty to using his position to engage in illegal drug trafficking while he was head of environmental enforcement at DPNR. He was sentenced to 70 months in federal prison.

But Mapp, who took office as governor of the territory in January, told CNN the misuse of methyl bromide had nothing to do with governmental failures but was the result of bad decisions on the part of the pest control companies.

“It occurred because someone was cutting corners, thought they could enhance their profit margin and thought they could get away with it. And apparently in my own residence, someone had been getting away with it for quite some time,” Mapp said.

Williamson said the EPA bears responsibility as well. “EPA really needs to take the leadership on this, look at the mistakes that have happened here. And the very most important thing for them to do is to quit allowing methyl bromide and these other fumigants to be available to just about anybody with the certification card,” Williamson said. EPA officials tell CNN that they are working on proposals to strengthen training requirements and certifications for people who use methyl bromide.

What’s changed

Since this incident, the EPA and Terminix have done national inventories, checking for improper methyl bromide use, sources said.

The EPA also had a meeting with every region in the nation about the case and sent out a safety alert to all states and territories, asking for “increased vigilance of distribution and use of methyl bromide to ensure the product is not being applied in residential settings.”

In a statement, Terminix said: “All of us continue have this family in our thoughts and prayers. We are cooperating with the authorities and conducting our own thorough investigation.”

The company also said it has taken steps to ensure this doesn’t happen again, including halting fumigation in the U.S. Virgin Islands, reinforcing policies with employees and speaking to technicians about the specific products they use and how they’re applied.

People, Places, or Things by Gwen DeRu

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IT’S GREAT WEATHER FOR GOLF, FOOTBALL, AND TALLADEGA SUPERSPEEDWAY!  IT’S FALL AND TAILGATING TIME!!

Here are a few things to do….and ‘not to miss’ coming soon!


