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—GOOD MORNING
Friday, November 9,2018 | gainesvilletimes.com
LOTTERY I Drawings for Thursday, November 8, 2018
CELEBRITY REPORT
Prince Charles says he’ll keep
views to himself when king
CASH 3
Midday: 9-8-9
Evening: 4-9-3
Night: 8-3-6
CASH 4
Midday: 4-7-5-6
Evening: 1-2-2-1
Night: 4-9-9-9
FANTASY FIVE
1 -3-20-29-41
GEORGIA FIVE
Midday: 6-8-1 -1-8
Evening: 3-6-9-3-3
POWER BALL (11/7)
26-28-34-42-50 Power Ball: 25
Current jackpot: $92 M
MEGA MILLIONS (11/6)
28-34-37-56-69 Mega Ball: 12
Current jackpot: $90M
Lottery numbers are unofficial. Some results may be unavailable at press time; for updated
numbers, visit gainesvilletimes.com/lottery. The Georgia Lottery Corp.: 404-215-5000.
TODAY IN HISTORY
On this date:
In 1620, the passengers and crew of the Mayflower sighted
Cape Cod.
In 1938, Nazis looted and burned synagogues as well as
Jewish-owned stores and houses in Germany and Austria in
a pogrom or deliberate persecution that became known as
“Kristallnacht.”
In 1961, U.S. Air Force Maj. Robert M. White became the first
pilot to fly an X-15 rocket plane at six times the speed of sound.
In 1965, the great Northeast blackout began as a series of
power failures lasting up to 13 1 /2 hours left 30 million people in
seven states and part of Canada without electricity.
In 1967, a Saturn V rocket carrying an unmanned Apollo
spacecraft blasted off from Cape Kennedy on a successful
test flight.
In 1989, communist East Germany threw open its borders,
allowing citizens to travel freely to the West; joyous Germans
danced atop the Berlin Wall.
In 2000, George W. Bush’s lead over Al Gore in all-or-nothing
Florida slipped beneath 300 votes in a suspense-filled re
count, as Democrats threw the presidential election to the
courts, claiming “an injustice unparalleled in our history.”
BIRTHDAYS
Baseball Hall of Famer
Whitey Herzog Is 87. Base
ball Hall of Famer Bob
Gibson is 83. Actor Charlie
Robinson is 73. Movie
director BilleAugust is 70.
Actor Robert David Hall is
70. Actor Lou Ferrigno is
67. Sen. Sherrod Brown,
D-Ohio, is 66. Rapper
Pepa (Salt-N-Pepa) is 49.
Rapper Scarface (Geto
Boys) is 48. Blues singer
Susan Tedeschi is 48. Actor
Jason Antoon is 47. Actor
Eric Dane is 46. Singer
Nick Lachey (98 Degrees)
is 45. Country musician
Barry Knox (Parmalee) is
41. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Sisqo (Dru Hill) is
40. Country singer Corey
Smith is 39. Country
singer Chris Lane is 34.
Actress Emily Tyra is 31.
Actress Nikki Blonsky
is 30.
Don't be a chicken.
Cross the road!
There’s plenty of parking in
DowntownGainesville.com.
WEATHER
Spotty showers
HIGH: 55°
A shower early
LOW: 37°
Plenty of
sunshine
53734°
An afternoon
shower
50740°
Cold with rain
47743°
A chance of rain
51725°
RFT: 55° .
RFT: 32°
RFT: 55°/30°
RFT: 51736°
RFT: 43734°
1 RFT: 47724° 1
Precip chance: Precip chance: Precip chance: Precip chance: Precip chance: Precip chance:
70% 55% 5% 40% 80% 35%
RFT: The patented AccuWeather.com RealFeel Temperature® is an exclusive index of effective temperature based on eight weather factors.
| Almanac
| Regional Weather
1
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
El I i
56/:
Morganton
56/30
O Blairsville
. v-A 5B ' 30 . -A
' ' J ■©
Turners Corner n Cla.
55/35 Cleveland 55/3.
55/34 Toccoa
J O >■;- 55/38 -*1
Dahlonega O ' Clermont
55/35 c 55/36 0“ a
O 56/34 ^ Vle P55/37 ^
Nelson Q Dawsonville O C 12 !) 55/37
Ca'
Talking Rock
57/32
57/33
P
56/33
Cantr
Cummlm
58/34
ing
i
55/37
lomer
""57/38
58/34 Oakwood A) T AD Commerce
-7-W 56/37 ° 57/38
w
1 W '
U (title
'129) 58/39
ielsville
Doraville 60/37
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018
5*®
Statistics for Lee Gilmer Memorial Airport
through 5 p.m. yesterday
Temperature
High/low
58 52
Normal high/low
65744°
Record high
78° in 2005
Record low
24° in 1967
Precipitation (in inches)
24 hrs. ending 5 p.m. yest.
