Governor notes ‘significant holes’ in state’s adopted spending package
By JILL NOLIN GEORGIA RECORDER
ATLANTA — Lawmakers signed off on a $32.4 billion spending plan for next year as the clock expired on the 2023 legislative session, although Gov. Brian Kemp warned of “significant holes” in the budget.
“I think it’s important for me to say tonight that the recent news from the Federal Reserve and others suggest there may be storm clouds on our nation’s economic horizon,” Kemp told members of the Senate on the final day of the session. “Additionally, there are significant holes in this year’s final budget that my office will need to work closely with you all, the House and the Office of Planning and Budget to address in the coming months.”
Kemp called on lawmakers to assist in making the tough decisions necessary to keep the financial health of this state on sound footing.
Johns
Creek
celebrates
Easter with Bunny Hop
JOHNS CREEK, Ga. — A few thousand people gathered, many with Easter egg baskets for an interactive walk around North Pond behind Johns Creek City Hall April 7.
Stations were set up along the path where visitors collected eggs, leading up to the final stop with the Easter Bunny.
— Amber Perry
As with all bills that pass through the Legislature, the governor has the power of the pen and can veto lines in the budget he finds problematic. The close of the session kicks off the usu-
See BUDGET, Page 16
International Festival set for end of April
► PAGE 6
April 13, 2023 | AppenMedia.com | An Appen Media Group Publication | 50¢ | Volume 27, No. 15
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Man reports harassment from former co-worker
JOHNS CREEK, Ga. — A Johns Creek man told police March 28 that a former coworker was stalking him and sending harassing text messages.
The victim said he thinks his exgirlfriend had been providing the suspect with his home address, business location and other sensitive information, although he provided no proof of her possible involvement.
The victim said he was concerned for his employees’ safety because he is not sure what the suspect is capable of doing.
He provided a screenshot of a text message from the suspect that stated, “…it’s on site…”
The suspect is described as a Black male with a mustache and has a low haircut. He has brown hair, brown eyes, weighs approximately 220 pounds and stands around 6-foot-2.
Family pays rental fees in fake real estate deal
JOHNS CREEK, Ga. — A family reported to police March 30 that they moved into house on Vicarage Walk in Johns Creek, paying more than $3,000 in rent and deposit to a person posing as the property owner.
The victims said they moved into the house with their children March 20. About a week later, a woman drove up to the residence and asked who they were.
The woman told them that her husband is the listing agent for the property with Berkshire Hathaway. She told the victims they had been
scammed after they informed her that they rented the property through Pathlight.
The victims paid the supposed owner of the listing on Pathlight $3,225 for the deposit through Zelle, then met her at the property. The suspect presented herself as a real estate agent, gave them a house key, two garage door openers and the key to one lockbox at the front door, but no pool key.
When one family member attempted to look up the property on the website, it was no longer listed.
He called the listed business, and a woman, who said she was familiar with the property, said she was based in South America, but her accent sounded Jamaican, the police report said.
Police recorded the conversation and had the victim request to meet with the alleged real estate agent the following day to “pay more money he thought he still owed.” Police directed the victim to call 911 if the agent contacts him.
Police investigate report of sexual assault at store
JOHNS CREEK, Ga. — Johns Creek Police were dispatched to The Strand Hair Boutique on Johns Creek Commons April 1 in reference to a disorderly person.
A boutique employee said she was working on a client when a man walked in and touched his head, indicating he wanted a haircut.
The employee told him that she had a client already and could not see him that day. The suspect then approached her and touched her hand without consent. He then touched her back and grabbed her breasts twice.
At that point, the employee and her client confronted the man and ordered him out of the boutique. The suspect left and was not seen again, the police report said.
Police were informed that the man had come into the boutique roughly
four to five times over the past two weeks. During the earlier episodes, the suspect stared at customers making them uncomfortable, then left the scene.
No cameras were available. The victim said if the suspect was found, she would like to press charges.
Man faces blackmail after photo exchange
JOHNS CREEK, Ga. — A Johns Creek man notified police April 2 that around midnight he had been contacted by what appeared to be a young woman on Instagram.
Their communication quickly led to an exchange of nude photographs, the police report said.
After the exchange of pictures, the woman sent a message threatening to post the pictures to all his friends and followers if he did not pay her $1,000. After the man tried talking his way out of the situation, the blackmailer sent the pictures to several of his Instagram followers, including close friends.
The victim did not send the suspect any money.
Police helped the victim shut down all relevant social media accounts. The victim said he would like to pursue criminal prosecution.
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Theater loses contract with Roswell, moves operation to Marietta
By AMBER PERRY amber@appenmedia.com
ROSWELL, Ga. — For now, the website for the Roswell Cultural Arts Center says it is “proud to have the Georgia Ensemble Theatre as its resident artist company,” but that relationship is changing.
After more than 30 years of residency in Roswell, the professional mainstage plays at Georgia Ensemble Theatre (GET) will have a new home at the Jennie T. Anderson Theatre in Marietta.
Its contract was canceled at a Roswell Recreation Commission meeting in early March with a recommendation that the theater enter the Roswell Cultural Art Center’s Partnership Production contract model.
Since its founding in 1992, the Georgia Ensemble Theatre has operated under a Resident Theatre contract which allowed the company to handle all things related to production.
But in Fiscal Year 2022, the theater presented only three of the five agreed-upon productions. There were 47 “dark days” with no programmed
activities. The city also cited a high turnover in production managers at GET, four managers in two years.
Production has a high price tag. GET co-founder Anita Allen-Farley said a play is about $60,000 to produce and musicals are well over $100,000.
“It’s expensive, and when you
don’t have the money, you have to go … ‘how can we adjust to satisfy our patrons?’” Allen-Farley said. “By moving things around, by postponing different shows.”
Allen-Farley and Mary Saville, GET communications director, sat inside the theater’s studio on Hembree Parkway April 4, discussing the
Georgia Theater Ensemble’s big move. City partnership
The new partnership model would have allowed Roswell to help the Georgia Ensemble Theatre with production and marketing, run its box office and patron services, then collect the revenue. David Crowe, Roswell Cultural Arts coordinator, said the city would have found an “equitable split” once paying technical fees.
Many local arts organizations had been struggling with money postCOVID, Crowe said. The city has fostered successful partnerships using a similar model over the past couple of years, he said, like with the Atlanta Balalaika Society, the Atlanta Vocal Project, the Song of Atlanta chorus and the Atlanta Dance Theatre.
“We were trying to find ways to partner with [GET] so that they wouldn’t have to worry about rent anymore,” Crowe said.
The Georgia Ensemble Theatre had been behind on around $30,000 in rent for its space at the Cultural Arts Center. The City of Roswell offered reduced rent to the theater, but Allen-
See CONTRACT, Page 4
AppenMedia.com | Johns Creek Herald | April 13, 2023 | 3 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
AMBER PERRY/APPEN MEDIA
From left, Mary Saville, communications director at the Georgia Ensemble Theatre, and Anita Allen-Farley, co-founder of the Georgia Ensemble Theatre, stand outside of the theater’s studio on Hembree Parkway April 4. After more than 30 years of residency in Roswell, the theater is moving to the Jennie T. Anderson Theatre in Marietta.
