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Information for Ridgecrest Baptist Day Care/Kindergarten, Birmingham, Alabama
Birmingham, AL
A great place to find information about Ridgecrest Baptist Day Care/Kindergarten located in Birmingham Alabama.
Private Schools
Ridgecrest Baptist Day Care/Kindergarten
| Type: |
Private |
| Address: |
117 12Th Court Nw Birmingham, AL 35215 |
| Phone: |
205-856-2054 |
| County: |
Jefferson |
| Association: |
No Membership Association |
| Grades |
PK - K |
| Students: |
79 |
| Teachers: |
1 |
| Student/Teachers Ratio: |
10 |
| Library: |
Unknown |
| Race: |
Native American:
Asian:
Black:
Hispanic:
White:
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Articles from the TimBrunson.com blog
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Good stress puts wind in our sails. It makes things happen. However, when we fail to balance our lives, excessive negative stress can make our existence a living hell. When we lack confidence that we can handle a situation our brain and body go into a defensive, fight-flight reaction. The major organs of our body cease to function adequately and our immune system becomes suppressed. When stress never lets up, this chronic condition can make do more than ruin our happiness and relationships. It can also destroy our health.
You probably know people who thrive on challenge and seem to tackle any situation with confidence. What makes them different than you? Most likely the answer is that at sometime in your life you became accustomed to reacting defensively. This could be because at that time you lacked self confidence or feelings of self-worth. Chances are if you really knew...
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If you are the point of your life when you finally admit that you are an alcoholic, you are ready to begin the journey toward recovery. This addiction is nothing new. Unfortunately it is rather popular considering there is an estimated 140 million alcohol addicts in the world. So, there has been a considerable amount of thought and experience when it comes to treating alcoholism and helping a person stay sober for a very long time. In fact, over the years I have met numerous people who have been successful and not touched another drink for years – if ever again.
Treatment options vary. The abstinence-with-support 12-step program promoted by Alcoholics Anonymous claims to be quite successful. Medically supervised programs – which may be the only correct option for those with very serious physical alcohol problems – typically use medications to wean a person off their habit and assist...
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If you are overly obsessed about what may or may not happen tomorrow, you are totally missing the enjoyment of living each day of your wonderful life and depriving yourself of the excitement that your future may bring. Worrying never solved anything. In fact, it is probably is responsible for making your worst fears a reality.
Having a superior human brain means that you possess the wonderful abilities to anticipate what may happen and simulate it in your mind thousands of times before it actually happens. By the way, clinical hypnotherapists call this suggestion and imagination. These mental powers allow you to successfully walk across the street, enhance your enjoyment of that hug that you are just about to get. They also help you decide when it is best to take precautions when bad weather is expected. However, when these abilities run amok and begin making your life a total...
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Check out what's happening in the NewQuestCity Forums for Alabama .
ATHENS, Ala (WAAY) - As the Limestone County Commission continues to try to find a way to pay for storm cleanup, residents are being urged to make this weekend a D-I-Y debris removal event. The County Transfer Station on Highway 72 is allowing storm victims to bring their debris to the center, free of charge this Saturday. Items will be sorted. Anything that's salvageable will be d onated to local thrift stores, the rest will be either recycled or placed in the dump. Residents are asked to bring photo I.D. to move the process along. There are some items that cannot be accepted, however. That list includes appliances with compressors (such as freezers, refrigerators, air conditioners and air compressors) and each visitor is limited to just four tires. The transfer station is located on Hwy. 72 West, just before reaching 7-Mile Post Road on the north side of the road. The Transfer Station is a tan metal building set back from Hwy. 72. It'll be open at 7:00 a.m. on March 31st. 
A local animal shelter fears for the safety of two stolen puppies.
Earlier this week, a couple that looked to be in their 20's showed up at the Florence-Lauderdale Animal Shelter and claimed to be interested in adopting two puppies. Shelter officials let them take the animals for a walk, but they never brought them back.
"My first thought was maybe time got away from them and they would come back," said Debbie Rappuhn, the volunteer pet care director at the shelter. "But they never returned and we still have not heard from them."
Now Rappuhn fears that the puppies might be used for dog-fighting or sold to a research company.
