General News

General

Cheese recalled in 5 states due to listeria concerns

A New Jersey-based Abbey Specialty Foods is recalling two types of cheese products sold in five states due to possible listeria contamination.

The company is recalling certain batches of Wicklow Gold Nettle & Chive and Wicklow Gold Cheddar Tomato & Herb cheese.

According to a report from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, the affected batches of cheese had a sell-by date of June 2, 2025, and were sold in Massachusetts, Maine, Ohio, Colorado and New Hampshire.

To date, there have been no confirmed reports of adverse health events due to the consumption of these products, reports the FDA.

The FDA is urging consumers who have any of the recalled products to refrain from consuming them and return them to their place of purchase for a full refund or dispose of the products.

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Former Alabama edge commits to Kansas State from transfer portal

One of Alabama football’s transfer portal departures has found his new home. Defensive edge rusher Jayshawn Ross has committed to Kansas State, he announced on social media Tuesday.

Ross spent one season with Alabama, and didn’t get much time on the field. He played only in the Crimson Tide’s win over Mercer late in the regular season.

The 6-foot-4, 239-pound Ross joined the Crimson Tide as a four-star recruit out of Liberty North in the Kansas City area. He was ranked as the No. 15 edge in the class by the 247Sports composite.

Ross was a three-star transfer portal prospect according to 247, which ranked him as the No. 18 edge in the portal this cycle. He considered Kansas State during his original recruitment out of high school, and now moves closer to home with the transfer.

He entered the transfer portal Jan. 3 after the Crimson Tide finished its 2024 season with a loss to Michigan in the ReliaQuest Bowl. He joins Keanu Koht (transfer to Vanderbilt) and Que Robinson (out of eligibility) as departures from Alabama’s edge group.

Qua Russaw, Yhonzae Pierre and Noah Carter remain at Alabama at the position, along with incoming freshman Justin Hill. Jah-Marien Latham also played some edge, and has not revealed whether he will return to Alabama for 2025.

The portal is officially closed for undergraduate player entry. Alabama’s players got an extra five-day window to enter following the end of the season.

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Krispy Kreme is teaming up with this breakfast icon for 3 new flavors

Krispy Kreme has launched three new doughnuts in partnership with one of America’s most popular breakfast brands: Pop-Tarts.

The Crazy Good Doughnut Collection, available for a limited time, features a mashup of doughnut and Pop-Tart flavors.

“Pop-Tarts aren’t just for the toaster – they can infuse culinary creativity to delight consumers,” said Jessica Waller, General Manager, Kellanova Away From Home, in a press release. “Krispy Kreme has done an incredible job bringing this opportunity to life, combining their iconic doughnuts with the beloved flavors of Pop-Tarts to create a truly one-of-a-kind experience for fans of both brands. We’re proud of this partnership to bring Crazy Good to doughnuts and doughnut lovers in unexpected ways.”

Here’s a look at the lineup:

Pop-Tarts Frosted Strawberry Doughnut – Krispy Kreme’s unglazed shell doughnut filled with strawberry filling, dipped in shortbread icing, topped with shortbread pieces, sugar sprinkles, strawberry filling drizzle and a strawberry Pop-Tarts Bites.

Pop-Tarts Frosted Chocolatey Fudge Doughnut – Original glazed doughnut dipped in chocolate icing topped with brownie batter flavored buttercreme, crushed Frosted Chocolatey Fudge Pop-Tarts® Bites and white nonpareils.

Pop-Tarts Frosted Brown Sugar Cinnamon Doughnut – Cinnamon sugar doughnut topped with brown sugar cinnamon cream cheese flavored buttercreme and a Frosted Cinnamon Roll Pop-Tarts Bites tart.

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Alabama sisters face murder-for-hire trial over custody dispute

Two sisters Baldwin County are facing trial in an alleged murder-for-hire conspiracy.

On Monday, Jessica Montgomery pleaded guilty to participating in the plot to murder Raul Mina by assisting Rebecca Murphy, her partner.