0.35
Month to date
1.35
Normal month to date
1.02
Year to date
49.84
Normal year to date
45.18
Record for date
1.93 in 1995
Main Offender: Particulates
Source: Environmental Protection Agency
| Pollen Yesterday
Trees
absent
Grass
absent
Weeds
I I I
o . 0 -
0 0
Low Mod. High Very
high
Main Offender: Ragweed
Source: National Allergy Bureau
City
Today
Hi Lo W
Tomorrow
Hi Lo W
Albany
79 48 c
61 43 s
Atlanta
63 37 sh
53 35 s
Augusta
68 49 sh
63 35 s
Brunswick
80 61 c
67 55 pc
Chattanooga
57 33 sh
48 27 s
City
Today
Hi Lo W
Tomorrow
Hi Lo W
Columbus
74 41 t
57 38 s
Dalton
58 33 sh
47 25 s
Greenville
55 39 c
55 29 s
Macon
73 42 t
60 36 s
Savannah
78 58 pc
65 42 pc
UV Index
1
Lake Levels
1
Sun and Moon
0 YL 0 0
9 a.m. Noon 3 p.m. 6 p.m.
The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ num
ber, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.
Lake data in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday
Full
Present
24 hr
Lake
Pool
Level
Change
Lake Lanier
1071.0
1069.40
+0.02
Allatoona Lake
840.0
833.23
-0.07
Burton Lake
1865.0
1864.15
-0.16
Clark’s Hill Lake
330.0
326.54
+0.10
Hartwell Lake
660.0
657.72
-0.03
Russell Lake
480.0
474.35
-0.02
West Point Lake
635.0
633.99
+0.29
Sunrise today 7:02 a.m.
Sunset tonight 5:35 p.m.
Moonrise today 8:48 a.m.
Moonset today 7:22 p.m.
First Full Last New
NOV 15 NOV 23 NOV 29 Dec 7
Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, r-rain, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice
LONDON — Britain’s Prince Charles has
pledged not to interfere in the affairs of state
when he becomes king, seeking to dispel
concerns about his past activism on issues
ranging from global warming to architec
tural preservation.
In an interview for a documentary
marking his 70th birthday, the
heir to the throne told the BBC
that he understands he will
have to act differently when he
becomes king. Britain’s mon
arch is barred from interfering
in politics.
“I’m not that stupid,” Charles
said when asked if his public cam
paigning would continue after he suc
ceeds his mother, Queen Elizabeth II. “I do
realize that it is a separate exercise being
sovereign, so of course I understand entirely
how that should operate.”
The prince has caused disquiet in the past
by expressing his commitment to organic
farming, traditional architecture and envi
ronmental causes. In 2015, he lost a long
court battle to prevent the disclosure of 27
letters sent to government officials on mat
ters such as badger culling, fish protection,
military readiness and the preservation of
historic buildings.
The “black spider” memos, so called
because of Charles’ cramped handwritten
greetings and closings, were controversial
because some saw them as inappropriate
lobbying by the heir to the throne.
But Charles defended his past actions,
including establishing the Prince’s Trust
in 1976 to help disadvantaged young
people, saying he had always
steered clear of party politics.
He wondered aloud whether
his interventions were really
“meddling.”
“If it’s meddling to worry
about the inner cities as I did 40
years ago... if that’s meddling, I’m
very proud of it,” he said.
The documentary captures the prince
in both public and private, including images
of him feeding vegetable scraps to his chick
ens and collecting their eggs at his High-
grove home.
It includes an interview with the prince’s
wife, the Duchess of Cornwall, who said
Charles is driven by a need to help others.
“He’s pretty impatient, he wants things
done by yesterday as I think everybody who
works for him will tell you. But that’s how he
gets things done. He’s driven by this, this pas
sion inside him to really help,” she said. “He
would like to save the world. ”
Associated Press
AROUND TOWN
TODAY
Ru Yi: Landscape of Stones. 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
University of North Georgia, Bob Owens Art
Gallery, 82 College Circle, Dahlonega.
678-717-3438, victoria.cooke@ung.edu. Free.
