Past resident recalls small town Dunwoody
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June 16, 2022 | AppenMedia.com | An Appen Media Group Publication | Ser ving the community since 1976
DeKalb County Schools offering summer meals DUNWOODY, Ga. — With summer break in full swing, the DeKalb County School District has rolled out a program to give children free meals over the summer. Under the district’s Seamless Summer Option Program, all children 18 and
younger can get nutritious breakfasts and lunches at no cost to their guardians. The program runs through July 22. Meals are available at any of the 70 district schools hosting summer school classes. Families are encouraged to con-
tact the summer school site for specific mealtimes and days of operation. “Studies show that nutritious meals impact a student’s well-being and academic performance. Those needs don’t end just because the school year does,”
DeKalb County Schools Executive Director of School Nutrition Services Connie R. Walker said. “We see the faces of the families we’re serving and know that we are making a real difference by providing these meals during the summer months.”
DeKalb County summer school meal sites Region 1
Chamblee High Cross Keys High Doraville United Elementary Dunwoody High Huntley Hills Elementary John Lewis Elementary Kingsley Elementary Margaret Harris High Peachtree Middle
Region 2
Briar Vista Elementary Coralwood Center Druid Hills High Druid Hills Middle Elizabeth Andrews HS Evansdale Elementary Hawthorne Elementary Henderson Mill Elementary Henderson Middle
Lakeside High McLendon Elementary Pleasantdale ES Smoke Rise Elementary Tucker High
Region 3
E.L. Miller Elementary Lithonia High Lithonia Middle Pine Ridge Elementary Princeton Elementary Redan Elementary Redan High Rock Chapel Elementary Shadow Rock Elementary Stephenson High
Region 4
Champion Middle Clarkston High
DeKalb School of the Arts Freedom Middle GNET at Shadow Rock Indian Creek Elementary Rockbridge Elementary Stone Mill Elementary Stone Mountain High Stone Mountain Elementary Stone Mountain Middle
Region 6
Region 5
Region 7
Chapel Hill Elementary E.L. Bouie Elementary Flat Rock Elementary M.L. King Jr. High Miller Grove High Miller Grove Middle Salem Middle Southwest DeKalb High
Registration open for Dunwoody baseball programs By CHAMIAN CRUZ chamian@appenmedia.com DUNWOODY, Ga. — Baseball will soon be in full swing in Dunwoody.
The Dunwoody Senior Baseball fall season will begin in mid-August and run through the end of October. Teams will play a 10-game regular season plus endof-season playoffs.
Registration is open for pre-formed teams as well as individual players,
See BASEBALL. Page 9
Bethune Middle Canby Lake Elementary Columbia High Columbia Middle Peachcrest Elementary Rowland Elementary Snapfinger Elementary Towers High Barack Obama Elementary Bob Mathis Elementary Cedar Grove High DeKalb Elementary School of Arts DeKalb High School of Arts Early Learning Academy Flat Shoals Elementary Kelly Lake Elementary McNair Discovery Learning Academy McNair Middle
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DINNER & BINGO!
JUNE 23
All crime reports published by Appen Media Group are compiled from public records. Neither the law enforcement agencies nor Appen Media Group implies any guilt by publishing these names. None of the persons listed has been convicted of the alleged crimes.
Police cite driver for 18 violations DUNWOODY, Ga. — A Peachtree Corners man was arrested June 4 on 18 charges after he allegedly struck two cars while driving under the influence. Police arrived on the scene to find that the man’s car “had crashed out over the curb of Savoy Drive and into the guard rail.” A witness had taken the man’s keys out of his car and gave them to police. Police approached the vehicle and saw the man in the driver’s seat with a cup of what they believed to be vodka in the cup holder, according to the report. The man struggled to exit the vehicle but told police he was not injured “at all.” An officer asked the man “how drunk he was on a scale of one to 10,” and the man responded with an eight, according to the report. He said he was driving from Duluth to Dunwoody to meet with a woman. Police conducted a field sobriety test and noticed signs of impairment. They also administered a breathalyzer test, indicating the man’s blood alcohol content 0.108, above the legal driving limit of 0.08. Witnesses described seeing the man driving on Chamblee Dunwoody Road and rear end another vehicle. They said he then backed up and accelerated forward, rear ending the vehicle a second time. He then did the same thing again, striking the vehicle a third time before he successfully negotiation his way around. Witnesses said the man then turned onto Savoy Drive, drove on the wrong side of the road and eventually struck the guard rail, according to the report. Police arrested the man, Shaka
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Howard, 43, of Peachtree Corners, on 18 charges including three counts of hit and run, three counts of following too close, open alcohol container, no insurance, expired license and driving under the influence.
