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Habersham South Precinct moving

Voters on the south end of Habersham will vote in the old Community Bank & Trust Operations Center near Belk in Cornelia on Tuesday, Dec. 6, 2022. (nowhabersham.com)

Voters assigned to the Habersham South Precinct will be voting in a different location come runoff day in Georgia.

The Habersham South Precinct has moved from its temporary location at the Cornelia Community House to its permanent home in the Old Community Bank & Trust Operations Center near Belk department store in Cornelia.

The rented facility will also serve as the county’s office of elections and voter registration. The address is 365 Habersham County Shopping Center in Cornelia.

All Habersham South Precinct voters will go to this location for the general runoff on Tuesday, December 6.

Banks County voters who live inside the city of Baldwin will vote at the Banks County Recreation Department, located at 607 Thompson Street in Homer.

New voter precinct cards are due to be mailed to voters notifying them of the precinct’s change of address.

Billy Ray Henson, Sr.

Billy Ray Henson, Sr. age 64, of Cornelia, Georgia, passed away on Tuesday, November 22, 2022.

Born in Hayesville, North Carolina on November 23, 1957, he was a son of Lois Jean Byers Henson of Mount Airy, Georgia & the late Carl Clinton Henson, Sr. Billy Ray retired from Wilbanks Lumber Company in Clarkesville with over 40 years of dedicated service. He was truly a hardworking man who loved his family tremendously. Billy Ray was of the Baptist faith.

Survivors include his children, Billy Ray, Jr. “Joe” & Christy Henson of Demorest, GA; Pam & Jeff Black of Cornelia, GA; grandchildren, Karley, Gentry, & Peyton Black all of Cornelia, GA; William Henson of Demorest, GA; great-grandson, Briggs Justice of Cornelia, GA;

sister, Sue Henson Berrong of Cleveland, GA; brothers & sisters-in-law, Carl Clinton, Jr. & Shirley Henson of Demorest, GA; Gary Lee Henson; Jacky & Louise Henson all of Mount Airy, GA; special nephew, Waylon Henson of Mount Airy, GA; many other nieces, nephews, relatives, & friends.

Funeral services are scheduled for 2:00 p.m. Friday, November 25, 2022, at Hillside Memorial Chapel with Rev. Bill Trotter officiating. Interment will follow in the East View Cemetery in Mount Airy.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 12:00 p.m. until the service hour on Friday.

An online guest registry is available for the Henson family at www.HillsideMemorialChapel.com.

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

Richard Lynn Braun

Richard Lynn Braun, age seventy-eight, entered rest on November 22, 2022, under the skilled, compassionate care of the Hospice of Northeast Georgia Medical Center, Gainesville Campus.

Richard was born March 8, 1944, in Lafayette, Indiana, to the late Harold & Ruth Davis Braun. He grew up in Lafayette, Indiana, and earned a bachelor’s degree in biology from Purdue University. He served his Country in the United States Army Medical Corps, having done a tour in the Vietnam War. Richard retired, having worked in food science and quality at Dolly Madison, Saps Donuts, and Martha White, and finally as a chemist at Delta First. He loved the outdoors – camping, hunting, archery, flint knapping, and tennis. But his passion was always fly fishing, even making his own flies. He also made silver jewelry in his later years. He had an endless appetite for books and magazines relating to science and nature. He loved his family and will be greatly missed by all who knew him.

Left to cherish amazing memories are daughter Misty (Thomas) Riffault; son Ryan (Sarah) Braun; grandchildren Julien Riffault, Luc Riffault, Anson Braun, Owen Braun, and Ethan Braun; brothers James “Jim” Braun and Donald “Don” (Tammy) Braun; nephews, Joshua Braun, Jacob (Amanda) Braun, and Benjamin (Melissa) Braun.

Services to honor Richard will be held at a later date.

If you would like to sign the online guestbook or leave a condolence, you may do so at  https://www.wardsfh.com/obituary/richard-braun.

In lieu of flowers, donations may be sent to the Hydrocephalus Association, https://www.hydroassoc.org.

Ward’s Funeral Home of Gainesville is honored to serve the family of Richard Lynn Braun.

Joye Belle Adair Rushing

Joye Belle Adair Rushing, age 85, of Clarkesville, Georgia, formerly of Haleyville, Alabama, went home to be with the Lord on Monday, November 21, 2022.

