Milton Senior Center hosts Alzheimer’s talk
By AMBER PERRY amber@appenmedia.com
MILTON, Ga. — In an effort to bring awareness to Alzheimer’s, the Milton Senior Center hosted an educational session on the disease June 13.
Richard Nailling, a volunteer with the Alzheimer's Association of Georgia, described 10 warning signs of the progressive disease to a small group, many older in age.
Alongside a video with medical experts and those living with Alzheimer’s, Nailling used anecdotes from his own life. Both his parents suffered from Alzheimer’s, and his oldest sister is beginning to show signs.
“That's why I'm here,” Nailling said. “That's why I do this.”
June is Alzheimer’s and Brain Awareness Month. According to the Alzheimer’s Association, nearly six million people are affected by Alzheimer’s, the most common form of dementia.
There’s a lot of misconceptions and stigma attached to the disease, Nailling said, which prevent people from seeking help.
“If we can find a cure, or at least some way to put it off, or make it more bearable — that's what we're hoping for at the Alzheimer's Association,” Nailling said.
Individuals may experience one or multiple warning signs to varying degrees, Nailling said, but they don’t have to experience them all to have a concern. Early detection allows planning for the future, access to treatments for symptoms and participation in clinical studies, he said.
If a loved one is experiencing symptoms, Nailing said the first step is
New webpage tracks history of Milton area
MILTON, Ga. — While the City of Milton was incorporated in 2006, the encompassing area has a rich, deep history that stretches many centuries before then.
In cooperation with Friends at the Milton Historical Society, Milton has created a new "History of Milton" webpage at miltonga.gov/residents/history.
The webpage offers a broad overview that covers a long period of time, from when the Cherokee called the region home through the present-day. It includes context on the creation and demise of the former Milton County, how the development of roads like Ga. 9 and Ga. 400 impacted the region, as well as the creation and governing approach of the City of Milton.
Major elements of this timeline help explain what Milton is today, including its treasured rural heritage.
10 warning signs of Alzheimer’s
Memory loss that disrupts daily life
Challenges in planning or solving problems
Difficulty completing familiar tasks
• Confusion with time or place
• Trouble understanding visual images and spatial relationships
• New problems with words in speaking or writing
• Misplacing things and losing the ability to retrace steps
to assess the situation and then have a conversation.
“Basically, it's a long journey,” Nailling said. “It doesn't just happen overnight … but you have to be persistent in trying to get them to do something about it.”
• Decreased or poor judgment
Withdrawal from work or social activities
Changes in mood or personality
The webpage continues a broad partnership between the city and the nonprofit Milton Historical Society to help relate the area’s history and provide those who live in Milton a more profound level of understanding and connection with the community.
This includes monthly historythemed posts on the City of Milton’s Facebook page. Plus, the city's GIS team has worked with the Historical Society to produce an interactive map as well as another page showcasing cemeteries.
To learn more about the Milton area's history and to take part in telling its stories, visit miltonhistoricalsociety-georgia.org to learn more about the Milton Historical Society.
June 22, 2023 | AppenMedia. com | An Appen Media Group Publication | 50¢ | Volume 18 , No. 25
AMBER PERRY/APPEN MEDIA
Richard Nailling, volunteer with the Alzheimer’s Association, talks about the 10 warning signs of the disease at the Milton Senior Center June 13.
Basically, it’s a long journey. It doesn’t happen overnight...
RICHARD NAILLING Volunteer, Alzheimer’s Association of Georgia
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Youth surrenders to authorities in North Point carnival shooting
ALPHARETTA, Ga. — The Alpharetta Police Department has arrested a juvenile suspect in a shooting at the North Point Mall Carnival that left two women injured June 7.
The City Public Safety Department said the suspect turned himself in to police June 9. He is facing charges of second-degree cruelty to children, possession of a firearm during
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Suspects from previous cases identified in Walmart theft
MILTON, Ga. — A loss prevention officer at the Windward Parkway Walmart reported to police June 11 that a theft that occurred the month before was perpetrated by two suspects identified from previous cases.
They stole several video game consoles and speakers, the officer said, totaling more than $2,500.
From photographs, police described one suspect as a White male with a thin build and tattoos on both arms, around 25 to 35 years old. The second was a Black male with a gray beard and no tattoos, between 40 and 60 years old. Both wore baseball caps, blocking their faces from view.
In video footage, the officer saw the suspects conceal the merchandise in boxes, then scan the boxes. He explained that the card number listed in the system was also found at a Walmart in Dunwoody, belonging to one of the identified suspects.
commission of a felony, two counts of reckless conduct, possession of a firearm by a person under the age of 18 and tampering with evidence.
The suspect’s identity is being withheld due to his age.
Officials said they think the shooting was an accident, and the suspect has known relationships with the two young adult victims.
The officer believed the suspects were part of a group with a history of using vehicles in thefts, then leaving them at random locations so police wouldn’t be able to locate them.
The officer said Walmart wanted to press charges.
Penske rental manager reports stolen box truck
MILTON, Ga. — The manager of Penske Truck Rentals on Cross Pointe Way in Duluth reported June 6 that a man had not returned a truck he had rented the month before.
The manager said the suspect rented the $45,000 white 2021 GMC box truck on May 6 with a return date scheduled for May 18. The manager sent a letter to the suspect at an Alpharetta address, but the vehicle was never returned. It had an Indiana plate.
The manager said Penske wanted to press charges on the suspect for theft. A warrant for the suspect would be entered at a later date, the police report said.
Man receives $163 bill for fake Verizon account
MILTON, Ga. — A Milton man reported to police June 6 that someone had opened an account with Verizon in his name, and he later received a $163
Detectives were unable to locate the suspect at the scene but found a handgun while canvassing the area. The female victims were transported to an area hospital.
Public Safety officials consider the incident to be isolated, and there is no threat to Alpharetta residents and visitors.
— Shelby Israel
bill.
The bill was addressed to him, the police report said, however it had an address that doesn’t exist. The victim said he contacted Verizon to advise them of the fraud and have them cancel the account and phone line, but he needed a police report to have the fraudulent account shut down.
The victim declined pressing charges. Police advised him to keep an eye on his other Verizon account to ensure no fraudulent activity occurs.
Police seek suspect in gas station shooting
ALPHARETTA, Ga. — The Alpharetta Police Department is searching for a suspect involved in an early morning shooting that left a Cumming man injured June 14.
Officers reported responding to an armed robbery call around 3 a.m. at the QuikTrip at 3190 Old Milton Parkway. Callers said a man, who was parked near the front right entrance of the gas station, had been shot several times.
A witness at the scene said he saw a male in camouflage pants fire seven to eight rounds with a pistol at the victim and then flee to the right of the store.
The victim was transported to Wellstar North Fulton Hospital.
The investigation remains ongoing.
2 | June 22, 2023 | Milton Herald | AppenMedia.com/Milton PUBLIC SAFETY
Honored as a newspaper of General Excellence 2018 2022
Roswell High School unveils wall of history
ROSWELL, Ga. — Roswell High School is celebrating 185 years of education history with a recently unveiled history wall in the school atrium.
The project, “A Flight Through Hornet History” was produced in collaboration with the Roswell Historical Society. It celebrates 185 years of education over three campuses and six schoolhouses.
“The history wall coming to fruition
means a great deal to me, it is a huge piece of the puzzle,” Roswell High School Principal LaToya Miley said. “I do believe it is onward and upward.
Miley said the visual map of the school’s history will help students connect to history and traditions at their “second home.”
Brand developer and graphic artist Pam Nitzken designed the piece, documenting Roswell High School’s
origin as a two-room cabin in October 1838. The school for elementary and high school children, located on what is now Mimosa Boulevard, was called The Academy and eventually Roswell School.
When the city was annexed into Fulton County in 1932, the Roswell School became part of the Fulton County School System. In 1954, the elementary and high school students
were physically separated when Roswell High School moved to its second campus on Alpharetta Street.
In 1990, Roswell High School moved to its third and current campus on King Road. The visual piece exhibiting over 100 years of history is on permanent display in the school’s atrium.
Roswell High School representatives said the school is planning a fall event where the public can visit the art piece.
North Fulton Community Charities welcomes two new board members
ROSWELL, Ga. — North Fulton Community Charities announced two new board members and a roster of new officers for the 2024 fiscal year on May 17.
The nonprofit offers emergency financial assistance, case management, education, clothing assistance and seasonal assistance to communities across North Fulton County. The organization also operates a food pantry and a thrift store. It serves thousands of residents every year.
Konda Pollard, senior vice president of private wealth at Synovus, and Barbara Blevens, vice president of talent acquisition at LexisNexis Risk Solutions, were named to the nonprofit’s Board of Directors.
Pollard has over 25 years of experience in private banking and private wealth management, with multiple awards in private wealth
direction and women in wealth banking. Blevens has more than 20 years of experience as a human resource professional.
The board also elected Mike Hampton, retired chief administrative officer at Choate Construction as president; Ted Schwartz, a senior partner at Carter Hill Advisors as vice
president; chief financial officer at DataScan Matt Powell as treasurer and CEO of Edge Solutions Julie Haley as secretary.
“As we mark North Fulton Community Charities’ 40th anniversary this year, the board and I look forward to working together to ensure that NFCC is meeting the growing needs of the community and is providing opportunities for all members of our community to thrive,” Executive Director Sandy Holiday said.
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AppenMedia.com/Milton | Milton Herald | June 22, 2023 | 3 NEWS Your Milton Neighbors & Real Estate Experts Helping you find your place in Greater Atlanta M 678.618.0398 | O 404.668.6621 brad@atlantahomeproperty.com bradpoolegroup.com | bradpoolegroup Brad Poole Group is a team of real estate agents affiliated with Compass, a licensed real estate broker and abides by Equal Housing Opportunity laws. All material presented herein is intended for informational purposes only. Information is compiled from sources deemed reliable but is subject to errors, omissions, changes in price, condition, sale, or withdrawal without notice. This is not intended to solicit property already listed. Photos may be virtually staged or digitally enhanced and may not reflect actual property conditions.
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Fulton County property owners to receive Notices of Assessment
ATLANTA — Property owners in Fulton County will soon receive their 2023 Notices of Assessment.
As required by Georgia law, every property receives an annual Notice of Assessment, which must reflect fair market value. Property owners should be prepared to see increased values reflected on their 2023 Notices of Assessment.
The county mailed the notices June 9. However, they can be accessed online at fultonassessor. org.
The Fulton County government says property owners are advised to carefully review their notice as soon as possible, and are recommended
to appeal their notice of assessment if they do not believe it reflects fair market value.
Appeals to be filed online at fultonassessor.org, by mail or dropped off at the Board of Assessors Office. The appeals deadline for most property owners is July 24, unless another date is specifically printed on the notice of assessment.
