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Kraven the Hunter

Kraven the Hunter is supposedly the final chapter of Sony’s Spider-Man Universe, and if that is the case, thank goodness.

Here’s a movie that zigzags from mediocre to absurd and interminable. At first, I was satisfied with its mediocrity, but then the film becomes so lackadaisical in its structure that any feelings of indifference get a whiplash into frustratingly ludicrous.

But let’s get into the plot as painlessly as possible. The movie stars Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Sergei Kravinoff, a Russian who along with his half-brother (Fred Hechinger) receive news that their mother has committed suicide, but will not have a proper funeral.

Russell Crowe plays their father, Nikolai, an ambitious crime lord who is hard on the boys and decides to take them hunting in Africa. While in Africa, Sergei gets attacked by a dangerous lion, giving him unique animalistic powers. No doubt you can see where the parallels to Spidey are between the two characters.

Just like in many comic book origin movies, Sergei begins testing his new powers and eventually leaves the iron fist of his father’s rule and makes his own way in the world. He first makes waves by eliminating criminals but then finds himself in prison after killing an arms dealer.

Ariana DeBose plays Calypso, a woman who aids Sergei, who is now known as Kraven, as he tries to stay one step ahead after he escapes. They have believable chemistry and bond over his weapons collection, which no doubt comes into play. You would think that someone with animal-like powers wouldn’t need to rely on weaponry, but that’s just about the fourth or fifth thing wrong with this movie.

The villains in the movie are one-dimensional at best. Alessandro Nivola plays The Rhino, a hired gun with human/rhino hybrid abilities, and Christopher Abbott plays The Foreigner, a killer who works alongside The Rhino to take out Kraven. Neither of these characters is menacing or imposing. Instead, they’re swamped in scenes that are heavily driven by laughable CGI or wooden dialogue.

I didn’t expect Kraven the Hunter to be a great comic book movie. It starts out with a formulaic plot but introduces so many convolutions in the second half that scenes run on sloppily when they should be advancing the story.

I kept checking the time at one point to see how much had been going on, only to find out there were another 40 minutes to go. By then, I knew it was going to be a slog to finish. I was right.

The movie is a massive clunker, and the actors don’t really inhabit the material. Only Crowe gives a performance that matches the halfhearted approach. Taylor-Johnson has been in better movies with better performances, so I just consider this a very weak deviation.

From the Venom movies to Morbius to Madame Web and now, Kraven the Hunter, Sony’s plans to expand the Spider-Man Universe have produced some of the most spectacular trainwrecks of the genre in recent years. This franchise is the hunted.

Grade: C-

(Rated R for strong bloody violence and language.)

UNG graduates more than 500 students

Tracy Amaya celebrates with her fellow graduates while serving as student speaker at commencement Dec. 7. She earned a degree in political science with a pre-law concentration (University of North Georgia)

In this year’s graduating class, the University of North Georgia (UNG) gave out roughly 985 degrees and certificates to students this fall, as the university honored more than 650 of those graduates in a pair of Dec. 7 commencement ceremonies in the Convocation Center at UNG’s Dahlonega Campus.

Tracy Amaya, a Gillsville resident who earned a degree in political science with a concentration in pre-law, was one of two student speakers. An immigrant and first-generation college student, Amaya expressed gratitude for all the support she has received and encouraged her classmates to embrace all that the future holds in store.

“As someone who believes in lifelong learning, I would  like my message to you all to be that this is only the beginning,” Amaya said. “As you leave here today ready to turn to the next chapter in your life, remember that hard work does pay off. My hope to you all would be that you never lose your will to learn and keep growing.”

Charlotte Sims, a Cleveland resident who earned a bachelor of business administration in management, was also a student speaker. She spoke to the importance of resilience, reminding them of the strength in the foundation UNG has given them through education.

“We are a generation of confident minds who are not easily bent or swayed by the world around us. And we have shown this not with banners or shouts of victory, but with wisdom and grace,” Sims said. “We are level-headed leaders and encouraging followers who do not give time and place to the unnecessary hatred so prevalent in the world around us.”

Shawn Mullins, an award-winning singer, songwriter-producer and recording artist, expressed gratitude to Joe Chapman, a professor of music who has worked at UNG since 1983 and taught Mullins when he was a student.

