We’re having fun in the sNOW Habersham and here are your pictures to prove it.
Please send us your sNOW Habersham photos. Sledding with the kids? Send it. Snowball fights? Send ’em. Building a snowman? Let us see your creativity. We’ll post your pictures right here on this page to capture winter in the ‘Sham.
Oh, and if you don’t mind, write ‘sNOW Habersham’ in the snow and send us a picture with your name and location. Send us your photos through Facebook at #sNOWhabersham or email them to news@nowhabersham.com.
As always, safety first. Bundle up, stay off the roads if possible and enjoy your snow days.
Now, let’s all go play in the snow!
sNOW Habersham
February 24-25, 2015
Click to enlarge photos
Backyard snow along Hwy. 197 ~ Kathleen Holcomb
Two inches in Demorest and still falling. ~ Lee
Fairview community ~ Heather Jones
Hollywood ~Angela Easters
9-year old Maddie Palmer of Batesville measures the snow on her back deck in Batesville.
Kaydon Bass plays in the snow in Demorest.
Cornelia ~ Georgann Haskins
They’re serving apple ‘fridgers’ in Hollywood. ~ Patricia Garrett
This morning in Tallulah Falls. ~ Barbara Hargis
Alto
Enjoying the snow! ~ sent by Nicole Frady
This car is celebrating its 43rd birthday today in the snow. ~ Noah Eller
Next time, can I use your bathroom!?! ~ Terry Cone
Taken in Clarkesville. ~ Melanie Maxwell
Hint of springtime. ~ Melanie Acker
Snow at our house. ~ Dennis Israel
Dog catching snowball. ~ Betty Higgins
From our front yard in Turnerville (a little over 2” of snow, here). ~
Cal Krefft
Makayla Ryals Snow day ~ Michael Ryals
Elsa’s at it again! ~ Anna Wynn Sapough
Just finished icing my snow cake! This is how a cake artist plays in the snow. ~ Angel Cakes
Submitted by Jennifer Higgins
Sledding at the Orchard. ~ Monica Hunt
I-M-P-R-E-S-S-I-V-E! ~ Jake Carmack and Blake Butterworth
Snow in Cleveland, Georgia. This is one tough little twig. Look at all that snow! ~ Candi Franklin
Funeral arrangements are being made for the three people killed in a domestic shooting on Sunday. Habersham County Coroner Kasey McEntire says services for Kathy Smith will be held at McGahee Griffin Stewart Funeral Home in Cornelia. Services for Steve Singleton will be held at Memorial Park Funeral Home in Gainesville. Hillside Memorial Chapel in Clarkesville is handling the arrangements for Anthony Giaquinta. Specific arrangements have not yet been announced.
Giaquinta’s body was released today from the State Medical Examiner’s Office in Decatur. An autopsy was conducted to determine the exact cause of his death. A report has not yet been released.
Investigation continues
Meanwhile, the GBI investigation into Sunday night’s shooting continues. Anthony Giaquinta has been identified as the shooter. GBI Deputy Director of Investigations Rusty Andrews says he apparently died from wounds he received in a shootout with a deputy responding to a 911 call made by Giaquinta and Smith’s 16-year old daughter. Investigators are still waiting on the State Medical Examiner to determine exactly how he died.
Kathy Smith was the first victim to be discovered. Her body was found in her garage. Singleton was shot multiple times. His body was found in a side yard of the residence after a four hour manhunt. Andrews says it appears he was dead before law enforcement arrived.
Habersham County Sheriff Joey Terrell and Deputy Bill Zigen were both wounded in the incident. Terrell was shot once in the arm. Zigen was shot twice. Terrell was treated and released from the hospital Sunday night. Zigen remains at Northeast Georgia Medical Center in stable condition. He’s expected to be released from the hospital soon. The name of the third deputy who fired on Giaquinta has not yet been released.
Funeral arrangements for Giaquinta, Smith and Singleton have not yet been announced.
Funeral services for Aetna “Mousey” Shockley Ivester, age 77, of Clarkesville will be held Friday, February 27, 2015 at 2:00 PM at Hillside Memorial Chapel with Pastor Don Samples officiating. Interment will follow the service at Hollywood Baptist Church Cemetery. The family will receive friends at the funeral home Thursday, February 26, 2015 from 6:00 PM until 8:00PM.