The government says many homeowners receive tax relief through floating homestead exemptions.
Properties in the county with at least a basic homestead exemption in place also benefit from at least two “floating” homestead exemptions.
These exemptions are designed to insulate homeowners from rapid increases in value, and cap the annual increase in taxable value at around 3 percent per year or the Consumer Price Index, whichever is lower.
Homeowners who do not currently have a homestead exemption in place can apply by April 1 of each year. Any homestead exemption applications submitted at this time will be valid for the 2024 tax year.
For more information about 2023 Notices of Assessment, homestead exemptions and appeals, property owners can visit www.fultonassessor. org or call 404-612-6440.
Appen Media staff honored by Georgia Press Association
ALPHARETTA, Ga. — Appen Media staff won multiple division titles in the Georgia Press Association’s 2023 Better Newspaper Contest at the Jekyll Island Club Hotel June 9.
The 136th annual competition recognizes state journalists for outstanding achievement in newspaper reporting. Appen Media staff won second place in general excellence and page one, lifestyle and local news coverage in the F Division for weekly papers with a circulation of 15,000 or
greater.
Company staff also scored third place in the lifestyle category, as well as breaking and local news coverage.
Appen Media reporter Delaney Tarr was awarded first place in the division’s feature writing category, and Amber Perry received the third-place title.
Alex Popp was awarded first place for best news photograph, and Perry won second place.
Former reporters Chamian Cruz
ESTATE
SALE
and Jake Drukman were recognized as the top two winners of the division’s business writing category.
Publisher and CEO Hans Appen won first place in serious columns, and columnist Bob Myers was awarded the second-place title. Columnist Steve Hudson also won second place for best lifestyle or feature column. Managing Editor Pat Fox took the third place prize for best humorous column.
— Shelby Israel
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4 | June 22, 2023 | Milton Herald | AppenMedia.com/Milton NEWS Then imagine the number of other readers that noticed it too! Advertise your products and services in our newspapers and get noticed by our 262,500 readers every week in North Atlanta.* CONTACT YOUR MEDIA REPRESENTATIVE TODAY! 770-442-3278 Did this ad
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AppenMedia.com/Milton | Milton Herald | June 22, 2023 | 5
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Northern District lists newest Eagle Scouts
The Northern Ridge Boy Scout District (cities of Roswell, Alpharetta, John’s Creek, Milton) has announced its newest Eagle Scouts, who completed their Eagle Board of Review on April 27 at Johns Creek Presbyterian Church.
Top row, from left:
Evan Self, Troop 51, sponsored by American Legion Post 201, whose project was the design and construction of a bench, rebuilding thee existing benches, and rebuilding and painting a set of bleachers for the Wexford Neighborhood HOA.
Aarnav Shankar, of Troop 2000, sponsored by Johns Creek Presbyterian Church whose project was the design and construction of two life jacket loaner stations, awareness information boards about life jacket safety at Old Federal Campground and Bolding Mill Campground at Lake Lanier.
Dominic DeLuca, of Troop 143, sponsored by John’s Creek United Methodist Church, whose project was the design and construction two garden beds after leveling the ground for Christ the Sheppard Lutheran Church.
Shaktik Bhattacharyya, of Troop 3143, sponsored by John’s Creek United Methodist Church, whose project was the design and construction of two benches and the painting of a border fence for the Children's Development Academy of Roswell
Reece Hannah, of Troop 431, sponsored by Roswell United Methodist Church, whose project was the installation of a 100’ French drain with seven catch basins, outside the front doors of Roswell North Elementary School. Reece also removed dead plants and bushes and relandscaped with flowery bushes and river rock.
Patrick Flood, Troop 87, sponsored by Roswell Presbyterian Church,
whose project was the renovation and restoration of the front landscape area, by installing two concrete footings for two benches he constructed, dug out several dead bushes, weeded the area and then mulched the area for Masonic Temple at Roswell.
Front row, from left:
Kayden Pham, of Troop 226, sponsored by Bridge to Grace Church, whose project was the design and construction of a kiosk to hold a map of the property for the Holy Vietnamese Martyr's Church
Michael Wilson, Troop 69, sponsored by Alpharetta First United Methodist Church, whose project was repairing a fence that covers a cooling tower outside of Alpharetta First United Methodist Church, as well as replacing the 6-foot fence with an 8-foot fence.
Christopher Slemmer, of Troop 356, sponsored by Fellowship Christian School, whose project was the design and construction of four planter boxes for Roswell High School.
Henry Brown, of Troop 3000, sponsored by Birmingham United Methodist Church, whose project was designing and constructing a 10'x7'6" garden shed for the Milton High School Garden Club.
William Harrison, Troop 51, sponsored by American Legion Post 201, whose project was the design and construction of six wooden benches for the Children’s Development Academy of Roswell.
Aiden Clark, of Troop 3000, sponsored by Birmingham United Methodist Church, whose project was design and construction of a pergola and one accompanying bench and filling the area under the pergola with gravel for the Lion Heart School at The Cottage.
6 | June 22, 2023 | Milton Herald | AppenMedia.com/Milton COMMUNITY
AppenMedia.com/Milton | Milton Herald | June 22, 2023 | 7
8 | Milton Herald | June 22, 2023
Talk of the Table takes guests on wines of the world journey
By SHELBY ISRAEL shelby@appenmedia.com
FORSYTH COUNTY, Ga. — In a cozy shop in The Collection at Forsyth, Amy Moreau invites guests to travel from Metro Atlanta to vineyards abroad with a unique repertoire of wine and a friendly experience.
While Moreau was doubtful about starting a business immediately following the Great Recession, she identified the need for a wine experience that is elevated and accessible to local residents and opened Talk of the Table in 2013.
“I was a stay-at-home mom for a very, very long time and went through a divorce, and during that process, knew that I was going to have to start working full time again,” Moreau said. “I had little kids, and I needed to be able to find something that was close by that I could manage my schedule.”
Moreau, who previously operated a small catering business, said she had liked wine before opening her shop, but it was a trip to a wine bar and a cheese shop in California that inspired her to conceive Talk of the Table.
A place like no other
Moreau’s boutique sells roughly 300 different wines, many sourced through distributors from small wineries. She said one of the shop’s core principles is offering customers a variety not available at other major retailers like Costco and Total Wine.
“There are so many wine producers out there, whether it’s in the United States or anywhere else, that make amazing wines that are not super expensive that
don’t get a lot of representation,” Moreau said. “And the reason they don’t get a lot of representation is because they’re small, but I wanted to make a commitment that I was going to taste every single wine that I put in my store.”
Daily at 1 p.m., Talk of the Table hosts Flights out Front, a sampler of four wines. Themed, educational tastings are Fridays at 7 p.m. and Saturdays at 4 and 5:30 p.m.
“[Educational tastings are] where you come in, you taste through the wine, somebody leads the tasting, we talk about the grapes and how they’re grown and how they’re harvested and any interesting winemaking techniques that are used to make the wine,” Moreau said.
Tucked away in the back of the boutique is a tasting room with a table that seats 12 and a wall made of multicolored wine bottles. Here, customers can socialize and learn more about the wine they taste.
The shop also sells cheeses to pair with wines, salami, herbed almonds, gift bags and accessories, such as corkscrews and decorative stoppers.
“I wanted to make sure that when you came in to Talk of the Table … whether you knew nothing about wine, or whether you had incredibly high preferences about wine, that we approached you in the same way, and we could meet you at your level of knowledge about wine,” Moreau said.
While many customers enjoy tasting in the boutique, Moreau also provides special event services; custom gift baskets; a wine club for customers to
See WINE, Page 9
I wanted to make sure that when you came in to Talk of the Table…we could meet you at your level of knowledge about wine.
AMY MOREAU, founder, Talk of the Table
AMY MOREAU/PROVIDED
Owner Amy Moreau opened Talk of the Table, a wine and cheese boutique on Peachtree Parkway, in 2013. A trip to California inspired Moreau to invent a retailer that offers an immersive and accepting wine experience in Forsyth County.
Wine:
Continued from Page 8
sample new blends each month; and international trips to the vineyards from which the wines originated.
“Part of the mission of the store from the very beginning was to have a wine club,” Moreau said. “That community has become just an amazing group of people that are very, very, very connected.”
Recently, Moreau traveled to Spain to visit Casa Rojo Bodega y Viñedos and Yllera Bodegas y Viñedos, whose products are on her shelves.
A taste of business
When Moreau decided to pursue her own business in 2010, she attended formal classes to learn more about the specifics of wine. She said she is studying for the Certified Specialist of Wine Exam offered by the Society of Wine Educators, a nonprofit that recognizes experts of the beverage.
Moreau said she also learns from experience. Trips to foreign vineyards and frequent visits from winery representatives allow her to disseminate what she has learned to customers.
She also said Forsyth County has been helpful in accommodating code changes. As a retail location, she said she was originally unable to allow tastings.
That changed in 2012 when the code was revised to allow customer samplings under her packaged beer and wine license.
With her current licensure under the county and the Department of Agriculture, Moreau is allowed to offer tastings and food that is already cooked. Now, she is asking the County Commission to allow her to sell wine by the glass in addition to food.
Celebrating her 10th year of business, Moreau said running Talk of the Table has broadened her palate and appreciation of wine. In the beginning, she said she focused more on domestic wines, but now the shop has ventured into selections from Slovenia, Croatia, Lebanon, Hungary and Israel.
“Wine has been part of our history for thousands of years, and what I have learned is that it is not only an agricultural product, but part of our history in terms of food and medicine and culture,” Moreau said. “I have an immense appreciation for people that have continued to carry on that legacy.”
With a recent franchising underway, Moreau will open her second location in Sugar Hill in the coming weeks, where she hopes to continue her easygoing approach to the world of wine.
Talk of the Table is open MondaySaturday noon-7 p.m. and Sundays noon5 p.m. in Suite 218 at 410 Peachtree Parkway.
Tucker
AppenMedia.com/Milton | Milton Herald | June 22, 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
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Talk of the Table sells a variety of curated wines from small domestic and foreign vineyards June 13. Owner Amy Moreau said red blends are a best-seller at the shop, which offers special tasting events, custom gift baskets and a wine club.
Men have emotion regulation needs, too
As a male therapist, I’m constantly surprised by my own hesitancy to ask for help. I know the benefits of regulating my emotions and opening up to someone I trust, but I also know the challenges men face when it comes to seeking therapy. Many men have grown up under pressure to suppress emotions and maintain a tough exterior. Be vulnerable? Not today! Unfortunately, this leads many men to suppress valid thoughts and emotions, missing out on greater satisfaction in our work, relationships, and life.
Here are some helpful strategies to regulate emotions:
1. Develop emotional awareness. Recognize tense shoulders, shaky legs, and tiredness as your emotions giving you a heads up. Next, identify your main emotional triggers, like work stress or financial problems, to know why your body is sounding an alarm.