“He’s one of my heroes,” Mullins said in his keynote address. “Remember the ones who help you along your way: your parents, your mentors, your teachers.”

Marvin Vines, vice president of industry leadership and retail for Coca-Cola North America Operating Unit and a UNG Foundation trustee, also served as a keynote speaker.

Vines encouraged graduates to discover their “superpower” within their individual strengths they have and to develop vital relationships through their lives.

“The key is to stay ready. This means continuously learning, staying curious and being willing to step out of your comfort zone,” Vines said. “Develop a mindset that embraces change and sees challenges as growth opportunities. Always be ready to seize the opportunity when it comes.”

The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim

The War of the Rohirrim is an anime prequel to The Hobbit and the Lord of the Rings trilogies. It’s a major disappointment, featuring a hackneyed story and ho-hum characters, and the animation is only marginally impressive.

At the movie’s beginning, you want to see excitement worthy of its epic predecessor. Alas, it only serves as a pale shadow, and that’s being generous.

The movie takes place 183 years before the events of LOTR and it focuses on the people of Rohan who are introduced in The Two Towers. Brian Cox is the voice of Helm Hammerhand, the king of Rohan. Gaia Wise is the voice of Hera, his daughter, a shieldmaiden.

Hera has a desire to protect her people when the Kingdom of Dunlending arrives and their leader Freca (Shaun Dooley) wants to claim the throne due to his lineage. Freca and Helm have a fight, with the latter accidentally killing him and spurring the wrath of Freca’s son, Wulf (Luke Pasqualino). He vows revenge against Helm.

Years later, Hera is kidnapped and offers herself to Wulf as a bride to stop the warmongering. Before that can happen, she’s rescued, and Wulf marches back to Rohan to declare war.

The rest of the movie is a recycled version of what was done better in Peter Jackson’s trilogy. We only get a certain amount of rooting interest for these characters, but their development also comes with sluggish scenes that drag on and on without giving us any sense of wit or imagination. If anything, the way these characters are drawn in anime is decent, but when we hear the actors delivering the dialogue, the result is spectacularly unconvincing. Their mouths don’t seem to match.

The War of the Rohirrim is a pretty hard sell, even for hardcore J.R.R. Tolkien fans. It does nothing new or exciting to add to the mythology. Instead, we’re treated to a story that is dull, bloated, and needlessly long at 134 minutes.

Sorry. This ring rules nothing.

Grade: C-

(Rated PG-13 for strong violence.)

Men’s Basketball Drops Road Contest at Brevard 99-93

(Photo by Logan Creekmur)

BREVARD, N.C. – Piedmont men’s basketball dropped a close road contest to Brevard Saturday, 99-93. The high-scoring game marks the third time in seven contests that the Lions have scored 90 or more points.

Dylan Patrick led all scorers with 24 points, followed by Fisher Darden with 21. The Lions had three scorers in double figures as Bailey Wiseman added 19.

Brevard spread its offense around with no scorer posting more than 17 points but had six players post double-digits. The Tornados also scored 38 points off the bench to Piedmont’s 14.

In the first half, Brevard built as much as a 15-point lead with 6:05 to play till the break, but the Lions used an 11-2 run to cut into the lead.

Trailing 52-45 at the half thanks to a last-second 3-pointer by Griffin Neville, Piedmont got it to a three-point game early in the second half.

The two battled back-and-forth with Piedmont finally tying the contest at 64 with 10:09 remaining. Brevard used an 8-0 run midway through the final 10 minutes to distance themselves and hold on for the win.

Up next, the Lions will face Gallaudet University in Atlanta on Tuesday at 1 p.m.

TURNING POINT:
–The Tornados made 17 3-pointers to Piedmont’s five, and the Lions lost by only six points.

STANDOUT PERFORMANCES:
–One game after scoring a career-best 25 points, Dylan Patrick put up 24 to lead the Lions.
Fisher Darden scored 21 points with three of the Lions’ five 3-pointers in the contest.

INSIDE THE BOX SCORE:
Javi Marlowe led Piedmont with 10 rebounds, two away from tying a career-high.

Lions fall to Southern Virginia 54-49 in Rocky Mount

(Photo by Mooreshots LLC)

ROCKY MOUNT, N.C. – Piedmont women’s basketball fell to Southern Virginia, 54-49, on Saturday afternoon in Rocky Mount, North Carolina.

