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Kemp endorses Derek Dooley for Georgia Senate seat

Republican U.S. Senate candidate Derek Dooley speaks, accompanied by Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, foreground, at the University of Georgia in Athens, Ga., on Saturday, Aug. 30, 2025. (AP Photo/Jeff Amy)

ATHENS, Ga. (AP) — Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp on Saturday endorsed Republican Derek Dooley in Georgia’s 2026 U.S. Senate race, arguing an outsider without congressional experience can best critique Democratic Sen. Jon Ossoff’s record.

“I’m a firm believer that we need a political outsider to do that, someone that can stay focused on his record, but also someone who has a vision for our state in the future,” Kemp said. “That is not a politician.”

Kemp’s choice of Dooley is hardly a surprise — he told other Republican candidates that he would back Dooley before the former University of Tennessee football coach even entered the race. But Kemp’s appearance with Dooley on Saturday before a University of Georgia football game in Athens underlines the investment of Georgia’s second-term governor in a political novice — along with Kemp spending on Dooley’s behalf and detailing his closest political aides to run Dooley’s campaign.

Kemp agreed to back the 57-year-old Dooley after deciding not to run for the seat himself. Georgia Republicans are looking to topple Ossoff, considered the Senate’s most vulnerable Democratic incumbent seeking reelection next year. The GOP field also includes U.S. Reps. Buddy Carter and Mike Collins, as well as activist Reagan Box.

Dooley has focused on attacking Ossoff and backing President Donald Trump, tactics that unify Republicans. He argued Saturday that Ossoff’s history of support for former President Joe Biden and his opposition to Trump disqualify him from another term.

“What’s amazing is he wants to be our quarterback for the next six years,” Dooley said. “And where I come from, when you deliver results like that, your ass goes on the bench. So I’m looking forward to rolling up my sleeves. I’m going to earn the support every day from the people and Georgia and give this Senate seat back to them.”

But Dooley has a scant history in politics — he didn’t vote in the 2016 and 2020 elections when Trump was a candidate. Still coaching at the time, Dooley has said he was too busy and distracted to vote. But Collins says that will repel Republicans whose votes are needed.

“If we nominate someone who didn’t vote for Donald Trump in 2016 or 2020, never registered as a Republican, and hasn’t lived in Georgia for 25 years, the base will not show up, the low-propensity Trump voters will stay home, and Jon Ossoff will win again — period,” Collins said in a statement posted online Friday pushing back against Kemp’s reasoning.

Collins said that backing Trump’s agenda in Congress won’t be a “liability” in a general election and argued his record shows he gets things done.

Kemp and Trump met and said they would try to agree on a preferred candidate.

Kemp said Saturday that he has talked to Trump about backing Dooley and that Trump “respects my decision.” But Trump isn’t yet ready to endorse, and all the candidates are vying for Trump’s nod.

“There’s only one endorsement that matters in Georgia — and will all due respect, it ain’t this one,” Carter spokesperson Harley Adsit said.

Democratic Party of Georgia spokesperson Devon Cruz said Kemp is “fanning the flames of an already chaotic GOP U.S. Senate primary.”

Dooley is the son of legendary University of Georgia coach Vince Dooley and was a lawyer before he went into coaching. Derek Dooley compiled a 15-21 record with the Tennessee Volunteers before he was fired in 2012. After that he was an assistant coach with the Dallas Cowboys, the University of Missouri, the New York Giants and the University of Alabama.

Kemp and Dooley spoke Saturday at a tailgate party blocks away from Sanford Stadium, where Georgia’s playing field is named for his father, before the Bulldogs kicked off their game against Marshall University.

Dooley hasn’t shied from his football past. He said Saturday that in both coaching and politics, “leadership matters,” saying coaching was about “bringing people together, finding some common ground and bringing hope and opportunity for them every day.”

But other candidates argue Dooley was a failure at coaching and are underscoring his affiliation with a non-Georgia school. Collins posted a University of Georgia football schedule online Friday with a picture of Dooley standing in for the Sept. 13 game against Tennessee.