"If the person absolutely fell in love with the dogs and couldn't afford an adoption fee, I'd rather them talk to me about it and we'll see what we can work out," said Rappuhn. "They might can do a foster until they have the money, but to just walk off with the dogs and us not know about the dogs, that concerns us a lot and we will find them."
Rappuhn said that now they will have to start taking precautions and will be using security cameras to prevent this from happening again.
"We've never had this happen ever," said Rappuhn. "Now, we're going to be leery of everyone who comes in to try to help, which is unfortunate. We really shouldn't have to worry about someone coming down to help us, but now it causes us to take a second look."
She said that they plan to start asking for people to leave their driver's license if they want to take a dog for a walk.
The puppies stolen go by the names of Hans and Sans. If anyone has seen them or has any information, please call the shelter at (256) 760-6676. 
Some Colbert County students celebrated the simpler life on Thursday.
Nearly a hundred students representing three chapters of Future Farmers of America gathered for the 10th annual Ag Day.
During the event at Longhorn Arena in Tuscumbia, students from Colbert County, Cherokee and Colbert Heights high schools showed off some of the skills they've learned in their agriculture programs. The students competed in building construction, safe tractor driving, livestock judging, forestry and ag computers.
"There's a huge skills shortage," said Colbert County Career Tech Director Steve Stayton. "We're not producing enough people in the workforce with marketable skills, and we want to explain to these students and future students that this is very important."
The winners of Thursday's events will go on to compete in the District FFA Competition at Wallace State next month. 
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - The Opry Mills shopping mall in Nashville formally reopened Thursday after being shuttered for almost two years because of flooding from the nearby Cumberland River. The 1.2-million-square-foot mall at the site of the old Opryland USA theme park has been closed since May 2010. A dispute over insurance coverage delayed restoration work at the venue adjacent to the Gaylord Opryland Resort and Convention Center and the Grand Ole Opry House. An estimated $200 million in repairs have been done. A few tenants have already reopened or, like Bass Pro Shops, never closed or shut down briefly. There are a dozen or so new stores.
The mall means nearly 3,000 jobs for Middle Tennessee. It draws some shoppers from nearby counties, and gets some business from Nashville's 1 million yearly tourists. The 12-year-old mall, with 140 retailers, is owned by Simon Property Group. There are three other major shopping malls in or near Nashville; two others have failed.

ATHENS, Ala (WAAY) - Accused murdered Jamie Pigg made his first court appearance on Thursday, in front of Judge James Woodroff. Pigg is accused of attacking his grandmother, 69 year old Barbara Delaney, with a hammer in the backyard of the home the two shared. Delaney was also shot during the attack. Pigg reportedly ran to Decatur, where he was captured about an hour after the attack. Delaney survived and was air lifted to Huntsville Hospital, where she later died. Pigg appeared on a closed circuit video hookup from the Limestone County Jail inside Judge Woodroff's chambers. The judge set Pigg's bond at $100,000 and appointed attorney Harlan Mitchell to represent Pigg. No plea was entered Thursday. That may come during Pigg's next court appearance on April 10th. 
FLORENCE, Ala (WAAY) - Florence Police have arrested and charged a 21 year old man with Rape and Sodomy, two weeks after his brother was arrested for the same crime. Investigators say 21 year old Keith Lamar Beckwith-Boddie was found hiding in a restaurant bathroom Wednesday when they went to serve an arrest warrant on him. Boddie is accused of sexually abusing a 7 year old girl several times beginning in June of 2006. 22 year old Brian Beckwith was arrested on March 16th. The attacks reportedly happened at the Beckwith home on Fairgrounds Road.
The victim is 12 years old now, and didn't report the abuse until last year. Florence Police were notified of the accusations and began an investigation, turning their findings over to a Lauderdale County Grand Jury.
Bail was set at $130,000 for Beckwith-Boddie, who was still in the Lauderdale County Detention Center.

