It Pays to Keep Secrets
by TheresaShadrix
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Jun 28, 2011 | 1210 views |  0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

By Theresa Shadrix

If you’ve ever thought you were not important, chances are you’ve not had your identity stolen. It’s the one time in your life that you wish no one knew your name…or credit card number, or birth date, or social security number.

Even if identity theft is not the kind of ego boost you want, someone has taken the time to know all about you. Of course it’s in order to buy stuff. Before you can ask yourself, “Why would someone want my identity?” the thief is busy getting a Kitchen Aid blender, an iPAD or an iPhone.

You know, the type of things you would never buy yourself.

Most people don’t think about protecting their identity when looking for a good deal. But, it’s the first step one should take in couponing and saving money. Often we give away sacred information without thinking twice about it. In our homes, we lock up personal data, but the moment we are asked for our personal email address in order to enter a drawing for a free makeover or for a $1 off an item, we lose all of our wits. 

Be stingy with your email

You should be a little stingy with your personal or work email. Your SPAM filter will certainly thank you. My recommendation is to create an email account that you only use for couponing, contests, and deals that require you to share contact information. You can get a free email through Gmail, Yahoo or Hotmail. Your username can be your name or you can get creative with a money-saving name. 

Don't use your real information

My second recommendation is that you not use your actual birth date. Often times when you print a coupon online you have to register and create an account. This is the one time it is fine to lie about your age. Use your actual month but not the date or year.

Also, when asked for information like your mother’s maiden name, your childhood pet’s name, your favorite of anything, or your high school, by all means feel free to make up something. Not to make you even more paranoid, but in case of a cyber attack, it will harder for the hacker to match up the “cyber” you with the real you.  

Write information down and keep in safe place

Now, because you are creating an alter ego, you are going to forget who you are. So, dig around the drawers in your house and find a pen. Then, look under the couch cushions and in the corners of your rooms for a piece of paper. Write down all the data for your “cyber self” on the paper and put it in your safe or in your filing cabinet. Do not write this information on the front of the phone book. You may need it for future reference when you are having an online identity crisis.

Consider PO Box

My third recommendation is that you consider using a post office box for all of your mail. There will be times that you can request free coupons, samples and other goodies but you just are not comfortable using your home address. Sure, it’s an easy find on whitepages.com or many of those “looky who is searching for you” websites, but why not make it as difficult as possible for scammers?

Never give out social security number

One more thing. Never, for any reason, give out your social security number. Along with other personal information, it can be used to apply for credit cards. Trust me when I tell you to protect that number as much as you can.

Many years ago I had my identity stolen because someone had my full name, birth date and social security number. Granted the person was a family member who stole my identity and I only discovered there were several credit cards with massive unpaid bills when my husband and I were trying to buy a car. It was not a minor hassle. The credit card companies required that I file a police report. It was sweet to get a lecture from the police officer on my “turning in” a family member, while my entire credit history was wiped clean and I had to start over. Needless to say, I haven’t been to any family reunions.

The bottom line when you are in couponing and saving money, keep who you are to yourself…or you might have a big identity crisis.
Contact Theresa Shadrix at tshadrix@annistonstar.com.

Having no plan is extreme
by TheresaShadrix
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Jun 24, 2011 | 292 views |  0 comments | 10 10 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

By Theresa Shadrix

It seems everyone is an expert these days. At least it seems when it comes to coupons. Thanks to the reality TV show on TLC “Extreme Couponing,” it doesn’t seem to take much experience to be an expert. Viewers watch as shoppers collect massive amounts of groceries for mere pennies.

Maybe you are one of them and thought to yourself, “Hey, I can do that too.” So, you are energized and ready to save money. You turn on your computer and search for coupons and deals. Then feel as if your head might actually explode. You are totally overwhelmed and have no idea where to begin.