Hall County firefighters knock down early-morning house fire

Fire broke out inside this Hall County home before sunrise on Sunday, Aug. 31, 2025. (Hall County Fire Rescue)

Hall County Fire Rescue responded to a residential fire early Sunday morning southeast of Gainesville.

Crews were dispatched around 4:15 a.m. to reports of a structure fire in the 2200 block of Smallwood Road. When firefighters arrived, they found flames in the home’s attic, said fire department spokesperson Kimberlie Ledsinger.

A quick attack contained the bulk of the blaze, which was primarily located in one room, Ledsinger said.

The residents were able to exit safely before the firefighters arrived. No injuries were reported.

The cause of the fire remains under investigation by the Hall County Fire Marshal’s Office.

BLITZ Power Rankings: Week Three

We’re three weeks into the season, and the top three teams remain unshaken. Jefferson, Rabun, and Habersham continue to hold firm at the top of the BLITZ Football Power Rankings.

Dawson County and Commerce slid down after tough losses to East Jackson and Luella, while Towns County and Franklin climbed the ladder with decisive wins over Lakeview and Banks County.

Here are the latest rankings, followed by last week’s.

Week Three

  1. Jefferson (RECORD: 3-0 / LAST RANK: #1 (N/A)
  2. Rabun County (RECORD: 2-0 / LAST RANK: #2 (N/A)
  3. Habersham Central (RECORD: 2-1 / LAST RANK: #3 (N/A)
  4. Lumpkin County (RECORD: 1-1 / LAST RANK: #4 (N/A)
  5. Stephens County (RECORD: 2-1 / LAST RANK: #5 (N/A)
  6. Franklin County (RECORD: 3-0 / LAST RANK: #8 (^2)
  7. Dawson County (RECORD: 0-2 / LAST RANK: #6 (-1)
  8. Towns County (RECORD: 1-1 / LAST RANK: #11 (^3)
  9. Commerce (RECORD: 0-3 / LAST RANK: #7 (-2)
  10. Union County (RECORD: 0-2 / LAST RANK: #9 (N/A)
  11. White County (RECORD: 0-2 / LAST RANK: #10 (N/A)
  12. Banks County (RECORD: 0-2 / LAST RANK: #12 (N/A)

 

Week Two

  1. Jefferson (RECORD: 2-0 / LAST RANK: #1 (N/A)
  2. Rabun County (RECORD: 2-0 / LAST RANK: #2 (N/A)
  3. Habersham Central (RECORD: 1-1 / LAST RANK: #3 (N/A)
  4. Lumpkin County (RECORD: 0-1 / LAST RANK: #5 (^1)
  5. Stephens County (RECORD: 1-1 / LAST RANK: #8 (^3)
  6. Dawson County (RECORD: 0-1 / LAST RANK: #6 (N/A)
  7. Commerce (RECORD: 0-2 / LAST RANK: #4 (-3)
  8. Franklin County (RECORD: 2-0 / LAST RANK: #9 (^1)
  9. Union County (RECORD: 0-1 / LAST RANK: #7 (-2)
  10. White County (RECORD: 0-1 / LAST RANK: #10 (N/A)
  11. Towns County (RECORD: 0-1 / LAST RANK: #11 (N/A)
  12. Banks County (RECORD: 0-1 / LAST RANK: #12 (N/A)

Powerball jackpot climbs to $1.1 billion for Labor Day

(Katelynn Hulsey/Now Habersham)

The Powerball jackpot has surged to an estimated $1.1 billion after no ticket matched all six numbers in Saturday night’s drawing. The next chance to win comes on Labor Day, Sept. 1, with a cash option of $498.4 million — the fifth-largest prize in the game’s history.

Saturday’s winning numbers were 3, 18, 22, 27, 33 and the red Powerball 17, with a Power Play multiplier of 3. While no one claimed the jackpot, nine players matched all five white balls to win $1 million, and three doubled their prize to $2 million by adding the Power Play option. Hundreds of others won smaller prizes ranging from $50,000 to $150,000.

