Dunwoody Crier — November 26, 2020

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Past Tense: Remembrances of Warnock Farm ► PAGE 5

N ov e m b e r 2 6 , 2 0 2 0 | T h e C r i e r. n e t | A n A p p e n M e d i a G r o u p P u b l i c a t i o n | S e r v i n g t h e c o m m u n i t y s i n c e 1 9 7 6

Annual book festival adapts to extend reach across U.S. Marcus Center event splits ticket proceeds By CATHY COBBS newsroom@appenmediagroup.com DUNWOODY, Ga. – One of Dunwoody’s most revered annual events, the Marcus Jewish Community Center’s Book Festival, not only survived 2020’s world pandemic, it found a way to help other struggling centers around the country. Going into its 29th year, festival organizers had high expectations for another successful event. In past years, the festival had hosted prominent authors like Hilary Clinton, humorist Dave Berry, former Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley and Olympic figure skater Adam Rippon. This year, the lineup included actor Michael J. Fox, journalist Joan Lunden, best-selling author David Baldacci and John Grisham. “Little did we know that this year’s festival would be an event unlike any other,” Book Festival Director Pam Morton said. “Once it became clear that an in-person event was not possible, we made some very quick adjustments that turned the festival into an online event.” The event, chaired by Deena Profis and Dr. Artie Gumer, which ended Nov. 22, was rebranded as “JCC Book Fest in Your Living Room.” Instead of flying authors to Atlanta, they were scheduled to appear virtually in hour-long sessions, which included 40 minutes

JEFFREY ALBERTSON/CRIER

Staff and volunteers from I Care Atlanta join with Dunwoody Police to distribute turkeys, greens and other produce to needy families Nov. 20 ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday.

Book festival co-chairs Dr. Artie Gumer and Deena Profis

SPECIAL

of moderated discussion and a 20-minute Q&A. The price of some tickets included the author’s latest book, which was shipped directly to the purchaser by longtime partner A Capella Books. In addition, the sessions were recorded, and ticket holders were given the option to download the event and watch at their leisure. Morton said the unintended benefits of doing the festival online were surprising and philanthropic.

See FESTIVAL, Page 2

Rising from homeless to hero, Dunwoody man helps needy By JEFFREY ALBERTSON newsroom@appenmediagroup.com DUNWOODY, Ga. — Long-time Dunwoody resident Anthony Delgado has made it his life’s work to keep the area’s most vulnerable fed, clothed, and in high spirits. The needy are at the center of his consciousness because he knows the struggle first-hand. For Delgado, the Doraville MARTA station marks the junction between two lives, one scarred by drug use, prison and homelessness; the other of salvation and giving.

Delgado heads I Care Atlanta, an area food distribution facility responsible for feeding upwards of 4,000 people per month. Today, Delgado’s organization takes on many roles: hunger relief, GED education, job placement, and financial training. “You can’t describe the feeling knowing that somebody’s going to go to sleep tonight with a full stomach of food, (have a) full stomach when they get up in the

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2 | November 26, 2020 | Dunwoody Crier | TheCrier.net

770-442-3278 | TheCrier.net 319 N. Main Street, Alpharetta, GA 30009 PUBLISHER EMERITUS: Dick Williams PUBLISHER: Hans Appen GENERAL MANAGER & ADVERTISING: Jim Hart MANAGING EDITOR: Patrick Fox EDITORIAL QUESTIONS: Alpharetta-Roswell Herald: Alpharetta: ext. 118, Roswell ext. 122 Dunwoody Crier: ext. 123 Forsyth Herald: ext. 118 Johns Creek Herald: ext. 123 Milton Herald: ext. 139 Calendar: ext. 122 TO SUBMIT EDITORIAL: News/Press Releases: NorthFulton.com/Sponsored Calendar/Events: NorthFulton.com/Calendar ADVERTISING QUESTIONS: General Advertising: ext. 100 advertising@appenmediagroup.com Classified Advertising: ext. 143 donna@appenmediagroup.com Circulation/Subscriptions/Delivery: ext. 100 circulation@appenmediagroup.com OUR PUBLICATIONS: Alpharetta-Roswell Herald: 28,000 circulation Johns Creek Herald: 20,000 circulation Dunwoody Crier: 18,000 circulation Forsyth Herald: 17,000 circulation Milton Herald: 10,000 circulation Answer Book: 40,000 circulation

