Park Cities People – October 2015

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OCTOBER 2015 I Vol. 35, No. 10 parkcitiespeople.com  

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@pcpeople

En Pointe HOW CITY BALLET FOUNDER ESCAPED POST-WAR PARIS TO LAUNCH A PARK CITIES INSTITUTION 48

LIVING WELL Embody Love Movement teaches positive living 33

COMMUNITY Park Cities artist makes her mark through therapy

44

SPORTS Cowboy connection: Scots WR hails from coaching family 1B E D U C AT I O N

Breaking down the HPISD bond package, campus by campus 10

PA R T N E R S C A R D

Get your wallets ready, The Family Place fundraiser is back 23

COMMUNITY

What does adding Royal Blue Grocery mean for HP Village? 43


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Christopher swam a half mile in 17 minutes

Building a Better You

CONTENTS LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Let’s All Look Out for Child Travelers Dear Editor: I was on a recent American Airlines flight from Florida to Dallas. I noticed a conversation going on behind me between a 10-year old boy who was flying alone and a middle-aged man who happened to be sitting next to him. As the conversation progressed, it became more and more personal. The man obviously knew what a prepubescent boy was interested in. He talked about his ranch where there were 27 fishing holes full of fish, his own children, and how they all loved to fish together, that he had been kicked off a plane twice because he did not like flying, and how much he wanted the little boy to come to see him at his ranch. He talked about being the child’s Facebook buddy and gave the boy his own contact information. I became especially concerned when the boy gave the strange man his phone number and address. The boy was completely captivated by his new friend. The woman who was sitting next to me became equally worried and we started talking about what we could do. I looked for a flight attendant to alert, but it was a full flight and there did not seem to be anyone available. Finally, we took matters into our own hands. We turned around and stated to the boy that we had sons of our own, and that it was not a good idea to give personal information to strangers. The flight was almost over and we wanted the child’s parent to know what had happened. The man became enraged and started yelling obscenities on the plane. He grabbed my seatmate’s backpack and tore it off her back. The flight attendants detained him in the plane until they retrieved the backpack and until the air-

port police arrived. I stayed to talk to the father, who was an airline pilot and met the boy at the gate. Several female passengers who sat around us were also upset and told the man who sat next to the boy that he should stop his bad language. The situation ended badly with the child crying, and the man yelling obscenities and exclaiming he was being accused of being a pedophile. The child’s father looked completely confused. I finally left because it was impossible to converse with him. I hoped that, at least, the parent would deter any communication between the boy and his newfound friend. We all need to be aware that children who fly alone should sit near the front of the plane where they can be observed. This young man was flying alone on row 19. We also should remind our children not to give their personal information to strangers. Facebook is often used for inappropriate communication between strange adults and children. No doubt the father thought that his son was safe because he would be met at the gate. Yet the stranger had picked up all the boy’s contact information and could easily contact him on social media. Child molesters are experts at “courting” or “grooming” children to be their friends. They make the child feel special, talk about favorite toys and topics, act silly, and constantly talk about staying in contact. Any physical contact comes later, after the child has learned to totally trust the adult. Perhaps the child was just being set up for future contact. We must be observant of children who could be in a vulnerable situation.

POLICE . ............................................................ 4 EDUCATION ��������������������������������������������������� 9 BUSINESS . ..................................................... 18 PARTNERS CARD ���������������������������������������� 23

LIVING WELL ���������������������������������������������� 33 FOCUS ON PHILANTHROPY ������������������ 37 SOCIETY ......................................................... 38 COMMUNITY ���������������������������������������������� 43

— Maurine Dickey

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Publisher: Patricia Martin EDITORIAL

A DV E R T I S I N G

O P E R AT I O N S

Editor Todd Jorgenson

Senior Account Executives

Business Manager Alma Ritter

Assistant Editor Sarah Bennett

Kim Hurmis Kate Martin

Art Director Elizabeth Ygartua

Account Executives Clarke Dvoskin Geraldine Galentree DeeAnna Thompson

Distribution Manager Don Hancock

Assistant Art Director Curtis Thornton Physicians provide clinical services as members of the medical staff at one of Baylor Scott & White Health’s subsidiary, community or affiliated medical centers and do not provide clinical services as employees or agents of those medical centers, Baylor Health Care System, Scott & White Healthcare or Baylor Scott & White Health. ©2015 Baylor Scott & White Health. BSWTLFC_5_2015 CE 08.15

Consulting Editor Jeff Bowden Interns Hannah Williams Karly Hanson

Intern Danielle Garcia People Newspapers are printed on recycled paper. Help us show love for the earth by recycling this newspaper and any magazines from the D family to which you subscribe.

Park Cities People is published monthly by CITY NEWSPAPERS LP, an affiliate of D Magazine Partners LP, 750 N. Saint Paul St., Suite 2100, Dallas, TX 75201. Copyright 2015. All rights reserved. No reproduction without permission. Submissions to the editor may be sent via e-mail to editor@peoplenewspapers.com. Correspondence must include writer’s name and contact number. Main phone number, 214-739-2244


4415 Woodfin Drive | $1,625,000 Clarke Landry | 214-692-0000

Representing the Finest Homes for 70 Years

Museum Tower Multiple Units Sold - Represented Buyer Bernice Edelman | 214-692-0000

10332 Woodford Drive | $3,995,000 Kay Weeks | 214-676-8230

6323 Meadow Road | $2,550,000 Penny Rivenbark Patton | 214-632-0805

4710 Bobbitt Drive | $1,869,000 Clarke Landry | 214-692-0000

4428 Greenbrier Drive | $1,850,000 Victoria Barr | 214-692-0000

6032 Burgundy Road | $1,595,000 Nilza Rueckert | 214-692-0000

5606 Meletio Lane | $1,250,000 Linda Vallala | 214-692-0000

14 St. Laurent Place | $1,095,000 Joe Gall | 214-957-5383 Kenneth Walters | 214-923-3297

11767 Valleydale Drive | $995,000 Paula Wier Scofield | 214-232-0562

EBBY.COM

EBBY’S LITTLE WHITE HOUSE | 214-210-1500 EBBY PRESTON CENTER | 214-692-0000 EBBY LAKEWOOD/LAKE HIGHLANDS | 214-826-0316 ©2015. Equal Housing Opportunity.


4  OCTOBER 2015 | PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM

POLICE K E E P I N G TA B S

SKU LD U GGE RY of the M O N T H A S LE E P AT T HE WHE E L At 6:38 a.m. on Sept. 9, officers found a driver sleeping in the front seat of a white 1997 Lexus sedan parked in a front yard in the 6300 block of Dublin Street. Tracy Renee Todd, 45, of Dallas was arrested on charges of public intoxication and possession of a controlled substance.

Brazen Burglars Prefer to Take Seats in the Back Row

S

UV owners beware: it seems we’re in the middle of another wave of overnight third-row seat thefts in the Park Cities. Police in Highland Park and University Park have been inundated recently with calls the sound pretty much the same. Someone breaks into a GMC Yukon, Chevrolet Tahoe, Cadillac Escalade, or other similar vehicle — locked or not — and detaches the rear seat. Then they sell it online or to a salvage yard for a tidy profit, sometimes north of $1,000. That refrain echoed throughout Labor Day weekend, with 10 such incidents in Park Cities streets and driveways in a two-day span, seven of which involved Yukons. This sort of crime spree is

TODD JORGENSON

common in other parts of the country as well, particularly in affluent areas. And it’s difficult to catch these burglars who often complete the whole process in just a few minutes. There are ways to deter such thefts, most notably with attachable third-row seat locks that you can buy either online or in stores. They might cost $100 or more, but that’s still pennies compared to the replacement cost of the seat.

INSTANT GRATIFICATION D MAGAZINE IS AVAILABLE IN PRINT AND DIGITAL. Subscribe at D M AG A Z I N E .C O M

N O TA B L E I N C I D E N T S H I G H L A N D PA R K September 2 At 9:25 p.m., a burglar shattered a window of a white 2005 Chrysler sedan in a parking garage in the 4200 block of Oak Lawn Avenue, but didn’t steal anything. September 3 At 3:24 p.m., a resident of the 3100 block of Drexel Drive reported the theft of more than $17,000 worth of jewelry from the master bedroom of a house sometime between Aug. 9 and Sept. 3. Some contractors and members of a church youth group each passed through the house during that time frame. September 5 Between 9:30 p.m. on Sept. 4 and 8:30 a.m. on Sept. 5, a thief entered an

unlocked black 2012 Chevrolet Suburban in the 4500 block of Bordeaux Avenue and stole the third-row seat, a credit-card holder, and $25 in cash. September 10 Between 11 a.m. and 4:10 p.m., a thief entered an unlocked red 2012 Dodge pickup in the 4000 block of Lexington Avenue and stole a briefcase containing an HP loptop computer, a checkbook, and the title to a Hunt County ranch. September 13 At 2 p.m., a massage therapist at Whole Foods Market in the 4100 block of Lomo Alto Drive said a client left a $5,500 Tag Heuer watch on the massage table.

2,000

Value, in dollars, of a flat-screen television that was attached to a back porch in the 3400 block of Wentwood Drive. A thief stole it between midnight on Sept. 4 and 9:30 a.m. on Sept. 6.

WANT TO READ MORE CRIMES? SIGN UP FOR OUR WEEKLY POLICE REPORT E-NEWSLETTER parkcitiespeople.com/ policereport

U N I V E R S I T Y PA R K September 4 At 10:45 a.m., a shoplifter tried to steal $280 worth of clothing from Luke’s Locker at Park Cities Plaza before being detained by a clerk. Following a scuffle, the thief dropped the merchandise and fled in a white Chevrolet Cruze. Between 10 a.m. on Sept. 3 and 2 p.m. on Sept. 4, a thief entered an unlocked garage in the 4100 block of University Boulevard and stole a $550 Nuna Mixx stroller and a $200 Samsung television. September 5 Between 10 p.m. on Sept. 4 and 5 a.m. on Sept. 5, a thief entered an unlocked white 2015 Ford F-150 in the 4000 block of Hanover Street and stole a $500 knife and two

Covert digital cameras with a combined value of $450. September 8 Between 3:30 p.m. on Sept. 4 and 8 p.m. on Sept. 8, a thief entered an unlocked white 2011 Toyota SUV in the 4000 block of Centenary Drive and stole a $500 Glock handgun. September 10 At 4:40 p.m., a thief stole a rented white 2015 Ford Fusion from the valet stand at Hotel Lumen in the 5900 block of Hillcrest Avenue. September 12 At 9:37 a.m., a vandal poured dog food and flour on a black 2013 GMC Sierra pickup and a black 2015 Jeep Wrangler in the 4300 block of Stanhope Drive.


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An Ebby Halliday Company

5414 Falls Road Preston Hollow · $7,495,000 Incomparable estate located in a very secluded area of Old Preston Hollow. Dave Perry-Miller 972.380.7723 Molly Malone 214.725.9969

Residences at the Ritz-Carlton · Uptown · $8,500,000 to $1,000,000 Sharon S. Quist 214.695.9595

4636 Chapel Hill · Cloisters Estates · $7,495,000 Kim & Taylor Gromatzky 214.802.5025

Kelly Hosch 214.478.4313 & Shelly Bailey 214.673.4323

5828 Woodland · Preston Hollow · $5,700,000

Christine McKenny 214.662.7758 & Megan Stern 214.912.0425

Christopher Miller 214.528.0707

Christine McKenny 214.662.7758

3309 Caruth · University Park · $3,349,000 Shelly Bailey 214.673.4323

3520 Bryn Mawr · University Park · $4,150,000 · SOLD*

10455 Strait Lane · Preston Hollow · $6,950,000

4515 S. Versailles · Highland Park · $1,799,000

3801 Maplewood · Highland Park · $6,950,000 (165’ x 208’ lot)

Diane & Becky Gruber 972.523.2448 – Represented Buyer*

10473 Epping · Preston Hollow · $1,475,000 Dawn Rejebian 214.354.1523

13 Ryddington · Downs of Hillcrest · $1,325,000 Megan Stern 214.912.0425


©2015 Equal Housing Opportunity

6615 Meadow · Preston Hollow · $2,475,000

4249 Westway · Highland Park · $2,550,000 Don Averitt 214.502.9070

5046 Radbrook · Preston Hollow · $1,289,000

CC Allen 214.912.8326

6814 Avalon · Lakewood · $995,000

Frada Sandler 214.616.6476

The Jackson Team 214.827.2400

18 Cheltenham Way · Downs of Hillcrest · $850,000 Megan Stern 214.912.0425

Every home has a story. And our magazine, the Dave Perry-Miller Collection, allows us to tell dozens of them. The second edition, which showcases the finest properties in Dallas’ most sought-after neighborhoods, will be delivered to homes in late September. Look for it in your mailbox, or visit DavePerryMiller.com.

Preston Center ∙ 214.369.6000

Highland Park ∙ 214.526.6600

InTown ∙ 214.303.1133

Park Cities ∙ 214.522.3838

Lakewood ∙ 214.522.3838

An Ebby Halliday Company · DavePerryMiller.com

3401 Dartmouth · Highland Park · $2,199,000

4598 Rheims Place · Highland Park · $1,375,000 Don Averitt 214.502.9070 & CC Allen 214.912.8326

Phyllis Glover 972.380.7606

4229 Irvin Simmons · Preston Hollow · $824,900 Paige & Curt Elliott 214.478.9544

4205 Manning · Preston Hollow · $799,000 Julie Boren 214.402.8778

10564 Somerton · North Dallas · $710,000 Christine McKenny 214.662.7758


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PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM | OCTOBER 2015  9

E D U C AT I O N Hockadaisy is in Harmony With History By Sarah Bennett

People Newspapers Most 17-year-olds can’t say that they’ve had two books published, but Hockaday student Juliette Turner can. The high school senior has written Our Constitution Rocks and a follow-up, Our Presidents Rock, before she’s even completed her college applications. Our Constitution Rocks was published in 2012 when she was just 14 years old. So how does a young teenager get so into history that she produces a book now used in the classrooms of some school districts? “It’s kind of a roundabout story,” Turner said. Her mother, actress Janine Turner, founded a nonprofit organization called Constituting America. While Juliette was homeschooled in middle school, she acted as its youth director. In addition to a youth contest called We the Future, the organization also holds a 90-day class for adults. For her history project that year, Juliette was assigned to interpret each day’s part of the class into an essay for kids. “In turn, I wrote 90 essays on the Constitution when I was in seventh grade,” Juliette said. Those essays then turned into the book, which was picked up by HarperCollins. Today, Grapevine ISD uses the book as a textbook. Juliette and her mother also donate copies of the books to schools where they speak, such as the Barack Obama School for Male Leader-

DON JOHNSON

Juliette Turner published her first book when she was just 14 years old. ship, thanks to a Fort Worth patron. “It’s the idea of a kid talking to a kid,” Juliette said. “It’s kind of like, ‘If she’s interested in this, then I can be, too.’”