FOR GREAT FOOD….
**MIDDLE EASTERN FOOD FESTIVAL – Saint George will celebrate its 34th Annual Middle Eastern Food Festival on next Thursday, September 17 thru Saturday, September 19. Amin Sultan, of New York, an internationally recognized Arabic artist, and his band will perform and embraces the opportunity to introduce the beauty and richness of Middle Eastern music to Americans. Along with the band, parish dance troupes clad in colorful costume will perform. Food will be served all day, Thursday, Friday and Saturday from 10:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. A drive through service will operate until 7 p.m. Informative church tours will be conducted during festival hours of operation.  Homemade foods include Kibbee, rolled grape leaves, Mediterranean style chicken. A tasty selection of vegetarian foods include spinach pies, falafel, and hummus. A wide variety of pastries and cakes will be available at the “mile long” sweet booth.  Proceeds will benefit local charities, diocesan charities and major maintenance projects of the church.  Saint George Melkite Catholic Church is located in the heart of Birmingham’s Southside, at 425 16th Avenue South.  Call 492-9621 for more.
FOR GOLF LOVERS….
**HABD FSS GOLF TOURNAMENT – The Housing Authority Birmingham District is hosting the 2015 George A. Pegues Memorial FSS Golf Tournament on September 11 at the Roebuck Golf Course, 8920 Roebuck Boulevard, Birmingham, AL 35206. Registration is 7 a.m. and Shotgun is 8 a.m.  For more call (205) 521-0769.
**H2O FOUNDATION GOLF CLASSIC – The Birmingham Water Works Board is hosting the annual golf tournament September 11 at the Robert Trent Jones Oxmoor Valley Golf Course. Registration is 8 a.m. and Shotgun is 9 a.m.  For information call (205) 244-4115.
**STILLMAN COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP GOLF TOURNAMENT – Join the fun at the 15th Annual Stillman College Scholarship Golf Tournament, September 25.  Registration is 7 a.m. and Tee-Time is 8 a.m.  The tournament will be held at the Roebuck Golf Course and will feature some of Birmingham’s finest golfers including NFL football celebrities, local community public officials and top female golfers.  There will be door prizes, raffle prizes, awards and delicious lunch.  Proceeds will go to the deserving Birmingham students to attend Stillman College.  For more information (205) 925-9373, gdennard2@aol.com, (205) 247-8145 or ascott@stillman.edu.
**HOMEWOOD CHAMBER GOLF CLASSIC – The Annual Homewood Chamber Golf Classic will be held on Thursday, October 8 at Robert Trent Jones – Oxmoor Valley Golf Course. Registration and the Putting Contest will be held at 8 a.m., and the Tournament will officially begin with a shotgun start at 9 a.m. The Golf Classic supports economic development efforts in the City of Homewood. Participants will enjoy a light breakfast, full round of golf, the chance to win fantastic door prizes from area businesses, a locally sourced lunch from Urban Cookhouse and so much more.  Call (205) 871-5631 for more.
**2016 AMPUTEE GOLF TOURNAMENT – The 67th National Amputee Golf Championship and International Cup is back in Sweet Home Alabama after more than 20 years! At this 67th annual event, the U.S. and International players will compete for the titles, hosted by Birmingham’s own Chris Osborne, who lost his leg in a motorcycle accident. The public can meet PGA pro Chad Pfeifer aka “Captain Clutch” from the Golf Channel’s Big Break and Dancing With the Star’s Noah Galloway. Both of these athletes are also military veterans and will be taking pictures on Tuesday, Sept. 15 at 6 p.m. Admission is free to watch. The public can play too in the scramble on Monday September 14th at Bent Brook Golf Club. For more information visit nagagolfbham.org.
**FOOTBALL AND RACING  AT ITS FINEST… AT TALLADEGA SUPERSPEEDWAY…..
If golf is not your cup of tea, football season kicked off recently so check out the games now until the first of the year. AND, if you love cars, then the Talladega Superspeedway race October 23-25 is right around the corner.
….There are always plenty of things to do around the southeast.  Here are a few things going on in town…
TODAY…, Check out PLUM and LEGENDS LOUNGE, downtown Birmingham.
FRIDAY…, Laughter… at the StarDome Comedy Club!
SATURDAY…
AlvinGarrett
toddandmojochild

raquellily 2

**ENSLEY ALIVE CONCERT – Ensley Alive is a concert and mini-outdoor music festival to highlight the heritage and revitalization efforts of Ensley. The event features a live performance from renowned artists Todd Simpson and Mojo Child, featuring Sharon with Heels & Chucks, Alvin Garrett and Raquel Lily. The event takes place Saturday, 2-6 p.m. at Avenue E and 19th Street Ensley. FREE. For more call (205) 254-2303.
**AUDITIONS!! AUDITIONS!  Auditions for stage play “ISOLATED” is 3 -7 p.m. at Cornerstone Daycare, located at 610 Ninth Avenue North in Bessemer. The play is based on a true life story of Pamela Adams Whitt.  Singers and actors are needed between the ages of 18 and 29. Bring a photo. For more: pam_whitt66@yahoocom.

SUNDAY…
**FASHIONS  RUNWAY – A Fashion Experience “A Stroll Through the Seasons, Sunday, 4-7 p.m. at the Fairfield Civic Center featuring celebrity clothing designer Paul Anthony Coordinated Apparel.There will be live music, vendors, appetizers & wine. Celebrity Clothing Designer Paul Anthony’s garments have been worn and purchased by: Award Winning Artist Lyfe Jennings, Actor and Model Kevin Savage, well known Pastors Gregory L. Clarke, Joseph H. Owens, III, Desi Keith, and recognizable Minister of Music Dr. Prince Yelder among others.  Fairfield Civic Center located at 6509 EJ Oliver Blvd., Fairfield, AL 35064.

