Tuesday, May 26, 2009

SAYING GOODBYE TO FAMILY, HELLO TO SERVICE

Tuesday, May 26, 2009 9:17 AM EDT

Special

Cole and Jami Ivester of Turnerville say their goodbyes before he was deployed to Afghanistan last week. Ivester is the son of Steve and Brenda Ivester. Cole and Jami Ivester have an 11-month-old son, Lucas. Some 47,000 U.S. forces currently serve in Afghanistan, with 17,000 additional troops scheduled to arrive there. Meanwhile, NATO member countries and partners have more than 32,000 forces in country, U.S. Department of Defense documents show.

Habersham places 10 on All-Region soccer squads

By MARK TURNER

MARK TURNER/Staff Habersham Central's Nolan Hemmer, No. 15, was named the 8-AAAA Player of the Year by the region coaches. Hemmer along with his brother Sawyer Hemmer, Newt Turk and Juan Vargas were selected to the First Team.

Habersham Central is well represented on the 8-AAAA All-Region soccer team.

HCHS placed six players on the boys' squad while four players were picked for the girls' team. The All-Region squads are voted on by the boys' and girls' head coaches from 11 region schools.

The Raiders, who have won four consecutive 8-AAAA championships and advanced to the Class AAAA Sweet 16 this spring, had a region-high six players recognized.

Junior Nolan Hemmer, who led the team in scoring this spring, was picked as the league's Most Outstanding Player.

See the complete story in the Friday, May 22 edition of The Northeast Georgian.

Sunday, May 24, 2009


The Habersham County Commission has declared that it will observe seven unpaid days of rest (furlough days) in the 2009-2010 budget year.That includes the county's public safety departments, though not all on the same day designated for county office and other departmental personnel.
"Not only are the employees of the county affected, but the citizens as well," said Habersham County 9-1-1/Emergency Management Agency Director Lynn Smith.To read more of this story, pick up the May 22 edition of The Northeast Georgian.

The Habersham County Board of Education has unanimously approved adding three vocational classrooms to plans for the new high school: Air Force Jr. ROTC, early childhood development and automotive technology.Because of the slow economy, bids for the new school came in well under what was expected, said Superintendent Robert Costley. A bid opening was held last week at Charles Black Construction Co. in Gainesville, and bidders had been asked to supply bids for the base building plus the three-classroom add alternate.
To read more of this story, pick up the May 22 edition of The Northeast Georgian.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Two NE Ga. Chrysler dealerships on list to be closed

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

click to enlarge
NEW YORK - Two northeast Georgia dealerships - one in Cleveland and one in Clayton - are among the 789 Chrysler said Thursday, in a motion filed in a bankruptcy court, that it wants to closed but the one in Cleveland has been closed for several months.

The company said its network is antiquated and has too many stores competing with each other. As a result, its dealerships in Cleveland and Clayton are among those on the chopping block. 

Other Georgia dealerships included on Chrysler's closing list are Augusta, Calhoun, Claxton, Dalton, Decatur, Jackson, Milledgeville, two in Newnan, Savannah and Thomaston. 

The automaker has about 3,200 dealers but says that's too many. It wants to have stronger, more profitable dealers with better facilities. 

The dealers likely will have a right to appeal to get off the list. The move could have a devastating impact on cities across the U.S., costing jobs and tax revenue. 

Meanwhile, GM is still keeping quiet on a Reuters report that it plans to eliminate 2,000 of its dealerships.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Georgia swine flu cases now at 8

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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ATLANTA - Georgia health officials have confirmed four more cases of swine flu, bringing the state's total to eight, with six associated with a private school in Henry County.

Dr. Elizabeth Ford, head of the state Division of Public Health, said Wednesday the new cases are associated with a group of students from Eagle's Landing Christian Academy in McDonough.

None have been hospitalized. All were initially identified as students who traveled together on a field trip out of state. Officials could not confirm the destination of the trip.

Georgia officials say they are now able to confirm cases without the help of the Centers for Disease Control and prevention.

Ford said testing for swine flu will continue for hospitalized patients, but the department will use seasonal monitoring methods for all others.