Police report finding 7 lbs of weed in car DUNWOODY, Ga. — Police arrested two Covington men who were allegedly in possession of seven pounds of marijuana May 31. A Dunwoody police officer pulled the men over at the intersection of Ashford Dunwoody Road and Perimeter Center East around 12:30 a.m. for an improper lane change. While speaking to the driver, the officer could smell marijuana, according to the report. The officer asked if the men had marijuana or weapons in the car, and they responded they had smoked earlier and that they had guns. Police asked the men to step out of the car and conducted a probable cause search of the vehicle. When police found a suitcase with a padlock in the trunk the driver began to “appear very nervous,” according to the report. He stated he did not know what was in the suitcase. Police had a canine sniff around the suitcase, and the dog alerted for drugs, according to the report. Police opened the suitcase and found seven pounds of marijuana incide, divided into seven bags. The passenger told police the suitcase was his but that he “did not know what was in it or who gave it to him,” according to the report. The driver refused to answer questions on the scene. The driver, 20-year-old Tyler McKenzie, and the passenger, 24-year-old Dazzman Ingram, both of Covington, were arrested and charged with possession of marijuana with intent to distribute. Ingram was also charged with possession of a firearm in the commission of a felony.
Dunwoody man arrested for peeping in apartment DUNWOODY, Ga. — Police arrested a Dunwoody man June 4 after he allegedly peeped inside a stranger’s apartment on multiple occasions. The reporting officer responded to
a peeping Tom call at an apartment on Peachtree Place Parkway. The report states the officer was familiar with the address due to a previous peeping Tom call. Another officer had the suspect in custody when the reporting officer arrived. Police spoke with a woman who lived at the apartment, who said she had been changing clothes when her daughter told her she could see the man looking in the window. The woman said her husband had gone outside to confront the suspect. The husband said he knew which way the suspect was going to run because of previous incidents. He said he waited in a corner in the suspect’s path, grabbed the suspect and held him until police arrived. The husband said he wasn’t going to let the suspect get away this time because this was “the fourth or fifth time the male had peeped on his wife and daughters,” according to the report. Police arrested Benjamin Lopez, 36, of Dunwoody on a felony peeping Tom charge.
Sandy Springs man arrested for voyeurism DUNWOODY, Ga. — A Sandy Springs man was arrested June 1 after he allegedly looked in on a woman in a changing room at Old Navy on Hammond Drive. The woman was crying when police spoke to her. She told police she was trying on a swimsuit when she saw the man “peering over the dressing room with his phone” as if he was recording, according to the report. She pointed out a man who was standing outside the store as the suspect. The man said he did not look into the woman’s dressing room and that he wasn’t even sure if he was in the dressing rooms at the same time. The man let police look at photos in his phone, and they did not locate any photos of the woman, according to the report. The store manager told police that a man matching the suspect’s description had done the same thing at a store in Buckhead, but employees were not able to identify him. The manager said the dressing rooms do not have cameras due to privacy concerns. Police arrested the man, Kenneth Powell, 25, of Sandy Springs, on a felony peeping Tom charge.
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Roswell preschool teachers accused of abusing students By CHAMIAN CRUZ chamian@appenmedia.com ROSWELL, Ga. — Two Roswell preschool teachers have been arrested and charged after live cameras allegedly captured them allegedly being abusive toward several of their students. Parker-Chase Preschool teachers Zeina Alostwani, 40, and Soriana Briceno, 19, were booked into the Fulton County Jail on June 6. The school is on Holcomb Bridge Road. Alostwani and Briceno are facing one count of cruelty to children in the first degree. Roswell police spokesman Tim Lupo said a concerned parent reported logging on the camera system on June 3 and seeing “concerning physical contact” between Alostwani and Briceno against several children in the classroom. The investigation remains ongoing and additional charges may be forthcoming, Lupo said. Anyone with additional information is asked to contact the Roswell Police Department at 770-640-4100. Anonymous information can be provided through Crime Stoppers Atlanta at 404-577TIPS(8477) or online at StopCrimeATL.org.
ROSWELL POLICE DEPARTMENT/PROVIDED
Surveillance footage at the Parker-Chase Preschool on Holcomb Bridge Road on June 3 allegedly shows “concerning physical contact” between two teachers, Zeina Alostwani and Soriana Briceno, both of Roswell, against several children in the classroom.
Stage Door Theatre slates free comedy event open to public DUNWOODY, Ga. — Dunwoody’s Stage Door Theatre will host a free comedy event Saturday, June 18. The two shows, performed by improv artists from Dad’s Garage, will take place at 2:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. The event is produced in collaboration with The Urban Clinic of Atlanta. The clinic will be providing free COVID-19 vaccinations and offering $50 gift cards for every dose taken. Seating for the free, ticket-less event is first come, first served. Stage Door is located at 5339 Chamblee Dunwoody Road. Please contact State Door Theatre with any questions at contactus@stagedoortheatrega.org.
