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Iconic Fountainhead home built by Frank Lloyd Wright is on the market for $2.5M

The Fountainhead, a “masterpiece of organic architecture designed by the legendary Frank Lloyd Wright,” is currently on the market for $2.5 million, according to listing agent Douglas Adams. The home is located in the Fondren neighborhood, a “vibrant mid-century community” in Jackson, Miss., Adams said.

Click through the gallery at the top of this story to see photos of the property.

Construction on the home, listed on the National Register of Historic Places, began in 1951 and was completed in 1954 when Wright was in his 80s. He died in 1959 at age 91.

Wright-designed homes occasionally come on the market, often the smaller houses he called “Usonian,” which were built to be affordable for middle-income families. He built 60 Usonian homes. One, the Rosenbaum House, is located in Florence, Ala., and is open as a museum.

The Fountainhead, a “masterpiece of organic architecture designed by the legendary Frank Lloyd Wright,” is currently on the market for $2.5 million. Located in Jackson, Miss., the home is one of Wright’s Usonian designs. The 3,558-square-foot home has three bedrooms and four bathrooms.G Douglas Adams Photography

Wright was known for designing original furniture to specifically fit his homes, which is typically sold with the home.

Listing details

Address: 306 Glenway Drive, Jackson, MS

Price: $2.5 million

Built: 1951

Size: 3,558 square feet, 3 bedrooms, 4 bathrooms

Lot Size: 0.97 acres

Agents: Douglas Adams and David A Smith, Crescent Sotheby’s Intl Realty in New Orleans, 504-944-3605

Adams said the Fountainhead “seamlessly integrates Wright’s iconic principles of natural harmony and innovative design” and was “designed specifically for the contours of its site, and this site generated the building’s form.”

The Fountainhead
The Fountainhead, a “masterpiece of organic architecture designed by the legendary Frank Lloyd Wright,” is currently on the market for $2.5 million. Located in Jackson, Miss., the home is one of Wright’s Usonian designs. The 3,558-square-foot home has three bedrooms and four bathrooms.G Douglas Adams Photography

The 3,558-square-foot home has three bedrooms, two full baths and two half baths.

“Fountainhead was built with no stud walls in the house, no sheetrock, brick, tile or paint and boasts of exquisite-exceptionally durable Heart Tidewater Red Cypress wood for the walls and ceilings,” the listing says. “The roof has the original copper sheeting.”

The home will appeal to admirers of Wright or those seeking a home that “embodies timeless beauty,” Adams said.

The Fountainhead
The Fountainhead, a “masterpiece of organic architecture designed by the legendary Frank Lloyd Wright,” is currently on the market for $2.5 million. Located in Jackson, Miss., the home is one of Wright’s Usonian designs. The 3,558-square-foot home has three bedrooms and four bathrooms.G Douglas Adams Photography

“Set amid lush landscaping, this property is a tranquil retreat while remaining moments from Fondren’s eclectic shops, restaurants, and cultural attractions,” the listing said.

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Asking Eric: New friend’s cooking turns the stomach

Dear Eric: A relatively new friend has invited me to a third dinner at her home, and I do not want to attend. Her first two meals were simply not well-prepared and not good.

One meal included fish that had an unappetizing odor as she fried it and also had an unpleasant “off” taste when I tried to eat it. She also served barely warm, bland mashed potatoes and overcooked, unseasoned vegetables. No butter or sauces for anything. When I helped her clean up after the meal, I placed the leftover fish into the refrigerator. I could tell the interior was not very cold. Perhaps the fish had been sitting in the refrigerator uncooked for too long a time and was beginning to spoil.

The second meal at her home consisted of hummus that had been sitting out uncovered so long it had started to develop a crust. Also, there were crackers and plain, overcooked broccoli to eat with the hummus. I ate only a small amount at each meal, telling her I was not very hungry.

Since I have decided not to eat another meal that she has cooked, I do not know how to tell her I am not interested in a third invitation to dinner.

She has asked me to pick a date when I can come. Other than her cooking, she makes a good friend. How can I bow out gracefully from attending her home for meals?

– Lost My Appetite

Dear Appetite: You’ve painted quite a vivid picture. After reading this letter, I’m not hungry either. I can see why you don’t want to go back.

Criticizing another person’s cooking can be a tricky thing. If you think there’s something technically awry, like the temperature of her refrigerator, you can alert her – and potentially help her avoid illness. But it sounds like the bigger issue is one of … well, taste.