Saturday, May 9, 2009

Updated: May 9, 2009 - 7:37pm - Body found confirmed to be of Missing Professor


ATHENS, Ga. – A professor wanted for killing his wife and two other people at a community theater two weeks ago was found dead in the north Georgia woods Saturday, his body covered in brush and dirt, officials said.

Two guns were found with the body of marketing professor George Zinkhan, who vanished after the April 25 shootings near the University of Georgia, said Athens-Clarke County Police Chief Joseph Lumpkin.

The guns matched those described by witnesses to the shootings, though police did not say how they believe Zinkhan died. Authorities hoped to have a cause of death by the end of Saturday.

Cadaver dogs found Zinkhan's body about 10 miles west of Athens in thick woods in Bogart, where he lived. Searchers — as many as 200 at one point — had been scouring the woods since his Jeep was found wrecked and abandoned in a ravine about a mile away a week ago.

The Georgia Bureau of Investigation crime lab confirmed later Saturday that the body was Zinkhan.

Reached by phone at her home in Baltimore, his mother, Mary, said she was aware of the discovery.

"I've heard that news," she said. "I have nothing to say about it."

Zinkhan had been missing since police said he opened fire on a reunion for the Town & Gown Players, a local theater group.

He argued outside the theater with his wife, Marie Bruce, 47, a family law attorney who was serving as the group's president.

Police say he walked away briefly before returning with two handguns and killing her, along with Clemson University economist and actor Tom Tanner, 40, and Ben Teague, 63, a longtime theater group volunteer who was married to a popular UGA professor. Two other people were injured by bullet fragments.

Police at first said they had no motive for the shooting. The FBI said later friends and family indicated Bruce may have been considering a divorce.

Zinkhan was last seen dropping off his children, who were in the car during the shootings but weren't injured, with a neighbor. He said there was an emergency.

Bulletins were issued nationwide and authorities kept watch on airports in case Zinkhan tried to flee to Amsterdam, where he had taught part-time at a university since 2007. Federal authorities later revealed Zinkhan had an upcoming flight booked to Amsterdam, but the professor never showed up at the airport.

Zinkhan had been a professor in the university's Terry College of Business and had no disciplinary problems, school officials said. He had taught at UGA since the 1990s and was fired after the shootings.

"I express my sincerest condolences to the loved ones and friends of the victims of this tragedy," UGAPresident Michael Adams said. "Our hearts go out to each of them as they try to bring closure to and cope with the pain and sorrow these losses of life have caused them. May they ultimately find healing and peace."

Bob Covington, the neighbor who Zinkhan dropped his children off with after the shooting, called Saturday's discovery "another sad chapter to the story."

"For the community, the families, his kids and this neighborhood, this last chapter will provide some healing," Covington said. "It's been two weeks of people being on pins and needles, every time you see a police car. I think this will ease a lot of tension. People can get back to their lives and move on from this horrible tragedy."

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Body Found Believe to be George Zinkhan




Law enforcement has reason to believe that human remains found near the scene where George Zinkhan's Jeep Liberty was discoverd are those of the missing UGA professor.

Saturday morning, cadaver dogs searching near the scene where George Zinkhan's Jeep Liberty was located last week discovered human remains. Law enforcement has reason to believe that the remains are those of George Zinkhan. The body is being taken to the GBI Crime Lab for positive identification.

Zinkhan's jeep was found in a ravine in a rural part of Athens-Clarke County just a few miles from his home. FOX 5 News was first to report that cadaver dogs were brought in on Friday to search the area. That search was unsuccessful yesterday but the canines were able to find a body Saturday.

Zinkhan is accused of shooting and killing three people including his wife at an Athens theater two weeks ago today. A nationwide manhunt has been underway for Zinkhan since that day. 

Friday, May 8, 2009

TORNADO WATCH 273 has been cancelled


TORNADO WATCH 273 has been Cancelled 

Monday, May 4, 2009

Second Case of the H1N1 Flu Confirmed in Henry County by the CDC


Updated: 4:36 pm EDT May 4, 2009

A second case of swine flu was confirmed in Georgia on Monday, closing a private school in Henry County until further notice.