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STAGE DOOR THEATRE/PROVIDED
Stage Door Theatre and Dad’s Garage plan to collaborate on a series of free comedy shows Saturday June 18.
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4 | June 16, 2022 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody
COMMUNITY
Newspaper wins 18 press awards Appen Media, parent company for weekly newspapers like the Dunwoody Crier and Alpharetta-Roswell Herald, won 18 awards, including first place for investigative journalism, in the Georgia Press Association’s 2022 Better Newspaper Contest. Recipients include four members of the newsroom, senior designer David Brown and columnists Valerie Bigger-
staff and Steve Hudson. Best Investigative Reporting, an award that must be given to an organization instead of an individual, was awarded to Staff for reporter Chamian Cruz’s coverage of the Oxbo Road realignment project. The company also won General Excellence for its division, which includes statewide newspapers with a circulation greater than 15,000.
Here’s the full list of honors: 1st Place - Health Care Advertising - David Brown 1st Place - News Photograph - Chamian Cruz 1st Place - Serious Column - Valerie Biggerstaff 1st Place - Investigative Reporting - Staff 1st Place - Food Advertising - David Brown 1st Place - Signature Page - David Brown 2nd Place - News Photograph - Carl Appen 2nd Place - Feature Writing - Sydney Dangremond 2nd Place - Food Advertising - David Brown 2nd Place - Service Advertising - Ingram Funeral Home 2nd Place - Special Issues/Special Sections - Staff 2nd Place - Business Writing - Staff 3rd Place - Business Writing - Pat Fox 3rd Place - Page One - Staff 3rd Place - Local News Coverage - Staff 3rd Place - Spot News Photograph - Sydney Dangremeond 3rd Place - Breaking News Writing - Sydney Dangremond 3rd Place - Lifestyle Feature Column - Steve Hudson
GARAGE SALES See more garage sales in the classifieds
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OPINION
AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody | Dunwoody Crier | June 16, 2022 | 5
Free speech and guns – a winning combination PAT FOX
Managing Editor pat@appenmedia.com
Let’s talk about the First and Second Amendments. Not those two – the original ones. The original First Amendment created a formula to determine the size of the House of Representatives based on the population of the United States in 1789.
It didn’t pass. The original Second Amendment set out to define when Congress can change its pay. That didn’t pass either. What we know today as the First Amendment prohibits the government from depriving us of certain freedoms – religion, speech, the press, peaceful assembly, and it allows a path to redress grievances with the government. It begins “Congress shall make no law…” Pretty clear. In his distinguished 34-year career on the Supreme Court, Associate Jus-
tice Hugo Black said as much. He was the driving force behind the 1964 Times v. Sullivan decision that declared freedom of speech protections in the First Amendment restrict public officials from suing for defamation. Black also sat solidly behind the press in the 1971 Pentagon Papers case in which The New York Times published damaging evidence about the government’s involvement in Vietnam. Black wrote: “…Only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government.” I’ve made my living, raised a family, paid my mortgage thanks to the First Amendment. I get edgy whenever someone tries to mess with it. I don’t like it. And yet… People have messed with it – a lot. There are libel laws sometimes used to intimidate reporters from pursuing stories. Libel laws ostensibly restrict the press from unjustly defaming individuals and organizations. Also, newspapers cannot copy information verbatim or run a photo from a published work without facing a suit over copywrite infringement. What gives?
The Constitution says “Congress shall make no laws…” Well, I’m willing to discuss it. Pretty much everyone in the newspaper business loves discussing it. The “press” is the only profession, by the way, specifically cited for protection in the Constitution. One of the best expressions of that distinction came from Justice Potter Stewart in his dissent opinion in a 1971 case involving police searches of newsrooms. “Perhaps as a matter of abstract policy a newspaper office should receive no more protection from unannounced police searches than, say, the office of a doctor or the office of a bank. But we are here to uphold a Constitution. And our Constitution does not explicitly protect the practice of medicine or the business of banking from all abridgement by government. It does explicitly protect the freedom of the press. I love that. On the other hand, should I be able to pick out of the air some local businessman and publish an article saying he is a shady no-goodnik who parks in handicapped stalls?
I’m willing to discuss that or any other matter relating to the First Amendment and the press. Let’s hold a town hall. Now, concerning the Second Amendment… I don’t like anyone messing around with the Constitution – not the First, Second, Third or any other amendments. I grew up in the rural Midwest and spent a lot of my youth hunting, so I’m familiar with guns. Many of my friends own one. We want to keep them, too, for a variety of reasons. We all came by our firearms legally, and we all took safety courses on their proper use. By golly, we’d probably be willing to talk to other people about our guns, maybe discuss safety and care, whether we’d ever loan one to a high school senior or whether we’d give one to a certified manic depressive. There are some people who won’t talk about these sorts of things, though. Around 50 of them are in the U.S. Senate. There are a lot more in the Georgia Legislature. They won’t discuss it.
