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—GOOD MORNING
Friday, November 16,2018 | gainesvilletimes.com
LOTTERY I Drawings for Thursday, Nov. 15, 2018
CASH 3
Midday: 5-3-1
Evening: 6-6-3
Night: 3-8-3
CASH 4
Midday: 1 -3-8-5
Evening: 7-8-6-8
Night: 1 -4-8-7
FANTASY FIVE
15-33-37-28-36
GEORGIA FIVE
Midday: 3-8-8-1 -7
Evening: 9-2-0-3-9
POWERBALL (11/14)
7-42-49-62-69 Power Ball: 23
Current jackpot: $124M
MEGA MILLIONS (11/13)
34-46-57-65-69 Mega Ball: 11
Current jackpot: $122M
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 1776, British troops captured Fort Washington in New York
during the American Revolution.
In 1914, the newly created Federal Reserve Banks opened in
12 cities.
In 1933, the United States and the Soviet Union established
diplomatic relations.
In 1939, mob boss Al Capone, ill with syphilis, was released
from prison after serving IVi years for tax evasion and failure
to file tax returns.
In 1959, the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical “The Sound
of Music” opened on Broadway.
In 1966, Dr. Samuel H. Sheppard was acquitted in Cleveland at
his second trial of murdering his pregnant wife, Marilyn, in 1954.
In 1973, Skylab 4, carrying a crew of three astronauts, was
launched from Cape Canaveral on an 84-day mission.
In 1981, actor William Holden was found dead in his apart
ment in Santa Monica, California; he was 63.
In 1982, an agreement was announced in the 57th day of a
strike by National Football League players.
In 2006, Democrats embraced Nancy Pelosi as the first
woman House speaker in history, but then selected Steny
Hoyer as majority leader against her wishes.
BIRTHDAYS
Actor Clu Gulager is 90.
Journalist Elizabeth Drew
is 83. Actor Steve Rails-
back is 73. Actor Miguel
Sandoval is 67. Actress
Marg Helgenberger is 60.
Country singer-musician
Keith Burns (Trick Pony)
is 55. Former pro tennis
player Zina Garrison is
55. Former MLB All-Star
pitcher Dwight Gooden is
54. Jazz singer Diana Krall
is 54. Actor Harry Lennix
is 54. Rock musician Dave
Kushner (Velvet Revolver)
is 52. Actress Lisa Bonet
is 51. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Bryan Abrams
(Color Me Badd) is 49.
Actress Martha Plimpton
is 48. Actress Missi Pyle is
46. Olympic gold medal
figure skater Oksana Baiul
is 41. Actress Maggie
Gyllenhaal is 41. Actress
Kimberly J. Brown is 34.
Actor-comedian Pete
Davidson (TV: “Saturday
Night Live”) is 25.
Don't be a chicken.
Cross the road!
There’s plenty of parking in
DowntownGainesville.com.
WEATHER
Gainesville 5-Day Forecast
#AccuWeather downloadthefreeapp
TODAY
TONIGHT
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
MONDAY
TUESDAY
Mostly sunny Mainly clear;
chilly
HIGH: 57° LOW: 37°
Plenty of
sunshine
61740°
Partly sunny Becoming cloudy Partly sunny
62744° 62743° 60741°
RFT: 56°
RFT: 37°
RFT: 66°/40
° 1
RFT: 68°/42
* 1
RFT: 64741°
RFT: 60737°
Precip chance: Precip chance: Precip chance: Precip chance: Precip chance: Precip chance:
0% 5% 5% 5% 10% 10%
RFT: The patented AccuWeather.com RealFeel Temperature® is an exclusive index of effective temperature based on eight weather factors.
Almanac
Regional Weather
Statistics for Lee Gilmer Memorial Airport
through 5 p.m. yesterday
Temperature
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
High/low
45°37°
Normal high/low
62742°
Record high
77° in 1941
Record low
Precipitation (in inches)
14° in 1969
24 hrs. ending 5 p.m. yest.