I do hate being avoidant, but in this case the most palatable path may be to ask for another activity other than dinner. Perhaps, it’s a movie or an outing instead. You could even reverse the invitation and have her over. If you emphasize that you’re very interested in spending time together, but you’d rather eat at home, you honor her intention without having to make an unsavory compromise.

Read more Asking Eric and other advice columns.

Send questions to R. Eric Thomas at [email protected] or P.O. Box 22474, Philadelphia, PA 19110. Follow him on Instagram and sign up for his weekly newsletter at rericthomas.com.

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Alabama’s bowl victory in ’53 was an absolute blowout, ‘near perfect’

EDITOR’S NOTE: Every day until Aug. 29, Creg Stephenson is counting down significant numbers in Alabama football history, both in the lead-up to the 2025 football season and in commemoration of the Crimson Tide’s first national championship 100 years ago. The number could be attached to a year, a uniform number or even a football-specific statistic. We hope you enjoy.

The most-decisive Alabama bowl victory wasn’t coached by Nick Saban, Paul “Bear” Bryant or even Wallace Wade, but by Harold “Red” Drew.

The Crimson Tide set numerous school postseason records — some that still stand — in a 61-6 rout of Syracuse in the 1953 Orange Bowl. Alabama capped a 10-2 season by pummeling the hapless Orangemen before a crowd of 66,208 on New Year’s Day in Miami.

“A ‘souped-up’ University of Alabama riptide all but chased the boys from Syracuse back across the Mason-Dixon Line yesterday as they amassed the most lop-sided victory in the history of major bowl competition,” Zipp Newman wrote in the following day’s Birmingham News, using a Civil War metaphor, as was the sports-writing custom at the time. “The score: 61-6 speaks for itself.

“The boys from Tuscaloosa went into the game with the heady scent of orange blossoms but emerged four quarters later with the sweet fruits of victory after pouring on an astonishing performance of offensive football.”

Alabama had been a good, but not great team during the 1952 regular season. In addition to its nine victories, the Crimson Tide lost 20-0 at Tennessee in mid-October and 7-3 in mid-November to a Georgia Tech team that finished undefeated and ranked No. 2 in the polls behind national champion Michigan State.

But Alabama got hot down the stretch, routing a good Maryland team 27-7 in Mobile on Nov. 22 and shutting out a not-so-good Auburn team in the Iron Bowl on Nov. 29. That set up the Orange Bowl matchup with Syracuse, which was 7-2 with losses to Michigan State (48-7) and a team of former college and professional players from Bolling Field Air Force Base (13-12).

Ben Schwartzwelder’s Orangemen — making their first-ever bowl appearance — were a year away from signing future superstar Jim Brown and a half-decade from becoming a national power that would win the 1959 national championship. An Associated Press report prior to the 1953 Orange Bowl set Alabama as a two-touchdown favorite, with Schwartzwelder calling the Crimson Tide “the most powerful team I ever saw.”

The same report indicated that Syracuse “hopes to spring an upset with Pat Stark, a good-passing quarterback, and Bill Wetzel, 205-pound fullback who’s just back from driving a truck in Korea.” It was not to be, to say the least.

“I’m proud of my boys,” Drew said after the game. “They were fired up. I thought we would win. But I had no idea it would be by such a margin.

“I’m serious when I say this group of kids are the finest and greatest fighters I’ve ever coached.”

Alabama coach Red Drew, right, shakes hands with Bobby Marlow on the sideline during the 1953 Orange Bowl victory over Syracuse. (Photo courtesy of the Paul W. Bryant Museum)Paul W. Bryant Museum photo

Alabama’s 61 points and 56-point margin of victory remain school bowl records. The Crimson Tide’s 586 yards of total offense has been exceeded only once, by the 621 yards against Ohio State in the 2021 College Football Playoff National Championship Game.

Among those 586 yards of offense were 300 passing, a rarity in those days. Newman, who had covered Alabama football since 1919, wrote that he couldn’t remember the last time the Crimson Tide had gained so many yards through the air in one game.

(The day ultimately proved to be a sad one in the state of Alabama, as news spread that country music superstar Hank Williams — a Butler County native who grew up in Montgomery — had died from heart failure while traveling by car to a show in Ohio. Williams, who had battled alcoholism and other health issues for years, was just 29.)