Born in Winston County, Alabama, on June 18, 1937, she was a daughter of the late Arthur Fuller & Callie Adair Self. Joye was a homemaker and a member of County Line Church in Haleyville. She was a very loving wife, mother, grandmother, & great-grandmother. Joye’s care and compassion for others were immeasurable. Her last words to everyone were always, “I Love You!”

In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, D.J. “Shorty” Rushing & by her brother, Robert Adair.

Survivors include her children, Ronnie & Susan Rushing of Clarkesville, GA; Cindy & Terry Gann of Vincent, AL; Renese Rushing King of MS; sisters, Jeanette Wiley of Memphis, TN; Faye Simmons of Booneville, AR; grandchildren, Derek & Liza Rushing, Ty & Rachael Rushing, Kaitlin Gann, Maggey Gann, Amber King, & Justin King; great-granddaughter, Jaina Rushing.

Funeral services are scheduled for 1:00 p.m. on Friday, November 25, 2022, from the Chapel of Pinkard Funeral Home of Haleyville, 1308 21st Street, Hwy. 195, Haleyville, AL 35565. Interment will follow in the Winston Memorial Gardens in Haleyville.

The family will receive friends at the Pinkard Funeral Home from 12:00 p.m. until the service hour on Friday, November 25, 2022.

An online guest registry is available for the Rushing family at www.HillsideMemorialChapel.com.

Local arrangements are in the care & professional direction of Hillside Memorial Chapel & Gardens of Clarkesville, Georgia. (706) 754-6256

No Saturday voting for runoff in Habersham

Early in-person voting for the Dec. 6 Senate runoff will be held at the Ruby Fulbright Aquatic Center in Clarkesville. (Jerry Neace/Now Habersham)

While voters in some Georgia counties will head to the polls to cast ballots this weekend, voters in Habersham will not. County elections supervisor Laurel Ellison says Habersham will not offer Saturday voting ahead of the December 6 U.S. Senate runoff between Sen. Raphael Warnock and Herschel Walker.

The Georgia Supreme Court this week paved the way for Saturday voting after Warnock and Democratic groups sued, challenging a law the secretary of state says prohibits Saturday voting within two days of a holiday. Thanksgiving falls on Thursday. A state holiday formerly honoring Gen. Robert E. Lee’s birthday will be observed on Friday.

More than a dozen Georgia counties, mostly in Democratic-leaning metropolitan areas, will open precincts the weekend after Thanksgiving.

Ellison refuses to say who decided not to allow Saturday voting in Habersham and why; however, the decision is in keeping with most of the state’s smaller Republican-leaning counties, which will only offer early voting the week before the runoff.

All early in-person voting in Habersham will occur at the Ruby Fulbright Aquatic Center in Clarkesville. Polls will be open from 8 a.m.-7 p.m. from November 28 to December 2.

Any Georgian who was registered to vote as of November 7, 2022, will be allowed to cast a ballot in the runoff, even if they did not vote in the general election.

Voters may request absentee mail-in ballots through Monday, November 28. Those unsure of their eligibility are encouraged to visit the My Voter Page on the secretary of state’s website to check their voter registration status.

For more information about runoff elections, contact your County Registrar’s Office.

SEE ALSO

State Supreme Court rules Georgians can vote Saturday after Thanksgiving

State Supreme Court rules Georgians can vote Saturday after Thanksgiving

The Joan P. Gardner library in Fulton County will be one of the early voting sites open on Saturday, Nov. 26, ahead of the Dec. 6 runoff between Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock and Republican Herschel Walker. The Georgia Supreme Court on Wednesday ruled against the Republican Party attempts to block local election officials from conducting advanced voting the Saturday after Thanksgiving. (John McCosh/Georgia Recorder)

(GA Recorder) — Early voting is set to take place in more than a dozen Georgia counties both days on Thanksgiving weekend after the Georgia Supreme Court rejected a last-ditch attempt by Republican groups to block the polls from opening on Saturday for the runoff for the U.S. Senate.

On Wednesday, the Supreme Court justices unanimously denied the petition from the Georgia Republican Party, the Republican National Senate Committee and the Republican National Committee that argued that it is illegal for counties to offer early voting on Saturday, Nov. 26, since it falls two days after Thanksgiving and one day after a state holiday.

