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Kevin L Feeler
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Archive for December, 2010

Updated Arkansas Storm Report for December 31, 2010

Friday, December 31st, 2010

North Little Rock – The Arkansas Department of Emergency Management (ADEM) is monitoring the severe weather activity that has occurred on December 31, 2010. At this time the State Emergency Operations Center (SEOC) is operational at a level II. Benton, Fulton, Madison and Washington counties are reporting damage.

As of 1:00 p.m. there are a total three fatalities and eight injuries. There are 29 homes damaged and 6 businesses.

Breakout by county:

Benton County

Benton County Emergency Management has reported five injured. Damage estimates are 13 homes and 5 businesses. The airport has re-opened.

Fulton County

Fulton County Emergency Management has reported damage to the Jim Hinkle Fish Hatchery on the Spring River. They have also reported some minor home damage. There are no reported injuries at this time.

Madison County

Madison County Emergency Management has reported two unoccupied mobile homes damaged and trees down around Clifty.

Washington County

Washington County Emergency Management has received reports of three fatalities and three injuries in the Cincinnati area. There are an estimated 14 homes and one business with damages.

A feeding center has been set up at the United Methodist Church in Cincinnati on Hwy 59.

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Three Arkansas counties reporting damages from Storm for December 31, 2010

Friday, December 31st, 2010

North Little Rock – The Arkansas Department of Emergency Management (ADEM) is monitoring the severe weather activity that has occurred on December 31, 2010. At this time the State Emergency Operations Center (SEOC) is operational at a level II.

Madison County

Madison County Emergency Management has reported damages and trees down around Clifty.

Previously reported:

Benton County

Benton County Emergency Management has reported 2 minor injuries and damage to five homes in the southwest part of the county. At this time the XMA airport is closed.

Washington County

Washington County Emergency Management has received reports of three fatalities in the Cincinnati area. There are damages and power outages throughout the county.

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Arkansas Storm Update for December 31, 2010

Friday, December 31st, 2010

North Little Rock – The Arkansas Department of Emergency Management (ADEM) is monitoring the severe weather activity that has occurred on December 31, 2011. At this time the State Emergency Operations Center (SEOC) is operational at a level II. Three fatalities have been reported in Washington County.

Washington County

Washington County Emergency Management has received reports of three fatalities in the Cincinnati area. There are damages and power outages throughout the county.

Benton County

Benton County Emergency Management has reported 2 minor injuries and damage to five homes in the southwest part of the county. At this time the XMA airport is closed.

Tornado Safety for Arkansans

The Arkansas Department of Emergency Management (ADEM) urges Arkansans to monitor TV and radio broadcasts for storm information, as well as NOAA weather radio.

A TORNADO WATCH is issued when tornado activity is expected. It means WATCH the sky. A TORNADO WARNING means TAKE ACTION because a tornado is on the ground. Seek shelter immediately. Because a tornado has already been seen, a tornado warning usually covers a specific area whereas a tornado watch area can range from few counties to the entire state depending on weather activity.

When a tornado is sighted, the most important rule is to get low and stay low.

Seek shelter in an interior room on the lowest floor of the home, such as a bathroom, closet or room without windows. In an office building, go to an interior room or hallway on the lowest floor. Leave your mobile home and take shelter in a nearby building. If no building is nearby, lie flat in a ditch or ravine. Never stay in a car. Leave the car and lie flat in a ditch or ravine. If a building is nearby, take shelter inside. Never try to outrun a tornado in your car.

At school, follow plans and go to a designated shelter area, usually interior hallways on the lowest floor. Avoid auditoriums, gyms and areas with wide, free span roofs.

Go to the interior rooms and halls on the lowest floor of a shopping center. Do not leave the shopping center to get in your car.
If you are in open country, take cover on low, protected ground.
Avoid areas near exterior glass or doors and areas along exterior walls/rooms.

Because disaster can strike at any time, ADEM encourages everyone to have a disaster supply kit in their home and vehicle.

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Win Diana Krall: Live in Rio this weekend Jan 1st-2nd from KFFB 106.1

Thursday, December 30th, 2010

Win Diana Krall: Live in Rio this weekend Jan 1st-2nd from KFFB 106.1 . Call and register when asked to on the air at 1-800-896-1669 or register on line at www.ourcontestonline.com

Diana Krall: Live in Rio

Diana Krall has had a long time fascination with bossa nova, a type of music which perfectly suits her sophisticated yet sensual style. This culminated in her new studio album “Quiet Nights” (released by Verve in spring 2009) and in this stunning concert filmed in the home of the bossa nova, Rio de Janeiro, in November 2008. Accompanied by her band and an orchestra, Diana Krall delivers a superb set of standards in true bossa nova style but clearly bearing her unique stamp. This DVD captures Diana Krall at her scintillating best.

