MAR. 4 - MAR. 17, 2016 • VOL. 10 — NO. 5
FACEBOOK.COM/THEREPORTERNEWSPAPERS
Sandy Springs Reporter
TWITTER.COM/REPORTER_NEWS
► Mayor: Traffic congestion is a challenge PAGE 13
► Glenridge Drive study suggests bike lanes PAGE 15
EXCEPTIONAL EDUCATOR | P20
Construction cranes: Who keeps them safe? BY JOHN RUCH johnruch@reporternewspapers.net
Several times each workday, the long blue arm of a construction crane at One City Walk swings a hundred feet above busy Roswell Road in Sandy Springs. It’s one of dozens of cranes dotting the skyline—and often working above busy streets and buildings—in this north metro Atlanta construction boom. It’s easy to imagine the destruction if one of those cranes collapsed because it happens sometimes. Two “tower,” or fixed in place, cranes like those sprouting around the Perimeter Center area fell in New York City in 2008, killing nine peo-
PUBLIC SAFETY Deadly crashes convince some local police agencies to review chase policies Page 2
ple. Mobile cranes on wheels or tracks tip over more frequently, including at a Buckhead construction site last fall and in a Manhattan accident in February that took a pedestrian’s life. Neither the state of Georgia nor any of its cities require crane operators to be licensed, and federal efforts to establish a national certification system are stalled until at least next year. But federal and private inspectors and trainers say that’s no cause to worry. Any crane operator on a major construction site almost certainly has training from the National Commission for the Certification of Crane Operators, an indus-
When spring comes, you can see all the dogwoods bloom. It’s like snow. We call it ‘spring snow.’ KAZUMI FUJISAWA THE JAPANESE EMBROIDERY CENTER IN SANDY SPRINGS PAGE 7
WIN 8170 Reporter Strip ad 2.indd 1
reporternewspapers.net
try nonprofit whose work is the basis for the national standards underway. And the crane equipment undergoes several federally mandated inspections, ranging from daily to annual ones. In collaboration with an independent training company, Heede Southeast, the North Carolina company that operates that One City Walk tower crane, trains its own operators with written and practical tests for NCCCO certification and at least three weeks of “seat time” in a working crane with a certified operator. “We’re not just throwing any Tom, Dick or Harry into the crane as operaSee CONSTRUCTION on page 16
OUT & ABOUT Road Trips
5 nearby gardens where you can enjoy spring flowers Pages 10-11
At Lost Corner, city finds its newest park BY JOHN RUCH johnruch@reporternewspapers.net Before her death in 2008, Peggy Miles had a final wish: preserving Lost Corner, her family’s historic, 24-acre Sandy Springs property, as a public park for future generations to enjoy. That wish comes true on March 17, when the city cuts the ribbon on its newest park, Lost Corner Preserve. A recent preview tour showed the fruits of six years of city and volunteer labor at Lost Corner, located at 7300 Brandon Mill Road. Nature trails wind through woods. Gardens—of both the community and landscape variety—are ready to bloom. A new stone parking area and paths lead to the picturesque, nearly century-old cottage where Miles lived and died, now renovated into a rentable community event space. “I think Peggy would have been absolutely delighted… I think this is exactly what she wanted, exactly what she See LOST on page 18
2/18/16 12:36 PM
2 | Community
Facebook.com/TheReporterNewspapers ■ twitter.com/Reporter_News
Sandy Springs police say car chases only for serious, dangerous crimes BY DYANA BAGBY dyanabagby@reporternewspapers.net
Two people died in a head-on crash after they fled a Georgia State Patrol officer on patrol on Buford Highway in Brookhaven. Their deaths were among several recent metro Atlanta collisions that have some local law enforcement agencies rethinking their vehicle pursuit policies. At about 10 p.m. on Feb. 25, a Georgia State Patrol officer attempted to pull over a 2002 Saturn SL on Buford Highway for speeding. The Saturn driver did not stop and the trooper initiated a chase. The Saturn ended up attempting to elude the trooper by speeding away north on I-85 South at Clairmont Road. The trooper monitored the speeding Saturn from I-85 north when he witnessed the Saturn crash head-on into an Infiniti. “The trooper continued north, turned around, and located the crashed Saturn. The Saturn struck a black 2012 Infiniti G37 head-on. The driver of the Infiniti, Lisa Jackson, 52, of Alpharetta, was transported to Grady Hospital with minor injuries,” GSP reported. A woman in the back seat of the Saturn was seriously injured and transported to Grady Hospital. The male driver and front
er conditions and the pursuing officer’s seat passenger of the Saturn were killed. training. When a chase begins, it is conAlthough Brookhaven Police did not stantly monitored by the officer and his or take part in the Feb. 25 chase, according her monitoring supervisor to weigh the neto a spokesperson, the department is recessity of apprehension, Gurley said. viewing its policies following recent metDunwoody Police only allow police ro Atlanta high-profile law enforcement chases in instancpursuits that led to es of forcible felocrashes and deaths nies, such as rape, of innocent people, murder, robbery, asincluding a grandsaults and shootings, mother and her two said Chief Billy Grograndchildren. gan. “Our chief asked Sandy Springs us to update our polPolice Department’s icy. We’re not cutpolicy, developed usting it altogether, but ing standards estabit will likely be a litlished by the Geortle more restrictive,” gia Chiefs of Police said Brookhaven Maand the Commisjor Brandon Gurley. sion on AccreditaThe department’s tion for Law Encurrent police allows forcement Agencies, for police to chase felstates “vehicle purony suspects and se- POLICY OF SANDY SPRINGS POLICE suits may be initiatrious misdemeanors ed only when danger to the public created as well as hit-and-run suspects where seby the pursuit is less than the imminent or rious injury or deaths have occurred, Gurpotential danger to the public should the ley said. suspect remain at large.” SSPD officers are Other caveats come into play when deinstructed that “the more serious or danciding to chase a suspect, Gurley said, such gerous the crime, the greater the consideras the time of day, traffic conditions, weathation to pursue.”