As the Habersham community comes to grips with the tragic loss of three of its own, one local organization is moving forward on hope and a prayer. The Easton Foundation will host a community-wide prayer vigil on Saturday, March 7, at the Habersham County Courthouse beginning at 5pm. Organizers invite the public to come together and pray for “healing, unity and restoration” in our community.
Steve Singleton
The Easton Foundation was started two years ago in memory of the son of one of the shooting victims. 45-year old Steve Singleton was killed along with his friend Kathy Smith and her ex-husband Anthony Giaquinta at Smith’s home in the Winding Stair subdivision west of Clarkesville. Authorities say it appears the shooting stemmed from a long-simmering domestic dispute.
A living legacy
Steve Singleton’s son, Easton Singleton, was a junior at Habersham Central High School when he was killed in an automobile accident in 2012. The Easton Foundation was established in his memory. Monday night the foundation board met and issued this statement:
“It is with heavy hearts that The Easton Foundation would like to express our sincerest condolences to the family and friends of those involved in the tragic events that occurred Sunday evening. The Easton Foundation would also like to send out a special thanks to our Sheriff’s Department and all those who work hard to keep our community safe.
Steve Singleton was a strong supporter and great friend to the The Easton Foundation. The Foundation was started in memory of Steve Singleton and Sonya Hix’s son, Easton Singleton, after his passing on April 25, 2012. Steve was a wonderful asset to the community and a friend to anyone he met. He, along with the other lives that were taken too soon, will be greatly missed. The Easton Foundation will continue to reach and empower teens like Steve would have wanted.”
Board member Pamela Fain says the foundation will continue with its mission of providing scholarships, mentoring and other types of assistance to teens and their families.
9-year old Maddie Palmer of Batesville delivers her first on-air weather report. Maddie is in 4th grade and goes to school (when it’s not snowing) at Clarkesville Elementary.
The Georgia Department of Transportation says road conditions in Habersham are improving as temperatures warm slightly, but snow still remains on secondary roads and two lane state routes. GA DOT spokeswoman Teri Pope asks motorists to stay off the roads and let crews clear them.
Despite more than two inches of snow on the ground roads have been relatively safe and clear in Habersham thanks to the not-so-extreme temperatures and absence of icy precipitation.
Habersham County Road Superintendent John Stamey says the county’s five snowplows were out on the roads early this morning scraping the snow and laying down gravel and salt. That layer of defense should help if sleet heads Habersham’s way as predicted on Wednesday.
Now Habersham will continue to update road conditions in and around Habersham as this winter snow storm develops.
Philippians 4:7, “And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.”
As a pastor I have seen people at their best, and I’ve seen people at their worst. It is the reality of my job; but, I am most surprised at times by the strength and character I find in those who put their trust in God. Insurmountable odds; yet, there is peace. Unbelievable grief; yet, there is peace. Many times I have done a funeral and heard the comments of those around, “I don’t know how they are doing it. How are they putting one foot in front of the other?” God says we won’t understand it but He will give us what we need to get through the really tough moments of our lives if we rely on Him.
Isaiah 26:3, “You will keep in perfect peace him whose mind is steadfast, because he trusts in You.”
What do you do when your world is falling apart? How do you deal with the crisis that seems crippling?
Tragedy does not discern race, age, education, or social status. It gives little warning and comes into our lives regardless of whether we know God or we don’t know God. For some people it visits more frequently than others.
My heart is broken today and my community’s heart is as well. We lost to severe tragedy three people – all with families – all with friends – all with promise for a beautiful future – all with hope for tomorrow.
How do you handle unthinkable tragedy? That’s the question I contemplate today. My friend is dead. In fact, three of my friends are dead, all shot as a result of a foolish act of rage. Two other friends are recovering from gunshot wounds. Families I desperately love are reeling under the throes of grief. Two children have lost both their parents. How does one handle the loss of parents, a sibling, a child, a friend?
All these effects were caused by a senseless, staggering, nefarious choice. So how do I and those I love respond? What are we to think? How are we to work through the heart wrenching pain?