Murphy was hired as a hit-woman by sisters Mitzy Gaye Smith, Judy Owen and Sandra Smith, according to an FBI affidavit.

However, instead of following through with the murder, Murphy provided information to the FBI.

Murphy pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit murder for hire and possession of a firearm by a forbidden person in September.

In October, Sandra Smith pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit murder for hire as her two sisters continue to face trial.

Mina, who is from Louisiana, was in a custody battle. According to the affidavit, the sisters wanted Mina killed because they said that he was abusive to Mitzy’s daughter and grandchildren.

Murphy was initially approached by the sisters in February 2024 to perform the hit.

After Murphy’s dog got sick, Owen helped cover the remaining veterinarian bill of $500 but said that Murphy would have to repay the favor by killing Mina.

According to the affidavit, this led to Murphy taking part in three separate trips to Louisiana.

The first trip the included discussions of how to carry out the plot by injecting Mina with heroine to make it appear as a drug overdose.

“Since Mina was a drug user, Grimes and Owen wanted the murder to appear as an overdose,” the affidavit stated.

“They wanted Murphy to inject Mina with a lethal dose of heroine via a needle. However, they did not care if Murphy had to slit Mina’s throat, as long as she got the job done. They stated they had already paid Edward Lane $10,000 to murder Mina, but he ran off with the money. Murphy agreed to the scheme, but stated they had to pay her more.”

The second trip involved Owen telling Murphy to kill Mina outside a courthouse after he left a child custody hearing. Murphy refused, saying it was broad daylight and there were too many cameras.

After being provided a gun by the sisters, Murphy and Montgomery went back to Louisiana and stayed a whole week but did not attempt to kill Mina.

Murphy was paid approximately $1,010 between March 7 and April 21. Communications between the sisters demonstrated their ire with Murphy as each day passed and Mina was still alive, the affidavit showed.

Murphy eventually gave consent to the FBI to search her phone about the conspiracy on May 3.

Murphy’s sentencing hearing is set for Jan. 13.

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Singer with legendary 1960s folk music trio dead at 86

Peter Yarrow, the singer-songwriter best known as one-third of Peter, Paul and Mary, the folk-music trio whose impassioned harmonies transfixed millions as they lifted their voices in favor of civil rights and against war, has died. He was 86.

Yarrow, who also co-wrote the group’s most enduring song, “Puff the Magic Dragon,” died Tuesday in New York, publicist Ken Sunshine said. Yarrow had bladder cancer for the past four years.

“Our fearless dragon is tired and has entered the last chapter of his magnificent life. The world knows Peter Yarrow the iconic folk activist, but the human being behind the legend is every bit as generous, creative, passionate, playful, and wise as his lyrics suggest,” his daughter Bethany said in a statement.

During an incredible run of success spanning the 1960s, Yarrow, Noel Paul Stookey and Mary Travers released six Billboard Top 10 singles, two No. 1 albums and won five Grammys.

They also brought early exposure to Bob Dylan by turning two of his songs, “Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right” and “Blowin’ in the Wind,” into Billboard Top 10 hits as they helped lead an American renaissance in folk music. They performed “Blowin’ in the Wind” at the 1963 March on Washington at which the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his famous “I Have a Dream” speech.

After an eight-year hiatus to pursue solo careers, the trio reunited in 1978 for a “Survival Sunday,” an anti-nuclear-power concert that Yarrow had organized in Los Angeles. They would remain together until Travers’ death in 2009. Upon her passing, Yarrow and Stookey continued to perform both separately and together.

Born May 31, 1938, in New York, Yarrow was raised in an upper middle class family he said placed high value on art and scholarship. He took violin lessons as a child, later switching to guitar as he came to embrace the work of such folk-music icons as Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger.

Upon graduating from Cornell University in 1959, he returned to New York, where he worked as a struggling Greenwich Village musician until connecting with Stookey and Travers. Although his degree was in psychology, he had found his true calling in folk music at Cornell when he worked as a teaching assistant for a class in American folklore his senior year.

