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The Fed raises interest rates again, signals more coming despite pressure to slow the pace

WASHINGTON, DC - NOVEMBER 02: U.S. Federal Reserve Bank Board Chairman Jerome Powell answers reporters' questions during a news conference following a meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee (FMOC) at the bank headquarters on November 02, 2022 in Washington, DC. In a move to fight inflation, Powell announced that the Federal Reserve is raising interest rates by three-quarters of a percentage point, the sixth interest rate increase this year and the fourth time in a row at rates this high. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

(GA Recorder) — The Federal Reserve announced on Wednesday that in its continuing efforts to tamp down inflation, it would raise interest rates yet again by another three-quarters of a point to a target range of 3.75 to 4%.

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said during a press conference following the announcement that the “historically fast pace” of rate increases is “appropriate given the persistence and strength in inflation and low level at which we started.”

Powell, who has been pressured in recent months by members of Congress to avert a recession, said that at some point it will make sense to slow down the pace of increases but added, “We have some ways to go,” and said he anticipates ongoing increases.

Powell said he does not want to prematurely change the Fed’s approach because “ … the longer the current bout of high inflation continues, the greater the chance that expectations of higher inflation will become entrenched.

“Price stability is the responsibility of the Federal Reserve and serves as the bedrock of our economy,” he said. “Without price stability, our economy does not work for anyone. In particular, without price stability, we will not achieve a sustained period of strong labor market conditions that benefit all.”

In its policy statement, the Federal Reserve said: “In determining the pace of future increases in the target range, the Committee will take into account the cumulative tightening of monetary policy, the lags with which monetary policy affects economic activity and inflation, and economic and financial developments.”

In September, when the Fed raised rates three times, a Bankrate analysis found it was the most increases by the Fed in one year since the 1980s. In the 1980s, Federal Reserve Chair Paul Volcker raised rates several times — ultimately to the highest they had ever been, which was close to 20%. There were two recessions as a result and inflation fell to 3.4% in 1987 from 9.8% in 1981.

In August, Powell said the Fed’s goal to eventually get to 2% core inflation is “unconditional.” On Wednesday, the Fed repeated its mission and said it is “strongly committed” to meeting its 2% inflation goal.

And while Powell has said the Fed’s aim is to bring down inflation without causing a recession, he has also said “No one knows whether this process will lead to a recession or, if so, how significant that recession would be,” PBS NewsHour reported. The acknowledgement that efforts to curb inflation could lead to job losses, has resulted in pushback from some economists and lawmakers who argue that a recession would be worse than today’s inflation.

Josh Bivens, director of research at the Economic Policy Institute, wrote in July that inflation does not directly decrease people’s incomes in the aggregate in the way that unemployment does and that in the long term, a recession would hurt economic growth more than inflation would.

Several Democratic senators have spoken out against raising rates, saying that it will put more Americans out of work, and would ultimately result in a painful recession. U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren tweeted on Wednesday morning, “Throwing millions out of work without addressing key drivers of higher prices isn’t the solution to fight inflation.”

On Monday, Sens. Warren, Bernie Sanders (I-VT), Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), and Jeff Merkley (D-OR), and U.S. Reps. Sylvia Garcia (D-TX), Jesus “Chuy” G. Garcia, Katie Porter (D-CA), Madeleine Dean (D-PA), Jamaal Bowman (D-NY), and Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) wrote to Powell: “Your ‘overarching focus’ on ‘using [the Fed’s] tools to bring inflation back down to our 2 percent goal’ no matter the cost is particularly troubling given the limits of interest rate hikes in addressing key drivers of today’s inflation, including lingering supply chain snarls, corporate price gouging, and the war in Ukraine.”

Powell had previously heard from U.S. Sens. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) and John Hickenlooper (D-CO).  Brown, chair of the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, wrote to Powell on Oct. 25, “ … potential job losses brought about by monetary over-tightening will only worsen these matters for the working class.” While Hickenlooper wrote: “… I worry any additional action will undermine economic growth and harm American families.”

Democratic members of Congress introduced a bill in May that would focus on stopping price gouging during an “exceptional market shock.”

Republicans say they would cut government spending and “regain American energy independence” to bring down inflation, under the Commitment to America plan shared by House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy.