RELATED: No Saturday voting in Habersham

When the secretary of state’s office declined to appeal to the state’s top court, Republican organizations filed the emergency petition. The lawsuit was initially filed last week by Sen. Raphael Warnock’s campaign, the Democratic Party of Georgia, and the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, who argued that the secretary of state’s office was misapplying a law and that having more voting opportunities is a benefit for busy people who work weekdays.

Following the Nov. 8 midterm election, when both Warnock and GOP challenger Herschel Walker failed to avoid a runoff by surpassing 50% to claim victory, GeorgiaSecretary of State Brad Raffensperger initially said that he expected some counties would have advanced voting sites open on Saturday, Nov. 26. Soon after, the state’s position changed when his office issued guidelines for the Senate runoff that said that the new election law’s holiday provision makes it illegal for counties to open the polls this Saturday.

Early voting for the Dec. 6 runoff election began in Douglas County on Tuesday and in DeKalb County on Wednesday.

A number of Georgia counties are planning to open early voting precincts this Saturday, including Chatham, Clarke, Clayton, Cobb, DeKalb, Douglas, Fulton, Gwinnett, Macon-Bibb, Muscogee, and Walton counties. Others will open on Sunday, while each of Georgia’s 159 counties will have polls open from Nov. 28-Dec. 2 ahead of the Dec. 6 runoff.

State election officials recommend voters check the website of their county election office to see when local early voting is available.

In the closely contested runoff, Walker may be at a disadvantage after three courts ruled in favor of Warnock’s suit since, during the early voting period, counties with strong Democratic leanings in Georgia’s large metro areas are planning to offer weekend voting to a larger pool of voters than those with Republican majorities.

Following the 2020 presidential election, Republican lawmakers overhauled Georgia’s voting laws in response to former President Donald Trump’s unexpected loss to Democrat Joe Biden.

The same Republican party that fought to ban voting access on Saturday had repeatedly emphasized that their 2021 election law overhaul was intended to make voting in Georgia harder to cheat and easier to cast a ballot.

They argued in legal filings that Georgia’s law is designed to provide election workers with time off for an extended holiday weekend while also preventing voters in communities with fewer resources from being disadvantaged because of understaffed election offices.

Republican groups contended in their “friend of the court” brief that the Warnock campaign and the Democratic Party are unfairly using the Saturday voting controversy in a partisan manner since the counties with the largest voting bloc that would have the staffing and will to open on Saturday are typically Democratic-leaning.

“Meanwhile, voters in smaller, Republican counties are sidelined, forced to watch as others vote on a day the statute does not permit,” attorney Jake Evans, a defeated Trump-backed congressional candidate, wrote in the brief on behalf of the Republican organizations. “Finally, the court improperly inserted itself into voting procedures, changing the rules of this election days before voting begins.”

Georgia law specifies that in-person voting can begin as soon as possible after a primary and general election but no later than the second Monday before the runoff date.

Early voting sites can be open on the third Saturday of the month if a state holiday precedes the prior weekend, however, the runoff on Dec. 6 does not fit this timeline since the third Saturday falls within the timeframe for midterm certification.

Georgia Supreme Court restores state’s strict six-week abortion ban, for now

An anti-abortion law that sparked massive protests when it was implemented this summer is back in place after it was blocked by a Fulton County judge last week. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

(GA Recorder) — Most abortions are once again illegal in Georgia pending a state Supreme Court decision.

A one-page ruling from the court Wednesday forced abortion providers to send patients home without treatment. The legal question hinges on the state’s ability to pass laws that are invalid at the time the Legislature approves them.

Last week, Fulton County Superior Court Judge Robert C. I. McBurney blocked the state’s controversial law, which bans abortions once cardiac activity is detected in the fetus, typically six weeks into a pregnancy, before most women know they are pregnant.

McBurney ruled that provisions of the law were unconstitutional because they were passed in 2019, while Roe vs. Wade was still the law of the land. The law went into effect this summer after the Supreme Court overturned the longtime precedent. Georgia law states that laws that are illegal when passed are void, McBurney ruled, citing a doctrine called void ab initio, or invalid from the beginning.

When the law was passed, Roe v. Wade guaranteed the right to an abortion based on Fourteenth Amendment protections on the right to privacy; McBurney argued, therefore, a law that violating those protections was not constitutional.

“The Dobbs majority is not somehow ‘more correct’ than the majority that birthed Roe or Casey,” McBurney ruled. “Despite its frothy language disparaging the views espoused by previous Justices, the magic of Dobbs is not its special insight into historical “facts” or its monopoly on constitutional hermeneutics. It is simply numbers. More Justices today believe that the U.S. Constitution does not protect a woman’s right to choose what to do with her body than did in that same institution 50 years ago.”