FOR ART LOVERS…
IN BIRMINGHAM

Artwalk
**ARTWALK – Artwalk is an arts festival Friday, 5 – 10 p.m. and Saturday, 12 – 6 p.m. in the historic Loft District that transforms Birmingham’s loft neighborhood into an arts district, featuring the works of more than 100 visual artists, live musicians, street performers, food and drink vendors, and children’s activities. The event is free to the public and in the last three years has become a much anticipated fall event drawing visitors from all over to downtown Birmingham. Artwalk hosts established and emerging regional artists in the unique and architecturally rich setting of downtown Birmingham. Art lovers will see original work in all mediums priced from the affordable to the extravagant. Participating artists are from Birmingham and surrounding communities, showcasing the wealth of regional talent. Enjoy being downtown at a safe, family-friendly, community event. Friday night has been compared to a huge gallery opening with a street festival atmosphere, while Saturday afternoon caters more to the family crowd with special children’s activities.  See ‘YOU’ there.

IN TUSCALOOSA….
**THE LIFE OF A COSTUME: FROM PAGE TO STAGE – This exhibition is at The University of Alabama Gallery in the Dinah Washington Cultural Arts Center September 4 through the 25th. The gallery is located at 620 Greensboro Avenue, Tuscaloosa, AL 35401.
**ROOTS AND ALL – P.H. POLK and GEORGE WASHINGTON CARVER – This exhibition now through September 25 is at the Paul R. Jones Gallery, 2308 Sixth Street in Tuscaloosa. Call (205) 345-3038 for more.

NOW…on to the rest of the happenings…. THIS WEEKEND….A FEW THINGS IN BIRMINGHAM!
CHECK OUT….the TIDE AND TIGER every Tuesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday on Graymont Avenue.
HERE ARE A FEW MORE THINGS GOING ON…THIS WEEKEND…
TODAY….
**TIDE AND TIGER LOUNGE, 8 p.m. on Graymont Avenue across the street from Legion Field.  Open Tuesday through Sunday.
**Ona’s Music Room is relocating…. look for more soon.
**TOOT SWEET, TOMAS GAGAN MOTTA, and HUNDRED DOLLAR CAR at The Nick.
FRIDAY…
*FRIDAY AFTER WORK – For those that want ‘a break’ before the weekend ‘Friday after Work’ has food and more, 5 – 10 p.m. Call (205) 572-1295 for more.  Get your palates ready!
**SAM BURCHFIELD, GOLDWING, OVER THE EFFECT at The Nick on southside.
SATURDAY…
**TIDE AND TIGER LOUNGE, 8 p.m. on Graymont Avenue across the street from Legion Field. Open Tuesday through Sunday.
**KING BEE and AUTOMATIC SLIM at The Nick.
SUNDAY…
**ROOSTER BLEU AND THE BARNYARD CREW, 8 p.m., 8 p.m. at the Nick.  No cover.
MONDAY…
**PORTER and SYLVIA ROSE NOVAK at The Nick on southside.

FOR COMEDY LOVERS…
DON’T MISS….

GaryConrad1
(Photo Credit: freetime.com )
**AT THE STARDOME… this weekend… TOMORROW…GARY CONRAD – Entrancing audiences wherever he goes, Master Hypnotist, Gary Conrad next plans to cast a hypnotic spell over Hoover. Master Hypnotist, Gary Conrad hypnotizes volunteer from the audience and puts them through hilarious paces by suggesting different scenarios. Audiences from Florida to California have held beauty contests, imitated fish, lost their feet and seen leprechauns doing the nasty. His powerful skills in hypnosis make for a hilarious evening. Grab a group and come catch this unbelievable performance. It’s a show you won’t forget but can’t remember.

COMING SOON…, MIKE EPPS – September 18-20, STEVE WILSON & GUY TORRY  – September 25-27, BRUCE BRUCE – October 2-4, ETTA MAY – October 9-11, TOM SEGURA – November 2 (ONE NIGHT ONLY) Call (205) 444-0008 for more.