Republican candidates for Congress have seized on the issue for the midterm elections. On Oct. 6, Madison Gesiotto Gilbert, who is running to represent Ohio’s 13th Congressional District, tweeted, “41-year high inflation” among her list of criticisms of Biden’s presidency. While Mark Robinson, the Republican running to take Democratic Rep. Dina Titus’ seat in Nevada’s 1st Congressional District, has blamed pandemic relief for inflation, according to the Financial Times. He said, “It’s reckless government policy that spent trillions of dollars we did not have and then paid people not to work: that’s what fueled the inflation. If they hadn’t done that, the Fed would not have to react.”

The CARES Act, the first pandemic relief measure with a $2.1 trillion price tag, was passed with bipartisan support in Congress during Donald Trump’s presidency. And economists have said that inflation in large part is being driven by consumer spending.

In the past month, the Biden administration has taken action to try to alleviate the burden of inflation by providing cost-of-living adjustments to people receiving Social Security benefits as well as implementing IRS inflation adjustments.

Biden says ‘democracy itself’ is on the ballot, warns of ‘path to chaos’ by election deniers

WASHINGTON, DC - NOVEMBER 2: U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks on preserving and protecting Democracy at Union Station on November 2, 2022 in Washington, DC. Biden addressed the threat of election deniers and those who seek to undermine faith in voting in the upcoming midterm elections. (Photo by Michael A. McCoy/Getty Images)

(GA Recorder) — President Joe Biden asked voters Wednesday night to focus on the threats candidates aligned with his predecessor pose to the foundation of U.S. democracy in the midterm elections.

In a 20-minute speech at Washington, D.C.’s  Union Station, before a Democratic audience, Biden decried a rise in political violence and blamed former President Donald Trump for promoting a dangerous environment in which losing candidates refuse to accept election results.

“This is a path to chaos in America,” Biden said. “It’s unprecedented. It’s unlawful. And it’s un-American. As I’ve said before, you can’t love your country only when you win.”

Biden noted the midterms, in which voting ends on Tuesday, are the first national election since a mob inspired by Trump’s false claims that he was cheated out of reelection stormed the nearby U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Union Station sits just down the street from the Capitol.

The midterms give voters a chance to reject “extreme MAGA Republicans” and their efforts to undermine the electoral process, Biden said, using a term for Trump supporters. That wing of the Republican Party was a minority of the GOP, Biden said, though polling shows the vast majority of Republicans support Trump and most do not blame him for the Jan. 6 attack.

The election results will influence many major policy issues, including the economy, Social Security, safety, health care and others, Biden said.

“It’s all important,” Biden said. “But there’s something else at stake: democracy itself.”

He urged voters to remember not only “the policy of the moment” but that national institutions are under threat.

Biden cited the recent attack on Paul Pelosi, the 82-year-old husband of U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, in his San Francisco home by an assailant who was looking for the speaker and using the same threatening language as Jan. 6 rioters.

Biden also mentioned Georgia election worker Shaye Moss and her mother, Ruby Freeman, who testified before the U.S. House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack and Trump’s role in it that they’d been harassed and threatened by Trump’s supporters.

Biden’s remarks came in the last intense days of campaigning in a contest whose results will have great bearing on the success of his next two years in office.

Already more than 30 million people have voted, according to the United States Election Project. In Congress, Republicans are expected to take over control of the U.S. House, but control of the Senate remains a toss-up, with Georgia and Nevada races seen as key.

Election deniers on the ballot

Republican candidates for office at every level have promoted Trump’s lies that the 2020 election was stolen from him. There is no evidence to support the claim that Biden’s 2020 victory over Trump was illegitimate.

Doug Mastriano, the Republican candidate for governor in Pennsylvania, was among those who stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6. GOP gubernatorial nominees in Arizona, Michigan and Wisconsin have also denied the results of the 2020 election.

Republicans seeking to become secretaries of state, a position that usually oversees elections, in Arizona, Michigan, Minnesota and Nevada have also embraced Trump’s false 2020 claims.

Mark Finchem, the Republican nominee in Arizona, has said he would not have certified the last presidential election.

