Template to use when posting a missing person's case:
Subject Line: Missing Woman/Man/Girl/Boy: Name--State Abbreviation where missing from--Date missing in xx/xx/xx format
Example of subject line: Missing Woman: Mary Jones--GA--5/15/06
Photo (a must) (Use the Insert Image button to your upper right and paste in the URL where the image is found.)
Name:
Alias / Nickname:
Date of Birth:
Date Missing:
From City/State:
Missing From (Country):
Age at Time of Disappearance:
Gender:
Race:
Height:
Weight:
Hair Color:
Hair (Other):
Eye Color:
Complexion:
Identifying Characteristics: Examples include glasses, braces, birthmarks, piercings, scars, and tattoos
Clothing:
Jewelry:
Circumstances of Disappearance:
Investigative Agency:
Phone: (xxx) xxx-xxxx
Investigative Case #:
Template to use when posting a new story:
URL/link to the story
(This order may vary, depending on the new source. There may not always be a listed author.)
Date story was published
Author of story
Name of news source
Optional/As Needed: Photos added using the Insert Image button to your upper right
Title of story (in bold)
Body of story (Be sure paragraphs are spaced for easier reading)
Example Below: (Not a missing person story)
http://www.omaha.com...&u_sid=10162669
Published Saturday | October 20, 2007
Living Paycheck to Paycheck Gets Harder
By ANNE D'INNOCENZIO AP Business Writer
The Associated Press
NEW YORK (AP) - The calculus of living paycheck to paycheck in America is getting harder. What used to last four days might last half that long now. Pay the gas bill, but skip breakfast. Eat less for lunch so the kids can have a healthy dinner.
Across the nation, Americans are increasingly unable to stretch their dollars to the next payday as they juggle higher rent, food and energy bills. It's starting to affect middle-income working families as well as the poor, and has reached the point of affecting day-to-day calculations of merchants like Wal-Mart Stores Inc., 7-Eleven Inc. and Family Dollar Stores Inc.
Food pantries, which distribute foodstuffs to the needy, are reporting severe shortages and reduced government funding at the very time that they are seeing a surge of new people seeking their help.
While economists debate whether the country is headed for a recession, some say the financial stress is already the worst since the last downturn at the start of this decade.