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Continued from Page 3
Farley said GET will pay half the cost at the Anderson.
Considering GET’s season isn’t quite over in Roswell, Crowe hasn’t actively sought other theater companies. But he intends to make those connections.
Crowe had been with the city’s Cultural Arts Center since 2015 but has known the founders of Georgia Ensemble Theatre much longer. He said Bob Farley, the late co-founder of the theater, gave him his “first big break” after graduate school to direct at GET. As a young person, Crowe also performed in “Of Mice and Men” in the 2004-2005 season.
“Georgia Ensemble Theatre has been an enormous asset to the city on and off for many years, and it’s unfortunate that we couldn’t find a way to continue working together,” Crowe said. “But the way that I see this is: everything is an opportunity. I think this is a great opportunity for them and for us to find something different, maybe.”
Community connection
Despite city efforts to retain the theater company, Allen-Farley said she couldn’t afford the partnership.
“The biggest issue was the model has [the city] selling all of the tickets, keeping all of the money until after the show is over,” Allen-Farley said. “And I have people that I have to pay, months before we open the show.”
The agreement would have also cut the theater’s 20-week season in half. Saville said producing two shows, rather than four or five, would generate far less income. The cut also would have meant the theater wouldn’t
have been able to produce the same variety of shows, Saville said.
The Georgia Ensemble Theatre struggled during the COVID-19 pandemic, but Allen-Farley said it’s been fun to watch more and more patrons fill the seats. She said around 25 percent of the house was filled for the first two shows, which had gone up to 35 percent.
“And now, we’ve had some really nice houses with ‘Bright Star,’” AllenFarley said. For the foreseeable future, “Bright Star” will be GET’s last mainstage production in Roswell.
Many patrons have told AllenFarley they’ll ride along with her to Marietta and have bought subscriptions, or a package deal. While the move is only 13 miles away, she knows some won’t be able to follow her. The theater sees an older demographic, and many can’t drive at night.
“What I’ll miss most is that connection that we’ve had,” AllenFarley said. “We’ve had some people that have had the same seats for 30 years.”
But she’s exploring a shuttle option for those who can’t make the drive themselves.
A new space
The Georgia Ensemble Theatre released a statement, saying staff will continue to be in conversation with Roswell officials about the future and are open to return if an opportunity arose. The theatre also said it would continue its investment into Roswell’s growth and well-being, considering its studio will remain on Hembree Parkway.
The studio hosts the theater’s administrative offices, its conservatory and the GET Travel Team, which takes professional productions to schools and senior communities at
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their locations. The studio also serves as the rehearsal space for mainstage plays.
The Jennie T. Anderson Theatre has around the same number of seats as the Roswell Cultural Arts Center with 606 seats. It does not include a balcony, but handicap-accessible seating is on the front row.
Saville shared that the Anderson was once home to the Atlanta Lyric Theatre, which recently closed due to a collection of pandemicrelated issues, like rising costs, reduced revenue and donations, and audiences’ reluctance to return quickly.
“Being able to regain our footing after our entire industry was closed for over a year has been a very slow process—much slower than anyone anticipated—and we all need patience, understanding and grace while we’re still in the ‘rebuilding’ phase,” Saville said.
While GET is raising prices of premium seating, it has made more “budget-friendly” seats available at the Anderson Theatre. Preview plays will be $15 a ticket, and regular performances will range from $25 to $70. Discounts will be offered to seniors, students, educators, military/ veterans and first responders.
The Georgia Ensemble Theatre is set to produce three plays at the Anderson, in October, February and April, though the titles have yet to be announced. GET will also co-produce two musicals in the Overture Series with the Anderson Theatre, “The Light in the Piazza” in December and “Ragtime” in June of 2024.
“I think people will enjoy the experience of watching a play [at the Anderson Theatre]. It is a change. But that doesn’t mean that it’s a bad thing,” Saville said. “Change is just inevitable.”
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4 | April 13, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Transit agency considers MARTA Reach future
By SHELBY ISRAEL shelby@appenmedia.com
ATLANTA — The Atlanta-Region Transit Link Authority (ATL) is weighing its options on the future of MARTA Reach after interest and ridership climbed during a six-month pilot period last year.
MARTA Reach offers riders the ability to call a shuttle to a regular MARTA rail or bus stop or to one of several new stops added for the service.
The program, a partnership between Georgia Tech and MARTA, served more than 8,000 riders during its run from March-August 2022. Its launch followed the increasing call for on-demand transportation, rather than traditional fixed-route buses.
Reach launched with three Atlanta coverage zones, including Belvedere, the Gillem Logistics Center and West Atlanta. In May 2022, the service added a North Fulton zone, which spanned from Roswell to North Point Mall, Avalon and the Georgia State University Alpharetta campus.
Based on the ridership trend upward during its six-month run, MARTA Reach could increase the days and hours of service at a similar cost if it were relaunched, said Anthony Thomas,
MARTA Customer Experience Innovation Program manager.
With positive results from the endof-program data analysis, Thomas said he and staff recommend authority boardmembers incorporate underserved areas, pursue a request for proposal for the program’s software and include ADA trips on regular shuttles.
Thomas said the cost of the service using MARTA vehicles, maintenance and
Group focused on eating disorders schedules walk at Alpharetta park
By AMBER PERRY amber@appenmedia.com
ALPHARETTA, Ga. — Atlanta’s annual NEDA Walk will take place April 16 at Webb Bridge Park.
The event is intended to raise awareness about eating disorders and help fund programs provided by the National Eating Disorder Association (NEDA), the country’s largest nonprofit dedicated to supporting individuals and families affected by eating disorders.
The organization offers a number of services, including screenings, a helpline and connecting individuals with treatment. So far, Atlanta has raised more than $8,600 toward a goal of more than $18,500.
“People can come out and have a safe place to either celebrate the fact that they’re in recovery or if they know someone, or if they themselves kind of feel like they might be experiencing symptoms,” said Lyla Mills, a counselor at Johns Creek and Alpharetta Counseling.
Mills, who has helped coordinate the Atlanta NEDA Walk since 2017, specializes in eating disorders. She also worked at an eating disorder facility before entering private practice.
NEDA Walks are an educational opportunity, Mills said. They often have dieticians and therapists who speak, and this year, Mills said the event will feature more outpatient providers.
Eating disorders are common, she said, and it’s common for them to go undiagnosed.
“Eating disorders come in all shapes and sizes,” Mills said. “It’s more so about the patterns and behaviors and thought processes behind the eating than it is about how much you weigh in numbers.”
Check-in is at 9 a.m., and the walk will begin an hour later. Registration is free, but walkers who pay the suggested donation of $25 will receive a T-shirt.
For more information, email nedaatlanta@gmail.com.
software would be ultimately cheaper than a contract with a third-party vendor.