2. Once aware, learn strategies to regulate the emotion. In the work I do with men, we process what the emotional alarms communicate and determine effective responses. Men tell me they feel more empowered and less stress when they can observe the anger or fear start in then body, and then check the facts and choose their response. Responding effectively versus just reacting is both tough and doable.
3. Create healthy coping mechanisms. It’s amazing the benefits I see in my office from straightforward actions like addressing sleep issues, drinking water, eating well, and exercising. In fact, regular exercise has been shown to be one of the most effective ways to reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood in men.
I know it takes courage to seek help, and the benefits of improved mental health and wellbeing are well worth it. Learn more about Summit and schedule an appointment by visiting www.summitcounseling.org.
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In the last month, two airline pilots have come to see me for suspicious spots that proved to be invasive malignant melanomas. As an instrument-rated recreational pilot myself, I sympathize and understand that the stakes involved for commercial pilots are not only health and lifespan but also work and livelihood. Pilots are sometimes wary of physicians, but it is critically important for pilots and non-pilots alike to know that early diagnosis is the best way to keep your wings and your life.
The FAA is very strict with pilots’ health. Regular health examinations with an FAA flight examiner are required of all pilots. For pilots over the age of 40 acting as “pilot in command” of a commercial airline flight, a medical certificate must be renewed every 6 months by means of a thorough flight physical. The running joke among physicians who take care of pilots is that non-pilots come in with a list of ten maladies and complaints whereas pilots respond to every question about possible illnesses with single word answers ranging from “nope” to “never.” Most jokes have a grain of truth. Pilots do not want an illness on their medical record that might result in an inability to fly.
Sometimes, you can make a case for someone trying to fix an illness without a physician’s help. For example, someone at the edge of type II diabetes might restore his or her own health with disciplined diet and exercise and be healthy by the time medical certificate renewal comes around.
Not so with melanoma. Don’t delay. Don’t try to fix it yourself. If a spot is changing, get that spot checked out! Melanoma continues to grow as long as it is left in place. The single most important feature of a melanoma is how deep it has grown. A melanoma that is less than 0.80mm is generally considered “good” with a low risk of having spread to other parts of the body.
The FAA draws the line in the sand for melanomas at 0.75mm. Melanomas
less than 0.75mm deep need only documentation of no clinical signs of metastatic disease and complete removal with clear and appropriate margins. Then, the flight examiner can issue the medical certificate to allow a pilot to keep on flying. This means that a simple excision by a dermatologist under local anesthesia for a shallow melanoma in almost all cases allows a pilot to keep his or her ability to fly. Melanomas deeper than 0.80 mm often require lymph node biopsies under general anesthesia, imaging such as MRI and/or PET/ CT scans. Even then, permission to fly is not guaranteed. Instead, all documents must be submitted to the FAA for consideration of permission to continue flying which is called “Special Issuance Authorization.” It wouldn’t be called “Special” if it were routine and for everyone.
Both pilots who came to me recently with melanomas had noticed the spot changing for a few months, and both cases had measured depths of 0.7mm. Talk about cutting it close! Just a little more growth and those pilots might have lost their medical certificate. Just as importantly, a little more growth would have pushed them into a higher risk category with a much higher chance that the melanomas could have spread.
In my practice, I have so far always been able to honor the policy that a patient who is worried about a single spot that is changing and could be a melanoma can be added onto my schedule within a day for a “spot check” even if my schedule is fully booked. We might not have time to complete a full body skin exam at an overbooked appointment, but I never want scheduling problems to be the reason that a melanoma diagnosis is delayed. Likewise, I typically work from 7am to 5pm but add on melanoma excisions at 6:30am or 5pm to make sure patients are treated as quickly as possible.
For so many reasons, people are afraid to go to the doctor, but in the case of dermatology, it is in one’s interest to seek care. Getting that suspicious or changing spot checked out should be a priority. Even if your job isn’t on the line, early detection of skin cancer can save your life.
EMPTY NEST • Sponsored Section AppenMedia.com/Milton | Milton Herald | June 22, 2023 | 11
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July author meetings sizzle with books hot off the press
By KATHY DES JARDINS CIOFFI newsroom@appenmedia.com
The dog days of summer have arrived, but these nearby book events are the cat’s meow. Author appearances across the area in July offer such novel approaches to beating the heat as curling up with a chilling thriller or perusing a variety of genres with a locally distilled beverage in hand. What’s more, local luminaries are providing much of the month’s reading respite. Lisa Yaszek, the
Saturday, July 8, Licia Chenoweth. Chenoweth will chat about her awardwinning debut middle-grade novel, "My Thousand Treasures.” Noon. Talk, signing. Free. Read It Again Bookstore, 3630 Peachtree Parkway, Suite 314, Suwanee. 770-232-9331 www.read-it-again.com
Saturday, July 15, Cody Ray George. George will chronicle his new occult thriller, "Good Night Room Nine." Noon. Discussion, signing. Free. Read It Again Bookstore, 3630 Peachtree Parkway, Suite 314, Suwanee. 770-232-9331. www.readit-again.com
Saturday July 15, Boozy Book Fair. Suwanee’s Read It Again Bookstore is partnering with Distillery of Modern Art on a Boozy Bookfair showcasing a selection of carefully curated books and locally distilled beverages. 6 p.m. Free. Distillery of Modern Art, 2197 Irvindale Way, Chamblee. 404- 482-2663. distilleryofmodernart.com
Thursday, July 20, Lisa Yaszek. Yaszek, the Regents Professor of Science Fiction Studies at Georgia Tech, will detail her new anthology, "The Future Is Female! Volume Two, The 1970s: More Classic Science Fiction Stories By Women: A Library of America Special Publication.” 7 p.m. Talk, signing. Free. Read It Again Bookstore, 3630 Peachtree Parkway, Suite 314, Suwanee. 770-232-9331. www.read-itagain.com
Saturday, July 22, George Weinstein and Kim Conrey. Married Atlanta Writers Club officers Weinstein and Conrey will sign and discuss their latest works. Weinstein is the award-winning author of six titles, including the Southern Gothic historical novel “Hardscrabble Road” and its sequel, “Return to Hardscrabble Road.” Conrey’s works include the sci-fi romance series Ares Ascending and the urban fantasy, “Nicholas Eternal.” 11 a.m. Free. Poe & Company Bookstore, 1890 Heritage Walk, Suite P101, Milton. 770-797-5566.
Regents Professor of Science Fiction Studies at Georgia Tech, is heading to Suwanee July 20 to talk about her new anthology. Atlanta’s Thomas Mullen, an internationally bestselling author and Townsend Award finalist, will discuss his latest release in Sandy Springs July 24. And, on July 25, the powerhouse Atlanta Writers Club couple of George Weinstein and Kim Conroy are launching a pair of new books in Alpharetta.
Here are details about these and other July author events:
Poeandcompanybookstore.com
Monday, July 24, Thomas Mullen. Friends of the Sandy Springs Library, in partnership with Bookmiser, will host Mullen, an internationally bestselling author and Townsend Award finalist. The conversation will center on his seventh book, “Blind Spots,” a riveting crime novel with a speculative edge about the ways our perceptions of reality can be manipulated. 6 p.m. Discussion, signing. Free. Sandy Springs Library, 395 Mount Vernon Highway NE, Atlanta. 404-612-7000. bookmiser.net/ book-events.html
Tuesday, July 25, George Weinstein and Kim Conrey. A Novel Idea presents Atlanta’s philanthropic writing couple as they officially launch their latest books. Weinstein, the twice-former president and current executive director of the Atlanta Writers Club, will focus on his new release, “Offlining.” Conrey, whose many roles include serving as AWC’s vice president of operations, will be spotlighting “Nicholas Eternal.” Bookmiser will have copies of both authors’ novels for sale. 7 p.m. Celebration, signing. Free. Brimstone Restaurant & Tavern, 10595 Old Alabama Road, Alpharetta. 770-509-5611. bookmiser.net/book-events.html
Friday, July 28, Saturday, July 29, Monday, July 31: Friends of the Roswell Library will have a “Mid-Summer Sale” filled with all the boxes of treasures they can pull from storage. Old and new books, books for children and senior citizens, fiction and nonfiction, vintage and collectible, cheap and pricey, sad and funny. If weather permits, the sale will be held on the library’s front porch as well as in the meeting room and bookstore. Free. See website for hours. Roswell Library, 115 Norcross St., Roswell. 404-612-9700. forl.net
To submit an author event for the upcoming month, email Kathy Des Jardins Cioffi at kathydesjardins3@gmail.com by the 15th.
12 | June 22, 2023 | Milton Herald | AppenMedia.com/Milton COMMUNITY
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AppenMedia.com/Milton | Milton Herald | June 22, 2023 | 13
Friends of Bulloch Hall hosts annual fundraiser
By DELANEY TARR delaney@appenmedia.com
DUNWOODY, Ga. — Organizers at the June 10 Magnolia Ball, hosted at Dunwoody Country Club said the 38th annual fundraiser brought in about $85,000 to help preserve and restore Roswell’s Bulloch Hall.
The event, hosted by nonprofit the Friends of Bulloch Hall, raises funds every year to pay off projects at Bulloch Hall, a historic home built in 1839 that is on the National Register of Historic places. This year, the organization targeted funds for plumbing, furniture, floor repairs and
general cleaning.
Friends of Bulloch also honored master carpenter Geoff Lambousis, who spent 30 years reconstructing Bulloch Hall and its pavilion, terrace, gazebo and pergola. At the black-tie ball, attendees raised money by buying tickets and participating in a silent and live auction. Bids ranged from $50 to $3,000 on items from jewelry to inclusive vacations.
More photos
► PAGE 15
14 | June 22, 2023 | Milton Herald | AppenMedia.com/Milton NEWS
PHOTOS BY DELANEY TARR/APPEN MEDIA
Members of the Friends of Bulloch, a nonprofit in Roswell dedicated to restoring Bulloch Hall, host the Magnolia Ball on June 10 to fundraise thousands of dollars for the historic building projects.
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PHOTOS BY DELANEY TARR
Roswell approves $194.3 million budget for 2024
By DELANEY TARR delaney@appenmedia.com
ROSWELL, Ga. — After a weeks-long process, the Roswell City Council passed the fiscal year 2024 budget at a June 12 meeting.
The $194.3 million budget was originally set for adoption on May 25, but some councilmembers pushed for a new deadline to discuss the finances. At the rescheduled reading on June 12, everyone but City Councilman Mike Palermo voted in favor of the budget.
Palermo cited issues with the expenses, particularly in the operating budget. The general fund, which accounts for the city’s day-to-day operations, is set at $100.5 million. That’s up about $6 million from the current year’s $94.6 million spending plan — about a 6 percent increase.
