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Dozens turn out for Good Friday Cross Walk

Around 60 people turned out on a damp Friday morning for a reverent walk through downtown Clarkesville. They carried handmade crosses on the mile-long trek, stopping at the downtown gazebo and Old Clarkesville Cemetery along the way to worship through scripture, prayer, and hymns.

The event ended about an hour after it began back at the church fellowship hall on Washington Street, with participants enjoying a warm meal.

This is the second year in a row that First United Methodist Church of Clarkesville has hosted a Good Friday Cross Walk. The church intends to make this an annual event, marking the start of the holiest of holidays on the Christian calendar.

The Friday before Easter Sunday commemorates the crucifixion of Jesus Christ in the Christian church. It is traditionally a day of fasting and penance. Easter Sunday, which this year falls on April 9, celebrates the resurrection of Christ, which is the central tenet of the Christian faith.

Trees fall at The Masters; second round suspended due to bad weather

Patrons ran to get out of the way as a large pine tree fell near the 17th tee at Augusta National Golf Club on Friday, April 7, 2023. (screen image, Sky Sports)

The second round of The Masters was suspended due to bad weather Friday as three trees fell near spectators at Augusta National Golf Club.

No one was injured, according to tournament organizers.

Sky Sports broadcast footage showing spectators running as a tall pine tree fell close to the 17th tee. It happened shortly after play was suspended for the second time during the round at 4:22 p.m.

The three trees were blown over due to wind, The Masters said in a statement.

“The safety and well-being of everyone attending The Masters tournament will always be the top priority of the Club, which will continue to closely monitor weather today and through the Tournament,” the statement read.

Play is scheduled to resume at 8 a.m. Saturday.

 

Play was suspended before all the players could finish, including second-placed Jon Rahm. With nine holes left to play, Rahm is three shots back. Brooks Koepka leads at 12-under par.

North Carolina man arrested in Northeast Georgia for meth trafficking

John Ray Campbell (Hall County Sheriff's Office)

A North Carolina man was arrested Wednesday for drug trafficking after authorities allegedly discovered a large quantity of methamphetamine in his possession during a traffic stop in the Braselton area.

According to the Hall County Sheriff’s Office, deputies conducted a traffic stop on a pickup truck around 4 p.m. on April 5 near Old Winder Highway and Friendship Road. The truck was displaying a tag belonging to a different vehicle with no insurance, officials say. The driver of the truck was identified as John Ray Campbell, 50, of Gastonia.

Deputies said they observed open beer containers in plain view in the vehicle, leading them to suspect Campbell might be driving under the influence. The Georgia State Patrol (GSP) arrived at the scene to assist with the investigation and conducted the field sobriety test on Campbell, resulting in a DUI charge.

“During a search of Campbell’s vehicle, a deputy discovered a backpack in the bed of the truck and found more than 1,000 grams of meth inside the backpack,” says Hall County Sheriff’s Public Information Officer B.J. Williams.

The drugs have an estimated street value of $77,000.

In addition to drug trafficking and DUI, deputies charged Campell with violating the state’s open container law and no proof of insurance. He is currently being held in the Hall County Jail with no bond.

NGTC Medical Assistant program ranked first in state

Clarkesville Medical Assisting seniors pictured from left, front to back, Jennifer Marzilli, Clarkesville Medical Assisting Instructor Vanessa Lone, Jacqueline Garcia, Riley McKay, Araceli Huerta.

For the fifth consecutive year, North Georgia Technical College has earned the No. 1 ranking as the Best Medical Assistant Program in Georgia by the online resource Medical Assistant Advice.

This recognition places NGTC at the top of 41 Medical Assisting programs in Georgia, say school officials. Rankings are based on graduation rates, tuition, admission rates, enrollment, retention rates, and Medical Assistant Advice staff ratings.

Lanier Technical College in Barrow, Dawson, Forsyth, and Hall counties ranks second in Georgia.

Rounding out the top five are Ogeechee Technical College in Statesboro, South Georgia Technical College in Americus and Cordele, and Georgia Northwestern Technical College in Rome.