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) - A Thursday execution was halted for a man set to die for the 1982 murder-for-hire of a Muscle Shoals businessman, but his legal battle is far from over. The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Wednesday denied Alabama's request to reconsider the stay of execution for Thomas Douglas Arthur, who has maintained his innocence for more than 29 years on death row. The stay was granted after a three-judge panel overturned a judge's ruling to stop Arthur's appeal, which contends Alabama's lethal injection procedure is cruel and unusual. The court has yet to rule on a motion to have the full 11th Circuit re-examine the decision to allow the appeal. If the court declines, Arthur will be allowed to appeal his death sentence.

HUNTSVILLE, Ala (WAAY) - The Huntsville Havoc are in a do or die situation Friday night.
The Southern Professional Hockey League's current format has the #8 seeded Havoc playing the #1 seeded Augusta Riverhawks in a best of three series. Wednesday night, the Havoc put up a tremendous effort in Georgia, leading the game 3-2 in the last minute of the game. However, Augusta Neil Graham was able to tie the score with just 12 seconds remaining, sending it to overtime. Captain Matt Auffrey won the game for Augusta with about 5 minutes left in overtime.
Havoc captain Glenn Detulleo wasn't deterred by the loss. "Going on the road in that situation, facing the first place team, if you'd said going into the game we'd have one shot to win the game in overtime, I think we'd all take it." Detulleo told WAAY 31 on Thursday. "So, that's the attitude we had. Obviously, we're a little disappointed but between periods we just set it aside and got ready to go to the overtime period."
Goalie Mark Sibbald agrees. "We played well all game." he said. "We definitely had changes to put them away, we had a little bit of a breakdown and they capitalized. It was defiitely a shock, and it was heartbreaking at first, but I think if you look at the bigger picture, we played with them for 60 minutes. We dominated a lot of the game. If we lost by three or four goals, I think we'd be in a lot different mindset."
Now, the Havoc must come out on top Friday night, or their season will come to an end.
The teams will meet at 7:30 at the VBC with the Havoc's season on the line. Win, and they go on to a third and final game in Augusta. Lose, and it's all over.
"Players at this level love pressure." Detulleo said. "I think our team is that kind of team and these guys are looking forward to the opportunity to send the series back to Augusta. We want the crowd to be loud. If we played the game we played Wednesday night, if we do that in our building, the crowd would love it. I think if we get the crowd behind us, I think we have a great chance."
Sibbald says that this season has been a roller coaster, but they're playing with a purpose now. "We're playing for a new coach who we believe in." he said. "If you look back a couple of years ago, we lost our first game of the playoffs the year we won, and we rattled off some really big wins. I know our group has the confidence in each other and looking forward, I think were just going to build on last night."

PRINCETON, NJ (WAAY) - A new study produced by Gallup shows Mississippi is the most religious state in America, with Utah and Alabama not far behind. The study was conducted throughout 2011, asked 353,492 adults in all 50 states and the District of Columbia how they'd describe themselves. Their options were "Very Religious", "Moderately Religious" and Nonreligious". In Mississippi, 59% of respondents said they were "very religious", with another 30% falling under the "moderately religious" category, and only 11% saying they were nonreligious. In Utah, 57% said they were very religious, 15% moderately so, and 28% not religious. And in Alabama, 56% put themselves in the "very religious" category, 29% said they were moderately religious and 16% were non-religious. Louisiana and Arkansas rounded out the top five. The nation as a whole was 40.10% very religious, 28.30% moderately religious and 31.50% nonreligious. The five least religious states were (from 46-50) : Alaska, Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont. T he full survey can be viewed here. 
Keys : we’ve all got them. Keys make us feel safe, we like to think they're the difference that protects us from the bad guys who’d love to get inside. But what if I told you that you can throw away your house keys...and be more secure than ever?
"It’s a platform that allows you to control your doorlocks, your lights, your thermostat, your cameras all logged into a PC on a website. Or for your iPhone or iPad." Matt McGovern from Nexia Home Security says the concept isn't new. We've had keyless entry for cars for decades now. What is different, is the smartphone interface.
It's set up where if a homeowner puts their code in, it sends you a text or email. So you always know who's coming and going in your home.