The bulk of the fund, 64 percent, covers salaries and benefits for city employees. The budget includes funds for 25 new full-time Fire Department positions as part of a five-year strategy to transition to a full-time department to make Roswell the “safest community in America.”
“My major issue is there’s just
too large of a percentage of this budget going towards operating and not enough going towards capital,” Palermo said.
The capital budget is separate from the general fund and is used to pay for
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one-time, major expenses, like road and park upgrades.
Palermo pushed to invest in parks, road resurfacing and sidewalk projects across the city, saying it is more “sustainable” than a focus on the operating budget. The proposed capital fund is set at about $7.2 million.
Roswell Finance Director, Ryan Luckett has said the city’s operating budget has increased due to employee pay increases, a full-time Fire Department transition and nationwide inflation.
While Palermo voted against the budget, he said the proposal is a “step in the right direction.”
The budget includes some capital investments beyond the designated fund as well. Over $21 million is set aside for transportation projects, including road resurfacing, bridge replacements and trail construction, with funding from the transportation sales tax and state assistance.
Roswell officials also set aside $5 million for the historic parks and botanical gardens as part of a maintenance plan that focuses on the city’s historic halls.
The fiscal year 2024 budget pulls from property and sales taxes for a chunk of its funding. Service charges, reserve use, business taxes and other revenue make up the rest of the $199.1 million in sourced funds.
Property tax revenues are based on the city’s millage rate. Last year, the council adopted a rate of 4.463 mills, the lowest rate in 35 years. One mill brings in $1 for every $1,000 in assessed value a property is worth.
Finance Director Luckett said that with anticipated growth in property values – including new construction – the proposed budget is based on revenues generated with the same property tax rate as last year. The city won’t receive the final appraisal numbers from Fulton County until July, though.
The city also must factor in the $180 million general obligation bond approved by voters in November 2022 dedicated to public safety, parking and parks and recreation.
While officials hope to keep the mill levy the same, the city has the added expense this year of repaying new bond debt. Luckett stated that as of now, the bond payments may increase the levy by 0.8 mills, but overall there is room to lower it.
The minor increase, Luckett explained, is because the city only issued about $86 million in bonds at a May City Council meeting. The millage rate will only cover the costs of the first issuance.
The city’s millage rate overall is split into two components: maintenance and operations and debt. Maintenance and operations pay for most city services through the general fund. The debt portion covers payments on the bonds.
Residents can expect a slight increase in stormwater fees for the city depending on the “tier” of service. The increase ranges from about 30 cents to a high of 70 cents, with payments ranging from $3.55 to $8.17 per month. The increase will “enhance stormwater management” according to city officials.
16 | June 22, 2023 | Milton Herald | AppenMedia.com/Milton NEWS 80 Milton Ave., Alpharetta Mon-Fri 7am-6pm • Sat 7am-noon 770.475.7613 AlpharettaAnimalHospital.com Alpharetta Animal Hospital has been serving the Alpharetta community and surrounding area for over 49 years. We offer a variety of medical services to treat your dog or cat and strive to provide excellent care with established and emerging medical technology.
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Roswell City councilmembers vote June 12 to approve the city’s fiscal year 2024 budget at a meeting at Roswell City Hall.
Robotics company unveils Alpharetta headquarters
By DELANEY TARR delaney@appenmedia.com
ALPHARETTA, Ga. — Swedish-Swiss automation company ABB is bringing the future to Alpharetta one robot at a time.
The multinational corporation officially opened its U.S. Packaging and Logistics Headquarters on Old Roswell Road in Alpharetta June 8, dedicating the facility to automated robotic solutions.
Company leaders say they hope the new headquarters will be a hub for the design and development of artificially intelligent robots aimed at automating the packaging and logistics industry.
ABB works in logistics, robotics, automation and manufacturing in a variety of global industries including automobiles, water, artificial intelligence, cosmetics and postal services. Some well-known clients include Volvo and Kraft foods.
At a June 8 ribbon cutting ABB displayed a variety of high-speed packing robots.
One robot named YuMi prepared coffee for the guests. Another YuMi across the room pretended to DJ the event, occasionally mimicking a fist pump with its robotic arm. The high-speed robot is typically used to assemble cell phones.
Another robot sorted chicken wings into Tyson-branded packages mere yards away from a device that sorted heavy boxes into shelves — all while using artificial intelligence to gauge its surroundings.
The whirring, high-tech displays are all part of ABB’s effort to repair the struggling packaging and logistics job market.
ABB U.S. Country Leader John Bubnikovich said packing and assembly has long been a strenuous job for individuals. Factory workers must spend hours on their feet doing repetitive tasks like assembling cell phones.
“People don’t want to do those jobs anymore,” Bubnikovich said.
Nationally, the unemployment rate is about 3.7 percent. Bubnikovich said that was a low rate, but about 40 percent of United States transportation and logistics companies lack the staff to take on laborious manual packaging tasks.
The robotics center in Alpharetta is part of the company’s larger effort to create at least 70 new jobs in the United States. Currently, about 20 employees are based in the Alpharetta headquarters—a number the company expects to grow.
ABB has more than 105,000 employees worldwide.
“There’s always a stigma of robots taking away jobs, but that’s just not the case anymore,” Bubnikovich said.
While the automated packaging jobs will be passed off to robots, the business leader said people will be able to move into more “meaningful” roles. The factory workers will begin programming the robots, which Bubnikovich thinks will “fill a void” in the job market.
For robots like YuMi, programming the robot is easy. Employees simply move the arms of the device so it can learn the assembly pattern for small devices, a programming job that doesn’t require a specialized degree. Grabbing the arm stops YuMi entirely, and its soft exterior keeps the robot from causing any physical harm.
“They’ll have an opportunity to actually learn technology and learn how to integrate robots, which is a much more fulfilling career path,” Bubnikovich said.
Other robots use artificial intelligence to streamline and speed up sorting and packaging processes. One device identified objects and placed them into separate containers, while another stacked cardboard boxes onto a shipping pallet “like a game of Tetris.”
The development fits into a broader automation trend across the country. In 2022, the United States installed 41,000 new robots across various industries.
While the Alpharetta headquarters will be the hub for the company’s robotics development, the company will
manufacture the so-called “robotics solutions” at factories in Michigan, Shanghai and Sweden.
Still, ABB leaders say the headquarters will benefit Metro Atlanta.
Robotics Managing Director Daniel Navarro has lived in Alpharetta for a year working on the headquarters launch.
“Many of our employees live in this area,” Navarro said.
He credits Alpharetta with being an all-around “good environment” filled with diverse backgrounds and plenty of room to grow and expand.
AppenMedia.com/Milton | Milton Herald | June 22, 2023 | 17 NEWS
PHOTOS BY DELANEY TARR/APPEN MEDIA
YuMi, a robot designed for small assembly tasks prepares coffee for guests at the June 8 ribbon cutting for the ABB Packaging and Logistics Headquarters in Alpharetta.
A robot sorts raw chicken wings into Tyson chicken packages at the June 8 ribbon cutting for the ABB Packaging and Logistics Headquarters in Alpharetta.
Taste of Alpharetta draws record 45,000 visitors
By SHELBY ISRAEL shelby@appenmedia.com
ALPHARETTA, Ga. — The beloved annual food festival Taste of Alpharetta drew a record number of attendees and ticket sales in its 31st year May 11.
City Community Services Manager Amanda Musilli said the exact ticket revenue and sales numbers are private because the event was produced by marketing agency JacobsEye, but she said at a Recreation Commission meeting June 13 the Public Safety Department estimated total attendance around 45,000 with unprecedented ticket sales.
Similar street events, such as the Alpharetta Arts Streetfest in the Grove at Wills Park, drew crowds of 25,000 this May, and the annual Brew Moon Fest saw its highest attendance to date of 2,500. Roswell city officials averaged attendance at the Alive in Roswell festival, which runs from April-October, at 5,000.
First launched in 1992, the annual Taste of Alpharetta draws local restaurants and business owners to downtown Alpharetta, where guests can sample different menu items using individual tickets. In 2023, over 60 city businesses ran booths.
This year, guests purchased virtual
tickets called TasteBucks, equivalent to $1. Musilli said the experiment moving from printed to digital ticketing was successful, but next year the city will improve signage to inform guests how to purchase tickets and reduce wait times.
The next Taste of Alpharetta is scheduled from 5-10 p.m. May 9, 2024.
Because of an increased volume of visitors at events downtown and at City
Center, Parks Manager Eric Milley said the Park Services Division has increased trash receptacle cleaning and servicing this month, which will continue throughout peak event seasons.
Also at the Recreation Committee meeting, Projects Manager Kurt Kirby said the Project Management Division is pursuing ongoing bond projects, including improvements for Old Rucker Road, Union
Hill and Waters Road parks, as well as the artificial turf at Webb Bridge Park.
Kirby said half of the construction plans for the Old Rucker Road facility were submitted June 9 and are under review by staff. Similarly, finished plans for Waters Road Park are also under review, with construction anticipated in late summer.
Renovations to the restrooms, the concession building, roof insulation, painting, gutters and electrical upgrades are complete at Union Hill Park, with the remaining work to continue through July.
Recreation and Parks Director Morgan Rodgers unveiled a new conceptual plan for Union Hill Park at a City Council work session April 17. The park, which declined in popularity in the late 1990s and early 2000s, was earmarked for an art installation, renovated restrooms, a new parking lot and a relocated skate park.
Development of the formal design will begin once the City Council approves plans.
Also at the June 13 meeting, Kirby said the City Council is considering a design contract to replace the failed septic system under the artificial turf at Webb Bridge Park. He said the new turf can only be installed after the completion of the sewer project.
18 | June 22, 2023 | Milton Herald | AppenMedia.com/Milton NEWS
SHELBY ISRAEL/APPEN MEDIA
Alpharetta Community Services Manager Amanda Musilli said Taste of Alpharetta saw record attendance and ticket sales at a Recreation Commission meeting June 13. The annual food festival, which averages 40,000 guests, drew roughly 45,000 visitors this year.
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Ken Leffingwell
Francia Lindon
Harlan Little
Ross Long
Karen Magill
Valerie Matthews
Austin McCully
Mike McLoughlin
Jennifer Mendoza
Robert Popp
Mark Rundle
Al Merrill
Christine Miller
Fred Moeller
Carol Morgan
Kathy Morgan
Jack Murphy
Tricia Novarro
Bob O’Brien
Joy Pooler
Debra Powell
Righteous PR
Chuck Pugh
Cheryl Rand
Jan Satterfield
Stephanie Schuette
Lisa Shippel
Cindy Simpson
Faye Sklar
Judith Slaughter
Andy Smith
Cathryn Stovall
Mike Tasos
Candice Teichert
Lisa Tilt
Matthew Tyser
Ollie Wagner
Lewis Walker
Nancy & Dave Wistrand
AppenMedia.com/Milton | Milton Herald | June 22, 2023 | 19
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Suraj Sehgal
The Alpha Arts Guild find new home
Group christens The Scene in North Point Mall space
By AMBER PERRY amber@appenmedia.com
ALPHARETTA, Ga. — No longer rotating between the Alpharetta Arts Center, Joann Fabric and Crafts, restaurants or homes, the Alpha Arts Guild has secured a permanent home 15 years after it began.
