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The new official website for Tara Grinstead who has been missing from Ocilla, GA, since October 24, 2005

Click here for the missing TARA new website

 

 


Yahoo


City of Pineview

YARD SALE

First Saturday of Each Month

Cost is $5.00 – Register at City Hall


 

 

 

 

 

 

Wilcox County NEWS

 

This page is dedicated to happenings and events within Wilcox County

 

 

Notice: New airdate for 48 Hours

 

episode on Tara Grinstead

 

 

48 HOURS is airing a show on 1 Jul at 9:00 about Tara Grinstead's disappearance.

 



 

Published June 25, 2008

 

Century plant is talk of the town

 

By CHARLES MINSHEW

 

ABBEVILLE - Earlier this year, a young family became the talk of this small town when a 45-year-old plant in their yard decided that it was time to grow and bloom.

 

Wilcox County native Rusty Smith, his wife Jennifer, and their 2-year-old son Tripp moved into the home in September and inherited a pleasant surpise.

 

Jennifer is a stay at home mom with the couple’s son and Rusty is an engineer at Robins Air Force Base in Warner Robins.

 

The century plant that makes its home in one corner of the Smiths’ yard has made its way toward the sky. The fact that the plant has grown so tall isn’t the only thing that makes it unique.

 

Click here for rest of the story

 

 

Ocmulgee Symphony Orchestra

 

announces Concert Master

 

Audition

Cochran, GA.—The Ocmulgee Symphony is announcing the opening of the concert master position for its 2008-2009 season. After an extremely successful inaugural season with three symphony concerts, next season will feature seven orchestra concerts in Hawkinsville, Cochran, and Warner Robins. Auditions will take place on Saturday, July 19th 2008 at Middle Georgia College in Cochran. For audition materials and further details, please contact the OSO’s artistic director Dr. Charles Quinn at 478-934-9575 or under info@ocmulgeesymphonyorchestra.com.

 

 

 

May 16, 08

 

Ocmulgee Symphony Orchestra

 

presents The Back Porch

 

Symphony at Old Opera House



Cochran, GA.—The Ocmulgee Symphony Orchestra will present a ‘symphony orchestra’ of a slightly different kind on Saturday, June 14 in the Hawkinsville Opera House: The Back Porch Symphony, a fun-loving trio from Macon voted “Best of the Bands” in the Oldies Category in a “Macon Telegraph” readers poll.

 
The trio will feature the Ocmulgee Symphony’s own Sue Tomlin on hot violins and vocals, Chris Cider with great guitar playing and vocals, and Nancy Sasser on bass and sassy vocals, playing favorite hits of the 1800s and 1900s. Tunes like “Bill Bailey”, the “Can-Can” by Jacque Offenbach, “Limehouse Blues”, “12th Street Rag”, and “All of Me”, just to name a few, are sure to put a smile on your face and you will be humming along by the end of each song.


The concert will begin at 7:30 pm on Saturday, June 14, 2008 in the Opera House in Hawkinsville. Tickets for $ 10 can be purchased in advance or at the door at the Opera House, 100 North Lumpkin Street, phone 478.783.1884. Tickets and more information are also available at the Ocmulgee Symphony Orchestra’s webpage (www.ocmulgeesymphonyorchestra.com) or by calling Dr. Charles Quinn (478.934.9575).
 

 

Apr. 18, 2008

 

 

Second Cochran officer accused

 

in incident with teen girl

 

By Ashley Tusan Joyner

 

ABBEVILLE - A second Cochran police officer was arrested today for an incident involving a girl under age 16 in Pineview last year, according to a news release from the GBI in Perry.

 

Corporal Morris Ross turned himself in to the Wilcox County Sheriff's Office this morning upon being charged with enticing a child and interference with custody.

The arrest stems from the same incident for which Cochran police corporal Brent Powell was arrested April 10.

 

Ross, 29, of Cochran, was once a police officer in Pineview but no longer was employed there when the incident occurred, according to officials.

Powell, 25, also of Cochran, was then the Pineview police chief.

 

Ross was released from custody at the Wilcox County Jail after posting a $6,000 bond earlier today. Powell posted a $51,000 bond the day after his arrest.