The board made no decisions at the April 6 meeting, but it will hear a more complete overview on ridership and demographics in October.
Boardmembers also heard updates on the ATL Rides program, a multi-agency trip planning app that allows riders to transfer from MARTA to Xpress buses, as well as Cobb, Douglas, Cherokee,
Gwinnett and Henry County public transit.
Atlanta Regional Commission Transit Funding Manager Abby Marinelli said the app is in beta testing and will formally launch this summer.
The ATL is also assisting Forsyth County in implementing a new demand response computer aided dispatch and automated vehicle locator for county vehicles.
AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | April 13, 2023 | 5 NEWS
FILE PHOTO
A MARTA Reach shuttle waits outside the Fulton County Public Library in Alpharetta July 28, 2022.
Johns Creek to host International Festival
By AMBER PERRY amber@appenmedia.com
JOHNS CREEK, Ga. — For the fifth year, Johns Creek will present a cultural smorgasbord to an anticipated 17,000 visitors at its largest International Festival April 29.
Home to more than 83,000 residents, Johns Creek is one of the most culturally diverse cities in the state and nation. Johns Creek’s Edie Damann, who has taken the lead on planning since the event’s inception, said the city has an international population of more than 51 percent.
“It was important for us to have an event that celebrates all those different cultures and then bring people in from outside of Johns Creek to hopefully introduce them to things that are new that maybe they didn’t know about — different types of foods, dances and music,” Damann said.
Damann said the event will feature countries from all continents, except Australia. To name a few, featured countries include Mexico, Canada, Hungary, Ghana, Kenya, France, Korea, Ireland and Turkey.
“If I’m lucky, somebody from Australia will come in and decide to participate,” Damann said.
The city has allocated $45,000 to this year’s festival, which will have more than 105 participating vendors. Vendors include retail, food and sponsors.
A Global Marketplace will have arts and crafts from cultural artisans. From international restaurants and food trucks, visitors might smell the aroma of Asian and Indian spices, sample the savory flavors of the Mediterranean and Europe and indulge in Latin American dishes.
The Global Beer and Wine Garden
will feature brews and wines from around the globe. From stouts to chardonnay, festival-goers ages 21 and over can explore different beverages from countries far away and close to home.
There will also be a Kids Corner, hosted by the Johns Creek Arts Center, where the family can enjoy engaging and collaborative activities for the kids as they learn about cultures from around the world. Activities include face painting, cultural storytelling and art stations.
Cultural performances include some returning acts like the Drake School of Irish Dance and the Magic Eastern Ensemble, an instrumental group, as well as new performers.
For the first time, visitors will get the opportunity to see live African storytelling at the festival. Chetter Galloway, with the Kuumba Storytellers of Georgia, will use the Djembe drum and music to enliven African lore.
The rain-or-shine, free event is from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m on the field located across from the Atlanta Athletic Club on Bobby Jones Drive. Visitors can enter the festival from Medlock Bridge Road. There will be ample on-site parking. Handicap parking will also be available. A local Boy Scouts troop assisting with parking is asking for a $3 donation, but it’s not required.
6 | April 13, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek NEWS
PHOTOS BY CITY OF JOHNS CREEK/PROVIDED Visitors at the Johns Creek International Festival in 2022 hold flags from different countries.
Dancers perform at the Johns Creek International Festival in 2022.
Alpharetta Symphony schedules
‘Organic Fanfare’ performance
ALPHARETTA, Ga. — The Alpharetta Symphony announced it will host an “Organic Fanfare” concert 8 p.m. April 21 at Alpharetta First United Methodist Church.
The program will feature three artists and a showcase of the organ by Matthew Alan Edwards, who serves as keyboardist for the Alpharetta Symphony and director of music and organist at St. Matthew’s Episcopal Church in Snellville.
Edwards will play Camille SaintSaëns’ “Symphony No. 3,” named the “Organ Symphony” for its uncommon use of the pipe organ.
Following Edwards, violist Jason Seo will perform Max Bruch’s
“Romanze” with the orchestra. Seo, 17, of Johns Creek was selected by the National Youth Orchestra of the United States of America to play at Carnegie Hall in New York City and on tour in Europe.
The concert will conclude with “Oracle,” an original piece that highlights brass instruments and high woodwinds by composer Michael Torke.
The Alpharetta Symphony is also set to host a “Twilight in Paris” concert 7:30 p.m. May 29 at Brooke Street Park.
Tickets can be purchased at alpharettasymphony.org.
— Shelby Israel
Jewish Family and Career Services launches ‘Be Well’ Atlanta initiative
DUNWOODY, Ga. — Jewish Family and Career Services received a $500,000 matching grant from the Zalik Foundation to help address the growing teen mental health needs through a new Jewish Atlanta mental health and wellness program.
The national “Be Well” initiative was developed through a collaboration of the Network of Jewish Human Services Agencies and Jewish Federation of North America. A roadmap was created to develop the program in select cities, and the Horwitz-Zusman Child & Family Center of Jewish Family and Career Services was selected to lead the initiative in Atlanta.
The funds, secured through the Atlanta Jewish Funder Collaborative led by the Atlanta Jewish Foundation, will be used to support Jewish youth
facing mental health challenges as well as those that care for them.
The initiative will focus on the needs of young adults ages 12 to 26, to help them thrive through training, consulting and mobilizing networks of care for positive youth development and overall well-being.
Funding will provide for two professionals and will support connecting the community to services. In addition, strategies will be developed to best address wait lists and increase capacity, such as expanding therapeutic models, resiliency-building programs and payment options.
For more information on how to support the “Be Well” initiative, contact Atlanta Jewish Foundation Chief Foundation Officer Jori Mendel at jmendel@jewishatlanta.org.
AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | April 13, 2023 | 7 NEWS
FILE PHOTO
Mother-daughter café brings Vietnamese flavors to Alpharetta
By DELANEY TARR delaney@appenmedia.com
ALPHARETTA, Ga. —Hanh Nguyen filled a decades-long dream when she opened July Moon Bakery and Café at the Maxwell in Alpharetta in 2022 — and she did it with her daughter by her side.
The bakery and café named in honor of Nguyen’s daughters, offers Vietnamese iced coffees, boba teas, bánh mìs and Asian pastries. She opened July Moon in 2022, but her dream stretched back much further.
Nguyen is a first-generation Vietnamese immigrant born in a Malaysian refugee camp, where she said she “should have died but didn’t.” Her mother made Vietnamese iced coffee to make a living and Nguyen often had to help.
“I used to crush ice for my mom, it’s not an easy task for a child,” Nguyen said.
After a tumultuous childhood, Nguyen, her mother and siblings ran away from her abusive father and spent two years in a homeless shelter. Nguyen said she had “humble beginnings” but eventually made it to college, and later Seattle, Washington, where she began her career in the IT industry.
“I might look polished, like I had it all together, but it’s been a long journey, a lot of sacrifices and heartaches,” Nguyen said.