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And that interest is something that goes back generations in her family. Not only was her grandfather a graduate of the U.S. Military Academy at West

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Point, her mother also shares her passion for American history. “I’ve always had a love of the founding fathers since I was 8, which is a little strange,” the actress said. “I read The Five Thousand Year Leap and that stimulated the thought process. Juliette was 10, and on our ranch, we sat on the hammock and started reading the Constitution.” After that first full reading together, they began listening to seminars, reading The Federalist Papers, and researching further. All of that research then turned into Our Constitution Rocks and Our Presidents Rock. “She was born with this love of country,” Janine said. “I kept thinking she would outgrow it, but she’s on this trajectory. It’s fascinating to watch.” Though Juliette’s primary interest lies in nonfiction, constitutional law, and political science, she’s also got a fiction book coming out in February called That’s Not Hay in My Hair, loosely based on her experiences on the family ranch, which — get this — she was working on before the history books came along. “I loved that too, because it was the first time I’d done fiction, and a lot of me is in it as well,” Juliette said. It’s that inherent drive to pick up new projects that keeps Juliette going — and it’s also one of the things her mother admires watching. “She has a heart for service, and I’m proud of that — her good, sweet heart,” Janine said. “She thrives on it.” Email sarah.bennett@ peoplenewspapers.com


10  OCTOBER 2015 | PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM

E D U CATI O N

HPISD: BONDS AND BUILDINGS

P

ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS

ick a campus, any campus. Whatever your choice, it could look drastically different several years down the road if Highland Park ISD voters pass a bond initiative this fall. The $361.4 million proposal is by far the most expensive in the district’s 101-year history, and is the most ambitious effort yet to reconcile the preservation of HPISD traditions with the need to accommodate unprecedented enrollment growth. When they cast ballots on Nov. 3, voters within the district’s boundaries will determine whether to add a fifth elementary school, and could authorize the tearing down and rebuilding of three of the four existing elementary campuses, all of which were built prior to 1950. The plan also includes significant cosmetic changes to the Highland Park High School campus and its athletic facilities, and to the newest building in the district, which houses McCulloch Intermediate School and Highland Park Middle School. So what will our neighborhood schools look like in 2020? And is it worth the cost? Here’s a breakdown of what could happen at each campus if the bond issue passes.

HIGHLAND PARK HIGH SCHOOL

HPMS/MIS Both HPMS and McCulloch Intermediate School would add classrooms and flex spaces to their respective wings.

P H O T O S : TA N N E R G A R Z A

The existing natatorium would be removed to create space for 28 additional classrooms to alleviate overcrowding. The parking lot at the northwest corner of the building would be replaced with a multilevel addition that could

1

house 30 classrooms for fine arts and other programs. The Seay Tennis Center would be relocated behind the parking garage, across from the outdoor tennis courts. A multi-sport facility would replace the existing Seay Ten-

2

nis Center, which would house a new natatorium as well as meeting rooms, locker rooms, and athletic offices. The district would plan to acquire land around the school for surface parking without building another garage.

NEW SCHOOL It would be constructed on 4.6 acres the district plans to purchase from Northway Christian Church.

3

BRADFIELD(1), HYER(2), AND UNIVERSITY PARK(3) E L E M E N TA R Y Bradfield (5.5 acres), Hyer (6.2 acres), and University Park (4.6 acres) would each be razed and rebuilt in successive years on their current sites. Each campus would consist of three levels and would be configured to accommodate 770 students. An underground parking garage at each school would

4

include 90 spaces and be designed to reduce queuing congestion. The district says it intends to have the new schools incorporate historical elements of the original buildings and contain architecture that will complement the surrounding neighborhoods.

ARMSTRONG E L E M E N TA RY ( 4 ) A slight addition on the north side would add

a new music, art, and foreign-language classrooms and expand administration space. Interior renovations would update the auditorium, create flex spaces, and enlarge classrooms. The building would not be razed and replaced in part because of limited land area, but it would be smaller than the other four elementary schools with just 550 students. — Todd Jorgenson

The school would serve as a rotating relief campus for displaced students from Bradfield, Hyer, and University Park while those campuses are being rebuilt. It would accommodate 770 students and include 90 underground parking spaces, and would be populated with its own students after the other elementary schools are finished.

Parking would be moved to a 200-space underground garage beneath the existing athletic field to the south of the school. Athletics, administrative, and performing arts spaces would get significant renovations, including enlarged locker rooms and relocated tennis courts.

DO THE DOLLARS MAKE SENSE? Here’s how the money is allocated in HPISD’s bond proposal that will be on the ballot in November.

TOTAL COST: $361.4 millon

Elementary schools: $139.8 million HPHS: $113 million Land acquisition: $45 million HPMS/MIS: $38.3 million Misc. costs: $25.3 million


PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM | OCTOBER 2015  11

EDUCAT IO N

Park Cities Native Helps Give Orphans Hope in Guatemala

HOCKADAY B ELIEVING IN THE LI MITLESS POTEN TIAL OF G IR LS.

Park Cities native Christopher Powell spent this summer in Guatemala as an intern with Tree 4 Hope. He worked to find relief for displaced orphans and provided meals for children fighting cancer. C O U R T E SY PHOTO

Christopher Powell, a Park Cities native and a junior at Hamilton College, recently returned home from a summer spent helping orphaned and displaced children in Guatemala through an internship with Tree 4 Hope. Powell received a Levitt Public Service Internship Award, which funds summer internships focusing on public service. It was not Powell’s first experience with Tree 4 Hope, or with work in Guatemala. “I learned about Tree 4 Hope through my Adirondack Adventure leader when he asked me to come on one of Tree 4 Hope’s service trips in Guatemala over this past winter break,” Powell said. During that trip, Powell met the Crist family, which owns the T4H foundation, and upon expressing his enthusiasm for the program, was informed that they were looking for a summer intern that would be able to work full time on-location in Guatemala. Powell’s primary work this summer was with Hogar Miguel Magone, an orphanage focusing on displaced children. Through their partnership, Tree 4 Hope funds food for more than 300 children supported by HMM. Powell chiefly focused on continuing Tree 4 Hope’s sponsorship program,

through which it hosts sponsors who agree to fund a given child’s fruits, vegetables and meats on a monthly basis, an average of $7 a month per child. When other tasks weren’t commanding his time, Powell worked on one of Tree 4 Hope’s newer aspirations: providing meals for children fighting cancer at a hospital in Guatemala City. “I’ve loved my time in Guatemala because of the children at the orphanage,” he said. “I made great relationships with them over the course of my two weeks with them in January, and it was those relationships that drove me to return this summer. This work is really rewarding because of them, and how much they express their gratitude to everyone that works with them.” Beyond helping the orphans, Powell said he learned from them, obtaining new practical Spanish skills, as well as gaining lessons in gratitude, acceptance and patience. “I also learned how to make friends fast,” he said. “At the orphanage obviously this applied, but while the teams I led at the orphanage weren’t in Guatemala, I stayed in a hostel dorm room, and met people from all over the world, which was an experience all its own.” — Staff report

ADMISSION PREVIEW Oc tober 4 and December 6 1:00 – 4:00 pm

Day: Pre-K–12 Boarding: 8 –12 www.hockaday.org The Hockaday School does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, creed, sexual orientation, religion, national or ethnic origin.

Love Learning.

C O M E S E E W H AT S E T S U S A PA R T. Admission Previews (weekends): Preschool & Lower School (PK - 4) | Sunday, October 18, 2015, 1:00 pm Middle School (5 - 8) | Saturday, November 14, 2015, 9:00 am Upper School (9 - 12) | Saturday, December 5, 2015, 1:00 pm

Admission Coffees (weekdays): Preschool/Lower School Preschool Middle School Upper School

Tuesday, November 3, 2015, 10:00 am Tuesday, November 17, 2015, 10:00 am Wednesday, December 2, 2015, 10:00 am Wednesday, January 6, 2016, 10:00 am

October 18th, 4:00 pm

Register to attend at www.greenhill.org It is the policy of Greenhill School to administer its educational programs, including admission and financial aid, without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, national or ethnic origin, or disability.


12  OCTOBER 2015

E D U CAT I ON SPECIAL ADVERTISING CONTENT PROVIDENCE CHRISTIAN SCHOOL

35 Great Books

BUILDING

One of Providence’s tenets is to cultivate the love of reading. That’s the idea behind the 35 Great Books List, which includes the best books in historical fiction that each grade is studying. While there is an ever-growing list of well-written books, there are also many favorites that provide a balance between more thoughtful concentration and books in the fantasy and fairy tale genre. Review the book lists at: www.pcstx.org.

LOVING MINDS

Small class sizes, hands-on experiences and integrated programming inspire a love for learning in our children.

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Welcoming You With a Touch of Grace

Enlightened Minds. Compassionate Spirits. 9200 Inwood Road, Dallas | 214.706.9568

a ministry of lovers lane united methodist church

Grace Academy of Dallas Open House, “A Touch of Grace,” will be offered for prospective parents on October 6 at 7:00 p.m. and October 7 at 9:00 a.m. “Parenting with Purpose” author, blogger and Grace parent, Julie Hildebrand will share her Grace community perspective. Come learn about amazing Grace Academy of Dallas where we are Christ-Centered and FutureFocused. Visit www.graceacademy.com for more information or email the admission office at Burns@graceacademy.com. See you there!

Lamplighter delivers serious education wrapped in the wonder of childhood. Join us for a tour in October or explore Lamplighter at our Open House on Sunday November 8 from 1:00 – 3:00 p.m. Contact the Office of Admission and Placement at .. ext. .

SPECIAL ADVERTISING CONTENT THE EPISCOPAL SCHOOL OF DALLAS

Igniting Lives of Purpose

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We won! 10

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SPECIAL REPORT

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1. Richard Rogers .............. $10,000 Peo ple d Jorgenson New spa 2. Ellen Flowers.................... $7,500 per s 3. William Dunn ....................$5,551 Nobody T4. Roy Coffee ..................... $5,000 if his mind could blam e T4. Joe Colonnetta ............. $5,000 nom will was elsew Scottie here. TheT4.Sche ffler Colonnetta .. $5,000 Kimberly events tee off in at golf least two T4. phe- Madeley ............ $5,000 this sum Amateur PGADaniel mer Tour Champion as well asT4. William He’s the U.S. Ward ............... $5,000 ship. prep 9. Debbie Dunlap................. $3,000 arin g high scho to 10. Accountability ty of Texa ol and enro grad uate from ll First PAC................................ $2,855 the foot s, where he at the Univ ersihopes steps of to follo Leonard, Dall w in Harrison as standout Spieth. s Just Frazar, and Jord in Yet the an Park High main focu 1. Howard Crow ................ $25,000 s for the the indiv School in High2.land senithe Three Republicans are trying to replace Dan Branch as District 108’s representative H.R. Perot Jr................... $25,000 or Class 4A idual and team is on defendin 3. Robert B. Rowling ......... $25,000 Y state tour let’s title g AT H E Texas House. We’ll profile each of these men Con theC Gfollowing pages. Inhasthe meantime, a chan nament s at the UIL HRIS M ce to in Aust T4. Albert Huddleston..... $10,000 ing the on in. He Morgan Meyer ............ $10,000 take a look at their campaigns’ finances. These numbers are based on reports e histo filed with fi theymak the Prest ry by becoT4. behind vidual rst HP player the alley T6. m- Bracewell & Giuliani nts in the Texas Ethics Commission, covering activity between July 1 and Jan. 23.championships, to win three indifavorite ost conte nd. Committee PAC................... $5,000 to do and he weektheir comp Garla will be Still, for so. show off Worm Ranch in s for twice the T6. Lisa Fichtel.................... $5,000 BY DAN KOLLER • PEOPLE NEWSPAPERS the the state a golfer of Needleman lution Dalla task, either: Texas ScottieJohn .................. $5,000 Scheffl T6. Natalie tournam cle Revo small and Leslie directly to the than no Recy er’s tige, Scheffl Bass it’s more ent yn stature,T6. Henry Ross but might p. And er III cts goes donated Perot $5,000 will...com Mary Kathr lack in ly picku loyalty he doesn’t see er produ ated and year. pete in pres-T6. Ryan Rogers .................. $5,000 to his co-owners of leftov it that bar gener compost last two two PGA juice startin way, c The GEM efront. The mix prim S I D E - B Y- S I D E C O M P A Runds I S Oof NS D I Das Y O U K N Oscho W ol. . . ore than

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Students learn best through the active pursuit of knowledge and the relevant application of that knowledge. At The Episcopal School of Dallas, we believe this is best achieved in a community that fosters critical thinking, creativity, collaboration, personal responsibility, and intellectual risk-taking in a safe and open environment. ESD educators endeavor to guide students through inquirybased, real-world learning experiences that yield enduring understanding and encourage students to become life-long learners in an ever-changing global society.


PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM | OCTOBER 2015  13

E D U CAT I ON

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14  OCTOBER 2015 | PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM

E D U CATI O N SALUTING THE SCOTS

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The stands at Highlander Stadium were packed with fans supporting the Scots, and the band and cheerleaders were loud for Highland Park’s home opener against Pulaski Academy on Sept. 4.

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16  OCTOBER 2015 | PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM

E D U CATI O N SPECIAL ADVERTISING CONTENT

SPECIAL ADVERTISING CONTENT

GOOD SHEPHERD EPISCOPAL

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Inspiring Children at GSES

Leading the Way in Innovative Education

At Good Shepherd Episcopal School, we believe every child possesses unique gifts, so we focus on the intellectual, emotional, physical, and spiritual growth of every student. As a PreK through 8th grade faith-based community, GSES cultivates the importance of family while celebrating individual growth and achievement. Our culture, free from the pressure and influence of high school, fosters students to develop the conviction and courage to choose their own path. Beginning with our full-day preK program, GSES enables students to discover their own joy and confidence in how they learn and prepares them to master the skills essential for high school and beyond. We provide leadership opportunities to instill respect, courage, and acceptance so students of all ages can make a positive impact on the world around them. With an exceptional scholastic background behind them, 98% of our eighth grade graduates are admitted to one or more of their top two high school choices.

Calvin Carter, CEO of Bottle Rocket in Dallas, is one of several local business leaders who visit students at Alcuin’s Innovation Studio. Alcuin School’s Innovation Studio is a creative space that was constructed to offer students of all ages the resources necessary to execute their imagination and tend to their inventive spirits. This unique facility, which is available to first grade through Upper School, is designed to promote educational success through a high-tech interactive learning environment that stimulates imagination, creativity, innovation, and leadership exploration. The studio is equipped with a variety of advanced technological supplies and tools for students to collaborate, innovate, and execute projects including a 3-D printer, All-In-One Learning Boards, a SMART Table®, and presentation theater among many other cutting-edge amenities. The Innovation Studio is also home to Alcuin School’s De León Entrepreneurial Leadership Speakers’ Series. The events give students an opportunity to interact with today’s business and community leaders who offer hands-on, real world and relevant learning experiences. Visit us at: www.alcuinschool.org.