The jackpot has been rolling since May 31, when a California ticket hit for $141 million. If won Monday, the winner can choose between annual payments that grow by 5% or a lump sum before taxes.

The odds of winning the jackpot are 1 in 292.2 million.

Turner’s 2-run single with 2 outs in 10th inning leads Phillies past Braves 3-2

Philadelphia Phillies' Weston Wilson celebrates hitting a solo home run with teammates during the third inning of a baseball game against the Atlanta Braves, Saturday, Aug. 30, 2025, in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Chris Szagola)

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Trea Turner hit a two-run single with two outs in the 10th inning to lift the Philadelphia Phillies to a 3-2 win over the Braves on Saturday night, spoiling the return of reigning NL Cy Young Award winner Chris Sale to Atlanta’s starting rotation.

Nacho Alvarez Jr. put Atlanta ahead 2-1 with an RBI single in the 10th.

Philadelphia loaded the bases against Hunter Stratton (0-1). Dylan Dodd came on and struck out Brandon Marsh and had Turner in an 0-2 hole before the Phillies shortstop lined a 94-mph fastball into right field, scoring Alec Bohm and Nick Castellanos.

Matt Strahm (2-3) got the win after giving up just Alvarez’s hit.

Sale and Phillies starter Cristopher Sánchez both had strong outings.

Sale, a nine-time All-Star, struck out nine and gave up three hits in six innings. His only blemish came on Weston Wilson’s solo homer in the third. The lefty was making his first start since fracturing a left rib while making a diving stop on a batted ball by the Mets’ Juan Soto on June 18. Sale, who lowered his ERA is 2.45, did not come out for the seventh after throwing 78 pitches, 51 of which were for strikes.

Sánchez struck out eight and gave up one run on seven hits in seven innings.

Both starters benefited from strong defense.

Key moment

Atlanta had a chance to pad its lead in the 10th, but Vidal Bruján and Jurickson Profar each hit flyouts after Alvarez’s single.

Key stat

Sánchez lowered his ERA to 2.66. He began Saturday fourth in the NL in ERA.

Up next

Braves RHP Hurston Waldrep (4-0, 0.90 ERA) opposes Philadelphia LHP Jesús Luzardo (12-6, 4.23) in the finale of the four-game series on Sunday when the Phillies go for the sweep.

Can you hear us? Verizon customers speak up on outage

A widespread Verizon outage left customers across the nation without service on Saturday, with many phones showing only SOS signals. Verizon blamed the disruption on a software issue and said engineers were working to restore wireless service as quickly as possible.

Local residents were quick to share their frustrations.

“My kid was going nuts that Fortnite just went out. Luckily I have Kinetic too,” said Alexandria Holzmiller.

Others reported entire households losing service. “Located in Clarkesville and all our lines with Verizon show SOS. That’s five of us here,” said Melissa Brooks.

The issue wasn’t limited to one town. “Out in Canon,” said Pamela Sullivan, while Sherry Moore Adams reported the same in Turnerville. Teresa Pless added that Eastanollee had no service, and Mandy Barnes said she was experiencing the outage in Dillard.

Some noted the outage was inconsistent, even within the same family. “Mine and my son’s phones are showing SOS with no service unless connected to Wi-Fi, and my daughter and husband’s phones have been fine,” said Cassie House. “I’ve been trying to get a hold of Verizon, but it always hangs up because of the high call volume.”

Others described the situation as confusing. “Yep, it has definitely been strange… affects some and some it hasn’t. Verizon confirmed this,” said Vickie Flood.

By Saturday evening, Verizon said service was beginning to return in affected areas. “Our engineers have been working diligently on today’s service disruption and continue to work to ensure remaining customers are fully restored as soon as possible,” the company said in a statement.