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Robotic imaging system helps support personalized care at Emory Saint Joseph’s Hospital ATLANTA, Ga. – A new state-of-the-art robotic imaging system at Emory Saint Joseph’s Hospital will enable doctors to work more efficiently and effectively while performing minimally-invasive procedures to treat a broad range of heart and vascular conditions. The Artis Pheno imaging system – the first in the state – uses a robotic arm that rotates 360 degrees around the patient to generate high resolution 3D images, providing a clear view to help guide cardiac and vascular interventional treatments. The new C-arm robotic angiography system is part of the hospital’s hybrid operating room, a surgical suite that combines the capabilities of a cardiac surgery room and catheterization room. “The 3D imaging provided by this new system, combined with the capabilities of a hybrid operating room, allows us to treat complex cases with minimally-invasive procedures that reduce risk to the patient and improve recovery times,” says Michael Halkos, MD, chief of cardiothoracic surgery at Emory Healthcare, which operates one of the largest cardiothoracic (CT) surgery programs in the country and the largest in Georgia. A large robotic arm helps maneuver the angiography system around the patient that enables doctors to gain a clear picture of the treatment site while fine tuning the angle of the image, supporting the high precision needed for complex, minimally-invasive interventions. The system features a large flat panel display that shows 3D images in real time, guiding the treatment process. The Artis Pheno imaging system, from Siemens Healthineers, will support treating patients for abdominal aortic aneurysms, as well as minimallyinvasive procedures such as transcarotid artery revascularization (TCAR), a treatment for patients with carotid artery

NEWS

Festival: Continued from Page 1

disease. The system will also be used for patients undergoing transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR). In addition, the hybrid operating room supports a wide range of other minimally-invasive treatments such as electrophysiology laser lead extractions and convergent procedures, which combine the expertise of a cardiac electrophysiologist and a cardiothoracic surgeon and involve the ablation of the inside and outside of the heart to restore its regular rhythm. “The ability to see in real time with such clarity is critical during these procedures, and this system gives us the flexibility to easily personalize treatment in a way that ensures the patient receives the right care at the right time and in the least invasive way,” says David B. DeLurgio, MD, director of electrophysiology at Emory Saint Joseph’s Hospital. The flexibility of the hybrid operating room, with its capability of supporting full cardiac surgery, ensures the efficient conversion with minimal delays if alternative treatment options are needed. “The hybrid room allows us to completely evaluate an acutely-ill patient with a ruptured aneurysm or ischemic leg and decide whether the patient should receive interventional treatment, open surgical care or a combination of both,” says Joseph Zarge, MD, a vascular surgeon at Emory Saint Joseph’s Hospital. “We have all the sophisticated tools in the hybrid room with no need to transport the patient.” Hybrid operating rooms, similar to the one at Emory Saint Joseph’s, are utilized in hospitals throughout Emory Healthcare.

“Since the authors didn’t have to travel, it opened a whole new opportunity for us with a greater pool from which to choose,” she said. “While we will open up the festival in person when it’s safe to do so, I see us doing hybrid programming in the future.” Morton said going virtual has provided the Atlanta location the opportunity to help other Jewish community centers around the United States and Canada. “There are many smaller community centers around the country that are struggling, and some have even shut down,” she said. “Our way of giving back to these smaller centers was offering them access to our festival and splitting the revenues. As of today, we have 95 JCCs in the United States and Canada in the partnership.” And although attendance is running about 40 percent from previous years, the reach of the festival has expanded globally, Morton said. “We had people joining the sessions from Germany, Canada and the Philippines during the 29 events we had this year.” While the traditional festival has ended, there are several other author events of interest, including a Zoom appearance by beloved author and chef Ina Garten on Dec. 2 at 7:30 p.m., which will be moderated by actor and author Michael Ian Black. The $44 ticket includes a copy of her latest book, “Modern Comfort Food.” On Dec. 6, Phillipa Gregory, author of “Dark Tides: A Novel,” will be appear on Zoom at 1 p.m., and on Dec. 13, Peter Frampton will discuss his memoir, “Do You Feel Like I Do,” at 2 p.m. Tickets to these events can be purchased by visiting www.atlantajcc. org. Morton said technical support is available to assist those who are new to the Zoom experience.