Nguyen found success in the industry, working for various Fortune 500 companies. But the memories of making coffee with her mom never disappeared. Nguyen said her time in
Seattle, a coffee destination and the origin of Starbucks turned her into a “bit of a coffee snob.”
She had wanted to open a business in Seattle, but the market was oversaturated with boba and coffee offerings. It wasn’t until Nguyen moved to Alpharetta for a job promotion that she saw an opportunity to bring her
business concept to life. Her eldest daughter, 11-yearold Charlie, helped push Nguyen to pursue her dream. During a visit to a gourmet bakery years ago, Nguyen caught Charlie staring at the baristas. She told Charlie that if she wanted, she could work at a coffee shop one day.
“I’m not going to work here, I’m going to own my own bakery,” Charlie said.
Charlie’s response inspired Nguyen to pursue the café, both for herself and to inspire her daughter. Nguyen had no business ownership
See FLAVORS, Page 9
8 |
Johns Creek Herald | April 13, 2023
DELANEY TARR/APPEN MEDIA
Hanh Nguyen and her daughter, Charlie Crose work together to bring the vision of July Moon Bakery and Café, an Asian coffee shop and bakery concept to life.
I might look polished, like I had it all together, but it’s been a long journey, a lot of sacrifices and heartaches.
HANH NGUYEN, Founder
of July Moon
Flavors:
Continued from Page 8
experience, little capital and faced a long journey to creating July Moon, but she was determined to build a business from the ground up.
She also knew Charlie would be integral to July Moon’s success. It would be a mother-daughter project in every aspect. Charlie is officially a cofounder of July Moon, and Nguyen’s younger daughter Colette is “quickly becoming more instrumental” in the business by putting stickers on the cups and helping clean the bathrooms.
“(Charlie) has been in all the major meetings, like loan signing, architectural rating floor plan design,” Nguyen said.
Charlie called the meetings “boring,” but her mother said Charlie’s candor and creativity helped bring July Moon to where it is now.
Charlie helps create new drink recipes for the business, which she jots down during development. During an April 6 interview, she concocted an ombre drink with “everything boba,” mango sparkling water, mango-rose tea and strawberry-kiwi tea.
The café has a limited food menu due to its small kitchen, but Nguyen’s focus is on the drinks. She sources
coffee beans from local business Boarding Pass Coffee and gets tea from Atlanta-based business Just Add Honey. She also makes organic and gluten-free drink syrups from scratch.
Her taro tea, a popular boba drink made from a purple root vegetable, is made from actual taro rather than the powder used in many other boba shops. It’s more work to cut up and boil the vegetables, but for Nguyen it’s essential.
“It’s these little things that people don’t see,” Nguyen said.
Every aspect of the business is “highly intentional,” Nguyen said, from the accessible seating to the drinkmaking methods.
“There’s meaning behind everything I do,” Nguyen said.
She said her pellet ice machine is a reference to her childhood spent crushing ice for her mother’s Vietnamese iced coffee. The ice is the “best way to drink” Vietnamese coffee.
Nguyen carries her intention into the rest of the businesses, where she focuses on mentorship and expansion opportunities. She hosts networking events for women in business, acts as a mentor for her young employees and spotlights small businesses.
“Charlie and I wanted to launch July Moon to be a safe, fun community space for people,” Nguyen said.
AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | April 13, 2023 | 9 BUSINESSPOSTS YOUR SAFETY IS OUR TOP PRIORITY The health and safety of our customers, associates and services providers is our top priority, and we’re continuing to take extra precautions. Visit homedepot.com/hscovidsafety for more information about how we are responding to COVID-19. Home Depot local Service Providers are background checked, insured, licensed and/or registered. License or registration numbers held by or on behalf of Home Depot U.S.A., Inc. are available at homedepot.com/licensenumbers or at the Special Services Desk in The Home Depot store. State specific licensing information includes: AL 51289, 1924; AK 25084; AZ ROC252435, ROC092581; AR 0228160520; CA 602331; CT HIC.533772; DC 420214000109, 410517000372; FL CRC046858, CGC1514813; GA RBCO005730, GCCO005540; HI CT-22120; ID RCE-19683; IA C091302; LA 43960, 557308, 883162; MD 85434, 42144; MA 112785, CS-107774; MI 2101089942, 2102119069; MN BC147263; MS 22222-MC; MT 37730; NE 26085; NV 38686; NJ 13VH09277500; NM 86302; NC 31521; ND 29073; OR 95843; The Home Depot U.S.A., Inc. is a Registered General Contractor in Rhode Island and its Registration Number is 9480; SC GLG110120; TN 47781; UT 286936-5501; VA 2705-068841; WA HOMED088RH; WV WV036104; WI 1046796. ©2020 Home Depot Product Authority, LLC. All rights reserved. *production time takes approximately 6-8 weeks. HDIE20K0022A CUSTOM HOME ORGANIZATION Solutions for every room in your home Custom Design High-quality, furniture-grade product customized to your space, style, and budget. Complimentary Consultation We offer complimentary design consultations with 3D renderings Quick 1-3 Day Install* Enjoy your new, organized space in as little as 1-3 days. Affordable Financing We offer multiple financing options to make your project affordable [on a monthly basis]. HOMEDEPOT.COM/MYHOMEORGINSTALL 770-744-2034 Call or visit for your FREE IN-HOME OR VIRTUAL CONSULTATION Hello there, Our local team is based in your area. We’d like to provide you with a free in-home or virtual Custom Home Organization consultation and quote. Frank Paras Home Depot Installation Services Local Team Leader Tara
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DELANEY TARR/APPEN MEDIA
Hanh Nguyen prepares a traditional Vietnamese iced coffee at July Moon Bakery and Café April 6. The coffee is sweetened with condensed milk, and Nguyen serves it with pellet ice reminiscent of her mother’s recipes.
Summer group therapy: helping your child thrive with 4 key benefits
Brought to
you
by - Summit Counseling Center
It’s no secret that most kids love summer - with its long days, warm weather, and lack of school, summer break provides a welcome pause from the structure and routine of the academic year. For some kids, however, summer break can be a difficult time. Without the support, resources, and social exposure provided by school, they may struggle to maintain their mental health and well-being after the last school bell rings in May. Therapy groups during the summer can benefit all students, no matter
where they fall along the spectrum of mental health, by helping provide a safe and supportive environment for children to learn new skills, build healthy relationships, and address any mental health concerns they may be experiencing.
According to a 2019 study, summer programs designed for children and youth with social and emotional difficulties showed moderate evidence of effectiveness in improving social skills, self-esteem, and overall emotional well-being while decreasing anxiety, depression, and unwanted behaviors at home (National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and
Medicine. 2019. Shaping Summertime Experiences: Opportunities to Promote Healthy Development and Well-Being for Children and Youth. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press). There are several other potential benefits of therapy groups for kids during summer break, including:
1. Social support: Therapy groups can provide a sense of community and social support for children who may feel isolated or disconnected during summer break, proving particularly helpful for kids who struggle with social anxiety, shyness, or other social difficulties. Therapy groups also allow kids to receive feedback and support from their peers, which can be great for students who may struggle receiving feedback from adults or authority figures.
