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Rosenbaum missing: Official timeline

The Habersham County Sheriff’s Office on Tuesday released a timeline of events in the ongoing search for Joel Rosenbaum. The 65-year-old Lawrenceville man disappeared on January 26 after being released from the Habersham County Detention Center.

He was last seen around 7 p.m. on January 26 walking past the Chevron gas station on Monroe Street, less than a half mile east of the county jail.

Habersham County Public Information Officer Rob Moore issued the following statement on April 4 after the latest search for Rosenbaum failed to turn up any new leads:

“As with every missing person, the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office takes this case very seriously and hopes for successful location of Mr. Rosenbaum. Our hearts go out to his family and friends, who have described him as a friend to all. We are not sure Mr. Rosenbaum is still in the area at this time, as there have been possible sightings in the Rabun County area. Unfortunately, without new information, a sighting, or a tip that provides a possible starting point, we have to rely on the public to report any contact or possible sightings of Mr. Rosenbaum so that we can deploy resources to that area. Today (Tuesday), we brought in a world-renowned canine tracking team with a very successful track record, but found no indication that Mr. Rosenbaum is or has been in the area around where he was last seen.” – Rob Moore, Public Information Officer, Habersham County Sheriff’s Office

Timeline as of April 4, 2023

  • Jan. 26 – Joel Rosenbaum, 65, of Lawrenceville was released from the Habersham County Detention Center in Clarkesville following his arrest on traffic charges and left on foot with the clothes on his back (grey and red Atlanta Falcons shirt, black pants, and white tennis shoes) and his driver’s license.
  • Feb. 2 – A search party, made up of Rosenbaum’s friends, volunteers, state, and local law enforcement personnel canvassed the Clarkesville area, but turned up no new information and no new leads in the case.
  • Feb. 10 – Habersham County Sheriff’s Office again asked for the public’s help, publicizing a $10,000 reward offered by Rosenbaum’s family for information leading to his whereabouts.
  • Feb. 20 – Friends and family of Rosenbaum concentrated their search efforts in the Clayton, Georgia area after a Rabun County woman reported she thought she had seen him in that area. Habersham County Sheriff’s Office investigators also followed up that lead during that search effort.
  • April 4 – Specialty tracking dogs were brought in to assist Habersham County Sheriff’s Office investigators with the ongoing search effort, but uncovered no evidence that he is still in the area.

What we know:

  • The last known sighting of Mr. Rosenbaum in Habersham County was at a convenience store a couple of minutes’ walk from the Habersham County Detention Center in Clarkesville, where the clerk saw him walking toward the downtown square.
  • Searches in Clarkesville and Tallulah Falls uncovered no new leads.
  • The Atlanta native is 5-foot-6, 140-150 pounds.
  • Rosenbaum’s family is offering a reward leading to his whereabouts.

How can the public help?

Anyone with information or who has seen Rosenbaum is asked to contact Investigator George Cason at the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office at (706) 839-0560 or submit an online tip at https://www.habershamsheriff.com/tips

Bobby Elwood Griffin

Bobby Elwood Griffin, age 83, of Mount Airy, passed away peacefully Sunday, April 2, 2023, at his residence.

Mr. Griffin was born December 8, 1939, in Bay, Georgia, to the late Walls A. Griffin and the late Hazel Marie McMillan Griffin. Mr. Griffin was preceded in death by his beloved wife of 53 years, Judith Deen Griffin, and two grandsons, Caleb Nation and Michael Griffin. He was a farmer, rancher, and retired as a custodian with Hebron Baptist Church. He was a member of Level Grove Baptist Church in Cornelia.

Survivors include his children, J. Marie (John) Griffin-Taylor of Mount Airy, Ann (Michael) Nation of Pelzer, SC, and Robert (Cathy) Griffin of LaMoille, IL, and six grandchildren also survive.

A graveside service will be held Thursday, April 6, 2023, at 11:00 a.m. at Antioch Congregational Christian Church Cemetery, with Rev. John Williams officiating.

Funeral arrangements are under the direction of Swain Funeral Home in Baxley, Georgia.