Alabama led only 7-6 after one quarter and 21-6 at halftime, but poured on 40 points in the second half. The game got so out-of-hand that All-America halfback Bobby Marlow — who had run for 950 yards during the regular season — carried the ball just 10 times for 32 yards in the Orange Bowl, scoring on a 1-yard run in the second quarter.

Starting quarterback Clell Hobson passed for 207 yards and two touchdowns, while freshman backup Bart Starr added 93 and another score. Fullback Tommy Lewis ran for 77 yards two TDs, while halfback Bobby Luna had a 38-yard touchdown run and a 27-yard scoring reception and Corky Tharp caught a 50-yard TD.

Alabama’s defense also rose to the occasion, holding Syracuse to 75 yards rushing and intercepting five passes. Hootie Ingram (the Crimson Tide’s future athletics director) had one of those interceptions and also returned a punt 80 yards for a touchdown, while Marvin Hill ran back an interception 60 yards for another score.

At one point late in the game, Alabama assistant coach Lew Bostick walked up to the bench and asked, “Is there anyone who hasn’t played?” No one answered in the affirmative.

“I couldn’t stop them,” Drew said. “This bunch just loves to play football.”

Wrote Newman, “It was about as near perfect for Alabama in a bowl game as it could possibly have been.”

Coming Wednesday: Our countdown continues with No. 52, one of Alabama’s early dual-threat quarterback superstars.

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Asking Eric: Longtime boyfriend hesitant to introduce me to others

Dear Eric: I have been with my boyfriend for 14 years. We live about 15 minutes’ drive apart.

He is widowed and I’m divorced. We both have one adult son. Mine is 31 and his is 40.

I haven’t met his son or any friends/family members, though he knows mine.

My boyfriend says he had an abusive dad, and he doesn’t much like his two siblings or their families. He only has one real friend but won’t introduce us.

I asked him why once and he said he “likes his privacy.” I put it down to his idiosyncrasies but still find it odd.

We have always talked for hours on a nightly basis. Previously, he has gone quiet for a week or two at times. But now, although we haven’t had a falling out, I haven’t seen him in eight months.

I miss him and told him that, but nothing changed, we kept talking. Now I feel like I am wasting my time on someone I love, who clearly doesn’t feel the same way. I am not good at letting go, so please, what is your suggestion here? I don’t want a phone-only connection.

– Short-Distance Love

Dear Love: Something’s gotta give. If he’s happy to talk for hours every night, then he can and should spend 15 minutes of one of those hours, making the trek to your house for an in-person talk. Ask for that. If he can’t or won’t do it, it doesn’t mean he doesn’t love you, but it may mean that he’s not in a position to be who you need right now.

That said, multiple things can be true here. Your boyfriend has communicated – perhaps not entirely effectively – his boundaries and the traumas from which they stem. Sometimes when boundaries are communicated, they can sound like rejections even if they’re not.

It’s concerning that, after 14 years, you haven’t met his son or his sole friend. There are some indicators that he’s dealing with heavy stuff – the past abuse, going quiet for a time. He may be happiest letting the relationship he has with you flourish away from other, more complicated relationships. But he’s not doing a great job integrating his coping mechanisms into his love life. That can be hard, but it’s not insurmountable. A loving relationship needs care, empathy, compromise and understanding in order to survive. So, if you’re not getting that, or not getting it in the way you want, it may be healthiest for you to choose separation.

Read more Asking Eric and other advice columns.

Send questions to R. Eric Thomas at [email protected] or P.O. Box 22474, Philadelphia, PA 19110. Follow him on Instagram and sign up for his weekly newsletter at rericthomas.com.

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Country music star learned from affair with married man: ‘I’ve been cheated on, too’

LeAnn Rimes recently opened up about her affair with now-husband Eddie Cibrian.

Rimes, 42, and Cibrian, 52, were married in 2011 after meeting three years earlier on the set of the Lifetime movie “Northern Lights.”

The “Can’t Fight the Moonlight” singer told “Flow Space” she was the target of hate as a result.

“I realized very quickly that there are a lot of women who’ve been hurt,” Rimes said. “Like, I’ve been on both sides of that coin — I’ve been cheated on, too, so I know that feeling. But so many women don’t know what to do with that anger… I was a target that was just easily projected upon. And once I realized that, things got a lot easier.”

Cibrian was married to Brandi Glanville, while Rimes was married to Dean Sheremet at the time of the affair.

She went on to say she didn’t take the backlash “personally,” and instead reminded herself that “this is not all my pain to carry.”

