Zumba event raises more than $500 for chamber program
May 21, 2013 | 62 views | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend | print
From left:  Alison Schmidt, Elsa Gonzalez, and Crissy Davis.
From left: Alison Schmidt, Elsa Gonzalez, and Crissy Davis.
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The 3rd annual Zumba for Recovery, held on April 13 at Cherokee Capital fairgrounds collected $534 for the Chamber of Commerce’s “Drugs don’t work” program. The event was started as a memorial for Larry Gonzalez whose wife, Elsa, is responsible for bringing Zumba to Calhoun. Elsa was joined by Fitness First of Calhoun instructors Tennille Aker, Valerie Allen, Alison Schmidt and other instructors from Calhoun, Rome and Dalton for three hours filled with fun, sweat and laughter. Door prizes were donated by Andy Baxter photography, Fitness First of Calhoun, Southern Living at home (Crystal Brown), Yoga and more, Carissa York and other businesses. Also participating in organization and volunteer duties includes Crissy Davis, Reese Davis, Denise Rice and Pam Stephens.
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College Softball: Reinhardt learns seed, will open NAIA Championship Friday
by Reinhardt reports
May 21, 2013 | 78 views | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Reinhardt's Maddie Monroe (Reinhardt Athletics)
Reinhardt's Maddie Monroe (Reinhardt Athletics)
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WALESKA — Reinhardt University’s softball team has been seeded No. 8 for the upcoming NAIA National Championship, to be contested May 24-30 in Columbus, Ga. The Lady Eagles will open play in the tournament May 24 at 1 p.m. against No. 9 St. Xavier (Ill.). RU punched its ticket to Columbus with a, 2-1, victory over No. 13 Belhaven in the decisive game of the Belhaven Bracket. St. Xavier reached the NAIA National Championship by winning the Concordia (Ore.) Bracket over Corban (Ore.) in the final game. The Lady Eagles (43-7) will be the only team from the state of Georgia in the event. Nineteen of the 20 players on the roster have hometowns in the state of Georgia, with many from the Cobb and Cherokee County areas. RU’s pitching staff was one of the biggest reasons that the Lady Eagles will be making the trip to Columbus. Senior pitcher Maddie Monroe (Calhoun, Ga.) pitched back-to-back shutouts over LSU Alexandria and Belhaven to help RU reach the final day. Senior hurler Kelsey Floyd (Newnan, Ga.) entered in relief of Monroe in Wednesday’s first contest against Belhaven, and while the Lady Eagles would lose that game, it was Floyd who pitched 6.1 innings and allowed just one unearned run in earning the win in the finale. Monroe came back out of the bullpen to record the final two outs to earn her third save of the year, going along with her record of 26-2 on the 2013 campaign. The Lady Eagles were also solid in the field at the Belhaven Bracket. Senior shortstop Lindsey Booker (Americus, Ga.) made three diving catches in RU’s first two wins, and also had a key relay throw in the final game against Belhaven. Freshman Alexis Chumbler (Canton, Ga.) made a spectacular diving catch against Belhaven Tuesday which resulted in a double play to end a BC threat. Sophomore Haley Brannon made a running catch just in front of the wall in right during the final game against Belhaven to end another Blazers threat. Chumbler led the Lady Eagles in batting at the Belhaven Bracket with a .360 batting average and the team’s only home run. Shelby Sinclair (Marietta, Ga.) had a bracket-best four runs scored. Booker’s three-RBI day Tuesday against Belhaven gave her the team-high in RBIs for the tournament, with Floyd and Kaley Garmon (Flowery Branch, Ga.) each driving in two runs over the four games. Sinclair, Amber Herrington (Canton, Ga.) and Tyler Sampson (Loganville, Ga.) each stole a base in the tournament as RU swiped the most bases of any team in the bracket. If Reinhardt wins May 24, it will move on to a game Saturday, May 25 against top-seeded Concordia (Calif.) at 7 p.m. If Reinhardt falls to St. Xavier, the Lady Eagles would play Saturday against the loser of a contest between No. 4 Oklahoma City and No. 5 Cal State San Marcos.
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rt_elms
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May 21, 2013
It’s a delicate balance. Sales tax receipts vs. public safety.