Top 15 MA programs in Georgia

Grads teaching future graduates

NGTC offers Medical Assisting on all three of its campuses in Clarkesville, Blairsville, and Stephens County. The instructors are graduates of the program.

“Being NGTC Medical Assisting graduates themselves, our faculty are committed to ensuring their graduates are equipped with the knowledge and skills necessary to excel in their careers and make a positive impact in the lives of others,” says NGTC Dean of Academic Affairs Christy Bivins.

NGTC Vice President of Academic Affairs Mindy Glander says the college is thrilled to receive the top state ranking once again. She attributes the program’s success to the college’s “dedicated faculty and hardworking students.”

“Their commitment to excellence and passion for the medical field is truly inspiring. This accomplishment is a testament to the quality of education and training our program provides, and we are proud to be a leader in the healthcare industry,” Glander says.

Medical Assistant Advice has served medical assisting students and professionals since 2012. The website offers current information regarding education and career statistics to help guide students.

Lynn Whitmire Sims

Lynn Whitmire Sims, age 70, of Clarkesville, passed away Thursday, April 6, 2023, at her residence.

Born in Dawsonville, Georgia, on August 14, 1952, Lynn was the daughter of the late William “Ken” and Lula Caroline Carnes Whitmire. She was retired from Ethicon, where she worked in the extrusion department, and she was a member of Bethlehem Baptist Church in Clarkesville. Lynn was an avid gardener, and she loved to play Bingo and go to Harrah’s Casino. She was a very direct person and loved to speak her mind. Lynn had an amazing work ethic and she loved reading and a good challenge. She enjoyed nothing more than her lunch dates with her sisters and spending time with her loving family. In addition to her parents, Lynn is preceded in death by her husband, Terrell Sims; sisters Ellen Hammond, Opal Hammond, Josephine Nix, Betty Cahill, Lillian Whitmire, and Martha Jean Whitmire; brothers Emmett Whitmire, William McKinley Whitmire, jr., Talmadge Whitmire, Gerald Whitmire, and Jerry Whitmire.

Survivors include daughters Sherrie Sims (Darren Brown) of Baldwin, Angelia Sims Norris (Craig) of Clarkesville, sisters Joy Whitmire Dixon and Darlena Whitmire Church of Clarkesville, grandchildren Dyllin Carter of Cornelia, Cade Collins (Samantha) of Clarkesville, Abbagail Lynn Wright (Chris) of Cornelia, Chesney McAllister (Logan) of Carnesville, Payton Wright of Bradenton, Florida, Casidi Collins of Mt. Airy, Lily Turpin of Demorest and Evan Williams of Clarkesville, great-grandchildren Ben, Grayson, Colton, Cohen, and Evander, as well as numerous extended family and many friends.

A Celebration of Life service will be held at Hillside Memorial Chapel on Monday, April 10, 2023, at 1:00 PM, with Rev. Terry Rice officiating. The family will receive friends at the funeral home Monday, prior to the service, from 11 AM until 1 PM.

An online guest book is available for the family at www.hillsidememorialchapel.com.

Arrangements are in the care and professional direction of Hillside Memorial Chapel & Gardens, Clarkesville. 706-754-6256

Trail markers installed on Panther Creek Trail

(NowHabersham.com)

Each spring, hikers of all experience levels from all regions flock to the mountains of Northeast Georgia to enjoy its natural beauty. And each year, local first responders get called to help them when they’re in trouble.

Habersham County’s Panther Creek is one area where first responders routinely respond. Since January of last year, there have been eleven 911 calls for help from the trail by people overcome by heat exhaustion, who are injured, or lost.

In 2020, a hiker fell ill and collapsed on the trail. She died of a heart attack as first responders were attempting to rescue her.

Getting help to people quickly is a challenge on backwoods wilderness trails and it’s a challenge made more difficult when rescuers don’t know where the patients are located. Until now, hikers on Panther Creek Trail without access to GPS and reliable cell service had no quick frame of reference to pinpoint their location.

Now they do.

Trail markers

Recently, Habersham County Emergency Services (HCES) personnel, in cooperation with the U.S. Forest Service, placed 21 trail markers along the 3.5 mile (one way) trail.