There's also a video display that will give you a chance to physically see whois there. It can be set up so anytime you put a code on a door lock, it will trigger the video to record for 10-15 seconds. There's a screen that shows which doors are locked or unlocked, and you can control the locks through a laptop or smartphone. "A mom who wants to know when her kids get off the bus and put their code in. or someone who travels a lot they have that piece of mind of what’s going on. " The system can also control a thermostat... and blinds if you want to make it look like someone’s home. This high-tech home security system is a trend among all of the major lock companies. And if you still want the security of using keys, the system does offer a backup that uses traditional house keys. Would you want something like this? Tell us about it on our Facebook page.
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. - State legislators return to Montgomery this week following their spring break. They face a laundry list of controversial issues, from the prepaid college tuition program to health insurance coverage for abortions. Also on the table is a bill on charter schools, which some lawmakers have been trying to implement for years. Alabama is one of ten states where charter schools are illegal. These are schools that are publicly funded but don't have to go by public school rules, including teacher tenure. The purpose is to give families more schooling options beyond zip-code-based school zones. Nationally, charter school performance has been mixed, but here in Alabama, a group of lawmakers feel legalizing them could help education in the state, which by some statistics ranks 49th overall. We spoke with the bill's sponsor, State Representative Phil Williams of Madison. He addressed some criticisms of charter schools, including the argument that they'll snatch funds from public schools. He says, "Charters are just public schools, so when you hear they're taking money away from the public schools, the money follows the student." Last week, the legislature held a public hearing on the bill. Generally, Williams says many parents support it, while a number of educators are opposed. The Ways and Means Education committee plans to vote on the bill this Wednesday. 
HUNTSVILLE, AL - With Easter a week away, one Huntsville salon is once again donating its services to underprivileged children.
From 2PM until 6PM on Monday, April 2nd, Black Pearl Select Salon will offer free haircuts to boys who are 12 and under.
This is the 16th year the salon has provided free cuts for the community.
Black Pearl Select Salon is located at 2908 Meridian Street in Huntsville. For more information, call (256) 536-3133.

KANSAS CITY, MO - The National Weather Service hopes to raise awareness about the importance of heeding weather warnings by testing out a new kind of alert that's aimed to scare people into seeking shelter.
NWS officials say studies conducted after deadly tornadoes in Tuscaloosa, Alabama in April 2011 and Joplin, Missouri in May 2011 found that most people didn't heed the initial warnings about the oncoming storms.
They also say people in tornado prone areas have become desensitized by frequent false alarms and don't always pay attention to the first warnings. Now, NWS offices in Missouri and Kansas will start sending out what they call "impact-based" warnings.
These warnings describe how much damage a storm could cause.
Among the messages in the new warnings: "COMPLETE DESTRUCTION OF ENTIRE NEIGHBORHOODS IS LIKELY" and "MASS DEVASTATION IS HIGHLY LIKELY MAKING THE AREA UNRECOGNIZABLE TO SURVIVORS."

HUNTSVILLE, Ala. - The spirit of Easter was in the air Saturday as hundreds of kids got to take a train ride with the Easter bunny. The festive one-day event was hosted by the North Alabama Railroad Museum, which offers rides on its historic, 1940's era train throughout the year. On each of the train's five trips Saturday, kids got to meet two Easter bunnies, one outside and one on the train. They also received a small gift once the ride was through. Organizers hope families will appreciate the history of the train as well. Museum Historian Hugh Dudley says, “Since we don't have any more passenger trains available here for them to ride, we think this is a good thing, they enjoy a little bit of history and they know what a real train is all about." The Railroad Museum also hosts a Santa train ride for kids during the winter. 
A second Wal-Mart is possibly in the works for Florence but not before the company jumps through several hoops and meets guidelines from the state.
A recent traffic study was reviewed by the Alabama Department of Transportation and has been submitted back to the planning commission this week.
ALDOT made eight stipulations that Wal-Mart must meet before the state grants official approval.
Wal-Mart is hoping to build a stoe on thw est side of Cloverdale Road just north of Cox Creek Parkway. However, many residents, including Coy Bramlett who lives in a nearby subdivision, have voiced concerns about the plans.
"They're coming and sitting down within our neighborhood," said Bramlett. "We didn't build and buy there because of a Wal-Mart. We already have a Wal-Mart three and a half miles from here and two Wal-Marts in this town, it's just not big enough."
