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Pollock plans to get back in the game

HCHS head football coach Michael Pollock resigned his coaching job on Thursday, Nov. 13. He led the varsity Raiders for two years.

Mt. Airy, GA – Habersham Central High School head football coach Michael Pollock says he will coach again somewhere after resigning his position with the Raiders on Thursday. Pollock says he is actively pursuing other coaching jobs outside of Habersham County. “I’m a football coach. I’ve been doing this for 20 something years. I’m going to be coaching somewhere next year – that’s the plan and the goal.” In the interim, Pollock says he’ll continue to teach at Habersham Central. His teaching contract runs through May 27, 2015, but Pollock is leaving the door open for the possibility of an early exit. He says he’s got some leads on available coaching jobs and says more opportunities should open up when playoff season ends. “I’m looking at each job individually to see if it will be a good fit for me.”

Pollock turned in his letter of resignation to HCHS Athletic Director Geep Cunningham on Nov. 13.

Pollock insists he was not pushed out as HCHS head football coach. He says he decided to leave for personal reasons. “It was no one thing that prompted it (his decision to leave). It was just a family decision that we made. We felt it was time.” Pollock and his wife Shannon have five children. “We’ve got children growing up and moving around and we just needed to step back at this time and try to see what the future may hold on a different path.”

It’s been a tough two years for Coach Pollock. He entered the job at HCHS under a cloud of scrutiny after being fired from his coaching job at Americus-Sumter High School in south Georgia and immediately took on the challenge of leading the Raiders through the highly-competitive Region 6A football schedule. The Raiders posted back to back losing seasons, winning just once in the second to last game of this season. “It’s been tough and it didn’t move as fast as we all would have liked but there’s definitely a foundation for a new coach to come in and build on and continue what we started,” Pollock says.

The former UGA walk-on came in with great promise. He joined Raider Nation with a 36-17 overall record and 16 state playoff appearances under his belt. Before coming to Central Pollock had never posted a losing record. He says the highlight of his time as the Raiders’ head football coach came when the team broke it’s 21-game losing streak on Oct. 31 in a region game against North Forsyth in front of a hometown crowd.

Raider varsity football players pass around the High 5 Sports Team of the Week trophy from Fox 5 in Atlanta. The trophy was awarded to the team on live television after their win over North Forsyth on Oct. 31. It was the Raiders' first win in 22 games.
HCHS football players pass around the High 5 Sports Team of the Week trophy from Fox 5 in Atlanta. The trophy was awarded to the team on live television after they won an online poll following their win over North Forsyth on Oct. 31. It was the Raiders’ first win in 22 games.

“It was nice to break through and get that victory after we had struggled so long. We were light years ahead of where we were when I got here,” he says of the team and its performance that night. “They hung in with the coaches and the coaches hung in with them.”

Hanging in with his former players is something Pollock says he intends to do. “We’re going to continue to work hard in the weight room preparing for next year. I’m going to work with the seniors and others in the recruiting process, making phone calls and writing letters.” He adds, “During this transition it’s vital we continue to work hard so that when the new coach comes in he has a team ready to go to the next season.”

“For fans, football is a game but for coaches it’s about relationships. We’re tyring to grow young men. I’ve built relationships. Just because you change the colors of your team doesn’t mean you change your relationships.” ~ Coach Michael Pollock

Pollock says he’s grateful for the two years he spent leading the Raider football program. “You couldn’t ask for better fans. I’m grateful to the fans and, though the result wasn’t what we always wanted, people cared about and loved the Raiders.” He adds, “There is nothing but great things I can say about HCHS and Habersham County. People have been great to me. The school system has been great to me.” Pollock says the coaching profession is full of constant change. “Just because you’re leaving doesn’t mean you’re upset or mad about anything, it’s just time for the next step and that’s where I’m at right now.”

Pollock’s resignation letter will be presented to the Habersham County School Board during its next meeting on Monday, Nov. 17.

 

Marie Hunter Purcell

MARIE HUNTER PURCELL, age 75, of Cornelia, passed away Friday, November 14, 2014 at her residence.

Ralph Oliver

RALPH OLIVER, age 78, of Alto, Georgia, passed away on Thursday, November 13, 2014 at Habersham County Medical Center.

Stella Mae Wall Holbrook

Funeral services for STELLA MAE WALL HOLBROOK, age 80 of Clarkesville will be held on Saturday, November 15, 2014 at 2:00 PM from the Hillside Memorial Chapel.

Neal recognized for 25 years of service

Tallulah Falls, GA – Tallulah Falls School Athletic Director Scott Neal is shown receiving an award from the Georgia Independent School Association (GISA) in recognition of 25 years of distinguished service in independent education. The award was presented by TFS President and Head of School Larry A. Peevy.