Lawyers for the state argued a different interpretation of void ab initio, saying it means that a law that is unconstitutional now was also unconstitutional when it was written. They argue that McBurney is misapplying the law and that the U.S. Supreme Court’s overturning of Roe v. Wade means there never was a constitutional protection for abortion rights.

“The LIFE Act is plainly constitutional now, so it was not ‘void’ when enacted in 2019, under the same federal constitution in force today,” the state argued in a filing. “Yet the superior court enjoined the LIFE Act anyway, on the theory that the shift from Roe to Dobbs was, effectively, an amendment to the federal constitution. But that makes no sense, because overruled judicial decisions have no authority at all. The superior court fundamentally misunderstood the role of courts, which merely interpret law in the course of issuing judgments in individual cases.”

“Courts do not amend the constitution, and the constitution does not change simply because a court’s view of it changes. A judicial decision that is later overruled is no law at all, and it cannot invalidate the LIFE Act.”

The justices will scour through the law and relevant past cases before coming to a decision, said Tangi Bush, director of legal affairs for the New Georgia project. It’s not yet clear how long that could take, but it’s likely to be a high priority.

“I do think that given the fact that we have gone, literally, 180 (degrees) within seven days, means there might be more pressure to move a little bit quicker for this decision, I don’t think that they will risk the accuracy of the law, but I think that this will absolutely be top of the docket. So maybe this will give us a little shorter amount of time to get a final decision. I think the pressure’s on because people are suddenly mad again.”

The quick stop is painful for abortion providers, who had resumed offering services to those more than six weeks pregnant and reported high demand, including people calling from other states to make appointments. Those patients, including any waiting in waiting rooms at the time of the decision, are supposed to be turned away.

Monica Simpson, executive director of SisterSong Women of Color Reproductive Justice Collective, the lead plaintiff in the case, said she is frustrated and disappointed but not surprised

“The governor and attorney general of Georgia are doubling down to control access to reproductive health care, and while the stay was granted, we will not stop fighting until this ban that is steeped in white supremacy is gone,” she said. “All Georgians — including Black women and queer, trans, low-income, and rural people — should have the freedom to decide to have children, to not have children, and to raise the families they have in thriving communities. We remain undeterred from realizing this vision.”

“Over the past week, we have seen an (outpouring) of need for abortion care across the southeast,” Atlanta’s Feminist Women’s Health Center wrote in a statement. “Today, we’ll have to turn many patients away once again. This ban is cruel and will especially harm Black communities and other communities of color that face significant barriers to care, such as systemic racism, state criminalization, and financial hardship.”

Abortion opponents celebrated the decision as a win for their cause.

“Lives are now being saved because of our Attorney General’s fast action to reinstate the law after a judge made a blatantly political ruling temporarily knocking it down,” said Cole Muzio, president of the conservative lobbying group Frontline Policy Council in a tweet. “Real leadership saves lives!”

But the attorneys representing SisterSong vowed to fight on.

“Reinstating this extreme abortion ban will cause immense harm, especially to Black Georgians and people with the fewest resources — who are least likely to be able to travel out of state for care and most likely to suffer severe medical consequences from forced pregnancy and childbirth,” said Julia Kaye, staff attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union’s Reproductive Freedom Project. “While this ruling is devastating, the case is not over. We will never stop fighting to ensure that everyone, no matter their geography, race, or income, has the power to control their own bodies and futures.”

Gainesville man arrested in computer sex sting

A 26-year-old Gainesville man was arrested by the Hall County Sheriff’s Office (HCSO) this week after he allegedly had sexually explicit online conversations with someone he believed to be a child.

Jason Allen Looney, who also goes by the name Jason Allen Keeler, faces two felony counts of electronic exploitation of a minor. Investigators said the suspect used an instant messaging service to engage in sexually explicit conversations with a person he understood to be under the age of 16. Looney also arranged to meet the child at a location in Hall County for sex.

Looney was arrested at his residence on East Hall Road on Tuesday, November 22.

Jason Looney

“At this point in the investigation, HCSO has not found evidence that Looney has any local victims,” says Hall County Sheriff’s Public Information Officer B.J. Williams.

Investigators seized electronic devices from the suspect, and additional charges may be forthcoming pending the outcome of forensic processing.