Stockton flashes dual-threat skills with 2 TD passes, 2 TD runs as No. 5 Georgia routs Marshall 45-7

Georgia quarterback Gunner Stockton (14) throws a pass during the first half of an NCAA college football game against Marshall, Saturday, Aug. 30, 2025, in Athens, Ga. (AP Photo/Colin Hubbard)

ATHENS, Ga. (AP) — Gunner Stockton enjoyed a promising start to his first full season as No. 5 Georgia’s starting quarterback, running for two touchdowns and adding two scoring passes as the Bulldogs rolled past Marshall 45-7 in their season opener on Saturday.

Stockton, a junior, had scoring runs of 13 and 11 yards. He completed 14 of 24 passes for 190 yards and rushed for 73 yards.

“It felt different,” said Stockton of beginning the season in the No. 1 role. “Running out as the starter is a little different than hoping you’ll get in. I enjoyed everything about it.”

Zachariah Branch, a transfer from Southern California, had three catches for 95 yards, including a 47-yard touchdown. Stockton added a 2-yard scoring pass to London Humphreys. Backup Ryan Puglisi threw a 23-yard scoring pass to Elyiss Williams.

Marshall, the defending Sun Belt Conference champion that entered the season with 74 new players, was held to seven first downs and 207 yards.

Georgia led 45-0 before Zion Turner — the Thundering Herd’s third quarterback to see action — led a touchdown drive capped by Ja’Shon Barbie’s 1-yard scoring run.

Big block

Bulldogs safety KJ Bolden provided a lift on special teams when he blocked Nathan Totten’s punt in the second quarter, giving Georgia possession at the Marshall 20.

“I tried to come off the ball fast,” Bolden said. “I just jumped. I came looking for the ball.”

Three plays later, Stockton’s 11-yard scoring run gave Georgia a 21-0 lead.

QB surprise

Marshall first-year coach Tony Gibson started redshirt freshman quarterback JacQai Long ahead of Syracuse transfer Carlos Del Rio-Wilson, whom he had labeled as the No. 1 QB after spring practice.

“I thought JacQai early on, he was a little nervous,” Gibson said. “He’s going into his first start, and we did it to him at Georgia, but he’s been our best quarterback through camp, and I like where he’s at.”

Long completed 3 of 11 passes for 19 yards. Del Rio-Wilson went 2 of 3 for 10 yards, and Turner — a transfer from Jacksonville State — was 6 of 7 for 100 yards.

Gibson said Turner “brought a little energy to us, and we finally crossed the 50-yard line, punched one in, made a couple really good throws. So we’ve got to go back and evaluate who our guy is going to be next week.”

The takeaway

Marshall: Gibson’s quarterback rotation couldn’t spark the offense, which managed one first down and 40 total yards in the first half.

Georgia: Stockton provides the dual-threat potential the Bulldogs have lacked since Stetson Bennett led back-to-back national championship teams in 2021-22. Stockton showed creativity in a fake handoff to Chauncey Bowens before keeping for a 13-yard touchdown run.

Injury report

Georgia freshman right guard Juan Gaston Jr. left in the first quarter with an ankle injury. Bo Hughley filled in at right tackle for Earnest Greene III, who “had some stiffness and wasn’t able to go,” coach Kirby Smart said.

Up next

Marshall hosts Missouri State next Saturday.

Georgia hosts another nonconference foe in Austin Peay next Saturday.

Carolyn Jean Campbell Tilson

Carolyn Jean Campbell Tilson, age 80, of Banks County, Georgia, gained her Heavenly Wings on Friday, August 29, 2025, following a sudden illness.

Mrs. Tilson was born on February 15, 1945, in Jackson County, Georgia, to the late Eugene Campbell and Louise Gunter Campbell. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her loving husband of 58 years, Tommy L. Tilson, Sr.; daughter, Clarice Tilson; sister, Doris Campbell Crow; and brother, Paul Campbell.

Carolyn was of the Christian Faith and dedicated many years of her life to the sewing industry, where her skilled hands and strong work ethic made a lasting impression. Beyond her work, she found joy in the simple and beautiful things life had to offer. She was most at home in the great outdoors, whether camping or fishing, she simply enjoyed the peace of nature. To her family, she was known lovingly as “Nanny” by her grandchildren and “Big Momma” by her great-grandchildren.