Vehicle pursuits may be initiated only when danger to the public created by the pursuit is less than the imminent or potential danger to the public should the suspect remain at large.
Atlanta’s premiere foot and body massage retreat Come in and experience our rejuvenating foot massage or if you need something more comprehensive you may enjoy our full body massage.
$
5
Foot Massage Expires March 3, 2016
OFF
$
10 OFF
KEY BENEFITS
Body Massage Expires March 3, 2016
• Muscle Relaxation • Tension relief • Stress reduction
Foot Massage
Therapy
30 min
$25
60 min
$40
90 min
$60
• Increased blood circulation
Body Massage
Therapy
• Increased production of Serotonin
60 min
$70
• Better sleep
90 min
$100
120 min
$120
6690 ROSWELL RD #550, SANDY SPRINGS, GA 30328 ■ 404-254-3758 I www.FTSole.com I info@FTSole.com
For the Atlanta Police Department, vehicle pursuit is only allowed when one of three standards are met by the fleeing suspect: the suspect possesses a deadly weapon or device that can cause serious bodily injury; the officer reasonably believes the suspect poses an immediate violent threat to the officer or others; or there is probable cause to believe the suspect has threatened to or seriously injured another. Many factors come into play when deciding to pursue a vehicle, said Brookhaven’s Gurley. “It’s a constant balancing act,” he said. “Is the risk worth the need to apprehend?”
‘Public wants something done’
That risk is on many people’s minds after two police chases – one beginning in College Park and another in Johns Creek – resulted in five deaths within a few days span in January. On Jan. 31, College Park Police pursued an SUV believed to have been stolen from a hotel near the Hartsfield-Jackson airport. The chase ended when the SUV crashed into another vehicle, killing a 76-year-old grandmother and her grandchildren, ages 12 and 6. An elderly couple died Jan. 28 after their vehicle was struck by a car being chased by Johns Creek Police. Police arrested the father and son who were in the car that struck the couple. They now face drug charges as well as vehicular homicide and DUI charges. These deaths and others catalyzed State Sen. Gail Davenport (D-Jonesboro) to introduce legislation Feb. 22 to provide a standard for state, county and city agencies that authorize police pursuits. “The public wants something done,” Davenport said. “We support the police, but we want to make sure no innocent lives are lost. We are trying to make sure they do not endanger the lives of the public.” But her bill did not pass out of the Public Safety Committee this year. The law would have made it standard practice that state, county and city law enforcement could only pursue those suspected of murder, aggravated battery, kidnapping, false imprisonment “or any offense that creates an immediate threat of death or serious bodily injury to another person or substantial threat to the safety of another person.” “Things have recently gotten out of hand,” Davenport said. “We are not trying to run the police departments. But if the chase involves something frivolous, call off the chase.”
‘Most chases over quickly’
Dunwoody chief Grogan acknowledges most chases do not end up in captures. “Most chases are pretty short and are over pretty quickly,” he said. “We’ve initiated a few in the past. The SS
MAR. 4 - MAR. 17, 2016
■
Community | 3
www.ReporterNewspapers.net
majority of them have been terminated by the officer or the supervisor. We take into account many factors such as traffic, weather, time of day,” he said. In 2015, Brookhaven police were involved in 17 pursuits. Most were canceled either by the supervisor or the officer. One involved an intoxicated juvenile driving without a license who refused to stop for police until he pulled into the driveway of his parent’s home and surrendered. “We stayed at the speed limit or below in this case; we never got over 35 miles per hour,” Gurley said. But anytime an officer flips on their blue lights to go after another car, it’s counted as a pursuit. Officers pursued several erratic and reckless drivers who refused to stop for blue lights, but those chases were typically called off after just a few minutes. In another instance, an officer ran a tag number to a car that came back as stolen. The officer sped after the car and ended up in a 100-mile-per-hour chase on I-85 before the police supervisor called off the chase due to icy rain conditions. Another incident ended when the suspect vehicle being chased crashed into a utility pole. The passenger was arrested at the scene, but the driver fled on foot; he was later identified and arrested. Only one chase ended in the apprehension of the suspect – officers were able to
use a “rolling roadblock,” a move in which several police cars surround the suspect to stop him. The driver was charged with DUI and was driving on sidewalks, posing a serious risk, Gurley said.