“We were just vagabonds,” said Barbara Rush, president of the Alpha Arts Guild. She joined the group about two years ago.
Opened in mid-May, The Scene is an 11,269-square-foot space on the second floor of North Point Mall that includes a gallery as well as a classroom area. It’s exclusively for Georgia artists, and the Guild is looking for those who want to consign their family-friendly art in a juried selection for three- to sixmonth contracts.
“We're all about the arts,” Rush said. “We love talking with other artists about techniques, and we share information here.”
The Alpha Arts Guild, open to all Georgia residents, is a nonprofit arts community with 50 members. Its mission is to learn and inspire one another through their work. Mediums vary.
“We have such a melting pot of nationalities that have come to our local area,” Rush said, represented throughout the gallery.
There were more than 100 pieces by 35 artists, many of them Guild members, hanging on the walls that day. Rush had her own work on display — what she calls “geocubism,” consisting of colorful animal portraits formed through geometric shapes.
She highlighted several artists throughout the gallery. Hope Riveron, Guild member, uses herbs, ground seeds and berries to create the pigments for her paintings. Sangeeta Lal, another longtime member, dyes silk for her vibrant work.
And, there’s space for more. Rush pointed out newly painted sculpture stands waiting to be used, sitting by the breaker box she opened to flip more than a dozen light switches in the backroom. Tables were gathered and chairs were stacked in the same room for upcoming monthly artist workshops.
“I never thought that I'd be flipping switches,” Rush said.
It took a year and half to close
the deal on The Scene. Rush said it was a “big undertaking” for the Guild’s board of directors, who have volunteered time and energy into making the gallery their new home.
“We have been through many trials and tribulations and have chosen to continue moving forward without looking back,” Rush said. “We are The Scene, but we are also the Alpha Arts Guild, and together we pulled all of this together.”
More info
For Georgia artists looking for consignment at The Scene, apply online at thesceneartgallery.com. To join the Alpha Arts Guild, apply online at alphaartsguild.org.
20 | June 22, 2023 | Milton Herald | AppenMedia.com/Milton ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
BARBARA RUSH/PROVIDED
Board members of the Alpharetta Arts Guild and employees stand inside The Scene art gallery, a 11,269-square-foot home for the Guild and Georgia artists. From left, bottom row, is Sharmila Roy, member at large; Barbara Rush, president; and Max Lundin, gallery assistant. From left, back row, is Tatiana Mack, first vice president; Ericka Jones-Craven, gallery manager; and Kelly Cook, second vice president.
AMBER PERRY/APPEN MEDIA Opened in midMay, The Scene is located on the second floor of the North Point Mall. Behind the gallery is space for monthly classes.
AppenMedia.com/Milton | Milton Herald | June 22, 2023 | 21
Music-minded pair customizes repertoire to suit seniors’ tastes
By AMBER PERRY amber@appenmedia.com
CUMMING, Ga. — Close to two dozen residents at the Oaks at Hampton assisted living facility tapped their feet, clapped their hands and nodded their heads side to side listening to Nick Vernola and his brother Mike play familiar tunes.
Gathered around in big, comfy couches and armchairs, residents listened to songs from the “Great American Songbook.” Some dogs were wandering about, probably feeling the music too.
“That’s a fictitious book that exists, but everybody knows what songs are in it. It’s songs that everybody knows — that’s why,” Nick said.
Wearing a red beret and shirt with musical notes, Nick took the lead of the set and introduced songs with history lessons and personal anecdotes. He played the virtual accordion, as part of the moniker Memory Lane.
Nick’s instrument had been programmed with a couple hundred different types of recordings, or samplings. But that day he used all orchestrations, with sounds from the saxophone, clarinet, trumpet and harmonica.
The first of two solos was “Begin the Beguine” by Cole Porter, written in World War I to an African drum beat.
Later introducing a re-recording of a 1930s song by Willie Nelson, Nick said music is timeless.
“It travels through the years,” he said. “It stays with us.”
It also stays with the residents, despite mental handicaps, re-animating them and carrying them back to days long ago.
“I try to calculate when they were 18 to 24 years old because that’s when people remember the most about the music, and sometimes playing music that their parents listened to really works as well,” Mike said.
Other classics in the one-hour set were Tommy Dorsey’s “Tea for Two Cha-Cha,” Glen Miller’s “Moonlight Serenade” and Louis Armstrong’s “What a Wonderful World,” sung in part by Nick who assumed Satchmo’s distinct gravelly voice.
Soon, the Vernolas will also have a projector set up behind them as they play, casting old television programs like “The Ed Sullivan Show,” and maybe some silent clips of The Beatles and Bing Crosby.
Giving back
Around six years ago, Nick met a woman at a homeowners association function, who said an assisted living
center off Tribble Gap Road was looking for entertainment. He and Mike have been touring senior living facilities ever since.
Over time, they developed a catalog of about 300 songs and practice at Mike’s house. Newer songs are introduced as crowds change with age.
The brothers play all over North Georgia, in Cumming, Roswell, Canton and Gainesville, and book over 100 performances a year with repeat clients, playing at the same facilities every month. They know some residents by name, like a woman named Georgia who was front and center to “Georgia on My Mind” at Oaks at Hampton.
Originally from New York, the Vernolas had a musical upbringing. Their parents always had the phonograph on. They also played in bands albeit in different decades — Nick is 15 years older than Mike, and he had exposure at the 1964 New York World’s Fair as well as a restaurant on Broadway.
“I was destined to be in entertainment
because I was born one block off of Broadway in Times Square,” Nick said.
Mike pulled up an old photo of himself in the ’70s with big hair, holding a guitar.
“I had dreams of being a rock star. You want to conquer the world. You want to build a business. You get past all of that,” Nick said. “Now, I just want to give back.”
Jogging memory
For the first year and a half, Nick and Mike played for free but began charging a nominal fee of $50 once they saw more demand. Before the COVID pandemic, they put on nearly 300 shows a year.
“You know, we watched our father wither away in a nursing home” Mike said, describing a time when an older fellow walked into his father’s facility, setting up and strumming a guitar. “We said to each other — ‘Boy, I’d like to be doing that.”
Earlier that day, the Vernolas played for the same facility’s memory care unit
— coined as the “mile-long walk” by Laurie Owens, assisted living lifestyle director at Oaks at Hampton.
Owens grew up at Oaks at Hampton, taking her mother’s position when she retired. Her twin sister works there, too. Nick and Mike had been playing before Owens began working there, and she wanted to continue their shows for residents — her “adoptive grandparents.”
“[Music] lets them reminisce, and bring back memories,” Owens said.
While the brothers enjoy playing at independent living residences, where there are full-blown dance parties, memory care is their most rewarding show.
During one performance at a memory care facility in Gainesville, one woman mouthed all the words to all the songs. After the performance, Nick and Mike were told by an employee that she never spoke.
“You get a lot of stuff like that,” Mike said.
22 | June 22, 2023 | Milton Herald | AppenMedia.com/Milton ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
AMBER PERRY/APPEN MEDIA
From left, brothers Mike and Nick Vernola play for about 20 assisted living residents at Oaks at Hampton. The pair tours senior living facilities around North Georgia, booking more than 100 shows a year.
County issues $1.3 million to North Fulton nonprofits
By ALEXANDER POPP alex@appenmedia.com
NORTH METRO ATLANTA — Fulton County leaders have granted 25 North Fulton nonprofit groups more than $1.3 million in grant funding, as part of the county’s Community Services Program and Veterans Services Program.
The Fulton County Board of Commissioners voted to approve funding for 167 nonprofit groups throughout Fulton County at a meeting in May. Included in the grant funding commissioners approved was nearly $1,365,000 which went directly to North Fulton County groups.
Groups awarded grant funding through the Community Services Program and Veterans Services Program were celebrated during an event at the Chattahoochee Nature Center in Roswell May 24. During the event, nonprofit representatives were congratulated by Fulton County Commissioners for Districts 1 and 2, Bridget Thorne and Bob Ellis.
Nonprofits awarded with Community Services Program and Veterans Services Program grants in North Fulton included the following groups:
• Camp Kudzu - $70,716
• Chattahoochee Nature Center$55,000
• Champions Community Foundation - $50,000
• Community Assistance Center$85,000
• Erin’s Hope for Friends - $50,000
• Jewish Family and Career Services$60,000
• Los Niños Primero - $85,000
• Mary Hall Freedom Village - $65,000
• North Fulton Child Development Association - $85,000
• North Fulton Community Charities$85,000
• North Metro Miracle League$35,000
• Raksha Inc - $50,000
• Reach Out and Read - $25,000
• Revved Up Kids - $25,000
• Senior Services North Fulton$70,000
• STAR House Foundation - $85,000
• The Drake House - $78,000
• The Lionheart School - $60,000
• The Summit Counseling Center$70,000
• U Hope CDC - $90,000
• Vision Warriors - $86,000
Dozens of businesses join up for Roswell Summer Sippin’
ROSWELL, Ga. — Dozens of Roswell businesses are participating in the city’s eighth annual Summer Sippin’ competition from June 13-Aug 15, all tasked with creating a special summer inspired drink.
Throughout the two-month competition customers can order drinks from participating businesses and rate them on the Summer Sippin’ website or app. At the end of the contest, one alcoholic and one non-alcoholic beverage will be crowned the best sips in Roswell.
With 61 participating breweries, tasting rooms, coffee shops, bars and restaurants, the 2023 event is the largest Summer Sippin’ yet.
“We’re thrilled to have our largest number of food and beverage partners participating in Summer Sippin’ to date,” Visit Roswell Executive Director Andy Williams said. “This summer-long competition allows us to further showcase our local businesses and drive sales throughout our hotter months.”
On June 24 Summer Sippin’ will host a one-day bar crawl with 12 participating locations. The $35 ticketed event, hosted through Bar Crawl U.S.A includes six cocktail tickets and various discounts.
The full list of participating establishments for the summer-long contest is available on SummerSippin. com.
AppenMedia.com/Milton | Milton Herald | June 22, 2023 | 23 NEWS
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PRESERVING THE PAST BOB MEYERS
Sacred Harp singing preserves tradition in Alpharetta
This June marked the 155th anniversary of the June Singing held in Alpharetta, the longest running public event in the city’s history. It dates back to 1868 a decade after Alpharetta became the seat for Milton County. Alpharetta had fewer than 300 residents.