Month to date
0.92
7.32
Normal month to date
1.98
Year to date
55.81
Normal year to date
46.14
Record for date
2.49 in 2006
Air Quality Today
▼
Good | Moderate |5j“jj*lliiliealtliyi
Unhealthy Haza " ,ous
50 100 150 200 300
Main Offender: Particulates
Source: Environmental Protection Agency
Pollen Yesterday
Morganton
54/31
Elliiay
54/31 o '■jPY
O Blairsville
55/31
Turners Corner pCIarko
57/36 Cf Cleveland 59/36
57/35
Talking Rock
54/34 O 57/36 " e ^ a ° ' “% Cornelia
A,YY-_-r.O 58%5 ayVille 0 Lula
Nelson Q Dawsonville O $29} 58/37
55/34 57/34 Gainesville qHoi
© «, .>
O 56/34 Oakwood XL
Canton y O 56/37 0 ^^^,58/36
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Trees
Weeds
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Roswell 56/35 Yl3 Da| Y |s#M|e
; 54/33 O Du|uth0 'TYT 59/35
55/34 Winder ■>—LjYll
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Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018
absent
Low Mod. High Verjj
Main Offender: Ragweed and Juniper
Source: National Allergy Bureau
UV Index
City
Albany
Atlanta
Augusta
Brunswick
Chattanooga
Today
Hi Lo W
61 37 s
55 38 s
61 33 s
60 44 s
55 33 pc
Tomorrow
Hi Lo W
67 41 s
63 41 s
67 38 s
68 54 s
61 39 s
City
Columbus
Dalton
Greenville
Macon
Savannah
Today
Hi Lo W
59 38 s
54 30 pc
56 35 s
60 34 s
59 37 s
Tomorrow
Hi Lo W
65 42 s
61 36 s
60 37 s
66 37 s
69 47 s
Lake Levels
Sun and Moon
Lake data in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday Sunrise today 7:09 a.m.
Lake r™ P S' change Sunse! tonight 5:31p.m.
Lake Lanier 1071.0 1071.46 +0.23 Moonrise today 2:05 p.m.
_ 3 , Allatoona Lake 840.0 839.96 +0.83 Moonsettoday 12:28 a.m.
' Q Burton Lake 1865.0 1864.96 +0.16 Full Last New First
■ a.m. Noon 3 p.m. cp.m. Clark’s Hill Lake 330.0 327.75 +0.71 .
Hartwell Lake 660.0 659.23 +0.24 J
The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ num- Russell Lake 480.0 475.39 +0.12
ber, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. West Point Lake 635.0 634.84 +0.03 Nov 23 Nov 29 Dec 7 Dec 15
Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, r-rain, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice
She Simcs
gainesvilletimes.com
A Metro Market Media Publication
©2018, Vol. 71, No. 320
Friday, November 16, 2018
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CELEBRITY REPORT
Roy Clark, country guitar virtuoso,
‘Hee Haw’ star, has died at age 85
Country star Roy Clark, the guitar virtu
oso and singer who headlined the cornpone
TV show “Hee Haw” for nearly a quarter
century and was known for such hits as
“Yesterday When I was Young” and “Hon
eymoon Feeling,” has died. He was 85.
Publicist Jeremy Westby said Clark died
Thursday due to complications from pneu
monia at home in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Clark was “Hee Haw” host or co-host for
its entire 24-year run, with Buck Owens
his best known co-host. Started in 1969,
the show featured the top stars in country
music, including Loretta Lynn, Tammy
Wynette, Charley Pride, Johnny Cash,
Merle Haggard, Dolly Parton, as well
as other musical greats including Ray
Charles, Chet Atkins and Boots Randolph.
The country music and comedy show’s last
episode aired in 1993, though reruns con
tinued for a few years thereafter.
‘“Hee Haw’ won’t go away. It brings a
smile to too many faces,” he said in 2004,
when the show was distributed on VHS and
DVD for the first time.
“I’ve known him for 60 years and he was
a fine musician and entertainer,” Charlie
Daniels tweeted on Thursday. “Rest In
peace Buddy, you will be remembered.”
Keith Urban, who won entertainer of the
year Wednesday night from the Country
Music Association, also honored Clark on
Thursday. “My first CM A memory is sitting
on my living room floor watching Roy Clark
tear it up,” Urban tweeted. “Sending all my
love and respect to him and his
family for all he did.”
John Lennon’s killer says he
feels more shame every year
The man who killed John Lennon told
a parole board he feels “more and more
shame” every year for gunning down the
former Beatle outside his apartment in 1980.
“Thirty years ago I couldn’t say I felt
shame and I know what shame is now,”
Mark David Chapman said. “It’s where
you cover your face, you don’t want to, you
know, ask for anything.”
