Alabama
Selma’s police, Methodist rules, campus protest: Down in Alabama
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Frustrated in Selma
We mentioned yesterday that the mayor in Selma had suspended the police chief. He said he would speak on the topic, and on Wednesday he certainly did.
AL.com’s Carol Robinson reports that Mayor James Perkins let loose on the police department at a press conference. He gave examples of what’s been frustrated him, including a complaint that Selma PD failed to show up to provide extra protection at two Selma schools after two high school students were shot over the weekend. And he spoke about big “Freaknik-style” block parties that have taken place outside the police department, including one at which he said there were more than 100 shots fired yet no police action. And he said the city takes a constant stream of calls complaining about such issues.
Perkins suspended Selma Police Chief Kenta Fulford Tuesday. It’s the second time the mayor has suspended the chief; the City Council reversed his previous suspension.
The UMC’s new same-sex views
Possible changes that led the more conservative congregations to leave the United Methodist Church denomination over the past couple years have already happened.
AL.com’s Greg Garrison reports that the denomination’s bans on the ordaining of openly gay clergy and the officiating of same-sex weddings were lifted Wednesday at the United Methodist General Conference in Charlotte, N.C.
The changes to the “Book of Discipline” do not require clergy to perform same-sex weddings or churches to permit them at their locations, however.
Here’s the ideological impact of the UMC’s split: An issue that previously split the denomination passed 692-51. That’s over 90 percent voting in favor.
More than half Alabama’s UMC-affiliated churches have disaffiliated.
Gaza to Tuscaloosa
Protests calling for a ceasefire in Gaza have made their way to the University of Alabama campus, reports AL.com’s Rebecca Griesbach.
A few dozen protesters gathered, but they weren’t alone. Opposite their waving Palestinian flags were counter-protesters waving American and Israeli flags and even Donald Trump banners. But if you need some feel-good in the middle of all the acrimony, there was a moment where both sides were chanting a really ugly thing about President Biden.
The primary protesters were calling on the severing of ties between the university and defense contractor Lockheed Martin, the maker of weaponry that’s been used by Israel in its ongoing war against the Hamas government in Gaza that was triggered by the October 7 Hamas terror attacks in Israel.
The demonstrators would like the school to rename Hewson Hall, which was named after former Lockheed CEO Marillyn Hewson after her $15 million gift, to prohibit Lockheed from recruiting on campus, and to stop doing research that gets funding from the Defense Department, among other things.
Quoting
“I’ve been watching the Legislature for (more than a) half century, and the most serious of act of financial malpractice and the most serious act of the failure of this state is to not have a lottery. It has probably easily cost us $1.5 billion.”
Jess Brown, retired political science professor at Athens State University.
By the Numbers
That’s where Montgomery ranks nationally with an STD rate of 1,323 cases per 100,000 residents, according to recently released CDC statistics. Philadelphia was the highest city in the U.S. with a rate of 1,504 cases per 100,000.
More Alabama News
Born on This Date
In 1941, former major league relief pitcher Clay Carroll of Clanton. During the 70s in Cincinnati he had some great seasons out of the bullpen for the Big Red Machine.
In 1950, the late Randy Colley of Alexander City. Y’all know him as former WWF Tag Team champion Moondog Rex of the Moondogs.
The podcast
Alabama
Connected Jasper brings free public Wi-Fi to Alabama city – Alabama News Center
Alabama
West Alabama’s largest hospital starting shuttle service while new parking deck is constructed
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (WBRC) – DCH Regional Medical Center will begin providing its own shuttle service Wednesday after using money donated to the DCH Foundation to pay for the two shuttles, affectionately called “shuttle bugs.”
One of the new shuttles is red and black while the other is yellow and black. They’re wrapped to resemble a lady bug and a bumble bee, thus the nickname shuttle bugs.
Each shuttle can carry as many as six people.
“We have the guest service team staffing the shuttles,” said Mallary Myers, Senior Vice President and COO for DCH. “They’re driving around, actively available to pick up patients, visitors, and team members.”
Parking at the DCH campus has been disrupted during the construction of a new parking deck.
The shuttles will serve people who must park in parking lots farther away from the hospital’s entrances due to the construction.
“I love the shuttle service because I wear high heels and it saved me today because I was parked way in the far end,” Ottia Phillips said.
Shuttles will run routes to all parking lots on the Regional Medical Center campus.
Drop off locations include the north and south entrances of the hospital, the Outpatient Center lobby entrance, and the Manderson Cancer Center.
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Copyright 2024 WBRC. All rights reserved.
Alabama
Roll Call, May 16, 2024: Alabama Swimmer Qualifies for Olympic Trials
Alabama swimmer Liberty Williams competed in the Olympic Trial Cut on Wednesday, finishing the 1500m freestyle with a time of 16:42.82. That time was good enough to qualify her for Olympic Trials later this summer.
Williams, a senior, is finishing up her lone season at Alabama after transferring from Louisville, where she spent the previous three years. Trials for the Olympic swim team will take place from June 13-15, with the chance to compete in the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris.
May 16, 1964: A pair of football players earned All-SEC Western Division status in baseball. Outfielder Mickey Andrews, who led the team in hitting with his .324 average, was chosen along with catcher Buddy French. Both were expected to be key members of the football team in the fall.— Bryant Museum
“Dixie Howell, the human Howitzer from Hartford, Alabama blasted the Rose Bowl dreams of Stanford today with one of the greatest exhibitions football has every known.”— Grantland Rice at the 1935 Rose Bowl.
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