Indians clinch playoff spot with win over Rabun

Caden Walker (Austin Poffenberger)

The Indians not only took an 11-4 win on the road Tuesday at Rabun County, but clinched a postseason berth in the process.

TFS scored 5 runs in the opening inning, and 4 more in the final stanza to earn a dominating win. After a Caden Walker RBI single to get things started, Davanta Brown was hit by a pitch with the bases full to bring in another. Chase Pollock also got plunked on the next at-bat, making it a 3-0 game. The Indians got 2 more runs before the inning was over.

In the third, Danny Grant singled home Pollock, while 2 runs in the fourth advanced the lead to 7-0. Rabun County bounced back with a pair of runs in both the fifth and sixth to close the gap to a 7-4 contest.

In the last inning, Frankey Moree worked a bases-loaded walk, Grant doubled in a couple guys, and Cole Bonitatibus walked with the bases loaded to cap off the scoring.

Rohajae Pinder earned the win after going 6 frames and allowing 4 earned runs on 4 hits and 2 walks while striking out 7. Moree, Pollock, and Grant all had 2-hit games, while Grant had 3 RBI and one each for Pollock and Moree.

The win is the fourth straight for the Indians, matching the program record achieved once in 2022 and twice in 2021. Overall, TFS is now 10-9 and 7-3 in region play.

Kemp says no to HB 319, his first veto of second term

Gov. Brian Kemp (Credit: Riley Bunch)

Gov. Brian Kemp vetoed House Bill 319 on Tuesday. HB 319 is the first veto of his second term and of the 2023 legislative session.

HB 319 would require legislative approval for a year-after-year tuition increase larger than 3% at a public Georgia college.

The bill passed the House and Senate nearly unanimously but ran into trouble on Kemp’s desk.

Kemp said that the bill oversteps the Board of Regents’ power.

“Because of the constitutional reservation of authority in the Board of Regents, the legislation cannot be adopted without the approval of Georgians through exercise of their franchise,” he said in a statement.

The Board of Regents governs the University System of Georgia and is appointed by the governor.

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This article appears on Now Habersham through a news partnership with GPB News

Francis “Frank” Alexander Cahill

Mr. Francis “Frank” Alexander Cahill, age 88, of Clarkesville, Georgia, passed away on Sunday, April 2, 2023, peacefully in his home.

Mr. Cahill was born in Albany, New York, to the late Frances and Ferdie Cahill. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his loving wife, Betty Whitmire Cahill, and son, Lonnie A. Smith, of Colorado Springs, CO.

Survivors include his sons, Matthew Cahill, of Clarkesville; daughters, Desiree Cahill, of Margate, FL; Jackie Cahill, of Catawba, NC; grandchildren, Ashley, Kyle, Frankie, Melonie, Gennea, Mackinzie, Emily Rose; nine great-grandchildren.

A Funeral Mass will be held at 2:00 p.m., Saturday, April 8, 2023, at the Whitfield Funeral Home, North Chapel. Interment will follow in Yonah Memorial Gardens.

The family will receive friends from 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m., Friday, April 7, 2023, at the funeral home.

Arrangements have been entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Homes & Crematory, North Chapel, at 245 Central Avenue, Demorest, Georgia 30535. Telephone: 706-778-7123

Trump hit with 34 felony counts of falsifying New York state business records

Former President Donald Trump sits stoically in a Manhattan courtroom on Tuesday, April 4, 2023. He pleaded not guilty to 34 counts against him. Trump is the first U.S. president to be charged with a crime. (pool photo)

Former President Donald Trump pleaded not guilty Tuesday to 34 New York state felony offenses related to what prosecutors say were hush money payments to an adult film star.

In a brief but historic appearance in a Manhattan trial court, Trump, the first former president to face criminal prosecution, learned he was charged with falsifying business records 34 times from February to December 2017.

Trump’s former attorney, Michael Cohen, paid Stormy Daniels, a porn actor who said she had a sexual relationship with Trump, $130,000 in exchange for her silence about the supposed relationship during the 2016 presidential race, according to a 16-page indictment and attached statement of facts that were unsealed Tuesday.