Chapman expressed his enduring remorse
for killing Lennon at his 10th parole board
hearing in August at Wende Correctional
Facility, where he is serving a 20-years-to-life
sentence. The board denied his release that
month. New York prison officials released a
transcript of the hearing on Thursday.
Chapman, 63, shot and killed Lennon on
Dec. 8,1980, hours after having the former
Beatle autographed an album for him.
Chapman told parole board members he
still thinks about how Lennon was “incredi
ble” to him earlier that day. He said he had
been going through an internal “tug of war”
of whether to go ahead with the shooting.
“I was too far in,” Chapman told the
board. “I do remember having the thought
of, ‘Hey, you have got the album now. Look
at this, he signed it, just go home.’ But there
was no way I was just going to go home.”
Associated Press
AROUND TOWN
TODAY
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.
A Penny for Your Thoughts - Call For Artists. 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. Quinlan Visual Arts Center, 514
Green St. NE, Gainesville. 770-536-2575,
info@quinlanartscenter.org. Free.
Veterans Day Craft Week. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. In
teractive Neighborhood for Kids, 999 Chest
nut St. SE, No. 11, Gainesville. $1 -$8.
Adult Two-Day Workshop - Drawing Trees in the
Winter Garden. 10 a.m.-noon. Atlanta Botani
cal Garden Gainesville, 1911 Sweetbay Drive,
Gainesville. 404-888-4763, wcannon@
atlantabg.org. $74 - $79.
2nd annual Brenau Holiday Arts and Crafts
Market. 4-6 p.m. Brenau University Galleries,
200 Boulevard, Simmons Visual Arts Center,
Sellars Gallery, Gainesville. 770-534-6263,
alauricella@brenau.edu. Free.
Food Truck Friday. 5-8 p.m. Lake Lanier Olym
pic Park, 3105 Clarks Bridge Road, Gaines
ville. 770-535-0397, Robyn@
lakelanierolympicvenue.org. Free.
CRUZ-IN Downtown Dawsonville. 5-9 p.m. Daw
sonville Ga. 30534, Dawsonville.
Magical Nights of Lights. 5 p.m. Lanier Islands
Resort, 7000 Lanier Islands Parkway, Buford.
770-945-8787.
Bluegrass Farm Jam Concert Series Season 3.
5:30-11 p.m. Jaemor Farms, 5340 Cornelia
Highway, Lula, Ga. 30554, Buford, caroline@
jaemorfarms.com.
MosesMo Solo Project. 7 p.m. Mule Camp Tav
ern, 322 Spring St. SW, Gainesville.
Yesterday Las Vegas Beatles Tribute. 7:30-10
p.m. Carlos and Sandra Cervantes Theatre
for the Arts - Riverside Military Academy,
2001 Riverside Drive, Gainesville. $25.
Putting the “Thanks” back into Thanksgiving.
8-9:30 p.m. Grace Chapel Church of Christ,
6755 Majors Road, Cumming.
Myrna Clayton. 8 p.m. Sylvia Beard Theatre,
2200 Buford Highway Northeast, Buford. $30.
Brenau University Swimming and Diving @ Day
1 - Brenau Invitational. Brenau University, 500
Washington St. SE, Gainesville.
SATURDAY
Dirty Spokes Chateau Elan Muscadine Trail
Races. 8 a.m. Chateau Elan Winery, Braselton.
$30-$149.
Gainesville Plein Air Painting Days. 8:30 a.m. to
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.
5 p.m. Quinlan Visual Arts Center, 514 Green
St. NE, Gainesville. 770-536-2575, autoeac@
mindspring.com. Free.
Embellished Watercolor for Not Quite Normal
People with Sara Oakley. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Quinlan Visual Arts Center, 514 Green St. NE,
Gainesville. 770-536-2575, paula.lindner@
quinlanartscenter.org. $125 - $150.
AARP Driver Safety. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Lump
kin County Library, 342 Courthouse Hill,
Dahlonega. 770-965-2625, diverdodge@
bellsouth.net.
American Legion Post 7 Veterans Fall Festival. 9
a.m. to 6 p.m. American Legion Post 7, 2343
Riverside Drive, Gainesville. 404-536-3831,
alpost7@outlook.com. Free.
Bobbin Lace Making. 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.
Veterans Day Craft Week. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. In
teractive Neighborhood for Kids, 999 Chest
nut St. SE, No. 11, Gainesville. $1 - $8.