In the defensive slugfest, the Lions were able to hold the Knights to just 30.4% shooting and forced 27 turnovers. Unfortunately, they were unable to find enough offense to get over the top.

Two-time CCS Player of the Week Andelin Hill was one of only two Lions in double figures, scoring 12 points and grabbing a team-high 12 rebounds in the loss. Nae-Nae Eades delivered 11 points in just 19 minutes off the bench, shooting 4-of-7 from the field.

Although it was only a five point margin of victory, all four quarters were decided by at least five points.

The Knights came out of the locker room on fire defensively, holding Piedmont to just five first quarter points to take a 14-5 lead into the second.

However, the Lions found their offensive footing in a strong second quarter, outscoring SVU 19-9 to take a 24-23 edge into the second half.

Piedmont held close throughout most of the third quarter before the Knights reeled off a 9-3 run over the final 3:10 of the period to lead by double digits going to the final 10 minutes.

While SVU pushed its lead to 47-35 early in the fourth quarter, Eades delivered a personal 4-0 run to cut the Piedmont deficit to just four points. However, the Lions only cut the deficit to three, coming with 1:34 to go, before the Knights shut the door on the comeback.

Up next, the Lions have one more game in Rocky Mount, with a true road contest against N.C. Wesleyan tomorrow at 1 p.m.

TURNING POINT:
– Southern Virginia took control of the contest with a 22-11 advantage in the third quarter.

STANDOUT PERFORMANCES:
– Piedmont’s Andelin Hill delivered her fourth double double in her past five games, with 12 points and 12 rebounds to lead the team.
Nae-Nae Eades added 11 points off the bench.
– UNG transfer Ava Hunter made her Piedmont debut, scoring five points and pulling down three rebounds in 10 minutes off the bench.

Baldwin firefighters, police shop with children for holidays

The joy was evident on the faces of children and adults who took part in Baldwin's Shop with a Hero event at Walmart in Cornelia on Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2024. (John Dills/City of Baldwin)

Firefighters and police officers from the City of Baldwin spent the day shopping with ten local children Tuesday, December 10. The children participated in the annual “Shop with a Hero” event, which the Baldwin Fire and Police Departments organize to help families during the holidays.

The departments raise money throughout the year to help fund the event, including a raffle at the end of the year. This year the children were able to spend $150 on clothes and $150 on toys at the Cornelia Walmart.

Baldwin police and firefighters play Santa with the help of a cashier at Walmart in Cornelia on Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2024. (John Dills/Baldwin)

The Shop with a Hero event shows the Baldwin Fire and Police Departments working together to serve the community and help bring joy to children during the holiday season.

Indians hold off Walhalla’s deep-shooting efforts to get back on track

The Indians, playing for a second straight day, this time came out victorious in a 56-52 game Saturday at Walhalla, ending a two-game losing streak.

It meant surviving a barrage of 3-pointers from the Razorbacks. Walhalla had 10 3-pointers, including seven by one player. He and the home team combined for six triples in the first quarter to take an 18-17 lead.

Fortunately, Neyo Bain was also hot early, scoring nine points in the opening quarter. Todor Stanimirovic did heavy lifting in the second with seven points, as the #8-ranked Indians were up 29-28 at the break.

It was even at 39 after the third, leading to a solid final period offensively for TFS. Kayra Aksu hit three shots from beyond the arc in the final quarter, and Bain knocked down four shots from the charity stripe.

Bain finished with 15 points, and Stanimirovic had 13. Aksu had nine, Marquis Rolle and Armando Landecho Cedeno had seven apiece, while Hayden Bootle had six. Brian Neely finished with three, and Noah Massong had two. Tallulah Falls is now 5-6 overall.

White County recognizes 26 employees at annual Christmas Luncheon

10 year Left to right: Seth Weaver, Debra Sanders, Robert Messmore, Keith Horn, Bradley Alexander (WRWH)

(Cleveland)- On Thursday a total of 26 White County employees were recognized for their service to the county during the annual County Employee Christmas Luncheon. The event was held at Truett McConnell University in Cleveland.