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6 | June 16, 2022 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody
PAST TENSE
OPINION
Joan Jameson Moore recalls small town Dunwoody
Joan Jameson Moore was born in 1936 to Sue Kirby Jameson and Tom Jameson. Her grandparents are Tolleson Kirby and Laura Little Kirby on her mother’s side and John and Effie VALERIE Jameson on her BIGGERSTAFF father’s side. Tolleson and Laura Kirby brought their family to Dunwoody by train in 1914 and made their home along Little Kirby Road, now known as Pitts Road. In the 1910s and 1920s, Tolleson Kirby delivered mail by horse and buggy and later with his Ford Model T on a 26-mile route from Dunwoody along Roswell Road and back. Moore’s parents married in 1935 at the home of the Dunwoody Baptist Church preacher. The couple lived in a house next door to the church when it was located on Chamblee Dunwoody Road where Chase Bank is today. Then they lived with Grandmother
Kirby just north and across the road. This is where Moore was born. The Kirby family ran a dairy farm. Her mother used to call the home the “old Sarratt house” because the Sarratt family owned it before the Kirby family. The home sat on 6 acres. Joan Jameson Moore moved several times with her parents over the next few years, living in downtown Atlanta, Brookhaven, Chamblee, Smyrna, Brookhaven again, Dunwoody again, and Sandy Springs. For a time, Moore lived next door to her grandmother’s house on Chamblee Dunwoody Road. She also lived on a farm along Spalding Drive for a while with her Jameson grandparents and great-grandparents. Moore’s father worked several years at Frost Motor Company. Frost was a Ford dealership and repair center on Peachtree Road in downtown Atlanta. Tom Jameson also worked at other car dealerships through the years. Sue Kirby Jameson was a music teacher who gave private piano lessons. When the Jameson family heard the news on their radio that World War II
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PROVIDED
Joan Jameson Moore, third from left, is shown on the stage of Dunwoody School in 1947. was over, they were overjoyed, especially because their Uncle Max Kirby was in the Pacific and would be coming home. Moore went with her father to the Baptist church to ring the church bell and announce the news to Dunwoody. Her father was a deacon. Moore recalls how she held on tightly to the rope with both hands and “pulled as hard as I could. The bell rang out wonderfully! Then the bell started the downward path in its arc, and I went up about 5 feet.” She remembers when the country store and gas station on the southwest corner of Chamblee Dunwoody Road and Mount Vernon Road was called Nash’s store. Ethel Nash ran the post
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office on one side of the building. Joan Jameson Moore attended a few different schools, including Dunwoody Grammar School and Morgan Falls School. When Moore’s grandmother Kirby was sick, the family moved to the home on Pitts Road. Moore attended and graduated from Roswell High School. When Joan Jameson Moore left home for college, she did not return to live in Dunwoody. She has many fond memories of growing up in what was then a small town, surrounded by extended family. You can email Valerie at pasttensega@gmail.com or visit her website at pasttensega.com.
THE INK PENN
OPINION
AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody | Dunwoody Crier | June 16, 2022 | 7
Historical fiction with a splash of mystery Goodness, how I love my library! When I read a book review in the Wall Street Journal, the Atlanta paper, or somewhere online, I find appealing books and jot the titles down. That means there are KATHY lists of books on the MANOS PENN screened porch, by my chair in the living room, and on my desk. Eventually, those titles make it to one of two online shelves at my library, either Hold or Save for later. The order in which I consume books is dictated by the library and when the books become available. Last year, these two novels came in at the same time. Both are historical fiction with a splash of mystery, and since the anniversary of D-Day just passed, they seem timely. Travel with me to the WWII era through two marvelous books. “The Rose Code” by Kate Quinn This may well be the best book I read last year. Kate Quinn does a masterful
job of weaving fictional characters into the lives of historical figures and revealing the amazing story of the work that went on at Bletchley Park during WW II. You’re sure to be intrigued by Osma, the real-life Canadian deb who was a codebreaker at Bletchley Park and was Prince Phillip’s wartime girlfriend. Your heart will break at the grueling work done by the women who worked at Bletchley, work they couldn’t speak of, lest they run afoul of the Official Secrets Act. To the outside world, they were clerical workers, when in fact, they were so much more. Even the Author’s Notes and the Acknowledgements at the end are thrilling reads. If you read one book this year, let it be this one! “The Consequences of Fear” by Jacqueline Winspear Book 16 in the Maisie Dobbs series does not disappoint! It’s difficult to say which of Winspear’s books is my favorite, as I started with “Maisie Dobbs” in 2003, but this one may be it. Yes, at its heart, this is a mystery series, but it’s also historical fiction at its best. Perhaps it’s the way Maisie’s life has evolved since the
WW I era when we first met her. In this latest addition to the series, it’s WW II, and London is enduring the blitz. You feel as though you are there as you experience Maisie solving a complex case and the emotional upheavals she endures as she, her friends, and family live through yet another war. What I love about Maisie is that she is a complex, mature, capable woman who never stops growing. Through the years, I’ve teared up at her sorrows and smiled at her joys. Book 17, “A Sunlit Weapon,” was released in March this year — and, yes, the blitz continues. In this one, Eleanor Roosevelt is visiting London and traveling around England to visit U.S. troops. Now, time’s a wastin’, and I have yet another stack of books to get to. Hope you do too. Award-winning author Kathy Manos Penn is a Sandy Springs resident. Find her cozy mysteries locally at The Enchanted Forest and on Amazon. Contact her at inkpenn119@gmail.com, and follow her on Facebook, www.facebook.com/ KathyManosPennAuthor/.