2. Skill-building: Many therapy groups for kids focus on teaching specific skills, such as social skills, coping strategies, or emotional regulation techniques. Not only are these skills helpful during summer break when kids may have more unstructured time and less support from school-based resources, but they are also invaluable to have once school restarts in the fall.
3. Safe environment: If your student struggles to open up at home, therapy groups can help by providing a safe and supportive space for kids to explore their thoughts, feelings, and experiences. Additionally, participating in a therapy group can help reduce the stigma associated with mental health issues, as kids can see that they are not alone in their struggles and that seeking help is a normal and healthy behavior.
4. Continuity of care: By regularly practicing skills throughout the summer, therapy groups can help children maintain the progress they made during the school year and prevent any regression that may occur during summer break.
Summit Counseling Center is offering both individual and group therapy services for Kindergarten through 12th grade students throughout the summer, providing a supportive and structured environment for children to work on their mental health goals and develop new skills and coping strategies. Selection requests for our 6-week groups close on May 12th, so register your student now at tinyurl.com/ SCCSummer23!
10 | Johns Creek Herald | April 13, 2023 Sponsored Section
Building a Parkinson’s support team
Brought to You by - Home Helpers of Alpharetta and North Atlanta Suburbs
This is Parkinson’s Awareness Month. Join us on April 22nd as we help sponsor the Parkinson’s Optimism Walk. You’ll feel the hope and support provided for this progressive disease by the Georgia Chapter of the American Parkinson Disease Association. (Visit their website at apdaparkinson.org/GA for details.)
Recent studies show Parkinson’s affects over 1,000,000 Americans, with over 90,000 new cases diagnosed annually. While there are early onset cases, the main risk factor is age - with over 90% occurring after age 60. It can be hard to diagnose and comes on slowly. When the brain cells that make the chemical dopamine stop working it impacts movement, thinking and behavior. There’s no definitive cause but aging, repeated head injuries and exposure to environmental toxins are factors. Men are twice as likely to be diagnosed, and while there may be some genetic issues it’s rare to run in families.
Tremors are a major symptom but not everyone has this. Slowness of movement, stiffness or tight muscles, balance instability, walking or gait difficulties, a decrease in arm swinging when walking, loss of smell (often months or years earlier), gastrointestinal issues, loss of facial expression, monotone or decreasing vocal strength, fatigue, insomnia, cognitive changes and depression or anxiety are all symptoms. With two or more of these, it’s time to consult your doctor about a visit to a neurologist with Parkinson’s training or a Movement Disorder Specialist.
With a diagnosis of Parkinson’s, it’s important to build a support system. While there is no cure, there are a number of treatments that can maximize your potential with this disease and not let it overwhelm your life and outlook. This includes highly individualized medications like carbidopa and levodopa, physical, occupational and speech therapy for daily lifestyle changes to maintain fitness, balance and strength building, stress reduction, good sleep habits and maintaining a healthy diet high in fruits, vegetables and unprocessed foods. To help manage this you need a team of professionals that includes your Primary Care Physician, Neurologist, a Movement Disorder Specialist, Nutritionist, Therapy providers and Psychologist.
Being a Care Partner for a loved one with Parkinson’s is a critical role. As an advocate, educating yourself, managing the daily care process and coordinating with the care team is crucial. Parkinson’s is a progressive disease and can take years to progress, so it’s just as important to care for yourself. To keep up your stamina you have to take time and get some respite and additional support.
In-home care that is skilled and knowledgeable about Parkinson’s can be the key to helping you and your loved one thrive. A professional, heart-centered and well matched caregiver from Home Helpers can help with a personalized care plan and specialized support to achieve your best possible quality of life.
We’re here to help – from six hours a day, several days a week to 24/7 and live-in care. For a free consultation contact Home Helpers of Alpharetta and North Atlanta Suburbs at (770) 681-0323.
HEALTH & WELLNESS • Sponsored Section AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | April 13, 2023 | 11
ISTOCK
Allergy season is here
Brought to you by - Wellstar North Fulton Medical Center
As spring comes, so do allergies!
If you have symptoms like congestion or sinus infections, you are not alone. Each year, more than 50 million people in the United States have allergies, according to the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America. Allergies are your body’s response to the environment. You might react to things in the air like dust or
pollen. Symptoms include coughing, sneezing, runny nose, stuffy nose, red eyes, itchy eyes and post-nasal drip. These can progress to infections if not treated.
Wellstar Ear, Nose and Throat knows every symptom and infection can impact your daily life. You can use simple tips to relieve your allergy symptoms and prevent infection.
How to relieve seasonal allergies
• Try over-the-counter medications
like antihistamines and medicated nasal spray.
• Rinse your nose. Over the counter saline sprays and sinus irrigations can help clean your nose.
• Check the weather report. Avoid outside activities on days with a high pollen count.
• Don’t invite allergens inside. Keep windows and doors shut.
• Stay on top of spring cleaning. Dust, wipe and vacuum surfaces.
• Don’t forget your four-legged
friends. Be sure to wash or brush your pets more often.
Expert care for allergies
When these tips do not work, Wellstar Ear Nose and Throat can help diagnose you. We help treat a full range of adult and pediatric allergy conditions at 1360 Upper Hembree Road in Roswell.
Call (770) 475-3361 to make an appointment today.
12 | April 13, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek HEALTH & WELLNESS • Sponsored Section
PROVIDED
COMPREHENSIVE CANCER CARE
From diagnosis to treatment and survivorship, Wellstar is ensuring the community in this area has access to expert, compassionate cancer care.
The new Wellstar North Fulton Cancer Center brings more than 12,000 additional square feet on the medical center campus dedicated exclusively to groundbreaking cancer treatments right here in the North Fulton area. Services include:
• CyberKnife radiation technology
• Physician expertise in many specialties
• Surgery, medical and radiation oncology
Find care at every step of your cancer journey here in North Fulton.
wellstar.org/northfultoncancercare
Wellstar North Fulton Cancer Center 4500 Hospital BLVD | ROSWELL (770) 410-4530
HEALTH & WELLNESS • Sponsored Section AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | April 13, 2023 | 13
Not tan? Labrador overweight? POMC might be the answer!
coverage in the popular press as the “Barbie Drug.”
Are you pale? Is your labrador overweight? Then this is the article for you! Proopiomelanocortin (POMC for short) is a remarkable hormone that your brain makes and that may unlock our ability to regulate body weight and even help us get a tan without going in the sun.
If we break apart POMC’s name, pro-“opio”-“melano”-“cortin” comes from the fact that POMC is cut apart by enzymes into three main smaller proteins. First, POMC is broken into opioid hormones that regulate pain, satiety (feeling full after eating) and response to exercise. Second, POMC is broken down into melanocyte stimulating hormones that affect skin pigmentation, sexual behavior and satiety. Third, POMC is broken down into adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), a cortisol-regulating hormone that affects blood sugar, responses to stress and the immune system.