Biden didn’t mention any candidates by name Thursday but said such campaigns were happening across the country. He said “it’s estimated that there are more than 300 election deniers on the ballot all across America this year.”

The many challenges of the 2020 results that Trump launched actually reinforced that the election was fairly decided, Biden said. Every lawsuit and recount showed Biden won, he said.

“There’s no election in history that we can be more certain of its results,” he said.

Candidates for Congress, governor, attorney general and other offices won’t even commit to respecting the results of the races they were competing in, he said.

“They’ve emboldened violence and intimidation of voters and election officials,” he said.

Republicans reject the premise

Some Republican members of Congress dismissed the speech as an effort to distract from pocketbook issues that voters could see as more immediate.

“Joe Biden is beyond desperate to talk about anything other than the historic 40-year-high inflation he’s caused,” U.S. Sen. Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee tweeted.

U.S. Rep. Don Bishop of North Carolina said the address was “20 minutes of partisan bickering.”

And U.S. Rep. Andy Biggs, a far-right member of Arizona’s delegation, called Biden a “tyrant.”

“Americans are fed up with Joe Biden,” Biggs said. “Instead of listening to their concerns, he responded by holding a national address to patronize them.”

But Biden implored voters to reject political violence and intimidation.

Midterm voters could turn aside the threat to democracy and steer the country on another course, he said.

“You have the power,” Biden said. “It’s your decision. The fate of the nation, the fate of the soul of America, lies where it always does—with the people, in your hands and your heart and your ballot.”

Phillip J. Hulsey

Phillip J. Hulsey, age 79, of Mt. Airy, Georgia went home to be with his Lord on Tuesday, November 1, 2022.

Mr. Hulsey was born on February 9, 1943 in Stephens County, Georgia to the late William Jefferson and Rosa Belle Garrett Hulsey. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his brothers-in-law, Jerry Pruitt; and Rev. Johnny Jett, Jr; sister-in-law, Sheila Jett.

Mr. Hulsey was an active member of Gethsemane Baptist Church. Phillip was a proud veteran of the United States Army. He had retired as Owner and Operator of Star Auto Electric and current owner of The Shop at Star Place in Cornelia with over 44 years of dedicated service to his community. Phillip was a loving and dedicated husband, father, grandfather, and great-grandfather and was affectionately known to his grandchildren as “PawPaw” and “Papa”.

Survivors include his loving wife, Nina Jett Hulsey, of Mt. Airy; daughter and son-in-law, Cindy and Tom Silone, of Lima, OH; sons and daughters-in-law, Chuck and Laura Hulsey, of Toccoa; P.J. and Coral Hulsey, of Clarkesville; Billy and Tonya Lumpkin, of Jefferson; Travis and Tina Lumpkin, of McDonough; Stephen and Tabitha Lumpkin, of Mt. Airy; sisters and brothers-in-law, Rosalyn and Henry Brown; Regenia and Billy Haygood; sister, Debbie Pruitt, all of Mt. Airy; sisters-in-law, Elaine Jett, of Clarkesville; Sherri and Carlos Reed, of Pendergrass; twenty-two grandchildren and thirteen great-grandchildren; and numerous nieces, nephews, and cousins.

Funeral Services will be held at 2:00 p.m., Saturday, November 5, 2022 at the Level Grove Baptist Church with Rev. Donald Grizzle, Rev. Shannon Irvin, Rev. Austin Kelley and Rev. Billy Burrell officiating. Interment will follow in Yonah Memorial Gardens with military honors provided by the United States Army and the Grant Reeves Honor Guard.

The family will receive friends from 6:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m., Friday, November 4, 2022 at the Whitfield Funeral Home, North Chapel.

in lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to Gideons International, P.O. Box 195, Baldwin, Georgia 30511.

Arrangements have been entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Homes & Crematory, North Chapel at 245 Central Avenue, Demorest, Georgia 30535. Telephone: 706-778-1700.

Party heavyweights cheer for Abrams and Kemp to land knockout in countdown to Election Day

Democrat Stacey Abrams and GOP Gov. Brian Kemp are taking their closing pitches to the campaign trail in the final days of voting. (Ross Williams and Jill Nolin/Georgia Recorder)

(GA Recorder) — Gov. Brian Kemp and his rival Stacey Abrams are crisscrossing the state in the last week of voting in hopes of rallying supporters to the ballot box.