PALS PERIMETER ADULT LEARNING & SERVICES
Perimeter Adult Learning Services (PALS) is pleased to announce its Summer 2022 session running for 6 weeks on Mondays beginning June 20, 2022 through August 1 (no class July 4). The classes will be in person at the Dunwoody Baptist church. The cost is $55 for all classes for the 6 weeks. Registration and payment must be made on the PALS web page (www.palsonline.info). If there are any questions please contact Iris Katz, PALS Administrator by calling the PALS office at 770-698-0801 or by email at dunwoodypals@gmail.com. The lineup of classes is as follows: MONDAYS: From 10:00 am - 11:00 am Author Talks We will have 12 local authors (2 each class) speaking about their writing history and their books, The topics will include history, childrens’ books, historical fiction, southern gothic, religious, crime thrillers, romantic suspense and memoirs From 10:00 am - 11:00 am Financial and Estate Planning for Seniors Sally Bayliss of Edward Jones and Heather Nadler, JD of Nadler and Biernath will present classes including Estate Planning from both the legal and financial aspects, Elder Law, Making Your Money Last in Retirement, Tax Free Investing and Avoiding Scams With Your Finances. From 10:00 am - 1:45 pm Mah Jongg Bring your own Mah Jongg card and come play. There is no instructor for the session- just fun and self-evaluation.
GRAND OPENING Ribbon Cutting at 2 pm | June 23rd 2 - 4 pm Villa Palazzo Assisted Living 1st & 2nd Floor
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From 11:15 am - 12:15 am Open Bridge for Experienced Players There is no instructor for this weekly session – just fun and self-evaluation. From 11:15 am - 12:15 pm Art History (The Italian Renaissance) Marilyn Morton returns with her art history survey, this time beginning in the 1300s with the art of Giotto, who turned art toward nature as inspiration instead of following existing conventions of the Byzantine era. This resulted in the brilliant art of the 1400s in Florence and the 1500s in Rome. Artists to be discussed include Giotto, Raphael, diVinci and Michelangelo. From 11:15 am - 12:15 am Gamechangers Brandt Ross will regale us again with his stories and songs about people who changed the course of American history as well as significant events that allowed the country to move forward. Included will be discussions about Memorial, D-Day and Flag Day, 4 Women of Valor, Andrew Jackson, Jackie Robinson and Moe Berg, Civil War celebrities Sullivan Ballou and Joshua Chamberlain and U.S Marshall Bass Reeves. There will be no lunch or afternoon class for this session.
8 | June 16, 2022 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody
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OPINION
AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody | Dunwoody Crier | June 16, 2022 | 9
GET OUTSIDE, GEORGIA!