Trump then repaid Cohen in 34 payments over the course of 2017 but described them in Trump Organization records as payments for legal services meant to cover up the payment to Daniels, prosecutors said.

Trump, a Republican candidate for president in 2024, denies having an affair with Daniels.

​​“These are crimes in New York no matter who you are,” Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg said following the arraignment.

“Everyone stands equal before the law,” he added. “No amount of money and no amount of power changes that enduring American principle.”

Responding to a question asking why Bragg brought charges after his predecessor and federal prosecutors declined to do so, Bragg said his office had new evidence that wasn’t available to the prior district attorney and that New York state, as the “business capital of the world,” had a particular interest in prosecuting business fraud cases.

Trump has accused Bragg of being motivated by politics.

Just before arriving at the arraignment, Trump posted to his social media site, Truth Social.

“Heading to Lower Manhattan, the Courthouse” he wrote. “Seems so SURREAL — WOW, they are going to ARREST ME. Can’t believe this is happening in America. MAGA!”

Trump left the courthouse without commenting but is scheduled to speak later Tuesday at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida.

READ indictment here

Payments covered up campaign crime, DA says

Cohen’s payments to Daniels in 2016 exceeded campaign contribution limits — and because they were meant to boost Trump’s White House bid, they should be considered campaign funds, Bragg said. The records of Trump’s payments to Cohen, therefore, were meant to conceal a crime, making the false business records criminal.

“He could not simply say that the payments were a reimbursement for Mr. Cohen’s payments to Stormy Daniels,” Bragg said. “To do so, to make that true statement, would have been to admit a crime. So instead, Mr. Trump’s said he paid Mr. Cohen for fictitious legal services in 2017 to cover up actual crime committed the prior year.”

The indictment said the false business record was done “with intent to defraud and intent to commit another crime and aid and conceal the commission thereof.”

The payment to Daniels was part of a pattern Trump’s 2016 campaign employed to suppress stories about alleged Trump affairs, according to prosecutors’ statement of facts.

A longtime confidante of Trump, Cohen pleaded guilty in 2018 to campaign finance and fraud charges. He also pleaded guilty to lying to Congress.

He has said his crimes were in service of Trump’s 2016 campaign and has cooperated with authorities.

House Republicans attack DA

Bragg and U.S. House Republicans have publicly quarreled over the case, with the Republican chairs of the House Judiciary, Oversight & Accountability and Administration committees accusing Bragg of conducting a politically motivated prosecution.

Judiciary Chair Jim Jordan of Ohio and Oversight & Accountability Chair James Comer of Kentucky said in a Tuesday statement that Judge Juan Merchan should not impose an order on Trump not to speak about the case.

“To put any restrictions on the ability of President Trump to discuss his mistreatment at the hands of this politically motivated prosecutor would only further demonstrate the weaponization of the New York justice system,” they said.

“To even contemplate stifling the speech of the former commander in chief and current candidate for President is at odds with everything America stands for.”

Merchan did not issue a gag order Tuesday.

Jordan, Comer, and House Administration Chair Bryan Steil of Wisconsin wrote to Bragg last month, calling his prosecution politically motivated and demanding documents.

Greene headlines muted protest

U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia traveled to New York City for a Tuesday morning rally in support of Trump across the street from the Manhattan Courthouse.

According to videos and photos posted to Twitter, the Georgia Republican spoke for roughly 10 minutes through a bullhorn as supporters and journalists surrounded her, but counter-protesters largely muffled her comments with drums and whistles.

New York Republican Rep. George Santos, who is under several legal and ethical investigations, made a brief appearance in the crowd prior to Greene’s comments, according to news media reports.

Greene wrote on Twitter hours before the rally that protesters were “coming to commit assault that can cause audible damage to everyone’s ears, including NYPD.”

She wrote that protesters’ behavior should be considered “disorderly conduct” and that the “@NYCMayor better direct NYPD to lock these people up.”

New York City Mayor Eric Adams said in a Monday press conference that Greene should be on her “best behavior” during her visit.