Sacred Harp singing is a special and unique kind of acapella harmony using only four notes. It originated in England, was popular in Ireland and Scotland, then migrated to New England before moving to the rural South where it became firmly established. The “June Singing” in Alpharetta was not only an all-day event for singing hymns, it was also a social happening with families enjoying picnic lunches and meeting with friends and neighbors. At its heyday in the early 1900s, several thousand people would travel to Alpharetta in their buggies and wagons to gather every second Sunday in June.
Local historian Connie Mashburn wrote an article about the June Singing in his book “Alpharetta, Milton County – The Early Years,” in which he quoted George D. Rucker, publisher of the Alpharetta Free Press. In an article written in 1923, Rucker said “The Alpharetta 1923 June Singing has just passed. There were several thousand people present, and it was a well behaved crowd, considering the size of it. The men were sober and in a good humor, and the women were well dressed and happy, bringing their many baskets of good eats. We hope they will continue to come here from year to year, as long as people’s hearts are touched by old-time songs.”
Sometimes called “fa-so-la” singing or “shape-note singing,” the music got its name from “The Sacred Harp” hymnal tune book by B.F. White published in 1844. It uses a system of four printed shapes, instead of standard music notation, to help those who don’t know how to read music. The book and subsequent revisions helped promote shape note singing throughout the South.
In the songbook, each of the four voice parts, base, tenor, alto and treble, is printed on a separate musical staff. Singers sit or stand in a square facing the center with each group corresponding to one of the four singing group harmonies. Each singing group has its own melody which adds to the
unique sound. Singers sing the notes to the hymn first using the shapes (fa, sol, la, mi) before singing the written lyrics.
A singer will stand in the middle of the group and lead a few songs before turning the floor over to another volunteer who will select a few more songs from the song book. Anyone is welcome to join the singers. There are no rehearsals, and unlike a choir, there are no members who must be present. While interested people are welcome to come to listen, there is no formal audience. Singers are singing for themselves.
The June Singing is an annual event held at the City Hall in Alpharetta. This year’s program, held June 11, was in the rotunda which magnifies the sound of the music manyfold. The 15 singers at this year’s event sounded to me like the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. The music is loud, bold and clearly heartfelt.
Although the songs are hymns, the June Singing is not affiliated with a specific church. One exception is Boiling Springs Primitive Baptist Church founded in 1837 in today’s City of Milton and some other Primitive Baptist Churches, which included Sacred Harp singing in every Sunday service. Boiling Springs Primitive Baptist Church Elder Randall Cagle, says “Every Sunday when I was growing up, we sang Sacred Harp for an hour as part of the church service.”
As was true with the June Singing, competition from movies, television and other distractions reduced participation over the years. It is no longer part of the Boiling Springs Primitive Baptist Church service and the number of singers has been drastically reduced at the June Singing.
Faye Holbrook, Chairman of the June Singing, says “For the singers it is pure love of the music. The music is deeply felt. Our goal is to keep Sacred Harp alive for generations that come after us.”
People who are interested in knowing more about the June Singing can contact Faye Holbrook at fholbrook218@gmail.com. For general information about Sacred Harp singing in Georgia go to www.atlantasacredharp.org.
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 about local history.
24 | June 22, 2023 | Milton Herald | AppenMedia.com/Milton OPINION
Columnist
PHOTOS PROVIDED
Faye Holbrook, chairman of the June Singing held annually in Alpharetta’s City Hall atrium, leads volunteer singers at arranged in a square with each group corresponding to one of four singing group harmonies. Faye led the singers in a few hymns and then turned the floor over to another volunteer singer who led the group in a few more songs. The singing began at 10 a.m. and finished at 3:00pm with a break for lunch provided by the singers.
The Sacred Harp Songbook was originally published in 1844 and has undergone several revisions. It’s oblong shape makes it easier for the song leader to hold the book in one hand while keeping time to the music with the other hand and arm.
Enjoying bluebirds and helping them prosper and survive
A bird that I enjoy and would enjoy seeing more often is the Eastern Bluebird. Although they remain in Georgia yearround, I rarely see them during the winter months. On Jan. 29, I was thrilled to see a bluebird for the first time in 2023. These beautiful birds with a blue head and wings and an orange breast, are a standout, and seeing one is always a memorable experience.
Bluebirds enjoy a diet of insects and fruit and will periodically appear at my suet baskets. I tried to attract them with mealworms last year without success. I have also added three bluebird boxes to the trees that border the divide between the grass-covered portion of my yard and the pine forest behind it because they like an open area in front of them and a forest behind them.
Bluebirds prefer open cavities in trees but will occupy a nesting box if a tree cavity cannot be found. Place the bluebird box near the forest edge and leave it up all year. Bluebirds will use them for shelter in the cold winter months. If you purchase or build a bluebird box, make sure it has a door that can be opened for cleaning. Add a metal guard to surround and protect the circular front opening from predators who often try to chew their way into the nest.
For instructions on building a bluebird nesting box, please consult the following website: gadnr.org/out-my-backdoor-whats-best-bluebird-box-design
Here are interesting facts about Eastern Bluebirds:
• Scientific name: Sialia sialis.
• They are approximately 7 inches in length.
• The female builds the nest and incubates the eggs.
• The female lays 4-5 pale blue eggs without markings.
• The male helps the female feed the young.
• Their main food is insects and fruit.
• Lifespan: 6-10 years.
• They live year-round in Georgia.
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.
Eastern bluebird (Sialia sialis)
Learn more
• https://www.thespruce.com/eastern-bluebird-387244
• https://site.extension.uga.edu/newtonextanr/2021/05/bluebird-basics
• https://fcmasternaturalists.com/eastern-bluebird/
• https://gadnr.org/out-my-backdoor-whats-best-bluebird-box-design
• Birds of Georgia, Stan Tekiela, Adventure Publications, 2002.
• Field Guide to the Birds of America, Jon L. Dunn and Jonathan Alderfer, National Geographic. ISBN: 1-4262-0071-4, pages 278-9, 82-3.
• Peterson Field Guide to Eastern and Western Birds, Seventh Edition, Roger Tory Peterson. Mariner Books, 2020, ISBN-10 132877143.
About the author
This week’s “Garden Buzz” guest columnist is Carole MacMullan, a Master Gardener since 2012 and a Milton resident. Carole describes herself as a born biologist. Since childhood, she loved to explore the out-of-doors and garden with her mother. When she entered college, she selected biology as her major and made teaching high school biology her career
for 35 years. in 2012, she 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. Her favorite hobbies are gardening, hiking, biking, traveling and reading.
AppenMedia.com/Milton | Milton Herald | June 22, 2023 | 25 OPINION GARDEN BUZZ
CAROLE MACMULLAN
Guest Columnist
JOHNNY N. DELL/BUGWOOD.ORG
CHRIS EVANS/UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS/BUGWOOD.ORG Eastern bluebird, habitat
UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA/BUGWOOD.ORG Eastern bluebird on cell, David J. Moorhead
THE INVESTMENT COACH
Avoiding travel nightmares, achieving travel dreams
Avoiding nightmares in travel
The Wall Street Journal, 5/25/23, ran a picture of the world’s largest passenger cruise ship, a massive vessel that can carry 7,084 guests. It boasts 18 decks and 2,867 staterooms. The headline underneath the picture in unflattering prose proclaimed, “Summer Cruise Travelers Get Packed Like Sardines.” The Journal advised, “Expect long lines, sold-out excursions and stressed crews; in some cases would-be passengers are bumped due to overbooking.” That seems like the seagoing version of the 1979 hit song, “Highway to Hell,” by the Australian rock band AC/DC. Ship to hell????
J. WALKER, CFP
The same issue of the Journal also headlined, “Airlines Take Steps to Avoid Summer Chaos.” Who can forget the dysfunction of the not-so-distant past of mass cancellations, seas of lost luggage stranded at airports, and stories of ruined vacations and special events? How do you avoid travel nightmares and costly surprises? Advance planning well in advance, and with the help of a seasoned travel agent. A good agent can help you to plan a great trip within the parameters of your budget and time constraints.
This writer traveled from Atlanta to
South Africa for a safari-oriented tour of South Africa, to Zimbabwe for Victoria Falls, and with forays into Botswana and Namibia. Delta flies nonstop from Atlanta to Johannesburg several times a week. The flight takes about 15 hours and 20 minutes. Expect to be on the plane for about 16 hours. Depending on the departure times of your outbound and return flights, per person expect to pay about $2,179 in the main cabin (coach), $4,362 in Premium Select with more comfort, and $7,827 in the Delta One lay-flat-bed seats in the front of the plane. Obviously, if you have the funds, and/or frequent flyer miles to help cut the cost, go for comfort. But flying coach is fine if you want the destination experience and have limited funds. The key is to “get out there.” That goes for any destination on the planet.
My wife and I made many long-haul trips in coach, and one option is to buy seats that are aisles across if you don’t want to climb over someone, even a loved one, in the middle of the night to get to the restroom. Check the website seatguru. com for cabin layouts for all major airlines, and/or your specific flight. The site will pinpoint good and less-than-good seats, for example, seats with no window, too close to the lavatory or galleys, partial blockages under the seat in front of you, seats with no or limited recline, etc.
Say, you’re flying to Europe and want to splurge. Going over on a night flight, you may opt for lay flat beds in the front of the plane. Coming back on a daylight flight where sleeping is less important, you may
opt for the carrier’s version of premium economy for significant savings. Carriers with the premium economy cabin between coach and first or business class up front, offer a more spacious seat with greater recline, and upgraded food and beverage packages. That’s a good option if up-front is too pricy on any trip.
Cruise ships come in all sizes with “personalities” to match. Again, a seasoned travel agent can match your personality, travel dream, and budget to the right ship. If family is involved with little children or teenagers, certain ships may fit your needs. Older travelers may not crave waterslides and cartoon characters running around the decks, preferring a different experience on a smaller more intimate vessel known for outstanding cuisine and refined service. Right now, luxury travel on smaller more elegant ships in the small to mid-sized category are hot. Suites and higher style more roomy cabins sell out quickly.
Several cruise lines such as Ponant, Silversea, Seabourne, Viking, National Geographic and others offer luxurious small ship cruising in exotic locales. Expedition cruises to places like the Arctic, Antarctica, the Indian Ocean, Arabian Sea, the wild Kimberley Coast in South Africa, featuring Zodiacs, naturalists, and guest lecturers along with comfortable cabins and great cuisine are increasingly popular.
Other outfitters may organize treks to see mountain gorillas, climb mountains, ride bikes in unique and scenic locales, hike renowned trails such as the Milford Track on the spectacular south island
of New Zealand, photography trips, dive trips...if you can dream it, there’s probably an outfitter or guide out there somewhere.