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KATV: Foster Parent Accused Of Murder In Court

Wednesday, December 29th, 2010

Russellville-The man who police believe murdered a five year old in russellville appeared before a judge this morning to have his bond set.  38 year old Derek Benham is charged in the death of five year old Dale Young Junior.

Wednesday morning, Stacy Kelley, came face to face with the foster parent accused of killing her son in May of 2008.  Kelley is the biological mother of dale.  An autopsy showed dale died of trauma to his stomach.  At the time, his foster father told investigators the little boy was choking and he tried to save him with a modified heimlich maneuver on a counter top.  Earlier this week, police finally arrested Benham for Dale’s death.

Read more from KATV

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Nominations Now Being Accepted for Batesville Business of the Year

Wednesday, December 29th, 2010

The Batesville Area Chamber of Commerce is now accepting nominations for Large Business of the Year, Small Business of the Year and New Business of the Year. These awards will celebrate the outstanding contributions being made in the Batesville Area. The categories and instructions for submitting your nominations can be found online at www.mybatesville.org or by contacting Membership Director, Angela Connell, (870) 793-2378.

All businesses nominated must be members in good standing with the Batesville Area Chamber of Commerce.

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New Years Dance with Sugarloaf Band, Clinton Dec 31

Friday, December 24th, 2010

Title: New Years Dance with Sugarloaf Band, Clinton Dec 31
Location: Van Buren County Fair Grounds in Clinton
Description: New Years Dance with Sugarloaf Band
Van Buren County Fair Grounds in Clinton
Friday, December 31
7:30 pm – 12:30
Addmission
$10 a person

Start Time: 193000
Date: 2010-12-31

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“Christmas at The Gas Station” A Christmas Story

Thursday, December 23rd, 2010

The  old man sat in his gas station on a cold  Christmas Eve. He hadn’t been anywhere in years  since his wife had passed away. It was just  another day to him. He didn’t hate Christmas,  just couldn’t find a reason to celebrate. He was  sitting there looking at the snow that had been  falling for the last hour and wondering what it  was all about when the door opened and a  homeless man stepped through.

Instead of  throwing the man out, Old George as he was known  by his customers, told the man to come and sit  by the heater and warm up. “Thank you, but I  don’t mean to intrude,” said the stranger. “I  see you’re busy, I’ll just go.” 
 
“Not  without something hot in your belly.” George  said.

He turned and opened a wide mouth  Thermos and handed it to the stranger. “It ain’t  much, but it’s hot and tasty. Stew … Made it  myself. When you’re done, there’s coffee and  it’s fresh.”

Just at that moment he heard  the “ding” of the driveway bell. “Excuse me, be  right back,” George said. There in the driveway  was an old ’53 Chevy. Steam was rolling out of  the front. The driver was panicked. “Mister can  you help me!” said the driver, with a deep  Spanish accent. “My wife is with child and my  car is broken.” George opened the hood. It was  bad. The block looked cracked from the cold, the  car was dead.
 
“You  ain’t going in this thing,” George said as he  turned away.

“But Mister, please help  …” The door of the office closed behind George  as he went inside. He went to the office wall  and got the keys to his old truck, and went back  outside. He walked around the building, opened  the garage, started the truck and drove it  around to where the couple was waiting. “Here,  take my truck,” he said. “She ain’t the best  thing you ever looked at, but she runs real  good.”

George helped put the woman in the  truck and watched as it sped off into the night.  He turned and walked back inside the office.  “Glad I gave ‘em the truck, their tires were  shot too. That ‘ol truck has brand new .” George  thought he was talking to the stranger, but the  man had gone. The Thermos was on the desk,  empty, with a used coffee cup beside it. “Well,  at least he got something in his belly,” George  thought.

George went back outside to see  if the old Chevy would start. It cranked slowly,  but it started. He pulled it into the garage  where the truck had been. He thought he would  tinker with it for something to do. Christmas  Eve meant no customers. He discovered the the  block hadn’t cracked, it was just the bottom  hose on the radiator. “Well, shoot, I can fix  this,” he said to
himself. So he put a new  one on.

“Those tires ain’t gonna get ‘em  through the winter either.” He took the snow  treads off of his wife’s old Lincoln . They were  like new and he wasn’t going to drive the car  anyway.

As he was working, he heard shots  being fired. He ran outside and beside a police  car an officer lay on the cold ground. Bleeding  from the left shoulder, the officer moaned,  “Please help me.”