“I did it for the money because I wanted to wash dishes less and play guitar more,” he told the late record company executive Joe Smith. But as he led the class in song, he began to discover the emotional impact music could have on an audience.

“I saw these young people at Cornell who were basically very conservative in their backgrounds opening their hearts up and singing with an emotionality and a concern through this vehicle called folk music,” he said. “It gave me a clue that the world was on its way to a certain kind of movement, and that folk music might play a part in it and that I might play a part in folk music.”

Soon after returning to New York, he met impresario Albert Grossman, who would go on to manage Dylan, Janis Joplin and others and who at the time was looking to put together a group that would rival the Kingston Trio, which in 1958 had a hit version of the traditional folk ballad “Tom Dooley.”

But Grossman wanted a trio with a female singer and a member who could be funny enough to keep an audience engaged with comic patter. For the latter, Yarrow suggested a guitar-strumming Greenwich Village comic he’d seen named Noel Stookey.

Stookey, who would use his middle name as a member of the group, happened to be a friend of Travers, who as a teenager had performed and recorded with Pete Seeger and others. Gripped by stage fright, she was reluctant to join the pair at first, changing her mind after she heard how well her contralto voice melded with Yarrow’s tenor and Stookey’s baritone.

“We called Noel up. He was there,” Yarrow said, recalling the first time the three performed together. “We mentioned a bunch of folk songs, which he didn’t know because he didn’t have a real folk-music background, and wound up singing ‘Mary Had a Little Lamb.’ And it was immediately great, was just as clear as a bell, and we started working.”

After months of rehearsal the three became an overnight sensation when their first album, 1962′s eponymous “Peter, Paul and Mary,” reached No. 1 on the Billboard chart. Their second, “In the Wind,” reached No. 4 and their third, “Moving,” put them back at No. 1.

From their earliest albums, the trio sang out against war and injustice in songs like Seeger’s “If I Had a Hammer” and “Where Have all the Flowers Gone,” Dylan’s “Blowin’ in the Wind” and “When the Ship Comes In” and Yarrow’s own “Day is Done.”

They could also show a soft and poignant side, particularly on “Puff the Magic Dragon,” which Yarrow had written during his Cornell years with college friend Leonard Lipton.

It tells the tale of Jackie Paper, a young boy who embarks on countless adventures with his make-believe dragon friend until he outgrows such childhood fantasies and leaves a sobbing, heartbroken Puff behind. As Yarrow explains: “A dragon lives forever, but not so little boys.”

Some insisted they heard drug references in the song, a contention at the heart of a famous scene in the film “Meet the Parents,” when Ben Stiller angers his girlfriend’s tightly wound father (Robert De Niro) by saying “puff” refers to marijuana smoke. Yarrow maintained it reflected the loss of childhood innocence and nothing more.

After recording their last No. 1 hit, a 1969 cover of John Denver’s “Leaving on a Jet Plane,” the trio split up the following year to pursue solo careers.

That same year Yarrow had pleaded guilty to taking indecent liberties with a 14-year-old girl who had come to his hotel room with her older sister to ask for autographs. The pair found him naked when he answered the door and let them in. Yarrow, who resumed his career after serving three months in jail, was pardoned by President Jimmy Carter in 1981. Over the decades, he apologized repeatedly.

“I fully support the current movements demanding equal rights for all and refusing to allow continued abuse and injury — most particularly of a sexual nature, of which I am, with great sorrow, guilty,” he told The New York Times in 2019 after being disinvited from a festival over the sentence.

Over the years, Yarrow continued to write and co-write songs, including the 1976 hit “Torn Between Two Lovers” for Mary MacGregor. He received an Emmy nomination in 1979 for the animated film “Puff the Magic Dragon.”

Later songs include the civil rights anthem “No Easy Walk to Freedom,” co-written with Margery Tabankin, and “Light One Candle,” calling for peace in Lebanon.

Yarrow, who with Travers and Stookey had supported Democratic Sen. Eugene McCarthy’s 1968 presidential bid, met the Minnesota senator’s niece, Mary Beth McCarthy, at a campaign event. The couple married the following year. They had two children before divorcing.