COMING SOON….
**SEPTEMBER 17-19 – MIDDLE EASTERN FOOD FESTIVAL – The 2015 Middle Eastern Food Festival sponsored by Saint George Melkite Catholic Church will be held September 17-19. Mark your calendars!
**OCTOBER 10 – UNITY BALL – The second Annual Unity Ball by the Lovely Ladies of Stewart Success is Saturday, October 10, 7 p.m. to midnight at the Boutwell Auditorium.  For more call 223-1160.
**OCTOBER 10-11 – LIFE ISN’T FAIR – NOT ALL WHO WANDER ARE LOST, a stage play by Award Winning Film-Maker/Play-Writer DERRELL LAWRENCE featuring Grammy Award Winner REGINA BELLE, Emmy Nominated SEAN BLAKEMORE, International Actor JOHN TERRELL, Lawrence (himself) and more at the BJCC. The performances are Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 3 p.m.
**OCTOBER 15-16 – DON’T MISS… CLEARWATER JAZZ FESTIVAL, with Gladys Knight, the O’Jays, Sheryl Crow, Buddy Guy, The Averett Brothers and more.
**OCTOBER 18 – BIG DADDY’S NEW BAND will perform at Daniel Day Gallery Dream Meccas Studio, 3025 Sixth Avenue South, 2- 6 p.m.  Call (205) 223-9882 for more.
**OCTOBER 31 – MAGIC CITY CLASSIC is the largest Historically Black College and University (HBCU) football game in the country. Alabama A&M University and Alabama State University play in the game annually at Legion Field in Birmingham, Alabama, and the winner could potentially earn a spot in the SWAC Championship. Festivities surrounding the event include the Magic City Classic Alumni Pep Rally, Magic City Classic Parade, Coors Light Pre-Game Tailgate Party and the famed halftime show performed by the Marching Hornets and the Marching Maroon and White.   For more information, visit www.themagiccityclassic.com.

NOW…. BIRTHDAY SHOUT OUTS!
HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO YOU… AND TO ALL CELEBRATING!! HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ALL YOU BIRTHDAY BALLERS…MANY, MANY MORE HAPPY BIRTHDAYS!!  ENJOY!!  Celebrate ‘your’ month…I do…all 30 days ‘and’ some!

Well, that’s it.  Tell you more ‘next’ time.
(People, Places and Things by Gwen DeRu is a weekly column. Send comments to my emails: thelewisgroup@birminghamtimes.com or gwenderu@yahoo.com.)

ONE MAN’S OPINION

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Dr. Jesse Lewis, Sr. is the founder of The Birmingham Times.

By
Jesse J. Lewis, Sr.