TheCrier.net | Dunwoody Crier | November 26, 2020 | 3

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4 | November 26, 2020 | Dunwoody Crier | TheCrier.net

OPINION

THE INVESTMENT COACH

Mr. Market and the Georgia runoff election “Mr. Market,” the personification of the thinking of stock market investors at large, was introduced by British-born American professor, economist investor LEWIS J. WALKER, CFP and Benjamin Graham (1894-1976), in his 1949 classic book, “The Intelligent Investor.” Observing the volatility of stock prices, Graham noted, “The true investor scarcely ever is forced to sell his shares, and at all other times he is free to disregard the current price quotation. He

need pay attention to it and act upon it only to the extent that it suits his book, and no more. Thus the investor who permits himself to be stampeded or unduly worried by unjustified market declines in his holdings is perversely transforming his basic advantage into a basic disadvantage. That man would be better off if his stocks had no market quotation at all, for he would then be spared the mental anguish caused him by other persons’ mistakes of judgment.” Prior to the election, clients asked about selling or buying stocks based on one outcome or the other. Despite votes being counted and recounted as this is written, Mr. Market assumes Joe Biden is president-elect. On Friday the 13th,

2020, the S&P 500 average soared to an all-time high of 3585.15. Euphoria centered on positive COVID-19 vaccine trials and the assumption of “divided government,” Democrats presiding over the White House and House of Representatives, with control of the Senate in Republican hands. However, between now and Jan. 5, Mr. Market will be humming Ray Charles’ “Georgia On My Mind,” potentially spawning seesawing market volatility. Two Georgia Senate seats are up for grabs in the Jan. 5 runoff. If Republicans hold onto only one of the seats, they will retain the majority with power to influence Joe Biden’s agenda. If Democrats prevail and win both seats, they will have a working majority since with a 50-50 Senate split, Vice President Kamala Harris would cast a tie-breaking vote. The thinking is Mitch McConnell will retain control of the Senate, but this is 2020, and taking things for granted has proven fallacious. As of Nov. 14, the three major U.S. stock index averages were well above their 65-day moving average. Job recovery numbers are ahead of expectations, but by Inauguration Day, millions still will be unemployed. However, Mr. Market is looking beyond current strains, such as rising cases of COVID-19 and possible business shutdowns in viral hot spots, seeing the possibility of Mitch McConnell working with President Biden and Nancy Pelosi to bring forward “bipartisan comity,” more stimulus and an infrastructure package. Split government may prevent passage of legislation Mr. Market might detest, however, executive orders will have to be weighed and reckoned with. Market pundits have publicized data showing that 46 years of split power led to an average S&P 500 return of 7.2 percent, indicating that Mr. Market likes divided government. But if Professor Graham were holding

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class, he’d point out the problem with basing a strategy on averages. An “average number” tells you nothing about variances from the mean. In any given time frame, you will experience market corrections, bear market interludes, bullish surges and sideways action. The Wall Street Journal (11/9/20) opined, “Don’t Expect Split Government to Lift Stocks,” noting, “Since 1929, there hasn’t been a year where Republicans controlled the Senate and Democrats controlled both the House of Representatives and the presidency.” In other words, there’s no data for the most assumed scenario! Four years of a presidential term is a long time. And with apologies to William Shakespeare, “what’s past may not be prologue.” We have long suggested, regard all market forecasts as pure entertainment. Every president encounters surprises that torpedo markets, 9/11 and COVID-19 as examples. Mid-term elections are only two years out, and with roughly half the electorate potentially convinced the 2020 election was stolen, anything is possible. Base investment decisions on a longterm strategy and your risk/reward profile, not which way punditry winds are blowing. Long-term data suggests that America will keep growing despite recessionary interludes, creative’s will keep innovating, and investment diligence and patience will be rewarded. Over the long run, stocks as a liquid investment medium are likely to beat inflation in your quest to accumulate future purchasing power. Safe alternatives like insured bank deposits, while essential to peace-of-mind and “down market protection,” are not likely to build future purchasing power net of inflation and taxation. Warren Buffett instructed, “Mr. Market is there to serve you, not to guide you. It is his pocketbook, not his wisdom, that you will find useful. If he shows up some day in a particularly foolish mood, you are free to ignore him or to take advantage of him, but it will be disastrous if you fall under his influence.” Good advice! Keep calm and carry on. Lewis Walker, CFP®, is a financial life planning strategist at Capital Insight Group; 770-441-3553; lewis@lewwalker.com. Securities & advisory services offered through The Strategic Financial Alliance, Inc. (SFA). Lewis is a registered representative and investment adviser representative of SFA, otherwise unaffiliated with Capital Insight Group. He’s a Gallup Certified Clifton Strengths Coach and Certified Exit Planning Advisor.