Neal is currently in his 16th year at Tallulah Falls School after teaching for 12 years at Albuquerque Academy in New Mexico.

Neal’s extensive resume includes teaching physical education from grades 6-12, coordinating strength & conditioning programs, as well as coaching football, basketball, cross country, and track & field. He was also part of a team that started a sixth grade interdisciplinary program and played a prominent role in developing the Hoops for Heart initiative which is now a national program with the American Heart Association.

Wallenda may soon visit Tallulah Gorge

Aerialist Nik Wallenda set two world records during a skywalk between two skycrapers in Chicago on Sunday, Nov. 2. (Photo courtesy of the Discovery Channel).

Aerialist Nik Wallenda set two world records during a skywalk between two skycrapers in Chicago on November 2, 2014. (Photo courtesy of the Discovery Channel)

Daredevil aerialist Nik Wallenda is expected to visit Tallulah Gorge soon to discuss his plans to skywalk across the gorge next year. Wallenda announced to the world earlier this month he intends to cross Tallulah Gorge on a high wire to commemorate the 45th anniversary of his great-grandfather Karl Wallenda’s famous gorge crossing in 1970.

news-teka earnhardt
Executive Director of the Rabun Tourism Development Authority Teka Earnhardt is one of the driving forces behind the Tallulah Gorge Skywalk Celebration.

Executive Director of the Rabun Tourism Development Authority (RTDA) Teka Earnhardt is leading the local drive to bring Nik Wallenda to northeast Georgia next year. She traveled to Chicago to watch his record-breaking tightrope walk between two skyscrapers on Nov. 2. Earnhardt called the experience “incredible.” She says “you could feel his confidence” as he walked across the wire 600 feet in the air.

Earnhardt says a commemorative walk across Tallulah Gorge would be even more spectacular because of the natural beauty of the terrain and the history behind it.

Karl Wallenda was 65 when he skywalked across the Tallulah Gorge. His great-grandson Nik will be 36 next year.
Karl Wallenda was 65 when he skywalked across the Tallulah Gorge. His great-grandson Nik will be 36 next year.

Nik Wallenda never met his great-grandfather. Karl Wallenda died in a tightrope walking accident in San Juan, Puerto Rico in 1978. Still, the younger Wallenda has made a successful career of carrying on – and building upon – his great-grandfather’s legacy. “Nik has been to the gorge three times and has camped at the campground at the state park,” Earnhardt says. “He loves this place. He feels a connection with his great-grandfather here.” She says it gives her a good feeling, “to be part of letting him be a part of his great-grandfather’s legacy and to help him accomplish something so important to him. ”

Earnhardt says she and RTDA member Gail Darugh met with Wallenda’s manager while they were in Chicago. She says, “We are ready. We’ve asked for a site visit. You can’t negotiate exactly what he wants, where he wants to walk and whether it is even possible for him to walk where he wants without looking at the site.”

Earnhardt says organizing a second Wallenda walk is more complicated today than it was 44 years ago. “When his great-grandfather walked there was no state park, no EPA (Environmental Protection Agency), no DNR (Department of Natural Resources); it was a different world. And,” she adds, “the terrain is different; it’s changed a lot in 45 years.”

Spokesperson for the Georgia Department of Natural Resources Parks, Recreation & Historic Sites Division Sally Winchester says while the department is aware of Nik Wallenda’s intentions no formal applications have been filed:

“We are in very preliminary stages of beginning discussions. We are excited about the possibility of the Wallenda event happening but many conversations need to take place and details worked out before we have anything to report.” ~ Sally Winchester, GA DNR

If Wallenda’s walk happens – and at this point there is a strong likelihood that it will – it most likely will take place next June. Earnhardt says the Rabun Tourism Development Authority is planning a four to ten day-long celebration that will, hopefully, culminate with Nik Wallenda’s skywalk. The celebration will encompass events and activities throughout the region. That leaves less than eight months to finish planning and preparing for an event that is expected to draw hundreds of thousands of visitors to northeast Georgia.

The RTDA has been working on the commemorative celebration for over a year after latching onto the idea when it first was proposed by Gail Darugh. Darugh, who owns the Beechwood Inn Bed & Breakfast in Clayton with her husband David, now serves as chairperson of the Tallulah Gorge Skywalk Celebration Committee. Members of the committee and RTDA recently met with Habersham County leaders and are also reaching out to other elected, business and community leaders throughout northeast Georgia. Earnhardt says, “We are meeting with several counties not just Habersham only because, if the numbers come as we anticipate, Habersham can’t handle it, Rabun County can’t handle it.”