Kemp enters the homestretch with a lead in recent polls that show him potentially winning a second term without a runoff in his rematch with Abrams, who narrowly lost in 2018. But when asked about his apparent advantage Tuesday, he downplayed the significance, saying “nothing’s guaranteed in politics.”

“I’ve told people we don’t need to believe polls, we don’t need to believe the media. Don’t believe politicians. Just get out there and work. The ultimate poll is going to be this coming Tuesday,” Kemp told reporters.

The Abrams campaign has argued the polling does not reflect Georgia’s electorate today and has pushed back on polling that they argue assumes the state is more right-leaning than it is.

Both candidates are benefiting from last-minute boosts from high-profile national figures. Former President Barack Obama held a spirited rally for Abrams Friday, and Former Vice President Mike Pence campaigned with Kemp in the northern metro Atlanta area Tuesday.

“I am here because I believe in Gov. Brian Kemp,” Pence said in Cumming. “But I’m also here because Stacey Abrams can never be governor of the state of Georgia or lead an administration anywhere else in America.”

Pence didn’t say whether he had plans to campaign for Republican senatorial candidate Herschel Walker, but said he supports “the whole ticket” in Georgia.

Pence supported Kemp in the primary, coming to Georgia on the eve of the May election to help seal Kemp’s victory over a Republican challenger who had the backing of former President Donald Trump. Pence is also positioning himself as a potential presidential contender in 2024, though he said Tuesday he is “completely focused on 2022.”

The pair shared the stage Tuesday afternoon in the parking lot of the Cumming Cigar Company in conservative Forsyth County, where early voting turnout is already high. When the crowd was asked if they had voted yet, most of the hands shot up.

Statewide, about 1.8 million Georgians had already voted as of Monday, which is 34% higher than the same point in 2018, according to GeorgiaVotes.com. This week is the last chance to vote early ahead of Election Day Tuesday.

The governor and Pence later appeared together in Gainesville, and the governor is set to campaign with Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey in northwest Georgia Wednesday and stump with former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie later in the week.

Kemp focused his attacks Tuesday on pandemic-era policy contrasts with Abrams and touted the overall strength of the state’s economy – themes that have been central to his re-election message. Pence praised Kemp’s handling of the pandemic.

“Georgia was not one of the first states to reopen its economy and end the shutdowns. Georgia was the first state in America to open up again, and Gov. Brian Kemp led the way,” Pence said to applause.

“No one in Georgia’s history has done more to create jobs, cut taxes, restore sanity to your schools, put criminals behind bars, protect the unborn and secure all the God-given liberties enshrined in the Constitution of the United States than Gov. Brian Kemp,” he said.

“I can honestly say I was for Brian Kemp before it was cool,” former Vice President Mike Pence said during a campaign stop in Cumming – a reference to his support for Kemp back in the 2018 primary election. Jill Nolin/Georgia Recorder 

Abrams’ closing arguments

Shortly after Kemp’s event, Abrams took the mic inside a Marietta brew pub, where she teased her rival over Pence’s visit.

“Let me tell you a little secret about Mike Pence,” she said. “When he was governor of Indiana, he expanded Medicaid in his state. He accepted the money. He created 30,000 new, good-paying jobs, and they did not lose six hospitals in the last four years.”

Standing in front of a collection of brewing equipment, Abrams was flanked by U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff and Democratic attorney general candidate state Sen. Jen Jordan, whose Atlanta district includes part of Cobb County.

The crowd stood shoulder to shoulder near the bar, whooping and applauding as Abrams recited campaign promises, including better access to affordable housing, teacher pay raises and stricter gun control.

Abrams said she would use Georgia’s record budget surplus to help all Georgians, while she argued Kemp plans to help only those who have already found success.

“We’ve got 6.6 billion ways to invest in the state of Georgia,” she said. “Right now, the state of Georgia has $6.6 billion sitting in its coffers. That’s after we pay every bill we’re supposed to pay this year, that’s after we put 15% into a rainy day fund. That’s after we’ve accounted for population growth, that’s what we’ve got left.”