Alabama Football!
The major concerns in one week of football by most people would be Ohio State, Auburn and Alabama. My unofficial, non-playing and non-coaching evaluation would be that Ohio State and Alabama lived up to the hype. Auburn did not. Auburn is not a great team but could be a good team. Alabama is a good team that could be a great team. Ohio State is a great team that could be even greater.
Auburn’s quarterback just tried too hard. This was his first game and the huge crowd overwhelmed him. Their first test will come with LSU and I still believe that both Auburn and Alabama will be undefeated until they meet one another.
If they had to play today, Alabama would win. Football is a day to day operation, for you can lose two or three of your players on any given day, at any given time. By losing these players, it changes the landscape of who was a better team one week ago.
Alabama can win the SEC championship with Coker – the present quarterback who started in Saturday’s game. They can’t win a national championship with Coker. He is too predictable, can’t run for any yardage and can’t throw passes on the run. The second string quarterback can do all of these things that Coker can’t do. I would not be surprised if he did not become the first string quarterback within the next three or four weeks. This could happen week after next when Alabama plays Mississippi.
When the dust settles and the National Championship is being played, Ohio State will be one of those teams.
At the present time, I am undecided who will be the other team. I am hoping Alabama.
The Morning Talk Shows
For those people interested in politics, the ones that carry an audience are FOX News, CNN and MSNBC. The highest rating is in this order named. Out of these three stations, there are several groups that are attempting in every way to demand that the Southern Poverty Law Center label FOX News a hate group. These same groups say that MSNBC’s Joe Scarborough (Morning Joe) is almost as bad. What he does according to these groups is bring liberals to the table and ask them questions that require a negative answer. For example, ‘Do you think that Hillary Clinton did anything wrong with her email server?  The answer to this is ‘Yes.’ And, then he would ask the question, ‘If she is found guilty of using her server to distribute knowingly classified information, do you think she still should run for president?’  The answer it this question is ‘No.’
Now, Joe Scarborough can say, ‘ I just ask questions.’  The only thing he does is throw a rock and hide his hand.
According to this same group and individuals CNN is the most accurate with information and the fairest to all parties concerned.
Here is what they say FOX News said and has done:  FOX News’ witch hunt against the movement for justice reached an all-time low.  Elizabeth Hasselbeck kicked off an all day attack on the movement for Black lives by declaring that the movement is a hate group just like the KKK.
The rest of the FOX gang followed Hasselbeck’s attempts to brand the peaceful justice movement a hate group by calling the movement a “criminal organization,” and a “Murder Movement” out to kill police officers. They called for the leaders of the movement to be arrested, and Bill O’Reilly capped if all off by saying, “I’m going to put the movement for Black lives out of business.’
The groups have said that this is one of the vilest attacks FOX has launched against Black folks. To call the movement for justice and equality a hate group is absurd. The reality is, FOX has been profiting off of anti-Black narratives for years, peddling white supremacy and privilege as family values, and inspiring a generation of Dylann Roofs with their dangerous narratives. They want FOX News labeled as the hate group.
FOX News launched the attack to destroy this justice movement in response to the tragic death of a white Sheriff’s Deputy in Harris County, Texas allegedly killed by a Black man, Shannon Miles. Miles, who has no affiliation with the movement for Black lives, and so far has not revealed any motive for his alleged murder of Deputy Goforth, was all that FOX News needed to declare that the movement for Black lives is out to kill cops and that all of the peaceful organizing is criminal and should be destroyed.
The movement for Black Lives is not about murder, it is about ending violence. Incidents of white cops murdered by Black people being chalked up to the movement for Black lives detracts from the movement’s real goals and FOX News calling the movement for Black lives a ‘murder movement’ in response to this random and isolated shooting is a totally misleading narrative with zero factual basis.

Where Were You on Sept. 11, 2001?

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9-11-2001

By Birmingham Times Staff

This year marks 14 years since one of America’s worst tragedies: the terrorist attacks on our country. September 11, 2001 was such an unforgettable day that it left some type of mark on every American’s heart, whether directly impacted by the attacks or not. This week some of the staff at the Birmingham Times shares where they were when they got the news that Tuesday morning.

Where were you when the Twin Towers were hit?

Jessica Lewis, Social Media Editor
During the tragic event of 9/11 where was I? I was in the second grade. I remember sitting there in the classroom full of other students staring at the board daydreaming about anything but school. My daydream was interrupted by another teacher storming into the classroom and demanding that my teacher turn on her T.V. to watch the news. I was a little excited because I thought to myself “movie time.” When we turned to the screen I saw videos of planes crashing into buildings, smoke, fire, people jumping out and falling. Honestly, I didn’t have any real thought to it. I didn’t understand what was going on or why my teachers were over-reacting, I thought it was some type of movie. I didn’t know anything about news or whatever adults watched. When I got home that’s when it hit me. I saw my mother in front of the TV, crying on the phone trying to get into contact with the family that worked in that building or lived near that area. I knew then… This was a bad thing; this was a very bad thing. Now that I’m older, I understand what was going on and my heart goes out to the victims, as well as the families. This affected everyone – not just in New York… But all of America.

James Lewis, Jr., Ad Sales
I will never forget the tragic day of 9-11 01. I was working with an architectural  consulting firm when on the television I saw people jumping from the towers, at first I thought I was watching a movie, then the reality set in. What I was watching was horrific and saddening.
The first call I made was to a cousin on wall street. He was opening the door to the first tower when a piece of airplane debris fell from the sky. He looked up saw the plane and returned home. I was relieved that he survived and sadden by the massive loss.