Rules changed over years
The recent incidents in metro Atlanta are “very tragic for everyone involved,” Grogan said. Grogan said he had been in “tons” of police chases himself, dating back to the 1980s. Although none of Dunwoody’s police chases have ever ended with an arrest, Grogan said, arrests have happened when an officer later recognized a suspect or gets the license plate number leading to the identification of a suspect. Over time, he said, law enforcement leaders looked at the outcomes and the rewards versus the risks of high speed chases and made the decision that more restrictions were necessary. “The rules now were not present then,” Grogan said. “Previously, all law enforcement chased everyone for any reason.” The times Grogan was involved in chases were “pretty stressful,” he said. “You don’t want to wreck, don’t want to get hurt and you don’t want to hurt anyone else,” he said. “But you don’t want to let the bad guy get away either.”
Mercedes unveils the look of its planned office campus
“Choosing this community was one of the best decisions I have ever made. I never would have imagined the joy and relief I feel everytime I walk into Phoenix at Dunwoody to visit my mother. She is at home, surrounded by people who genuinely love her and care about her entire well-being.” – Daughter of a resident Phoenix at Dunwoody
When it comes to your loved one, EVERYTHING matters and it MATTERS to us. Each Phoenix senior Living community offers innovative and personalized services for seniors. • Assisted Living • Memory Care THE PHOENIX AT ROSWELL (770) 521-9913 11725 POINTE PL.
THE PHOENIX AT DUNWOODY (770) 350-2393 4484 N. SHALLOWFORD RD
www.PhoenixSrLiving.com
Raising The Standard of Care
Our team has grown... thanks to you!
SPECIAL
Mercedes-Benz USA released the first drawings of its forthcoming new headquarters building at Abernathy and Barfield roads in Sandy Springs. The glass-walled, 225,000-square-foot building reflects the company’s new collaborative workspace style. MBUSA says construction will begin this spring and continue into early 2018.
Our team is waiting to serve you! L to R First Row: Carol, Gloria, Bonnie, Susana and Mikel Back Row: Dr. Vik, Frances, Lori, MacKinsey, Bailee, Melissa, Ivy and Dr. Chen
Our Services Include:
• Metal-Free Fillings • Same-Day 3D Crowns • Root Canals • Non-Invasive TMJ Therapy • Saturday Appointments Available • Preferred Insurance Providers • Care Credit Financing
$129
NEW PATIENT OFFER Save $200! Exam, ALL X-Rays and Basic Mouth Cleaning
1407 Dresden Drive, Atlanta, GA
404-816-9336
www.BrookhavenDentalAssociates.com SS
4 | Community
Facebook.com/TheReporterNewspapers ■ twitter.com/Reporter_News
Northside Atlanta
Community Briefs
Orthopedics & Sports Medicine 5555 Peachtree Dunwoody Road, Suite 101, Atlanta, GA 30342
CHO A PLANS 57-B ED P I L L HILL EXPANSIO N
Northside Atlanta Orthopedics and Sports Medicine is a full-service practice that specializes in the diagnosis, treatment and management of disorders of the bones and joints.
Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta is seeking a 57-bed expansion of its Scottish Rite hospital on Pill Hill, requiring a one-story addition and a rezoning approval from the city of Sandy Springs. Scottish Rite currently has 273 beds and wants to add 43 inpatient beds and 14 observation beds, officials said at a Feb. 24 community meeting held at the hospital. The expansion, announced last fall, is needed due to a bed crunch that forces the hospital to send some older kids to adultoriented hospitals, CHOA Chief Public Policy Officer David Tatum said. The plan involves adding a fifth story to the main hospital building along Meridian Mark Road, as well as building out an existing top floor currently used as storage. But the plan requires rezoning the Scottish Rite property, largely to correct what hospital attorney Woody Galloway called inconsistency and “error” in the existing zoning, which dates to 1987. That zoning has a 250-bed limit that the hospital already exceeded with state approval long ago and permitted about 726,000 square feet of development under what Galloway said are irregular methods of calculating floor space. CHOA also wants to confirm its entitle-
Our board-certified physician, Dr. David Fowler has been recognized as one of the top orthopedic surgeons in Atlanta, and utilizes conservative and alternative methods care, opting for surgery only if needed. We proudly offer the latest minimallyinvasive procedures to restore your quality of life and return you to a high functional level.
We offer a full range of services, including: • Total hip and knee arthoplasty • Arthritis care • Arthroscopy of the upper & lower extremities • Sports medicine and general orthopedics • Tenex tendon repair • Trauma and fracture treatment • Alternative methods of care
NorthsideAtlantaOrtho.com
phone: (404) 303-8665 fax: (404) 303-8482
JOIN
US FO SUND R WORSH I AY M ORN P EACH ING AT 11 AM
Easter Egg Hunt March 20, 12noon Church Lawn
Petting zoo Crafts Pizza-50 cents/slice Lemonade and cookies
Summer Camps at SSUMC Weekly beginning June 6 Full day 9-4 Half–day 9-12:30 or 12:30-4 Early care 7:45-9am After care 4-6pm
$225/week, sibling discount $195 Cost includes field trips, supplies, camp t-shirt, and early drop-off/late pick-up.