OPINION

TheCrier.net | Dunwoody Crier | November 26, 2020 | 5

PAST TENSE

Remembrances of Warnock Farm potatoes and green beans,” recalls David Poss. “Mamaw canned a lot of vegetables. She loved stewed tomatoes and sweet pickles from their garden.” Beverly reminisces, “We picked and shelled the beans and gathered the ripe tomatoes for supper. There were always fresh vegetables and cornbread on the dinner table with sweet tea and buttermilk. Mamaw’s peach and apple pies were some of the finest.” One of David and Beverly’s chores was gathering the eggs. David remembers that the hens “seemed angry when I took the eggs and chased me sometimes.” Hogs were also raised on the farm. David often went on trips with his grandfather to barter vegetables and sausage for other goods. Ebbie bartered at a farm on Peeler Road, in downtown Dunwoody, and occasionally in Brookhaven and Atlanta. “After a long day in the fields,” David remembers, “Papaw and I would sleep in the day bed on the front screen porch. There was no air conditioning, so it was cooler on the porch. The sounds of the crickets, frogs, owls and whippoorwills filled the night air. It was a wonderful time for me and my grandfather.” Ebbie Warnock died in 1966 and Georgia sold all but 10 acres of the property. Beverly and David continued to spend many nights at the farm with their grandmother, “listening to the rain on the tin roof and making sweet memories of summer nights at the farmhouse.” David lived in the farmhouse from 1972 until 1978 and paid his grandmother $75 a month rent. Vermack was a dirt and gravel road with a wooden bridge over the creek. The following year, his parents built the brick ranch on the property and moved to Warnock Farm. Beverly Bohan and David Poss became stewards of this property after the death of their father on Aug. 23, 2020.

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Roy Eugene Poss and Jemmie Warnock Poss at their wedding in 1950

Beverly and David Poss with grandparents Their mother died in 1991. You may recall seeing Gene Poss mowing the vast lawn with his 1948 Ford tractor, a task which David is handling now. As a child, David sometimes rode on the same trac-

tor with his grandfather. John and Ada Baker Warnock are David and Beverly’s great-grandparents. John was one of eight children of William R. and Amanda Adams Warnock, the original owners of Warnock Cottage on Mount Vernon Road. David and Beverly are hopeful the old farmhouse can be preserved and recognized as a piece of Dunwoody history, the place where it all started for a farmer and his family. You can email Valerie at pasttensega@ gmail.com or visit pasttensega.com.

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Two houses on Vermack Road sit back off the road on a large piece of land in a pastoral setting. The addresses are 4809 and 4819 Vermack Road, better known to the family as Warnock Farm. VALERIE David Poss and BIGGERSTAFF Beverly Poss Bohan have many fond childhood memories of the farm, which belonged to their grandparents, William Ebbie Warnock and Georgia Elizabeth Pounds Warnock. Ebbie and Georgia were both born in the early 1900s. They married and had one daughter, Jemmie Lou Warnock, in 1932. Around that time, they purchased 50 acres on Vermack Road, with the encouragement of Carey Spruill, the husband of Ebbie’s sister Florence Warnock. Ebbie was a farmer and a carpenter who built his home and helped build other homes in Dunwoody. He was typically in his overalls with a wooden pipe hanging slightly left of his mouth. In addition to working on the farm, Georgia worked many years at Southern Bell, taking the bus from Chamblee to downtown Atlanta. She loved to plant jonquils, which made a perfect place to hide eggs each year at Easter. In 1950, Jemmie Warnock married Roy Eugene Poss of Brookhaven in the front room of the farmhouse. Jemmie and Gene Poss had two children, Beverly Poss Bohan and David Poss. The Poss family lived on Skyland Drive in Chamblee, but they visited Ebbie and Georgia often, calling them Papaw and Mamaw. The front and rear pastures were planted with corn. Ebbie plowed the field with the help of mules Hat and Dinah before the tractor was purchased. “Near the house were rows of okra, peas, squash, cucumber, tomatoes,

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6 | November 26, 2020 | Dunwoody Crier | TheCrier.net

