All News — Page 597

Robert Trent Jones' Ross Bridge golf course in Birmingham is no longer booking tee times due to a series of grounds keeping errors.

Judge Raymond J. Dearie was suggested by former President Donald Trump to be the special master who will review the 11,000 documents taken during the raid at Mar-a-Lago and the US Department of Justice agreed.

Justice Will Sellers: 500 years of global trade

With supersonic air travel, it takes less than three days to travel around the world. Five hundred years ago, it took three years.

For formerly terminated head coaches, coming under the tutelage of Nick Saban has proved to be a career-reviving experience.

Friday, Alabama Finance Director Bill Poole said that there are enough funds to start constructing the new prisons.

State preps for use of new execution method

The State of Alabama could possibly use a new method of execution on an inmate whose death sentence is scheduled to be carried out later this month.

For the fall semester, the University of Alabama reached its highest-ever enrollment in the institution's 201-year history.

Alabama Dept. of Commerce Secretary Greg Canfield highlighted the successes of the economic incentives laws.

Dr. Sutter: Labor Day reflections on quiet quitting

“Quiet quitting” refers to working no more than necessary to keep your job and then bragging about it on Tik Tok.

Local governments in smaller areas around the nation have long faced difficulties in applying for federal grants.

On a Saturday filled with mid-majors taking out Power 5 programs, the first two quarters in Jordan-Hare Stadium had Auburn on track to become the next casualty. The end of the first half found the home team trailing the visiting Spartans by a field goal on the scoreboard and by a truckload in the confidence […]

Ainsworth Homes development takes off in Guntersville

If Lake Guntersville is one of the most desirable places to live in Alabama, then Spring Creek is one of the most sought-after neighborhoods.

In an effort to combat fentanyl trafficking, State Representative Matt Simpson is planning to approach the issue in the upcoming legislative session, and he’s said in a news release that his legislation “will make sure that these drug dealers who are selling fentanyl to our kids will actually be put in prison where they belong.”

Democrats spent the 9/11 remembrance weekend talking about how their fellow Americans are the real threats to "democracy."

Radio talk show host Dale Jackson and 256 Today CEO Mecca Musick take you through Alabama’s biggest political stories

When Elysian Gardens opens in Avondale this fall, it will be the culmination of a 10-year dream for Birmingham’s William Colburn.

Gopher tortoise gets boost in South Alabama

The gopher tortoise is considered a keystone species, which impacts about 365 species of amphibians, reptiles, birds, mammals and invertebrates in the sandy-soil habitat.

The renewable Intergovernmental Service Agreement is the first of its kind in the nation to include eight military bases.

The University of Alabama College of Communication and Information Sciences will induct four new members into its Hall of Fame Thursday, Oct. 13, in the Bryant Conference Center on the UA campus.

Sunday Reflections: The gospel by way of Jim Rockford

Jim Rockford taught me how to respond when asked, “How much will this cost?” I reply, “Two hundred dollars a day, plus expenses.”

For decades, losing political candidates in Alabama have been exiled to “Buck’s Pocket.” It is uncertain when or how the colloquialism began, but political insiders have used this terminology for at least 60 years.

James R. Barth, Auburn University's Harbert Eminent Scholar, details what constitutes a recession.

The new Current Market and Deli on Neely Henry Lake provides a true waterfront dining experience with lovely views of blue-green waves.

MSNBC's Joe Scarborough is hardly a religious scholar but, like many on cable news, he likes to pretend.