Abrams reiterated her charges of voter suppression against Kemp, arguing that the state’s 2021 election overhaul turns voters away, which Republican state officials deny.

One of the largest applause lines of the evening came in response to Abrams’ pledge to restore abortion rights in the state.

“He is coming after your body,” she said. “He’s coming after your future. He is coming after our rights, and it is time to tell him, ‘hands off our bodies, hands off our laws.’”

“It took a man to break the promise of Georgia, it’s going to take a woman to put it right,” she added.

That line resonated with Angie Tate, an executive assistant from DeKalb County who said her top issues were womens’ rights and affordable housing.

“You can have your opinion, but when your opinion becomes a law to tell me what I can do, no. I can’t. No,” she said. “That’s the No. 1 issue. That’s scary. We’re going into the Handmaid’s Tale, where people are being forced to have children.”

Jordan, who has pledged to fight the state’s abortion law if elected, urged the women in the crowd to vote early and volunteer to make phone calls and knock on doors.

“Women need to take hold of their political power, they need to use it,” she said. “They need to understand that they hold the key in this election. And while almost a million women have voted, it is not enough, period, hard stop. If the women who cared about people’s individual rights, if the women cared about the future of the children of this state, if the women knew the kind of power they held with their vote, we can win this, and we can win it outright on Tuesday.”

Ossoff agreed, dismissing recent polls with a reminder of his and Sen. Raphael Warnock’s wins two years ago.

“I want you to remember as there’s so much chatter in the closing days, that folks who made their living or make their reputation predicting the outcomes of elections said there was no way that a 33-year-old Jewish son of an immigrant and a Black pastor who holds Dr. King’s pulpit at Ebenezer Baptist Church were going to win those two races in the state of Georgia,” he said. “But they didn’t understand you. All of us in this room, writing postcards, chipping in what we could, making phone calls, knocking on doors, taking our destiny into our own hands, and exercising our power as citizens. Well, now we have that opportunity and that obligation again, with one week — one week until the polls close.”

From left, Stacey Abrams, U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff and state Sen. Jen Jordan. With a week to go before Election Day, the three campaigned together in Marietta. Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder

Toccoa man killed in Franklin County wreck

fatal accident

A two-vehicle crash Tuesday in Franklin County claimed the life of a Toccoa man. 78-year-old Johnny Burton Freeman died after crashing into a pickup truck that ran a stop sign, state troopers say.

The fatal crash happened around 3:19 p.m. on Stone Bridge Road at Grady School Road, about 4 miles southwest of Lavonia.

The driver who caused the wreck now faces charges of 2nd-degree vehicular homicide.

According to the preliminary crash report, Robby Douglas McDaniel, 57, of Jefferson, was driving a Ford F-250 east on Grady School Road. He ran the stop sign at the intersection with Stone Bridge and pulled into the path of the northbound Cadillac Deville Freeman was driving.

The Cadillac struck the truck’s front passenger side. After impact, both vehicles traveled off the northeast corner of the intersection into a field. The Cadillac overturned. McDaniel was ejected from the truck.

The Franklin County coroner pronounced Freeman dead at the scene. A 16-year-old front-seat passenger in the car suffered minor injuries, says Georgia State Patrol Sgt. J.R. Dean of Post 52 in Lavonia. Franklin County EMS transported the teen to Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Gainesville.

Paramedics airlifted McDaniel to Northeast Georgia Medical Center with serious injuries.

In addition to vehicular homicide, Sgt. Dean says McDaniel will also be charged for failing to stop at a stop sign and not wearing his seatbelt.

Kline Osborn Pugh

Kline Osborn Pugh, age 92, a resident of Gainesville, Georgia, passed away on November 2, 2022, in the comfort of his home.

A native of Alabama he was President of his high school senior class, where he excelled in basketball and baseball. After graduation, he briefly played with a professional baseball team before enlisting in the United States Air Force shortly after the outbreak of the Korean War. He worked 50 years in the printing industry, retiring as a vice-president of a subsidiary company of AT&T. He was an authority in printing techniques and printing machinery engineering. In this capacity, he traveled over 20 times to Europe, Australia and Japan.