Exhibit Salutes Heroism in Tragedy The chaos, courage, and emotions of Sept. 11, 2011, will be on display at the Jesuit Dallas Museum through Nov. 24, thanks to an internationally renowned art exhibit labeled Ground Zero 360: Never Forget. In a panoramic installation of photographic images, visuals and audio clips, Irish photojournalist Nicola McLean and Paul McCormack, former commanding officer of the 41st precinct of the New York Police Department, pay tribute to the first responders and victims of the 9-11 terrorist attacks. Visitors will hear the city’s previously unreleased radio calls, touch a fragment of twisted steel and broken granite from the World Trade Center, view personal artifacts on loan from families of first responders, and more. The exhibit previously was on loan to the National Museum of Ireland, the National September 11 Memorial and Museum, and the Yitzhak Rabin Center in Tel Aviv, Israel, among others. It captures the confusion, panic, and heroism at Ground Zero, and provides a unique insight into the hearts and minds of New York-

C O U R T E SY P H O T O

I F YO U G O The Ground Zero 360 exhibit at Jesuit will run through Nov. 24. Docent-guided tours are available by contacting Elizabeth Hunt Blanc at ehuntblanc@jesuitcp.org.

The Wonderful World

of education Check out our education sections this October & November

ers in the days that followed the attacks. The exhibit, which is located on the campus of Jesuit College Preparatory School, is available for docent-guided tours through the museum. For more information, contact museum director Elizabeth Hunt Blanc at 972-387-8700, extension 383, or ehuntblanc@jesuitcp.org. — Staff report

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PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM | OCTOBER 2015  17

E D U CAT I ON

Alum Returns to Providence to Teach Alongside Mom By Karly Hanson

People Newspapers Hannah Bires was in second grade when she first drew a portrait of herself returning to her school as a teacher. She would read her homework out loud to her dolls after school. She loved getting to write on the white board — especially to diagram sentences. As she grew up, she would play school with her younger brother, Micah. Bires, 23, began her first year as a teacher this fall at Providence Christian School — the same school she attended growing up, and the same school where her mother, Suzann Bires, has taught for the last 17 years. “It’s kind of surreal,” Hannah said. “Everything is still pretty much the same. Today I found my old history book from when I took this class with my name and notes in it.” Providence is a small Christian school that uses classical teaching methods and reading materials to teach critical think-

C O U R T E SY P H O T O

Former Providence student Hannah Bires now teaches at the school with her mother, Suzann. ing skills to students in pre-K through eighth grade. Hannah teaches history to seventh and eighth graders. “History is her thing. She can talk it. Middle school is perfect for her,” Suzann said.

Suzann teaches first grade, which is called class one at Providence. She taught preschool for her first 14 years at the school. Hannah likes focusing on reading and comprehension,

rather than building a curriculum around a set of generic requirements. Suzann says by the end of the year, some of her students, who are mostly 7 years old, can do long division. Hannah got her degree in ed-

ucation from Texas A&M and student-taught history for sixth and seventh graders in Katy. After graduating, she worked for a year at a publishing company before applying to be a teacher at Providence. She knew she wanted to teach at a classical Christian school. “I think the classic stuff just works; there’s a reason it stuck around so long,” Hannah said. “I’ve seen it work on myself and my friends.” The weirdest part for Hannah is calling her old teachers by their first names. She says she’ll never be able to do it. Hannah was still a student at Providence when her students were starting preschool with her mom. Despite the six-year difference between their students’ ages, Suzann says first graders and middle schoolers are pretty similar, and both Hannah and Suzann enjoy being around their kids. “I genuinely have fun with them,” Hannah said. “I think we share that.”

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18  OCTOBER 2015 | PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM

BUSINESS Passion Fuels Career Choices for Cuellar By Haley Rogers

W H AT I S C F T ?

Special Contributor Catherine Cuellar’s diverse resume has various jobs in the local media and arts scene, having been an editor and columnist at The Dallas Morning News, a reporter at KERA-FM, a board member for various nonprofits, and a Dallas Cultural Affairs commissioner. Most recently, Cuellar left her post as executive director of the Dallas Arts District this summer to become director of Entrepreneurs for North Texas, a program of Communities Foundation of Texas. The job finds Cuellar working with companies that are too young or too small to have an inhouse corporate affairs department, helping them leverage their employee volunteerism, philanthropy, and sponsorships. Such efforts include organizing service projects, networking opportunities, and fundraisers.

What are some significant differences between your previous position and your new one? Entrepreneurs For North Texas has thousands of potential nonprofit service partners across the region, while the Dallas Arts District is geographically confined to 20 square blocks within downtown Dallas. I still love the arts, but EFNT also allows me to support education, health and human services, animals, elderly — you name it.

Communities Foundation of Texas has helped manage charitable funds for families, companies, and foundations since 1953. Learn more at cftexas.org.

Catherine Cuellar helps match businesses and nonprofits as director of Entrepreneurs for North Texas. || C H R I S M C G AT H E Y

What has been the most challenging part of the transition? This is the first time in seven years that I’m not working in downtown Dallas, where I also live, so I can’t walk to work

anymore. In fact, I’m driving to my member companies’ offices from Frisco to Las Colinas to Lancaster, so the biggest challenge is so much time spent driving between meetings.

How has your career prepared you to be director at EFNT? This job leverages all my previous experiences in the nonprofit, corporate, media, and government sectors. I helped launched

for-profit brands like GuideLive.com and co-founded the non-profit La Reunion TX, so I can relate to entrepreneurs. And most of my career has been spent in Dallas, so I understand the culture here and can help EFNT executives who are new to the area learn the lay of the land. What is it about Dallas that you are passionate about? And what about Dallas do you want to improve through your efforts? Right now I’m extremely passionate about inclusion and equity in Dallas. If our working poor neighbors continue to struggle in times of prosperity, that’s disheartening. I’m passionate about empowering our entire city — especially young people, women, and people of color — through access to the same outstanding public education, leadership development and career opportunities I’ve been lucky enough to have. Dallas’ public, private, and nonprofit sectors will be most vibrant and resilient when the leaders of our organizations are as dynamic and diverse as the citizens, customers, and clients we serve.

Luxury Apartments Appear Likely Near Preston Center By Todd Jorgenson

People Newspapers It appears likely that a new luxury apartment complex will come to the northeast corner of Preston Road and Northwest Highway, after all. Transwestern cleared its biggest hurdle yet toward developing the key intersection near Preston Center when the Dallas City Plan Commission approved its rezoning request in early September. The Dallas City Council still needs to vote this fall on the Planned Development Subdistrict before the developer can proceed.

The project would replace a complex of 34 outdated condominiums on the property, known as Town House Row. The Transwestern concept would consist of 164 units with building heights ranging from three to four stories. The rezoning request included just the southern portion of the 3.5-acre property, for which Transwestern requested a one-floor variance in building height, as well as allowances for increased density and lot coverage. Current zoning allows for 60 fewer units on that same property. The approval comes almost 18 months after Transwestern

" T R A FF IC O N P RE STO N ROA D A P P E A R S TO B E A P RO B L EM, BUT T HAT ’ S N OT W H AT T H E DATA SH OW S . THE BENEFITS ... OUTWEIGH THE DOWNSIDES." MARGOT MURPHY first announced plans to redevelop the site with a proposal that included eight-story buildings and 296 total units. When that proposal met with significant resistance from the surrounding neighborhood, the developer organized several community meetings and introduced a series of compromises,

and has since won the support of many of those skeptics. “We are realists who are not opposed to sensible redevelopment,” said Marc Hall, president of the 6040 Place Homeowners Association. “Transwestern offers us a sensible solution.” The proposal includes no surface parking, wide side-

walks, significant landscaping, and a left-turn lane from Preston Road to Averill in order to facilitate traffic flow. Access to the underground parking garage would be off Averill, and not Preston. Still, the increased traffic remains a concern for opponents of the project, including the possibility of cut-through traffic on east-west side streets such as Bandera Avenue and Del Norte Lane. “It is vastly going to add traffic to one of the busiest intersections in Dallas,” said Jeanne Hatfield, who lives on nearby Northwood Road. “I’m concerned about

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BUSINE S S

D O D D C O M M U N I C AT I O N S

Transwestern got a thumbs-up from the Dallas City Plan Commission for its latest luxury apartment plan.

CONTINUED FROM 18 people speeding down the street.” However, Mark Goode, a traffic consultant with Kimley-Horn, said the traffic impact of the project would be negligible, even during rush hour. It would increase the daily traffic count at the Preston-Northwest Highway intersection by less than 1 percent, he said. It also would not present any issues with traffic stacking up or queuing on Averill, according to Lloyd Denmon, assistant director of engineering for the city of Dallas. “Traffic on Preston Road appears to be a problem, but that’s not what the data shows,” said District 13 plan commissioner Margot Murphy. “The benefits

of this project outweigh the downsides.” The land also sits within a larger area under consideration from the Northwest Highway and Preston Road Area Plan task force, a group of volunteers appointed by the city whose task is creating guidelines to shape future development around Preston Center. The task force won’t have its final recommendations ready until next spring, at the earliest. But the city is not required to wait until the task force completes its work before proceeding with rezoning or other development requests, as in this case. “This won’t be monolithic like it was originally presented,” said Richard Brown, senior planner with the city of Dallas. “It protects and retains the character of the residential area.”

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16th Annual Baylor Health Care System Foundation Celebrating Women Luncheon Thursday, October 15, 2015 Hilton Anatole Hotel, Dallas www.BaylorHealth.com/CelebratingWomen Presented by:

* Breast cancer survivor, Amy Marcontell, with her family.


20  OCTOBER 2015 | PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM

BUS I N E S S BRIEFS

McClung to Lead Salesmanship Club Park Cities resident William McClung is the new president of the Salesmanship Club of Dallas, the nonprofit organization that owns the Momentous Institute and hosts the Byron Nelson Championship golf tournament each year. McClung, an executive vice president at Cushman & Wakefield, has been a member of the club since 1990. He has served in various leadership capacities during the past 25 years.

Coldwell Earns Newsweek Award Douglas Coldwell, a Highland Park High School alum, was recently named

one of the top 15 cancer doctors in the United States by Newsweek. Coldwell works at Brown Cancer Institute in Louisville, Ky., where he specializes in interventional radiology and inoperable liver tumors.

The award pays tribute to 100 women whose work and achievements encourage female students to pursue careers in science, technology, engineering, and math. She was director of the Caruth Institute from 2008 to 2015.

STEM Work Leads to Honor SMU Prof

James Stroud, the founder of Stroud Companies, has been featured in the second edition of “The Entrepreneurial Spirit of Seniors Housing: Thoughts, Stories, and Lessons on Leadership.” Stroud, a Park Cities resident, is a pioneer in the assisted-living industry who has been involved in more than $2 billion in deals and developments for senior living facilities.

SMU professor Delores Etter, founding director of the Caruth Institute for Engineering Education at the Lyle School of Engineering, will be recognized with the “100 Inspiring Women in STEM” award from Insight Into Diversity magazine.

Stroud Recognized in Senior Publication


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COMING UP AT THE MEADOWS MUSEUM Thursday, October 1, 6 p.m. Velázquez and the Blue Infanta Lecture by Géza von Habsburg, Independent Scholar Thursday, October 8, 6 p.m. Discovering Columbus in the White House: Presidents and the Admiral of the Ocean Sea Lecture by Alan C. Lowe, Director, George W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum Friday, October 9, 12:15 p.m. Between Realism and Classicism: Masterworks by Ribera from the House of Alba Gallery talk by Edward Payne, Meadows/Mellon/Prado Fellow, Meadows Museum Friday, October 30, 12:15 p.m. Highlights of Netherlandish Art from the House of Alba Lecture by Nancy Cohen Israel, Art historian and owner of Art à la Carte This exhibition is co-organized by the Meadows Museum and the Casa de Alba Foundation. A generous gift from The Meadows Foundation has made this project possible. It is part of the Museum’s Golden Anniversary, which is sponsored by The Meadows Foundation, The Moody Foundation, the Dallas Tourism Public Improvement District and the Dallas Convention & Visitors Bureau. Media sponsorship has been provided by The Dallas Morning News. This exhibition is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities. Images top left: Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes (Spanish, 1746-1828), The Duchess of Alba in White (detail), 1795. Oil on canvas. Colección Duques de Alba, Palacio de Liria, Madrid. Top right: Christopher Columbus’s logbook of the voyage of discovery of the New World. Map of La Española. Paper, covered in parchment, double folio, 1492 (?). Colección Duques de Alba.

Explore the Meadows Museum and learn about Spain’s rich culture and heritage through fun and engaging experiences for everyone! Art activities • Gallery talks • Food and wine tastings Film screenings by the Dallas Film Society Music and dance performances Look for a complete schedule of events at meadowsmuseumdallas.org. OUR DISCOVER SPAIN! SPONSORS Presenting Sponsor The Honorable Janet Kafka and Mr. Terry Kafka Event Sponsor Texas Monthly Supporter Penn Davis McFarland, Inc. Investment Advisors


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PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM | OCTOBER 2015  23

PA R T N E R S C A R D

FLASH YOUR CARD, SAVE A LIFE Tradition mixes fun with cause By Sarah Bennett

People Newspapers Most Dallasites know that Partners Card is one sweet week of shopping, deals, and savings. But this year’s chairs and honorary chair want to make sure that with every swipe, shoppers are mindful of the cause behind it. Rhonda “ We wa n t Sargent you to have fun Chambers but to remember that not only are you saving money, you really are saving somebody’s life,” co-chair Debbie Munir said. “It makes a huge difference. [The Family Place staff ] are good stewards of people’s contributions.” Munir pointed out that since its beginning 22 years ago, Partners Card has raised more than $14 million toward preventing domestic violence and providing care to its victims. As many know, the $70 spent to purchase the card goes directly to the organization. “With abuse rising in our culture, the services this organization provides are life-changing,” co-chair Melissa Boler said. “Personal safety is often something I take for granted. However, statistics are staggering — I have heard it is one in four women who are or will be abused. So chances are we all know someone affected, even if they aren’t sharing it.” With such numbers, it’s only natural that people would want to get involved and help. But many often wonder what they can do if they’re not able to donate a large sum or provide professional care. That’s where Partners Card comes in. “It’s hard when you are common folk and just someone who’s not trained to help with family violence or counseling. You think, ‘How can I help?’” honorary chair Rhonda

GEORGE FIALA

Partners Card co-chairs Melissa Boler, Debbie Munir, and Ashlee Weidner greet shoppers at the kickoff party in May.