SUMMER SPORTS CAMPS Check out what the SSUMC Activities Center has to offer at ssumc.org
ment to an additional 28,000 square feet permitted under the 1980s zoning, which the hospital does not have plans to build out at the moment, Galloway said. Brian Cohen, president of the homeowners association at the nearby Johnson Ferry Park townhomes, said that residents’ main concern is construction impacts, especially with other Pill Hill projects coming online soon. Galloway said rezoning, if the city approves it, could come in June. A state decision on permitting the additional beds was approved Feb. 25. If that all happens, hospital officials said, construction could start in July, with major exterior work wrapping up in January 2017. Further work would continue into fall 2017. Construction staging would take place on green space in front of the hospital on Meridian Mark, requiring the removal of some trees and the closure of one lane of the road. CHOA is not adding any parking with the expansion request, saying current capacity is fine.
FULT O N LO O KING FO R A NEW S C HO O L S UP ER INTENDENT AG A IN Days after naming a new school superintendent, members of the Fulton County school board found themselves looking for his replacement. Philip Lanoue, Philip Lanoue the sole finalist for the job of superintendent of the Fulton County school district, withdrew his name from consideration for the post, the school system announced Feb. 24. School board president Linda McCain said the board would be looking immediately for a new superintendent. “Our school board is moving forward,” McCain said in a press release. “We have a number of highly qualified candidates. In fact, choosing a finalist was difficult because of the quality of those considered for the position.” Lanoue, superintendent of the Clarke County School District in Athens, was named the 2105 National Superintendent of the Year by the American Association of School Administrators. Media reports in Atlanta and Athens said his decision followed controversy over the handling of a rape allegation at a Clarke County high school. “Dr. Lanoue feels a strong need to remain as superintendent in Clarke County,” McCain said in a press release from the Fulton school system. “We thank Dr. Lanoue for his interest and wish him well.”
SS
MAR. 4 - MAR. 17, 2016
■
Out & About | 5
www.ReporterNewspapers.net
Local indigo and glass artists create unique pieces for American Craft Council Show BY DYANA BAGBY
completely controlled technique where everything is planned before sitting down to the loom and requires great patience to a craft with immediate results and magical serendipity,” she said. Serendipity plays a key role in her indigo landscapes, but there are also careful measures taken to ensure a piece is worthy to be sold. “While I have control of many aspects of this work, one small slip can ruin an entire piece,” Pollard said. For example, dropping a piece while hanging it up to dry or having two pieces clap together and mar one another “or a
dyanabagby@reporternewspapers.net
Lynn Pollard has woven textiles most of her creative life. The craft requires a keen sense of aesthetics but also a high level of technical knowledge. “And infinite patience,” she said. For years, she said, she accepted and needed the challenges of weaving. But a few years ago she realized she needed to rid her dye studio of unsafe chemicals and switch to natural dyes.
An example of a Kathleen Plate light fixture.
Kathleen Plate’s green chandelier.
Gat U R
! RE VE O F O BE Y M E TH
G E N I AL R SP S
“I also began more mindful weaving with paper, making tapestry-like pieces,” she said. During a class in Japanese papermaking, she turned to indigo dyes and to the natural indigo vat in her studio. “When I dipped my first piece of paper into the vat, it was magical and I knew immediately that this was something I wanted to explore,” Pollard said. She knew of no one else who was dyeing paper with indigo to make landscapes and so began a new path. “I went from a
The American Craft Council
Show in Atlanta
Friday, March 11 thru Sunday, March 13 Cobb Galleria Centre Two Galleria Parkway, Atlanta, 30339 Tickets: On-site admission: $13 one-day pass Advance tickets online: $12 one-day pass $5 after 5 p.m. Friday night on-site purchases only FREE Admission for American Craft Council members and children 12 and under More info and to purchase tickets online at www.craftcouncil.org/atlanta Lynn Pollard - www.broadwovens.com Kathleen Plate - www.kathleenplate.com
Bell Carpet Galleries Moving to ADAC in March 2016 (Suite 141)
Plate’s glass artwork.
SPECIAL PHOTOS
dip just goes awry because the dip was the wrong scale,” she said. “And then there are the moments when I’ve made a number of dips which have had to dry in between over several days and the piece is good. I can take the good or I can make one more dip that takes it over-thetop wonderful or can completely ruin it,” she said. “I try to be brave.”
American Craft Council Show Pollard, of Buckhead, is just one of numerous artists showcasing their work at the American Craft Council Show March 11 through 13 at Cobb Galleria Centre. More than 225 artists will feature their handmade creations in everything from clothing, jewelry, furniture and home décor, said Susan Summers, spokesperson for the show. Also appearing at this year American Craft Council Show is Kathleen Plate of Brookhaven, the founder of Smart Glass Art. Recycled glass is her medium, and obContinued on page 6
STRATHMORE
CABINETS • DESIGN • FLOORS • PAINT
6 | Out & About
Facebook.com/TheReporterNewspapers ■ twitter.com/Reporter_News
Do you need help caring for a loved one?