Dorothy Burson, Business Manager

Fourteen years ago I was working at Gambro Dialysis, and as always, I get a call from my mother, thinking to myself this is just a normal “Hey baby, how are you today” call; but little did I know my mother was about to tell me “Please go to the breakroom and turn on the television!” When I did, I was in disbelief as I watched over and over those planes crashing into the Twin Towers. At that moment I felt the world was coming to an end. Little did I know that the tragedies were just beginning. 2011 wasn’t a great year; not just for the U.S., but also myself. Three months later I lost my mother to cancer.

Gwen Deru, Contributing Columnist

I was home getting dressed for work when the news came across a morning news show that one of the Twin Towers had been hit by an airplane.  They were trying to determine how an airplane could not see the big buildings.  Not knowing what had happened or how it happened, the news was being covered and shown as the second tower was hit.  It was a surreal moment in time.  Americans saw it in motion as it actually happened and was recorded.

Ariel Worthy, Editor
I remember being in my fourth grade class, and it was an hour before we let out for school. Our school counselor came into the classroom and said that she had to tell everyone something. When she broke the news all I kept thinking was that there was an accident. “Accidents happen all the time,” I thought to myself. When my mom picked me up, she took me back to work with her and sat me down and explained what happened. It still didn’t make sense to me, accidents were normal; we were in traffic because of accidents all the time. I kept hearing the news about it for months. It was until around March in 2002 when it all made sense. My mom bought this video called “In Memoriam: 9/11.” I was insistent on watching it with her. She told me no numerous times, until eventually she finally said okay. The video wasn’t just news footage of the attacks, it was personal footage. From the moment the first plane hit the first tower, to people screaming as bodies hit the ground from jumping out of windows. One moment in the video that really stuck with me was when the towers began to collapse and a woman was pulled inside of a restaurant by a news cameraman. He was (probably unknowingly) still recording, and the debris could be seen flowing outside the restaurant like an actual flood had covered Manhattan, and the only thing you could hear were muffled screams and the woman telling the guy that he had saved her life. I didn’t go to sleep that night. I remember crying for a little while, feeling bad that I didn’t think it was a big deal. I remember going to the library and checking out every book they had (on a fourth grade reading level) about the attacks. That day still has left a mark on me. I think a piece of America died that day, but also, America grew stronger that day.
This year as we remember that day, let us not forget those 3,000 people that died; and also let us not forget the families and friends that lost someone special.

Go to our facebook page and tell us where you were on 9/11/01.. https://www.facebook.com/birmingham.times

 

UPDATE: 911 Call: Mom Says Sons Drugged, Attacked Her And Husband

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ATLANTA (AP) — A woman told a 911 dispatcher that her two sons drugged and attacked her and her husband in their suburban Atlanta home.

In the 911 call, Yvonne Ervin repeatedly pleads for officers to hurry. She says she doesn’t know why her sons are trying to kill them, but she guesses that maybe they are after insurance money. At the end of the call, she screams and the operator’s questions are met with silence.

Ervin and her husband, Zachary, were hospitalized but are expected to survive.

Gwinnett County police say 17-year-old Christopher Ervin and 22-year-old Cameron Ervin face charges including aggravated assault.

Police said the brothers plotted to kill both of their parents, and officers found a bloody scene inside the family’s home Saturday.

The brothers are due in court Friday. Jail records don’t list an attorney for them.

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(Photo Source: AP)

Oregon officers turn in police chief, allege racism

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Click on this picture to see the video.

(CNN)Alex Stone knew he had no other choice.

The police officer in Clatskanie, Oregon, filed a formal complaint when he allegedly heard the city’s police chief making racist comments.

“I had to do this,” he told CNN affiliate KOIN, but he said the aftermath hasn’t been easy.