The reflective markers are there to provide a reference point for anyone needing to call 911 for help with an emergency.

Mile marker signs like this have been installed as reference points along Panther Creek Trail. They are for reference only and do not represent distance. (photo submitted)

“Markers have been installed between 400 and 600 feet apart, depending on the trail condition and where there was a good tree to mount them. There were some spots where the distance was shortened due to washout,” says HCES spokesperson Rob Moore.

The Georgia Department of Transportation provided the markers at no cost. They are the same type of mile markers seen on the highway. Moore stresses that the markers are for reference points only and do not represent the distance walked.

While the new trail markers should prove to be a significant help, it’s important for hikers to make sure they know the name of the trail they are traveling.

Last May, first responders were delayed getting help to a woman on Panther Creek Trail when she mistakenly told them she was at Tallulah Gorge.

Easter egg hunts in Northeast Georgia

On your mark, get set, go...

If you’re hunting for an egg hunt this Easter weekend in Northeast Georgia, check out our list below. With rain in the forecast, you may also want to check with organizers for possible schedule changes before you go.

Saturday, April 8

NOTE: Due to the weather, Hillside Orchard Farm in Lakemont has rescheduled its April 8 Easter egg hunt to April 15.

Saturday, April 15

  • Saturday, April 15, 2 pm: Annual Easter Egg Hunt at Hillside Orchard Farms. For kids up to 10 years of age. Hayrides, train rides, visits with bunny starting at noon with an egg hunt at 2 pm. Hillside Orchard Farms is at 18 Sorghum Mill Drive, Lakemont, GA. For more information, call 706-782-2776.

Federal judge orders abortion pill off U.S. market but immediate appeal expected

The abortion drug Mifepristone, also known as RU486. (Photo by Phil Walter/Getty Images)

WASHINGTON (States Newsroom) — A federal judge in Texas revoked the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s two-decade-old approval of the abortion pill Friday, though he gave the federal government seven days to appeal the case.

U.S. District Court Judge Matthew Joseph Kacsmaryk’s opinion in the case Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine v. U.S. Food and Drug Administration can be found here.

The Friday ruling will not take effect immediately, though if it does, abortion rights organizations have suggested healthcare providers could use just the second drug, misoprostol, without mifepristone.

“The Court does not second-guess FDA’s decision-making lightly,” Kacsmaryk wrote. “But here, FDA acquiesced on its legitimate safety concerns — in violation of its statutory duty — based on plainly unsound reasoning and studies that did not support its conclusions.”

“There is also evidence indicating FDA faced significant political pressure to forego its proposed safety precautions to better advance the political objective of increased “access” to chemical abortion — which was the “whole idea of mifepristone,” Kacsmaryk added.

Medication abortion, a two-step regimen, is used in more than half of pregnancy terminations in the United States, according to the Guttmacher Institute.

The medication is approved up to 10 weeks into a pregnancy, though it was originally approved in 2000 for up to seven weeks.

The lawsuit, filed in mid-November by anti-abortion organizations, argued the FDA “exceeded its regulatory authority” when it approved mifepristone and misoprostol to end pregnancies.

Kacsmaryk’s opinion is expected to start an appeals process that will next go to the conservative-leaning 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans before likely ending at the conservative-leaning U.S. Supreme Court.

That would place a second abortion case with nationwide implications before the same Supreme Court justices who overturned the constitutional right to abortion.

Friday’s ruling overturns the FDA’s 2000 approval of mifepristone, including in states where abortion remains legal following the Supreme Court’s decision last summer to end the nationwide, constitutional right.

Friday’s ruling sides with four anti-abortion groups and four anti-abortion doctors who filed a lawsuit in mid-November arguing the FDA erred in approving mifepristone in 2000. The lawsuit was filed by Alliance Defending Freedom, an anti-abortion legal organization.

Democrats in Congress called for an immediate appeal by the Biden administration.

“Because of today’s lawless ruling by an extremist Republican judge, women across the country could lose access to a safe and legal medication they’ve relied on for decades,” said Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts. “Attorney General Garland should quickly appeal this decision in order to preserve access to medication abortion, and I urge the Biden administration to use every legal and regulatory tool in its power to keep this drug available.”