One of the main stipulations in the traffic review is that an access road must be made on Cox Creek Parkway, relieving some of the congestion on Cloverdale Road.
City spokesperson Phil Stevenson said that the study also addressed other traffic concerns.
"It appears that the traffic study will answer most, if not all question composed by citizens at the first planning commission meeting," said Stevenson.
The following stipulations will be submitted to the Planning Commission's Technical Committee for review.
1. A revised site plan indicating a 100 foot buffer along the north boundary of the proposed development. 2. Access to raodway from extending from the retail site south to Cox Creek Parkway. 3. Traffic signal at Wright Drive. 4. Traffic signal at proposed main entrance to the retail development. 5. Expansion/Revision of the Cloverdale Road approach to Cox Creek Parkway to include dual left turn lanes for eastbound traffic. 6. Ingress/Egress at the proposed outparcels is restricted to right-in-right out only for southbound traffic. 7. No direct access from outparcels to Cloverdale Road. 8. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: The ALDOT has instructed the developer's engineers to submit drawings regarding needed adjustments to the CVS entrance on Cloverdale Road.
"It can run in to a significant amount of money, but that's the cost of doing business," said Stevenson. "It's a busy roadway and in order to present a safe environment, these are things that just have to be done."
Bramlett said, "The traffic now I think will be under control, and that was one of our biggest concerns, but there are several other issues with the site itself that we're still worried about. Now, the main concern is the cemetery located on the land. Other concerns are no impact study has been done. I don't know where all the runoff water is going in to the creeks and it's going in to our streams and the water we drink. There hasn't been an noise impact study."
Bramlett said he's also worried Wal-Mart will put smaller stores in the area out of business.
"I would like to see them deny the rezoning and have Wal-Mart move down the road to the edge of the city on Cox Creek Parkway. It's a lot more convenient for them," said Bramlett.
A public meeting with the technical committee will be held to discuss the traffic study soon. Then, it will go before the city council for final approval for annexation and rezoning. 
FLORENCE, Ala. (WAAY) - Hans and Sans, the two pit-mixed puppies reported stolen from the Florence/Lauderdale Animal Shelter earlier this week are back home. According to officials at the shelter, the person who took the animals got into contact with them after WAAY 31 aired the story of the stolen dogs Thursday night. The person arranged to drop the dogs off with a volunteer. The shelter says they won't press charges. We're told that one of the dogs has been adopted. The other, and several other great animals, are still looking for a new home. If you live in the Shoals and want to adopt an animal from the shelter, call (256) 760-6676, or visit the offices at 702 East College Street in Florence. 
PHENIX CITY, Ala. (AP) - Law officers are searching for a trio of inmates, including one prisoner who was convicted of murder, who broke out of an eastern Alabama jail. Authorities say the three prisoners escaped from the Russell County Jail Thursday night. Sheriff Heath Taylor says all three inmates should be considered dangerous. Authorities say the other two inmates were being held on burglary, theft and drug charges. Police in nearby Columbus, Ga., said they were assisting Alabama authorities with the search by issuing warnings to its officers to be on the lookout for the three. Justin Hysmith, lives just outside Phenix City, said officers were walking down his street around 7 a.m. Friday holding shotguns, and a helicopter had been circling the area since 5:30 a.m. The Ledger-Enquirer of Columbus identifies the men as Adam W. Barringer, 30; John Curtis Hendrix, 27; and Charles Smith, 41, UPDATE 2:30 p.m. - The Ledger-Enquirer reports that Smith has been captured. Hendrix and Barringer remain on the loose. 
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (WAAY) - The team behind the Huntsville Madison County Veterans Memorial have revamped their website, with a special emphasis on letting people who purchased a custom brick paver find their brick. Donors can visit HuntsvilleVeteransMemorial.org and search for their loved one's name. Once a query is submitted the database returns any and all results that contain the letters or phrase that was searched. Results will include the name of the donor, location of the paver and the inscription of lines 1, 2 & 3. A comment section will denote the following: A) A paver is not installed at the current time B) A misspelling has been verified and brick will be reordered C) A misspelling has been verified and is engraved correctly. Donors may replace brick for a minimal fee of $30. D) The brick was ordered after the dedication of Phase I and will be installed prior to Phase II dedication. 