A representative from the Clarkesville Business Association, Clarkesville Councilwoman Barrie Aycock and Habersham County Commissioner Andrea Harper were among those who met late last month with event organizers. Earnhardt says, “We had a great meeting. They’re very excited about being a part of it. We’ve asked them to think of some events they want to have there in Habersham and to put together tour packages we can promote and sell online.”

“We’re trying to bring together all the things these areas have to offer and spread them around the northeast Georgia mountains.”           ~ Teka Earnhardt, RTDA

Although Rabun County is leading the charge and actually will be hosting the much anticipated celebration, Earnhardt says the event offers a unique opportunity to showcase neighboring counties. “We’re thrilled about that because we want to promote the northeast Georgia region.” She says when it’s all over the whole world will know that “the north Georgia mountains are a force to be reckoned with.”

The RTDA has hired an international event planning company called the WOW Factory to handle the major details. Event planners from the company’s offices in Atlanta, Colorado and Las Vegas are working on the Wallenda Tallulah Gorge project. A consultant in Rabun County also has been hired to assist with event planning. Earnhardt says the RTDA is raising money for the Tallulah Gorge Skywalk Celebration through sponsorships and advertisements.

Tickets, tour packages, shuttles and much more will be available for purchase online through the Explore Rabun website after the first of the year.

Looking at it as a whole, the size and scope of the event are overwhelming but Earnhardt, who is the sole paid staffer in the RTDA office, says, “We’re taking it piece by piece trying to do as much as we can ourselves in order to save money but we want to do it professionally and do it the right way.”

Karl Wallenda in one of two headstands he performed while skywalking across Tallulah Gorge on July 18, 1970.
Karl Wallenda in one of two headstands he performed while skywalking across Tallulah Gorge on July 18, 1970.

Doing it the right way is the only way Nik Wallenda can do what he does; A single slip on the high wire could cost him his life. That element of danger is part of the attraction but Earnhardt says she’s not worried. “For you and me the element of danger is high but for him it’s his profession, his skill…it’s his heart and soul.”

Wallenda says he wants to re-create his great-grandfather’s Tallulah Gorge skywalk, headstands and all. Karl Wallenda performed two headstands while crossing the quarter-mile span across the gorge on July 18, 1970. He told reporters at the time that the first headstand “was to do better than anyone else has done,” the second was to honor the troops in Vietnam. Soon, his great-grandson may again show the world how the Flying Wallendas do it better than anyone else and, if he does, north Georgians will have a front row seat to watch him do it.

For continuing updates on the Tallulah Gorge Skywalk Celebration visit the Explore Rabun website and visit Explore Rabun and Tallulah Gorge Skywalk Celebration on Facebook.

Life in Motion

HCSO Lt. Tonya Elrod comforts Banks' mother shortly after the accident.

Sometimes in life there just are no words. Here, Lt. Tonya Elrod of the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office comforts the mother of a teenager injured in a wreck.

He sees…

Today’s devotional is written by Sarah Beth Cody, daughter of Gerald and Britt Cody of Clarkesville. 

There was only a pane of glass between us and the streets of Midtown, Atlanta; but there seemed to be a thousand miles between where we were and where we wanted to be.

I sat there with my sweet friend Katie, unloading pent up thoughts and frustrations and questions I have been asking God for weeks now. And finally, upon reaching the end, I concluded, “…we’ll see.”

We’ll see.

She didn’t flinch. “When do we reach that point in our lives when every.single.sentence stops ending with ‘we’ll see?’  When do we get to stop wondering and just know?”

The more I thought about it, the more I realized that tiny phrase had taken a huge reign over my vocabulary.

“I feel like my 20’s have been one long we’ll see. We’ll see if I get the internship. We’ll see if they actually offer me a job. We’ll see if this date ends up not making me want to crawl under the table.”

But just as Jesus always does, He showed up in our conversation and brought us to a couple of revelations. Because, we’ll never reach that golden age when we know what’s next and have all of the answers.

We’ll see…the competition for that job seems tough.”

“We’re trying to get pregnant but it just hasn’t happened yet …we’ll see.”

“We really want community. We’re starting to meet some people, hoping to grab dinner with that couple sometime soon…we’ll see.”

If we do think we’ve reached that place, I would venture to say we are living too comfortably.

I love the way The Message so beautifully articulates The Lord’s assurance that He is and will be right there in the trenches with us in all things.

“…I’ve redeemed you. I’ve called your name. You’re mine. When you’re in over your head, I’ll be there with you. When you’re in rough waters, you will not go down. When you’re between a rock and a hard place, it won’t be a dead end—Because I am God, your personal God, The Holy of Israel, your Savior…I’d sell off the whole world to get you back, trade the creation just for you. So don’t be afraid: I’m with you.”