He was a noted amateur genealogist and identified 15 ancestors who participated in the Revolutionary War. He was a member of The Sons of the American Revolution (SAR) serving 12 years as State Secretary of the Georgia Society. He was a member of Christ Lutheran Church in Oakwood.

He was preceded in death by his son, David Kline Pugh.

Survivors are his wife of 69 years, Patricia Knight Pugh; daughters Lisa Messina and Gina Bell; six grandchildren Corey Pugh, David Butler, Anthony Messina, Alicia Pugh, Erica Upchurch and Sarah Greene and seven great-grandchildren.

Mr. Pugh’s ashes will be interred in Alabama.

Arrangements have been entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Home & Crematory, South Chapel at 1370 Industrial Boulevard, Baldwin, Georgia. Telephone 706-778-7123.

Traffic shift planned for Appalachian Parkway work

Cleveland Bypass Traffic Shift (photo GDOT)

Phase three of the Appalachian Parkway north of Cleveland has been in use for months, but the Georgia Department of Transpiration still has work that needs to be done before it is actually complete.

GDOT in a news release has advised sometime during  November they intend to implement a traffic shift in the area of the White County Sheriff’s Office/Detention Center in order to install a new bridge.   The shift is expected to remain in place for approximately 9 months or until the bridge is complete.

Local drivers and commercial vehicle drivers who frequently use the roadway are encouraged to follow the Georgia DOT-Northeast social media (Facebook, Twitter) pages for up-to-date announcements regarding this project.

According to GDOT motorists are advised to expect delays, exercise caution, and reduce their speed while traveling through work zones.

The lesson of the wiggly worm

(Laura Stanley/Pexels)

Grandpa sat on the pond’s bank with a fishing pole in her hand, an apron around her waist, a bonnet on her head, and a pail full of dirt and wiggly worms by her side.

“Grandpa!” I yelled. “Will you please put a worm on my hook?” She did not answer, so I walked closer to her, thinking she might not have heard me.

As I held the old cane pole with the wormless hook waiting for her to put a creepy worm on it, she replied, “Honey, how old are you?”

“Grandpa, you know I am six!” I said, laughing.

“Well, you are old enough to put your own worm on that hook.”

My eyes grew large, and my mouth opened in disbelief. My favorite grandmother in the whole world was not going to help me. I was dejected and certainly would not put that squirmy, ugly worm on the hook by myself!

I stomped my feet and shed a few tears, but Grandpa refused to notice me. She never uttered a sound except when she caught a big brim and yelled, “Whoopee!”

The fish kept biting, and I kept pleading but to no avail. Finally, I knew I needed to dig in the bucket and find a worm if I was going to fish with Grandpa.

From then on, I became an expert in locating worms. My skills were well known to anyone interested in knowing them. Grandpa was about the only one who was.

We would fish nearly every day when I visited her, and she even let me exaggerate the size of the brim or bass I caught. Again, Grandpa was about the only one who pretended to believe me.

The funny thing about the lessons I learned sitting on the bank of a pond; they have stayed with me all my life. I realized that if you want to catch a fish, fulfill a dream, or live your best life, you must be brave enough to dig for it.

Life teaches us to keep trying and digging every day. There is no day that goes by that does not require patience, work, or understanding. There is not a day when we cannot learn a lesson. Sometimes we are not open to knowledge, and often we lose patience. Some days we are not the best we can be because we are not motivated to be. Those are the days we let the big fish swim on by to be caught by someone else.

I recall very few days when Grandpa wasted a day. She did her chores, didn’t complain, and rewarded herself by sitting in her folding chair by the pond when the day was done.
I also learned from fishing with my Grandpa how to teach a child to accept responsibility. Some grown-ups missed that little tidbit of information. They blame everyone for not improving their lives, relationships, or inability to catch a big fish.

Grandpa was not an enabler of anyone who would not try, including a six-year-old. It started early with all of us. She was willing to listen to the crying, yelling, and begging because she wanted us to learn that we were not always going to get our way, mainly when it was the wrong way.

The lesson she taught me about not relying on others to do the hard work has served me well. Being a single parent of three children required me to be self-reliant for much of my life. I never resented doing what was needed to put a fish on the table to feed my children. Even if I didn’t like the tasks—even if some of them felt like sticking slimy worms on hooks—I didn’t mind them.