In a “60 Minutes” interview that aired over the weekend, Greene defended her support for Trump and said other Republicans — including Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and former House Speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin — “failed.”

Greene, a well-known 2020 election denier, sits on the House Committee on Oversight & Accountability and the Committee on Homeland Security.

Greene’s rally was presented in conjunction with the New York Young Republicans Club, which released a statement on March 30 that read in part: “President Trump embodies the American people — our psyche from id to super-ego — as does no other figure; his soul is totally bonded with our core values and emotions, and he is our total and indisputable champion. This tremendous connection threatens the established order.”

Apart from Greene’s appearance in New York, major pro-Trump protests appeared limited across the country Tuesday. The U.S. Capitol remained calm.

Democrats call for fair trial

Reaction from other political figures split along party lines, with several Republicans alleging political bias in the criminal process and Democrats saying the case should play out.

White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre declined to comment on Trump’s indictment.

“I’m just not going to speak to this case. I’m not going to go beyond what the president shared with all of you,” she said during the daily press briefing.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York released a statement following Trump’s surrender.

“I believe that Mr. Trump will have a fair trial that follows the facts and the law,” Schumer said in the statement. “There’s no place in our justice system for any outside influence or intimidation in the legal process. As the trial proceeds, protest is an American right but all protests must be peaceful.”

House Judiciary ranking member Jerrold Nadler of New York said the indictment appeared well-reasoned and urged Republicans not to interfere with the judicial process.

“This matter will play out in the New York criminal justice system, no matter how MAGA Republicans try to obstruct the process,” he said. “In a desperate attempt to protect Mr. Trump, the most extreme House Republicans are already trying to bully the law enforcement officers involved. I do not know how this case will be decided, but I do know that DA Bragg will not be deterred or intimidated by the political stunts Jim Jordan and (U.S. House Speaker) Kevin McCarthy throw at him.”

House GOP leaders defend Trump

Republicans in Congress posted messages on Twitter criticizing the indictment.

House Majority Whip Tom Emmer, a Minnesota Republican, tweeted Tuesday was “a historic low for our nation.”

“The Democrat Party has proven there is nothing they won’t do to hold onto power — even if it means weaponizing our justice system to target a political opponent,” Emmer wrote.

Fourth-ranking House Republican Elise Stefanik of New York posted to Twitter: “I stand with President Trump.”

“Another dark day in our nation’s history. The Far Left will stop at nothing to punish Joe Biden’s number one political opponent Donald Trump,” Stefanik tweeted about a half hour later.

House Deputy Whip Guy Reschenthaler of Pennsylvania blamed the indictment on the “extreme left.”

“The Left’s weaponization of our criminal justice system for their own benefit is truly un-American,” he wrote on Twitter.

Tennessee Republican Sen. Marsha Blackburn said the “indictment is a gross abuse of power by a Democrat DA to get an outcome that the left has wanted for years.”

Utah Republican Sen. Mitt Romney began his statement by saying that he believes Trump’s “character and conduct make him unfit for office.”

“Even so, I believe the New York prosecutor has stretched to reach felony criminal charges in order to fit a political agenda,” he continued.

Other Republican members of Congress, however, were not focused solely on Trump.

Oklahoma Sen. Markwayne Mullin tweeted photos of a visit to Guymon, saying it was the first stop on his statewide tour.

“We discussed the ongoing drought, inflation, and the existential threat of communist China. Thanks to Mayor Kim Peterson for hosting us!” Mullin wrote.

Georgia Rep. Rich McCormick tweeted a photo of himself shaking hands with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy as part of a congressional delegation to the country.

“I was able to ask questions AND witness firsthand the accountability of equipment and impact that our assistance is having,” McCormick wrote. “I will continue to fight to hold the Biden Administration accountable for doing the right things and for doing things right.”

Nebraska Sen. Pete Ricketts shared photos of a meeting with the Columbus Rotary in the afternoon after congratulating Finland for joining the North Atlantic Treaty Organization earlier in the day.