The charges resulted from a GBI investigation requested by Wilcox County Sheriff Stacy Bloodsworth in March.

 

The investigation is ongoing. Anyone with information is asked to call the GBI office in Perry at (478) 987-4545.

 

 

 

 

 

Apr. 12, 2008

 

Ex-police chief charged with child

molestation

 

Brent Powell

By Ashley Tusan Joyner

 

The former Pineview police chief in Wilcox County, who also has served as a police officer in Cochran, has been charged with child molestation and other crimes, authorities said.

Brent Powell, 25, was arrested Thursday during a traffic stop in Cochran, said Gary Rothwell, special agent in charge of the GBI office in Perry. Powell was released on a $51,000 bail bond Friday.

 

Powell also is charged with enticing a child and interfering with custody, Rothwell said.

 

Rothwell said GBI investigators were contacted by the Wilcox County Sheriff's Office earlier this year to investigate an episode involving Powell and the use of force.

 

"This developed as a result of that," he said.

 

The former Pineview police chief in Wilcox County, who also has served as a police officer in Cochran, has been charged with child molestation and other crimes, authorities said.

 

Rothwell said the alleged molestation from this past fall involves a girl under the age of 16 years.

 

Powell resigned from the Pineview Police Department during the course of the GBI investigation, which is continuing.

 

"The investigation is not complete," Rothwell said.

 

 

 

4/10/08

 

Ocmulgee Symphony Inaugural

 

Season Finale

It has been a very successful and exciting first season for the Ocmulgee Symphony Orchestra. We would like to invite you to join us for the third and final orchestral concert of the season on April 26th at the Opera House in Hawkinsville. Prior to the concert will be a reception beginning at 6:30 pm.

In its short existence the OSO has made great strides as an ensemble. The orchestra will be put to the test on the 26th with their most demanding program of the season. Opening the concert will be the J.C. Bach Bassoon Concerto in Bb major which features OSO bassoonist Lisa Lombardo, followed by the hauntingly beautiful Pavane pour un Infante défunte by Maurice Ravel. Beethoven’s Egmont Overture will end the first half of the program with a flourish.

After intermission the OSO will play one of the most demanding and powerful works of early 19th century musical literature--Beethoven’s Eroica Symphony. The work was to be dedicated to Napoleon Bonaparte but when Napoleon named himself emperor, Beethoven scratched through the dedication. Many conductors, including Michael Tilson Thomas of the San Francisco Symphony, believe that the hero in Beethoven’s 3rd Symphony is none other than Beethoven himself. Thomas believes that the Eroica is Beethoven’s musical depiction of his own life.

The concert is on April 26th at 7:30 in Hawkinsville’s Old Opera House. Tickets are $25 for adults and $15 for students and are on sale now. They can be purchased online at www.ocmulgeesymphonyorchestra.com, ordered by mail (write to OSO, P.O. Box 684, Cochran, GA. 31014) or by calling the Opera House at 478 783-1884.

 

 

 

Mar. 20, 2008

 

Man gets 20 years for robbing

 

Cochran McDonald's

 

By Amy Leigh Womack

 

A Bleckley County jury has found a Cochran man guilty of aggravated assault and armed robbery in the April 12, 2007, robbery of a McDonald's, according to a Cochran police news release.

 

Leroy "Spud" Collins Jr., 20, was sentenced to 20 years in prison, according to the release.

 

Video surveillance showed a masked man with a gun enter the fast food restaurant at about 5:21 a.m., strike a female clerk on the head with the gun and rob another female employee of the store's cash at gunpoint, according to the release.

 

Darius Walker, 25, of Cochran, was an employee at the McDonald's who was at the store at the time of the robbery and left a back door cracked open, according to the release.

 

Walker entered a guilty plea last year and is serving a five-year prison sentence, according to the release.

 

To contact writer Amy Leigh Womack, call 744-4398.

 

 

 

Middle Georgia College & The

 

Ocmulgee Symphony Orchestra
 

Present: Malgorzata Staszewska

 

&

 

Anna Ho

 

Violin and Piano Recital

 

 

Continuing with an already promising inaugural season, Middle Georgia College and the Ocmulgee Symphony Orchestra will present a special recital by violinist Malgorzata Staszewska, concertmaster of the Ocmulgee Symphony Orchestra, and pianist Anna Ho on April 1, at 8:00 p.m. in Russell Hall on the Middle Georgia College campus.