Maybe you actually set out to a store with a stack of coupons and brand spanking new binder. But you became frustrated at the register as every coupon was scrutinized, you were told you couldn’t use one or you couldn’t figure out why a coupon “beeped.”

Maybe you tried to follow the deal advice of a blog, drove to a store and there was nothing left on the shelf to buy. Yes, reality set in.

There are a lot of things you will not learn by watching this reality show. For example, a few of the stores have admitted that they went against their own coupon policy for the show. Also, it costs money to coupon. Many coupons are purchased by coupon clipping companies or from publications with coupons inside. Then there is the cost of ink when you print coupons online.

One of the most important things not known is a few shoppers on the show were fraudulent in how they were using the coupons. Basically they used a coupon meant for one item but redeemed it for another item. Fraudulent with coupons? Yes, it seems greed has a way of taking root in many things, including coupons. Grocery coupons are distributed by manufactures of products and stores are reimbursed for the amount of the coupon, plus eight cents. The problem is that when they are used incorrectly, someone has to pay. Ultimately it’s the consumer. It’s a twisted fate of irony, but one that shouldn’t be ignored.

So, what are you to do and where do you start? With anything in life, you should have a plan. So, start with figuring out how much money you can save in all areas of your life, not just with couponing. I recommend that before you fork out money to workshops, drive all over town looking for free toothpaste or use up all of your ink printing every coupon you can find that you first look at where your money is currently being spent. Yes, that means doing some work.

This week, gather all of your bills and write down what you owe each month. Are there ways that you can save money with your expenses? Then, figure out how much money you actually bring in each month. Also, with everything you purchase seriously ask yourself if you need it and if you can pay cash for it. Finally, clip out the coupons from Clip2Save and put them in an envelope in your car so you will have them handy when needed. The worst thing in your finances is not having a plan. Now that’s extreme.

The Love Affair of Couponing
by TheresaShadrix
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Jun 23, 2011 | 461 views |  0 comments | 14 14 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

By Theresa Shadrix

In this first of my new weekly column on couponing and savvy shopping, I thought I’d come right out of the gate with a few truths that I’m sure you won’t hear anywhere else. We’re all friends here and I figure there is nothing like spilling my guts, so to speak, about the world of couponing.

 

For one, couponing may be one of the most difficult relationships you will ever have. There will be days when you will want to give up but you’ve got so much invested in it that you can’t.

 

There will be days couponing will take you to emotional heights that make you giddy. There will be days when you stare at them and wonder why you love them so.

 

Other days you will loathe them with a passion. You will be jealous when others seem to have the same love as you, but yet you want to tell everyone about what they mean to you.

 

You will spend countless hours studying your coupons, sorting them, and matching-making them with the rights deals. You will do all of this without cupids arrow smacking you in the face or piercing your heart. You will do all ofthese things for one reason – to save money.

 

Trust me when I say that it won’t take long before you read this column and realize all the truths I write.

 

For now, you may be scared out of your wits. “How on earth could I love couponing,” you ask? Possibly you are a little creeped out that you could actually get a flutter in your stomach from a piece of paper that will get you $.50 off paper towels at Wal-Mart, or $1 if it’s doubled at Fred’s or Winn Dixie.

 

I don’t write this column for those who already understand. This column is for those of you who heard the latest way to save money is couponing. The only problem is you are not sure where to start.

 

So, before we begin this journey, I have to let it be known up front that couponing is a commitment. Also, it’s hard work and you will only get out of it what you put into it. But, you won’t be alone. I’ll start from the basics and give you some tips. Each week I’ll try to answer your questions and help you to fully understand why I, like so many others, love couponing.

 

You may not fall head over heels in love for them. But, I bet after a few weeks of using them correctly, you just might have a slight puppy love.

Got a question? Email me at tshadrix@annistonstar.com.