“We heard firsthand about Finland’s highly capable military during my recent official visit. They’ll be a critical asset to the trans-Atlantic Alliance in the face of Russian aggression,” Ricketts wrote.

Other charges possibly looming

As he readies for another White House run, Trump faces other criminal investigations.

The U.S. Justice Department is investigating his role in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol after the congressional committee tasked with probing the causes of the insurrection made a criminal referral to the department.

Federal authorities are also investigating Trump’s handling of classified documents after his presidency. FBI agents retrieved boxes of classified material Trump took from the White House to his South Florida residence when he left office.

And a Georgia grand jury is looking into potential election interference from Trump during his reelection campaign in 2020. Trump was taped shortly after Election Day 2020 asking the Georgia secretary of state to “find” enough votes to overturn the state’s election results in his favor.

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States Newsroom reported Jennifer Schutt contributed to this report

Would-be burglars electrocuted in Gainesville

Two men were found dead inside this Georgia Power substation off Atlanta Highway in Gainesville before dawn on Monday, April 3, 2023. (Gainesville Police Dept.)

Two suspected thieves are dead after trying to steal from a power substation.

According to Gainesville police, around 3 a.m. Monday, emergency crews were called to the 2100 block of Atlanta Highway about a transformer fire.

When crews arrived, they found two men dead.

The investigation revealed the pair trespassed, broke into a fenced area, and attempted to steal from the substation. They were electrocuted and killed, police say.

(photo by Gainesville PD)

Gainesville Fire Department crews and Georgia Power employees worked to ensure the area was safe before retrieving the bodies. The two men have been identified as 44-year-old Christopher Blair Wood and 45-year-old Shane Joseph Long. Authorities sent their bodies to the GBI crime lab in Decatur for autopsies.

Substations convert high-voltage electricity into lower voltages that can be used in homes and businesses, according to Georgia Power.

The case remains under investigation. Anyone with information about this incident is asked to contact the Gainesville Police Department at 770-534-5252.

Mary Street Park being revitalized with community center, pickleball courts

AFTER | Here's how it looks now. Originally built in 1937, the lodge at 157 Mary Street has undergone extensive renovations. The building will be used as a community center. (Jerry Neace/Now Habersham)

It’s been years since the sounds of delighted children splashing and yelling for their moms to “watch me!” filled the air at Mary Street Park. Clarkesville closed its community pool years ago. It’s been even longer since Sharing and Caring first opened in Habersham and set up shop in the old brick lodge on Mary Street.

Now, the area is being brought back to life through the vision of city leaders and two taxpayer-funded investments.

Community Center

Next month, Clarkesville plans to reopen the lodge for use as a community center. The 2,400-square-foot facility, which was built around the time of the Great Depression, is currently being renovated. It’s on track to open in mid-May, city leaders say.

Contractors have been working on the building since December. It required substantial work due to its age and lack of upkeep.

The 86-year-old lodge sat vacant for years. Here’s how it looked in January of 2023. (NowHabersham.com)

 

So far, Clarkesville has spent approximately $135,000 on the project, says city manager Keith Dickerson. Once renovations are complete, the building will be available for the public to rent for meetings and special gatherings.

The Clarkesville City Council is still trying to work out the details. Council members discussed rental fees and how to manage the property during their monthly meeting on April 3. Although they did not reach any decisions, they say they hope to have a rental policy drawn up and ready to approve at their May meeting.

(Jerry Neace/Now Habersham)
The interior includes(Jerry Neace/Now Habersham)
(Jerry Neace/Now Habersham)

Pickleball courts

While progress is moving along steadily on the community center, work on Clarkesville’s planned pickleball courts has stalled.

The two new courts at Mary Street Park are being built where the pool used to be. Instead of youthful chatter, nearby residents will hear the ‘pop pop’ of plastic perforated pickleballs hitting players’ paddles.

(Pickleball took off during the pandemic and has become a favorite pastime of older adults. So much so that Habersham County transformed two of its tennis courts into six pickleball courts earlier this year.)