Unexpected places can be found in – unexpected places I was cleaning out a corner of the garage last week when I stumbled (literally) over a small but very heavy box. You know those boxes you packed up decades ago but then misplace for years STEVE HUDSON until time and dust Get Outside Georgia, aa4bw@comcast.net erase them from your memory, and they sink into the background noise of life and you just never get around to unpacking them ever again? Yeah. This was one of those. Try as I might, I really couldn’t remember packing up this particular box. It was not very big, only about six inches on a side, and it was sealed with layer upon layer of faded and weathered paper package tape. It was that old kind of tape that you had to moisten with water to make it stick. So, intrigued by the mystery, I stopped the organizing and opened up the package instead. Inside was a rock, a shiny black crystal of deep red garnet. It was the size of a softball. The instant I saw it, I remembered: I’d collected it decades ago with my rock hunting buddy Max. Max passed from this earthly scene a long time ago, but while he walked the planet he was always a catalyst for adventure. Of indeterminate age, Max had a long gray beard and looked like he might have been around “since Moses was a pup,” as they say. He drove a tattered pickup truck that might once,
in some previous epoch, have been red. And he always wore an equally tattered felt hat that looked vaguely western. In fact, he used to talk about moving out west someday, settling down, buying some land, and raising pygmy ponies. It took me a while to figure that one out. And he was always looking for neat things, for new discoveries, for the treasure that was in plain sight but that had, as yet, caught no one’s eye. “You want to find good things,” he was fond of saying, “then you go look in the unexpected places.” And he was right. In fact, that garnet had come from just such a place, an otherwise unremarkable roadcut somewhere up in the Carolinas. If only I could still remember where it was! The nice thing about unexpected places is that they’re unexpected. Finding one is always an “aha!” moment, and those are the spice that add such richness to life. I remember a fishing spot that I found one time. We had just moved to a new home, and a mile or two down the road was a city park that had been built in a floodplain. What else can you do with a floodplain but put a park on it? I wholly endorse the notion of floodplain parks, too, because they usually include a creek…and a creek usually includes fish. However, at first glance, this particular creek was not too promising. Its channel was littered with various discarded artifacts of urbanity, including an old washing machine, a dented and faded newspaper distribution box, and
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at least two huge truck tires. These were scattered more or less uniformly along the length of the little watercourse, and the overall look was one of a hopeless creek on its last legs. But that’s only if you didn’t look at it with your “unexpected places” glasses on your eyes. Fortunately, I had a brand new set of just those glasses – and as it turned out, the little stream was absolutely loaded with unexpected places (and fish!). For example, it turned out that the eddy hole below the washing machine usually held a decent bass (I eventually started calling it the “washing machine hole”). Fifty feet downstream, one of the truck tires had created a deep spot that reliably produced nice bluegill. And the newspaper box? Well, I never caught much around the newspaper box. But that was okay because the rest was so good. Unexpected? You bet. And that made the discovery all the sweeter! Another opportunity for finding things in unexpected places awaits anyone who likes waterfalls. And that’s just about everyone, isn’t it, for who doesn’t love falling water? Here’s what happens: Even though all the “name” falls are all thoroughly documented in books and on the interweb, there are myriad other unnamed falls that didn’t make the editorial cut. They are out there, scattered far and wide, just waiting for you to find them All you have to do is go look in unexpected places. Just pick a creek, start walking upstream, and odds are it won’t be long till you happen across
some falling H-2-O. Sometimes it’s just a delicate little trickle, but other times it’s a rambunctious cascade in the extreme. Always it can be beautiful. And you’d never have found it – you’d never have even known it was there! – if you hadn’t gone looking where you didn’t expect it to be found. I could go on and on, but you get the idea. This is a great time of year to be outside, to put on your hiking shoes, to just wander around and see what you can find. So keep looking, because it’s true: Sometimes the best things (whether forgotten rocks, or fishing holes, or waterfalls, or maybe even true love) really do show up in those unexpected places. They’ve been there the whole time. All you have to do is step out a little, open your eyes, and see.
Baseball: Continued from Page 9 which will be placed on a team. Tryouts for the Dunwoody Senior Baseball travel program, the Dunwoody Diablos, start on June 22 for 13U and 14U and on July 14 for 15U and 16U. Tryouts for the 10-month-long program will be held at the Brook Run Park Baseball fields. Pre-registration is required to try out. For details and registration, visit dunwoodyseniorbaseball.com or dunwoodydiablos.com.
Newspaper Delivery Route Openings with Appen Media Group We are looking for one person or couple interested in delivering weekly newspapers in South Forsyth, Alpharetta and the Johns Creek areas. Requirements: Must have a perfect driving record and background check, reliable transportation, honest, hard-working and positive attitude. For more information or to apply, email heidi@appenmedia.com and include a paragraph or two about who you are and any relevant background/experience. In the subject line of the email please put “Delivery Route Application.”
COMMUNITY
10 | June 16, 2022 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody
JOIN THE TEAM Appen Media Group is looking for a Reporter to cover local news in the north Atlanta area. Appen is investing in its newsroom, expanding when (and where) others are contracting. This position will contribute to that goal by covering city and county governments, as well as collaborating on stories with other members of the team. There will be additional opportunities to cover themes in health, business, sports or the arts.