OBITUARIES Mary Joan Wynne Mathews, age 71, of Atlanta/Dunwoody, Geogia, passed on November 1, 2020, at her home after a prolonged fight with Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP). Joan was born in Chattanooga, Tenn. on July 11, 1949. Her MATHEWS parents were Mary McQuown Wynne and Robert Francis Wynne III. She grew up in Louisiana, Florida and Tucker, Georgia for her high school years. Joan graduated from the University of Florida in the 1971 with a Bachelor Degree in Physical Therapy. After her graduation, Joanie was hired as an entry level Physical Therapist at Grady Memorial’s PT clinic in 1971 and served there until February 1973 when she and her husband Robert married and returned to his active duty station in the US Army at the Special Weapons Depot, Kriegsfeld, West Germany, during the midst of the cold war. Joanie and Bob traveled throughout Western Europe and made wonderful life long best friends from that Army experience. Upon their return to the USA, Joanie quickly chose a job at the Shock Trauma Unit at the University of Maryland Hospital in Baltimore. There Joanie worked with critically ill trauma patients and was a specialist in chest PT. In 1977 Joanie and Bob moved because he had taken a job in NYC. In New Jersey, Joanie worked for St. Barnabas Medical Center in the Cancer unit with patients requiring PT services. Joanie worked for St. Barnabas full time until the birth of their first son, Robert David (Dave) in 1980. From then own, even in between a move to Atlanta and the birth of two more sons, John Wynne (John) and William Jordan (Will), Joanie continued part-time in PT working with traumatically brain injured adults and special needs children culminating her career with her retirement from the Cobb County Schools. Joanie was a “joiner”. She was an

COMMUNITY

member of the Junior League of Summit, New Jersery, the Junior League of Dekalb County and the Assistance League of Atlanta. She served is various leadership roles in non-profit and community organizations including CoPresident of the Austin Elementary PTA, Co-President of the Dunwoody Gridiron and Baseball Clubs. She was active as team mom on many Murphy Candler Little League baseball teams to mention and was always one of the first to volunteer for anything she thought needed done for children and the community. Her parents, and her brother Michael, preceded her in death. Joanie is survived by her husband of almost 48 years Robert (Bob), her sons David, John and Will and daughter-in-law Sarah Mathews and grandchildren Riley, Millicent, George and Caroline and her and sister-in-law Robert and Margie Wynne and nieces and nephews on multiple sides of the family. A Celebration of life was held November 14th and is available online at dunwoodyumc. org under “Join us for on-line worship” and click “Livestream” and select the service. For those so inclined, donations will be appreciated for the Joan Wynne Mathews Scholarship Fund at the University of Florida, online at http://uff. ufl.edu/020569. Philip Arthur Baker (September 10, 1936 – November 10, 2020) Philip Arthur Baker, 84, of Venice, FL, passed away November 10th, 2020. Phil was the son of the late Herbert J. Baker and Dorothy BAKER (nee Wolfe) and is survived by his wife Linda (“Linnie”) Baker (nee Trexler Crosley) of Venice; daughters Melissa Baker Nimke of Milwaukee, WI, Kristin Baker Larpenter, Kristin Crosley, and Kim Crosley Lass of Denver; and his sister Barbara Baker Hansen and brother-inlaw Larry Hansen of Gillsville, GA. Phil is also survived by grandsons William Philip Nimke, Alexander Ryan Larpen-

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ter, Christopher Baker Larpenter, and Theodore Ellis Larpenter; special family members Gregory Hannah and Jay James; nieces and nephews, extended family members, and many friends. Phil was predeceased by his first wife, Janet Limbach Baker. Phil was born in Topeka, KS and attended Topeka High School (Class of 1954), where he played many sports. He graduated with an engineering degree from the University of Kansas (KU); served his Country as a Marine; and had a long, successful career at IBM Corp. as a Sr. Systems Engineer and Sr. Instructor in Kansas City, MO, Springfield, IL, and Atlanta, GA. He and Linnie were married in 1981 in Dunwoody, GA and retired to Venice in 1994 for a “New Beginning” to simplify their lives, due to both becoming ill with Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/CFIDS. Phil was a member of Delta Upsilon fraternity at KU and loved following KU Jayhawk sports. He played baseball and on multiple tennis leagues. He was an active member of Kingswood Methodist Church in Dunwoody, GA. Phil was a pro at finding sharks’ teeth on Venice Beach and enjoyed watching sports, reading, and completing sudoku puzzles. Phil was a patient, kind, and loving man who lived a very honorable life and always thought of others before himself. Even though he faced some serious health issues for many years, Phil greeted each day with a smile and gratitude. Due to COVID-19, a family celebration of Phil’s life will be held at a later time. In lieu of flowers, please perform a “Random Act of Kindness” in Phil’s memory. Donations may also be made in his memory to www.SolveCFS.org. Eva “Chava Elka bat Avraham Yekutiel v’ Roza” Goldberg Lipman September 1, 1946 November 18, 2020 Born: Eshvega, Germany Born in September of 1946, Eva Lipman’s LIPMAN journey began shortly after World War II had ended. Eva was born in a displaced person’s camp in Eshvega, Germany to Carl and Rose Goldberg. Carl, Rose and Eva immigrated to the United States aboard the USAT General Ballou, which sailed from the port of Bremerhaven on September 26, 1949. Nine days later, the transport ship reached New York Harbor and eventually they were sent to Jacksonville, Florida thanks to a sponsorship from the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society (HIAS) to begin their American journey. They came to the United States without money, family or friends and without an inkling of how to speak