Moulton, AL- A hit and run in Russellville sent police on high alert Thursday morning. 30 minutes later...a Moulton police officer caught up with the car on Highway 24. But the flashing lights didn't stop the driver. He continued to keep the pedal to the metal for several more minutes.
"He came up Court Street from Highway 57at a high rate of speed, which leads directly by the court house," said Police Chief Lyndon McWhorter.
The driver sped right through red lights and stop signs in downtown Moulton before finally stopping in a parking lot.
"There was about 4 or 5 cars that had another vehicle surrounded and they had him out of the car and was arresting him when I came by," said Faron Terry.
Terry later learned the chase happened around 8 o'clock in the morning....when his children were going to school.
"If he was running that fast through downtown Moulton that time of day, he got close.. He was one block away from the school. He could've got in school traffic and he could've injured no telling how many kids," said Terry.
34 year old Thomas Tucker of Winfield faces a long list of charges.....including DUI, driving with a revoked license, and no insurance.
"Basically we want to set an example, you run from us, we're not going to tolerate it especially putting our citizens in danger. If we catch you, we are going to prosecute you with every charge we possibly can," said Chief McWhorter.
Tucker remains in the Lawrence County jail. 
Athens, AL-Accused killer James Pigg made his first court appearance Thursday morning in Athens.
The 33-year-old suspect appeared on a closed circuit video hookup from the Limestone County jail inside the chambers of Judge James Woodroof. His bond is set at 100-thousand dollars. The judge appointed an attorney to represent Pigg. No plea was entered during the hearing.
Pigg is charged with killing his grandmother, 69-year-old Barbara Delaney. Investigators say she was beaten and shot during an attack in the backyard of the home they shared in Limestone County. The suspects mother Dianne Harber says her family is still haunted by what happened. "I mean something horrible must have happened to make him snap like this. He has no recollection of this whatsoever and I'm going to ask his lawyer for a mental evaluation" Harber said.
Pigg has not posted bond. His next court appearance is set for April 10th.

DECATUR, AL - James MacIlveen has been a beekeeper for 35 years. He has two active honey beehives in his backyard that he uses to make his own honey. MacIlveen says, "The raw honey that comes from a beekeeper is full of pollen, full of nutrients, full of vitamins." But MacIlveen eats a teaspoon of his honey every day for another reason besides its sweet taste. He believes the pollen in his honey helps take the sting out of his seasonal allergies. "The thought behind that is as you ingest the honey with all the pollen in it, your body builds up a resistance to those pollens and will lesson your reaction to allergies," he says. "It won't eliminate it, but it certainly will lesson your reactions." Dr. Sarah Styers of Family Health of Hartselle says she'll continue prescribing medicine instead of honey to treat her allergy patients. But, she says it doesn't hurt to try. Styers says, "Studies have shown that it does not make a significant difference in allergy symptoms. However, people believe it with all their heart and it's certainly not going to hurt you as long as your above the age of two." MacIlveen says he will continue using his honey to help keep him breathing easy this time of year. "Absolutely no doubt in my mind and not only me, there are tens of thousands of people out there that swear by honey as a allergy preventative," he says. 
HUNTSVILLE, Ala-
At 17-years-old, Bill Koch joined the Marine Corps and served in the Gulf War. He experienced a warm welcome from friends and family when he returned home from duty.
"There were parades, signs and people everywhere. It was overwhelming as a veteran to get that kind of reception,” Koch said.
Koch says he can't imagine how Vietnam veterans felt returning home to so much hostility.
”I can’t even imagine how the Vietnam veterans felt when they had to sneak back into the county because people were not welcoming them back. That is tough," said Koch.
Koch now works with a veteran’s advocacy organization called Still Serving Veterans. This is a group that worked closely with organizers for the "Welcome Home Vietnam Veterans Day" event.
"I mean, it’s got to be hard for them to see the way our modern veterans are treated and know the way we were treated when we came back. So maybe this will give them some closure," Koch said.
Richard Knight served in Vietnam in 1969 and 1970. He remembers how it felt getting off his plane in America where there were certainly no parades or balloons waiting for him.