White County Commission Chairman Travis Turner and Commissioner Craig Bryant recognized the different levels of employee service from 5 to 35 years with 295 combined years of service.

James Winkler, a Road Department employee was recognized for 30 years of service and White County Clerk of Court Dena Adams and Corner Ricky Barrett were recognized for 35 years of service.

All 5 Year Recipients – Receive $50.00

Mercedes Dodd – Planning

Teresa Forrester – E911

Justin Ledford – Fire Services

Robert Lownie – Fire Services

Fredia McLendon – Tax Assessors

Katherine Paterson – Building Inspections

Alexander Staton – Fire Services

Mark Steinkraus – Sheriff’s Office

Lanier Swafford – Fire Services

Leah Torregiano – Fire Services

Wesley Vandiver – Sheriff’s Office

Jeanne Weathers – Fire Services

10 Year Recipients – Receive $100.00

Bradley Alexander – Fire Services

Keith Horn – Maintenance

Robert Messmore – Assessors Office

Debra Sanders – Assessors Office

Seth Weaver – Fire Services

15 Year Recipients – Receive $150.00 and their Birthday Off

Chuck Davis – Sheriff’s Office

Krystal Talley – Human Resources

Travis Turner – Chairman

20-Year Recipients – Receive $200.00 and their Birthday Off

Regina Cochran – Library

25-Year Recipients – Receive $250.00 and their Birthday Off

Connie Hogan – Library

David Usher – Sheriff’s Office Drug Task Force

30-Year Recipients – Receive $300.00 and their Birthday Off

James Winkler – Road Dept.

35 Year Recipients – Receive $350.00 and their Birthday Off

Dena Adams – Clerk of Courts

Ricky Barrett – Coroner

GBI: Manhunt underway after deputy is shot in Towns County

Authorities are looking for a white male suspect after a Towns County Sheriff’s Office deputy was shot during a traffic stop Friday, Dec. 13.

Just after 2:00 a.m., according to the GBI, a Towns County deputy stopped a vehicle without a tag on Plott Town Road in Young Harris.

The driver of the car stopped, according to police, but immediately exited the vehicle and walked toward the deputy. After an unsuccessful attempt by the deputy to tase the suspect, there was a struggle between deputy and the man over the deputy’s firearm before the deputy was shot.

Police say the suspect then fled in his vehicle but left the deputy’s firearm at the scene. The deputy was taken to a metro hospital to be treated for non-life-threatening injuries.

Authorities are now looking for the suspect, who has not been identified. He is described as a white man standing at about 6-feet tall and weighs between 170-180 pounds. He was driving a 2010 or similar model silver Honda four-door sedan. The suspect wore a black beanie, gray hoodie and black athletic pants, according to GBI.

The investigation is active and ongoing. The GBI and the Towns County Sheriff’s Office are asking for the public’s help in identifying the man who shot the deputy in this incident. Anyone with information is asked to call Towns County 911 or the GBI Tipline at 800-597-TIPS (8477). Tips can also be submitted online.

Which Georgia programs will receive money from national opioid lawsuit settlements?

People affiliated with opioid recovery service providers listen in April to the question and answer portion of the Macon informational session around how Georgia's Opioid Crisis Abatement Trust will disburse millions of dollars of settlement funds (Grant Blankenship/GPB News)

The list of Georgia programs funded by the first year of the state’s opioid settlement money has been released after final approval by the state trustee, Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities Commissioner Kevin Tanner.

Programs range from research to addiction prevention, harm reduction, treatment and recovery.

Just over $70 million will go out over two years for 128 projects. The money is part of the court damages paid by opioid distributors and manufactures to the state which will be allocated to the state over several years. 

These programs, as well as any other programs funded by settlement money, are intended to address local needs in communities hard hit by the opioid crisis. These most recent awards required some local input before being sent to the Georgia Opioid Crisis Abatement Trust for review. 

Those awarded include a rural hospital for overdose reversal training and expansions to drug court programs. Most of the money is going toward recovery and treatment, run by a variety of nonprofits, clinics and universities. 

Regionally, awards skew toward programs in North Georgia, which got 24% of the total funds.

J. Aaron Johnson, a public and preventative health professor at Augusta University, was one member of the Regional Advisory Council for Region 2, one of the largest regions that includes Macon, Augusta and Athens. This region received around 14% of the award money.