Call Senior Helpers today at 770-442-2154 Your local Senior Care Expert since 2006 • Alzheimer and Dementia Care • Transportation and Errands • Bathing, Dressing and Light Housekeeping • Fall Risk Care
• Caregivers Available from 1 hr./day to 24/7 and Live-in • Care available in the hospital, rehab, assisted living or home. • Same Day Service Available
Continued from page 5
Senior Helpers
Matt Fredenberg,
Elizabeth Jackson, Pam Hodgson, Hutch Hodgson
Family Owned & Managed
Delivering Old Fashioned Personalize Care with State – of – the – Art Technology Our Approach to Patient Care Advanced Ear, Nose and Throat Associates specializes in the treatment of all areas affecting the ear, nose and throat. Maintaining a healthy lifestyle is tough when ENT issues are holding you back. Whether you’re suffering from sinus troubles, allergies, sleep difficulties, snoring or hearing loss, our team of ENT physicians provide comprehensive adult ENT care. • • • • • • • • • •
Sinus Infections Allergy Testing Allergy Shots and Drops Balloon Sinuplasty Sinus Headaches Hearing Loss Tinnitus/Ringing in Ears Snoring and Sleep Sleep Studies Thyroid and Parathyroid Disease
Andris Golde, MD | Sam Mickelson, MD | Aaron Rogers, MD | Steven Bomeli, MD
AdvancedENTpc.com 404-410-1094 Northside Doctors’ Centre - 960 Johnson Ferry Rd NE, Suite 200 Atlanta, GA 30342
SPECIAL
Above, Kathleen Plate’s glass in an interior. Plate, a Brookhaven resident, is founder of Smart Glass Art. Recycled glass is her medium, using thousands of bottles from bars, restaurants and friends to create her pieces.
taining the thousands of glass bottles she needs means asking bars, restaurants and friends to save their throwaways. “I’ve also been known to do a little dumpster diving,” she said with a laugh. Plate’s use of recycled glass to create works of beauty is part of a lifestyle where preserving and conserving the environment were instilled in her as a child growing up in a solar-powered home in a small fishing and logging village in Washington state. She has been commissioned by Coca-Cola and the Guggenheim Museum and many others to create pieces such as glass chandeliers and glass curtains. Chick-fil-A also commissioned her to handcraft chandeliers of Coca-Cola bottles for select restaurants. Of course, glass doesn’t arrive at Plate’s studio ready to be cut and shaped. “The bottles are dirty, gross, used bottles – like a frat party blew up,” she said.
So hours of scraping off labels and soaking the bottles until clean and shiny are the first steps before the arduous process of cutting the glass into circles and other shapes begins. Then the glass is put into kilns “and that’s where the magic happens,” she said. The pieces become smooth and stronger. “I just think glass is a magical thing. The way it feels, looks – it’s a fun medium,” she said.
SPECIAL
An example of a Lynn Pollard indigo landscape.
Teeth in a Day with Dental Implants Full Arch Dental Implant and Bridge
Beginning as low as $500 a month (financing available*) Lee M. Whitesides, D.M.D., M.M.Sc. Board Certified Oral & Maxillofacial Surgeon 4700 Chamblee Dunwoody Road Dunwoody, GA 30338 Tel: 770-393-8500 Northside Oral Surgery www.NorthsideOralSurgery.net
Call today for your free consultation! www.onedayteeth.net *Depending on credit score. No insurance. Single use only. X ray included. Not valid with any other coupon. Certain restrictions apply. Must present coupon at consultation. Expires 12.31.16
Restoration by Henry Schwartz www.papermilldental.com 404-596-5727
MAR. 4 - MAR. 17, 2016
■
Out & About | 7
www.ReporterNewspapers.net
Embroidery center brings a touch of Japan to Sandy Springs BY JOE EARLE joeearle@reporternewspapers.net
Surrounded by forest, the house shows little more than a driveway to the cars rolling past on Spalding Drive. But inside, this house feels different from the suburban homes around it. This Sandy Springs home offers a little piece of Japan. Since 1989, it has housed the Japanese Embroidery Center, a nonprofit that preserves and teaches Japanese embroidery. “We have about three acres of land,” said Kazumi Fujisawa, an officer of the Japanese Embroidery Center, a school housed in the home at 2727 Spalding Drive, and daughter of the center’s founder and master, Shuji Tamura, who lives at the house. “You can see the seasons change from the classroom. When spring comes, you can see all the dogwoods bloom. It’s like snow. We call it ‘spring snow.’” Visitors to the center remove their shoes in the entryway before entering the living area, just as they would at a home in Japan. The first room visitors enter is a sparely decorated space serving as a sort of gallery and meditation area. “You step into their house, which is also their workshop, and it’s a completely Japanese world,” said Elizabeth Peterson, director of the Oglethorpe University Museum of Art, which mounted an exhibition of works from the center in February. The exhibit, which lasts through March 6, features pieces covered with small stitches made with silk thread that create brightly colored images of plants, abstract designs and scenes. The show ties into an exhibit the center mounted at the Oglethorpe gallery in 1990, shortly after the center opened. “There’s a longstanding relationship and they’re our neighbors,” Peterson said. Tamura established the U.S. center more than a quarter century ago. The Japanese-style house is part of what attracted him to metro Atlanta after he decided to move to the U.S. to open a branch of the Japanese center where he took up the craft of embroidery, Fujisawa said. Fujisawa said the center now has about 500 members. Tamura said he looked at locations in New York and California, but didn’t feel at home there. “In the beginning, the choice was New York or San Francisco,” Tamura said. “I knew it was not my place. When I got off the airport in New York, I felt [it was] dangerous. In L.A., I felt no nature. In San Francisco, I felt it was more a sightseeing city.” A student from Atlanta had sent him a videotape showing the Spalding Drive house, which was for sale, Fujisawa said. “This house was already Japanese style,” she said. But it wasn’t really Japanese enough. They felt the house mixed in oth-