PET OF THE WEEK
Jango
Meet Jango (ID# 49247072). He’s got a teddy bear face (best seen in person) and handsome brindle coloring. He’s about 8 years old, so some people may call him a senior, but we would call him just pawfect. He’s most likely house trained, but definitely likely to bring lots of fun into your life. He loves running after toys and balls, and has the cutest prance. Jango is an overall friendly and playful pup. Come meet this sweetheart for yourself at DeKalb County Animal Services; Jango has a sponsored adoption fee. To learn more about Jango, email adoption@dekalbanimalservices.com. Don’t work from home alone; expand your family by 4 furry little feet, meet Jango and have a loving friend forever. All adoptions include spay/neuter, vaccinations and microchip. If you would like more information about Jango please email adoption@ dekalbanimalservices.com or call (404) 294-2165; all potential adopters will be screened to ensure Jango goes to a good home. How to Adopt your new best friend. 1. Browse our pets. Use the filter options to narrow your search. 2. Click the pet’s profile. 3. Click on the “Adopt Me” button to submit an adoption inquiry. In light of new CDC guidelines, masks are now optional. We appreciate your commitment to saving our homeless animals.
We are looking for a team player who will make a difference in the community and our workplace. A commitment to communication is critical. The ideal candidate would be able to spot unique angles and stories that address broader questions of the community. We are looking for someone with professional reporting experience, though it can be from a collegiate newsroom. If you’re excited by a fast-paced environment and genuinely care about community journalism, we want to hear from you. Applicants should email a resume and selected clips to Director of Content and Development Carl Appen at carl@appenmedia. com. Preliminary questions about the position, environment or hiring process are also welcome. Professional discretion is guaranteed.
ATTENTION GENERAL PUBLIC Thursday, June 16 10:45am: Atlanta WWll Roundtable brief meeting. 11:15am: Lunch, includes entree, sides, dessert & beverage ($20.00) WWII veterans eat FREE! Guest speaker: Fletcher Thompson - WWII & Korean War veteran. Pilot/Navigator and former Commander. To attend: Contact Bill LeCount 404-886-7383.
Location: Dunwoody United Methodist Church 1548 Mt Vernon Rd. Dunwoody, GA
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12 | June 16, 2022 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody
New Show, Same Ride.
CADILLAC JACK MY SECOND ACT In his long-awaited return to the airwaves, Caddy partners with his new co-host – and wife! - Donna, to bring his loyal listeners everything they’ve come to expect and love from Cadillac Jack.
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SOLUTION, Page 14
Remodeling Done Right.
Your Dunwoody Neighbor & Trusted Solution on next page Real Estate Advisor Nicole McAluney REALTOR®
c: 678.427.8697 | o: 770.284.9900 NICOLEM@ANSLEYATLANTA.COM
7 7 0 . 2 8 4 . 9 9 0 0 | 8 0 0 0 AVA L O N B O U L E VA R D, S U I T E 2 2 0 | A L P HA R E T TA , G E O R G IA 3 0 0 0 9 Equal Housing Opportunity | Rhonda Haran, Managing Broker. All information believed accurate but not guaranteed
“My goal is to get my sellers the most equity out of their home and secure the best deal for my buyers via my expertise, network and the Ansley Advantage!”
Call to setup a complimentary consultation:
770.670.6022 KITCHENS WHOLE HOUSE
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Visit our website to see examples:
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14 | June 16, 2022 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody
CLASSIFIED LINE AD RATES Call 770-442-3278
Real Estate Services OLDER ADULT with an extra room? Want help with expenses/ household chores? Homeshare ATL matches homeowners with mature adults seeking affordable housing. One adult must be 60+. All applicants fully screened. Must be vaccinated. Free. No personal care. jfcsatl.org/homeshareatl 770-677-9435
House for Sale DUNWOODY: Brooke Farm Subdivision 4BR/41/2BA. Totally finished walk out basement. Wooded backyard with pergola deck. $800,000. 2338 Littlebrooke Drive. 770-409-1436
A – 1 DRIVEWAY REPLACEMENT COMPANY
Specializing in
Full-time
Sales Real Estate
Concrete/Asphalt
Office Space for Rent
POOL TECHNICIANS WANTED
TUCKER: Great LaVista Road location! 920sf. Good for CPA, doctor, real estate. 3 good size office rooms, kitchen, bathroom, reception area, waiting room. Call Jean 770-841-0470 or email Jean.S841@gmail. com
Part-time & Full-time positions available. Pay is $12-$14 per hour. Hours starting at 6:30AM, Monday-Friday. Pick-up truck not required but must have your own reliable transportation. Gas allowance provided. Looking for people who enjoy working outside and are enthusiastic, dependable & punctual. Able to contribute independently or on a crew with consistently friendly attitude.
Bargains
Well-established commercial pool maintenance company providing service in the North Atlanta Metro area.
Musical Instruments
Call Bill: 404-245-9396
SPINET PIANO, lovely, plus bench. Maple finish. $150. 770-451-9464
Service Directory
Recreation
Garage Doors
TRAMPOLINE: FREE, but must dissassemble. 770-394-1284
Dunwoody Door Lift Co. The ONLY garage door company in Dunwoody!