S AV E T H E D AT E WHEN: Oct. 30 - Nov. 8 WHERE: See page 28 WHAT: Benefiting The Family Place programs

BY THE NUMBERS

10 $15 MILLION Days of saving

Raised since Partners Card began Sargent Chambers said. “You start thinking, ‘Oh, I can donate that refrigerator, I can do that.’ You start thinking of ways you can help them without being [a trained professional].” It’s true, The Family Place accepts many donated goods for its shelter and other programs that help victims of abuse regain their footing in the world. The money from purchasing Partners Cards also assists in those endeavors. Chambers said her first exposure with The Family Place began in high school by attending events. She also remembers clothing drives being paired with fashion shows to increase ex-

posure for great causes during her days with the Kim Dawson Modeling Agency. “Gaining awareness is very important,” she said. It’s important to the chairs because for some, it’s also personal. “My mother grew up in a violent household and in the 1960s, it wasn’t something that was very much discussed,” cochair Ashlee Weidner said. “You couldn’t talk to a teacher about it, and if you did, it was kind of brushed under the rug. That’s very important that women and children particularly are aware that it’s not something to be ashamed of.” Though The Family Place began primarily to aid women and children, they also aid

men who have suffered abuse. That large pool of clients gives chairs added motivation to rope in more participating retailers, which then helps reach more people. “It’s exciting. It’s a really good thing to grow awareness among people that need their services. The more people who know, the better,” Munir said. After all, buying a card is one of the simplest ways to help. “Partners Card is an easy way to contribute, so I’m working to spread that message,” Boler said. “This is such a unique fundraiser: we get the chance to impact lives doing something that is a normal part of life — shopping.” Email sarah.bennett@ peoplenewspapers.com

20%

23 $70

Savings on all purchases

Years of partnership with The Family Place

Cost of Partners Card

100%

Proceeds returned from purchased cards

14,050 Cards sold last year


24  OCTOBER 2015 | PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM

PARTN ERS CA RD H A P P Y H O U R AT T R I N A T U R K

Kathy Lethbridge and Michelle Velting C H R I S WA I T S

Heather Street Baker, Kiley Dunlap, Ashlee Weidner, Elizabeth Dacus, and other Partners Card VIPs gathered at Trina Turk on July 29 for a celebratory happy hour.

Kristi Hoyl, Regina Bruce, and Carol Seay

Nancy Scripps, Nicki Mehew, and Michaela Dyer

Paula Payne

Cheryl Brown, Megan Lethbridge, and Marilyn Wohlstadter

Tori Ratchford & Sharron O’Neill

Nancy Wechsler and Becky LaFavre

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Filled with luxe pumpkins in assorted metallic shades

Opening Soon in Our Beautiful New Store!

5 Highland Park Village (214) 521-3862 Partners Card Hours: Sun 1pm - 5pm • Mon–Sat 9:30am - 5:00pm


PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM | OCTOBER 2015  25

PA RT N E R S CA R D

Who You Help: The Family Place The Family Place is one of the largest family violence shelters in the Dallas area. Its mission is to empower victims of family violence by providing safe housing, counseling, and skills that create independence while building community engagement and advocating for social change to stop family violence. FAMILYPLACE.ORG | 214.559.2170 24-HOUR CRISIS HOTLINE: 214.941.1991 COMMUNITY BASED COUNSELING

1,689

clients served

CHILDREN’S COUNSELING Helped 455 children recover from the trauma of family violence

89%

reported improved emotional health after six months of counseling

SUPPORTIVE LIVING P R O G R A M : long-term housing, education, & training

CHILD DEVELOPMENT CENTER

K- 2 LEARNING CENTER

72 women 161 children 3 men

196

Keeping children safe and helping them regain developmental delays

In 2014, The Family Place provided 11,523 clients with 164,672 hours of service. All programs are offered in Spanish and English. B AT T E R I N G I N T E R V E N T I O N & PREVENTION PROGRAM

725 men 179 women 61 adolescents

94% of men

weren’t re-arrested for family violence in the following year

96%

of clients secured permanent housing

children served

EMERGENCY S H E LT E R

375 women 600 children 10 men

80%

showed at least a 25% increase in their ageappropriate developmental skills

61

children served

80%

of clients left program for safe housing

S O U R C E : T H E FA M I LY P L A C E

BE PROJECT

5,370

Empowers youth to be part of youth served in the solution to bullying, teen 15 elementary schools dating violence, 10 middle schools and family violence 20 high schools

74%

of youth pledged to be “upstanders”

CELLINI DATE

rolex

and cellini are trademarks.


1730 J.T. OTTINGER ROAD | Offered for $14,697,000

4411 BELFORT AVENUE | Offered for $4,399,000

5 Beds | 6.4 Baths | 12,316 Sq.Ft. | Pool | 24 Acres

5 Beds | 5.3 Baths | 6,437 Sq.Ft. | 3-Car Garage | Quarters

LILLIE YOUNG | 972.467.5714 | lillie.young@alliebeth.com

PITZER-FOXWORTH | 214.354.8048 | dennie.pitzer@alliebeth.com

3912 CENTENARY AVENUE | Offered for $2,325,000

3401 LEE PARKWAY, UNIT 2201 | Offered for $2,150,000

6 Beds | 6.1 Baths | 5,716 Sq.Ft.

3 Beds | 3.1 Baths | 4,777 Sq.Ft.

PINKSTON-HARRIS | 214.460.7401 | margie.harris@alliebeth.com

SUE KRIDER | 214.673.6933 | sue.krider@alliebeth.com

2220 KING FISHER DRIVE

5415 URSULA LANE

3220 GREENBRIER DRIVE

5 Beds | 4.4 Baths | 8,554 Sq.Ft. | Offered for $3,999,900

5 Beds | 7.3 Baths | 8,308 Sq.Ft. | Offered for $3,150,000

5 Beds | 5.3 Baths | 5,427 Sq.Ft. | Offered for $2,995,000

LILLIE YOUNG | 972.467.5714 | lillie.young@alliebeth.com

KELLEY WILLIS | 214.532.1413 | kelley.willis@alliebeth.com

LILLIE YOUNG | 972.467.5714 | lillie.young@alliebeth.com

Information contained herein is believed to be correct, but neither agents nor owner assumes any responsibility for this information or gives any warranty to it. Square foot numbers will vary from county tax records to drawings by a prior sale or withdrawal without notice. In accordance with the Law, this property is offered without respect to race, color, creed or national origin.


a l l ie b e t h .com

3401 BEVERLY DRIVE | Offered for $3,300,000

4033 MCFARLIN BOULEVARD | Offered for $2,595,000

4 Beds | 3.1 Baths | 4,640 Sq.Ft.

5 Beds | 4.1 Baths | 7,207 Sq.Ft.

ASHLEY RUPP | 214.727.4992 | ashley.rupp@alliebeth.com

PINKSTON-HARRIS | 214.460.7401 | margie.harris@alliebeth.com

2933 STANFORD AVENUE | Offered for $1,899,000

3510 TURTLE CREEK, UNIT 7E | Offered for $1,250,000

5 Beds | 4.2 Baths | 5,285 Sq.Ft.

2 Beds | 3.1 Baths | 2,811 Sq.Ft.

PINKSTON-HARRIS | 214.460.7401 | margie.harris@alliebeth.com

SUE KRIDER | 214.673.6933 | sue.krider@alliebeth.com

4508 SOUTHERN AVENUE

3109 HANOVER STREET

3316 GREENBRIER DRIVE

5 Beds | 5.1 Baths | 5,482 Sq.Ft. | Offered for $2,495,000

4 Beds | 4.2 Baths | 3,713 Sq.Ft. | Offered for $1,450,000

4 Beds | 4 Baths | 3,605 Sq.Ft. | Offered for $1,295,000

TIM SCHUTZE | 214.507.6699 | tim.schutze@alliebeth.com

PINKSTON-HARRIS | 214.460.7401 | margie.harris@alliebeth.com

PINKSTON-HARRIS | 214.460.7401 | margie.harris@alliebeth.com

5 0 1 5 Tr a c y S t r e e t

|

Dallas, TX 75205

|

2 1 4 . 52 1 .73 5 5

|

info@alliebeth.com


28  OCTOBER 2015 | PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM

PA RT NERS CA RD

Get Your Charge Cards Ready As this year’s chairs point out, the more people who know about Partners Card, the better — that means getting more stores involved, too. Here’s where you can grab some goods and help out with the cause all in one trip. Plan your week accordingly. 2 Shea Boutique

Bisous Bisous Patisserie

Dallas Yoga Center

Green House Market

Lily Lane Home

7 For All Mankind

Bittano

Daniel Taylor Clothier

Gypsy Wagon

Lily Rain

Abi Ferrin Flagship Boutique

Biz

de Boulle

H.D.’s Men’s

LINEN BOUTIQUE

Blinc

dear hannah,

H.D.’s Women’s

Lisa Bennett Salon

Accents

Blue Mesa Grill

Designer Jewelry Atelier

Hadleigh’s

Lisa Calaway-Batky, O.D.

Accessory Concierge

Blue Print

D’Hierro

Hair Bar

Little Lam Baby Boutique

Adeline

Blues Jean Bar

Haynsworth Photography

Little Orange Fish

Adriana Hoyos

Blush Aesthetics and Wellness

Diamond Luxury Healthcare

Helen Ficalora

Little Red Hen

Diane von Furstenberg

Hemline Boutique

Little Things

Henri Bendel

L’Occitane en Provence

Hiatus Spa + Retreat

LOFT Logos Bookstore

Adventure Kids Playcare | North Dallas

Diesel

Aftershock London

Blushington Makeup & Beauty Lounge

Agent Provocateur

Bodacious Boutique

Doodle & Stinker

Alexander McQueen

bodybar Studios

Double R

alice + olivia by Stacey Bendet

Bookshop of Saint Michael

Hip! Hip! Hooray! Children’s Boutique

Dougherty’s Pharmacy

BOSS Hugo Boss

Holidaze & Gifts

Lorna Jane

All Vac

Douglass Picture Frames

Bottega Veneta

Holy Ravioli

Loro Piana

Allen Edmonds

Bradbury Lane

Dr Delphinium Designs and Events

Hook Line & Sinker

Lotus Shop / Crow Collection of Asian Art

Allie-Coosh

Brahmin

Alton Lane

Bread Winners Café

Dr Delphinium Flower and Orchid House

Ambrosia

Brighton Collectibles

drybar

American Eyewear

Brooklyn + West

Ana’s Papeterie

Brooks Brothers

Durango Trading Company, Inc.

animal crackers

Brookstone

Ann Taylor

Brumley Gardens

Anne Fontaine

Brunello Cucinelli

Antèks Curated

BuDhaGirl

Antèks Home Furnishings

Burberry

Anthropologie

Busy Body

Antique Row

Cabana

Apples to Zinnias

Café Madrid

Arhaus

Calypso St. Barth

Armani Exchange

Camille’s Creations

Arrangement Distinctive Interiors

Canal Clothing

Art of Old India

Capel Rugs

Arteriors Home

Capital Distributing

Arteriors too

Carla Martinengo Boutique

Artful Dancewear

Carlyn Galerie

Avalon Salon and Spa

Carolina Herrera

Avant Garden

Casa Di Lino

Aveda Experience Center

Castle Gap Jewelry

AVIOR Jewelry

Cebolla Fine Flowers

B Gover Limited

CH Carolina Herrera

babybliss

Chantilly

Bachendorf’s

Chocolate Secrets

Bachrach Bag’n Baggage

Chris’ Craft Custom Framing

Balenciaga

Christi Harris Beaute

Ballard & Blakely

ChristyM Boutique

Bar Method

Circa 2000 Fine Apparel

Bare Minerals

City View Antique Mall

Barklee Ltd.

Clarks

Bask Boutique Bassett Furniture BCBGeneration BCBGMAXAZRIA Beading Dreams Beautystudio Becks Prime BelAir Home Bella MD Laser Vein & Aesthetic Center Bellacures Benefit Cosmetics Beretta Gallery Bernadette Schaeffler Collection Betty Lou Boutique Betty Reiter BeTween Scene bevello

Proud Sponsor of Partners Card

CANARY

Beyond Baroque Bibbentuckers The Dry Cleaner Big Mango Trading Co. Bijou Luxury Consignment Billy Reid Bishop Street Market

Club Monaco Coco & Dash Cole Haan Collectors Covey Columbia Sportswear PFG Consilium Lifestyle Collections Container Store Copper Lamp Fine Silver and China

Dive West

E.Leigh’s Eileen Fisher El Bolero Cocina Mexicana Elaine Turner ELEMENTS Elie Tahari Elizabeth Showers ella bleu Ellis Hill Enchanted Galleries Enlighten MD Epic Apparel Ermenegildo Zegna ESCADA Etre Belle Beauty and Medical Spa

IBB Design Fine Furnishings

Lou & Grey

ILORI

Loveliest

Image Eyewear Impeccable Pig

Lovers Lane Antique Market

Indigo 1745

LoveTennis

Insight Complete Eye Care

Lucky Brand Jeans

INTERMIX

lucky dog barkery

IO Metro

lucy Activewear

Ivy Cottage

Luke’s Locker

Ivy House

Luxe Salon & Design

J Jill

Luxury On Lovers

J. Douglas Design

Lync Cycling

J.Crew

Maddox Shop

J.Crew Men’s Shop

Madewell

J.McLaughlin

MADISON

J.Reneé Shoes and More Jacksons Home & Garden James Antony Home

lou lou

MADRE/Little Bean Maggiano’s NorthPark MAKE UP FOR EVER Mal Malouf

EVOO & Vin

James French Photography

Exercise Coach

James Perse

Mann’s Art & Frame

Eye Pieces

JELL Salon & Lounge

Fabricadabra

Jimmy Choo

Marbles Makeup and Blowouts

Facelogic Spa

Johnny Rodriguez the Salon

Facets Family Place Resale Shop FAST FIX Jewelry and Watch Repairs

Malouf’s

Markham Fine Jewelers Marmi Shoes

Johnston & Murphy

Mary Cates and Co.

Jonathan Adler

MaryBeth

Joni’s Boutique

Matthew Trent Jewelry Design Studio

FastFrame

Juice Bar

Field of Dreams

Julep Boutique

Fishin’ World

Karen Millen

Fitness HQ

kate spade new york

Fitting Room

Kendra Scott

Five & Ten

Ken’s Man’s Shop

Flirt Boutique

Kessler Cookie Company

FLOR

KidBiz

Flower Reign

Kidville

For Heavens Sake

Kiehl’s Since 1851

Forty Five Ten

KJ Dance Designs

Mister Tuxedo

FRAME MASTERS

Kleiman|Evangelista Eye Center

Mistura Timepieces

Frederic Fekkai Salon Free People fresh

Corner Market

Froggie’s 5 and 10

Cotton Hearts

Furs By Martin

Cotton Island

Gallerie Noir

Cozy Cottage Children’s Boutique

Gals on and off the Green

Crate & Barrel

House - chic easy living

L’Optique of Dallas

Gameday Connexion Gap

Kristina Wrenn L.A. Connection

Mecox Mel Crews Melissa Benge Collection Men’s Shak at Stanley Korshak Michael Cross Gallery Michael Kors Mill No.3 mine. a boutique. miniME

Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams

La Marque

Molto Formaggio The Cheese Shop

La Vignette

moreau

LACOSTE

Movida Boutique

LAFCO New York

Mulberry

Lane Florist

MYBAG

Layette

Napa Home

Le Creuset Signature Boutique

Nasher Sculpture Center Store

Crave Popcorn Co.