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Speak Out: The wrath of God
by our readers
Jun 19, 2013 | 0 views |  0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print
God is pouring his wrath on America — floods, storms, tornadoes and fires. With what people have put in our White House, it’s no wonder that when our America turns into Sodom and Gomorrah, when this person stands for such sin. A very sad day. Virty Walker
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Harvey H. Jackson: Alabama, No. 1 in more than football
Jun 19, 2013 | 0 views |  0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend | print
It was one of those headlines that simply dared me to write a column. “Alabama cities lead list of porn-loving religious places, poll says” My first reaction was not to take the dare. As we say down in south Alabama, “some swamps don’t need draining,” even if the swamp is AL.com, the face of new journalism in our fair state. But something just didn’t seem right. What sorta poll would have pollsters calling up folks around the country asking them (1.) “are you religious,” and if they answered yes, following up with (2.) “do you love porn?” So I checked it out, and guess who did the polling? No one. There was no poll revealing that Alabama cities were high among the “porn-loving religious places.” The article beneath the headline was based on another article that was based on research undertaken by researchers working for PornHub.com, a pornography website, and published online by BuzzFeed.com. PornHub.com bills itself as the world’s biggest porn distributor, which I doubt because there is no Wikipedia entry for it, and we all know that if it isn’t on Wikipedia . . . . As for BuzzFeed.com, according to Wikipedia, it is “a website that combines a technology platform for detecting viral content with an editorial selection process to provide a snapshot of ‘the viral web in realtime.’” Huh? Well, the “viral content” Buzzfeed detected was a report compiled by researchers at PornHub.com. (Dear readers, do not go to PornHub.com to see what it is all about. You might be scarred for life or, worse yet, find yourself a statistic in a research report like the one that was the subject of the BuzzFeed article. You have been warned.) Now, I am not exactly sure how or why the folks at PornHub.com came up with the research project that led to the BuzzFeed.com article, but the decision might have been the result of a conversation among researchers employed by the porn site that went something like this: Porn researcher No. 1 to porn researcher No. 2: “You know what I did over the weekend?” (Look, surely porn researchers have lives outside the realm of porn research. So I imagine this sort of conversation was pretty common around the PornHub.com office.) Porn researcher No. 2 replies: “No, what?” (A reasonable response, given the options available to porn researchers.) Porn researcher No. 1: “I took a look at that recent Gallup poll, you know, the one that ranked cities by how religious their residents were.” Porn researcher No. 2: “So?” Porn researcher No. 1: “People in those religious cities are into porn.” Porn researcher No. 2 gets really interested and asks: “How do you know that?” Porn researcher No. 1: “Because they visit our site.” And with that revelation, the research that led to the article that led to the headline was set in motion. I am not sure whether their inquiry was an effort to search out and expand a market niche, or if it was a way for porn people to fire a zinger at anti-porn people who seem to cluster under the Gallup poll category “very religious.” Whatever the motive, this is what they discovered. Eight of the top 10 “very religious” cities where folks watch a lot of online porn are in the South. Yessir. The Bible Belt. Of the remaining two, one was in Michigan and the other was Provo, Utah, in the heart of Mormon country. Go figure. This raises a number of questions, not the least being whether cities that aren’t “very religious” watch even more online porn than cities with significant “very religious” populations. The porn researchers didn’t say. What they did say was this: Of all the “very religious” cities that watch a lot of porn, the one that leads the list is Huntsville-by-gum-Alabama. This set my mind reeling back to 2010, when the owner of a Huntsville adult-items store, “Pleasures” (“your one-stop romance shop”), challenged Alabama’s ban on sex toys, a ban passed by a Legislature that conveniently did not ban owning the items, just selling them. That allowed Alabamians, including legislators, one supposes, to go online and order — or just watch. Which folks down in Montgomery are doing, for according to PornHub and Buzzfeed, Montgomery came in second in the race to the top of the “very religious” cities where citizens visit the PornHub website. That leaves me with just one question: Do these Montgomery visits to the PornHub website coincide with the times when the Legislature is in session? Now that would be really interesting to know. Meanwhile, “Pleasures,” well aware of the needs and desires of Huntsville’s porn-watching citizenry, has expanded to five locations so it can better serve its customers. The free market marches on. Harvey H. (“Hardy”) Jackson is Eminent Scholar in History at Jacksonville State University and a columnist and editorial writer for The Star. Email: hjackson@jsu.edu.