One of my readers once told me her favorite stories were about “Grandpa.” I smiled as I thought about the many lives my grandmother touched. She still inspires by the salt-of-the-earth way she lived. Hers was a simple, rewarding life of cooking meals for her family, loving her husband, tending her garden, playing with children, laughing with her friends, adoring the Lord, and teaching a six-year-old a pailful of lessons by using a wiggly worm and a hook.

RELATED: Her name was “Grandpa!”

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Lynn Gendusa

About the author: Lynn Gendusa is an author and columnist whose work appears weekly in newspapers in her home state of Georgia. She is regularly featured in the USA Today Networks around the country, including, The Tennessean. In addition, her stories appear in senior magazines across the US as well as in Guideposts. Lynn Gendusa’s latest book is “Southern Comfort: Stories of Family, Friendship, Fiery Trials, and Faith.” She can be reached at www.lynngendusa.com.

Season Preview: TFS Varsity Boys Basketball

Anfernee Hanna (Austin Poffenberger)

The roster might have undergone some reconstruction with a solid group of seniors graduating, but as the Indians turn the calendar to the 2022-23 season, coach Cody Coleman has a group that he believes will continue to improve.

“I believe our biggest strength is our senior leadership,” says Coleman. “We have eight seniors on the team this year, and several of them contributed major minutes last season.”

Leading that charge is senior Preseason All-State selection Anfernee Hanna, who is the lone returning starter off a team that made the Sweet 16 a year ago. However, others such as Lincoln Hall, Diego Crotta, and Vlad Popescu are among that senior group Coleman eluded to.

“We will continue to build and grow as a program,” adds Coleman of the outlook for the Indians. “Our biggest challenge is finding a balance between playing at a fast pace but also playing under control.”

Another challenge for Tallulah Falls is the reshaping of the region, which due to the recent realignment and reclassification, now includes Rabun County, Elbert County, and Commerce among others with TFS.

The Indians, who are just two seasons removed from their first-ever region championship, won 20 games, were ranked #2 in the state at one point, were the region runner-up, and made the program’s third-ever Sweet 16 last year, are hoping for more this time around. The offense will dictate in many ways what this team can do.

“We want to play fast in transition and push the pace to set the tempo of the game,” states Coleman.

Hanna will be looked to as the go-to scorer, as he averaged 17 points per game, posting 441 total points (fifth-most in school history) last season. The guard/forward stands at 697 career points, as he closes in on becoming just the fourth TFS player to reach 1,000 points.

Aside from the four seniors listed above, the roster includes seniors Joey Lamm, Lazar Grujanic, and Krystian Jankiewicz, as well as juniors Zakhar Valasiuk and Sam Ketch, and sophomores Teryk Tilly and KC Respress.

TFS opens the season with a #8 state ranking, and will tip off on November 8 at home in a scrimmage against Stephens County. The official season-opener comes on November 12 at home against Mt. Paran.

 

VARSITY ROSTER

SCHEDULE

PROGRAM HISTORY/RECORDS

Season Preview: TFS Varsity Girls Basketball

Denika Lightbourne (Austin Poffenberger)

A year ago, the Lady Indians had an unforgettable season that saw TFS win its first-ever region title and make the first trip to the Elite 8. Tallulah Falls went 15-5 overall and were ranked as high as #7 in the state polls.

The roster returns two starters in All-State selection: senior Denika Lightbourne and sophomore Haygen James. Lightbourne’s 342 points last year were the 8th-most in a single season at TFS. The guard has 971 career points and is set to become the Lady Indians’ fifth member of the 1,000-point club, and with 433 rebounds, she could become just the second 1,000-point, 500-rebound member in school history.

Coach Lowell Hamilton returns a group that has others with varsity experience such as sophomore Breelyn Wood, junior Allie Phasavang, and seniors Miracle Bain and Tanisha Seymour. Newcomers to the roster include senior Nahia Fresno Suarez, junior Tiana Bojovic, sophomore Millie Holcomb, and freshman Emily Cai.