Gary E Alhadef, DDS

Creative Stitches & Gifts crewcuts

Gecko Hardware/True Value

Learning Express

Needle in a Haystack, Inc.

CryoZone

Gemma Collection

Leather Sofa Company

Needlepoint This!

Culinary Connection

Gigi’s Cupcakes

Leff Optical

Neha’s China & Crystal

Culwell & Son

Gleneagles Country Club Tennis Shop

Leggiadro

Nespresso

LEKKA

Nest

Goo Goo Eyes

Lela Rose

New Balance

Grand Spa

LGS

Grange Hall

Lights Fantastic

Green Beans Toy Boutique

Lilly Pulitzer

Cynthia Elliot Boutique Dallas Arboretum Hoffman Family Gift Store Dallas Fine Wine & Spirits Shoppe

CONTINUED ON 30


2015 Oct. 30 Oct. 31 Nov. 2 Nov. 3 Nov. 4 Nov. 5 Nov. 6 Nov. 7

LA Eyeworks Theo Bevel ic! Berlin Mykita Oliver Peoples / Paul Smith Anne et Valentin Barton Perreira

SPECIAL SUNDAY HOURS: NOV. 1 & 8, 12PM - 4PM CALL US TO MAKE AN APPOINTMENT! *Some restrictions apply. Not valid with vision insurance. The Pavilion on Lovers Lane just west of the Tollway

DISTINCTIVE INTERIORS Dallas 13710 Dallas Pkwy Dallas, TX 75240 214.748.4540 Houston 1721 Post Oak Blvd Houston, TX 77056 713.627.9009 www.thearrangement.com


30  OCTOBER 2015 | PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM

PARTN ERS CA RD CONTINUED FROM 28

Park Cities Pilates Center

Premier Chiropractic of Southlake

Robin Jackson Photography

Spa On The Square

Nicholson-Hardie Garden Center

Park Cities Postal Center

Preston Luggage & Gifts

Rocket Fizz

SPANX

Peacock Alley Design Studio

Preston Road Pharmacy

Roti Grill

Speranza Design Gallery

Peek In The Attic

Primrose Boutique

Rug Studio

Sperry Top-Sider

Peek...Aren’t You Curious

Promenade Optical

Run On!

Nikki’s Popcorn Company

Splendid

Peeper’s

Pure Barre

Rutherford’s Design

Nine-Eighteen Fine Jewels

Peloton

Purely Pilates Center

Rye 51

Sports Authority

Noel Christmas Store

Pepper Smash

Q Clothier

Saint Bernard

Not Just Soccer

Phelan’s

Ra Ra’s Closet

Saint Laurent

Nothing Bundt Cakes

Pickles and Ice Cream Maternity Apparel

rag & bone

Saland Vision

Now See Here

Pieces Clothing Boutique

Ralph Lauren

Salon Pompeo

Nuvo

Pierce Decorative Hardware & Plumbing

RAW by Canines First

Sample House & Candle Shop

Oak

Piermarini

READ BETWEEN THE LINES

Sarah Tevis Poteet, DDS, PA

Occhiali Modern Optics

Pilates Connection

Reading Glasses To Go

Scardello Artisan Cheese

Old Chicago Pizza and Taproom

Pilates Methodology

Relax The Back

Scoop NYC

Steven Alan

One Posh Place

PilatesBarre

Renee Rouleau Skin Care Spas

Seasons 52

Store in Lake Highlands

Opportunity Market

PIN Salon

Restoration Hardware

Sebastian’s Closet

Stride Rite

ORIGINS

Pinto Ranch

Reveal

Second Floor by Scott Gottlich

Stuart Weitzman

Orvis

Planet Blue

Rich Hippie

Shak at Stanley Korshak

Studio 6 Fitness

Owl’s Nest Toy Shop

Pockets Menswear

Riddell Rare Maps & Fine Prints

Sharla’s

Studio Sebastian

Pakpao Thai Food

Polo Ralph Lauren

Riffraff Dallas

Shemara Couture

Suburban Optical of Dallas

Pampillonia Jewelers

Port & Manor

Risi Optique

Sherry Hayslip Interiors Boutique

Sun & Ski

Paper Affair

Posh Petunia

Ritz-Carlton Spa, Dallas

ShopSeptember

Sunglass Hut

Pappagallo Classiques

Pottery Barn

Robert Graham

Six:02

Papyrus

Pottery Barn Kids

Robert Talbott

Snider Plaza Antique Shops

Sunnyland Furniture

Paradise Pen Company

Practically Perfect Medical Aesthetics

Roberta Roller Rabbit

Soft Surroundings

Park Cities One Design

Pratesi Linens

Roberto Cavalli

Solstice Sunglass Boutique

Nicholson-Hardie Nursery Nicole Kwon

St. Croix Shop St. John St. Michael’s Woman’s Exchange STAG Provisions Stanley Korshak Starpower Stella McCartney

Sur La Table Surface Clinical Susan Saffron Jewelry Boutique Suzanne Roberts Gifts SWAG Swoozie’s Szor Collections T. Hee Greetings and Gifts Talbots Talulah & HESS

A C

Shoes and clothes can be addictive.

Team Sports & Performance Apparel Ted Baker London TENOVERSIX Terry Costa Texas State Optical

Proud supporter of the Partner’s Card

214-521-8833 4417 Lovers Lane www.louloushoe.com

Thomas Pink

ACCES SO RY CO N CIER GE

Tiny Hiney Baby Boutique

4239 West Lovers Lane

TJ’s Seafood Market & Grill

Title Nine TOD’S Tommy Bahama Tootsies Tory Burch Tourneau Tous Toy Maven Toys Unique! TRAFFIC Los Angeles at the Joule Trina Turk Trinity Hall Irish Pub TRU Salon Tumi TYLER’S UPS Store on Lemmon

CONVENIENTLY EFFECTIVE

Uptown Vision Urban Outfitters

ONE-ON-ONE PERSONAL TRAINING

Urban Taco Vera Bradley Versace

NO ANNUAL CONTRACT

VINCE. Vineyard Vines Vintage Martini Vision City Walton’s Garden Center

WORKOUTS

TWICE PER WEEK

Warthan Dermatology Wave Wash We Yogis West Elm Wild Birds Unlimited Williams-Sonoma Wisteria Wolford Wolo Boutique Wooden House Wooden Swing Company Write Selection y&i clothing boutique

14891 Preston Rd. Suite 100 Dallas, TX 75254 (972) 716-9530

4235 W. Northwest Hwy Suite 500 Dallas, TX 75220 (214) 353-0811

5600 W. Lovers Ln. Suite 210 Dallas, TX 75209 (469) 265-4466

YLANG 23 Yoga Factory & wellness center Yumilicious Frozen Yogurt Yves Delorme Zuri Furniture


SAVE 20% WITH YOUR PARTNER’S CARD october 30 – november 8, 2015

More than just a Christmas Store! 1SFTUPO 3PBE t 4VJUF Dallas, Texas 75252

(Southwest corner of Preston Road and Lloyd Drive)

972-991-8481 1-800-876-0049

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A TRADITION OF TRUST. Since 1985

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214.521.7355

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alliebeth.com


PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM | OCTOBER 2015  33

LIVING WELL Group Urges Young Women to Embody Love “ W HAT M AT T E R S A BOU T YOU I S N OT YOU R E X T E R NA L A P P E A R A N C E . ... I T ’ S A R E A LLY I M P ORTA N T M E S SAG E FOR T HE K I D S , BU T A LS O FOR T HE M OM S . . . ”

By Jacie Scott

Special Contributor Dr. Melody Moore is something of a “lovologist.” As a clinical psychologist, she preaches self-love to her patients who suffered from eating disorders and body shaming. As a dedicated yogi and yoga instructor, she connects her mind, body, and sprit to the notion of self-love. And as the founder of Embody Love Movement, she’s sharing it with the masses. The nonprofit organization empowers women and girls to embrace inner beauty. It was launched in 2011, providing a refreshing message in a society where there are pressures to look a certain way. “I really believe that negative body image is detrimental to the way that we view ourselves as valuable,” said Michelle Collins, executive director for Embody Love Movement. “What matters about you is not your external appearance. That’s our motto. It’s a really important message for the kids, but also for the moms, because a lot of kids experience body shaming at home and at schools.” The message especially hits home for Moore. The UT Southwestern Medical School graduate grew up in a family where she felt physical beauty was held in the highest regard. During her post-doctoral internship, she had to face her adolescent self and the struggles that she encountered in her home life. “I was offered an internship at Children’s Medical Center for pediatric eating disorders

M I C H E LLE C O LLI N S

C O U R T E SY P H O T O

Officers for the Embody Love Club at Highland Park High School are pledging to be positive. because I requested to work with adolescents,” Moore said. “I did not want to do it because I came from a family where my sister had an eating disorder, and beauty and thinness were celebrated. What I found there, though, was that I really had a connection to those girls and to that patient population.” When Moore entered private practice in 2006, about 90 percent of her patients were children with eating disorders. She implemented group therapy treatment as a tool for them to empower one another. The impact gave her the inspiration to create Embody Love Movement. “I had this magical group of six adolescent girls that stayed

in therapy with one another for five years,” Moore said. “It culminated and ended with them being incredibly empowered, fully recovered, and trusting in one another — having brave, courageous, vulnerable conversation with one another, and really relying on each other for support.” When someone is struggling with alcoholism, they have Alcoholics Anonymous for support and accountability. Drug addicts have Narcotics Anonymous. Moore didn’t see any such resources for eating disorders, nor was there any relapse prevention that involved community engagement and support. “I wanted to create a program where people who had

EXECUTIVE MEDICINE

Helping Patients Feel & Look Younger Mark Anderson, MD has made quite the name for himself at Executive Medicine of Texas where he spends his days doing full day physical exams, age management, and concierge medicine. Because the demand for hormone replacement was so high in his Dallas patients, he now spends some time each Friday in Dallas doing bio-identical hormone pellet therapy. This allows existing and new patients to see him for hormone therapy without having to drive to his Southlake location. Bio-identical hormone replacement therapy can help improve energy, mental focus, and libido. Many patients also experience a loss of fat and improved lean muscle mass. Not only do patients feel better when they hormones are balanced, they also look better. The entire procedure only takes moments and both men and women will see the benefits for months before they have to return for another treatment.

Mark Anderson, MD of Executive Medicine of Texas now extending bio-identical hormone replacement therapy at 8222 Douglas Ave., Ste. 950, Dallas, 75225 (800)910-3932

been struggling with eating disorders would have support, accountability, partnership, and mentoring,” Moore said. “People with eating disorders have a 66 percent relapse rate. That’s really high. I wanted to prevent onset of negative body image and prevent relapse of negative body image.” Embody Love Movement has served more than 3,000 women and girls, and given them an opportunity to pay the message forward. The organization offers several programs and interactive workshops to the community and in schools. Embody Love Movement clubs have been established at several campuses, including High-

land Park High School, Hockaday, and Ursuline. “This is how we get girls to be more purposeful,” Collins said. “Currently we’re in 17 states, and we are training people in Australia and in London.” For the last three years, the organization has hosted an annual One Love Fits All event at NorthPark Center, in which people of all ages and genders come together for a community yoga class with proceeds benefitting the organization. Participants are asked to raise or donate a minimum of $50 to participate in the class. “It’s such an awesome feeling to look out every year and welcome everyone to One Love Fits All knowing that we are here for this common purpose,” Moore said. “We’re one community and we stand together in hopes of making this change and creating a conversation that’s not full of criticism but full of kindness and compassion.”


34  OCTOBER 2015 | PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM

LI VI N G W ELL

Author: Can Women Have it All? By Paige Skinner

Special Contributor It’s August 1994 and Malia Litman is sitting at a stoplight on the Dallas North Tollway frontage road, but she doesn’t remember how she got there. She isn’t sure if she’s dead or alive, if she had just survived a stroke, or if she Malia Litman was suffering from amnesia. She would later find out she was on the verge of a mental breakdown. After working as a lawyer for years and raising three children, the Preston Hollow resident was beginning to lose it. Litman chronicles this tale in the first chapter of her third book, Evolution of the Feminine Mystique: Searching for Happily Ever After. Her career as senior partner at one of the biggest law firms in Dallas was going well. But trying to juggle her professional and personal responsibilities was taking a toll. “It was a perfect situation from a work standpoint,” Litman said. “But I couldn’t bal-

ance three kids and doing what I wanted for them.” In her book, Litman touches on everything from sex to soccer moms to women she admires. But she said she hasn’t always considered herself a feminist. Eventually, Litman decided to stop practicing law and focus all of her attention on her kids. “It wasn’t that I didn’t love practicing law,” she said. “I did. But I also loved having kids and raising my kids, and all my kids are doing such great things right now.” But can women have it all? Can women maintain a healthy home life while also moving up

professionally? “I don’t think we can do it all at the same time,” she said. “I think women can have kids and have a career at the same time but it’s a no-brainer to say a woman who wants to spend time with her kids can’t possibly devote the same number of hours to her job that a man or woman can. It’s not a question of woman or man, it’s a question of families or not.” Through the years, she saw how being away from home and her family affected them, and even though she had nannies and assistants to help her along the way, it wasn’t the same as being there. She thinks she and her husband would have divorced if they continued living the way they were. But now it’s different. Even though Litman chose to quit her law job and stay at home with her kids, while also writing, she said women should respect one another no matter what they want to do. “We can respect women who stay at home and women who are professionals because they’re just different choices,” she said. “It’s like are you going to be a photographer or a doctor. They are both valuable.”

It REALLY isn’t everyone else!