It is in moments like these that one must face the ultimate realities of life. Unanswerable questions flood our minds and overwhelm our emotions. Fears grip our hearts, and in the gut wrenching hours that follow, we come face to face with what really matters in life.
Today, I challenge you to never take a single moment for granted. Relish each one. Celebrate every victory. Passionately embrace every friendship. Take the time to express love to your family.
Sometimes, you don’t realize the value of life until you are encompassed by death. In those crushing moments of incredible grief when in a moment life as you know it changes, you come face to face with what really matters. Repeatedly, we have learned it; it’s relationships, first with God and then with those we love.
I find myself unable to answer my own questions in this overwhelming moment, much less the questions of others. In fact, the emotional challenges make me feel fatigue.
Yet, I find security, rest, and peace internally in God’s Word and in relationships. I still have questions. But none of them remove the awareness of the presence of God and the blessedness of His touch in my heart. What is more, the embrace of friends helps sustain me. Just like others, I face an imperfect world filled with imperfect people who do amazingly stupid things. But, in the midst of pain pushed upon us by the circumstances we face, there is joy in knowing a God who cares and feeling His love expressed through those around us.
“…He will never leave you nor forsake you.” Deuteronomy 31:6
The Wicked Set Truck is parked outside of the Fox Theatre in Atlanta, GA. It takes 13 trucks to deliver the entire set for this specific production.
The opening curtain of Wicked appears in front of hundreds of audience members before the show begins and during intermission. The Fox Theatre has hosted the show multiple times.
Wicked the Musical is currently back in Atlanta at the Fabulous Fox Theatre playing February 18th until March 8th. The story is based on Gregory Maguire’s 1995 novel, Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West and has been turned into one of Broadway’s highest grossing productions. Maguire’s book is known for the dark declaration on the Wicked Witch of the West and her friend Glinda, but the musical has been enlightened audiences so that it can be easily followed and enjoyed. Wicked is a show that will open your mind and expand your knowledge of what you know of the Wizard of Oz and you will become aware of how your favorite characters obtained their names along with why things happened the way that they did.
Wicked centers around Elphaba and Glinda who meet at Shiz University where they start out as roommates as well as awkward enemies. Elphaba is born green and outspoken and Glinda is the beautiful preppy blonde who befriends Elphaba and thus a journey begins. During the duration of the musical a friendship is tested and tried and musical numbers weave the history of the two most famous witches of Oz into what we now know of them. Many will connect with the story because you will fly back to school and step into the cliques you were once part of. Audience members will also recollect that one point in their life they had to choose their own path instead of joining the ever so “popular” bandwagon.
The Time Dragon Clock which was used in the 2004 Tony Awards presentation sits today inside the Gershwin Theatre Lobby in New York City
The show features famous musical theatre anthems such as : The Wizard and I, Dancing Through Life, Popular, Defying Gravity, As Long As You’re Mine and For Good , just to name a few. The Munchkinland Touring Cast which is performing at the Fox Theatre in Atlanta include the talents of: Carrie St. Louis (Glinda), Alyssa Fox (Elphaba), Liana Hunt (Nessarose) , Lee Slobotkin (Boq), Kristine Zbornik (Madame Morrible), Ashley Angel Parker (Fiyero), John Davidson (the Wizard) and a remarkable ensemble of sixteen who bring the magic of Oz to life.
Wicked is sure to mesmerize you with it’s spectacular lighting and set design as well as with the live orchestra that plays in the pit. The entire evening will overwhelm you with appreciation for the performing arts and those brave enough to be part of a show of this magnitude. If you are a theatre lover and wish to be enthralled with one of Broadway’s most prized musicals, I highly recommend Wicked. Even though the musical centers around two women, men can also connect with this classic tale. Regardless of gender, the show is sure to entertain you and will open your eyes and ears to musical theatre in a way you’ve never seen or heard it before.
A Quick History of Wicked: the Musical
Eugene Lee created the opening Emerald City Curtain and Time Dragon Clock for the spectacular production of Wicked.
Wicked is produced by Marc Platt, Jon B. Platt, Universal Stage Porductions , David Stone, as well as the Araca Group. The brilliant lyrics and music are by the one and only, Stephen Schwartz who is well known for his musical work in Disney’s Pocahontas and The Hunchback of Notre Dame . Winnie Holzman, the book writer adapted Maguire’s novel into a full stage production which originally opened in San Francisco for a pre-Broadway “tryout” before it headed to the Great White Way in 2003.