To think like a doctor, imagine what could go wrong if any one of these proteins isn’t working due to a disease. In fact, a mutation in POMC has been linked to increased interest in food and obesity in labrador retrievers and might explain why your labrador is overweight. Many labradors have been found to have a mutation in beta-endorphin, which is one of the opioid hormones that POMC is broken down to form. Beta-endorphin is also famous as a protein that contributes to the “runner’s high” – the feeling of wellbeing that we get with exercise. Similarly, low POMC has been found to make affected humans constantly hungry.
To think like a pharmaceutical scientist, imagine the medical (or cosmetic) potential of developing medicines that affect our responses to pain, our sense of well-being, whether we feel hungry, blood sugar levels, immune system health, sex drive and how tan our skin is. Just one of these functions has incredible pharmaceutical potential. University of Arizona researchers got to work on the tanning applications of POMC in the 1980s and developed a synthetic form of melanocyte stimulating hormone (MSH) which became known as “Melanotan” (aka afamelanotide, aka Scenesse) and now is best identified as “Melanotan I.” As an aside, Melanotan II is another synthetic hormone similar to MSH, but it is not FDA approved for any use, has more sexual and satiety effects and has periodically received
Melanotan I causes the pigment producing cells in your skin – the melanocytes – to produce more melanin. Melanin is an important defense against ultraviolet radiation. The problem is that we normally make melanin in response to ultraviolet light exposure after a lot of damage is already done. Increasing melanin before sun exposure sounds very appealing. Is Melanotan I ready for the masses?
Not yet…
The package insert for Melanotan I points out that carcinogenicity studies have not been performed. These studies are often required for FDA approval. Melanotan I gained approval under special circumstances for a very specific condition called erythropoietic protoporphyria – a skin disease in which people are so sensitive to sunlight that their quality of life is severely affected. The FDA sometimes issues special approval of medications used for “Orphan” diseases when no other treatments are available and when the number of patients affected is so small that the cost of fully testing a medicine would stop it from coming to market.
We do not have enough data on Melanotan I to help us know if it is appropriate for sunless tanning. Carcinogenicity studies have not been published. Long term safety studies have not been published. Melanotan increases blood pressure, and long term effects on cardiovascular health would likely not be known for decades. Case reports of individuals who developed melanoma while using Melanotan cannot know whether Melanotan had a role in causing the melanoma because they are simply case reports and not case-controlled or placebo-controlled.
So where do things stand? Some individuals are purchasing Melanotan I and II illegally, as these chemicals are part of the steroid and tanning-bed using weightlifting community. They are purchased at great personal risk because of all the above unknowns in addition to the problems with purity and safety when illegal substances are procured. For the rest of us, the pharmaceutical companies are still hard at work. They are actively testing similar compounds to identify medicines with fewer side effects. There is reason to hope that in the future a pill may allow us to develop a tan before going on vacation and better protect ourselves from the sun. In the meantime, traditional sun safety measures are best… and our labradors will remain fat and happy!
14 | April 13, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek HEALTH & WELLNESS • Sponsored Section
Brought to You by - Brent Taylor, MD, Premiere Dermatology and Mohs Surgery of Atlanta
Why do I get so many Cavities?!
At Roswell Dental Care, we take pride in our ability to educate our patients about their oral health. One question we frequently hear from our patients, “Why do I get so many cavities? I brush my teeth every day!” We understand the frustration that comes from putting the work in to maintain your teeth and still ending up with cavities, we are here to help break those reasons down for you.
1. How deep your grooves are:
How your teeth are shaped, including the grooves of your teeth, are inherited. These grooves are too small for your toothbrush bristles to get in and clean properly. Some teeth have deeper grooves, which increases the risk of biting surface cavities. We can prevent these types by placing sealants (plastic) over the grooves of the teeth.
2. Your oral bacteria:
Did you know, you inherit the genetic layout of your oral bacteria from your mom? The types of oral bacteria can impact your oral health, including your likelihood of cavities and developing periodontal disease. Staying on a cleaning schedule with your dental hygienist will help reduce the number of bacteria you have in your mouth.
3. Your frequency of sugar intake: Your habits also play a significant role in your oral health. Your frequency of sugar intake has a direct tie into the frequency of the occurrence of cavities. The more times you consume sugar, the more opportunities for cavities to take hold.
4. Your flossing habits: Flossing removes plaque and bacteria from the sides of your teeth, so not flossing on a consistent basis increases your risk of developing cavities between your teeth.
5. Your medications: When you eat or drink anything other than water, the pH of your mouth becomes acidic. Saliva’s job is to neutralize the acidic environment. Some medications cause xerostomia (or dry mouth). If your saliva is reduced or becomes thicker, your teeth have an increased risk of developing decay, especially along the gumline. Products containing xylitol are “mouth wetters,” and xylitol prevents bacteria from adhering to tooth structure, helping to prevent the effects of a dry mouth.
The above reasons are just a few of the many complex factors that go into why cavities develop. As dental professionals, we strive to keep our patients educated in their oral hygiene. Good or bad oral hygiene plays a role in overall health, and we are here to get your oral health in excellent condition so that your overall health can be too. Drs. Hood and Remaley at Roswell Dental Care understand and customize treatment for each person. We assure you will feel confident in the solution you choose before beginning any treatment. For enhanced comfort, we offer FREE nitrous oxide. You can rest assured that your experience will be positive, relaxing, and rewarding on many levels. Give our office a call at 770.998.6736, or visit us at www. roswelldentalcare.com, to begin your journey to happy and pain-free oral healthcare!
HEALTH & WELLNESS • Sponsored Section AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | April 13, 2023 | 15 Excellence in Dentistry 1570 Old Alabama Rd • Ste 102 • Roswell, GA 30076 470.288.1152 • roswelldentalcare.com Dedicated to providing exceptional dentistry and creating beautiful, healthy smiles for over 31 years. • Crowns and Bridges in a few days • Porcelain Veneers • Tooth Colored Composite Fillings • Teeth Whitening- no sensitivity • Oral Cancer Screenings on all patients • Teeth Cleanings, Digital X-Rays and Comprehensive Oral Exams on all new patients • Cosmetic Smile Makeovers and Full Mouth Reconstruction (Complimentary Consultation) • Occlusal Guards and Bite Adjustments • Snore Guards and Sleep Apnea Analysis • Digital X-Rays (90% less radiation) and Intra-Oral Photos • Digitally Scanned Dental ImpressionsNo more gooey impressions! • Electronic Records • Accept and File all Major Insurances • Implants • Root Canals • Extractions • Spa-like Relaxing Atmosphere Our services include: Same day appointments available! FREE Digital X-Rays $100 Value New patients only. • Custom Baked Cookies Daily • FREE Nitrous Oxide and Oral Conscious Sedation • Facial Aesthetic Enhancements including BOTOX and Dermal Fillers Dr. David Remaley Dr. Destinee Hood Thank You for Voting US Best for 8 Years in a Row! Best Of North Atlanta 2015 Presented By Best Of North Atlanta 2016 Presented By WINNER Best Of North Atlanta 2017 Presented By WINNER Best Of North Atlanta 2018 Presented By WINNER Best Of North Atlanta 2019 Presented By Best Of North Atlanta 2020 Presented By WINNER Best Of North Atlanta 2021 Presented By WINNER Best Of North Atlanta 2022 Presented By WINNER
Brought to You by - Dr. Destinee Hood, Roswell Dental Care
PROVIDED
Budget:
Continued from Page 1
al 40-day bill signing period, and Kemp has already signed a few bills, including a controversial measure banning most gender-affirming care for minors.