REAL FINE FOOD

Don’t Be Afraid to Branch Out When Choosing Your Cuisine

T

his year I’ve been getting more inquiries from friends and followers about their own food issues — confiding a dietary struggle or wanting to pay more attention to their food. But how and where does one start? Can I recommend blogs, websites, books as guides? Should they join Community Supported Agriculture? How about one of the “meals delivered as ingredients with cooking instructions included” services? While those are all awesome resources, my advice is always to get their hands dirty. What I mean is, go to food markets, look, smell, ask. Buy stuff and get in the kitchen. Something happened to American food culture starting in the 1950s: the advertising of convenience. Companies offering boxed mixes, frozen meals, and fast food began the big sell, teaching that growing food, knowing food, and cooking food was just a plain waste of time, a chore. I’m here to tell you, it’s not. I’ve come to the belief that, like showering or brushing your teeth, intimate involvement with sustenance should be part of a healthy person’s regular maintenance. Food is fuel providing for the body’s strength, energy, and regulation so treating that fuel as a rushed afterthought really makes no sense. Cooking can be very calming. Food shopping can be an adventure. Slicing, dicing, sautéing, stirring, smelling, seasoning, cleaning up as you go — these are therapeutic actions, meditative even. Listen

STEPHANIE M. CASEY to full records from start to finish while you cook. Turn off the TV. It’s the perfect way to take a breather from the bombardment of snippets that scroll in front of our faces on screens all day. Hit your local farmer’s market and buy something you’ve never had in your kitchen — ask the farmer how they like to use that item. Let your kids pick out something they are attracted to in the produce section of the grocery, then work as a family to figure out how to prepare it. Get wacky and creative — purple potatoes, Romanesco broccoli, and a full head of oyster mushrooms all look like something from a Dr. Seuss book! And about those blogs, books and CSAs? Once you’ve taken the first steps to working real food back into your life, yes, there are many others aligned with whatever path your food direction leads you. You’ll have started to come across them as you browse for recipes and spy dishes on Instagram that inspire you. It’s a positive, healthy, sharing community that is millions strong. And there’s always room for one more. Stephanie Casey can be reached through her website at realfinefood.com.

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PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM | OCTOBER 2015  37

FOCUS ON PHILANTHROPY

SPREADING A MESSAGE OF HOPE Center leads in research, therapy

some people can’t handle your sickness. It’s tough for them, too,” St. Don said. “The people here are great. They’re kind, it’s a good place to come to, and they have real feelings. They gave me a lot of hope, and it seems to be working.” By Jacie Scott “Hope Lives Here” is the Special Contributor center’s tagline, but St. Don found even more than that. Once every three weeks, JerThe Mary Crowley Cancer ry St. Don makes the trip from Research Center is a cancer his home in Abilene to the Mary clinical research center that is Crowley Cancer Research Cenrecognized as a leader in targetter in Dallas. The 56-year-old ed, vaccine and gene therapies. jokingly calls the trip a “pain in The nonprofit was established his butt,” but that notion subin 1992 as a way to advance the sides upon entering the 12,000 research of drugs used to treat square feet space. cancer patients. Crowley, a Dallas businessSt. Don is something of a gentle giant. He has a tough exteriwoman and mastermind behind C O U R T E SY P H O T O or, yet an undeniable twinkle in Home Interiors, was first diagThe Mary Crowley Cancer Research Center’s namesake fought off cervical cancer in 1957. nosed with cervical cancer in his eye when he smiles. Then, there’s that dash of goofiness. He 1957. At the time of her diagnoQ U I C K FAC T S says his sense of humor is what sis she was able to get an experimental drug that put her into keeps him sane. St. Don enjoys remission. Twenty years passed, all sports related to the great MISSION: Founded in 1992, the Mary Crowley state. He does some hunting here her business boomed, but her Cancer Research Centers have served more and there. But, his face lights up cancer returned. She went to than 5,300 patients and conducted more than at the mention of golf. That’s his the same doctor in hopes of be300 FDA-approved clinical trials. love. It’s also the sport that may ing treated again, but there were SAVE THE DATE: Allison’s Hope 2015 Hope in have saved his life. no new drugs. As her health beHollywood Gala, Sept. 26 About four years back, St. gan to decline, she knew that she Don was golfing with a few of wanted to provide an alternative FIND THEM AT: marycrowley.org for future patients that would his buddies. He was having a face similar battles. rather impressive game, sitting “She said to the doctor, at three under with six holes uary 2012, and he began treatSt. Don understood that his ‘What have you been doing? left. As luck would have it, a doctor found something more. “My doctor saw something ment. There was a period of diagnosis would present quite I’ve built a multibillion-dollar storm began to brew, putting a damper on the guys’ game. on the x-ray that he didn’t like,” remission, but when it returned, a challenge physically. Perhaps business. What are research“I was like, ‘I ain’t leaving! St. Don said. “He sent me to a St. Don’s oncologist in Abilene the battle that he found the ers doing about this?’” said I’m three under!” said St. Don lung doctor, put me through a recommended that he give the hardest was the one in his head. Pat Brown, director of stratein between laughs. few scans, then, I finally got a researchers at Mary Crowley a Yes, he lost some of his physical gic development. “What she He and a friend chose to stay biopsy. That’s how they found shot at improving his situation. strength, maybe his breath from wanted to leave as part of her on the course despite the in- it. The grace of God is what I He was eventually matched time to time, but the most pain- legacy was a research cenclement weather. At about four call it. Otherwise, I’d just kept with a clinical trial and began ful thing was losing some of his ter that could advance these holes left, it began to pour. Sure going on.” treatment at the research cen- best friends. Even a fiancée. It drugs faster to get to patients Highland Park Village - ParkCity Preston Hollow - October 2015 enough, a week later the duo It was lung cancer. The offi- ter, marking the start of several took a toll on him mentally. access to any last modified:and Sephave 3, 2015 11:04 AMpatient Live area: 10”w x 3”h “You’d be surprised how who needed these drugs.” had pneumonia. But, St. Don’s cial diagnosis was made in Jan- commutes to Dallas.

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38  OCTOBER 2015 | PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM

SOCIETY T E N B E S T D R E S S E D PAT R O N D I N N E R

Bob and Rachael Dedman, Paul and Tiffany Divis, and Lisa Arpey

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Patrons of the Ten Best Dressed Luncheon were given a sweet “thank you” with a dinner at the Dallas Country Club on Sept. 10. The annual Ten Best Dressed Luncheon took place the following week on Sept. 18. Proceeds from the event go toward the Crystal Charity Ball’s 11 philanthropies. The ball itself will be held Dec. 5.


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At Virginia Cook, Realtors, we do our homework before we do yours. Before they go to work for you, our agents are given some of the most extensive training provided by any Realtor in Texas. Plus, with an average of 17 years experience. Virginia Cook agents offer an added advantage: a kind of sixth sense for connecting buyers with what they're looking for. Buying? Selling? Let us do your homework for you. Visit virginiacook.com. LUXURY PROPERTIES LD SO

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PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM | OCTOBER 2015  41

S OC I ET Y U N I T E D W AY L U N C H E O N ENGAGEMENT

SMITH-SHANNON

Jessica Lee and Robbi Luxbacher

L A R RY S E N G B U S H – P H O T O G R A P H E R

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Kit Sawers, Mark Rohr, Susan Hoff, Harriet Miers, and Karin Torgerson

Tiffany and Darren Woodson

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Jason Downing, Margaret Reid, and Laura Downing

David Seaton and Jennifer Sampson

Kit Sawers and Scott Hudson Tocqueville Society members gathered for their Second Tuesday series luncheon on Sept. 8 at Abacus. Campaign chair David Seaton, chairman and CEO of Fluor Corporation, shared his reasons for giving to United Way. He was introduced by former NFL quarterback and Dallas Cowboys radio analyst Babe Laufenberg. United Way president and CEO Jennifer Sampson gave an update on the organization’s campaign kickoff.

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r. and Mrs. Eugene Bragg Smith III of University Park are pleased to announce the engagement of their daughter, Samantha Bonner Smith, to Robert Regan Shannon, son of Dr. and Mrs. Donelson Neal Shannon, also of University Park. The bride is a graduate of Highland Park High School. She received a Bachelor of Arts in Spanish from The University of Texas at Austin. Samantha works in human resources project management for JPMorgan Chase. The groom is also a graduate of Highland Park High School. He received a Bachelor of Business Administration and a Master in public accounting from The University of Texas at Austin. Robert is a controller for Burnett Petroleum Company. The couple will wed in late October at Highland Park Presbyterian Church.


42  OCTOBER 2015 | PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM

S OCI ET Y E M M I T T S M I T H B E L K U N I F O R M D O N AT I O N

Mills Elementary student

SHANA ANDERSON

Lindsey Overby, Pat Smith, Eddie Bernice Johnson, Salem Boohaker, Carol Roberts, and Emmitt Smith with Mills students

Emmitt Smith and Eddie Bernice Johnson

Pat Smith On Aug. 13, Pat and Emmitt Smith Charities representatives, along with employees of Belk Galleria Dallas, provided uniforms for two Dallas ISD schools, Roger Q. Mills Elementary School and Billy Earl Dade Middle School. Donations totaled more than 1,600 uniforms this year.

S TA R S & S T R I P E S F I L M F E S T I VA L K I C KO F F

Mary Lou and Scott O’Grady

Syd and Margaret Carter

Pete and Tanya Foster

KRISTINA BOWMAN

Paige McDaniel, Ryan Parrott, Debbie Oates, Mary Meier, and Christie Carter

David Burgher with Sandie and Steve Woods

Ellison Hurt and John Selzer

Steve Woods, Mark Hayes, Josh Lewis, and Mary Van Armisted

Festival chairs Pete and Tanya Foster, along with honorary chairs Syd and Margaret Carter, hosted supporters of the Sons of the Flag at the Highland Park Village Theatre on Aug. 27. The celebration was held to kick off preparations for the upcoming Stars & Stripes Film Festival, which begins Nov. 12 at the Angelika Film Center with a screening of Patton.


PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM | OCTOBER 2015  43

COMMUNITY

GET THE ROYAL TREATMENT

Body Cams Give Cops Extra Set of Eyes on Job By Todd Jorgenson

People Newspapers

CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT: Royal Blue Grocery owners Cullen Potts, Emily Ray-Porter, and Zac Porter; a deli counter at one of the Austin locations; Cuban sandwiches will be available at the grocer’s cafe; Stumptown Coffee will be sold in Dallas for the first time. C O U R T E SY P H O T O S

New grocery store fills Tom Thumb void By Sarah Bennett

People Newspapers Many frequenters of Highland Park Village lamented the departure of longtime anchor store Tom Thumb. After all, there’s been a grocery store within Village borders since its debut in the 1930s with Hunt’s Grocery. But one store is hoping to fill that void. Royal Blue Grocery is finally slated to open in late September or early October. “We fell in love with the concept and wanted to bring it to Dallas,” co-owner Zac Porter said. The Dallas native is opening shop along with his wife, Emily Ray-Porter, and business partner Cullen Potts, a University Park resident. The Royal Blue grocery chain, which began in 2006, is based in Austin — in fact, the Highland Park Village location will be the first store outside of Austin, where five are already located. “It’s kind of like the grocery store that our parents grew up having, but it’s brought into the current era with our product of-

fering: pressed juices, kombucha, gourmet goods, and conventional items,” said Porter, who has officed in Highland Park Village for four years. “We were thinking Dallas needed it, and there’s no stronger community in Dallas than the Park Cities.” The new store will total 6,000 square feet and operate from 7 a.m. to midnight daily. The grocer will include produce, bakery, and deli sections, in addition to floral, wine and beer, and catering. There will also be a café with seating for more than 70 people. The café, which will offer breakfast, lunch, and dinner, will also include patio seating and Stumptown Coffee — which will be the first time the Portland-based bean provider has hit the Dallas market. “Most employees [of the Village] ate lunch at Tom Thumb. So when they lost Tom Thumb, they lost their place to have lunch and hang out,” Potts said. “Why not give them an option of a place where they can actually sit down and grab something they want off the shelf and hang out?” Of course, that chance to relax isn’t just for the employees of the center. Potts remembers coming to the Village to hang out as a kid, and he hopes Royal Blue will help bring that sense of destination back. “The Village was never just stop-andshop,” he said. “I used to come and spend half a day here. This gives an opportunity to bring that back. It gives a gathering spot to hang out and relax.” To add to that community vibe, Porter

said there will be dog bowls and bike racks in front of the store. To make things easier on shoppers, there will also be dedicated parking facing Preston Road. But all of these amenities didn’t come without a price — the grocer was originally slated for a summer opening. “We wanted to get it right and not just do it fast,” Porter said. “When you’re working with a building that was originally built in 1931, you’re going to find things once you get started, so we had some surprises.”

" W H E N YO U ’R E WOR K I N G W IT H A BUI L D I N G T HAT WA S O RIG INA LLY BU I LT IN 1 931, YO U ’R E G OI N G TO F IND T H I N G S . . . ” Z AC PORTE R The business partners explained those surprises were both good and bad. Though they had to replace the roof and air conditioning, they were able to restore the original terrazzo flooring. “I was like, ‘Oh my god, we have to keep this. This is the original building. We can’t tear this out,’” Potts said. “So we kept slowing ourselves down saying, ‘Let’s get it right. Let’s enjoy this.’”

The use of deadly force by police has dominated national headlines in the past year from Arlington to Baltimore to Ferguson, Mo. Park Cities cops don’t want to be next, so they’re taking a proactive approach toward ensuring peaceful resolutions to Greg tense conflicts. Spradlin The University Park Police Department expects to have all of its officers outfitted with body cameras this fall, following a brief training period. Each cop will be required to test the camera and activate it prior to their shift. The department has used body cameras for three years on a limited basis, but decided last summer to expand the program. “We felt it was necessary because it gives the department an extra layer of transparency and an extra layer of accountability,” said UPPD chief Greg Spradlin. “We owe that to our community.” All Highland Park Department of Public Safety officers started carrying body cameras this summer. Manufacturers are a bit behind on filling orders from police departments across the country, so UPPD might not get their additional 30 cameras until October, Spradlin said. Studies have shown use-offorce incidents decrease when body cameras are in use, and Spradlin hopes they can be mutually beneficial to officers and the public. The cameras also can provide crime-scene evidence or lead to arrests in certain cases. “Cops are frequently the target of complaints, and while some of them are valid, many of them are not, so I owe it to the officers to protect them against those invalid complaints,” he said. “Individuals on both sides of the camera will behave differently when they know the

CONTINUED ON 50


44  OCTOBER 2015 | PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM

C O MMUN I T Y

Artist Finds Purpose in Therapeutic Hobby Proceeds from gallery show go to charities By Todd Jorgenson

People Newspapers Cindy Johnston didn’t set out to become an artist. Yet for three days in early September, the University Park resident was being saluted with a show at a gallery in the Dallas Design District. A gala opening saw her in the middle of a whirlwind of attention, as dozens of admirers purchased her work and a letter was read from President George W. Bush with his personal well-wishes. For Johnston, who has Down syndrome, the occasion meant to celebrate her upcoming 40th birthday turned into so much more, especially since she started coloring for reasons that were more therapeutic than artistic. “My dad thought it would be a good tool to help me work on my fine motor skills. It can be very relaxing,” she said. “I didn’t call myself an artist. Other people did.” Various therapists suggested that coloring might be beneficial for Cindy’s condition. So since her father, Jim Johnston, is fond of doodling on his bank stationery, his impromptu sketches soon gave Cindy something to color between the lines using markers. “I found myself doodling in meetings, then I would bring them home, and Cindy would color them,” Jim said. “When it first started, my doodling was really poor and her coloring was just as poor. Then as time went on, I could tell that it was physical therapy for her, and it was probably mental therapy for me at the same time. Then she started staying in the lines better and her coloring became

University Park artist Cindy Johnston greeted visitors at the opening of her gallery show for charity on Sept. 3. L E F T : Conduit Gallery

owner Nancy Whitenack hangs one of Johnston’s works.