The region will be a gauntlet that includes TFS (Elite 8), Elbert County (Class 2A State Champions), Rabun County (State Runner-Up), Commerce (Final 4), and others. It will be a crowded and talented region, with every game crucial for returning to the state playoffs.

“We’re focused on being the best us we can be,” says Hamilton, who feels the strength of this team is in the desire to simply play hard.

The region-title defending run begins on November 8 in a home scrimmage against Stephens County, and the first official game at home on November 12 against Mt. Paran.

VARSITY ROSTER

SCHEDULE

PROGRAM HISTORY/RECORDS

 

Fire damages fifth-wheel camper in Cleveland

Firefighters extinguish a fire that broke out Nov. 1, 2022, inside a camper on Hwy. 129 South in Cleveland. (White County Public Safety)

Firefighters responding to a structure fire instead found a camper on fire in Cleveland on Tuesday.

The fifth-wheel camper was parked on a lot with other campers in the 6200 block of Highway 129 South. White County Public Safety says it was vacant. Firefighters from the county and Cleveland responded to the call around 8:30 a.m. on November 1.

The cause of the fire remains under investigation.

(White County Public Safety)

Supreme Court rejects Lindsey Graham’s bid to avoid Fulton grand jury’s 2020 election probe

FILE - The U.S. Supreme Court ordered Republican South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham to testify in a Fulton County grand jury investigation into whether illegal efforts were made to overturn the 2020 presidential election in favor of Donald Trump. (Ting Shen/Pool Photo via AP, File)

(GA Recorder) — South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham will have to testify before a Fulton County special grand jury investigating 2020 election interference after the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday rejected his attempt to quash the subpoena.

The Supreme Court’s unsigned decision sets up a scheduled Nov. 17 showdown – which would be the latest trip to Georgia in several weeks for the veteran senator, who is expected to face questions about whether he tried to pressure state election officials to overturn former President Donald Trump’s 2020 loss to President Joe Biden.

The Supreme Court’s order does exempt Graham from having to answer questions directly tied to his legislative duties.

Attorneys for the senator said that when he called the Georgia secretary of state’s office about the state’s procedures for disqualifying absentee ballots and other election matters, he was acting under his responsibilities of certifying elections and as chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee.

According to the unsigned order, Graham’s speech or debate clause immunity does not justify blocking him from appearing before the grand jury. The Constitution’s Speech or Debate clause shields lawmakers from certain criminal or civil proceedings connected to their legislative duties.

Graham asked the Supreme Court last month to reverse a U.S. District Court judge’s ruling denying Graham’s motion to suppress the subpoena, with some restrictions on having to answer questions about details Graham discussed with Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger and other officials as part of his “fact-finding” mission before certifying the election

Graham’s appearance is to occur before a 23-member panel that will issue a report with recommendations whether Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis should pursue charges in a wide-ranging and long-running probe with dozens of witnesses that include some of Trump’s closest allies and Georgia political officials.

Willis initiated the investigation spurred by the public release of a recorded January 2020 phone call in which Trump pressed Raffensperger to find enough ballots to overcome Biden’s victory.

Last week, a South Carolina judge ordered Trump’s ex-chief of staff Mark Meadows to appear in the Atlanta courthouse after he fought the grand jury’s subpoena. Among those who have testified in the grand jury probe are Trump’s former personal attorney Rudy Giuliani, named by prosecutors as a target for his role in pushing baseless allegations of widespread voter fraud in Georgia.

Meanwhile, a Fulton judge in charge of overseeing the special investigation has ordered that Georgia GOP Gov. Brian Kemp must testify following his Nov. 8 re-election bid against Democrat Stacey Abrams. The judge in that case  rejected arguments that the governor could avoid a grand jury appearance because of executive privilege and sovereign immunity, which protects the state from being sued without its consent.

And the grand jury will also hear from nearly all of the 16 Georgia Republicans who, during a secret December 2020 meeting at the Capitol, served as fake electors and cast illegitimate votes for Trump. A judge ruled in July that the exception is Republican state Sen. Burt Jones, who participated in the meeting of fake electors. Jones does not need to testify in Willis’ investigation because she hosted a June fundraiser for his opponent in this year’s lieutenant governor’s race, Democrat Charlie Bailey.