In addition to his ex-wife and daughter, he is survived by a son, Christopher, and a granddaughter, Valentina.

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Trump proposes new name for the Gulf of Mexico: ‘It has a beautiful ring’

President-elect Donald Trump announced his plans to rename the “Gulf of Mexico” to the “Gulf of America” in a press conference this morning at Mar-a-Lago.

“We are going be changing — the the opposite of Biden closing everything up and getting rid of 50 to 60 trillion worth of assets — we’ll be changing the name of the Gulf of Mexico to the gulf of America, which has a beautiful ring,” he said.

“That covers a lot of territory, The Gulf of America. What a beautiful name. It is appropriate. It’s appropriate.”

“And Mexico has to stop allowing millions of people to pour into our country.”

This led into Trump commenting that the U.S. has a large trade deficit with both Mexico and Canada.

In November, Trump threatened to impose tariffs on products from Canada and Mexico if the two nations don’t stop what he called the flow of drugs and migrants across their borders.

He said he would impose a 25% tax on all products entering the U.S. from Canada and Mexico as one of his first executive orders.

He has also threatened to carry out mass deportations of undocumented migrants, accusing them of increasing crime in the country.

Shortly after the press conference, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., took to X to back Trump’s vision.

“President Trump’s second term is off to a GREAT start,” she wrote.

“I’ll be introducing legislation ASAP to officially change the name of the Gulf of Mexico to its rightful name, the Gulf of America!”

Public response has been mixed, with some X users supporting the idea, others rallying against it, and even more questioning if it is even within Trump’s powers to rename the Gulf.

“Can he actually do it?” one user wrote.

Alabama is one of several states that has shoreline on the Gulf of Mexico.

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UAB lands commitment from UTEP transfer running back, Decatur native

A former Alabama high school standout is returning to his home state.

Austin High alum and Decatur native Jevon Jackson announced his commitment to play for UAB on Tuesday, returning to Alabama for his final year of eligibility.

Jackson spent the 2024 season at UTEP, running the ball 191 times for 754 yards and four touchdowns as the Miners’ leading rusher.

Before his time in El Paso, he played three seasons at FCS Austin Peay before following coach Scotty Walden to UTEP. In 2023, he ran for 1,373 yards and 10 touchdowns to earn first team All-United Athletic Conference honors.

In three seasons at Austin Peay, he ran for 1,980 yards and 15 touchdowns while catching 13 passes for 81 yards and a touchdown.

As a senior at Austin High School under Jeremy Perkins, he earned second-team all-state honors in Class 7A at running back after running for 1,166 yards and 16 touchdowns.

He was an AHSAA North-South All-Star Football Game selection and graded a 3-star recruit out of high school, picking Austin Peay over offers from Troy, Arkansas State, Georgia State, Samford, North Alabama and Southern Illinois.

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Gov. Kay Ivey salutes new Miss America from Alabama: ‘Incredibly deserving of this honor’

Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey offered her congratulations to the new Miss America, Abbie Stockard, in social media posts this week. Stockard, who competed for the national title as Miss Alabama, won the national crown on Sunday, Jan. 5, in Orlando, Florida.

“Our very own Miss Alabama, Abbie Stockard, has won the title of Miss America!” Ivey said in a Sunday night post on X (formerly Twitter). “I’ve had the pleasure of meeting Abbie, and I know firsthand what an outstanding young woman she is. She is incredibly deserving of this honor. Congratulations, Abbie!”

Ivey also trumpeted Stockard’s win with the same message in an Instagram reel and Facebook story.

Stockard, who grew up in Vestavia Hills, is the fourth Miss Alabama to become Miss America and the first Miss America from Alabama in 20 years. She’s following in the footsteps of previous winners Deidre Downs, Miss America 2005; Heather Whitestone, Miss America 1995; and Yolande Betbeze, Miss America 1951.