C H R I S M C G AT H E Y

dramatically more impressive. It created a nice partnership for us.” Even once the works improved, it was nothing more than a shared hobby among close family members. “We just put them in a shoebox in my closet and left them there,” Jim said. “We thought they were priceless to us but not worth anything to anybody else.”

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The idea to showcase Cindy’s work in a gallery came from Carolyn Miller, who is friends with the Johnstons and with Conduit Gallery owner Nancy Whitenack, who loved the thought. “When we saw her drawings, they’re just marvelous,” Whitenack said. “Her sense of color is quite excellent.” Proceeds from the sale of Cindy’s works

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went to Special Olympics and to the Jesters theater troupe, two nonprofit groups with which Cindy is involved. But the value of the gallery show was priceless. “The doodles are just doodles to me, but when she colors them, they come to life,” Jim said. “She’s got a talent.” Email todd.jorgenson@ peoplenewspapers.com


PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM | OCTOBER 2015  45

C OM M U N I T Y O B I T UA RY

Legendary Ebby Halliday Lived a Life Worth Celebrating By Sarah Bennett

People Newspapers Dallas lost a legend with the passing of Ebby Halliday Acers on Sept. 8. The dynamo of local real estate was 104 years old. Born in 1911, Halliday first came to Dallas in 1938. Though she first started in the hat business, oilman Clint Murchison told her, “If you can sell those crazy hats to my wife, maybe you can sell my crazy houses.” She founded Ebby Halliday Realtors in 1945 and married Maurice Acers in 1965. Today, her company is the largest independently owned residential real estate company in the state and the 10th in the country, which encompasses 1,700 sales associates, according to the Ebby website. Much of Halliday’s legacy lies in the philanthropic sphere; last year, the YWCA of Metropolitan Dallas opened Ebby’s Place, a home for the YWCA’s women center, and Juliette Fowler Communities announced The Ebby House, a community for women who have aged out of foster care. But it’s also her personal touches that will be remembered by Dallasites for years to come. “As a north Texas native, I’ve known about and admired Ebby all my life,” said Jennifer Sampson, president and CEO of United Way of Metropolitan Dallas. “In 2011, when I was named CEO of United Way, Ebby called to congratulate me and she fol-

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1. Ebby and husband Maurice Acers. 2. Ebby as a young girl. 3. Ebby with kids from Communities in Schools, one of the many organziations she supported. 4. Ebby was famous for her excellent hat collection. 5. Ebby once played her ukulele at Ross Perot’s 80th birthday party. G I T T I N G S 6. Ebby brushed shoulders with some famous figures in her years including Presidents Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush. P H O T O S C O U R T E SY E B B Y H A L L I D AY R E A LT O R S A N D F R O M F I L E S

lowed up with a handwritten note of congratulations and encouragement. Ebby was a bright light and one of a kind. She blazed a trail and led the way for so many women, including me, and her love for Dallas and her legacy will continue forever.” Halliday served as the president of Thanksgiving Square Foundation and served on the boards of many organizations including the Communities Foun-

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dation of Texas and the Better Business Bureau. She was also involved in the Alexis de Tocqueville Society for United Way, the Dallas Symphony Orchestra Guild, the State Fair of Texas, and the Horatio Alger Association of Distinguished Americans, among other organizations. During her time of service, she received many awards including the Distinguished Ser-

vice Award from the National Association of Realtors and the International Real Estate Federation and was incited to the Texas Business Hall of Fame and the Dallas Business Hall of Fame. She has been recognized by Ernst & Young and the YWCA, among other groups. “While we grieve the loss of Ebby, our legendary founder and my friend and mentor for over 50 years, we celebrate

a long life well lived,” says Mary Frances Burleson, president and CEO of The Ebby Halliday Companies. “Each of us who had the good fortune of knowing Ebby has been touched by the grace, fortitude and compassion with which she lived her life. Ebby had a very simple saying that she lived by, ‘Do something for someone every day.’ That small bit of wisdom served Ebby very, very well.”

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C O MMUN I T Y

New Sound Reunites Old Friends, HPHS Alums People Newspapers Wade Cottingham and Robert Rothbard finally got the band back together, even though they’re separated by several hundred miles. The Rothbard Cottingham Bandwagon marks a reunion of sorts for the two former bandmates at Highland Park High School during the 1970s, allowing them to find a new sound more than 30 years after they last jammed with one another. In high school, Cottingham

played the clarinet and piano while Rothbard was a percussionist. They continued their partnership at Austin College, where they did a few cassette recordings as part of a jazz quintet. “Then we really lost touch,” Cottingham said. However, both retained their love of music and the arts. Cottingham was a part-time musician and computer programmer, then became a full-time, self-employed music teacher at Lakewood Piano Lab in 2002. Rothbard was involved in a con-

struction business and later moved to Missouri. In 2010, Rothbard reached out via email, asking if Cottingham would contribute some music to a series of art videos he was making. That collaboration went well, so Cottingham suggested they collaborate again — this time perhaps trying an album. “I don’t know what sparked it. I always enjoyed playing with him,” Rothbard said. “We both had different journeys, but we’re on the same path.” Through the wonders of technology, they worked togeth-

C O U R T E SY P H O T O

Robert Rothbard (second from left) and Wade Cottingham (right) were part of a jazz quintet at Austin College during the 1970s.

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er for three months this spring via SoundCloud — with Rothbard on percussion and Cottingham adding instrumentals — on several tracks that produced a unique jazz-pop sound. “Neither one of us had made an album for release before,” Cottingham said. “He’s very easy to work with.” While it might lack the polish of a traditional studio work, the 45-minute album is available online. However, sales aren’t the top priority for the two band members. And there won’t be any reunion tour, since Rothbard has a condition known as spastic paraplegia that limits his mobility. “I want to play as much as I can at this point, because I don’t know how much longer I’m going to be able to,” Rothbard said. “That’s what makes it fun. It’s not work.” They’re already talking about the next album, which will feature an electronic sound heavy on synthesizers. “This is not for money,” Cottingham said. “I feel very powerful in a collaboration. I want to do five or six more even if we don’t make a dime.” Email todd.jorgenson@ peoplenewspapers.com

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PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM | OCTOBER 2015  47

C OM M U N I T Y

Project Transformation Finds New Local Home at UPUMC By Meredith Diers

Special Contributor In June, University Park United Methodist Church pastor Matt Gaston partnered with Project Transformation, a nonprofit that engages young adults with community needs, with the goal of raising $100,000 by biking 1,000 miles. Gaston started his 1,000-mile route at SMU, rode to Project Transformation offices in Oklahoma City, Okla., and then in Nashville, Tenn. The $45,000 raised through the bike ride will be used to construct Project Transformation’s new national and local headquarters at UPUMC. “University Park UMC is very excited to welcome Project Transformation to our family,” said Rachel Baughman, UPUMC executive pastor. “We have been in a partnership with them for several years, and we are honored to take this next step with them.”

C O U R T E SY P H O T O S

Project Transformation, which is moving its North Texas headquarters to University Park, is known for its free after-school program. In 1998, UPUMC was one of the founding churches of Project Transformation under the United Methodist Church. Today, PT serves more than 2,000 elementary, middle, and high school students at seven free after-school programs, and more than 1,000 students at 10 free

summer camp locations. PT focuses on educational curriculum, with a one-on-one leader-to-student ratio in all programs. Students are exposed to one-hour reading sessions everyday. “Where we hang our hat is our literacy program,” said Kris-

tin Kelley, head of development at Project Transformation. UPUMC youth group members support PT as leaders in the summer and after school. In addition to UPUMC youth, the organization employs about 100 members of PT Corps — young adults who are inter-

ested in addressing community needs through a church-initiated program. As a grant recipient of AmeriCorps, PT has the resources to compensate mentors. “We believe our college-aged young adults make such a great impact on our students over time,” Kelley said.

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48  OCTOBER 2015 | PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM

C O MMUN I T Y

Local Ballet Institution Has Parisian Roots By Sarah Bennett

People Newspapers Evelyn Johnson’s mother, Denise Brown, came to the United States after the Nazis took control of her native Paris. She had fallen in love with and married an American G.I. along the same time her father, a resistance fighter, had been arrested and she took over his work. But she carried one thing with her in her trip over the ocean to her new home in University Park: a love of ballet. That love sparked her to found the Denise Brown School of Ballet, now called City Ballet, which Johnson lovingly carries on 65 years later. “When my oldest sister was about four years old, the mothers in the neighborhood found out that Denise, my mother, was a dancer and they talked her into teaching their children,” Johnson said. “She started teaching them in one of the bedrooms of the house. They moved the furniture out of the room, my father put some portable ballet barres in there, and that’s how she started.” Before she knew it, Brown had 50 students. To comply with city code — her husband was the finance director for University Park — she rented a space on Lovers Lane. Though the studio has moved around in its 65-year history, the current space sits on the same street. “She’s a really hard act to follow,” Johnson said of her mother, who taught until she was 83 years old. “She could see somebody in the grocery store and say, ‘You’re so-and-so’s grandmother.’ She remembered everyone and everything and got to know the family — not just the child in the room.” But even though Johnson ad-

C H R I S M C G AT H E Y

Dancers in Evelyn Johnson’s Thursday evening class work on perfecting their technique while developing a love of ballet.

Denise Brown was the founder.

mits she had big shoes to fill, clients and families are still coming to her for that very reason. Mary Ann May noticed the genuine love emanating from the studio’s instructors, rather than just the harsh criticism that could be found at other schools. “I wasn’t going to put [my daughter] in a place that was so strict they would extinguish her love of dance,” she said. She enrolled her daughter, Sydney, who now has her sights set on a professional dance career after 10 years with City Ballet.

Following her third year with the school, Sydney wanted to move up to a pointe class, so her mother went to speak with Brown, who then spent oneon-one time with Sydney after class. “She said, ‘I’ve pulled some ballet shoes out. Let me look at your foot. I’m going to take you into the studio and see if your ankles can support you, but you have to show me you’re strong enough,’” May said. Sydney passed the test and moved up to the next class. Eventually, Brown gave her a pair of own pointe shoes, which

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May says still hang on Sydney’s bed at home. It’s the dedication to students such as Sydney that Johnson has carried on even after her mother’s death. “This is a family of people who really know my daughter, and that’s what’s amazing about it,” May said. “It’s a place of enrichment.” Of course, that enrichment isn’t just about the emotional support; the technical side of ballet is very much a part of the curriculum at City Ballet, but it’s presented in such a way that doesn’t overwhelm its dancers. “City Ballet teaches you strength of character and pushes your boundaries in the best way possible,” former student Jane Beaird said. “It’s intense, but with that comes this feeling of empowering yourself.” And it’s that feeling of self-empowerment that Johnson loves teaching to students in the studio’s 65th year. “I’m beginning to understand what my mother went through in that I am now seeing the children of students that I taught,” Johnson said. “It’s more than just ballet. It’s life lessons. It’s a culmination of ballet teacher and parent.”


PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM | OCTOBER 2015  49

S P E C I A L A DV E RT I S I N G C ON T E N T BRIGGS FREEMAN SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY

BRIGGS FREEMAN SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY

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The home at 4632 Southern Avenue is listed by Will Seale for $849,000.

The Santa Barbara-style home at 4442 Manning Lane is listed by Becky Frey and Natalie Hatchett for $1,769,000.

According to recent data from Zillow, rental prices in the U.S. are rising faster than home sales prices. Recent numbers show that rising rental rates, (up 4.3% in August alone) historically low interest rates and steady inventory mean that this may be the best time in recent decades to consider buying. Potential buyers can take this opportunity to put pencil to paper and work the numbers for themselves. One consistently favorable factor is, as always, location. Making a purchase in a highly desirable, stable and conveniently located neighborhood means there’s a potential for rising property values. People dreaming of homeownership should consider the following benefits: • Equity – Homeowners may achieve an even greater return on their investment if their home increases in value over time. • Tax Advantages – Interest and property taxes paid are typically tax deductible. • Investment – Homeowners are free to make changes that reflect their personal styles and may possibly raise the value of their homes. • Security – Unlike rent, a homeowner’s fixed-rate mortgage payments remain stable. President and CEO Robbie Briggs independently owns and operates Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s International Realty. For more information see briggsfreeman.com.

A new season is just around the corner, and so are beautiful new homes. Here are some of the latest listings throughout Dallas. 3510 Turtle Creek Boulevard #12D This two-bedroom unit at the Claridge features views of the Dallas skyline from every room. The open floor plan includes double-door entry to the huge living room and a remodeled kitchen with Wolf oven and cooktop. Listed by Lisa Besserer for $1,650,000. 4442 Manning Lane Located in Manchester Place, this Santa Barbara style home features curved archways, built-in bookcases and gas fireplaces. The kitchen has wine storage racks, three sinks and a six-burner cooktop. Outside boasts an open patio, refreshing pool with diving rock and a soothing spa area. Listed by Becky Frey and Natalie Hatchett for $1,769,000 4529 Pomona Road This pristine home in beautiful Bluffview Park, is a stunning with four-bedrooms and a paneled study perfect for business calls. The dining room is great for an evening family meal. Outside features a fireplace and built-in grill. Listed by Anne Goyer and LeeLee Gioia for $1,325,000 President and CEO Robbie Briggs independently owns and operates Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s International Realty. For more information see briggsfreeman.com.

DAVE PERRY-MILLER REAL ESTATE

DAVE PERRY-MILLER REAL ESTATE

Contemporary Home Available in Heart of Highland Park

Home Built For Art Lover Surrounded By Lush Oasis

Danes Custom Homes’ contemporary gem at 4425 Southern Avenue in Highland Park (4425southern. daveperrymiller.com) features five bedrooms, five full bathrooms, and two half-baths in more than 5,000 square feet of living space. Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate’s Alex Roostaei is offering the property, which is just one block from Bradfield Elementary School, for $2,575,000. The home’s design combines clean lines with the finest materials and finish-out. The front door composed of metal and glass allows in an abundance of natural light, as do the matching windows. The living room includes built-in sabele cabinetry with polished chrome hardware and puck lights designed to showcase an art collection. Even the most discriminating culinary ex¬pert would be thrilled to create in this home’s well-equipped kitchen. Amenities include soft-close drawers, nickel hardware, and top-of-the-line ap¬pliances, highlighted by a traditional refrigerator and freezer flanking a wine fridge, all made by Sub-Zero. 4425 Southern Avenue is within walking distance of Fairfax Park, Highland Park Village, and Dallas Country Club. To schedule a private showing, contact Alex Roostaei at 214-686-3194 or roostaei@daveperrymiller. com. Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate, an Ebby Halliday Company, is a member of Leading Real Estate Companies of the World and Luxury Portfolio International.