George helped the  officer inside as he remembered the training he  had received in the Army as a medic. He knew the  wound needed attention. “Pressure to stop the  bleeding,” he thought. The uniform company had  been there that morning and had left clean shop  towels. He used those and duct tape to bind the  wound. “Hey, they say duct tape can fix  anythin’,” he said, trying to make the policeman  feel at ease.

“Something for pain,”  George thought. All he had was the pills he used  for his back. “These ought to work.” He put some  water in a cup and gave the policeman the pills.  “You hang in there, I’m going to get you an  ambulance.”

The phone was dead. “Maybe I  can get one of your buddies on that there talk  box out in your car.” He went out only to find  that a bullet had gone into the dashboard  destroying the two way radio.

He went  back in to find the policeman sitting up.  “Thanks,” said the officer. “You could have left  me there. The guy that shot me is still in the  area.”

George sat down beside him, “I  would never leave an injured man in the Army and  I ain’t gonna leave you.” George pulled back the  bandage to check for bleeding. “Looks worse than  what it is. Bullet passed right through ‘ya.  Good thing it missed the important stuff though.  I think with time your gonna be right as  rain.”

George got up and poured a cup of  coffee. “How do you take it?” he  asked.
 
“None  for me,” said the officer. 
 
“Oh, yer  gonna drink this.  Best in the city. Too  bad I ain’t got no donuts.” The officer laughed  and winced at the same time.

The front  door of the office flew open. In burst a young  man with a gun. “Give me all your cash! Do it  now!” the young man yelled. His hand was shaking  and George could tell that he had never done  anything like this before.

“That’s the  guy that shot me!” exclaimed the  officer.

“Son, why are you doing this?”  asked George, “You need to put the cannon away.  Somebody else might get hurt.”

The young  man was confused. “Shut up old man, or I’ll  shoot you, too. Now give me the  cash!”

The cop was reaching for his gun.  “Put that thing away,” George said to the cop,  “we got one too many in here now.”

He  turned his attention to the young man. “Son,  it’s Christmas Eve. If you need money, well  then, here. It ain’t much but it’s all I got.  Now put that pea shooter away.”

George  pulled $150 out of his pocket and handed it to  the young man, reaching for the barrel of the  gun at the same time. The young man released his  grip on the gun, fell to his knees and began to  cry. “I’m not very good at this am I? All I  wanted was to buy something for my wife and  son,” he went on. “I’ve lost my job, my rent is  due, my car got repossessed last  week.”

George handed the gun to the cop.  “Son, we all get in a bit of squeeze now and  then. The road gets hard sometimes, but we make  it through the best we can.”

He got the  young man to his feet, and sat him down on a  chair across from the cop. “Sometimes we do  stupid things.” George handed the young man a  cup of coffee. “Bein’ stupid is one of the  things that makes us human. Comin’ in here with  a gun ain’t the answer. Now sit there and get  warm and we’ll sort this thing out.”

The  young man had stopped crying. He looked over to  the cop. “Sorry I shot you. It just went off.  I’m sorry officer.”
 
“Shut up  and drink your coffee ” the cop  said.
 
George  could hear the sounds of sirens outside. A  police car and an ambulance skidded to a halt.  Two cops came through the door, guns drawn.  “Chuck! You ok?” one of the cops asked the  wounded officer.

“Not bad for a guy who  took a bullet. How did you find me?”

“GPS  locator in the car. Best thing since sliced  bread. Who did this?” the other cop asked as he  approached the young man.

Chuck answered  him, “I don’t know. The guy ran off into the  dark. Just dropped his gun and  ran.”

George and the young man both  looked puzzled at each other.

“That guy  work here?” the wounded cop  continued.
 
“Yep,”   George said, “just hired him this morning.  Boy lost his job.”

The paramedics came in  and loaded Chuck onto the stretcher. The young  man leaned over the wounded cop and whispered,  “Why?”

Chuck just said, “Merry Christmas  boy … and you too, George, and thanks for  everything.”

“Well, looks like you got  one doozy of a break there. That ought to solve  some of your problems.”

George went into  the back room and came out with a box. He pulled  out a ring box. “Here you go, something for the  little woman. I don’t think Martha would mind.  She said it would come in handy some  day.”

The young man looked inside to see  the biggest diamond ring he ever saw. “I can’t  take this,” said the young man. “It means  something to you.”

“And now it means  something to you,” replied George. “I got my  memories. That’s all I need.”

George  reached into the box again. An airplane, a car  and a truck appeared next. They were toys that  the oil company had left for him to sell.  “Here’s something for that little man of  yours.”

The young man began to cry again  as he handed back the $150 that the old man had  handed him earlier.