“I know what I’m responsible for in the situation and making amends for that,” she said. “But you know, the world’s pain is not mine to carry, and I think that really got thrown at me for a long time.”

In 2010, Rimes told PEOPLE she considered her affair with Cibrian “one of the most selfish things that I could possibly do, in hurting someone else.”

“I take responsibility for everything I’ve done. I hate that people got hurt, but I don’t regret the outcome,” she said.

Mark Heim is a reporter for The Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter @Mark_Heim. He can be heard on “The Opening Kickoff” on WNSP-FM 105.5 FM in Mobile or on the free Sound of Mobile App from 6 to 9 a.m. daily.

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Miss Manners: My age is changing how I approach chivalry on public transit

DEAR MISS MANNERS: I am a gentleman who strives to live a mannerly life. In that regard, when riding public transportation, I offer my seat to ladies who are standing. I also wait for ladies to leave an elevator before me.

Now that I am well beyond retirement age, does that change any expectations and norms? When, if ever, do I keep my seat and allow younger men the privilege of offering their seat to the fairer sex?

GENTLE READER: First, please get off those elevators when you are in front, instead of creating confusion by trying to stand back in favor of any ladies who are behind you. “Ladies first” never applied there.

For your habit of yielding seats, Miss Manners commends you, and hopes that ladies always treat the gesture graciously, whether or not they accept.

But it is not only your age that has changed; our system of precedence is in flux. Gender is becoming less of a factor, as it can do damage in the workplace, where deferring to colleagues as ladies undermines their professional identities. There, precedence should be determined by the job’s hierarchy.

And in society at large, age is becoming more of a factor. Should a young lady offer you a seat, Miss Manners hopes you will also respond graciously.

This is not to say that the gentlemanliness you practice should be abandoned — much less condemned, as is done by some. Tradition has its place, and these gestures add grace to society.

So the short answer is: Keep offering seats to ladies if you don’t mind standing; if you do mind, then stay seated.

Please send your questions to Miss Manners at missmanners.com, by email to [email protected], or through postal mail to Miss Manners, Andrews McMeel Syndication, 1130 Walnut St., Kansas City, MO 64106.

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Parole board, resigning lawmakers, UA president’s salary: Down in Alabama

Ivey makes a change

Gov. Kay Ivey has made a change at the Alabama parole board, reports AL.com’s Ivana Hrynkiw.

With parole-board chair Leigh Gwathney supplying a nearly automatic “no” vote, the board’s 2023 parole rate tumbled well below the board’s own guidelines. It’s rebounded somewhat, although Gwathney has remained a reliable “no” in most cases.

That’s ignited the debate over just how tight the parole board ought to be. The board’s stated guidelines called for a parole rate around 80%, and some officials and former Alabama chief justices from both parties have called for parole to be more attainable for those who qualify. State Attorney General Steve Marshall was among those wanting to keep many of those inmates behind bars. Marshall just last week called on the governor to reappoint Gwathney to the chair of the parole board.

Instead, Ivey replaced Gwathney with Hal Nash, the chief corrections deputy for the Jackson County Sheriff’s Office. Ivey called Nash a “tough-on-crime, fair and pro-law-enforcement candidate with leadership experience.”

He takes over the chair position immediately.

New school in Madison County

A new, big middle school is going up next to Hazel Green High School, reports AL.com’s Megan Plotka.

It’ll enroll 1,200 seventh- and eighth-graders in northern Madison County and cost $53 million to build. Builders will break ground this month, and the school is expected to open for the 2027-28 school year.

Other coming changes to that school district include a new 12-classroom wing for Hazel Green High School and the transition of Meridianville Middle School to an intermediate school for fifth and sixth grades.

Union fight

Officials with the International Motors powertrain-manufacturing plant in Huntsville apparently aren’t going to just idly watch the United Auto Workers union move into their work force.

AL.com’s William Thornton reports that the company has made a case to its employees ahead of a possible election. Last week employees received a letter that read, in part: “To be clear, we strongly believe that selecting an outside organization like a union to represent you in your dealings with the Company (and having to join the union and pay union dues) is not necessary here in Huntsville.”

The UAW has spent time and money over the past couples years trying to get footholds in the South. In Alabama, it’s found disappointment, with an election loss at the Mercedes-Benz plant in Vance and a stalled effort at Hyundai in Montgomery.