The musical moved to 222 W 51st Street at the Gershwin Theatre where it opened on Broadway the day before Halloween in 2003. The original cast was led by Idina Menzel who portrayed Elphaba “the Wicked Witch of the West,” Kristin Chenoweth who “popularized” the role of Glinda the Good, Nortbert Leo Butz as Fiyero, Carole Shelley as Madame Morrible and the legendary Joel Grey as the “Wonderful Wizard of Oz”. The show later earned three Tony Awards in 2004 for the categories of: Best Actress in a musical (Idinal Mezel), Best Costume Design (Susan Hilferty) and Best Scenic Design (Eugene Lee). It is still running in New York City today to sold out audiences with rotating casts.
The Fox Theatre is one of Atlanta’s most elegant landmarks. The theatre opened in 1929.
Along with playing in New York on Broadway at the Gershwin Theatre, the show currently has two US National Touring companies ( the Munchkinland Tour and the Emerald City Tour). Wicked is also on tour across the United Kingdom and has taken residence at the Apollo Victoria Theatre in London.
The Clarkesville Garden Club will meet February 26 at 1:00 p.m. at the Visual Tech Building at North Georgia Technical College. The meeting, Photographing Plants and Landscapes, will be held in Room 221 (Art Jury Room). The program will be presented by the instructors of the Photography Department. Guests are welcome. And packets of free seeds will be available.
Property owners in Downtown Clarkesville are invited to attend “Business & Biscuits”- a drop-in meet and greet breakfast hosted by Clarkesville Main Street on Friday, February 27th from 8-9:30am at Clarkesville City Hall.
The purpose of the breakfast is to provide an overview of the Main Street program and the Downtown Clarkesville Master Plan and how it will benefit business and buildings in the downtown area. Members of the Main Street Business Development Committee also hope to gather information from property owners about their buildings, as well as get feedback on downtown-related issues.
“Most of all, we just want to keep the lines of communication open between the City and our property owners,” explains Mary Beth Horton, Clarkesville Main Street Manager. “We want to exchange ideas for improving downtown and improving how we communicate with each other.” Horton said there is no set agenda for the meeting stating that it will be very informal, comfortable and casual.
The breakfast is open to all property owners in the downtown Clarkesville district. Main Street volunteers as well as various members from City Council and City departments will be present to help answer any questions. For more information, contact 706-754-2220.
The GBI held a press conference Monday outlining new details in the Sunday shooting in Habersham that left three people dead and wounded two local law enforcement officers.
The shooting apparently stemmed from a long-simmering domestic dispute. Kathy Smith, her boyfriend Steve Singleton and ex-husband Anthony Giaquinta were all killed in the shooting spree.
Habersham County Sheriff Joey Terrell and Deputy Bill Zigen were wounded. A third deputy who opened fire on Giaquinta was unharmed. His name is being withheld for investigative reasons.
GBI Deputy Director Rusty Andrews says the incident began around 7:33pm Sunday as Terrell, Zigen and the third deputy were responding to a domestic dispute call at Smith’s residence at 281 Lower Pond Court in the Winding Stair subdivision. He says as the officers turned into the subdivision they were confronted by a black Ford Crown Victoria that was speeding toward them. “As the sheriff’s officers turned onto the road, the Crown Victoria veered off of the road, went into a yard and spun out in the yard.” Andrews says a man, later identified as suspected shooter Anthony Giaquinta, got out of the car and “ran into the wooded area near the yard where the vehicle stopped.”
Former Habersham County deputy and alleged shooter Anthony Giaquinta. He was fired from the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office in 2013 for allegations of domestic violence. The charges were never adjudicated in court.
“The Sheriff’s Office stopped and looked for him briefly in that area. They had also been notified by their dispatch that Mr. Giaquinta’s 16-year old daughter was the person who had made the initial call to 911 and that she and her boyfriend had fled the residence,” Andrews says. “They went and they located her outside the subdivision to make sure that she was okay and then they turned and went back to the residence in the subdivision.”