er Asian styles. “We had to remodel a lot,” she said. They added a classroom on the rear of the house, where students come to learn embroidery skills. One of the first modifications to the house, Tamura said, was to build a new entrance. He had seen that Americans who came to his classes, which he then offered in hotels, wouldn’t stop talking. Even once class started, they would keep talking. That, he said, would never happen in Japan. “I was asking, ‘How can we make them quiet?’” So he built a Japanese-style entryway and required students and visitors to remove their shoes. It was a way to calm them. “The entrance was very important,” he said. “To take shoes off is very common in Japan. I have to ask them to take shoes off. The first step was to build a typical Japanese entrance.” Tamura, who’s now 75, said he took up embroidery when he was about 30. He grew up in Tokyo and had trained to work in the computer industry, he said, but didn’t like his job. He visited the embroidery center, located in the nearby town of Chiba, and “immediately, I realized this is my life’s work.” He was drawn to the craft’s history, which stretches back more than a millennium. And he found the craft satisfying spiritually, he said. “It was a different
world,” he said. Fujisawa, who said she coordinates about 100 embroidery teachers scattered around the world, said the work is technically difficult and requires patience. Learning the craft has taught her about herself. “For me, growing up, I was not the type of person who would do embroidery,” she said. “I would rather go outside and climb a tree. I was a tomboy. The state of your mind shows in embroidery. ... I learned how to calm myself. It shows in your embroidery. “I had to grow myself to be a good stitcher. That’s what amazed me. Embroidery is not the ultimate goal, but how much you grow inside, how much you change inside. A person becomes more patient.”
y nit mu . m r co a r s you 15 ye g v i n ver S e r fo r o d
W 1 str 0 yea e can uct r ura warr offer l co ant a nst y on ruc Ins tio ure n. d
e
ens
Lic
PHOTOS BY JOE EARLE
Top, Kazumi Fujisawa, educational director of the Japanese Embroidery Center in Sandy Springs. Above and left, Shuji Tamura, founder and master of the center, in the entryway.
Specializing in Construction, Renovation, & Repair
• Patios/Pool Decks • Pools & Spas • Outdoor Kitchens • Arbors • Brick & Stone • Chimneys/Fireplace • Decorative Concrete/Pavers • Decks • Driveways • Efflorescence Cleaning • Grading & Drainage • Historical Restorations • Retaining Walls • Stone Patio Restoration & Sealing • Stone/Tile Deck Waterproofing & Leak Repair josh@southernoutdoorcd.com
404.478.9563
www.southernoutdoorcd.com
8 | Out & About
Facebook.com/TheReporterNewspapers ■ twitter.com/Reporter_News
World Renowned Diamond Dealer SPECIAL! ALL LOOSE DIAMONDS UP TO QUANTITIES LIMITED
located in Dunwoody
70
%
OFF
BROOKHAVEN DIAMOND STUDS: 1 CT T.W. $990
We Buy Diamonds & Gold Appraisals starting at $20.00
•
BUCKHEAD
FUNDRAISERS
1.5 CT T.W. $2900 2 CT T.W. $4,400.
770-396-3456 WWW.HAJEWELRY.COM Monday through Thursday 10-6 pm, Fri 10-5pm
PINK AFFAIR
Melissa Babcock, M.D.
Introducing:
Sculptra Sculptra is an injectable liquid used to add volume to areas of the face for youthful recontouring. Special price $400/vial after manufacturer’s rebate.
and
Kybella Kybella is the first and only FDA-approved nonsurgical treatment that improves the appearance of double chin. Special price $500/vial. Both require up to 3 treatments usually 2 vials per treatment. Set up a free consultation to learn more about these non-surgical treatment options.
4890 Roswell Road, Suite B-10 • Atlanta, Georgia 30342 (404) 835-3052 • BabcockDermatology.com Located at the corner of Roswell Road & Long Island Drive
arteé fabrics & home artéé
Saturday, March 12, 7 p.m. TurningPoint Breast Cancer Rehabilitation hosts the 15th annual Pink Affair, the organization’s signature annual fundraising event, at the Westin Atlanta Perimeter North. Enjoy live and silent auctions, music, and food and beverages. Funds support the nonprofit’s financial assistance program and complimentary services for breast cancer patients. $100 per person. 7 Concourse Parkway, Sandy Springs, 30328. Purchase tickets: myturningpoint.org. Find out more by calling 770-360-9271 or emailing: ksmith@myturningpoint.org.
VANDERDASH 5K Saturday, March 19, 7:30 a.m. It’s time for the eighth annual Vanderlyn Elementary School’s VanderDash 5K/1-mile fun run! 5K begins at 7:30 a.m.; fun run starts at 8:30 a.m. $21 for 5K; $18 for fun run. Funds go toward school improvements and/or student purchases. To register, visit: vanderlynpto.org. Email: camilyn.germann@gmail.com with questions. 1877 Vanderlyn Dr., Dunwoody, 30338.
