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Red, White & Tunes in Clarkesville TONIGHT!

Water, music and fun times will be flowing through downtown Clarkesville this Friday.

Friday Night Live returns to downtown on Friday, July 17th with a Red, White & Tunes theme. In addition to extended shopping hours from several downtown merchants, event highlights include a live performance by Rudabaga Pie (an Appalachian Old Time String Band) at 6PM by the gazebo, live music & entertainment throughout the square, a popcorn and lemonade stand, bouncy slides and a huge outdoor hydrant sprinkler. Clarkesville Fire Chief Jerry Palmer said he’ll open a steady stream of water at 6 p.m. for kids to play in for an a few hours in the parking lot of the old courthouse in downtown Clarkesville.

Whereas a lot of the activity will take place from the gazebo lawn and parking lot, some of the eateries are offering live music at their establishments, and several merchants are extending their store hours for the evening.

According to Mary Beth Horton, Clarkesville Main Street Manager, the promotions committee created this event to feel like a backyard picnic. “We wanted to offer feel-good things like lemonade, popcorn, water sprinklers, and of course- music,” Horton explained. “But mostly, we want to celebrate our community and get people out here walking, shopping, eating, playing- just having fun!”

The event is from 6-8PM.  A complete lineup of entertainment will be posted on the City’s Facebook page (find City of Clarkesville on Facebook) or visit www.clarkesvilllega.com. For more information, contact 706-754-2220.

Beautiful Feet

I think of Mary Magdalene quite often. In a culture where women mattered so little, Christ, the King of kings and Lord of lords, sought her to deliver His good news – the news  He had arisen from the dead, just as He promised. “When Jesus rose early on the first day of the week, He appeared first to Mary Magdalene, out of whom He had driven seven demons” Mark 16:9. Realistically, if I were Him, I would have probably chosen John or to have a little fun with it, maybe the high priests or Pilot. But for some particular reason, He chose Mary. Maybe it was her loyalty or her ability to believe that allowed her to be chosen to deliver the news of His resurrection. In actuality, I imagine it was her heart and her passion for Him that brought Christ to her. When we have passion for something, we will stop at nothing to convince others. This amazing woman stood at the foot of the cross when all the others ran. She witnessed Jesus’ last breath. Why wouldn’t He reveal Himself to someone who fearlessly devoted herself to Him? Can you imagine how fast she ran to tell the others she had seen Him,  her feet pounding against the stone filled roads, rejoicing that her Lord was alive?

“How beautiful are the feet of those who bring good news” Romans 10:15.

As a writer I contemplate the use of words. Words bring images to life. They are the photographs of the soul. It is unusual to me that Paul would use the term “feet” in this passage. Who has beautiful feet? Feet are ugly and sweaty; they smell; they are blistered and calloused. No, I would have chosen “eyes” – How bright are the eyes of those who bring good news. Or arms – How welcoming are the arms of those who bring good news. Even a tongue would make better sense – How melodious is the tongue that delivers good news. Maybe he was connecting Jesus’ washing of the disciplines feet with their carrying His word to others. Maybe Paul used feet because they work the hardest of all our body parts or because feet are not regarded as “beautiful” but actually something we tend to hide. Have you ever heard a man say, “I am so attracted to her. She has the most amazing feet” ?  The use of the word “feet” in this verse probably symbolizes our daily walk with Christ. Preaching the gospel is not just about a week of missions in the rainforests of Brazil and we’re finished, although that is important. Preaching the gospel is an everyday interaction and representation of our relationship with Christ.

My grandmother used to say, “Pretty is as pretty does.” She loved to sing the childhood song, “O be careful little eyes what you see…O be careful little ears what you hear…O be careful little feet where you go, for the Father up above is looking down with love, so be careful little feet where you go.” Our actions, our movements, our responses speak louder than any words could ever be heard about Christ. We could shout from the highest mountain our love for Christ but destroy that message by our acts of anger or our greed or our malice toward others.

I love to get pedicures. There is just something about the removal of dead skin from my feet that rejuvenates me. Picking a unique color for my toenails and maybe (if I have $5.00 extra) getting a floral design to go on top of the polish is a “pick me up.” I feel beautiful again – instantaneously. Is it possible we might all need a soul pedicure? Where are your feet taking you?

Today as you interact with others,  purposefully examine what message you bring. Is it beautiful? Does it represent Christ? Would He have chosen you to deliver His message that morning, the message He had arisen from the dead? One of my favorite church billboards states, “Always be a witness for Christ and if necessary speak.”

How BEAUTIFUL will your feet be to others today?

Meeting Minds: Oscar Wilde

When we meet the minds of others, we can better understand one another. Today, meet the mind of Oscar Wilde, an Irish author, playwright and poet.