Survivors include her daughters, Melissa Tilson Reems, Amanda Tilson Jarrard, and Robert; sons, Tommy “Larry” Tilson, Jr., and Pauletta; David Matthew Tilson and Valisa; sisters, Vickie Campbell, Evelyn Dodd; brother, Curtis and Martha Campbell; sister-in-law, Janie Baker; fourteen grandchildren and twenty great-grandchildren.

Funeral Services will be held at 2:00 p.m., Wednesday, September 3, 2025, at the Whitfield Funeral Home, North Chapel, with Rev. Stephen Tilson and Rev. Larry Dyer officiating. Interment will follow in the New Hope Baptist Church Cemetery, where she will be laid to rest beside her beloved husband, Tommy.

The family will receive friends from 2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m., Tuesday, September 2, 2025, at the funeral home.

Arrangements have been entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Homes & Crematory, North Chapel at 245 Central Avenue, Demorest, Georgia 30535. Telephone: 706-778-1700.

Rep. Anderson: Fractured election board may need legislative fix

District 10 State Representative Victor Anderson (R-Cornelia) speaks during a contentious House study committee hearing at North Georgia Technical College in Clarkesville on Aug. 28, 2025. The hearing focused on the State Election Board and included some stunning and acrimonious testimony. (livestream image)

At a contentious hearing in Clarkesville this week, lawmakers acknowledged what many in the packed room already sensed — the State Election Board is fractured and struggling to carry out its duties.

“We knew there were issues within the SEB,” said State Rep. Victor Anderson (R-Cornelia), but he acknowledged they were not aware of how deep the divide was until the Aug. 28 meeting at North Georgia Technical College.

Anderson is vice-chair of the House study committee reviewing Georgia’s election procedures. He brought the hearing to his home county in the heart of Northeast Georgia to give his constituents an opportunity to be heard and to participate in the legislative process.

Deep fractures revealed

The hearing laid bare sharp internal conflicts, allegations of dishonesty, and accusations of partisanship within the board. Testimony ranged from calls to overhaul the SEB’s structure to warnings against hasty reforms. While Republican lawmakers pushed for more authority and stricter rules, Democrats stressed transparency and voter trust, with some questioning whether the board should exist at all.

“We didn’t realize until testimony how deep the fractures run,” Anderson told Now Habersham. “Legislative action may be needed to repair these issues, and our committee will prepare recommendations to improve the processes, effectiveness, transparency, and accuracy of elections in Georgia.”

He added, “We must have elections that promote trust, confidence, and participation.”

The committee is expected to deliver its recommendations to the House Speaker ahead of the 2026 legislative session.

More hearings through October

Thursday’s was the third of six statewide meetings the committee has planned. Previous sessions were held in Atlanta and Rockmart. Future meetings are set for Savannah on September 18, Covington on October 2, and Americus on October 16.

All meetings are open to the public and livestreamed.

McCormack picks up 100th career win as Lions rout Regent 4-0

(Photo by Mooreshots LLC)

NORFOLK, Va. – Piedmont women’s soccer continued its dominant start to the 2025 season, rolling past Regent University 4-0 on a sunny and warm Saturday afternoon in Virginia.

With the win, Head Coach Timmy McCormack now has 100 in his coaching career in just his ninth season as a head coach.

After scoring 12 times in a season-opening rout of Trinity Washington Friday afternoon, the Lions wasted no time in jumping out to another multiple goal lead on Saturday, scoring twice in the first half and two more times in the second to pull away from the Royals.

Senior Savannah Jerome found the back of the net off a cross in the game’s 23rd minute. Then, just 15 minutes later, sophomore Alison Witkiewicz scored the first of her two goals on the day, putting away a bouncing ball in the box to make it 2-0 Piedmont, which carried into halftime.