Selections for the exciting concert include: Faure Sonata in A Major op.13,   Zarzycki Mazurka op. 26 and Prokofiev Violin Sonata 2 in D Major. This program will showcase the talent of the orchestra’s string section leader.


Malgorzata Staszewska was born in Cracow, Poland in 1976 and began playing the violin at the age of six. After graduating with honors from the Cracow Conservatory of Music in 1999, she joined the professional chamber orchestra Capella Cracoviensis. Staszewska continued her education at the Hochschule für Musik in Freiburg, Germany, the University of Illinois at Urbana-­Champaign and the University of Georgia in Athens from which she earned her Doctorate of Musical Arts in Performance in 2007.

Anna Ho began piano studies in her native Taiwan at the age of 5 and completed her academic studies at National Chung-Hsin University. In the U.S. she received her bachelor of music degree in 1995 from Morningside College in Sioux City, IA. Her musical studies continued at the University of Wisconsin and Texas Tech University where she received DMA degree in 2003 with a major in collaborative Piano Performance.

The concert is free and the public is invited to attend.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mar. 17, 2008

Fishing area recovers from water

 

woes

 

By Chuck Thompson

 

Mike Marsh says he's caught more than 140 pounds of largemouth bass at the Ocmulgee Public Fishing Area since the first of the year.

 

And best of all, they're all still there. The man-made lake on the Bleckley-Pulaski County line has catch and release only rules for bass fishermen.

But anglers may keep some of the crappie, bream and catfish they catch, and area manager Michael Clark is predicting great fishing in coming weeks as the weather warms, the lake continues to fill and the growing fish feed and spawn.

"We drew 18,500 visitors last year, and I feel certain we'll top 20,000 this year," Clark said. "The fish are getting bigger, and the word is getting out how good the bass fishing is. The last couple of Sundays the parking lot has looked like we were having a fishing tournament. I think we'll just keep getting busier as the weather warms and the lake fills."

The lake was built in a valley on the Ocmulgee Wildlife Management Area that borders the Ocmulgee River east of Cochran. Fish were stocked in October 2004, but the lake wasn't opened to fishing until June 2006 to give the fish time to grow.

There also was a holdup in development in 2005 when water began leaking through a fissure in the limestone beneath the earthen dam. The lake, which is supposed to be 106 acres when full, had to be drained down to a 15-acre holding pond so that grout could be pumped into the rock beneath the dam to fill the crack.

"Draining a lake during a drought isn't the best thing, but we had no choice," Clark said. "The lake's not built on a stream, so we've had to rely on rain and runoff from the watershed to bring it back up, and it has taken awhile. But the rain we've had this winter has really helped. We're only about 3 feet below full pool now, and if we keep getting this rain we could be full by May. We're probably at 85 or 90 acres by now."

Marsh, who Clark said is one of the top bass fishermen at the lake, says the low water hasn't hurt fishing, especially since last summer.

"They've stocked the lake with plenty of forage fish - shad and goldfish - so the bass have plenty to eat. Now that they've had time to grow, you don't see any skinny ones. They're all fat and healthy. Sometimes you come and catch nothing, but most days I can get three, four or five that weigh around 5 pounds. Last Sunday I caught a 4 -pounder, then two 5-pounders, a 5 -pounder and finally, out there on that point, a 7-pounder.

"You really need to stock some bigger fish in here," he jokingly told Clark, who stopped to chat as Marsh was launching his boat last week. "I'm getting bored catching all these 5- to 8-pounders."

Not too bored, however. Marsh, who calls himself a "starving contractor," drives 21 miles from his home between Warner Robins and Perry to fish in the lake at least once a week.

 

Click here for rest of story

 


 

 

 

3/3/08

 

Police arrest man suspected of

 bringing gun on college campus

 

The Associated Press

COCHRAN, Ga. --

Authorities took into custody a man suspected of carrying a gun onto Middle Georgia College's main campus Monday, the Bleckley County Sheriff's Office said.