RAC’s were tasked with being the first to look over and grade applications. 

Speaking for his region, Johnson said there was a general agreement that awards be fairly distributed across the spectrum of addiction care. 

“We weren’t focused solely on one approach to addressing the epidemic,” Johnson said. 

Also that they be spread evenly across counties. 

“Particularly for me, it was something that I advocated for very strongly,” Johnson said. “Making sure that funding is spread across the district and not concentrated in one area.”

A full list of first and second year awards can be found here. Each falls under a category on the spectrum of care for addiction, explained Executive Director of the Opioid Crisis Abatement Trust, Holly Lynde during a DBHDD board meeting yesterday. 

“They couldn’t just say like, we want to do something without actually saying it’s under this category,” Lynde said. “And then we would look at it and say, okay, yes, it’s in that category.”

This is the first round of grants as opioid settlement money comes down the pike from companies including Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Johnson and Johnson and the McKesson Corporation. The state has also settled with Teva Pharmaceuticals and Walmart, Walgreens and CVS. A settlement with Kroger was finalized in November with an estimated $55 million coming to the state. 

Johnson said for the next rounds of applications for organizations to receive funds –– so far, there is no announcement for when that will be–– he’d like to see the process for opioid settlement money made more accessible to rural areas. 

“People who know how to write the proposals the best are people who live in the larger municipalities,” Johnson said. “And so you end up getting a small number of applications from rural areas of Georgia.”

Providing consultation and assistance to organizations in rural areas could encourage more, and stronger, applications, Johnson said. 

Local governments are also slated to get their share as litigants from major distributors, roughly $159 million, or 25% of total settlement funds that have been finalized. Municipalities, which include counties, school districts and some sheriff’s departments, are not expected to disclose how that money gets spent.

Meanwhile Georgia and others are still in a holding pattern in lawsuits against opioid manufacturer Purdue Pharma, which was denied bankruptcy earlier this year in a Supreme Court decision. That decision got both praise and criticism, since it essentially voided a nearly $8 billion settlement agreement reached between the company and hundreds of litigants. It may be years before money from Purdue Pharma gets to the communities most damaged by the epidemic it played such a big part in creating.

US grocery prices climb heading into holiday season

A customer walks by a display of fresh eggs at a grocery store on Sept. 25 in San Anselmo, California. Grocery prices rose 0.4% in November, according to the Consumer Price Index, leading to tougher times for many during the holiday season (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

A rise in food prices makes for a less than merry holiday season.

Grocery prices rose 0.4% in November, according to the Consumer Price Index, released this week by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Eggs made one of the biggest jumps at 8.2% over the month, and 37.5% over the past year, providing challenges for people trying to eat a somewhat cheaper protein and families cooking holiday foods such as sugar cookies and challah.

Although the increase in food prices has moderated a bit from past years, they are still more than 20% higher than they were before the pandemic, according to David Ortega, at Michigan State University.

“It was a key issue in the election in terms of people really feeling that sticker shock at the grocery store,” said Ortega, a food economist.

President-elect Donald Trump vowed to bring down prices during his campaign and blamed the Biden administration for how they reached this point. But in an interview with TIME published this week, Trump said he does not believe his presidency would be a failure if grocery prices do not come down.

“It’s hard to bring things down once they’re up,” he said.

Price changes to understand before you set the holiday table

The increase in grocery, or food at home prices, was partly driven by the rise in egg and beef prices, Ortega said. He said the price of holiday roast has been affected by drought and high feed prices. This year, the inventory of beef cattle was the smallest beef herd since 1951.

“On eggs, the story continues to be bird flu together with increased consumer demand given the holiday season,” he said following Wednesday’s release of the latest Consumer Price Index. “And for beef the issue is supply — high input costs and decisions that beef producers made a couple of years back when they were facing drought and high feed prices which has reduced beef supply, and this in turn is affecting beef prices.”

The latest food price numbers presented a mixed bag for holiday shoppers looking to bake treats this month. Flour and prepared four mixes fell 1% and bread decreased 1.3%, while sugar and sweets rose 0.2%, and butter ticked up 1.5%.

Oranges, including the popular stocking stuffers tangerines, fell 1.8% in the latest Consumer Price Index report.