The 2-0 lead for the Lions was added on two just over 11 minutes into the second half. Off a Regent goal kick, Piedmont newcomer Adriana Blumer was able to deliver a quick takeaway and beat the goalkeeper low and left for her first goal in a Piedmont uniform.

However, the scoring did not stop there, as Witkiewicz added her second of the day by putting away a mad scramble in the box off a Piedmont corner.

Hannah Thompson and Maggie Leger each played a half in goal and kept the team’s shutout streak alive to start the season with Leger making a single save.

Up next, the Lions are back in action tomorrow with a neutral site contest against former USA South foe Meredith in Rocky Mount, North Carolina at 2 p.m.

TURNING POINT:
– A pair of first half goals from the Lions were more than enough in the 4-0 win.

STANDOUT PERFORMANCES:
– Witkiewicz delivered her first career brace, scoring the team’s second and fourth goals of the game.

INSIDE THE BOX SCORE:
– Piedmont held a 20-4 shot advantage and a 14-1 edge in corner kicks.

Sen. Dixon condemns swatting hoaxes at Georgia universities

District 45 State Sen. Clint Dixon speaks at a GOP event in March 2023. That year, he was swatted and later introduced legislation making the practice a felony. (Sen. Clint Dixon/Facebook)

The senator who authored Georgia’s swatting law is condemning the wave of swatting hoaxes that targeted multiple Georgia universities Friday night. Senator Clint Dixon (R-Mulberry), calls the false reports of campus shooters “an act of domestic terrorism.”

The University of Georgia in Athens, Clark Atlanta University in Atlanta, and the University of West Georgia in Carrollton all received calls about gunmen on campus. Each incident triggered lockdowns, emergency alerts, and heavy police response before investigators confirmed the threats were hoaxes.

Dixon: “Georgia will not tolerate criminals”

In a statement Saturday, Dixon said the false alarms endangered lives and wasted critical resources.

“I am outraged by the disgraceful swatting hoaxes that disrupted universities across our state yesterday,” Dixon said. “Swatting is not a prank. It is an act of domestic terrorism that demands the strongest possible punishment. That is why I introduced and championed Senate Bill 421, which made swatting a felony.”

He added that, having been a swatting target himself in 2023, he knows the danger firsthand. “Georgia families deserve to know that their safety is our top priority. Those who choose to terrorize our students and communities will face the full force of the law.”

Timeline of Friday’s hoaxes

  • University of Georgia: At 8:51 p.m., UGA activated its alert system after a caller claimed a gunman was near the main library. Officers searched the area and reviewed security footage, finding no threat. An all-clear was issued at 10:40 p.m. “We strongly condemn hoax reports and swatting attempts,” UGA said in a statement.

  • University of West Georgia: At 9:54 p.m., UWG texted students about a reported man with a gun near Ingram Library. Police quickly determined the report was false.

  • Clark Atlanta University: Around the same time, CAU issued a shelter-in-place order “out of an abundance of caution.” Officers later confirmed the report of an armed man was a hoax, according to WXIA.

Part of a nationwide surge

Friday’s false reports came days after Mercer University in Macon was also targeted. Across the country, universities including Villanova, the University of Texas–San Antonio, the University of Arkansas, and the University of South Carolina have experienced similar hoaxes—some accompanied by recorded gunfire played over the phone.

The FBI’s Atlanta field office confirmed it is investigating the surge in swatting calls, working with state and local authorities.

Law enforcement officials warn these hoaxes not only waste resources but also risk deadly consequences if officers believe a threat is real—or lead to complacency in the event of a genuine emergency.

Motorcyclist injured in wreck north of Clarkesville

A 20-year-old man was injured in a motorcycle wreck Friday evening north of Clarkesville.

According to the Georgia State Patrol, Aden Nichols was driving a CFMOTO 450SS south on GA 197 North. He failed to maintain his lane in a curve and ran off the road, striking a mailbox and several trees as the bike traveled down an embankment.

Multiple fire and law enforcement units responded to the scene. Nichols was transported to the hospital for treatment of his injuries.