Later, Legislature

A couple of state lawmakers are stepping aside.

Tom Butler, a Republican who’s represented parts of Madison and Limestone counties in the state legislature since 1982, is retiring from the Senate, reports AL.com’s Scott Turner. Butler is an 81-year-old retired pharmacist. Among other things, he’s been credited for his roles in road projects such as the four-laning of Alabama 53 to the Tennessee line and the future widening of Highway 72.

Also, the Alabama Daily News reported that state Rep. Debbie Wood, a Valley Republican, is moving out of her district (parts of Chambers and Lee counties) and will resign. She told Alabama Daily News that her husband landed a job in the Florida Panhandle so they’re moving near the state line.

By the Numbers

$800,000

That’s new University of Alabama President Peter Mohler’s salary. He’ll also receive a $30,000 relocation bonus and is in line for performance bonuses of $75,000 in 2025 and $150,000 in 2026.

More Alabama News

The podcast

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Dear Annie: I’m hiding my new relationship from my kids

Dear Annie: I am a 60-year-old divorced mom with three grown children in their 30s. I have spent most of my adult life putting my family first, especially after my marriage ended more than a decade ago. I raised my kids mostly on my own, worked full time and never really dated seriously again. Part of that was fear, and part of it was being too busy trying to hold everything together.

Now, for the first time in years, I have developed a close friendship with a male co-worker who is about my age. We have worked together for a long time, and over time, that connection has grown into something more intimate. We both agreed that we are not looking for anything serious — just companionship, affection and a little joy in an otherwise routine life.

The problem is, I have not told my children. I worry they will see it as inappropriate or think I am making a mistake. They are very protective of me, and I can already imagine the raised eyebrows and awkward silences. Part of me feels I deserve to enjoy this chapter of my life without having to explain myself, but another part feels guilty, like I am hiding something.

Is it wrong for me to keep this relationship private? Should I tell my children, or is this part of my life none of their business? — Still a Woman, Not Just a Mom

Dear Still a Woman: You have every right to seek companionship and joy in this stage of your life. You spent years putting others first, and it is perfectly natural and healthy to want something that is just for you. Being a mother does not mean you stop being a woman with your own needs, desires and emotions.

Your relationship with your co-worker sounds respectful, mutual and grounded in emotional maturity. There is nothing shameful about wanting closeness, especially when it brings comfort and happiness.

That said, it is also understandable that you are worried about your children’s reactions. Adult children can be surprisingly quick to judge when it comes to their parents’ personal lives, especially if they are used to seeing you only in the role of Mom. They may not mean to be hurtful, but it can be jarring for them to realize that you have a life outside of them. Some adult children struggle with the idea that their parent is no longer just a caregiver or adviser, but a person with vulnerability, desire and autonomy.

But you are allowed to have boundaries, and not everything in your life needs to be shared or explained.

If you choose to tell them, frame it in a way that helps them understand that this is a positive and meaningful part of your life. Let them see that you are not asking for their permission or approval but simply letting them into a part of your world — on your terms. If you choose to keep it private, that is your right, too.

You have taken care of everyone else for so long. It is OK to take care of yourself now. You are still a mother, but you are also still a whole, vibrant person. Don’t lose sight of that.

Read more Dear Annie and other advice columns.

“How Can I Forgive My Cheating Partner?” is out now! Annie Lane’s second anthology — featuring favorite columns on marriage, infidelity, communication and reconciliation — is available as a paperback and e-book. Visit Creators Publishing for more information. Send your questions for Annie Lane to [email protected].

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Today’s daily horoscopes: July 8, 2025

Uranus takes about 84 years to journey through a sign. This is the first full day of Uranus in Gemini, kicking off a new era of communication — stretching from the whisper between friends to the pulse of planetary networks. The last time Uranus was here, the world cracked open through war, codebreaking, suburban sprawl and the birth of computing. Now, once again, thought becomes the battlefield — and the breakthrough.

ARIES (March 21-April 19). People will follow your lead when they believe you have a vision, even if they can’t see it, too. With today’s clarity, you can lay down a quick boundary or redirect a conversation that’s headed in a direction you simply don’t want to go.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You’ve changed. The others haven’t caught up to the new you yet, but they can sense that the old dynamic no longer fits. You’ll figure out where your growth quietly outpaces the pattern — and you’ll feel the power of choosing not to play along.

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Being trusted with someone’s world, however briefly, is a tremendous privilege. You’ll experience someone’s essence today, and it will color your mood like light through stained glass.