READ: Who is Abbie Stockard? Miss America 2025 is the fourth winner from Alabama

Ivey and Stockard share a kinship as sorority sisters, through Auburn University and Alpha Gamma Delta. Stockard, 22, is a nursing student at Auburn University and a member of Alpha Gamma Delta. Ivey, 80, an Auburn alum, pledged the sorority in the 1960s.

Stockard traveled to Montgomery to meet Alabama’s governor in October 2024, about four months after her win as Miss Alabama. “What an honor it was to meet with Alabama’s Governor, Kay Ivey!” Stockard said in an Instagram post. “We had a wonderful time discussing my work for Cystic Fibrosis advocacy across the state and giving a glimpse into the next few months as I prepare for Miss America!”

Stockard’s philanthropic platform as Miss Alabama, and now as Miss America, is Be the Change: Find a Cure — Cystic Fibrosis Awareness.

Another Miss Alabama winner with Auburn ties, Lauren Bradford, met Ivey in Montgomery after her win in the state pageant. Bradford, Miss Alabama 2021, is an Auburn University alum and a member of Alpha Gamma Delta. She was named first runner-up at Miss America 2022.

“I had a great visit with Miss Alabama 2021 Lauren Bradford today discussing her historic win as the 100th Miss Alabama, our @auburnalphagam sisterhood, our beloved @auburnu & most importantly #COVID19 vaccinations,” Ivey said in an Instagram post on Aug. 5, 2021. She and Bradford can be seen in a video clip saying, “Get vaccinated, Alabama!”

The Miss Alabama organization posted about Bradford’s meeting with Ivey on Facebook, saying “Thank you, Governor Ivey, for your hospitality.”

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Tuberville’s bill to block transgender athletes from women’s sports expected to get floor vote

U.S. Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R- Ala., has reintroduced a piece of legislation to ban transgender athletes from participating in women’s sports with the support of 23 Republican colleagues this year.

The bill, known as The Protection of Women and Girls in Sports Act, has moved forward under new Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., and a vote could come within the next week or so, according to a report from Fox News Digital.

The act defines gender under Title IX to be “recognized based solely on a person’s reproductive biology and genetics at birth,” rather than how an individual chooses to identify.

If passed, it would ban federal funding from going toward athletic programs that allow transgender athletes to participate in women’s and girls’ sports.

Tuberville has been pursuing this legislation since The Biden Administration proposed new Title IX regulations for the 2023-24 school year to include:

  • Protections for transgender and nonbinary students
  • Expanded definition of sexual harassment
  • New standards for determining the outcome of sexual assault cases
  • More protections for pregnant and parenting students

Although the updates were ultimately scrapped, Tuberville said “Congress has to ensure this never happens again.”

“President Trump ran on the issue of saving women’s sports and won in a landslide,” he said in a statement to Fox News Digital.

“70% of Americans agree—men don’t belong in women’s sports or locker rooms. I have said many times that I think Title IX is one of the best things to come out of Washington. But in the last few years, it has been destroyed.”

In 2021, Alabama passed a law that bans transgender athletes from competing on public school sports teams if the sex on their birth certificate does not match the rest of the team.

The state high school sports association told AL.com at the time that it was not aware of any student athletes impacted.

Several states have sought to ban trans participation in women’s sports, despite low numbers of transgender student athletes.

Roughly 30 trans athletes competed in high school sports during the 2020-21 academic year in the 14 states that recorded such data, a USA Today investigation found.

Tuberville’s cosponsors include U.S. Sens. James Risch and Mike Crapo of Idaho, Ron Johnson, R-Wis., Thom Tillis and Ted Budd of North Carolina, Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va., Kevin Cramer, R-N.D., Cindy Hyde-Smith and Roger Wicker of Mississippi, Tom Cotton, R-Ark., James Lankford, R-Okla., Steve Daines and Tim Sheehy of Montana, Roger Marshall, R-Kan., Mike Lee, R-Utah, John Kennedy, R-La., John Barrasso and Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming, Eric Schmitt, R-Mo., Marsha Blackburn and Bill Hagerty of Tennessee, Katie Britt, R-Ala., and Pete Ricketts, R-Neb.

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