“The heart was made to be broken.” – Oscar Wilde

Feds: Planned school in Cornelia illegally segregates students

The Civil Rights Division of the US Department of Justice says the planned “FUTURES” regional site in Cornelia is part of an illegal system that unnecessarily segregates students with disabilities from their peers.

As Now Habersham reported first back in May, Habersham County School Board members voted to hand over the old school building at 595 Elrod Street in Cornelia to the Georgia Network for Educational and Therapeutic Support (GNETS).

Known locally as Cornelia Elementary #2, the building now belongs to GNETS. Workers have been renovating the site this summer preparing it to become the regional hub for the Northeast Georgia FUTURES program this fall.

Habersham and about a half dozen surrounding counties send students with emotional and behavioral issues to the FUTURES program because, educators  say, traditional classrooms are not equipped to handle their special needs.

The local school boards don’t have any control over the curriculum at the regional site. State agencies fund and administer the program while FUTURES students are no longer considered part of the local school system at all.

GNETS has been running these regional schools since the 1970s but the Justice Department now says the program illegally segregates roughly 5000 students statewide and violates the Americans with Disabilities Act.

“We conclude that the State’s administration of the GNETS Program violates Title II (of the ADA). The state administers the GNETS Program in a manner that results in students with disabilities being unnecessarily segregated from their peers. In addition, the State discriminates against students with disabilities in the GNETS Program by failing to ensure the GNETS services are equal to those offered to other students not in the GNETS Program.”

In a letter to Governor Nathan Deal and Attorney General Sam Olens this week, the feds detailed the results of a three-year investigation into the GNETS program.

The negative effects of inappropriate segregation faced by students in the GNETS Program are readily apparent. One student in the GNETS Program stated, “school is like prison where I am in the weird class.” He attributes this in large part to isolation and distance from other students in the general education community, as he does not have the opportunity to interact with these students during the school day.

According to a number of other students we spoke with, the GNETS Program denies them some of the most basic elements of a typical childhood school experience. One student reported feeling frustrated and “like an outcast” in the GNETS Program, and was upset about not having a school locker like “normal” high school students.

Another parent remarked that her daughter, who attends the GNETS Program, desperately wishes to have her picture taken and included in a yearbook, as all her friends in general education schools do, as this would give her a sense of belonging and community that she craves.

We learned that students in the GNETS Program also face substantial stigma, with one parent stating, “once you are in GNETS you are considered a ‘bad kid.’ It’s a warehouse for kids the school system doesn’t want or know how to deal with.” Several parents and students with whom we spoke compared

The investigation also found that the program is not cost effective. The state legislature budgeted $70 million for GNETS students last year. An audit showed that providing the aid and support necessary for these students in a traditional classroom would cost $48 million per year.

In addition to the state funding, local school districts pay the program to cover the cost of transporting students to the regional locations. Through last year, when Habersham FUTURES students were transported to a site in Gainesville, annual transportation costs topped $64,000 for local tax payers.

The Justice Department letter included a threat to sue the state if Georgia doesn’t end the segregation and comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act requirements. There’s been no response so far from the Governor or Georgia’s Attorney General.

Armed Suspect still on the loose

The Georgia State Patrol is still searching for the suspect from last night’s high speed chase up Highway 365 near Alto. The chase began around 9:30pm. Authorities say the suspect, Ryan Van Hovey, turned off the highway onto a dirt road. His car became mired in mud and Hovey fled on foot. Air support as well as Hall, Habersham and Baldwin officers joined in the search along Yonah Post Road. At 6 a.m. today, the active seach was called off.

When GSP searched Hovey’s car, officers say they found ammunition, body armour as well as drugs. Hovey has a long list of previous charges as well as current warrants from Dekalb County and the City of Lawrenceville. Charges are also pending from GSP.

If you see the suspect, please excerise caution and call 911.

Gov. Deal orders review of Planned Parenthood in Georgia

Georgia’s Governor Nathan Deal today ordered a review of Planned Parenthood clinics operating in Savannah, Atlanta and Augusta.

According to a release, “Gov. Nathan Deal is committed to protecting life at all stages, particularly the most vulnerable and defenseless among us. In light of recent revelations regarding alleged illegal Planned Parenthood activity and to ensure this horrific practice is not occurring here, the governor is directing the Department of Community Health and the Department of Public Health to conduct a joint review of the clinics run by Planned Parenthood Southeast in Georgia.”

The “horrific practice” he’s talking about came to light in a video showing a Planned Parenthood official discussing the sale of body parts from aborted fetuses.