Policy, discretion guide media sources probes
by MARK SHERMAN,Associated Press
May 21, 2013 | 83 views | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend | print
FILE - In this May 13, 2013, file photo, the screen on the phone console is seen at the reception desk at The Associated Press Washington bureau. The Justice Department’s latest effort to examine who journalists are talking to _ the secret subpoena of Associated Press phone records from April and May of last year _ demonstrates how government investigators are guided more by policy and the judgments of high-ranking officials than by specific laws or, in this case, the need to satisfy an independent federal judge. (AP Photo/Jon Elswick)
FILE - In this May 13, 2013, file photo, the screen on the phone console is seen at the reception desk at The Associated Press Washington bureau. The Justice Department’s latest effort to examine who journalists are talking to _ the secret subpoena of Associated Press phone records from April and May of last year _ demonstrates how government investigators are guided more by policy and the judgments of high-ranking officials than by specific laws or, in this case, the need to satisfy an independent federal judge. (AP Photo/Jon Elswick)
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WASHINGTON (AP) — It was a rare moment in relations between the media and the government: In 2008, FBI Director Robert Mueller called the top editors at The New York Times and The Washington Post to apologize because the bureau had improperly obtained reporters' telephone records four years earlier. The extraordinary call was an admission that the FBI's actions violated Justice Department policy about seeking journalists' phone records. But nothing about what the FBI did in 2004 appeared to run afoul of any law. The Justice Department's latest effort to examine whom journalists are talking to — the secret subpoena of Associated Press phone records from April and May of last year — demonstrates how government investigators are guided more by policy and the judgments of high-ranking officials than by specific laws or, in this case, the need to satisfy an independent federal judge. The AP case involves a criminal investigation into who gave information to the news cooperative's reporters about a foiled bomb plot in Yemen. The AP's May 7, 2012, story attributed details of the operation to unnamed government officials. The government informed the AP 10 days ago that it had secretly obtained records for 21 phone numbers, including those of the reporters on the bomb plot story. The department's guidelines, first drafted in the wake of Watergate-era government abuses, call for news organizations to be informed before investigators ask phone companies for records unless doing so would compromise the investigation. Attorney General Eric Holder said the story was the result of "a very serious leak, a very grave leak." AP President and Chief Executive Officer Gary Pruitt called the gathering of phone records a "massive and unprecedented intrusion" into how news organizations gather the news. New developments emerged Monday in another case that has led to the indictment of an official for revealing classified information. Federal prosecutors got a search warrant for the private emails of Fox News reporter James Rosen and used building security records at the State Department to track his movements as they sought to identify whom he had relied on for classified information in a story about North Korea. The tension over balancing the government's duty to protect national security and the media's role as public watchdog is long-standing. Take away protections for reporters' confidential sources and "the people who know what's happening become fearful, and they will not come forward with information the public may find very valuable," said Lucy Dalglish, dean of the University of Maryland's journalism school. "It's a classic chilling effect." But neither, said George Washington University law professor Orin Kerr, does the public want a world of free disclosure by government workers with no opportunity for the government to investigate. "It requires a very delicate balance. We wouldn't want either extreme," Kerr said. One possibility for compromise is a long-discussed federal media shield law to go along with similar laws in most states. Even as President Barack Obama defended his administration's aggressive pursuit of leakers of government secrets, he also said Congress should consider a law that generally would protect journalists from government subpoenas and allow judges, in rare instances, to decide whether national security concerns trump press freedoms. Sens. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said they would introduce a new version of a media shield bill that Congress last considered four years ago. The congressional proposals — and there have been many over the years — are partly a response to a 1972 Supreme Court ruling that nothing in the First Amendment protects reporters from being called to testify before grand juries. Justice Byron White's majority opinion scoffed at the idea that it would dry up confidential sources. He said Congress was free to give journalists, or "newsmen" in that era's parlance, additional protection under federal law. That case arose in the context of the government's pursuit of Black Panthers and also drug users in Kentucky. But the 5-4 ruling in Branzburg v. Hayes also has bedeviled generations of prosecutors, media lawyers and judges because one of the five justices in the majority, Lewis Powell, wrote a concurring opinion that suggested that maybe the court's holding was not as absolute as it sounded. Powell said courts would consider the competing claims of prosecutors and journalists case by case, and called judges to strike "a proper balance between freedom of the press and the obligation of all citizens to give relevant testimony with respect to criminal conduct." At the time, Justice Potter Stewart charitably referred to Powell's opinion as "enigmatic" and hoped that it would lead to "a more flexible view in the future." Last year, Judge Albert Diaz, a member of a federal appeals court panel that is weighing an effort to compel a reporter's testimony in an investigation of unauthorized disclosure, called the 1972 ruling "clear as mud." The panel of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond, Va., has yet to rule on the attempt by New York Times journalist James Risen to avoid testifying at the trial of former CIA officer Jeffrey Sterling. Sterling is accused of leaking classified information about a botched covert operation in Iran. Earlier, U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema, the trial judge handling Sterling's case, sided with Risen, saying, "A criminal trial subpoena is not a free pass for the government to rifle through a reporter's notebook." Other courts, though, recently have rejected journalists' attempts to quash subpoenas for their testimony. The rules governing how the government seeks other information such as emails haven't kept up with the pace of technology. When it comes to electronic records held by Internet service providers, technology companies and credit card companies, the rules "are not as strict as they are for news media telephone toll records," said Alan Butler, appellate advocacy counsel for the Electronic Privacy Information Center. The wide sweep of the subpoena — across AP bureaus in Washington, New York and Hartford, Conn. — and the lack of advance warning make the government's approach look "more like a dragnet" than the narrowly drafted request the Justice Department guidelines say is required, Dalglish said. University of Chicago law professor Geoffrey Stone said Justice Department officials are aware that the broader they cast the net, the more questions they will face. "They reached as far as they did because it was the only way to get the information they needed," Stone said. As for the lack of notice, he said, it was at least plausible to believe that the authorities "really want to catch this guy who leaked really bad information, from their perspective. They didn't want to do anything to scare him off."
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Jennabug100
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May 21, 2013
I am behind Law enforcement 100%. But it seems the CPD maybe carrying it to far. Everytime I leave the house, they have someone pulled over. I would like to know how much ticket money was brought in 2 years ago verses the last 6 monthes. Instead of harassing good ole working people just trying to make a living, they should be pulling over the drunk folks leaving the Mexican Restaurant on Piedmont after a deck party every Friday and Saturday night. I have watched a lot of people leave this place after drinking ALOT! This is happening right under the CPD nose. Never have I seen a officer sitting around these places to check for DUI's.
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