the English language. Rose and Carl managed to buy a modest but beautiful home as Rose gave birth next to Anita and then Susie. Eva took on many jobs growing up to contribute to the family and played a big role in raising her younger sisters. She went on to attend the University of Florida and became the first person in her family to graduate from a four-year university. She soon became a teacher and married Charles. They had three children Wendy, Andrew “Andy” and Emily. The family eventually started their own family foundation in memory of Wendy who only lived 16 days due to cystic fibrosis. The Wish for Wendy Foundation has helped raise $4.5 million for the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. Eva was granted the Lifetime Achievement Award by the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation in honor of her half century of devotion to the goal of curing the disease. Eva was a voracious reader and had an encyclopedic knowledge regarding a myriad of subjects. She was the go-to source for her family and friends who relied upon her knowledge. Eva always saw the best in people and never had a harsh word regarding anyone. She loved people and they reciprocated with love for her. Eva was preceded in death by her parents Roza (Of Blessed Memory) and Carl “Kisel” Goldberg (Of Blessed Memory.) She was also preceded in death by her daughter Wendy (Of Blessed Memory) and her brother-in-law Jerry Zucker (Of Blessed Memory.) She is survived by her beloved husband Charles Lipman of 51 years, her son Andrew “Andy” (Andrea) Lipman and her daughter Emily Lipman. She is also survived by her sisters Anita (David) Zucker and Susie (Bobby) Davis and her sister-in-law Loretta (Carl) Bready. She is survived by her grandchildren Avery and Ethan Lipman of Atlanta. She is survived by her nephews and nieces Jonathan (Laura) Zucker, Andrea (Aaron) Lee-Zucker, Jeffrey (Jessica) Zucker, Barrett (Alma) Bready and Erin Davis & Drew (Dani) Davis. A private service was performed in Atlanta in order to follow CDC guidelines and prevent the spread of COVID-19. Thank you to her wonderful caregivers for making her so comfortable during her last few months. Eva was an amazing daughter, mother, sister, grandmother and wife. She will truly be missed by everyone. In lieu of flowers and should friends desire, the family has designated donations be made to the following in memory of Eva: Wish for Wendy Foundation (benefiting those with cystic fibrosis) 8480 Lazy Oaks Court Atlanta, GA 30350 May her memory be a blessing. Arrangements by Dressler’s Funeral Care, 770-451-4999.


SPORTS

TheCrier.net | Dunwoody Crier | November 26, 2020 | 7

Dunwoody fencer signs letter of intent

DUNWOODY, Ga. — Dunwoody Fencing Club fencer Drew Walker has signed his letter of intent with Cleveland State University. Drew will fence on the Cleveland State University NCAA Division I team under the direction of Coach Andy Tulleners. In his career with DFC, Drew has compiled an impressive record in the Georgia High School Fencing League as well as Regional and National competitions. He is coached by DFC head coach y Crier 11/26/20 Crossword Kathy Vail.

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SOLUTION ON PAGE 9

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8 | November 26, 2020 | Dunwoody Crier | TheCrier.net

COMMUNITY

Thanksgiving thoughts on food Giving: If my waistline is any indication, Thanksgiving is obviously my favorite holiday. And if this column gives you any indication I use drugs, I assure you I do not. Why would I do drugs when JOE PARKER there is beer? Editor So, as you are joe@appenmediagroup.com recovering from your 4,000-calorie meal coma, or preparing for it, here are a few random thoughts on the center of the holiday, food and eating. “Turkey butt bread” sounds a lot less appealing than stuffing/dressing. Unless someone is preparing for a boxing/wrestling match, can they really be considered overweight? If a smoothie is generally defined as blended fruit(s), could we consider ketchup a smoothie? If a soup is nothing more than a mixture of foodstuffs in mostly liquid, is a smoothie soup? Is ketchup soup? True optimism is believing the hot dog you’ve purchased from a gas station roller doesn’t have other people’s spittle, phlegm and general nastiness on it. The person who decided that what was really missing from their potato dish was marshmallows was someone definitely hitting the bottle hard on Thanksgiving. Eating a sandwich for dessert sounds strange until there’s ice cream involved. Avocadoes, certain fish species and some nuts are often labeled as “good fat.” I hope people describe me in the same way. Do vegans eat animal crackers? Oreos are vegan. That’s a statement, not a thought, but it is interesting anyway. If we used the labeling system used for corn-on-the-cobb for other foods, we would have peach-off-the-tree,