Minnesota Democratic Sen. Tina Smith said she was “furious” with the ruling.

“This is nothing but an extremist, anti-democratic national abortion ban,” Smith wrote on Twitter. “This outrageous decision would do irreparable harm to women’s health. It’s a blatant attack on our freedom and it cannot be allowed to stand.”

ADF attorneys wrote in their 113-page lawsuit the FDA “exceeded its regulatory authority” when it approved mifepristone and misoprostol to end pregnancies.

They also questioned the safety and efficacy of the abortion pill, a claim that was strongly refuted by medical organizations.

The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the American Medical Association, the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine and the American Academy of Family Physicians, among others, wrote in court documents that the abortion pill is safe and effective.

“Serious side effects occur in less than 1% of patients, and major adverse events — significant infection, blood loss, or hospitalization — occur in less than 0.3% of patients,” the medical groups wrote. “The risk of death is almost non-existent.”

The medical groups noted that mifepristone’s “safety profile is on par with common painkillers like ibuprofen and acetaminophen, which more than 30 million Americans take in any given day.”

“There is a greater risk of complications or mortality for procedures like wisdom tooth removal, cancer-screening, colonoscopy, plastic surgery, and the use of Viagra than by any abortion method (medication or procedural),” they wrote.

Attorneys for the federal government argued in a 52-page response to the lawsuit that pulling an FDA-approved medication off the market after more than two decades would be “extraordinary and unprecedented.”

“Plaintiffs have pointed to no case, and the government has been unable to locate any example, where a court has second-guessed FDA’s safety and efficacy determination and ordered a widely available FDA-approved drug to be removed from the market — much less an example that includes a two-decade delay,” wrote attorneys for the U.S. Justice Department.

Kacsmaryk held a four-hour hearing in mid-March where attorneys for ADF and the Department of Justice had two hours each to present their case. He declined to livestream the hearing or allow audio recordings.

Erik Baptist, senior counsel at Alliance Defending Freedom, argued during the hearing the FDA’s approval of mifepristone under a fast-track process known as Subpart H was improper, according to the Texas Tribune.

Kacsmaryk listed the HIV and cancer drugs approved under that designation before the FDA approved mifepristone, then noted that ADF was asking him to “deem one of these not like the others,” according to the Tribune.

Lawyers for the DOJ contended the statute of limitations on the anti-abortion organizations complaints had expired “and they have not satisfied the requirements to reopen the FDA’s approval of mifepristone,” according to the Tribune.

That would place a second abortion case with nationwide implications before the same justices that overturned the constitutional right to abortion.

Proposed GHSA bylaw takes aim at middle school recruiting

The Georgia High School Association is ready to make it harder for high schools to use sports camps to recruit middle school athletes and for parents and athletes to use camps to shop for high schools.

A proposed bylaw, which could be voted on April 17 at the GHSA’s executive committee meeting, would make middle school students ineligible until the 11th grade if they attend a high school skills camp and then transfer to the hosting high school.

“These camps are good fundraising events for the schools, so we certainly don’t want kids not to be able to do those things,” GHSA executive director Robin Hines said, “but we just don’t want kids going to a camp and then all of a sudden transferring to those schools.”

GHSA president Jim Finch said he’s heard from several member schools calling for oversight of undue influence placed on younger players. Some have directed him to social media accounts that show high schools recruiting middle school students in ways that colleges use to recruit high school students.

“Undue influence has more recently been aimed at middle school students in the way of QB/WR camps, OL/DL camps, 7-on-7 showcases, official visits, and anything else you can think of,” Finch said. “For example, high school A hosts a football camp that attracts or invites middle school athletes from middle schools who are in the feeder zones for high schools B, C, D, E, and F to their spring camp, much the same way a (school such as the) University of Georgia would invite high school athletes to their camp on campus. Miraculously, those attracted/invited middle school athletes are transferring to high school A.”

The proposal would require high schools hosting skills camps or official visits to provide a list of attendees and working staff. The rules would not affect students attending camps within their current high school attendance zone.