The video shows Dr. Deborah Nucatola, senior director of medical services at Planned Parenthood Federation of America, discussing pricing for body parts from aborted fetuses. She was talking to actors pretending to be from a biological company that wanted to pay for the body parts. The exchange was secretly recorded.

The Center for Medical Progress, a California-based anti-abortion group, released the video on Tuesday. They claim it is evidence that Planned Parenthood illegally sells aborted fetuses and conducts illegal partial-birth abortions.

Planned Parenthood claims they help women who want to make not-for-profit donations of their fetus’ organs legally for scientific research and does not profit from the practice.

There are 5 Planned Parenthood-branded clinics currently operating in Georgia.

Highway Chase ends with no one in custody

An attempted traffic stop turned into a high speed chase and overnight manhunt near Alto. The Georgia State Patrol says the incident started around 9:30 Wednesday night, when a trooper attempted to stop a white Infiniti traveling northbound on Highway 365 near Howard Road. According to the official report the suspect refused to pull over and led the officer on a high speed chase. A witness reported seeing the suspect drive the wrong way in traffic.

GSP says the suspect then fled down an unpaved road near the Hall/Habersham border, where his car became stuck. The suspect got out of his car and a chase ensued on foot into the woods.

After several hours of searching the search was terminated around 6 this morning. The suspect remains at large.

Unredeemed

Proverbs 1:7 reads, “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge, but fools despise wisdom and instruction.” The Hebrew word for fool in this context, and in other places in the Old Testament, is a word which means morally defiant. The fool Solomon describes here is very much like a snake, deaf and unable to charm. Until the fool is willing to know God, he despises Godly instruction.

According to the psalmist in Psalm 58, unredeemed people are seen as wicked in the eyes of God, “Even from birth the wicked go astray; from the womb they are wayward and speak lies. Their venom is like the venom of a snake, like that of a cobra that has stopped its ears, that will not heed the tune of the charmer however skillful the enchanter may be.”

Some of the psalmist’s words are hard to understand. The important part to remember is, when David wrote these words, he is asking God to punish the wicked; he is not asking God to allow him to punish them. Dietrich Bonhoeffer, a German pastor, anti-Nazi, and one of the greatest martyrs for Jesus Christ wrote a small book called Psalms: The Prayer Book of the Bible. Bonhoeffer lived his life according to the richness of the Book of Psalm. He understood from his prison cell in Nazi Germany what it was like to be tormented by the wicked. He felt the depth of evil, as David is describing in Psalm 58. He knew well of the existence of the ungodly.

Many times in the Book of Psalm, the authors cry out to God to punish the wicked; to declare judgment upon them: “The righteous will be glad when they are avenged, when they bathe their feet in the blood of the wicked.” The words are very sobering when we consider our God to be of love and light. David meant here simply the wicked will die and the righteous will not.

So what do we do with Psalm 58 and others like it? First, the important words to remember are, David was asking God to handle those who harmed him. It is no different from what we pray when we turn people over to God; those who sin against us or are cruel to us; those we believe are unjust and unfair. We lay them at the foot of the cross; we place them in the hands of God. It is not for us to handle but for God to handle in His time.

Secondly, we were all wicked before the redemption of Christ; before we were reborn in Him. Whether we want to accept such a thought or not, until we drenched the blood covering protection of Jesus Christ over us, we were/are considered lost among the wicked. That is why the battle for souls is so important to God and so important to Satan. Every soul counts.

Because Jesus was human on earth, He understands what it feels like to be treated cruelly and unjustly at the hands of mean and hateful people. The Psalms are the prayers and cries of human beings to God; humans in desperate situations; humans who believe in a God who protects and defends them against evil.

Bonhoeffer writes, “It is the incarnate Son of God, who has borne every human weakness in his own flesh, who here pours out the heart of all humanity before God, and who stands in our place and prays for us.” Psalms: The Prayer Book of the Bible, page 20-21.

Most of us will not experience the depth of evilness as David, Bonhoeffer, and many others tortured for their beliefs; but, some of us understand what it is like to face unfairness, hateful people, and cruelty. Some of us know the deep emotions of betrayal and heartache at the hands of another. As David, we must turn those feelings over to God to handle. Only He can punish fairly. He is the only just Judge.

Today, as you pray, ask God to help you find peace with your enemies. Put them in the hands of God. Let Him deal with them. Remember who stands in your place and prays for you.

Meeting Minds: Christopher Reeve

When we meet the minds of others, we can better understand one another. Today, meet the mind of Christopher Reeve, actor, known for his portrayal of Superman; a film director and producer, screenwriter, author.