Gainesville Plein Air Painting Days. 8:30 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Quinlan Visual Arts Center,
514 Green St. NE, Gainesville. 770-536-2575,
autoeac@mindspring.com. Free.
Isaac Alcantar Exhibit at the Quinlan Visual
Arts Center Regions Mini Gallery. 9 a.m. to
5 p.m. Regions Center, 303 Jesse
Jewell Parkway, Gainesville.
770-536-2575, amanda@qvac.org. Free.
Member’s Show at the Quinlan. 9 a.m. to
5 p.m. Quinlan Visual Arts Center, 514
Green St. NE, Gainesville. 770-536-2575,
paula.lindner@quinlanartscenter.org. Free.
Book Lovers Craft Week. 10a.m. to 5p.m.
Interactive Neighborhood for Kids, 999
Chestnut St. SE, No. 11, Gainesville. $1 - $8.
Buford Corn Maze. 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Buford
Corn Maze, 4470 Bennett Road, Buford.
678-835-7198, jeff@vardeman.com. $15 - $25.
Busy Builders. 10-11 a.m. Flampton Park
Library, 5345 Settingdown Road, Cumming.
Drop-in Craft for Adults: Fall Leaves. 10 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Hall County Library System,
Gainesville Branch, 127 Main St. NW,
Gainesville. 770-532-3311, ext. 114,
gkoecher@hallcountylibrary.org. Free.
Friday Sketch Club - 1st, 2nd and last Friday of
the month. 1:30-3:30 p.m. Quinlan
Visual Arts Center, 514 Green St. NE,
Gainesville. 770-536-2575,
info@quinlanartscenter.org. $5 - $10.
Cherry Cherry Neil Diamond Tribute. 7-10 p.m.
The Venue at Friendship Springs, 7340
Friendship Springs Blvd., Flowery Branch.
UNG Music Theater Ensemble presents “A Million
Dreams.” 7:30-9:30 p.m. University of North
Georgia, Gloria Shott Performance Hall, 238
Georgia Circle, Dahlonega. 706-864-1423,
connie.esford@ung.edu. Free.
Gainesville Theatre Alliance Discovery Series:
Waiting for Godot. 7:30 p.m. University of
North Georgia, Ed Cabell Theatre, 3820
Mundy Mill Road, Oakwood. 678-717-3624.
Annie 2018. 8-10:30 p.m. Cumming
Playhouse, 101 School St., Cumming.
770-781-9178. $27-$30.
NotQuiteGNR. 9 p.m. 37 E Main St. NE, Buford.
The Band Lovett. 9-11:30 p.m. Wild Wing Cafe,
311 Jesse Jewell Parkway, Gainesville,
Kristyi@ymail.com. Free.
Departure (The Journey Tribute Band).
9:30-11:30 p.m. 37 Main, 212 Spring St.,
Gainesville. 678-696-8829,
customer_care@37main.com. $5.
Cumming Steam, Antique Tractor & Gas Engine
Expo. Cumming Fairgrounds, 235 Castleberry
Road, Cumming.
SATURDAY
Suwanee Kiwanis All American 5K. 8-10:30
a.m. Town Center Park, 330 Town
Center Ave., Suwanee. 770-945-8996,
aedge@suwanee.com.
The Veteran’s Appreciation Weekend Festival.
Publish your event
Don’t see your event here? Go to
gainesvilletimes.com/calendar to add it.
Events publish at the editors’ discretion
and as space allows.
8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Hancock Park, Hawkins
Street, Dahlonega. 248-568-8232,
art.attaway@ranger.org. $30 - $1.
XTERRA Georgia Little Mulberry Park Trail
Races. 8:30 a.m. 3855 Fence Road, Dacula.
$29 - $30.
Gainesville Plein Air Painting Days. 8:30 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Quinlan Visual Arts Center, 514
Green St. NE, Gainesville. 770-536-2575,
autoeac@mindspring.com. Free.
Winter Farmers Market. 9-11 a.m. Town Cen
ter Park, 330 Town Center Ave., Suwanee,
adoherty@suwanee.com. Free.
Men’s Prayer Breakfast. 9-10:30 a.m. Email for
location, 4000 Thurmond Tanner Road,
Flowery Branch, mzbcinfo@yahoo.com. Free.
Mountain Top Lectures - The Rev. Brian
McLaren. 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. University of
North Georgia, Hoag Auditorium, 82 College
Circle, Dahlonega. 706-864-1771,
laura.mullins@ung.edu. $55 - $75.
Book Lovers Craft Week. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Interactive Neighborhood for Kids, 999
Chestnut St. SE, No. 11, Gainesville. $1 - $8.