Larry Lee: Seeking the ‘bold steps’ for Alabama schools
by Larry Lee
Special to The Star
Jun 19, 2013 | 1 views |  0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend | print
It was exciting to read recently that one of the Republican leaders of the Alabama House of Representatives said, “It is time to take bold new steps and leave the broken status quo behind.” I could not agree more. Obviously, Dr. Tommy Bice, state superintendent of education, feels the same way. In fact, the statement of the legislator echoes what Bice said last winter when speaking to the legislative education budget committees. “We have bold plans and high expectations of everyone involved in public education,” Bice told committee members. So when are we going to start with these “bold steps”? This last legislative session would have been a great time, especially considering that Bice, along with lots of help from many people, has put together an excellent outline of what our public education needs are in his Plan 2020. What sets this plan apart from so many others is that it truly takes a comprehensive look at education by focusing on all the areas that must be addressed if we’re to have quality education in quality schools being led by quality educators. It details priorities and objectives in four areas: (1.) students; (2.) support systems; (3.) education personnel; and (4.) schools and systems. Of these, the recognition that attention must be paid to factors that impact students outside the classroom is especially significant. Each day during the school year, 150,000 Alabama students attend a school where there is at least an 80 percent poverty rate. These are the schools most prone to fail and these are the students who are most likely to need health care, vision screening, hearing screening, mental health counseling, etc. Some systems are already addressing such needs. The Florence City System has a partnership with a local mental health agency that provides counselors to schools; in Gadsden there is a health clinic at Adams Elementary manned by a local health provider. In many systems there are churches and nonprofits that provide food for needy children for the weekend. But filling these, and other Plan 2020 needs, takes resources. This is why Bice’s budget proposal re-directed funding in a number of cases. He was not asking for new money, but rather, asking to take the “bold step” of setting new priorities. Unfortunately, no one paid much attention. For instance, since the Alabama Reading Initiative devotes considerable resources to professional development, the Alabama State Department of Education asked that $10 million be shifted from ARI to a more inclusive professional development program for teachers and principals. This was not funded, but ARI was still cut by $10 million. Is that a “bold new step”? They asked for $5 million to work with family resource centers to provide more of the critical support system needs of high poverty students. Again, they got zerp. Another “bold new step”? They asked for $19.1 million to cut class sizes and restore lost teacher units. Zero again. Again, a missed opportunity for a “bold new step.” They asked to restore funding for textbooks to $75 per student, as it was in 2008. Instead, this was level funded at last year’s rate of $31.50. How in the world do you under-fund textbooks and claim you are taking “bold new steps”? About 360,000 kids ride buses each school day. The actual cost of providing transportation is $323 million. But the state only funded $304, leaving a hole of $19 million. So, evidently, leaving rural school systems to pay for things the state is supposed to pay for is considered a “bold new step.” The same can be said for setting aside funding for controversial new programs professional educators did not support, while not increasing support for proven programs such as the Alabama Math and Science Technology Initiative and the distance-learning program. Yes, we need “bold new steps.” But we need to do more than talk about doing so. You can’t run a bus on political “spin” or reduce class sizes or buy textbooks. Bice and the State Board of Education have the plan in place to move our schools forward. They just need help from the folks controlling the purse strings — help that was woefully lacking this year. Larry Lee led the study, Lessons Learned from Rural Schools, and is a long-time advocate for public education and frequently writes about education issues. Email: larrylee33@knology.net.