CANCER (June 22-July 22). You’ll be drawn to something you don’t usually do — and that’s the exact reason you should try it. A small departure from your routine leads to a big shift in energy and maybe even chemistry. One different move changes the whole rhythm, opening up possibilities you wouldn’t have seen from the usual groove.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). People notice when they’re not respected, even if they rarely notice when they are the ones who are not offering the respect a person or situation deserves. You’ve learned to lead with grace anyway. You’ll offer kindness today that will be remembered later.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You’ll spot the small adjustment that makes everything smoother, faster or more elegant. It may seem minor — rearranging a step, rewording a phrase, shifting timing slightly — but the effect is outsized.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). A sudden, intuitive flash moves you to act — and thank heavens you listened. The window is small, the timing tight. And yet, somehow, you’re exactly where you need to be. Your instincts are your secret superpower.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). There’s a difference between secrecy and privacy. You’re not hiding anything — you’re just choosing when and how to share. Your discernment makes others feel safe. People tell you things today they haven’t told anyone else.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You’re not in the mood to be confined by expectations — not yours, not theirs. Luckily, there’s room for improvisation. A surprising opportunity arises when you veer off the plan and follow your curiosity.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). People like you and want to impress you, so they offer their advice. It may feel like they are trying to tell you to be something other than you are. It’s not that. They want to matter to you and be part of your world.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You don’t need to explain a single thing. The results speak for themselves. Your calm is magnetic, your quiet confidence louder than applause. Let others make noise. You’ve already arrived.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Karma’s currency is nonlinear. What you give will circle back in surprising ways, from unlikely places. Don’t measure too closely. Just know fairness is real. The universe balances its books in its own brilliant time.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (July 8). You hold the emotional weather. Others flourish in your sunshine and breeziness; they cozy up to your warmth; they marvel at your coolness when the pressure is on, your chill when everyone needs to relax. Is it any surprise you’re given a leadership role? More highlights: hot intuition, a financial upgrade after one well-timed risk, and a deep relationship. Taurus and Aquarius adore you. Your lucky numbers are 3, 11, 12, 9 and 29.

CELEBRITY PROFILES: Kevin Bacon is one of Hollywood’s most enduring talents, known for his wide-ranging filmography (“Footloose,” “A Few Good Men”) and the beloved “Six Degrees” game that celebrates his prolific career. A classic Cancer, Bacon brings emotional intelligence and depth to every role, whether he’s playing a rebellious dancer or a haunted detective. His most recent: the dark, complex comedy “Sirens” — a perfect fit for this intuitive water sign.

Holiday Mathis’ debut novel, “How To Fail Epically in Hollywood,” is out now! This fast-paced romp about achieving Hollywood stardom is available as a paperback and e-book. Visit creatorspublishing.com for more information. Write Holiday Mathis at HolidayMathis.com.

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Barrage of gunfire in quiet east Birmingham neighborhood leaves 1 dead

Gunfire rang out in a quiet east Birmingham neighborhood, leaving one man dead and launching a search for a killer.

Just after 9:30 p.m. Monday, East Precinct officers received a call of shots fired in the 800 block of School Avenue Road, which is off Gene Reed Road in the Huffman area.

Officer Truman Fitzgerald said while officers were en route, the call was updated to a report of a person shot.

When police arrived on the scene, they found the victim unresponsive in the yard of a house. Birmingham Fire and Rescue Service pronounced him dead.

Fitzgerald said investigators believe the victim was visiting someone at the home when someone he may have known opened fire on him.

The number of shots fired, he said, was close to double digits.

“To have that many shots fired in such a quiet neighborhood, that’s why the calls started coming in the way they did,” Fitzgerald said. “Everyone in the neighborhood has been cooperative and we’re just hoping witnesses continue to come forward to speak to our detectives.

A motive has not yet been determined, and no arrests have been made.

Fitzgerald said homicide detectives will canvas the neighborhood tonight, and return again in the morning to do so again.

The victim is the city’s 39th homicide victim this year, and the first in more than two weeks.

“It’s unfortunate when you have a life lost,” Fitzgerald said. “In 2025 the narrative has been the decrease in homicides, however on a scene is not where we want to brag about that because the family that lost their loved one is not concerned with homicides being down 55 percent.”

Anyone with information is asked to call homicide detectives at 205-254-1764 or Crime Stoppers at 205-254-7777.

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