"When we got back, most guys didn’t want to wear that uniform. And if you came with it on in the airport, the first time you got to a bathroom you wanted to change into some civilian clothing because we were not received well behind what the Vietnam War brought for us," Knight said.
Warren Harmon relates. He also felt unappreciated.
"It was like no one liked the military back then. Everyone was burning draft cards and going to Canada," Harmon said.
Thursday afternoon all the Vietnam veterans were hoping for a sense of closure, and a renewed since of pride for serving our country.
"Today is going to bring along a lot of healing for myself and probably quite a few more veterans here that have come to see this event," Knight said.
"Today brings a lot of peace, a lot of these Vietnam veterans are still suffering even today after this long time since the war was over," Harmon said.
Event coordinators hope to make this celebration of service an annual event.

Huntsville, AL -- On a recent Thursday afternoon, a group of local clergy sat gathered around a conference table, lunch bags scattered in front of them, as a minister read aloud from a well-worn book. But this was no King James or NIV. Instead, it was Madeleine L'Engle's A Wrinkle in Time, a work of science-fiction.
The woman reading from it, Rev. Traci Loveman, says, "you never know what God can use to get his word out, when you're willing to show up and let God work through you." Loveman has been a fan of fantasy and sci-fi since childhood and says that didn't change just because she entered the ministry. Now, she's sharing some of her reflections on the role these fictional genres can play in faith with other members of the Huntsville Association of Pastoral Care.
Last fall, HAPC began a series of monthly lunch meetings for spiritual care givers. Each week, a topic is presented, after which the clergy take part in a dialogue. Loveman's topic was "Faith and Fantasy: Using Fictional Resources for Spiritual Care Ministry."
Rev. Frank Broyles is the Executive Minister of HAPC. While some might find the pairing odd, he says, "the place of fiction and fantasy in the Christian life is a fascinating thing. You can use it in worship, in Bible study, in small group experiences, and if it's done well, it can be a great way of helping people on their spiritual journey better understand who they are and whose they are." 
Lawrence County-
It was a weather active Saturday night across the Tennessee Valley.
After 6:30, a strong thunderstorm caused flash flooding, toppled trees and even produced thumbnail sized hail. Crews were quickly called to clear trees from the roads. No injuries were reported. A Lawrence County convenience store owner says that the hail pounding on the tin roof of her business was the scariest part of the storm.
“It was dark outside and the wind was blowing really hard. It was raining really heavy and there was a lot of hail. Not large hail, just a lot of it,” said Donna Lindsey.
One viewer from Lawrence County tells us this is the worst hail storm they've had since 1989.

MARSHALL COUNTY, Ala. – Motorists driving along Highway 431 in Sand Mountain Saturday morning may have seen something out of the ordinary. Christians from different denominations took to the streets. Escorted by police, they marched roughly 13 miles from Boaz to Guntersville. For many, the reasons for marching were emotional. Sarah Howard faces a tough challenge at home, and says God is guiding her through it. She says, “My step-dad got on meth really bad, and it was unreal how bad his life was changed." But Howard believes her step-dad's life can change for the better, which is why she's marching side by side with fellow believers: “He does change lives. I mean, never stop believing in God because he will make a difference." March organizer Jon Henderson adds, "Nationally, we've been known as "Meth Mountain," and the first thing we want to do is break that identity, that this is not Meth Mountain, it's God's mountain." Fixing Sand Mountain's drug problem is just one of the march's many causes. Henderson explains, "What we challenge is for people to come out and march for their cause, whatever it is, and ultimately that cause is the cause of Christ." Jon Henderson runs a non-profit evangelist ministry. He says the idea for the march came to him during prayer: “We just want to bring the church, every denomination together, and bring them together for the cause of Christ and get out in our streets and just start praying over our land." Along their route from Boaz to Guntersville, Henderson hoped to inspire those marching and driving along Highway 431. He says, “Our nation is in a time of trouble and need, and there's no better time than this to let the church shine." And for Sarah Howard, the help can't come soon enough: “He's not too small, and he's gonna change lives through this. And hopefully we'll bring a revival into Marshall County and take back our mountain." 
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