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    All In The Game: Study Centers And Counselors Give Student-Athletes Academic Support

    Football, basketball, baseball, gymnastics. College sports are a way of ...

    Football, basketball, baseball, gymnastics. College sports are a way of life in the South. Fans pack into stadiums or glue themselves to TV's to watch their favorite teams battle it out. But the pressure on a young person to succeed on the field or court is only half the battle. College athletes are also expected to succeed in the classroom.

    Sep 25, 2015 Read more
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    NAACP Asks for Jefferson County Courthouse Murals to be Removed

    Members of the Jefferson County Commission say they’ll address a ...

    Members of the Jefferson County Commission say they’ll address a petition by the local NAACP chapter and other groups calling for the removal of two murals in the courthouse. This latest push comes in the wake of the killings of nine African Americans at a church in Charleston, South Carolina, that sparked a debate over symbols of the Confederacy throughout the South.

    Sep 25, 2015 Read more
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    Alabama Charges More Women For Chemical Endangerment Of Children Than Any Other State

    In August of 2014, Casey Shehi gave birth to a ...

    In August of 2014, Casey Shehi gave birth to a healthy baby boy at Gadsden regional medical center. But a few days later, she was later arrested for chemical engagement of a child. She was confused at first, until she remembered she took two anti-anxiety pills during her pregnancy. It’s part of a growing trend. In the last few years, authorities have aggressively prosecuted women for prenatal drug use. A joint investigation between ProPublica and AL.com found that Alabama prosecutes more pregnant and new mothers for this than any other state. Al.com's Amy Yurkanin reported the story with ProPublica’s Nina Martin. She tells WBHM’s Rachel Lindley how this all started.

    Sep 25, 2015 Read more
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    Arc Stories: September 2015 Edition

    Stories include a man trying to do the right things ...

    Stories include a man trying to do the right things when society is telling him otherwise; one man’s conflict within his own making; a young girl impersonating someone of a different race and gender; and a father trying to keep up appearances in front of his daughter.   (Originally aired September 24, 2015 at 2 p.m. and 7

    Sep 24, 2015 Read more
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    Emails Paint House Speaker as Eager to Make Money off his Office

    Political observers have been watching the lead up to Alabama ...

    Political observers have been watching the lead up to Alabama House Speaker Mike Hubbard's corruption trial in periodic salvos tossed from both sides. Hubbard is scheduled to go on trial next year accused of using his public office for personal gain. The latest bomb blast comes from prosecutors and they're emails from Hubbard that Alabama Media Group columnist John Archibald says paint the speaker as the worst kind of politician.

    Sep 24, 2015 Read more
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    All In The Game: Athletes And Schools Tackle Tougher NCAA Academic Requirements For Potential D1 Players

    When it comes to Division I football, Southern states including ...

    When it comes to Division I football, Southern states including Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and Louisiana, produce the largest number of recruits per capita. New NCAA rules take effect for college athletes next fall. A 2.0 GPA and a decent ACT score won’t be enough anymore. To avoid the bench, freshmen will have to come in with a 2.3 GPA in core classes — reading, math, science, and social studies. And players in high school — where standards are generally lower — are feeling it.

    Sep 24, 2015 Read more
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    Alabama Auto Workers Say “Yes” To Joining Union

    The United Auto Workers Union scored a major victory Wednesday ...

    The United Auto Workers Union scored a major victory Wednesday in Piedmont, Alabama where workers at truck seat manufacturer CVG voted in favor of joining the union. The company says it has been responsive to employee concerns, and invested millions to improve working conditions. But that wasn’t enough.

    Sep 24, 2015 Read more
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    What Ever Happened to Artur Davis?

    What ever happened to former Congressman Artur Davis? Once seen ...

    What ever happened to former Congressman Artur Davis? Once seen as a rising star in the Democratic party, he’s now struggling to get back to the Democratic party itself, after briefly defecting to the Republican party. Also, is the Alabama Ethics Commission relevant anymore? WBHM’s Michael Krall talked about all this with Kyle Whitmire — state political

    Sep 24, 2015 Read more
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    Dissecting Alabama’s General Fund Budget

    The state’s new budget year starts October 1 and agency ...

    The state’s new budget year starts October 1 and agency leaders have to figure out how to work within the austere general fund budget passed by lawmakers in a special session last week. The budget provides level funding to key departments such as prisons, Medicaid, law enforcement, and mental health. Most others face cuts of at least 6 percent. For an overview we turn to Thomas Spencer, a senior research associate at the Public Affairs Research Council of Alabama. PARCA is a nonpartisan think tank focused on Alabama government.

    Sep 23, 2015 Read more
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    All In The Game: College Athletes Talk Tensions Between Sports And Academics

    Across the South, college football is in full swing. But ...

    Across the South, college football is in full swing. But football is just one of dozens of NCAA sports. In any season, student-athletes are pushing themselves on the field, in the gym, and in the classroom. They get scholarships and generate billions of dollars, but they also get hurt and struggle with their studies on

    Sep 23, 2015 Read more
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