SYMBOLS: Bird--Yellowhammer; Flower--Camellia; Mineral--Hematite; Tree--Southern pine (longleaf yellow pine)
FLAG: Crimson St. Andrew's cross on white field
GOVERNOR: Guy Hunt (R) 1990
EXECUTIVE TERM: 4 years
VOTERS IN 1988 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION: 45.8% casting votes
ELECTORAL VOTES: 9
SENATORS: Richard C. Shelby (D) 1992, Howell Heflin (D) 1990
NUMBER OF U.S. REPRESENTATIVES: 7
AGE OF MAJORITY (FULL CIVIL RIGHTS): 19
AGE OF MARRIAGE W/CONSENT: 14
AGE OF MARRIAGE W/O CONSENT: 18
AGE OF BUYING ALCOHOL: 21
AGE OF LEAVING SCHOOL: 16
STATE FUNDING FOR ART: $0.4 per capita
STATE GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES: $1,413 per capita
FEDERAL INCOME TAXES PAID: $1,084 per capita
DISTRIBUTION OF FEDERAL FUNDS: $3,478 per capita
FEDERAL SPENDING, DEFENSE PROGRAMS: $3,733 (millions)
FEDERAL EMPLOYEES, CIVILIAN: 59,000
SOCIAL SECURITY RECIPIENTS: 16.7% of population
PUBLIC AID RECIPIENTS: 6.3% of population
FOOD STAMP RECIPIENTS: 10.3% of population
.CRIME IN ALABAMA
CRIME RATE, TOTAL: 4,562 offenses per 100,000 population
VIOLENT CRIME RATE: 559 offenses per 100,000 population
MURDERS: 9.9 per 100,000 population
FORCIBLE RAPE: 30 per 100,000 population
ROBBERY: 118 per 100,000 population
AGGRAVATED ASSAULT: 401 per 100,000 population
PROPERTY CRIME RATE: 4,003 offenses per 100,000 population
BURGLARY: 1,234 per 100,000 population
LARCENY-THEFT: 2,503 per 100,000 population
MOTOR VEHICLE THEFT: 267 per 100,000 population
PRISON INMATES: 12,357 total
PRISON INMATE RATE: 300 per 100,000 population
PRISONERS EXECUTED, 1980-1988: 3 executed
POLICE PROTECTION: 22.7 police per 10,000 population
LAWYERS: 597 population per lawyer
.ECONOMY OF ALABAMA
INCOME PER CAPITA: $12,851
DISPOSABLE PERSONAL INCOME: $11,040
GROSS STATE PRODUCT: $55,007 (millions)
GROSS STATE PRODUCT, AGRICULTURE: $1,331 (millions)
GROSS STATE PRODUCT, MINING: $1,389 (millions)
GROSS STATE PRODUCT, CONSTRUCTION: $1,754 (millions)
GROSS STATE PRODUCT, MANUFACTURING: $12,918 (millions)
GROSS STATE PRODUCT, TRANSPORTATION: $5,569 (millions)
GROSS STATE PRODUCT, WHOLESALE TRADE: $3,606 (millions)
GROSS STATE PRODUCT, RETAIL TRADE: $5,249 (millions)
GROSS STATE PRODUCT, FINANCE: $7,240 (millions)
GROSS STATE PRODUCT, SERVICES: $7,397 (millions)
GROSS STATE PRODUCT, GOVERNMENT: $8,554 (millions)
U.S. EXPORTS: $2,347 (millions)
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE CONTRACTS: $1,826 (millions)
PATENTS GRANTED: 267 (1988)
NEW BUSINESS FAILURES: 82 failures per 10,000 concerns
BLACK-OWNED FIRMS: 7,321 total
EMPLOYED/POPULATION RATIO: 56.8% employed of total population
FEMALE LABOR FORCE: 50.8% of labor force
UNEMPLOYMENT RATE: 7.2% unemployed
UNION MEMBERSHIP IN MANUFACTURING: 15.3% unionized
NEW HOUSING STARTS: 14,000 units
NONRESIDENTIAL CONSTRUCTION: $764 (millions)
MORTGAGE LOANS FORECLOSED: 2.5%
VALUE ADDED BY MANUFACTURE: $18,591 (millions)
MANUFACTURING WORKERS, CHANGE 1982-1987: 6.3%
EXPORT RELATED FACTORY EMPLOYMENT: 9.6% of total employment
RETAIL SALES PER HOUSEHOLD: $14,397
CHANGE IN RETAIL SALES PER HOUSEHOLD 1982-86: 37.8%
MINERALS PRODUCED (NON-FUELS): $447 (millions)
MINERAL FUELS PRODUCED: $1,728 (millions)
CRUDE PETROLEUM PRODUCTION: 21 million barrels