Current GHSA rules generally require that transferring high school students sit out sports for one year unless they move into their new school’s attendance zone, but middle school students entering the ninth grade aren’t subject to that rule. That makes middle schoolers attractive to athletic programs looking outside their boundaries, especially to the many private and city schools that can accept students regardless of where they live.

Savvy parents of athletes also know it’s easier to pick a high school before the ninth grade because of the GHSA’s bonafide move requirements that kick in afterward. Skills camps are a way to visit prospective schools. Some rising ninth-graders have even posted their high school choices on social media.

The GHSA already has recruiting and undue-influence rules that apply to enticing eighth-graders, but camp attendance doesn’t meet the criteria unless camp coaches or school officials make direct overtures to students about transferring.

The proposed bylaws would change that, effectively defining camp attendance as undue influence. To give it more teeth, the bylaw would make the sit-out period two years instead of one since freshmen rarely play varsity.

Hines said the new proposal is similar to existing undue-influence bylaws that apply to high schoolers.

“We already have a bylaw that says, for example, if you’re getting hitting lessons from a high school coach and you end up at (that coach’s) school, that’s undue influence,’’ Hines said. “We allow the [Georgia Athletic Coaches Association] to do all-star games, and if a player in one of those games is coached by a coach at another high school and moves to that high school, that’s considered undue influence. This [proposed bylaw] is applying the same rule to camps and those middle school kids.”

GHSA vice president Curt Miller, the Oconee County athletic director, submitted the proposal, which must be approved in committee and could be tweaked before going before the full executive committee. Miller is traveling on spring break and unavailable for comment.

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Produced by Georgia High School Football Daily. To join the GHSF mailing list, click here.

Some local government offices closed for Good Friday

All Habersham County government offices and Cleveland city offices are closed today, April 7, in observance of Good Friday.

The Habersham County Landfill will be open during regular hours.

Tallulah Falls City Hall has been closed all week and remains closed through Easter weekend.

Public safety agencies will be available to respond to calls, but their administrative offices are closed Friday.

All offices are scheduled to reopen Monday, April 10.

Cleveland lifts Boil Water Advisory

The city of Cleveland has lifted the Boil Water Advisory it issued for some city water customers Thursday.

The advisory affected customers on the north side of town and was issued as a precaution due to maintenance work on a water main.

Affected areas included 1210 Hulsey Road to Highway 75 North to Urgent Care and 190 Tom Bell Road and Asbestos Road up to the White County Recreation Department.

City water customers in the affected areas may now resume normal water consumption.

Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves

Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves is obviously intended to be the first in a series, and I personally would like to see it go in that direction. It’s a fantasy-action-comedy that delivers exactly what fans of the iconic game series will expect: Heroes and villains, magic and creatures, humor and special effects, but one thing it never forgets to have is a sense of heart and joyful energy.

Chris Pine stars as Edgin Darvis, a knight who turns to being a thief to make a new life for him and his daughter. Michelle Rodriguez costars as his partner-in-crime Holga, and together they journey across a dangerous world in order to save his daughter (Chloe Coleman) after she ends up in the hands of Edgin’s enemy (Hugh Grant). Grant’s character is a rogue con artist who has an evil wizard under his control (Daisy Head).

Edgin and Holga encounter a series of characters who provide comic relief, including a sorcerer (Justice Smith) and an ageless knight (Rege-Jean Page). While the former is intentionally funny, the latter provides moments of unintentional hilarity, especially his philosophy on irony.

The movie has impressive special effects that often prove convincing because the actors are in the thick of the action, and its pacing is fast enough without having to sacrifice the plot in favor of the huge action. There’s a gigantic climax involving knights in a gladiatorial competition, which features imagination and energy and never becomes tiresome.

Dungeons & Dragons has captivated millions of fans, and they’re not going to be disappointed as this adaptation stays true to the spirit of the game.

This movie is witty, with lots of laughs and performances that embrace the goofy spirit this movie is going for. It never drags, and we can always sense the actors are playing their roles with excitement, energy, and a knowing sense of fun.

This film goes right to the wall with its loony story, endearing characters, and imaginative spirit. It certainly earns its HPs.

Grade: A-

(Rated PG-13 for fantasy action/violence and some language.)