Looney remained in the Hall County Jail with no bond on Wednesday morning.

Kenneth Dale “Bud” Wood

Mr. Kenneth Dale “Bud” Wood, 73, a longtime resident of Habersham County, GA, passed away on Tuesday, November 22, 2022, at his residence in Carlton, GA.

Bud was born in Habersham County, GA, on November 27, 1948, son of the late Swain Wood and Mildred Mize Wood. He was of the Baptist faith and a retired farmer.

Survivors include his wife, Veronica Smith Wood of the residence; son, Michael Kenneth Wood and his wife Deborah of Carlton, GA; grandson, Zachary Wood of Carlton, GA; siblings: Phillip Wood, Tommy Wood, Leah Smith, Betty Tench, and Carolyn Barron, all of Habersham County, GA; and numerous nieces, nephews, and other relatives.

In addition to his parents, he is preceded in death by his wife, Sue Ferguson Wood; and siblings: Linda Smith and Brenda Wood.

Memorial services celebrating Bud’s life will be held on Friday, November 25, at 3 o’clock in the Memorial Chapel of Berry Funeral Home with the Rev. Tony Goss officiating.

The family will greet friends for one hour prior to the service.

Contributions may be made in his memory to T.J. & Friends Foundation, PO Box 6161, Elberton, GA 30635.

Those wishing may sign the online guestbook at www.berryfh.com.

Berry Funeral Home & Crematory of Elberton is respectfully in charge of arrangements for Mr. Kenneth Dale “Bud” Wood.

Announcement courtesy of Hillside Menorial Chapel & Gardens, Clarkesville. For more information please visit www.berryfh.com.

Lady Indians finish runner-up in Jackson EMC tournament

The Lady Indians dropped the championship game of the Jackson EMC tournament at Jefferson to #4-ranked Buford, 91-58. TFS, ranked #9, was the runner-up in the tournament after going 2-1 in three games.

Buford took a 32-8 first quarter lead, and stretched it up to 57-20 at the half.

Denika Lightbourne scored a team-high 27 points, while Tanisha Seymour tallied 15. Breelyn Wood scored seven, Haygen James six, and Nahia Suarez three.

Lightbourne and Seymour were named to the All-Tournament team. TFS is now 2-2 overall.

Northeast Georgia quarterfinal previews

With the quarterfinals kicking off this weekend, several Northeast Georgia area teams remain in the hunt for a state title.

Here’s a preview of the matchups for Rabun County, Gainesville, North Oconee, and Oconee County.

Rabun County (12-0) at Swainsboro (11-0): Both teams were in the Class 2A semifinals last season, so their success after moving down is no surprise. Each has its own style. Swainsboro averages 334.1 yards rushing and 51.5 passing per game, while Rabun averages 82.8 rushing and 297.5 passing. This is Rabun County’s eighth straight quarterfinal. The Wildcats are 2-5 in those games. Ranked No. 3, Rabun County beat Social Circle 42-0 in the second round. Keegan Stover was 17-of-23 passing for 352 yards and four touchdowns. Lang Windham had 103 yards rushing and a touchdown on 18 carries. Jaden Gibson had 10 receptions for 201 yards and two touchdowns. He needs 161 yards to break the state single-season receiving record set in 2018 by Warner Robins’ Marcayll Jones. Swainsboro, ranked No. 2, rushed for 391 yards and six touchdowns in its 57-13 victory over Screven County. Demello Jones rushed for 95 yards and a touchdown on four carries and had three receptions for 103 yards and a touchdown. This is the first meeting between the two.

Houston County (10-2) at Gainesville (12-0): Tenth-ranked Houston County is the only No. 4 seed still alive in any classification and the only 6A team remaining that was not a region champion. The Bears reached their first quarterfinal since 2019 with a 41-31 victory over North Atlanta. Houston County trailed 31-21 in the fourth quarter but scored three touchdowns to put the game away. Antwann Hill was held to a season-low 73 yards passing but has 3,246 for the year. Ryan Taleb ran for a season-high 273 yards (1,585 for the year) and three TDs. No. 4 Gainesville is in the quarterfinals for the first time since 2014 after a 42-21 victory over South Paulding. The Red Elephants led 14-7 at halftime and added two touchdowns early in the second half to seize control. Baxter Wright passed for 257 yards and four touchdowns, and Naim Cheeks ran for 206 yards and two scores. Cheeks has rushed for 436 yards in two playoff games and 1,511 for the season. Gainesville held South Paulding’s Jamarion Wilcox, the leading rusher in 6A during the regular season, to less than 100 yards for the first time this season.