 

The man, who was not identified, was not a student at the school in Cochran, located about 120 miles south of Atlanta, college officials said.

 

Earlier Monday morning, the college was placed under a lockdown after a student reported seeing a man with a gun. Authorities conducted a room-by-room search of the college.

 

The college has resumed normal operations and the lockdown was lifted around noon, said college president Mary Ellen Wilson.

 

The sheriff's office said there were no reports of shots fired.

Georgia law prohibits carrying guns on college campuses.

 


1/26/2008

 

Semi-Truck Hits 7 Vehicles
 

Rebecca Stewart
 

The Bleckley County Sheriff's Office and Cochran-Bleckley Emergency Management Agency responded to an eight vehicle accident Friday afternoon.


According to Lieutenant Kris Coody with the Bleckley Sheriff's Office, a man was driving an 18-wheeler truck on Highway 87 in Bleckley County when he suffered a medical emergency that caused him to pass out while at the wheel.

Lt. Coody says just before 3:00 p.m., the truck crossed the road and struck 7 vehicles that were parked in the RideShare Parking lot.

He says the driver was not injured in the incident and that no one was in the parking lot when the accident occured.

It is not known what caused the driver to black out.


 

 

Bleckley County Forestry

 

Pageant

 

Pageant is Feb. 2, Bleckley County-Cochran Chamber of Commerce, 318 Second St., Cochran. Applications accepted from girls and women birth-24 years. 284-2350. www.
 

midsouthforestrypageants.com.

 


 

 

 

Jan. 19, 2008

 

Houston County attorney realizes

 

his passion in public defense

 

By Becky Purser

 

Houston County's public defender Nick White, sitting in his Perry office recently, says he's found his calling.

 


 

 

Nick White is passionate about defending people who cannot afford legal representation. But pursuing a career as a public defender isn't what he thought he'd be doing when he first entered law school.

Today, the 39-year-old Bleckley County native heads the Houston County Public Defender's Office, a post he was tapped to fill by the Houston County Board of Commissioners. White, who replaced long-time Public Defender Terry Everett upon her retirement, has been on the job for about three months.

But back in his days at Mercer University's Walter F. George School of Law in Macon, White recalled, he was probably like a lot of his colleagues who had traditional conservative values and thought that the best way to practice those values was to be prosecutor.

After all, White said, he believed - and still believes in limited government, protection of individual rights, gun ownership, property rights and similar values.

But when he got into the practice of law, he said, it wasn't long before he realized that his core beliefs worked well with his role as defense attorney.

"I have really found my niche with defense," White said in a recent interview. "It complements my beliefs in keeping the government limited and protecting and defending individual liberties."

He first served as a clerk for Superior Court Judge Hugh Lawson - now a federal judge in Macon - in the large six-county Oconee Circuit that includes White's home county. He next served as an associate with Hawkinsville attorney Genelle Jennings for three years before going out on his own in private practice. His law practice was mostly domestic and criminal defense.

"Through the years, I found out through private practice that I loved defense. The only thing I didn't like about private practice was I didn't like being a bill collector," White said. "I just wanted to take that part out if it."

He joined the Houston County Public Defender's Office as an assistant public defender from October 2001 to December 2004. He next went over to the eight-county Ocmulgee District where he also was an assistant public defender.

On Oct. 1, 2007, he became Houston County's head public defender, with staff of 20 and an annual budget of about $1.5 million.

 

Click here for rest of story

 

 

"Leash on Life" for Abused Dogs

 

Last Update:1/14/2008

 

Web Editor: Evan Pinsonnault

Georgia Canine Rescue and Rehabilitation in Cochran has rescued and treated more than 300 abused dogs since May of 2007, when it opened in Bleckley County.


Owner Heather Zaresky says she started the non-profit organization after watching hundreds of dogs get euthanized in Eastman and Bleckley County in the last year, and after hearing about numerous local dog fighting cases.


"What we do is give dogs that people and the shelters have given up and left for dead, we give them another chance at life," said Zaresky. "We treat the dogs, get them the medicine they need, then train them so they can be adopted and be loved by a family."