Kemp also pressed senators to sign off on renewing a tax break for big economic development projects, threatening to call lawmakers back for a special session if they didn’t. The current perk is set to end this summer.
The Senate gave the measure final approval with a 43-to-6 vote shortly before midnight, extending the tax break to 2026.
“There’s only been 18 of them in the history of Georgia. These are used very selectively,” said Sen. Chuck Hufstetler, a Rome Republican who chairs the Senate Finance Committee and who is the bill’s sponsor. “About 75 percent of them are outside the Atlanta metro area that have been done. It’s brought in thousands and thousands of jobs.”
School voucher push fails
Kemp had less luck this year with a push to expand Georgia’s school voucher program. That measure fell short of votes in the House in what proved to be one of the more dramatic votes of the 2023 legislative session.
The governor and the state’s lead budget writers framed the process of developing next year’s spending plan as an exercise in restraint in anticipation of a potential economic downturn. Revenues will also be needed to fund future priorities, such as the gradual income tax rate reduction plan passed last year that is set to start in 2024.
State revenues have been on an upswing in recent years, but economists predict a slowdown in tax collections and that has caused budget hawks to approach new spending with caution. But rising revenues have also turned up the pressure to boost funding for state services.
“I’d like to note that this is no easy task to balance the revenue at hand with the needs statewide. With more money, we certainly could have done more things, and I would have liked that,” House Appropriations Chairman Matt Hatchett said.
When asked about the governor’s comment about “significant holes” in the budget, House Speaker Jon Burns told reporters there are always some funding plans that come up short. Lawmakers typically address the gaps when they return in January when they amend the budget.
“I think we have a very comprehensive budget, but I’m sure there’s some issues that maybe we could have addressed in different ways that may need to be backfilled some in the future,” Burns said.
Teachers will get pay bump
The new budget, which will take effect in July, provides a $6,000 pay raise for some state law enforcement and a $2,000 salary bump for teachers and other state employees, and funds the state’s HOPE scholarship at 100 percent.
The increase for educators is part of a multiyear effort to drive up those salaries and will put the average teacher salary in Georgia to $61,000, according to Hatchett. The budget also includes a $1,000 supplement for school custodians.
The final spending plan softened some of the cuts made in the Senate, but the reductions remained, including a $1.4 million cut to Georgia Public Broadcasting and $66 million cut to the University System of Georgia.
The top legislative budget writers said the Board of Regents has about $500 million in reserves to help absorb the cut, and Senate Appropriations Chair Blake Tillery told senators GPB’s news competitors have long complained about the state subsidy.
“I think that’s actually a very valid point: Why are we picking winners and losers?” Tillery said this session.
Lawmakers also set aside $9.4 million to pay for 500 people to come off the wait list for services for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. That’s short of the 2,400 a Senate panel recommended last year.
But this year’s budget process also appeared to become tied up with tensions between the House and Senate. Hatchett received a standing ovation when he kicked off his late-night budget presentation with this declaration: “This House does not play politics with the budget.”
Some Democratic priorities – such as $6.3 million for free breakfast and lunch for school children – were also restored after being stripped out in the Senate.
“Kids aren’t able to learn if they’re hungry,” Hatchett said to cheers from some lawmakers. “This funding will provide more than 17 million meals at no cost to low-income students in Georgia public schools. Seventeen million meals.”
16 | April 13, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek NEWS
This story comes to Appen Media through a partnership with Georgia Recorder, a nonprofit newsroom covering statewide issues.
JILL NOLIN/GEORGIA RECORDER Gov. Brian Kemp speaks to reporters after signing the amended fiscal year 2023 budget in early March.
PRESERVING THE PAST
A centenarian’s story of World War II (Part 2)
In Part 1 of Centenarian Henry (Hank) Cockerill’s story, we told of his experiences in France following the bloody invasion of Normandy in June 1944 when Allied forces marched across France toward Germany.
Hank’s exhausted battalion met up with the 7th Armored Division about Dec. 1 in Malmedy, Belgium, in the Ardennes Forest. After five days, Hank’s battalion went south about 16 miles to the town of St. Vith for a long overdue break.
Germany was on its last legs, or so thought Allied commanders, and no one expected any major offensives. American entertainers such as Marlene Dietrich and a group of baseball players led by Mel Ott of the New York Giants traveled to the Ardennes to entertain the troops. The Allies, including 500,000 Americans, were lightly defended, spread out along the 75-mile-long forest, short of supplies, living in deep snow and bitter cold.
Battle of the Bulge
Hank tells a unique story about his experience. He became friends with the battalion cook, Frenchie. One day Frenchie suggested they take a hike. He said, “Let’s take our guns in case we see a deer and I will cook it.” They saw a deer across a valley about a mile east of St. Vith, then they heard a rumble. Hank says “I recognized Rommel’s old battalion of Tiger tanks with 81 caliber canons that could be lowered to shoot at ground forces. Two hundred tanks, all painted white, had been brought in from the Russian front. We weren’t prepared. We had settled down for the winter.”
Early on Dec. 16, an estimated 200,000 German troops with 800,000 in reserve and nearly 1,000 tanks launched a surprise attack along 50 miles of the forest.
At the end of the first day, the Germans broke through the American lines and captured key crossroads creating the “bulge” that gave the battle its name. Everything happened so quickly that troops often did not know what was happening nearby.
“Having to retreat knocked hell out of our morale. It was the breakthrough that no one expected,” says Hank. “That’s when Ike said ‘turn around and fight’ and we did.”
The Americans were quick to provide reinforcements. Supreme Allied Commander Gen. Dwight Eisenhower rushed reinforcements to the bulge to prevent
Hank Cockerill will celebrate his 100th birthday in May 2023. He joined the Army as a young man and had assignments in Europe during WWII, including Normandy following the D-Day invasion, the Battle of the Bulge and the Battle of Remagen. After the war, Hank went on to a distinguished career with The CocaCola Company, retiring in 1993 after 45 years. (March 2023)
further penetration by the Germans. Gen. George Patton counterattacked with his Third Army. The Germans were ultimately thwarted and permanently weakened.
“I went back to find my pup tent,” says Hank. “It was full of bullet holes.”
The Battle of the Bulge was the largest and bloodiest single battle fought by the U.S. in WW II, with more than 19,000 killed. Fierce battles took place in Malmedy and St. Vith. In the Malmedy Massacre, 84 American soldiers were captured and executed by the Waffen-SS in a farmer’s field. St. Vith was a priority target due to its excellent road network. The Americans successfully defended the town, thereby slowing the German advance. Hank remained in the Ardennes until the middle of January.