chicken-wings-off-the-bird, honey-offthe-hive and vanilla-beans-out-of-thepod ice cream. Every saltwater fish you have ever eaten was brined. The cook who coined the term meatloaf wasn’t very creative. And meatloaf is probably the most unappealing sounding food name of them all. I looked up the word “mashed” in a thesaurus and found a whole lot of new ways to describe that form of potatoes. Drinking orange juice without pulp is like eating cottage cheese with no curds. Almond milk suggests the existence of pistachio milk, which sounds delicious. All food can be considered baby food, it’s just that it’s not really advisable to feed a baby most of it. The term “cream cheese” is redundant. Eating an egg with mayonnaise on it is the egg equivalent of crunchy peanut butter. If cut grass smelled like roasted garlic, I’d mow my law a lot more often. Takeout food is taken out of a restaurant in a takeout container and eaten by taking out the food from the takeout container before we take out the takeout container when we take out the trash. Eating sausage biscuits and gravy for breakfast is telling the world you will not be productive that day. The first person who cracked open an oyster, saw what was inside and decided it looked like something he could eat must have been on the cusp of starvation. The more you think about it, the less appetizing it sounds to order a “bucket” of chicken or popcorn. Any liquid is a BBQ sauce if you put it on BBQ. Also, BBQ can be a verb, noun or adjective. Eating mashed potatoes with squash sounds like someone dropped dinner. You cannot convince me that Cheese Nips were not named by a giggling, 8-year-old boy. Happy Thanksgiving, everyone.

Continued from Page 1 morning, and they’re going to be able to have some breakfast,” Delgado said. “It’s so rewarding.” Delgado said the most memorable moment of his food service assistance was taking food to an elderly resident who had been eating cat food. He headed south 23 years ago seeking refuge with a cousin living in Duluth. After an argument, he was kicked out and homeless. The odyssey began at the same train station, from which I Care Atlanta sits today. The watershed moment came during the winter at the Greyhound station on Forsyth Street in downtown Atlanta, after being homeless for a year. “This man and woman stood up in front of me, clapped their hands, and said young man go to the (Veteran Affairs) hospital, they’re going to help you,” Delgado said. After leaving the bus station, he walked about a mile to Woodruff Park. Unable to shake a feeling to get to the VA, a man helped him get a train ticket and directions to the Decatur VA facility. “By the time I stepped on to the train, the doors close, and I turn around (and) the man was gone. There’s no way he could have went up that long escalator that quick, but he vanished.” Delgado believes that angels helped guide him that day. The VA referred him to a treatment facility in Dunwoody, where he was required to obtain employment and go to church. Four years later, he lost his job and founded My Brother’s Keeper Reaching Out, INC. He started taking bread and pastries downtown in a 1984 Dodge Prospector van that had to be started with pliers and often jumped out of gear. My Brother’s Keeper was renamed to I Care Atlanta. The Dunwoody Police Department has aided in food distribution to the city’s vulnerable residents. The connection started as the police department searched for non-profits to support at the city’s inception.

JEFFREY ALBERTSON/CRIER

Anthony Delgado, who heads I Care Atlanta, helped coordinate efforts to distribute food to the needy in Dunwoody Nov. 20. The distribution included turkeys and other Thanksgiving Day staples.

“Words cannot express the tireless compassion and dedication Anthony has demonstrated toward the Dunwoody community. He has brought smiling faces and tears of joy to hundreds of families,” Dunwoody Community Outreach Officer Anwar Sillah said. I Care Atlanta has sponsored and hosted Dunwoody Police’s Christmas for Kids program, providing toys for hundreds of kids in need for 11 years. I Care Atlanta and area police departments partner to distribute meals to families in need several times a year. City officials have joined with police to help pack food at the distribution facility and delivered to the community. “Anthony is always there, he’s got food to assist people in need, clothes for people for interviews, he’s a well rounded individual who likes to help people,” Dunwoody Councilman John Heneghan said. I Care Atlanta distributes food at 5879-B New Peachtree Road in Doraville every Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. On Wednesdays, the refrigerated truck delivers food to Malachi’s Storehouse in Dunwoody.