Zaresky says the GCRR can hold anywhere between 25 and 35 dogs at a time, and that on average, it takes anywhere from two to six months for the rehabilitation process.

She says since May of last year, people have adopted 142 "successfully rehabbed" dogs.

"From getting them healthy again to house-trained, trained to be around other dogs and people once again, it's important to me," said Zaresky. "Dogs and all pets deserve a second chance at life."

For more information on Georgia Canine Rescue and Rehabilitation, or to volunteer in the canine rehab process, you can call 478-298-2773.

For more information on Georgia Canine Rescue and Rehabilitation, or to volunteer in the canine rehab process, you can call 478-298-2773.


 

 

1/8/08

 

Colleagues, friends recall well-

 

known federal judge

 

By Amy Leigh Womack - awomack@macon.com

The late Senior U.S. District Judge Duross Fitzpatrick in 2002 photo.
Beau Cabell/The Telegraph
The late Senior U.S. District Judge Duross Fitzpatrick in 2002 photo.

DUROSS FITZPATRICK FUNERAL

WHEN: 1 p.m. Wednesday

WHERE: Christ Church on Walnut Street in Macon The Rev. Wesley Smith will officiate. Visitation will follow the service. Burial will be held in Jeffersonville City Cemetery.

 

The flag will fly at half-staff at Macon's federal courthouse through Wednesday in honor of U.S. District Judge Duross Fitzpatrick.

Fitzpatrick, 73, died Sunday night at his home in Twiggs County after suffering from a rare neurological disease, said Greg Leonard, chief clerk for the U.S. District Court.

"His illness was so debilitating and progressive," Leonard said. "He was very stubborn in fighting the disease. There's no cure for it."

Fitzpatrick was appointed to the federal bench by President Reagan on Dec. 31, 1985. He became chief judge in 1995 and remained in that position until taking senior judge status in February 2001.

Fellow U.S. District Judge Hugh Lawson said Fitzpatrick tried cases until fall 2006 and continued to perform administrative tasks and take guilty pleas from defendants until he wasn't physically able.

"He fought (the disease ) like a tiger until the end and never gave up," Lawson said. "He wanted to come to work. He didn't want to give up his social contact, and he didn't want to give up on his church work. As long as he was physically able to drag himself to those places, he did."

Fitzpatrick suffered from progressive supranuclear palsy, which causes disability by impairing movement, balance, vision, speech and swallowing.

Born in 1934, Fitzpatrick called the Twiggs County crossroads of Tarversville home nearly all his life. He rode a Greyhound bus to school in Bleckley County, where he graduated from high school in Cochran, Lawson said.

After graduation, Fitzpatrick attended the University of the South at Sewanee, Tenn., from 1953 to 1954 before taking a detour to the U.S. Marine Corps from 1954 to 1957. He was discharged as a sergeant.

Afterward, Fitzpatrick attended the University of Georgia, where he graduated with a degree in forestry in 1961 and married his wife, the former Beverly O'Connor.

Fitzpatrick worked for a timber company in south Georgia and later took a forestry job on the West Coast.

"That's where he concluded his calling wasn't in the forestry service," Lawson said.

Soon, the family returned to Georgia, and Fitzpatrick graduated from the University of Georgia's law school in 1966.

He took his first job with the Elliott & Davis law firm in 1966 and worked there until he found his footing and started his own law office in Cochran.

Partner Sewell Elliott said Fitzpatrick came to him highly recommended.

"He was very serious-minded," Elliott said. "I felt he would be highly qualified to work with me, and that proved to be very true."

Lawson reminisced of many an hour that he and Fitzpatrick spent as young lawyers drinking coffee and talking about their dreams and aspirations.

"As the years passed, he developed into an outstanding lawyer," Lawson said. "He was the pre-eminent lawyer in his county."

In 1984, Fitzpatrick became president of the State Bar of Georgia. A year later Fitzpatrick received the call confirming his appointment to the federal bench from Reagan.

Donning his black robe for the first time, Fitzpatrick quoted former New York Yankees great Lou Gehrig.

"I consider myself the luckiest man on the face of the Earth," he said.
 

'COMPASSION FOR

THE INDIVIDUAL'
 

During the course of his time on the bench, Fitzpatrick left his mark on Middle Georgia.