“I’ve received death threats, a tire flattened with a nail on my driveway,” he said. “My kids, they’re afraid to go outside.”

Stone’s complaint, filed along with a complaint from another officer over the summer, alleges that Clatskanie’s then-police chief, Marvin Hoover, compared African-Americans to monkeys, made monkey sounds and sang “Dixie” while being debriefed on the arrest of a woman who had said she was discriminated against.

“While Chief Hoover was scratching and chanting, he started to move around the room, in a dance or jumping fashion. While jumping and moving about the room, Chief Hoover momentarily beat his chest like Tarzan,” Stone’s complaint said. “As Chief Hoover was comparing African-Americans to monkeys, I began to become extremely uncomfortable. I have never been in a work environment where a manager, especially an executive officer, is openly racist.”

Stone said he tried to continue debriefing Hoover but was interrupted again.

“This time Chief Hoover said, ‘That’s what they deserve,’ ” Stone alleges. Then, according to the police officer, he started singing the words to “Dixie” while pumping his fist as though he were punching someone.

K-9 Officer Zack Gibson also filed a complaint with the same allegations.

“Officer Stone brushed aside the antic but I could observe that it bothered him,” he wrote. “At the same time I was in disbelief that the Chief of Police was acting in such a manner while an officer is concerned he may be accused of racism.”

Hoover could not be immediately reached for comment.

Chief retires while on administrative leave

He was placed on paid administrative leave last month after the complaint, KOIN reported. Soon afterward, he retired, prompting a letter from the city’s mayor to the local newspaper, praising his years of service.

“I say, thanks to Chief Hoover for a job well done. You have this community’s gratitude, gratefulness and appreciation,” Mayor Diane Pohl wrote. “Enjoy your retirement knowing we will miss you and wish you all the best. Just take it easy on the elk, bear and fish that you will have more time to pursue!”

She told KOIN the city’s investigation had been completed.

The decision to allow Hoover’s retirement drew sharp criticism from the ACLU of Oregon.

“Allowing Chief Hoover to retire while paying him a bonus sends exactly the wrong message. Rather than holding Chief Hoover accountable for his racism, they rewarded him,” David Rogers, the chapter’s executive director, said in a written statement. “By condoning Chief Hoover’s actions and intolerance, the city council has delivered a disturbing message about the values of Clatskanie, at the same time discouraging people who think about stepping up and doing the right thing by reporting such unacceptable actions.”

City: Deal ‘in the best interests of the city’

Hoover chose to end his employment before the city’s investigation into the alleged racism was completed, city officials said in a statement Tuesday.

“The city strongly condemns the alleged conduct,” the statement says, adding that it reached a separation deal with Hoover that was “in the best interests of the city.”

The city will conduct diversity training for its employees, the statement said.

“The city regrets that this incident occurred and supports that the matter was reported,” the statement said. “The city asks that members of the public respect the rights of the individuals who brought this matter forward.”

A reporter from KOIN asked Stone whether, when he made the complaint, he was worried he could lose his job over it.

The officer didn’t hesitate when he responded.

“I’m still worried about that,” he said.

Would you admit it if you were a racist?

Highlights from AP’s interview with Hillary Rodham Clinton

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Tyler Perry Meets With African Children He Bought Home For

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TLANTA (AP) — Tyler Perry recently met with a group of Tanzanian children with albinism who are living in a home the filmmaker helped fund.

Perry representative Keleigh Thomas Morgan said Monday he donated $200,000 three years ago to help build a four-bedroom house in New York for a group of children who had been mutilated for their body parts. The children attended Perry’s “Madea on the Run” play Thursday night at Manhattan’s Beacon Theatre, where they met him backstage.

The children will stay there while they receive medical treatment in the United States.

Perry donated after watching a special featuring Elissa Montanti, a Staten Island woman who runs the nonprofit Global Medical Relief Fund for children affected by war and natural disasters.

Montanti recently brought the children with albinism to the U.S. from Tanzania.