The rise in cost of eating your meals at home compared to the rise in cost of eating out is also getting narrower, with the gap in inflation between restaurant menu prices and grocery year-over-year prices being the narrowest it has been since May 2023, according to Supermarket News. Food at home in previous reports rose 0.2% and 0.4% compared to 0.2% and 0.3% for the past two food away from home reports.

Are companies profiting off of uncertain times?

Rakeen Mabud, chief economist at the Groundwork Collective, a left-of-center economic think tank, said that just a few seed producers, meatpackers, and grocers dominate the food industry, which is a key part of the story of what drives grocery prices. This hurts lower-income shoppers the hardest. Oklahoma, Iowa, and Arkansas are some of the states most dominated by a single grocer, such as Walmart or Hy-Vee.

“Across the food and grocery industry, we have a sector that is deeply consolidated,” Mabud said.  … And so when you have big companies controlling such large chunks of the market, we know that they have used things like inflation, things like supply chain shocks to jack up prices far beyond what their input costs to justify.”

Mabud said that when there is this level of market concentration, companies can signal to each other in earnings calls that they are going to start raising prices.

“If you know that your only other competitors are also raising prices, there’s kind of no reason for you to try to undercut them if you both hold giant shares of a market,” she said.

An economic paper published this year found that companies are able to coordinate price increases around cost shocks and increase profits from these events. Mabud said the holidays provide plenty of opportunity for the food industry to raise prices on things people ordinarily don’t buy and don’t have a price comparison for during a less in-demand season.

“Grocers and the food industry kind of know that they know that they have more information about the underlying cost of a good than a consumer who only comes to buy the Christmas ham once a year. And so they can take advantage of that,” she said.

An unhappy new year for grocery shoppers

Economists are watching out for how the next administration will impact food prices.

Trump’s promise to impose heavy tariffs on the U.S.’s biggest trading partners – Mexico, Canada and China – are expected to drive up the cost of everything, including groceries.

Products the U.S. can’t produce year round, like fruit and coffee, will be affected, Ortega said.

“There’s still a lot of uncertainty in terms of whether these tariffs are really going to be implemented or are they a negotiating tool? But that creates a lot of uncertainty,” he said. “Even that amount of uncertainty can lead to a rise in costs as companies prepare for the potential of these tariffs taking place.”

Trump’s expected policy of mass deportation of immigrants will also affect the agriculture industry, in addition to the major human rights implications.

“If there’s a mass deportation that is a shock to the labor supply and the agricultural sector. And that will lead to an increase in costs as producers and companies have to offer higher wages to attract enough labor. Ultimately that gets passed down to the consumer in the form of higher prices,” Ortega said.

Mabud is also concerned that expected tariffs could mean companies take advantage of the policy change well beyond the actual financial impact to their business.

“It’s a policy change where consumers don’t necessarily know how much the price of an avocado is going up because of a tariff versus a supply chain issue versus the grocery store just wanting to increase the price,” she said.

Patricia “Pogo” Overmeyer, 65, who works as a lawyer in Arizona and lives with her retired husband, said she has always been focused on how to save money on groceries. But she said she has become even more thrifty since inflation worsened.

She said she’s been using more meatless meals and stocks up on holiday food all year round when prices are low, some of which she freezes and cans.

“Once I retire, our income will not be as high,” she said, “Most likely I will forgo some foods or make substitutions. It’s anyone’s guess as to what we will be paying for groceries.”

Hall County rescues 24 dogs from Buford home

Hall County Animal Shelter (Source: Google Maps)

Hall County Animal Services removed two dozen dogs from a single residence in Buford on Wednesday, Dec. 11.

According to a county press release, animal services executed a search warrant on a property in the 6000 block of Whispering Pines after receiving a tip about the animals, with the assistance of the Hall County Sheriff’s Office.

Officers found 24 dogs and discovered several violations, including poor sanitation and a lack of sufficient space.

The case remains under investigation by Hall County Animal Control. More information may be released at a later date.

In January, Hall County Animal Services rescued 23 animals from a Gainesville residence.

Due to the surplus of animals, the shelter encourages residents that are interested in adopting or fostering to visit during regular business hours, Tuesday through Saturday, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. or visit Hall County Animal Shelter to view adoptable pets.