A gravel pad sits where pickelball courts are to be built at Mary Street Park in Clarkesville. (Jerry Neace/Now Habersham)

The Clarkesville City Council approved the courts’ construction last April at a cost of $82,500. To date, the city has only spent approximately $6,000 on the project, says Dickerson. He says the project stalled because of the weather and scheduling conflicts with the paving contractor.

“When you get into the wet season, and you’re talking about working in a hole up here and getting heavy equipment down there, it’s not going to be easy to do,” says Dickerson.

According to Dickerson, the project won’t move forward until the paving is completed.

The city is also waiting for park bathrooms to be delivered.

Clarkesville contracted with a company to have the bathrooms “pre-built.” They’ll be built in a factory, then delivered and installed at the same time. Dickerson says the pre-built unit costs a little bit more than stick-built construction but is easier and faster to install.

“They are nice bathrooms,” he says. “They look nice, and they are built to last and easier to maintain.”

The Mary Street bathrooms are included in the pickleball court project cost.

New Clarkesville City Council member sworn in

Clarkesville Mayor Barrie Aycock administers the oath of office to Rick Wood during the Clarkesville City Council meeting on Monday, April 3, 2023. Pictured behind them are council members Franklin Brown, left, and Brad Coppedge. (Jerry Neace/Now Habersham)

Rick Wood is now the newest member of the Clarkesville City Council. He was sworn into office by Mayor Barrie Aycock during Monday night’s city council meeting.

Wood was the only candidate to qualify for the March 21st Clarkesville special election to fill the Post 5 seat. He’s the third person in 15 months to hold the office.

“I’m excited. I’m glad to help out,” Wood says of his new role as a city councilman. “I think it will be enjoyable.”

Asked about his long-term goals for Clarkesville, Wood replies, “I want to keep it local, but we can’t deny growth’s coming. We also want to accommodate that to a limited, manageable state.”

He says he wants to “Limit growth and try to support the businesses we have.”

Wood, a farmer and general contractor by trade, is new to politics. Councilman Brad Coppedge edged him out for the Post 2 seat in last November’s city election. Now the two will be serving together.

Wood succeeds Brendon Ansley, who resigned from the Post 5 Clarkesville City Council seat last October. The seat was previously held by Steven Ward, who died in December 2021. Wood will serve out the remainder of Ward’s term through December 31, 2025.

Women and high blood pressure

The management of hypertension is changing. According to the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, high blood pressure accounts for 1 in 5 deaths among American women and is a greater health burden for women than men. Women develop more pathophysiologic consequences such as heart failure, diabetes, chronic kidney, and coronary artery disease.

In 2017, the American College of Cardiology and AHA lowered the threshold of hypertension to 130/80 mm Hg ( milliliters of mercury) and higher (the previous definition was 140/90 and above).

Many patients believe that controlling high blood pressure (when blood pushes against artery walls more forcefully than normal) with medication is as simple as taking a single drug, but this is often not the case. Correcting this oversimplified view of blood pressure management is one way that blood pressure management is changing.

Multiple drugs

Hypertension, especially among women, often requires multiple drug therapies. The average person requires two to three prescriptions to effectively control hypertension and continual monitoring to tweak types and doses as we age.

Another shift in management is tailoring the treatment to the individual patient based on factors more than the traditional focus of age, sex, and race. Healthcare professionals take diet, activity levels, reproductive history, and other chronic conditions and medications into account. Doctors must choose among over 200 blood pressure medications available – or their combinations – to determine which ones will work best for the individual patient in order to fine-tune treatment. This is important because two-thirds of women aged 65-75 have elevated or high blood pressure. Women aged 70 and older are far more likely than men to have uncontrolled readings despite treatment, according to the American Heart Association.

What the different drugs do

Several drug classifications are used independently or in combination to treat high blood pressure.

Diuretics lower blood pressure by helping kidneys remove extra salt and water from the body.

Beta blockers lower blood pressure by reducing heart rate and lessening the heart’s workload.

ACE inhibitors help blood vessels stay relaxed by blocking an enzyme that causes them to tighten.