Isaiah 43: 1-5

He’s telling us, “So don’t wait around to ‘see’ what might happen. I’m with you right here, right now. That’s all that matters.”

And when you feel like you’ve been waiting forever; when you are so sure God has forgotten about you; when you think He has left you hanging in the balance for life:

“Once I was young, and now I am old. Yet I have never seen the godly abandoned or their children begging for bread.”

Psalm 37:25

 Rest in knowing. Drink it like you do your morning coffee—quickly and with anticipation. Because we’ll see He sees.

 

The Whole Parade Route

pastormikeWhen I was a little boy, my mom and dad took my sister and me to the Christmas parade. It was crowded with people and being as we were late in arriving, it was difficult to find a parking spot. The parade had already started, and I just knew we were going to miss seeing Santa, the marching band, the floats, and the girls twirling fire. Finally, we found a spot on the parade route behind a fence. “It is the best we can do, Michael,” my mom reminded me. There was a hole in the fence, just the perfect height and width for me. I pressed my forehead against the wooden edge and like a pair of binoculars, I could see the action in front of me. But only in front of me through the hole in the fence.

I often think about that parade day when I feel uncertain about my future. We see life like I saw that parade. We have a limited view of what’s out there for us. God, on the other hand, sees the whole parade route. He isn’t limited by the hole in the fence. He knows just what is needed to get where He is taking us. He knows the next step.

2 Corinthians 4:16-18, “Therefore we do not lose heart. Though outwardly we are wasting away, yet inwardly we are being renewed day by day. 17 For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all. 18 So we fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen, since what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal.”

Today, put your trust in Him. He knows where you are going – He’s already been there! Rely on Him to teach you what you need to know to get there. Don’t fret. Just do what you know to do today and give the rest to Him.

Profiles in Entrepreneurship: Lynda Henry – The Haberdashery

Haberdashery owner Lynda Henry has some unique items in her shop.

I noticed something was in the little standalone building across from the theatre in Clarkesville. Day by day, I would notice more intriguing things going up in the window until finally, a sign. The Haberdashery, a new shop, was open for business. Lynda Henry  has worked in sales and other careers until she was driving through Clarkesville and loved the feel of “small town cozy.”  With some help from her mother, Delores Jennings, she decided to open a store that would feature unique handcrafted items from the local community. Many local neighbors have contributed either through consignment or from booth rental.  Henry also repurposes and reworks antiques. “It is a blessing to share a place for people share their talents,” says Henry.

Farm tables made with 100-year-old reclaimed heart pine by local woodcrafters is a popular item.
Farm tables made of 100-year old reclaimed heart pine by local woodcrafters are popular items.

As you wander through the brick lined store, your eyes are drawn to jewelry, hats, woodwork and jams and jellies. The building is two stories of throughly unique items and is a perfect stop on your Christmas shopping excursions. Come and visit with Lynda. Some of the local contributors are “A Frayed Knot” by Misty Irwin and Linda Davis. Davis and Irwin make hand-sewn bags, accessories and other items. “Reconciled Woodworks” handcrafts benches, wine racks and signs. “Georgia and Daughter” refurbishes antiques. “Mara Smith” makes jewelry and “Kaye” makes hats. Ron and Caroline Godzisz make custom items from wood as well as art items.

The Haberdashery features jewelry from local artist Mara Smith.
The Haberdashery features jewelry from local artist Mara Smith.

“The Shabby Bears” make banana bread, jams and jellies that are “just right.” Anna Schultz is displaying her artwork along with many more of our community members.

A restored telephone booth from Andrews. N.C. is on display.
A restored telephone booth from Andrews. N.C. is on display.

The Haberdashery is open 10:30am-6pm, Tues.-Sat. It is located at 1363 Washington Street in Clarkesville.

For more information, call 706-754-7259 and visit their facebook page at The Haberdashery.

Ralph Oliver

RALPH OLIVER, age 78, of Alto, Georgia, passed away on Thursday, November 13, 2014.

Piedmont hosts “Familia Day”

Demorest – Piedmont College will be hosting its first “Familia Day,” from 5–8 p.m., Nov. 20, at the Swanson Center on the Demorest Campus. The event seeks to bring together and encourage college-bound students and their families from Hispanic communities in northeast Georgia.

Activities will include a variety of informational college-track sessions; campus tours; faculty interaction; and a keynote presentation by David Araya, a founder of HoPe, a non-profit organization promoting leadership, education, and community service to Hispanic high school students. The event will end with dinner and entertainment in Brookside Dining Room.

For more information about Familia Day, visit www.piedmont.edu/events, contact Analilia Gowan at 706-778-3000 ext. 1238, or email [email protected].