Travel alert:Airlines offering waivers in, out of Georgia ahead of winter storm This is the second winter storm to hit Augusta and many other areas of Georgia. The first came on Jan. 10 with ...
The rare deep freeze in the wake of an historic winter storm that swept across the U.S. South this week will linger through Sunday, leaving the region in the grip of extreme cold and ice and creating dangerous driving conditions.
Georgia Baptist Disaster Relief Volunteers have embarked on a 2-week deployment to the greater Augusta area, doing some remaining cleanup work of damage caused by Hurricane Helene.
Welcome to Synovus Park, the latest and perhaps greatest chapter in Columbus's long baseball history. Explore the past, embrace the future, eat a peach. (Note: This Ballpark Guide was written while the ballpark in question was still under construction. It will be updated with additional photos and info during the course of the 2025 season.)
Icy roads and hills are a dangerous mix and Augusta had more than enough of both as the roads were like skating rinks leading to accidents and some being closed down
Women are being prescribed drugs that were never tested on women's bodies. Or when they experience uterine pain or migraine headaches, their concerns are sometimes downplayed by male doctors.
A major winter storm blankets the Gulf Coast with record-breaking snowfall, causing widespread closures and travel disruptions from Texas to Florida.
Mayor Garnett Johnson saying Augusta faces a lot of challenges still from Helene but says the city is building back and is one the rise.
The women's golf team will look to build on the momentum of a No. 11 national ranking for its fall performance under the direction of head coach Sierra Campbell. Freshman Ellie Jane Riner, sophomore Abby Franks and seniors Ellie Rippee and Jadin Ware lead the charge.
The U.S. Senate voted 64-35 on Monday to pass the proposed Laken Riley Act and sent the measure to the House of Representatives for consideration.
The projects could transform how the rest of the country sees Mississippi and perhaps more importantly, how Mississippians see themselves.
President Donald Trump is poised to sign the first bill of his new administration, and it is named after a slain Georgia nursing student whose name became a rallying cry during his White House