The Enduring Charms Of Savannah
Known as the "Hostess City of the South," it's an alphabet soup of architectural array, breathtaking beauty, cultural climate and more.
Known as the "Hostess City of the South," it's an alphabet soup of architectural array, breathtaking beauty, cultural climate and more.
AP | MEG KINNARD | Posted 05.08.2012
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — A panel created to represent South Carolina's interests in the Savannah River moved on Tuesday to set limits on a dredging pro...
TruTV.com | Posted 03.02.2012
For most people, the world of sex takes place behind closed doors. The adult entertainment industry acts as a peephole where one can get a tantaliz...
Dallas Angguish | Posted 02.27.2012
A sign sellotaped to the bench read "All funds to the Church of the Ecstatic Angel Tongues." I instantly got images of people writhing on the ground babbling in gibberish.
Paula Gordon | Posted 11.20.2011
The nation of Gabon abolished capital punishment on the 14th day of February, 2011. When will the United States of America be that civilized? Capital ...
Ben Arnon | Posted 10.12.2011
Hundreds of thousands of people from all over the world will journey to the nation's capital to bear witness to the dedication of this new, national memorial.
Georgianne Nienaber | Posted 05.25.2011
A rock star-turned-environmentalist, a coach morphed into a master gardener, and an inspired Vietnam Veteran author are all part of the lineup at this year's Fourth Annual Savannah Book Festival.
Meredith Barnett | Posted 05.25.2011
Here's what the president of Marc Jacobs International is giving and getting this Christmas.
Ben Colclough | Posted 05.25.2011
We didn't need a guide book; we had restaurant recommendations, tips on where to park, which is the best beach, even a guide to all the local playgrounds. And of course we had our own van thrown in, too.
Meredith Barnett | Posted 05.25.2011
After word got out that Marc Jacobs was going to be at the store signing t-shirts that the company had designed for a fundraiser to benefit a local skate park, fans descended.
Lea Lane | Posted 11.17.2011
I realized the other day that the river of my life has been I-95, the highway that starts in Canada and ends thousands of miles later and a couple of...
Kristi York Wooten | Posted 05.25.2011
The Mellencamp formula hasn't changed much since 1976. What's different about his latest record, No Better Than This, is that the mosaic starts to take the shape of a musical self-portrait.
AP | RUSS BYNUM | Posted 05.25.2011
SAVANNAH, Ga. — Biologists conducting a survey for the U.S. military said Tuesday they photographed an endangered right whale giving birth near ...
Carolyn Scott | Posted 11.17.2011
The Healthy Voyager goes to Savannah, GA to find healthy, vegan, vegetarian, low fat, gluten-free and other special-diet friendly meals in the historic southern town.
Georgianne Nienaber | Posted 05.25.2011
It is appropriate that journalist and memoirist Allegra Huston conducts regular writing workshops called "The Imaginative Storm." If the name Huston...
HuffingtonPost.com | Arthur Delaney | Posted 05.25.2011
Single-mother Alexis Hutchinson refused to deploy to Afghanistan on Nov. 5, she said, because she didn't have anyone to take care of her infant son. N...
Georgianne Nienaber | Posted 05.25.2011
Has it occurred to you that social networking is really not very social at all? We Twitter, and cultivate relationships with hundreds of "friends" we have never met on Facebook.
AP | RUSS BYNUM | Posted 05.25.2011
BRUNSWICK, Ga. — A 6-year-old boy pleaded with his captors – a man and his adult son – as they stripped and sexually assaulted the child inside a mobile home before strangling him, a prosecutor told jurors Wednesday.
The comments were made during opening arguments in the trial of David Edenfield, 61, who faces the death penalty if convicted of the March 2007 slaying of Christopher Michael Barrios. The boy was missing for a week before police found his naked body dumped off a road and wrapped in trash bags.
Prosecutor John B. Johnson told jurors in his opening statement that they would learn the details of what happened to the boy "in the most horrible two hours of his life" from a taped confession Edenfield made to police.
Johnson said Edenfield and his son, 34-year-old George Edenfield, lured the boy into their trailer across the street from the home of Christopher's grandmother, stripped the boy naked and took turns molesting him.
"You will hear him say this from his own mouth," Johnson said of David Edenfield. "Christopher Barrios didn't want to be there. He said, 'Let me go! Please don't do this! I'm going to tell my parents!'"
Mike Ragogna | Posted 05.25.2011
Rick Foster | Posted 05.25.2011
Our attraction to certain personal characteristics is integral to how we evolved as humans. How do we leap from prehistoric clan success to modern day presidential politics?
iLoveInns | Posted 05.30.2012