“Once you choose hope, anything is possible.” – Christopher Reeve

Farmers’ Market Report for July 18th

Wow, we are really into the summer growing season. All of this rain and high temps are heating things up in the garden. Lots of delicious items to tempt our palates this week. Take a ride on Saturday and visit more than one market. There are different things at each market and you don’t want to miss any goodies! Look for fresh eggs, fresh breads, soaps and so much more!

Clarkesville Farmers’ Market:

Squash, cukes, beets, cabbage,  onions, tomatoes, cucumbers, sitao, basil, Italian parsley, hokkaido squash, and gem squash, the first of yummy melons, berries, Italian sweet red peppers, eggplant, mints, okra, beets, radishes, green beans, noodle beans, savoy cabbage, baby hakurei turnips, microgreen mix, baby carrots, sunflower shoots, spinach, baby kales, baby beet greens, sorell, very baby arugula

Soque Farmers’ Market:

Squash, corn, sweet peppers, herbs, okra and tomatoes

Stoney’s celebrates 50 years

Pictured are Grace Ward and Treelis Stonecypher with a cake commemorating 50 years.

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Some of the “regulars” celebrating in “their” booth.

With four generations present, landmark restaurant, Stoney’s celebrated 50 years of business in Habersham County on the corner of Historic 441 and 197. Opened in 1965 by Ottis Stonecypher, the restaurant started as a Tastee-Freeze. According to Treelis Stonecypher, his wife, Ottis’ Uncle owned the house behind the building and built a booth to sell ice cream. Ottis took the idea and opened the Tastee – Freeze. When his contract ran its course, Stonecypher went out on his own. “He added to the restaurant and took an old house off to expand the parking lot,” notes Ms. Stonecypher, “in the beginning there was just a counter and some stools and it was about half this size.”

Expanding the menu beyond soft-serve proved to be profitable for the Stonecyphers. When Ottis died in 2002, his wife and daughter, Anita Crane decided to join in together and keep the business open. “The most important thing was to keep it going for my husband, he loved people, loved being here every day,” notes Treelis. Now two of her grandaughters work at the restaurant and it “supports the whole family.” A fourth generation, Grace Ward 12, daughter of grandaughter, Jennifer, has been training to work at the restaurant. “If you are here, we put you to work,” notes Treelis with a smile.

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Patrons enjoyed the festive decor as well as their favorite menu items.

Breakfast is the restaurant’s busiest time. Customers coming to join in congratulating the Stonecypher family told of “their children being raised on Stoney’s gravy.” Treelis notes with pride, “I was surprised by how many people remember and still keep coming.” Now retired, Treelis said that she thought Ottis would be surprised “at how big it has gotten.”

As for the future, the family hopes to expand and remodel sometime. In the meantime, the biscuits and gravy will be fresh and hot tomorrow and every day to come.

FDIC close to Habersham Bank lawsuit settlement

The final legal chapter in the Habersham Bank saga is coming to an end. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and eight former executives of the bank say they’re close to a settlement in a $15.3 million lawsuit stemming from bad real estate loans issued by the bank.

Attorneys for the FDIC and the defendants on Tuesday notified US District Court Judge William O’Kelley that they’d reached a “settlement in principle.” Details of the settlement are still being worked out and the case is on hold until all parties agree.

The suit, filed in February, named David D. Stovall, Edward D. Ariail, Bonnie C. Bowling, Michael C. Martin, Michael L. Owen, M. Edward Hoyle, Frank E. Felker and Andrew Corker.

Stovall was the CEO, a director and later president of the bank. Ariail was a director and president. The others named in the suit were directors or held executive positions.

Habersham Bank was founded in 1904 in Clarkesville and had 12 branches across our area by 2007. The feds moved in and closed it down in February of 2011. The FDIC reports it paid out an estimated $141 million on insured deposits.

The FDIC lawsuit contends the former Habersham execs breached their fiduciary duty by approving negligent commercial real estate loans.

Like many other financial institutions, Habersham began making high volumes of “commercial real estate” and “acquisition, development and construction” loans just after the turn of the century. The FDIC says those loans eventually reached 1,052% of the bank’s total capital.

Among other things, the FDIC suit alleges executives –

  • Failed to properly oversee the Bank’s lending function
  • Improperly extended credit to borrowers who were not creditworthy
  • Extended credit based on inadequate information about the financial condition of prospective borrowers and guarantors and without adequately analyzing cash flow and other critical financial information, resulting in loans advanced to borrowers with no apparent ability to repay or otherwise service the loans

According to this week’s filing in the case, “The Parties engaged in mediation on July 1, 2015, and reached a settlement in principle. The Parties are now preparing a written settlement agreement. Once the settlement agreement is finalized and executed, the FDIC-R will file a stipulation of dismissal.”