Buford Corn Maze. 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Buford
Corn Maze, 4470 Bennett Road, Buford.
678-835-7198, jeff@vardeman.com. $15 - $25.
Feminine Mysteries Retreat - Part II. 10 a.m. to
7 p.m. Namestoy Farm, 7490 Whitmire Road,
Cumming.
Holiday Bazaar. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Cornerstone
of Faith, 3485 McEver Road, Gainesville,
cornerstoneoffaith@gmail.com.
Thanksgiving Card Workshop. 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Hall County Library System, Gainesville
Branch, 127 Main St. NW, Gainesville.
770-532-3311, ext. 114,
gkoecher@hallcountylibrary.org. Free.
Drop-in Craft for Adults: Fall Leaves. 10 a.m. to
5 p.m. Hall County Library System, Gaines
ville Branch, 127 Main St. NW, Gainesville.
770-532-3311, ext. 114,
gkoecher@hallcountylibrary.org. Free.
Ru Yi: Landscape of Stones. 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.
University of North Georgia, Bob Owens Art
Gallery, 82 College Circle, Dahlonega.
678-717-3438, victoria.cooke@ung.edu. Free.
Veterans Parklet Event. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Quinlan
Visual Arts Center, 514 Green St. NE, Gaines
ville. 770-536-2575, info@qvac.org. Free.
Greater Hall Chapter of Georgia Council of the
Blind monthly meeting. 10:30 a.m. to noon.
Smoky Springs Retirement Residences,
940 S. Enota Drive, Gainesville.
770-932-1112, harveyroberts2@att.net. Free.
Saturday Family Storytime at Post. 11:15 a.m.
to noon. Post Road Library, 5010 Post Road,
Cumming.
Peach State Chili Cook-off. Noon to 5 p.m.
Town Center Park, 330 Town Center Ave.,
Suwanee, peachstatechili@gmail.com. Free.
UGA Football Saturdays. Noon. Margaritaville
Lanier Islands, 7650 Lanier Islands
Parkway, Buford. 678-304-3120,
margaritaville@islandsentertainment.com.
HOROSCOPES BY HOLIDAY
She Stmes
gainesvilletimes.com
A Metro Market Media Publication
©2018, Vol. 71, No. 313
Friday, November 9, 2018
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SINGLE COPY
The Times is available at retail stores,
newspaper racks and at The Times for $1.00
Mon.-Sat. and $2.00 on Sun.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19).
Every attitude causes a chain
reaction. So it’s important to
check in with yourself before
stepping one foot into con
versations, environments or
projects. Where am I at? What
attitude am I bringing to it?
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). A
buoyant mood prevails. From
here it’s easier to be resource
ful and open to change. Any
and every thing you do to feel
better will contribute to your
positive vibes.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21).
The real challenge will be in
choosing what to believe. As
sessing not only if a potential
belief is correct, but also what
its natural trajectory is. Who
will you be if you believe it?
Choose beliefs that uplift and
empower.
CANCER (June 22-July 22).
Conventional approaches to
self-improvement may leave
you feeling resentful and rebel
lious against the taskmaster
that is supposedly the higher
version of you. Make your over
all well-being a priority instead.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). The key
to harnessing and maximiz
ing your energy is to embrace
your own polarizations — the
very best and worst in you,
the most attractive and unat
tractive traits and tendencies.
There’s power in loving your
whole self.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22).
Productivity and joy go hand
in hand. Even work you once
considered to be a grind will be
over quickly and done well be
cause of the happiness in your
approach.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23). Your
brain has a way of balancing
itself and today you can prac
tically feel it at work, guiding
you to the next action that will
lead to your health and well
being.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21).
The earth is big, and yet in the
entire world there is only one
place where success exists,
and that place is inside you.
There are experiences you’d
like to have. Whether you have
them or not, you are success
ful.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.
21). Because everyone has
different values, it is some
times difficult for people to
understand what matters to
you and how you want to be
treated. Today you won’t have
that problem. They’ll get it right
away.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
How can you get more of the
things that make you feel good
being in your body? Because
when your physical self is
happy, the rest of you will fol
low in kind.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18).
The first time you do some
thing, there’s excitement and
possibly trepidation over the
unknown aspects of it. The
second time you know what to
expect and can relax into the
process. The third time — that
will truly be the charm!
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20).
Learning about things makes
you appreciate and enjoy them
better. Your urge to go deeper
into a body of knowledge is an
instinct to move toward happi
ness.