“And what are you  supposed to buy Christmas dinner with? You keep  that too,” George said. “Now git home to your  family.”

The young man turned with tears  streaming down his face. “I’ll be here in the  morning for work, if that job offer is still  good.”

“Nope. I’m closed Christmas day,”  George said. “See ya the day  after.”

George turned around to find that  the stranger had returned. “Where’d you come  from? I thought you left?”

“I have been  here. I have always been here,” said the  stranger. “You say you don’t celebrate  Christmas. Why?”

“Well, after my wife  passed away, I just couldn’t see what all the  bother was. Puttin’ up a tree and all seemed a  waste of a good pine tree. Bakin’ cookies like I  used to with Martha just wasn’t the same by  myself and besides I was gettin’ a little  chubby.”

The stranger put his hand on  George’s shoulder. “But you do celebrate the  holiday, George. You gave me food and drink and  warmed me when I was cold and hungry. The woman  with child will bear a son and he will become a  great doctor.

The policeman you helped  will go on to save 19 people from being killed  by terrorists. The young man who tried to rob  you will make you a rich man and not take any  for himself. “That is the spirit of the season  and you keep it as good as any  man.”

George was taken aback by all this  stranger had said. “And how do you know all  this?” asked the old man.

“Trust me,  George. I have the inside track on this sort of  thing. And when your days are done you will be  with Martha again.”

The stranger moved  toward the door. “If you will excuse me, George,  I have to go now. I have to go home where there  is a big celebration planned.”

George  watched as the old leather jacket and the torn  pants that the stranger was wearing turned into  a white robe. A golden light began to fill the  room.

“You see, George … it’s My  birthday. Merry Christmas.”

George fell  to his knees and replied, “Happy Birthday,  Lord  Jesus”

Merry  Christmas!!

This story is better than any  greeting card.

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Paul Harvey and “The Man and the Birds a Christmas Story” Remembered

Thursday, December 23rd, 2010

The Man and the Birds by Paul Harvey

The man to whom I’m going to introduce you was not a scrooge, he was a kind decent, mostly good man. Generous to his family, upright in his dealings with other men. But he just didn’t believe all that incarnation stuff which the churches proclaim at Christmas Time. It just didn’t make sense and he was too honest to pretend otherwise. He just couldn’t swallow the Jesus Story, about God coming to Earth as a man.

“I’m truly sorry to distress you,” he told his wife, “but I’m not going with you to church this Christmas Eve.” He said he’d feel like a hypocrite. That he’d much rather just stay at home, but that he would wait up for them. And so he stayed and they went to the midnight service.

Shortly after the family drove away in the car, snow began to fall. He went to the window to watch the flurries getting heavier and heavier and then went back to his fireside chair and began to read his newspaper. Minutes later he was startled by a thudding sound…Then another, and then another. Sort of a thump or a thud…At first he thought someone must be throwing snowballs against his living room window. But when he went to the front door to investigate he found a flock of birds huddled miserably in the snow. They’d been caught in the storm and, in a desperate search for shelter, had tried to fly through his large landscape window.

Well, he couldn’t let the poor creatures lie there and freeze, so he remembered the barn where his children stabled their pony. That would provide a warm shelter, if he could direct the birds to it. Quickly he put on a coat, galoshes, tramped through the deepening snow to the barn. He opened the doors wide and turned on a light, but the birds did not come in. He figured food would entice them in. So he hurried back to the house, fetched bread crumbs, sprinkled them on the snow, making a trail to the yellow-lighted wide open doorway of the stable. But to his dismay, the birds ignored the bread crumbs, and continued to flap around helplessly in the snow. He tried catching them…He tried shooing them into the barn by walking around them waving his arms…Instead, they scattered in every direction, except into the warm, lighted barn.

And then, he realized that they were afraid of him. To them, he reasoned, I am a strange and terrifying creature. If only I could think of some way to let them know that they can trust me…That I am not trying to hurt them, but to help them. But how? Because any move he made tended to frighten them, confuse them. They just would not follow. They would not be led or shooed because they feared him.

“If only I could be a bird,” he thought to himself, “and mingle with them and speak their language. Then I could tell them not to be afraid. Then I could show them the way to safe, warm…to the safe warm barn. But I would have to be one of them so they could see, and hear and understand.” At that moment the church bells began to ring. The sound reached his ears above the sounds of the wind. And he stood there listening to the bells – Adeste Fidelis – listening to the bells pealing the glad tidings of Christmas. And he sank to his knees in the snow.

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Paul Harvey “The Inn Keeper”

Thursday, December 23rd, 2010

Paul Harvey’s Story about, “The Inn Keeper” a Christmas Tradition.

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