COLOR DASH Saturday, March 19, 9 a.m. The Down Syndrome Association of Atlanta hosts the second annual 5K Color Dash. $40. All ages invited. Untimed race. Pets welcome on a leash. Start with a white t-shirt, then add color! Half the proceeds benefit the DSAA. Blackburn Park, 3493 Ashford-Dunwoody Rd., NE, Brookhaven, 30319. Find out more and register by going to: cd5k.com.
Experience the artéé difference ► 2,000+ Unique Fabrics ► Trims ► Panels ► Pillow Covers ► Pillow Inserts
*in-stock merchandise only � Coupon Expires 3-31-16
886 Huff Road Atlanta, GA 30318
20 OFF %
404-554-1215 Mon-Sat 10-5
•
SANDY SPRINGS
Concourse Parkway, Sandy Springs, 30328. Get details and buy tickets: sandyspringsrotary.org.
VISUAL & PERFORMING ARTS Saturday, March 12, 8-11 p.m. Zydeco dance with accordionist Lil’ Malcolm & the Zydeco House Rockers. Free dance lesson 7:15-8 p.m. No partner necessary. All ages welcome. Cajun food for sale. $18; $5 students; $14 ACZA members and active military. Dorothy Benson Center, 6500 Vernon Woods Dr., Sandy Springs, 30328. Questions? Go to: aczadance. org or call 877-338-2420.
CHORAL GUILD Sunday, March 13, 4 p.m. The Choral Guild of Atlanta presents Maurice Durufle’s “Requiem” and Louis Vierne’s “Solemn Mass.” $15 per person; $12 seniors; $5 students. Northside Drive Baptist Church, 3100 Northside Dr., Atlanta, 30305. For additional information, email: info@ cgatl.org, call 404-223-6362 or visit: cgatl.org.
“THE ADDAMS FAMILY” Thursday, March 17, 7 p.m. Riverwood International Charter School’s Performing Arts Department presents, “The Addams Family,” about creepy kooks in their super-spooky Central Park mansion. Tickets, $10 students; $15 adults. Additional shows: March 18 and 19, 7 p.m.; March 20, 3 p.m. 5900 Raider Dr., Sandy Springs, 30328. Find out more: http:// school.fultonschools.org/hs/riverwood.
VOICES OF NOTE Friday, March 18, 8 p.m. The Atlanta Gay Men’s Chorus and the Atlanta Women’s Chorus, collectively known as Voices of Note, perform together in “And Justice For All,” featuring music known for uniting people of different backgrounds and cultures. Tickets: $10-$35. Additional shows: Saturday, March 19, 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. Peachtree Road United Methodist Church, 3180 Peachtree Rd., Atlanta, 30305. Buy tickets and get details: voicesofnote.org.
PUBLIC HEALTH
INTERNATIONAL MARKET
Bring this ad to receive
DUNWOODY
LIL’ MALCOLM
1820-C INDEPENDENCE SQUARE, DUNWOODY 30338
Haim Haviv, Owner
•
Saturday, March 19, 7 p.m. The Rotary Club of Sandy Springs invites all to its 21st annual Spring Gala. Highlights include: international food tastings, a bazaar, fine scotch and wine/spirit pulls, raffle prizes, music and entertainment. $125/ person. Black-tie optional. Traditional dress encouraged. Westin Atlanta Perimeter North, 7
Saturday, March 19, 12 p.m. Opening for “The Art of Public Health” exhibition, where Yale public health and art students merged talents to create posters designed to provoke awareness and change behavior on issues such as obesity, breast cancer screening, self-respect, concussions, child abuse, early signs of autism and skin cancer. $5. Oglethorpe University Museum of
MAR. 4 - MAR. 17, 2016
■
Out & About | 9
www.ReporterNewspapers.net
Art, 4484 Peachtree Road, Brookhaven, 30319. Learn more: museum.oglethorpe.edu.
“FANCY NANCY” Sunday, March 20, 1 p.m. Nancy’s eager to steal the spotlight in her first dance recital. But she’s not picked to be the prima ballerina, so she’s stuck playing a tree. Nancy must become a hero by finding the flair in her new role. For all ages. Tickets, $10-$20. Additional shows: March 20, 3 and 5 p.m. Marcus Jewish Community Center, Morris & Rae Frank Theatre, 5342 Tilly Mill Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. Call 678-812-4002 or visit: atlantajcc.org/boxoffice to purchase tickets.
LET’S LEARN! FAMILY RECIPES Saturday, March 12, 10:30 a.m.-12 p.m. Family recipes can be nostalgic and a way to learn more about your heritage, but they can also be problematic. Recipes may be faded, sketchy or even unwritten. How can you ensure recipes, stories and photos last as long as possible? This program helps preserve your family’s food traditions. Tickets, $10 for Atlanta History Center members; $15 for non-members. Reservations recommended. 130 West Paces Ferry Rd., NW, Atlanta, 30305. For information, call 404-8144042 or visit: atlantahistorycenter.com.
HIGH SCHOOL PREP Wednesday, March 16, 6:30-7:30 p.m. Begin preparing for high school during the middle school years. Proactively think and move toward high school readiness well before your student actually begins high school. Free. Open to the community. For middle school students and parents. Buckhead Branch Library, 269 Buckhead Ave., NE, Atlanta, 30305. Email: amy.alexander@fultoncountyga.gov or call 404-8143500 for further information.