If cruise ship excursions are sold out, you can always hire your own guide. See viator.com and toursbylocals.com to find experienced and vetted local guides. If you are not on a ship-arranged tour, you are responsible for getting yourself and your party back to the ship on time. If you’re going to book ship tours, do so early. Don’t wait until you’re aboard the ship. Many tours in popular locales in Europe for this summer are already sold out. If you want to see a popular attraction, such as the Eiffel Tower in Paris, Antoni Gaudi’s stunning Sagrada Familia in Barcelona, or renowned museums, buy a skip-the-line tour from Viator or some other operator, or you are not likely to get in, given summer crowds.
Everyone has travel dreams. Don’t say “someday,” because that means you really haven’t decided to do it. If you don’t have the money, establish a travel savings bucket and work toward your goal. “Someday” may never come due to illness or other happenstance. Get out there!
Lewis Walker, CFP®, is a life centered financial planning strategist with Capital Insight Group (CIG); 770-441-3553; lewis@ capitalinsightgrp.com. Securities & advisory services offered through The Strategic Financial Alliance, Inc. (SFA), which is otherwise unaffiliated with CIG. Lewis a Gallup Certified Clifton Strengths Coach and Certified Exit Planning Advisor (CEPA).
A tax increase, like a diamond, is forever
At my tenure on this big round ball, it’s easy to think that things are moving way too fast. Finding myself in a semi-state of confusion while glancing at a newspaper is enough to induce a panic that might make me do something really stupid.
Like try to make sense of it all. Here are some “for instances:”
Does anyone understand exactly what a “debt ceiling” is? It beats the dickens out of me, yet Washington folks who are running things seem to be in a whale of a scrap. Everyone is in a rage about this concept and the ruination it will cause.
As one who has long ago given up trying to comprehend the pure folly of politicians, this is a term that I know must have devastating ramifications for us “regular folks.”
Why? Because it is a point of common ground for both Democrats and Republicans.
While the government brain trusts huddle and portray their collective concern and empathy, I have about given up on ever trying to understand much about government bigwigs, except that: a) any money they have was made while they were in office; b) they all shiver and break into a cold sweat at the mention of “term limits”; and
c) the Flat Tax concept makes far too much sense to ever be adopted.
If they want to make my list of essential human beings, let them figure out how to get the Braves some decent starting pitching.
Here in Forsyth County, property tax bills were mailed out and, as happens every year, citizens are grousing that the increases are way too steep.
No kidding!
That’s another concept that I have come to embrace: Once anyone votes for a “temporary tax increase,” you might
as well say “Sayonara” to that yen you’ll never see again. It’s rather telling that withholding tax was only supposed to be something temporary – way back during World War II.
Perhaps it’s the realization that this is it for me writing a column as a 67-year-old. I’m steaming headlong into being 68. And that makes me officially old, no matter how many pairs of thick glasses you use.
There are some definite perks to reaching this milestone. But I’ve kind of eased my way into it.
I guess I should make more of an effort to get that geezer discount offered at Publix, or better yet, at a favorite restaurant. It just feels rather cheesy to ask for 10 percent off a bowl of queso.
And as I’ve advanced, I can’t help but notice youngsters in their 40s holding a door for me and insisting I go first. It’s a nice gesture, but there are times, for the life of me, that I can’t remember why I’ve gone to the store in the first place.
It was probably either a prescription or
something to help with grooming.
I don’t know why God plays this cruel joke on us old guys. What is the purpose of having all this hair growing in my ears?
And these eyebrows! They are both as unruly as an 8-year-old on a sugar high. They grow every which way. Forget a trimmer! I need a hedge clipper and a competent gardener to stop this infestation that has taken residence in my lower forehead.
My job is keeping me challenged and I am truly enjoying the lack of travel. Unless it involves jumping on The Black Beauty, my newly named Harley Trike.
Then I’m ready to put on my helmet and head for the mountains.
That’s where I feel young again and love seeing the forest, providing no betraying mirror unveils my ears and eyebrows.
Mike Tasos has lived in Forsyth County for more than 30 years. He’s an American by birth and considers himself a Southerner by the grace of God. He can be reached at miketasos55@gmail.com.
26 | June 22, 2023 | Milton Herald | AppenMedia.com/Milton OPINION
LEWIS
Columnist
The Investment Coach
MIKE TASOS Columnist
AppenMedia.com/Milton | Milton Herald | June 22, 2023 | 27 appenmedia.com/milton/ MiltonHerald 770.442.3278 MORE than just a newspaper TO KEEP YOU INFORMED THROUGHOUT THE YEAR WE OFFER YOU: • A digital version of our newspaper • Continuously updated news on our website about your region • A prime venue for businesses and organizations to get noticed • A platform for meaningful exchanges and the sharing of ideas Do you have questions or suggestions? Our passionate team is here to help. Reach out to us today! appenmedia
28 | June 22, 2023 | Milton Herald | AppenMedia.com/Milton
See solution Page 30
AppenMedia.com/Milton | Milton Herald | June 22, 2023 | 29 North Fulton’s Only On-Site Crematory 770-645-1414 info@northsidechapel.com www.northsidechapel.com Locally Owned and Operated • Pre-planning • Funeral Services • Grief Support • Veteran Services 12050 Crabapple Road • Roswell, GA 30075 • Cremation Services Copyright ©2023 PuzzleJunction.com Dunwoody Crier 6/22/23 Crossword PuzzleJunction.com Solution on next page 41 Little wriggler 42 Retainer 44 Some trial evidence 46 Road shoulder 49 Agree out of court 50 Stun gun 51 Burgundy grape 52 ___ Oop 53 Western director Sergio 54 Borscht vegetable 55 Outward flow 56 Aerial maneuver 57 Missile housing 59 Vermin 61 Nobleman 63 Ultimate ending 65 Shade tree 123 4567 891011 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 Across 1 Hydroelectric project 4 Captain of the Pequod 8 Motivate 12 Agitate 13 Game on horseback 14 Falcon’s home 16 Condo division 17 Camp Swampy dog 18 Besmirch 19 Puts away 21 Musty 23 Red letters? 24 Amount past due? 25 Inventor Sikorsky 27 German spa 29 Bug-eyed 30 Historic period 31 Oklahoma city 34 Vegas attraction 37 Scheme 38 EU language 39 Kind of car 40 Furry pinnipeds 42 Quick 43 Quilting party 44 Buck 45 Spain and Portugal 47 Easy mark 48 Bottom line 49 Old dagger 50 Children’s game 51 Squint 52 Priest’s robe 55 Literary lioness 58 Pluck 60 Ruckus 62 Idaho city 64 ___ meridiem 66 Cream additive 67 Tree trunks 68 Kind of call 69 It’s overhead 70 Left at sea 71 Rose part 72 Soapmaker’s need Down 1 Tunisian coin 2 Still in the game 3 Apportion, with “out” 4 G.I.’s mail drop 5 Frank 6 Hitching post 7 Blessing 8 Dance step 9 Romulus’s twin 10 Loads from lodes 11 “Buenos ___” 12 Pipe problem 15 Stumble 20 Endorse 22 Coal oil 26 Zero 28 Yoga class need 29 Abet 30 Building annex 31 Thickening agent 32 He loved Lucy 33 Ionian gulf 34 Chicago team 35 On the briny 36 Exude 37 Foot the bill
Human Resources Manager
Handles all employee-related processes and procedures. This role will be responsible for Recruitment and Onboarding, Job Design, Employee Relations, Performance Management, Training and Development, Employment Compliance, Total Rewards and Talent Management. This position reports to the Director of Finance and Administration and will interact with the entire management team by providing guidance on all Human Resources related topics at NFCC. Bachelor’s degree in human resources or related field and 3-5 years of Human Resources experience, preferably in multiple HR disciplines required. Please visit https://nfcchelp.org/ work-at-nfcc/ to see the full job description. To apply, submit a resume to sholiday@nfcchelp.org and to mburton@nfcchelp.org.
Workforce Development Coordinator is responsible for developing programs and services for NFCC clients and students seeking employment, post-secondary education, or other career options. The workforce development coordinator collaborates with local employers to help match job seekers to open positions. They work directly with clients on the job application, resumes, and interview preparations and provide tips for successfully securing and improving employment to foster financial stability. Bachelor’s degree in a human services, human resources, or other related field required and 2 years of professional experience in human services, human resources or career counseling preferred.
To view the entire listing visit https://nfcchelp.org/ work-at-nfcc/. To apply, please submit resume to Carol Swan at cswan@nfcchelp.org.
Part-time
NEWSPAPER DELIVERY ROUTE
Director of Childrens Ministry
Seeking Director of Children’s Ministry for Alpharetta Presbyterian Church. Part-time position with benefits.
The ideal candidate will have a bachelor’s degree from an accredited college or university. Also have classroom or work experience in education and/or children’s ministry.
Work with children’s ministry leaders to provide meaningful and engaging Sunday School and additional programs for children. Collaborate with committee, recommend curriculum to Session for approval and provide the curriculum for children’s Sunday School classes and Vacation Bible School.
Recruit, train and supervise all Children’s Ministry teachers and volunteers (this includes providing “child safety training” and assuring compliance with that policy).
• A person of mature Christian faith who will work collegially with others in support of the overall mission of the church.
Appen Newspapers is looking for one or two folks to help deliver our newspapers. Work is part time and flexible. Routes can be done at night or during the day - on your schedule - within our deadlines. Comfortably earn $550 or more a month on your own schedule.
This is a great way to get out as well as contribute to helping your local newspaper! Perfect for retired person who wants to stay active or a parent with school-aged kids - deliver during school hours. Also good way to earn supplemental income at night. We have had many retired couples deliver our papers and almost all have managed a route well and enjoyed the time and the work.
Requirements include reliable vehicle, clean driving record, availability, reliability, and honesty. Prior delivery experience is good, but not required. It helps if you live relatively close as papers are picked up to be bagged and delivered from our office in Alpharetta. Delivery areas can be Alpharetta, Roswell, Milton, Johns Creek, South Forsyth, Dunwoody, or Sandy Springs typically - depending on open routes.
Please contact our Office Manager Heidi to set up an appointment to come in and fill in paper work or start the process via Email!
Community Events Manager
The Community Events Manager is responsible for all aspects of NFCC’s community events, from inception through execution, including helping secure sponsorships. Events may include annual golf tournament, annual fundraising gala, community engagement events, donor recognition events, and other community events. Position requires a highly organized, creative, and motivated person to lead event planning, sponsorship, and community engagement. Bachelor’s Degree preferred with 2-3 years special events and fundraising experience. To view entire listing visit: https://nfcchelp.org/workat-nfcc/ To apply, send a resume to Sandy Holiday, sholiday@nfcchelp.org.
HIRING ACCOUNTANTS!