He revived citizenship ceremonies in Macon after several years of absence.

In 1989, Fitzpatrick capped the Bibb County jail population until renovations were completed to provide space for more inmates.

Fitzpatrick sentenced Macon rapper and performer James E. Maxwell, aka Sonny Spoon, to serve 13 years in prison on drug and firearm charges in 2004.

In 2006, he approved the final portion of a promotions system for Macon's police and fire departments, ending a six-year promotions freeze prompted by federal discrimination lawsuits.

Fellow U.S. District Judge Ashley Royal described Fitzpatrick as "a great gentleman."

Royal was appointed to fill Fitzpatrick's position when he took senior status in 2001.

"He was a great guy and he was well-liked," Royal said.

Longtime friend and Macon lawyer Carr Dodson said Fitzpatrick was one of the fairest and most courteous judges he's ever encountered in court.

"He had compassion for the individual, but also saw that society needed order to it," Dodson said. "And he blended those two in fairness."

Dodson said he first met Fitzpatrick at a high school football game. Dodson was a tailback for Americus, and Fitzpatrick was a guard for Cochran.

Their paths crossed numerous times, and ultimately the two became close friends and colleagues.

Fitzpatrick served as Dodson's attorney when Dodson served as minority leader in the Georgia House of Representatives in the 1969 session. He was a groomsman in Dodson's wedding.

In Fitzpatrick's final months, Dodson and another close friend of Fitzpatrick's, attorney Jerome Strickland, made regular trips to Tarversville to pick up the ailing judge for lunch.

Although Fitzpatrick had been suffering from the debilitating symptoms ofprogressive supranuclear palsy for a few years, Lawson said his death came as a surprise.

"I don't think anybody would have anticipated it would have happened as quick as it did," he said.

Lawson said the mood at the federal courthouse was solemn Monday as court employees arrived and learned the news.

The American flag was lowered at the courthouse Monday, and a Marine Corps flag will be flown in his honor.

Leonard, the court's chief clerk, said a portrait of Fitzpatrick in his black robe soon will be hung alongside portraits of other senior judges on the second floor of the federal courthouse.

Although Fitzpatrick didn't live to see it displayed, Leonard said the likeness was delivered to his home in Tarversville before it was taken to the courthouse a couple of months ago.

"He liked it," Leonard said.

Leonard said the Middle District of Georgia won't be eligible for another judicial appointment by the president until December, when Lawson becomes eligible to take senior status.

Fitzpatrick is survived by his wife, Beverly, two children and two grandchildren.
 

Information from Telegraph archives was used in this report.

To contact writer Amy Leigh Womack, call 744-4398.

 


 

 

 

1/8/2008

 

My Teacher Is Tops
 

One Bleckley County Elementary School math teacher got a big surpise from her students on Tuesday.

Mrs. Cindi Wimberly won this week's My Teacher is Tops Award.

"Don't you think she is the best teacher ever," said 4th-grader Jeremiah Mack, who nominated Wimberly for the "top" award.

Wimberly says she's been teaching math for nineteen years in a variety of exciting ways.
One Bleckley County Elementary School math teacher got a big surpise from her students on Tuesday.

Mrs. Cindi Wimberly won this week's My Teacher is Tops Award.

"Don't you think she is the best teacher ever," said 4th-grader Jeremiah Mack, who nominated Wimberly for the "top" award.

Wimberly says she's been teaching math for nineteen years in a variety of exciting ways.

"I know it can be difficult or boring so we try to have a lot of fun with it even though we're learning," said a smiling Wimberly. "We do games, math from around the world, lots of things to get the kids involved."

Her students say Wimberly's humor makes class fun.

"She makes us laugh and when we upset she come and tell jokes and stuff," said Nebraya Johnson.

"She makes me smile and do my best and do the right thing on the problems," Samuel Rainer added.

Wimberly says she tries to make things interesting for her students--something she wishes her teachers did.

"A little secret: when in school, I didn't like school very much," said a whispering Wimberly.

She says she's glad her students don't feel the same way.

"I really like Mrs. Wimberly," said Crystal Bechtold. "And that's all I have to say about that."