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TheCrier.net | Dunwoody Crier | November 26, 2020 | 9

THE INK PENN

Banjo’s take on the little Dickens Since I’ve retired from writing books, Mum sometimes asks me to help her out. She wanted to write a column about Dickens, the dog in her cozy mystery series, but she’s been too busy writKATHY ing more and more MANOS PENN books. I mean, can you believe the third one just came out and she’s already got another one ready? She thought me writing about a dog would be right up my alley, and I agreed. After all, Dickens is a smaller version of moi — and younger as Mum likes to remind me. He’s not any better looking, mind you, just smaller and younger. Now that we’ve got that straight, let me tell you more about him — the little Dickens. My fans may recall that two of my great-grandparents were Great Pyrenees, and they were the Royal Dogs of France. That’s how I came to be known as Lord Banjo. Even though my fur is black, I’m a Pyr. Full-blooded Pyrs are white and weigh much more than I do. I weighed in at 80 pounds when I first arrived here at the royal abode, but I’m down to around 60 now. Let me tell you, the first 10 pounds were a struggle, but the next 10 weren’t so hard. Dickens is a Pyr, but the boy’s a dwarf Pyr. Sometimes it just happens that two Pyr parents have a dwarf puppy. Dickens weighs only 40 pounds, though some of the dwarves weigh a little more. Some are deaf too, but not Dickens. He hears everything, and if you read Mum’s books, you know he can communicate with his owner. That’s right, Leta understands him and vice versa. How cool is that? Dickens has a great life in the Cotswolds, where Leta owns a cottage with a garden. He likes to roll in the grass and sniff around the stone wall that encloses it. He’s a big believer in cornerchecking which is what he calls sniffing every inch of the wall. Leta lets him out to do that every morning. She tosses him a treat as he heads out the kitchen door and he goes to work. And like me, Dickens is a fiend for belly rubs. When anyone approaches him and leans down to pet him, he assumes the belly rub position. That little Dickens is a smart boy. He enjoys his garden, but his favorite thing is visiting the donkeys. He and Leta walk a mile down a country lane to see Martha and Dylan, and Leta takes carrots to feed ‘em. Those donkeys come running — well trotting — when they see

them coming because they know Leta always has carrots in her pockets. They duck their heads down to touch Dickens, and he loves it. Dickens and Leta are originally from Atlanta, and it had only been in the last few years that Leta could take him to sit outside at a restaurant. The Cotswolds are different, though. If you can believe it, Leta can take him into pubs — and some pubs have dog beds scattered around for dogs to snooze in. If he doesn’t go for a bed, he hangs out in front of one of the fireplaces or beneath the table. Leta has two friends who sneak him snacks. She says they’re incorrigible because no matter what she says, they sneak him chunks of buns or chips or sometimes a bite of a burger. She’s worried Dickens will turn into a little butterball, but they go on lots of long walks, so I think he’ll be okay. He also gets to go lots of places with Leta in her refurbished London taxi. He has a special harness in the back seat so he’s safe. I think the boy has a wonderful life, and I’m just a teeny bit jealous. The part I’m not jealous of? He had to ride in the cargo hold of a jet to get to England — nine hours. My thoughts on that? No way, José. No one’s getting me on a plane. I’m staying right here in the royal abode. I can enjoy Dickens’ life vicariously by reading Mum’s books. And you can do the same. You can find the Christmas book — “Whiskers, Wreaths & Murder” — on Amazon along with the just-released box set of all three books in the Dickens & Christie Mystery series. Lord Banjo lives with award-winning author Kathy Manos Penn in Sandy Springs. Find her cozy mysteries at the Enchanted Forest and on Amazon. Contact her at inkpenn119@gmail.com.

Solution

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P A R T E D H E R S P E T

A D E M E R I N G S A E M M E C E P R H O R O W O R Y V A M A I K E S S I D E L M A E A L

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10 | November 26, 2020 | Dunwoody Crier | TheCrier.net

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TheCrier.net | Dunwoody Crier | November 26, 2020 | 11

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12 | November 26, 2020 | Dunwoody Crier | TheCrier.net

Nominate Your Favorite Businesses, Services & More! 2021

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