We sell, install and repair garage doors and openers. Authorized Genie Dealer serving Dunwoody since 1973.
770-393-1652
If you can’t lift your door, let Dunwoody Door Lift it!
Roofing Roofing
Handyman Handyman
KETNER CONTRACTING
Matthew the Handyman - Carpentry, painting, drywall, plumbing. Electrical and small jobs. 404-547-2079.
* Re-Roofs, * Repairs & Painting. * * Lic/Ins. * Exc Refs. * Free Est. Tree Services Services Tree * 25+ Years Experience Neil Ketner Neumann’s Landscape 770-318-7762. & Tree Service: Joe Neumann 770-452-1173 or 404-644-7179.
DRIVEWAY REPLACEMENT
SIDEWALKS, PATIOS, AND SLABS Since 1974 Insured – Free Estimates
David Scott 770-493-6222 ALEX FRASER MASONRY INC. • BRICK • CONCRETE
• BLOCK • STONEWORK
Alex Fraser, President www.alexfrasermasonry.com E-Mail: afrasermasonry@aol.com Concrete/Asphalt Concrete/Asphalt
Retaining Walls Brick or Wood
Contact Ralph Rucker. Many local references. Honest, punctual, professional and reasonable prices!
678-898-7237
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martinezmasonry281@yahoo.com
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Ask for Tony Martinez
Driveway $250 OFF NEW DRIVEWAY!
Mention this ad. Concrete driveway specialists. Driveways, Pool Decks, Patios, Walkways, Slabs. A+ BBB rating. FREE ESTIMATE. Call Rachael at 678-250-4546 to schedule a FREE Estimate. 30 years of experience. ARBOR HILLS CONSTRUCTION INC. Please note we do have a minimum charge on accepted jobs of $4,500.
The Herald and Crier newspapers reach 93,000 homes and thousands more online!
AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody | Dunwoody Crier | June 16, 2022 | 15
Service Directory Painters
Landscaping
AwArd winning LAndscApes
Quality Without Compromise
ROBERT CROAWELL REMODELING Full Service Contractor
Additions • Kitchens • Basements • Bathrooms Interior/Exterior Paint • Minor Repairs • Licensed Insured
Office: 770-814-0064 Cell: 678-642-8314 Insured
Home Improvement
Full Service Exterior Specialists ROOFING • SIDING CARPENTRY • GUTTERS www.PaintingPlus.com www.SidingPlus.com
Rot Repair Technician
Licensed
770-971-1577 Electricians
770-455-4556
Check out our new website: BelcoInc.com and follow us on:
Miscellaneous
Budget Fabrics
Installation Maintenance Seasonal Color
ROT-DOC
Don’t waste good paint on rotten wood. Minor repairs make a major difference!
Ogletree Enterprises
a MALTA Award Winning Firm Ken Ogletree
770.840.8884
Interior/Exterior Painting Pressure Washing Rotten Wood Deck Repair Free Estimates
Belco Electric
“Family Owned Since 1972” Fast Dependable Service by Professional Uniformed Electricians
20 years of Keeping Dunwoody Green
Licensed • Insured • References Pressure Washing
Thurman | 770.899.1354 | www.rot-doc.com
Tree Services
And Upholstery *DISCOUNT PRICES*
-FREE Design Consultation• Thousands of designer 770-396-6891 fabrics IN STOCK 770-396-6824 Mon-Fri 8-6 • Sat 8-3 Haulers
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Full Service Bush Hogging, LANDSCAPING Clearing, Company Grading, Hauling, Etc.
Many local references-
Capable of doing your job – grading, hauling and tree service.
678-898-7237
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Call Ralph Rucker
Ralph Rucker
PLACE YOUR AD HERE
770.442.3278
DANGEROUS REMOVALS & TRIMMING FREE ESTIMATES INSURED & REFERENCES CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED FAMILY OWNED AND OPERATED NO JOB TOO BIG OR SMALL 20% OFF WITH THIS AD! griffintreeservices.com
404-234-4810
CELEBRATING MY 41ST YEAR! THANK YOU TO ALL OF YOU!
Roofing ROOF LEAKING? Call us for roof repair or roof replacement. FREE quotes. $200 OFF Leak Repairs or 10% off New Roof. Affordable, quality roofing. Based in Roswell. Serving North Atlanta since 1983. Call to schedule FREE Quote: 770-284-3123. Christian Brothers Roofing
MY EXPERIENCE ACHIEVES OPTIMAL RESULTS!!!
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16 | June 16, 2022 | Dunwoody Crier | AppenMedia.com/Dunwoody
WE BUY ALL JEWELRY!
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