Upon arriving at the house, Andrews says the three officers entered the garage where they found the body Guiquinta’s ex-wife Kathy Smith. He says, “They then posted Deputy Zigen at the entrance to the garage outside the residence. The sheriff and the other deputy made entry to the residence to search for the suspect and to clear it and to see if there were other victims on the inside.” That’s when the shooting began. “Deputy Zigen was confronted by Anthony Giaquinta on the outside of the residence. It appears he was likely ambushed from a position that Giaquinta had taken.” He says Giaquinta started firing and Deputy Zigen was struck twice. “He went down on the concrete and then crawled to a position of cover inside the garage of the residence,” says Andrews.
Habersham County Sheriff Joey Terrell returned to the scene of the search several hours after being shot.
Upon hearing the shots, Sheriff Terrell and the third deputy returned to the garage where Terrell was shot in his right bicep by Giaquinta. “The Sheriff then returned back into the residence seeking a position of cover. The third deputy was able to step up and exchange gunfire with Giaquinta,” Andrews explains. At that point Terrell and the third deputy evacuated the house and got Deputy Zigen to safety.
A perimeter was set up outside the house and SWAT teams from the Hall County Sheriff’s Office and Georgia State Patrol were called to the scene. Andrews says when the SWAT teams arrived they began searching for Giaquinta. “They fired gas into the house fearing that he was inside. Ultimately, it was determined that he was not inside the residence.” Andrews says officers began an exterior search and found Giaquinta’s body in the rear yard of the residence. “At this point we believe that he was likely killed by the return fire from law enforcement.” GBI Director of Public Affairs Sherry Lang says no shots were fired during the search.
Dozens of officers from multiple jurisdictions converged on the scene to assist in the manhunt.
As officers searched the exterior of the home they discovered the body of a third victim in a side yard. That victim is identified as 45-year old Steve Singleton of Flowery Branch. He’d been shot multiple times. Facebook posts made by Singleton and Smith this past New Year’s paint a foreboding picture of the events that unfolded last night. See Second shooting victim identified
It has not yet been determined when Singleton was killed but Andrews says it happened before law enforcement arrived.
Giaquinta and Smith divorced in June of last year. They had two daughters together, ages 16 and 18. The 18-year old was not at home when the shooting occurred. Andrews says the 16-year old and her boyfriend fled to safety unharmed.
GBI agents Brad Parks (left) and Rusty Andrews spoke to the media four hours into the manhunt. The 11:30pm Sunday press conference is where they announced Giaquinta and two others were dead.
GBI investigators are still processing the crime scene. Andrews says, “We have most of our interviews done as far as the investigation is concerned,” but adds, “There are still a few folks we are trying to locate and interview.”
Giaquinta was a former Habersham County Sheriff’s deputy who left the department to go overseas to work as a military contractor. He returned to his job in Habersham where he worked until June 15, 2013, when he was fired for allegations of domestic violence. Andrews says it appears he has not worked in law enforcement since, but that remains under investigation.
Officers guard the entrance to Winding Stair subdivision off Hwy. 17 west of Clarkesville after the manhunt.
Despite the history of domestic violence involved, Andrews says there were no restraining orders in place at the time of Sunday’s shooting.
Asked by reporters why the Sheriff responded to Sunday’s 911 call Andrews explains, “He responded because he knew the family and knew the situation and he knew there was a potential for violence.” Andrews adds it was well-known that Giaquinta had a lot of guns in his possession, but says the GBI currently has no information indicating he had made any previous weapons-related threats. There was nothing legally barring Giaquinta from owning firearms. “He was terminated for domestic violence, however, the charges were not ever adjudicated in court,” Andrews says.
Officers guard the crime scene on Monday as GBI investigators search for evidence inside.
The GBI’s investigation at this point indicates that the 2013 incident was the only time Giaquinta was ever charged with domestic violence. There is strong indication, however, from friends and family and through social media that trouble had existed between the two for some time. Smith’s relationship with Singleton was apparently an issue between the exes.
As far as Giaquinta’s relationship with the Sheriff, Andrews says there’s no immediate evidence of any ‘bad blood’ and adds, “He (Giaquinta) was disenfranchised with law enforcement, in general.”
The GBI is conducting the investigation at the request of the Habersham County Sheriff’s Office.