Welcome to Shangri-La! The three-bedroom home at 4357 Fawnhollow Drive in North Dallas (4357fawnhollow.daveperrymiller.com) fronts a beautifully landscaped oasis, which features a swimspa pool for the exercise enthusiast that is surrounded by seven cascading waterfalls for relaxing after your workout! Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate’s Susan Mooney is marketing the property for $714,900. The interior is an art lovers dream, with accent lighting throughout the home to feature the most exquisite collection. The main area of the great room features a floor of stone tiles and a vaulted ceiling. It is open to a gallery with a wall of floor-to-ceiling built-in shelves, with light fixtures on each shelf for showcasing art. The highly upgraded kitchen features hardwood floors, granite counters, and beautiful cherrywood cabinets with pull-out features. The Sub-Zero refrigerator and freezer match the cabinets, and they are complemented by a wine cooler above two cooling drawers. Other amenities include a Wolf six-burner range, Wolf double ovens, and a warming drawer. To schedule a private showing, contact Susan Mooney at 214-558-2887 or susanmooney@ daveperrymiller.com. Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate, an Ebby Halliday Company, is a member of Leading Real Estate Companies of the World and Luxury Portfolio International.

Enjoy elevated living at its finest at 2025 Woodall Rodgers #51. Listed by Michelle Wood for $2,600,000. There’s no better way to enjoy the excitement of urban living than from the balcony views of a luxury high rise. Check out some of the most breathtaking options. To see more, visit briggsfreeman.com. 1717 Arts Plaza #2002 With dramatic views of Downtown, this threebedroom high rise includes two terraces, a custom study, mosaic floors and a media room. The spacious balcony holds a separate kitchen while the amenities continue with a rooftop pool, fitness center and 24/7 concierge. Listed by Faisal Halum for $3,495,000. 2801 Turtle Creek Boulevard #3E An extraordinary condominium in the illustrious Mansion Residence, this home features a custom wine room, oversized living room, two spacious bedrooms and a private terrace with spectacular views of both Downtown and Turtle Creek. Listed by Pogir for $3,495,000. 2025 Woodall Rodgers #51 A step away from Klyde Warren Park, this threebedroom home boasts floor-to-ceiling windows, a private balcony and stunning views throughout. The luxuries continue with the state of the art kitchen, white oak floors and 10-foot ceilings. Listed by Michelle Wood for $2,600,000. President and CEO Robbie Briggs independently owns and operates Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s International Realty. briggsfreeman.com

EBBY HALLIDAY REALTORS

The home at 4021 Marquette Street is listed by Amy Detwiler for $2,295,000. Expert agents are seeing three main groups of people looking to make a home purchase. Relocators—Whether they’re coming for job opportunities, corporate relocations or take advantage of the reasonable cost of living, people are arriving in North Texas at record pace—more than 1,000 a day, say some experts. And many of these newcomers are eager to get in the homeownership game in this rising economy. Upsizers—Buyers who have been waiting and saving are ready to make a move to larger properties in neighborhoods with great schools, plenty of green space and easy access to major commuter arteries. Downsizers—No longer to people live in their family home for their entire life. For many in the post parenting years, the right home for this new season of life includes single-level or high rise living, convenient access to familiar places. For sellers who have been waiting for a strong market so they can list their home, now is the time. Interest rates continue to be historically low, inventory levels are low and buyers who have put off making a move are out in the marketplace looking for properties.

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Timeless Classic And A Must See!

Local Ownership, Management Benefit Buyers, Sellers Ebby Halliday Realtors offers North Texas homebuyers and sellers local ownership and management that successfully combines the benefits of a large company with a friendly, hometown atmosphere. “Ebby Halliday Realtors is the largest independent broker in M A RY FRANCES Texas and is one of the largest BURLESON in the nation, and yet we offer our clients and sales associates an exceptional team of real estate practitioners, who truly are ‘The Home Team,’ ” says President & CEO Mary Frances Burleson. “As a locally owned residential real estate firm that has been in business since 1945, Ebby Halliday is not subject to an out-of-state owner’s influence or direction,” Burleson says. “This benefits our buying clients and our Associates in many ways. Included in that is our ability to identify and respond rapidly to changes in the North Texas marketplace. All of our decisions are made in the context of the local business environment.” “In 1945, Ebby Halliday founded her one-woman, one-office company on three points of service: service to the client, service to the industry and service to the community,” says Ms. Burleson. “We haven’t forgotten where we started. We’re rich in tradition, but also poised for the future, and still deeply focused on our communities. We aren’t just real estate professionals, we’re also your neighbors. If you’re thinking of buying or selling a home, contact us today. We’re here to help.” Visit the award-winning ebby.com. To download the Ebby App from the Apple App Store or Google Play Store, search for Ebby Halliday Realtors.

Delicious and rich is an understatement when describing this premier, high-end estate, constructed by Lewis Russel Homes in 2008. This home located at 3650 University, has everything… big lot, great location, killer media room, gourmet kitchen, outdoor living area with awesome pool, spa, waterfall, cooking station and a wood burning fireplace…..every bell and whistle todays buyers want! Nora Ling Lane is offering this property at $5,850,000. Situated on a 91 x 175 lot, this seven bedroom, nine full baths, 9137 square feet home in one of the most coveted corners in University Park has you the moment you step into the two-story entry! This elegant home showcases the most incredible craftsmanship and custom cabinetry throughout, which is just the beginning of the most stunning features that overflow throughout! A few of the flawless features include a stunning library with a wood burning fireplace, a cooks dream kitchen, four wet bars, a wine room which holds over 2000 bottles, an incredible family room and a downstairs bedroom. Upstairs features four bedrooms, game room, huge media room with state of the art sound system and master suite with two huge walk-in closets, steam shower and a private exercise room. Two additional bedrooms on the third floor. Other amenities in this grand estate include a three-car garage with an electric privacy gate, elevator, mosquito misting system, Sonos sound system, four outside cameras and a telephone intercom system. Nothing was spared in this timeless classic! Truly a must see! Visit alliebeth.com for photos and for a private showing call Lane at 214-244-4866.


50  OCTOBER 2015

CLASSIFIEDS

COMMUNITY

To place your ad in People Newspapers, please call us at 214-523-5251, fax to 214-363-6948, or e-mail to classified@peoplenewspapers.com. All ads will run in Park Cities People and Preston Hollow People and online on both websites. Pre-payment is required on all ads. Deadline for our next edition is Mon., Oct. 5. People Newspapers reserves the right to edit or reject ads. We assume no liability for errors or omissions in advertisements and no responsibility beyond the cost of the ad. We are responsible only for the first incorrect insertion.

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camera is rolling.” Meanwhile, HPDPS has ordered 50 tasers and a force-options simulator system to enhance de-escalation techniques, and expects to have them in operation by the end of October, after officers are trained in both policies and equipment. The high-tech tasers include internal computers to document their use, including cameras and video capabilities. HPDPS Lt. Lance Koppa said former HPDPS chief Chris Vinson, before he died in June, began researching tasers as alternative to lethal force in the field. “The hope is that when we show up, the mere presence of a police officer helps to calm the scene. The thing that you want to avoid is putting hands on individuals where the other person could get hurt or the officer could get hurt,” Koppa said. “By using a taser, it allows us to have another option that’s less lethal when we have someone who’s being non-compliant or wanting to fight.” The department also will introduce as part of its routine training operation an interac-

Sept. 14. A check presentation was held at Highland Park High School to honor the donation, which goes directly toward scholarships. The funding comes as a result of the organization’s annual home tour and luncheon, and the scholarship is presented to one senior who will study architecture or a related field.

Register for HPISD Dads Club Tourney Registration is now open for the Highland Park ISD Dads Club golf tournament. The 24th annual Teachers Cup will be held on Oct. 12 at the Dallas Country Club. In its 24 years, the tournament has raised more than $2.35 million to help fund staff development within HPISD. You do not have to be an HPISD parent or member of the Dads Club to play, but you can register online on the HPISD website.

tive simulator with three large screens and up to 800 scenarios stored in a computer. The unit can be tailored to each officer’s daily routine when necessary, even incorporating actual landmarks and locations. “The scenario allows the officer to walk through an event, and the scenario can be changed by the officer’s interaction. The officer is required to decide how they’re going to respond,” Koppa said. “The goal is to expose our officers to scenarios like this more often, so you can come to a place where the scene is under control. It allows us to put officers in situations that are very stressful so we can see what works and what doesn’t work.” Koppa said officer-involved shootings in other cities around the country have emphasized the need to prevent such incidents close to home. “It draws a microscope to law enforcement interaction with people, especially when they’re not armed,” Koppa said. “People want us to be well trained and to make smart decisions so that nobody gets hurt and everybody goes home.” Email todd.jorgenson@ peoplenewspapers.com


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ctober has to be the best month of the year — weather-wise for travel and weekends, activity-wise as the kids are back in school, the workplace is humming, the clubs and organizations have all revved up, the heat is behind us, and the holidays have yet to besiege us. It’s a good kind of busy, except for the poor, poor, uberrich, particularly the “one percenters” in wealth, dwelling in Manhattan’s Upper East Side, who live as a peculiar tribe, with a specific pecking order and caste rules dictated by the limited geography and limitless wealth they entail. Having upscaled from funky lower Manhattan to this rarefied world of condos and penthouses, author Wednesday Martin has taken the clever narrative tone of a “social anthropologist” to liken the world of image-obsessed women to those of the alpha females in chimpanzee society in her rollicking satire, The Primates of Park Avenue. It’s so much more than a summer read. This subset of tribal women she once scorned but became adapted to and accepted by are in a never-ending marathon to stay married to the hedge-fund managers, scions of business, the multi-multi-millionaires and billionaires who run Wall Street, our economy, and much of the world (even going so far as to run for president, methinks). “Women of the tribe I was studying paid the price for beauty, looking frozen, starving and exercising their bodies into submission. They did the never-ending work of forging and maintaining social connections and social status for themselves, their children, and the couple. But it was the men who picked up the tab.” (Even for those with “careers.”) The author, a Midwesterner with a sensible attitude, is determined not to succumb to this new world when she and her husband hit the big time, but she’s in need of friends for her child, if not herself, and finds herself going native instead of just observing them. As a child of the corporate

Early Bi Speci rd al

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move, I can attest that succumbing to local norms and mores can seep into the pores like osmosis. She is completely frozen by all the women in the school hallways who won’t deign to make eye contact, much less speak, until the ice is broken by an alpha male who befriends her. Then the imperious queens begin slowly to reassess her and allow her to penetrate their inner sanctums.

" THIS GOT ME WONDERING ABOUT WHETHER DALL AS HAS SUCH FEMALE PRIMATE S ADHERING TO STRICT WARDROBE CODES & INCESSANT SOCIAL CLIMBING.” In one funny but rather pathetic episode, the author, now attuned to the importance of the wardrobe of the tribe, begins her pursuit of the ultimate status symbol: a Birkin bag — a purse for the uninitiated — which like the tony pre-schools has a waiting list. Sales personnel must be courted, bribes paid, trips to foreign countries offered, in search of this object of leather with a $10,000 price tag. Seriously. Never mind these women sit on charitable boards for world hunger.

It sounds remarkably like junior high, except in my day we coveted a John Romaine pocket book (never “purse,” too old-ladyish). And they cost about $25. Portion control, I guess. The Birkin bag had to accessorize the everyday designer clothes that were the uniforms of these socialites. When Ms. Martin garners one, she feels the smug endorphin high of a marathon winner. This got me to wondering about whether Dallas has such female primates adhering to strict wardrobe codes and incessant social climbing while their silverback gorillas are pursuing the almighty buck. Surely our down-home Texas gals — spread out all over the Metroplex rather than piling up on top of each other in condos with park or river views — shelter us from female alphas obsessed with stiletto shoes, extravagant clothes, jockeying for spots for exclusive preschools, board positions, clubs, and nannies, only vacationing in the Texas Hamptons, known as “The Ranch.” After all, this is the buckle of the Bible belt, and we have high church attendance that precludes marginalizing a fellow sister if she loses her status in divorce, or worse, her man loses his money and they have to downscale and sell the ranch. Sleek, shallow, snobby, secular, scheming, social-climbing primates reside in Park Avenue zip codes. We Texans don’t put up with that sort of “monkey business,” in October or any month. Right? Len Bourland can be reached at len@lenbourland.com.

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extraordinary lives | extraordinary homes Learning the Art of Local Fare delicious meal from fare purchased that morning. “These chefs are true champions,” says Chad Julka, the Grow North Texas Farm Coordinator at the Dallas Farmers Market. “They volunteer their time because of their true passion for local ingredients and for education.” Chef Mark Wooton, owner of Garden Cafe, concocted a simple recipe that requires little skill: seared flat iron steak over a salad of sautéed green beans, zucchini and garlic, tossed with a grapefruit vinaigrette. Patrick Stark from 940’s Restaurant & Bar prepared a Texas sausage and pepper bruschetta. Chef Justin Box from Cafe Momentum Get ideas on shopping, buying and preparing local food at Walkabout is challenging himself to walk the aisles without a with a Chef at the Dallas Farmers Market. Photo by Ashley Tobar. recipe in mind, waiting to see what inspires him.

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hopping at a bustling farmers market can be intimidating. Not only do you have to navigate vendors and choose one stand of gorgeous strawberries over another, but then—once you have purchased your produce—you must figure out how to turn it into a delicious meal. But now, with the recently launched Walkabout with a Chef program at the Dallas Farmers Market, eating locally produced food is approachable and achievable. Every second Saturday of the month, shoppers meet in The Shed at 10 a.m. to be guided through the market with a professional chef. On the walk, the group discusses what is currently in season, how to successfully pick out produce, and how to best converse with vendors. At the end, the chef whips up a simple,

Whether you find yourself walking the market with a professional chef or stepping boldly out on your own, the best tip is to ask questions. Learn about the food you are buying and the farmers who produced it. Give yourself the freedom to experiment a little by cooking foods outside your répertoire. And soon enough, you will have mastered the art of eating locally.

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4000 University Boulevard | $5,199,000 A true example of quality craftsmanship, this sophisticated property JONATHAN ROSEN situated on almost half an acre, boasts an immaculate 8,144 sq. ft. This four bedroom home consists of an oversized master suite, 214.927.1313 putting green, pool/spa, three car garage with quarters, theater and jrosen@briggsfreeman.com wine lounge.

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4505 Cherokee Trail | $2,800,000 This rare and secluded property in the heart of Bluffview offers privacy within a heavily treed 48,412 sq. ft. lot with a home valued primarily BECKY FREY in the land.The drive up is spectacular with a row of landscaping for 214.536.4727 complete privacy that opens to an inviting winding drive, gated and bfrey@briggsfreeman.com grand. For details, visit beckfrey.com. An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Briggs Freeman Real Estate Brokerage, Inc. is independently owned and operated.

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