Entry level to Senior level.
Direct Hire and temp to hire.
Resume to lauren@discoverstaffing.com or call or text 678-393-9313 for more details.
Donor Operations Associate
The Donor Operations Associate greets and removes donations from vehicles and sorts merchandise in a designated area. They are responsible for keeping the merchandise secure, all areas free of debris and the donor door area neat and clean. This position is the face of NFCC so they are expected to provide excellent customer service and treat each donor with a professional and friendly demeanor. High school diploma or equivalent preferred. Ability to perform low to moderate facility maintenance tasks. To view entire listing visit: https://nfcchelp.org/work-atnfcc/ To apply, please complete an application for employment and email to Marten Jallad, mjallad@nfcchelp.org.
• A person of outstanding character and strong relational skills who is approachable, compassionate, energetic, honest, dependable, creative, joyful, fun, motivated and humble.
• A dynamic and grace-filled leader who is a role model for children and their families.
• Someone who is committed to setting an inspiring example, serving others, making disciples, and equipping the saints for ministry.
Qualified candidates please send resumes to alpharettajobopening@gmail.com.
HANDY HELPER NEEDED
20-30 hours/week. Call Stan 678-357-5371
Home Improvement
DECKS BUILT & REPAIRED-PAINT
Decks repaired/built. Labor payment upon completion. 30-plus years experience. John Ingram/678-906-7100. Act now before prices increase next year! Heritage Home Maintenance HOMEREPAIRGA@GMAIL.COM, (HERITAGECONSTRUCTIONGA.COM)
Call 770-442-3278 and ask for Heidi or Email Heidi@AppenMedia.com
30 | June 22, 2023 | Milton Herald | AppenMedia.com/Milton Call today to place your ad 470.222.8469 or email classifieds@appenmediagroup.com • FAX: 770-475-1216 ONLINE INCLUDED Full-time Part-time Deadline to place a classified ad is Thursdays
4 pm
by
Solution DA M AH AB PR OD RI LE PO LO AE RI E UN IT OT TO SM EA R SAVES DANK US SR TR E IG OR EM S A GOG ER A AD A CA SI NO PL OT GE R US ED SEA LS FA ST BEE DE FY IB ER IA SAP NE T SN EE TA G PEE R AL B EL SA GR IT ME LE E BO IS E AN TE AL OE BO LE S TO LL RE NT PO RT ST EM LY E
Concrete/ Asphalt Retaining Walls
Brick or Wood
Contact Ralph Rucker. Many local references. Honest, punctual, professional and reasonable prices! 678-898-7237
Pinestraw
PINESTRAW, MULCH
Delivery/installation available. Firewood available. Licensed, insured. Angels of Earth Pinestraw and Mulch. 770-831-3612
Haulers
Many local referencesCall Ralph Rucker 678-898-7237
Tree Services
24 hour emergency service. Licensed, insured. Workers Comp, insurance claims. 25+ years experience. Family business. Free estimates. We Love Challenges!
Yellow Ribbon Tree Experts 770-512-8733 • www.yellowribbontree.com
COMPLETE TREE SERVICES
Appen-Rated 98
Text or Call us for a FREE quote appointment.
Tree removal, Pruning, Stump grinding, Free mulch. Fully insured.
Emergency 24/7 770-450-8188
Company
Retaining walls (brick or wood), grading, sod, tree services, hauling, topsoil & more.
Ralph Rucker 678-898-7237
Gutters
AARON’S ALL-TYPE GUTTERS Installed. Covers, siding, soffit, facia. www.aaronsgutters.com. Senior citizen discount! 678-508-2432
Deadline to place a classified ad is Thursday by 4 pm
Bargains –Antiques
ANTIQUE DESK Circa 1810-1820 Rhode Island/New Hampshire; mahogany, remodeled; great condition. $5500. 770-881-6442.
BATH & SHOWER UPDATES in as little as ONE DAY! Affordable prices - No payments for 18 months! Lifetime warranty & professional installs. Senior & Military Discounts available. Call: 855-761-1725
Donate Your Car to Veterans Today! Help and Support our Veterans. Fast - FREE pick up. 100% tax deductible. Call 1-800-245-0398
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Unlimited Data is Here. Stream Video. Bundle TV & Internet. Free Installation. Call 866-499-0141
Become a published author.
We want to read your book!
Dorrance Publishing trusted since 1920. Consultation, production, promotion & distribution. Call for free author’s guide 1-877-729-4998 or visit dorranceinfo.com/ads
DISH TV $64.99 For 190 Channels + $14.95 High Speed Internet. Free Installation, Smart HD DVR Included, Free Voice Remote. Some restrictions apply. Promo Expires 1/31/24.
Prepare for power outages today with a GENERAC home standby generator $0 Down + Low Monthly Pmt Request a free Quote. Call before the next power outage: 1-855-948-6176
Eliminate gutter cleaning forever! LeafFilter, the most advanced debris-blocking gutter protection. Schedule free LeafFilter estimate today. 20% off Entire Purchase. 10% Senior & Military Discounts. Call 1-833-610-1936
1-866-479-1516
Safe Step. North America’s #1 Walk-in tub. Comprehensive lifetime warranty. Top-of-theline installation and service. Now featuring our free shower package & $1600 off - limited time!
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MobileHelp,
Estate
PEACHTREE CORNERS Moving overseas. Brookwood; 6225 Brookwood Road 30092. Friday 6/23, 9AM5PM, Saturday, 6/24, 9AM-3PM. Bring cash, & help for moving large items. Everything goes INCLUDING PLANT SALE!
Garage
highs. Interest rates are way up. Credit Cards. Medical Bills. Car Loans. Do you have $10k or more in debt? Call National Debt Relief to find out how to pay off your debt for significantly less than what you owe! Free quote: 1-877-592-3616
Wesley Financial Group, LLC Timeshare Cancellation ExpertsOver $50,000,000 in timeshare debt & fees cancelled in 2019. Get free info package & learn how to get rid of your timeshare! Free consultations. Over 450 positive reviews. 833-308-1971
Home
Post Oak Lane – Forsyth/Gainesville call/text 404-403-5080
AppenMedia.com/Milton | Milton Herald | June 22, 2023 | 31 SERVICE DIRECTORY Driveway $250 OFF NEW DRIVEWAY! Mention this ad. Concrete driveway specialists. Driveways, Pool Decks, Patios, Walkways, Slabs. A+ BBB rating. FREE ESTIMATE. Call Rachael at 678-250-4546 to schedule a FREE Estimate. 30 years of experience. ARBOR HILLS CONSTRUCTION INC. Please note we do have a minimum charge on accepted jobs of $4,500. ROOF LEAKING? Call us for roof repair or roof replacement. FREE quotes. $200 OFF Leak Repairs or 10% off New Roof. Affordable, quality roofing. Based in Roswell. Serving North Atlanta since 1983. Call to schedule FREE Quote: 770-284-3123. Christian Brothers Roofing Roofing NATIONAL ADVERTISING Miscellaneous Prepare for power outages today WITH A HOME STANDBY GENERATOR *To qualify, consumers must request a quote, purchase, install and activate the generator with a participating dealer. Call for a full list of terms and conditions. REQUEST A FREE QUOTE CALL NOW BEFORE THE NEXT POWER OUTAGE (866) 643-0438 $0 MONEY DOWN + LOW MONTHLY PAYMENT OPTIONS Contact a Generac dealer for full terms and conditions FREE 7-Year Extended Warranty* A $695 Value! Prepare for power outages today REQUEST A FREE QUOTE! CALL NOW BEFORE THE NEXT POWER OUTAGE (866) 643-0438 $0 MONEY DOWN & LOW MONTHLY PAYMENT OPTIONS Contact a Generac dealer for full terms & conditions. WITH A HOME STANDBY GENERATOR *To qualify, consumers must request a quote, purchase, install and activate the generator with a participating dealer. Call for a full list of terms and conditions. Health & Fitness VIAGRA and CIALIS USERS! 50 Generic Pills SPECIAL $99.00. 100% guaranteed. 24/7 CALL NOW! 888-445-5928 Hablamos Español Dental insurance - Physicians Mutual Insurance Company. Covers 350 procedures. Real in-surance - not a discount plan. Get your free dental info kit! 1-855-526-1060 www. dental50plus.com/ads #6258 Attention oxygen therapy users! Inogen One G4 is capable of full 24/7 oxygen delivery. Only 2.8 pounds. Free info kit. Call 877-929-9587 Viagra stop overpaying! Generic Viagra or Cialis 70 tabletsonly $99 shipping included! USAServicesOnline.com call now 888-203-0881
Fi-nancing available. 1-855-417-1306 DIRECTV Stream - Carries the most local MLB Games! Choice Package $89.99/mo for 12 mos Stream on 20 devices at once. HBO Max included for 3 mos (w/ Choice Package or higher.) No contract or hidden fees! Some restrictions apply. Call IVS 1-866-859-0405 Are you a pet owner? Do you want to get up to 100% back on vet bills? Physicians Mutual In-surance Company has pet coverage that can help! Call 1-844-774-0206 to get a free quote or visit insurebarkmeow.com/ads
with lung cancer? You may qualify for a substantial cash award - even with smoking history. No obligation! We’ve recovered millions. Let us help!! Call 24/7, 1-877-648-2503 !!OLD GUITARS WANTED!! GIBSON, FENDER, MARTIN, Etc. 1930’s to 1980’s. TOP DOLLAR PAID. CALL TOLL FREE 1-866-433-8277 Call today and receive a FREE SHOWER PACKAGE PLUS $1600 OFF With purchase of a new Safe Step Walk-In Tub. Not applicable with any previous walk-in tub purchase. Offer available while supplies last. No cash value. Must present offer at time of purchase. CSLB 1082165 NSCB 0082999
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America’s premier mobile medical alert system. Whether you’re home or away. For safety & peace of mind. No long term contracts! Free brochure! 1-888-489-3936 Free high speed internet if qualified. Govt. pgm for recipients of select pgms incl. Medicaid, SNAP, Housing Assistance, WIC, Veterans Pension, Survivor Benefits, Lifeline, Tribal. 15 GB internet. Android tablet free w/one-time $20 copay. Free shipping. Call Maxsip Telecom! 1-833-758-3892 Inflation is at 40 year
Landscaping Full Service LANDSCAPING
Herald Headlines northfulton.com/newsletters
Bush Hogging, Clearing, Grading, Hauling, Etc.
Sale
8340
Grandplacere.com Keller
770-503-7070
Williams Lanier Partners
For
Sale
Sale
675
Saturday 6/24-Sunday 6/25, 9AM-3PM.
lighting,
etc...
JOHNS CREEK-30022
St. Fillans Court.
HUGE! Furniture,
mirrors, art,
32 | June 22, 2023 | Milton Herald | AppenMedia.com/Milton