If you'd like to nominate a teacher for My Teacher Is Tops, send a one-page hand-written letter to the following address:

My Teacher Is Tops
P.O. Box 5008
Macon, GA 31208

And remember, neatness counts!

L'Darius Fuller

"I know it can be difficult or boring so we try to have a lot of fun with it even though we're learning," said a smiling Wimberly. "We do games, math from around the world, lots of things to get the kids involved."

Her students say Wimberly's humor makes class fun.

"She makes us laugh and when we upset she come and tell jokes and stuff," said Nebraya Johnson.

"She makes me smile and do my best and do the right thing on the problems," Samuel Rainer added.

Wimberly says she tries to make things interesting for her students--something she wishes her teachers did.

"A little secret: when in school, I didn't like school very much," said a whispering Wimberly.

She says she's glad her students don't feel the same way.

"I really like Mrs. Wimberly," said Crystal Bechtold. "And that's all I have to say about that."

If you'd like to nominate a teacher for My Teacher Is Tops, send a one-page hand-written letter to the following address:

My Teacher Is Tops
P.O. Box 5008
Macon, GA 31208

And remember, neatness counts!

L'Darius Fuller

 

More than a football coach


Mourners laud Roland's compassion


The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 01/04/08

An angel with a whistle. An inspirational mentor. A great storyteller.

 

Dennis Roland was called many things during his memorial service Thursday night, but never a mere football coach. To the roughly 600 people who packed Central Baptist Church in Lawrenceville, Roland was something far more significant

.

Jason Getz/Staff

 

Central Gwinnett football players pray Thursday night during a memorial service for their former coach Dennis Roland at Central Baptist Church in Lawrenceville. Roland, who died Tuesday of cancer at age 51, was remembered as being much more than a coach.
 

"The world is full of coaches who can scheme," Central Gwinnett athletics director Tally Johnson said. "They know Xs and Os. But none of them [has] the compassion for people that he had."

 

Roland, the Black Knights' late head coach, died at age 51 Tuesday after a nearly three-year bout with cancer. He will be buried Saturday in Cochran, his hometown. But first, friends and family members from near and far gathered Thursday to remember his life.

 

Each of the dozen people who spoke during the service brought their own stories about Roland. But all shared a common sentiment: His impact on people had far more to do with life than it did with football.

 

"He taught me how to carry myself as a first-class man," senior linebacker Javis Williams said, tears streaming down his face. "He taught us to appreciate each other. He brought our community together as one, and I thank him for that."

 

The two-hour memorial service was less than half a mile away from Central Gwinnett High School. Just a short walk from the field where Roland spent so much of the final year of his life.

 

It was only 11 months ago that Roland took the job there, following coaching stints at 10 colleges and two high schools, including North Gwinnett in 2004. But it was apparent Thursday that his impact at Central Gwinnett will be felt for much longer than his tenure.

 

"No person has ever come through Central Gwinnett and touched as many lives as he did in one year," said longtime Black Knights supporter Clyde Strickland.

 

Principal Valerie Clark recalled breaking the news of Roland's death to a teacher earlier this week. Too bad, the teacher said, "I was his favorite." But Clark said that's the way Roland made many people feel, from teachers to other coaches.

"I'm convinced we all believed we were Coach Roland's favorite person," Clark said. "He just had that way about him."

 

Roland was first diagnosed with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in May 2005, shortly after becoming the head coach at Southeastern Louisiana University. The cancer went into remission twice but had its final recurrence this past fall.

 

Even then, Central Gwinnett quarterback coach Ed Stokes said Roland tried his best to keep the focus on his team.

 

"He had every reason to turn inward and worry about himself," Stokes said. "But he didn't do that. He continued to turn outward and worry about others."

 

On Thursday, though, all the attention was on Roland and his life. Senior defensive back Cedric Mance read a poem he wrote about Roland titled, "After A While."

 

"After a while, I'll see you again," Mance said. "For all the love and the lessons you taught me, I thank you."

 

Funeral services are scheduled for Saturday at 3 p.m. at Cochran First Baptist Church. Visitation will take place tonight from 6 to 8 p.m. at Fischer Funeral Home in Cochran.