2nd annual Brenau Holiday Arts and Crafts Mar
ket. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Brenau University Gal
leries, 200 Boulevard, Simmons Visual Arts
Center, Sellars Gallery, Gainesville. 770-534-
6263, alauricella@brenau.edu. Free.
Sahaja Meditation. 11 a.m.-noon. Sharon
Forks Library, 2820 Old Atlanta Road, Cum
ming.
LAMP Ministries Community Thanksgiving Din
ner. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Across from Popeye’s,
794 Jesse Jewell Parkway, Gainesville. 678-
343-6065, mmauricio@lampga.org. Free.
Wood Burning Basics with Jason Smith. Noon-3
p.m. Quinlan Visual Arts Center, 514 Green
St. NE, Gainesville. 770-536-2575, paula.
Iindner@quinlanartscenter.org. $60 - $85.
Peach State Chili Cookoff. Noon-6 p.m. Su-
wanee Town Center Park, 300 Suwanee Town
Center, Suwanee. $8.
UGA Football Saturdays. Noon. Margaritaville
Lanier Islands, 7650 Lanier Islands Parkway,
Buford. 678-304-3120, margaritaville@
islandsentertainment.com.
Free Santa Photos at Montbello. 2-5 p.m.
Montebello by SR Homes, 3160 Hurt Bridge
Road, Cumming. 678-252-2562, events@
thesrteam.com. Free.
November Board Game Night. 6-1 p.m. Geek-
space Gwinnett, 3690 Burnette Park Drive,
Suwanee.
Square Dance. 8-10 p.m. First Presbyterian
Church gym, 800 South Enota Drive, Gaines
ville. 678-956-0287, mcclureac@charter.net.
$7.
Brenau University Swimming and Diving @ Day
2 - Brenau Invitational. Brenau University, 500
Washington St SE, Gainesville.
HOROSCOPES BY HOLIDAY
ARIES (March 21 -April 19).
Needing to be right is a human
instinct related to processing.
No one can proper functionally
without a little of it. And a little
goes a long way. Needing to
be right all of the time is a sign
of emotional and intellectual
immaturity.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). It
can be challenging to keep
your energy vibrant when your
domestic situation is compli
cated. Whatever you can do to
lift, smooth or heal your home
environment will positively
change who you are out in the
world.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21).
Naivety has its advantages.
Functionality is in the hands
of the user. She who doesn’t
see a thing as broken won’t be
bothered with the prospect of
fixing it.
CANCER (June 22-July 22).
Spiritual wonder and faithful
decision-making will contrib
ute to your success. This is
outside the realm of religion
or any school of thought. It’s
an instance of magic that you
have to be looking for to find.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). On
earth, red is hot and blue is
cold. In other places in the
galaxy, red is among the cold
est of heat colors and blue is
extremely hot. Consider the
larger context. Matters of scale
will color decisions of the day.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). After
a series of intellectually clear
days, cleanly pointed toward
their purpose, this day will be
shrouded in a dreamy mist
of unreason that obscures all
goalposts and destinations.
This challenges you to see
without your eyes.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23). A
sure sign of intelligence is be
ing able to look things from
multiple angles. It follows that
a tolerance for different views,
customs, appearances, tastes,
etc., is typically a function of
higher intellect, and one you’ll
gravitate toward at that.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21).
You’re generous in most re
gards; you’re only greedy for
the best things in life: pure
love, pristine beauty and na
ked truth. Hoard these rarities
when you find them, as you
don’t know when you’ll come
across them again.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.
21). Achieving Earth’s escape
velocity takes tremendous
energy. But if you go 7 miles
per second, you’ll soon be out
of gravity’s influence. Or you
can escape with your mind; it’s
easy, fun, free and necessary
for sanity.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19). To be stuck in one way
of thinking is to be stuck in
one way of living. Your efforts
to open your mind on certain
matters, while still maintaining
the core of who you are, will
also open new opportunities.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18).
No matter how you try to
capture what you’ve learned
today you won’t be able to pin
it down. It’s application is too
broad, it’s meaning too mean
dering across a spectrum of
potentials. It’s poetry; it’s jazz.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
Love changes, as you’ve no
ticed. You might think of love
as an action, a story, a mood, a
time or even an ingredient. All
these ways of thinking about
it will work their way into how
you attract and enact love.