NATURAL GAS PRODUCTION: 117 billion cubic feet marketed
NET ELECTRICAL ENERGY GENERATION: 67.5 billion kWh
ELECTRICAL ENERGY INSTALLED CAPACITY: 19.9 million kW
NUCLEAR POWER PLANTS: 5
.AGRICULTURE OF ALABAMA
PRINCIPAL FARM COMMODITIES: Broilers, cattle, greenhouse, peanuts (71% of total)
PRINCIPAL CROPS: Peanuts, soybeans, hay, cotton lint
LAND IN FARMS: 11,000,000 acres
CROPLAND HARVESTED: 2,356,000 acres harvested
NUMBER OF FARMS: 47,000
SIZE OF FARMS: 226 acres per farm
CHANGE IN FARMLAND, 1982-87: -10.3%
VALUE OF FARM LAND AND BUILDINGS: $760 per acre
NET FARM INCOME: $967 (millions)
NET FARM INCOME/DEBT RATIO: 57.7%
BARLEY PRODUCTION: 0 bushels (thousands)
BARLEY YIELD: 0 bushels per acre
CORN PRODUCTION: 14,580 bushels (thousands)
CORN YIELD: 81 bushels per acre
COTTON PRODUCTION: 390 bales (thousands)
COTTON YIELD: 551 pounds per acre
HAY PRODUCTION: 1,540 tons (thousands)
HAY YIELD: 2.20 tons per acre
OATS PRODUCTION: 1,375 bushels (thousands)
OATS YIELD: 55 bushels per acre
POTATO PRODUCTION: 2,571 CWT (thousands)
POTATO YIELD: 199 CWT per acre
RICE PRODUCTION: 0 CWT (thousands)
SOYBEAN PRODUCTION: 11,970 bushels (thousands)
SOYBEAN YIELD: 21 bushels per acre
SUGARBEET PRODUCTION: 0 tons (thousands)
SUGARCANE PRODUCTION: 0 tons
TOBACCO PRODUCTION: 0 pounds (thousands)
TOBACCO YIELD: 0 pounds per acre
WHEAT PRODUCTION: 6,600 bushels (thousands)
WHEAT YIELD: 30 bushels per acre
BROILERS PRODUCED: 702.8 millions
TURKEYS RAISED: 50,000 millions
CATTLE AND CALVES: 1,780 on farms (1,000 head)
HOGS AND PIGS: 300 on farms (1,000 head)
.COMMUNICATIONS IN ALABAMA
INTERSTATE HIGHWAYS: 880 miles; 1,416 kilometers
MOTOR VEHICLE TRAVEL: 424 thousands of miles traveled per road mile
LICENSED DRIVERS: 604.4 per 1,000 population
MOTOR VEHICLE ACCIDENT DEATHS: 29 deaths per 100,000 population
REGISTERED AUTOMOBILES: 672 per 1,000 population
REGISTERED MOTORCYCLES: 12 per 1,000 population
DRIVERS EXCEEDING 55 MPH SPEED LIMIT: 57.9%
COMMERCIAL AM RADIO STATIONS: 153
COMMERCIAL FM RADIO STATIONS: 80
EDUCATIONAL FM RADIO STATIONS: 14
COMMERCIAL TELEVISION STATIONS: 20
EDUCATIONAL TELEVISION STATIONS: 9
DAILY NEWSPAPERS: 27
DAILY NEWSPAPER CIRCULATION: 0.18 papers per capita
.TRAVEL IN ALABAMA
STATE BOARD OF TOURISM: Alabama State Board of Tourism, 532 South Perry Street, Montgomery, 36104, (205) 261-4169
TOURIST ATTRACTIONS: Montgomery--State Capitol, White House of the Confederacy, the 1835 home of Jefferson Davis; Birmingham--art museum (Wedgwood collection), iron- and steel-making museum, Redmont Hotel, statue of Vulcan on Red Mountain, Birmingham Zoo; Mobile--Battleship Alabama, Oakleigh (1830 historic mansion/Museum), 4 historic districts, Fort Conde (reconstruction of 1720 settlement), Bellingrath Gardens, Gulf Shores and Dauphin Island beach resorts, Mardi Gras, Historic Homes Tour, Azalea Festival in March; Huntsville--Alabama Space and Rocket Center (space Museum), Twickenham Historic district, 1822 Arlington Antebellum Home and Gardens, Kress collection at Museum of Art, Sloss Furnace Museum, Zoo, Botanical Gardens (largest in southeast), Burritt Museum; Decatur--Wheeler Wildlife refuge, Cook's Natural Science Museum; Tuscumbia--Ivy Green (Helen Keller home, biographical play performed in summer).