Wayne County (10-2) at North Oconee (12-0): Seventh-ranked Wayne County, an 0-9 team in 2021, is in the quarterfinals for the first time since 2013 after beating third-ranked Perry 14-7 last week. Wayne County led 14-0 in the fourth quarter, but the victory wasn’t secure until Perry threw an incomplete pass on fourth down from the 5-yard line with 30 seconds left. Matthew Fuller ran for 145 yards and both of Wayne’s touchdown and stopped a Perry scoring threat with a third-quarter interception. No. 2 North Oconee was a semifinalist in 2021 and is in the quarters for the third time in the school’s 19-year history. In a 35-9 victory over Lovett last week, Dominic Elder ran for three touchdowns, including two in the first half as the Titans built a 28-3 lead. Max Wilson was 10-of-16 passing for 148 yards and threw first-half touchdown passes to Brooks Cole Davidson and Thompson. North Oconee had been 1-7 in second-round games but has won its last two.

Oconee County (8-4) at Carver-Columbus (9-2): Both teams ended up in Class 3A after reaching recent state finals. For Oconee County, that occurred in 2020 after a runner-up finish against Blessed Trinity. Carver was the 2021 Class 4A runner-up to Benedictine. Carver, ranked No. 8, rushed for 301 yards and held Harlem to four first downs in a 40-7 victory last week. Jamari Riley has rushed for more than 1,400 yards for a team that has fewer than 1,000 passing yards on the season. Carver’s defense hasn’t allowed a point in the past three games, including against then-No. 8 Dougherty in the regular season. Oconee County, ranked No. 8, beat Adairsville 45-20 last week. C.J. Jones rushed for 149 yards and two touchdowns on 19 carries. He’s a three-year starter with 2,841 career rushing yards. Whit Weeks, who is committed to LSU, had two receptions for 70 yards and a touchdown, three tackles for losses and two interceptions, one returned for a touchdown.

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Chip Saye of Georgia High School Football Daily contributed to this report. To join the GHSF mailing list, click here.

Quarterfinal lineup

This weekend marks the quarterfinal round of the GHSA playoffs. 64 teams from the eight classifications will face off for a spot in next week’s semifinals.

Here’s the quarterfinal lineup (Northeast Georgia area teams are in bold):

Class 7A

North Gwinnett (10-2) at Colquitt County (12-0)

Walton (10-2) at Carrollton (12-0)

Westlake (9-3) at Mill Creek (11-1)

Grayson (10-2) at Milton (9-3)

Class 6A

Roswell (11-0) at Thomas County Central (12-0)

Houston County (10-2) at Gainesville (12-0)

Woodward Academy (11-1) at Hughes (12-0)

Marist (10-2) at Rome (11-1)

Class 5A

Calhoun (9-3) at Ware County (11-0)

Mays (8-4) at Dutchtown (11-1)

Warner Robins (8-4) at Creekside (10-2)

Coffee (10-2) at Cartersville (11-1)

Class 4A

Cedartown (12-0) at Bainbridge (8-4)

Wayne County (10-2) at North Oconee (12-0)

Benedictine (10-2) at Stockbridge (10-2)

Troup (11-1) at Holy Innocents’ (9-3)

Class 3A

Carver-Atlanta (8-3) at Thomasville (9-3)

Sandy Creek (10-2) at Savannah Christian (11-1)

Calvary Day (11-0) at Cedar Grove (9-2)

Oconee County (8-4) at Carver-Columbus (9-2)

Class 2A

Rockmart (10-2) at Fitzgerald (12-0)

Pierce County (11-1) at Fellowship Christian (9-3)

Appling County (10-1) at Callaway (9-3)

Thomson (11-1) at South Atlanta (11-0)

Class A Division I

Mount Pisgah Christian (9-3) at Irwin County (10-1)

Rabun County (12-0) at Swainsboro (11-0)

Metter (9-3) at Prince Avenue Christian (11-0)

Bleckley County (10-2) at St. Francis (9-3)

Class A Division II

Bowdon (11-1) at Early County (9-3)

Dooly County (7-5) at Lincoln County (9-2)

Clinch County (10-2) at Johnson County (12-0)

Wilcox County (9-3) at Schley County (10-2)

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