Battle of Remagen
As German forces retreated, they destroyed all the bridges crossing the Rhine River except one, the Ludendorff Bridge in the town of Remagen. The bridge was mined but it had not exploded.
Hank says “Our job was to disarm the explosives so our tanks could cross. One guy took the right side of the bridge and I took the left. We climbed on the girders and came across satchels full of dynamite. The wiring was different from ours and the wires were different colors.
I had a feeling that the red wire was the one to cut. On the count of three I cut it and no explosion.”
The two soldiers crawled toward
satchels at the end of the bridge, but they were exposed to sharpshooters.
“We crawled back thinking we would disarm the explosives at night,” Hank says.
Just then a jeep drove up with a general on board. It turned out to be General Patton. He said, “What’s the delay?”
Hank replied, “We are going to remove the explosives tonight because of the sharpshooters.”
Patton said “Son, this is a war. People die. I want to cross the Rhine. Get back on the bridge.”
The men climbed back on the bridge, somehow avoided the sharpshooters, disarmed the explosives and saved the bridge from destruction.
Hank is a very humble man according to his son Gary.
“Dad has not spoken much about the war. He doesn’t volunteer information, but he will respond if people are really interested,” Gary says.
After separation from the Army in December 1945, Hank’s first job was in Detroit selling Esquire calendars and playing cards.
“The challenge of sales gave me a thrill,” he remembers. He also owned a
seasonal restaurant, Hank’s Hi-Da-Way, a Lake Huron favorite. He eventually realized he could not simultaneously work at a full-time sales job, so he sold the restaurant.
In December 1948, Hank obtained a job with The Coca-Cola Company selling Coke machines to outdoor movie theaters which were proliferating all over Michigan. He climbed the corporate ladder quickly thanks to his strong entrepreneurial spirit: district manager in Detroit, regional manager in Cleveland, senior regional manager in Baltimore. He was sent to Atlanta to create a sales team targeting the top 100 food chains in America. Hank’s team became the lead food service industry sales team for Coca-Cola. He worked 45 years at Coca-Cola, retiring to his home in Sandy Springs in 1993 as senior vice president, director National Accounts. He will celebrate his 100th birthday in May.
Bob is director emeritus of the Milton Historical Society and a Member of the City of Alpharetta Historic Preservation Commission. You can email him at bobmey@bellsouth.net. Bob welcomes suggestions for future columns.
AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | April 13, 2023 | 17 OPINION
BOB MEYERS Columnist
BOB MEYERS/PROVIDED
Discovering the brilliance of pink lady’s slippers
Every woodland walk or hike gives the observer an opportunity to view the seasonal transitions associated with the changing temperature, tree leaf cover and sunlight. My favorite spot for a daily walk is in the 150-acre wooded lot behind my house in Milton. Last year’s mid-April walk revealed an amazing discovery! Not only are these Milton woods peppered with groves of native azaleas but also rare and protected Pink Lady’s Slippers. The first discovery revealed a handful of pink lady’s slippers, but as the April sun warmed the air and soil and the day length increased, more and more pink lady’s slippers emerged from their winter dormancy. By the end of April, my walking partner and I counted over 150 flowering plants!
Pink lady’s slippers are one of the most visually appealing of the many Georgia spring wildflowers. They
are a native orchid species with one large pink, showy flower per plant. They are rare and protected by the Georgia Wildflower Preservation Act of 1973. Do not develop an urge to transplant one into your garden or pick the flowers, as it is illegal, and transplanting is almost always unsuccessful. What contributes to their rarity is destruction of their habitats, growth requirements and a seven-year reproductive cycle from seed to flowering. Over the last decade the metro Atlanta population has increased by almost a million people, creating a continuing need for new office buildings, homes and shopping areas and thus reducing the forest environment for lady’s slippers and other native plants and animals to thrive.
In February 2022, the Georgia Department of Transportation began a project to add lanes and a new exit/entry ramp onto Georgia 400 north of exit 11, Windward Parkway. During an environmental assessment, the Department found a stand of close to 1000 pink lady’s slippers in the path of
About the Author
new construction. As required by law, it was determined the pink lady’s slippers needed to be saved and relocated. A team from the Department of Natural Resources and members of the Georgia Botanical Society attempted the difficult and meticulous task of digging up each individual plant along with its allimportant surrounding soil.
Pink lady’s slippers have a very poor transplant survival rate since they have a symbiotic relationship with a specific soil fungus. Without this fungus in the soil, they die. Even with the expertise of the Georgia Botanical Society and transporting the pink lady’s slippers to an area where the soil fungus was present, the survival rate was 70% with declining survival rates expected over time.
Scientists are learning more each year about the network of interconnections among soil organisms and the types of plants that thrive in our environment. This spring, take a walk in the woods, closely observe the flora and fauna and you will be amazed at what you will find and learn about the north Georgia woodlands. Remember to leave the environment intact for the next visitor and for future generations.
Happy gardening!
North Fulton Master Gardeners, Inc. is a Georgia nonprofit 501(c) (3) organization whose purpose is to educate its members and the public in the areas of horticulture and ecology in order to promote and foster community enrichment. Master Gardener Volunteers are trained and certified by The University of Georgia Cooperative Extension. Learn more at nfmg.net.
This week’s “Garden Buzz” guest columnist is Carole MacMullan, a Master Gardener since 2012. Carole describes herself as a born biologist. Since childhood, she loved to explore the out-of-doors and gardening with her mother. When she entered college, she selected biology as her major and made teaching high school biology her career for 35 years. After retirement in 2008, she had three goals: to move from Pittsburgh to Atlanta to be near her daughter and granddaughter, to volunteer, and to become a Master Gardener. Shortly after moving, she became involved with the philanthropic mission of the Assistance League of Atlanta (ALA) and in 2012, completed the Master Gardener program and joined the North Fulton Master Gardeners (NFMG) and the Milton Garden Club. Carole uses her teaching skills to create a variety of presentations on gardening topics for the NFMG Lecture Series and Speakers Bureau.
For more information
•“Plant Lovers Dig in, Save Pink Lady’s Slippers,” Atlanta Journal Constitution, December 10, 2022, page G-1
•Favorite Wildflower Walks in Georgia, Hugh Nourse and Carol Nourse, The University of Georgia Press, 2007, ISBN-13: 978-0-8203-2841-6
•North Fulton Master Gardenershttps://www.nfmg.net/
•To learn more about Spring Wildflowers, visit the NFMG YouTube channel (https://youtu.be/ sw4cdG3OoOA)
18 | April 13, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek OPINION GARDEN BUZZ
CAROLE MACMULLAN
Guest Columnist
PROVIDED
Pink Lady’s Slipper on a wooded property in Milton, Georgia
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AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek | Johns Creek Herald | April 13, 2023 | 23
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24 | April 13, 2023 | Johns Creek Herald | AppenMedia.com/Johns_Creek