ARBs (Angiotensin-receptor blockers) ease blood flow by blocking a receptor that constricts blood vessels when the hormone angiotensin attaches to it.

Calcium-channel blockers relax blood vessels.

So, for example, a woman who is otherwise healthy and exercises a great deal may not tolerate a beta blocker, which can limit the heart’s ability to respond to physical challenges. Or, a woman who experiences heart palpitations may respond better to a beta blocker, which treats both conditions.

Matching the right drug to the patient and her lifestyle is a challenge that doctors have to meet to achieve the best results.

Most serious health problem for women

According to the National Institutes of Health, cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the most serious, neglected health problem for women in both the developing and developed worlds. High blood pressure is among the most important risk factors for developing CVD in women.

It is important to remember that blood pressure control is often a moving target due to lifestyle and health changes as we age. New drugs can change our choices, and your doctor can work with you to create an optimal treatment plan to minimize side effects, including dizziness or lightheadedness. It often requires continuous conversation and close monitoring, even if blood pressure is well controlled for years.

In a follow-up article, we will discuss ways to decrease our risks of developing hypertension.

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Tracy Backer, RN

Tracy Backer is a Registered Nurse with 39 years in the medical field specializing in critical care nursing. Her health columns appear regularly on Now Habersham. She may be reached at [email protected]. For more health-related content, click here.

A new immersive Disney experience is coming to Atlanta

Lighthouse Immersive’s Immersive Disney Animation will see its Atlanta premiere at the new Armour Yards development on May 1, 2023. (Credit: Disney / Lighthouse Immersive)

Disney fans in Atlanta have something to look forward to in May — a new immersive walkthrough experience from Immersive Lighthouse, the company that has created other touring experiences like the popular Immersive Van Gogh.

Immersive Disney will see its Atlanta premiere at the new Armour Yards development on May 1. The event was created as a collaboration between Immersive Lighthouse and Disney.

“We have opened Immersive Disney Animation in eight cities so far,” said Corey Ross, producer and founder of Lighthouse Immersive Studios, in a press release. “And while we expected a positive reception, we have really been blown away by just how incredibly excited audiences are with this experience, a testament to the timeless legacy of Disney Animation’s worlds, stories and characters. We can’t wait to share this very special presentation with Atlanta audiences.”

Immersive Disney Animation will open in a 44,000-square-foot warehouse space in the Armour-Ottley Loop, a former industrial corridor situated between Buckhead and Midtown, where developers have started reclaiming unused spaces. The venue stands adjacent to the future Atlanta BeltLine and Path 400 trails.

Disney has been enjoying a resurgence of popularity lately off the success of its streaming service Disney+ and announcements for upcoming films like The Little Mermaid remake starring Halle Bailey.

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This article appears on Now Habersham through a news partnership with GPB News

3 injured in crash on Hwy. 441 in Demorest

Three people were injured in a two-vehicle crash on Hwy. 441 in Demorest on Monday, April 3, 2023. (Red Bird Media)

Three people were injured in a two-vehicle crash Monday afternoon in Demorest. A 911 caller reported the wreck on Highway 441 at Charlie Batson Road around 4:30 p.m. on April 3.

According to the Georgia State Patrol, 62-year-old Vickie Hoose of Alto was driving a Subaru Forester. She failed to yield when entering the highway from a nearby business. A Chevy S10 pickup truck struck the Subaru on the driver’s side. After impact, both vehicles ran off the road into a field.

Troopers identified the pickup truck driver as 58-year-old Richard Gibson of Demorest.

The wreck injured both drivers and a passenger in the Subaru, 42-year-old Jennifer Pitts of Alto. All three sustained possible minor injuries, state troopers say.

(Red Bird Media)
(Red Bird Media)
The crash temporarily shut down both lanes of travel on U.S. 441 Business at Charlie Batson Road in Demorest. (Red Bird Media)

Habersham EMS transported the injured drivers to Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Gainesville for treatment.

The wreck temporarily shut down both lanes of the highway near the crash site as law enforcement investigated and tow trucks cleared the scene.

The Georgia State Patrol says charges are pending against Hoose.