The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) confirmed Monday a middle school student at the Eagle's Landing Christian Academy tested positive for the illness. CDC officials said the school could be closed for up to two weeks.

Tim Dowdy, president of the school said in the posting on the school's Web site that the school was closed "as a preventative measure."

He said the school will undergo a "deep-cleaning."

The CDC is also checking blood samples from three patients from metro Atlanta for swine flu, including a 3-year-old in Cobb County, a 36-year-old in DeKalb County and an 8-year-old in Clayton County.

The Eagle's Landing Christian Academy serves students in grades pre-kindergarten through 12. It was not immediately clear whether other students were being tested for the illness.

The academy is the first school in Georgia to close because of the swine flu outbreak.

The health department said they suspect the 14-year-old middle school student got the flu from a 12-year-old sister who got it from a group that visited Panama. The middle school student is over being sick and was never hospitalized, but is still infectious, the health department said, so school is closed.

“Wow. I think it’s scary. I think it’s very scary,” said Henry County resident Laurie Kidd.

At least 533 schools enrolling about 334,000 children had closed across the country as of Monday because of the outbreak, according to the U.S. Department of Education. The schools are in about two dozen states.

An entire school district west of Detroit closed after a high school student came down with an apparent case of the illness. All 140 schools in the Fort Worth (Texas) Independent School District have closed until May 8, a system that serves 80,000 students.

The outbreak hasn't touched the majority of the nation's 132,000 schools, but a few have been hit heavily by the illness. One New York City high school had 45 students with confirmed cases of swine flu.

At least 274 cases of swine flu virus have been confirmed in 35 states so far in the United States, a count by The Associated Press shows. The most recent CDC count was 226 cases in 30 states. The discrepancy can be attributed at least in part to a time lag in state reporting to the federal agency. And in some instances, states have identified "probable" cases that were not confirmed subsequently.

Worldwide, at least 1,226 people have been sickened by swine flu. More than half of those were in Mexico.

Possible Swine Flu Case Closes Henry Co. School


Updated: 12:40 pm EDT May 4, 2009

HENRY COUNTY, Ga. -- A possible case of swine closed a private school in Henry County on Monday until further notice.

An announcement on the Web site of the Eagle's Landing Christian Academy said the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and the Henry County Health Department notified school officials that a middle school student may have a case of swine flu.

"This is a single suspected case that is not confirmed and is not cause for alarm," said Tim Dowdy, president of the school in the posting on the Web site.

Dowdy said the school is closed as the request of state officials "as a preventative measure."
He said the school will undergo a "deep-cleaning."

Sunday, May 3, 2009

May 3, 2009 - 6:55 am - MyCountyAlerts adds link to CDC


MyCountyAlerts.com has added a Link on it's Main Page to the CDC (H1N1 Flu) aka Swine Flu Page to give NE Georgians a Fast and Easy way to keep on top on the Current Flu Situation.
Update on the GA Outbreak. *Case is a resident of KY, but currently hospitalized in GA. So there is Only One (1) Comfirm Case in GA (LaGrange - Troup Co)
By MCA NEWS

Friday, May 1, 2009

April 30, 2009 - 11:08pm - Two suspected cases that were sent to the CDC for confirmation of the virus.


ATLANTA - Officials said Thursday that there may be some additional cases of swine flu in Georgia. A spokesperson for Tanner Medical Systems in Carrollton confirmed there had two suspected cases that were sent to the CDC for confirmation of the virus.


One of the patients was being treated in Bremen and there was no word on where the other patient was receiving care.


State health officials already confirmed the first case of swine flu in Georgia. A 30-year-old Kentucky woman who had fallen ill during a trip to west Georgia.


The case was confirmed Thursday by the Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.


Dr. Elizabeth Ford, head of Georgia's Division of Public Health, said at a news conference that the woman had traveled to Cancun, Mexico earlier this month. The people who were traveling with the woman to Mexico have tested negative for swine flu, Ford said.


Health officials refused to provide details about the woman's condition or say where she was being hospitalized. The LaGrange Daily News reported the woman was hospitalized with the West Georgia Medical System in LaGrange after being admitted on Sunday.
By the Associated Press