Medlen, Johnson lead Braves past Mets, 5-3
by Associated Press
Jun 19, 2013 | 126 views |  0 comments | 6 6 recommendations | email to a friend | print
ATLANTA — Chris Johnson homered for the first time in more than a month, Kris Medlen overcame a defensive blunder and the Atlanta Braves bounced back from a doubleheader sweep, beating the New York Mets 5-3 Wednesday night. Johnson hit a three-run homer in the fourth, his first time going deep since May 13. Jordan Schafer put the Braves ahead to stay with some gutsy baserunning in the fifth, scoring on a wild pitch that didn’t even roll off the dirt around home plate. Medlen (4-7) pitched seven-plus innings for his third win in four starts this month, even though he cost himself two unearned runs with an errant throw. Shawn Marcum (0-9) took another loss, becoming just the third pitcher in Mets history to start a season dropping nine straight decisions. The Braves scored first with two outs in the fourth. B.J. Upton and Dan Uggla hit back-to-back singles, and then Marcum left a 2-0 pitch over the plate to Johnson. He drove it into the left-field seats, slapping hands emphatically with first-base coach Terry Pendleton on his way around the bases. But Medlen gave the runs right back in the fifth. Marlon Byrd led off with a single and Lucas Duda was plunked, putting two runners aboard. Medlen got just what he wanted from John Buck — a one-hopper back to the mound. But instead of going to second base for what likely would have been a routine double play, Medlen inexplicably threw to third looking to get a force on the lead runner. Johnson, obviously caught off guard, was late arriving at the bag and the throw was low anyway, skidding into foul territory while both Byrd and Duda came around to score. Kirk Nieuwenhuis followed with a bloop single just inside the right-field line to bring home the tying run. The Braves quickly reclaimed the lead in the bottom half of the inning. Schafer led off with a double and advanced on Andrelton Simmons’ sacrifice before Freddie Freeman walked. It looked as if Marcum might escape the jam when he struck out Justin Upton. But a pitch to Brian McCann bounced off Buck’s chest protector, rolling off to the catcher’s right. Schafer was nearly halfway down the line already — the Mets shifted their defense against McCann, leaving only third baseman David Wright on the left side of the infield — and the runner broke for home as soon as he saw the ball get away. Even though it rolled only to the edge of the grass and Buck made a quick flip to Marcum covering home, Schafer slid headfirst under the tag. B.J. Upton followed with an RBI double that gave the Braves a two-run cushion, finishing off Marcum. He surrendered six hits and walked four in 4 2-3 innings. Medlen pitched into the eighth, coming out after giving up a bloop single to pinch hitter Josh Satin leading off the inning. Luis Avilan got Mets newcomer Eric Young Jr. to hit into a double play, and Craig Kimbrel struck out two in a perfect ninth for his 20th save in 23 chances. Medlen gave up six hits and one earned run, struck out seven, and didn’t walk anyone. Marcum’s start is the worst for a Mets pitcher since Anthony Young lost his first 13 decisions in 1993 on the way to a 1-16 record. The only other pitcher in New York history to begin a season with as many as nine consecutive losses was Bob Miller, who started 0-12 in 1962 before winning his final decision with the woeful expansion Mets. NOTES: Young started in center field and led off for the Mets, less than 24 hours after being acquired from the Colorado Rockies. He singled on the second pitch of the game and finished 1 for 4. ... B.J. Upton had two hits and a walk. ... The Mets placed RHP Scott Atchison back on the disabled list after he injured his right groin while warming up for an appearance Tuesday night. He had just come off the DL for an ailing elbow, but didn’t even make an actual pitch before getting hurt again.
Darrel "Sonny" Clayton was known in the community for his profession as a clown. Clayton had hundreds of hats which were on display at his memorial service.  Photo by Courtney Davies
Darrel "Sonny" Clayton was known in the community for his profession as a clown. Clayton had hundreds of hats which were on display at his memorial service. Photo by Courtney Davies
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