WINE AND CHEESE Wednesday, March 16, 7-9 p.m. In this class you‘ll taste five different wines, paired with artisanal cheeses. Learn how each varietal underscores and complements each cheese; which wine to drink with goat cheese, which goes with cow milk cheese; and how to accompany these selections with other breads, fruits or nuts. $40 for members of the Dunwoody Nature Center; $45 non-member. 5343 Roberts Dr., Dunwoody, 30338. Call 770-394-3322 or go to: dunwoodynature.org with questions.
HONEYBEE DAY Saturday, March 19, 11 a.m.- 12:30 p.m. Honey is sweet, and so is the Blue Heron Nature Preserve’s Honeybee Day! Join a beekeeper for a peek into the lives of honeybees. See the preserve’s apiaries and learn what it takes to be a beekeeper. $10, adult; $5, child; under 3 free. RSVP to 678-315-0836. 4055 Roswell Rd., Atlanta, 30342. Get more details and register: bhnp.org.
VISION BOARD Saturday, March 19, 2-5 p.m. Join others for a vision board party! A vision board is a representation of your dreams, goals and desires. Bring magazines, decorations and keepsakes. Posterboard, markers, scissors, glue and tape provided. Free. Open to the first 25 participants. For adults. Call 770-512-4640 or visit the Dunwoody Branch Library to register. 5339 Chamblee-Dunwoody Rd., Dunwoody, 30338.
“THE MESSENGER” Saturday, March 19, 5:30 p.m. “The Messenger” explores our connection to birds, and warns that the uncertain fate of songbirds might mirror our own. Winner of the Jackson Hole Conservation Film Festival’s Best Conservation Film award. General admission tickets, $10. Chattahoochee Nature Center, 9135 Willeo Rd., Roswell, 30075. Questions? Go to: chattnaturecenter.org.
Happily Ever After! Sailing from Port Canaveral, Florida Disney Cruise Line is sailing year-round out of Port Canaveral, conveniently located near Walt Disney World ® Resort. On board, discover magic for every member of your crew. You can choose an enchanting Bahamian or Caribbean getaway—with a stop at Disney Castaway Cay, a private island paradise.
7-Night Western Caribbean Cruise sailing from Port Canaveral starting at
1,750
$
*
per person, based on double occupancy. Taxes, Fees, and Port Expenses of approximately $122 per person not included. For 10/29/2016 sailing aboard Disney Fantasy. Category 5A Deluxe Oceanview Stateroom with Verandah.
FREE DELIVERY & SETUP! Sales • Service • Rentals
We Also Carry:
Lift Chairs ■ Scooters Hospital Beds ■ Wheelchairs Medical Compression Garments And More!
*Rates in U.S. dollars and valid through March 31, 2016. Offer is subject to availability. Other restrictions may apply. All amounts subject to change. Gratuities and excursions are not included. See Disney Cruise Line website for applicable Terms and Conditions.
DCL-16-48779 ©Disney Ships’ Registry: The Bahamas
Contact The Cruise & Vacation Authority to book your next magical voyage. 770.952.8300 • Open Saturdays 11-3 • tcava.com
www.adamedicalsupply.com • 678-398-0505 6780 Roswell Road, Suite D115, Sandy Springs, GA 30328 All Major Credit Cards Accepted/Financing Available
10 | Out & About
RoadTrips
Facebook.com/TheReporterNewspapers ■ twitter.com/Reporter_News
Editor’s note: Spring soon will bloom, so for the first of our periodic Road Trips ar�icles for 2016, we’re spotligh�ing a few special places you can watch �lowers burst into color to bring in the new season. Our Road Trips focus on unusual places and spaces within about a two-hour drive of Sandy Springs, Buckhead, Brookhaven and Dunwoody.
As nature shrugs off winter, it’s time to get out of the house, load the family into the SUV and hit the road. We thought the change of seasons marked a good time to visit
places where flowers really strut their stuff. Here are five Georgia gardens where you can stop and smell the roses ... or the irises ... or the daffodils.
MAR. 4 - MAR. 17, 2016
Out & About | 11
www.ReporterNewspapers.net
Atlanta Botanical Garden, Atlanta
Efforts to create an Atlanta garden began in 1973, and the garden opened in 1976. It occupies about 30 acres and five main buildings, and operates as a nonprofit charged with developing and maintaining plant collections for display, education, research and conservation. The garden’s website promises “a tidal wave of color” as tulips, daffodils and crocus bloom in March and April.
MOSAIC’S SUCCESSFUL REMODELING PROCESS
FRESH IDEAS
Address:1345 Piedmont Avenue NE | Atlanta, GA 30309 Directions: The garden is next to Piedmont Park in Atlanta. Take I-85 south to Exit 84 and follow signs to 14th Street. Turn left on 14th and continue to Piedmont Avenue. Turn left on Piedmont. The garden is on the right. Hours: Tuesdays through Sundays – 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. November through March; 9 a.m. until 7 p.m. April through October; Thursdays – 9 a.m. until 10 p.m. May through October; closed Mondays, except holidays. Cost: $18.95 for adults; $12.95 for children aged 3 to 12; free for children younger than 3. Parking costs $2 an hour up to $15. What it’s known for: Orchids, roses, hydrangeas, a Japanese garden, desert plants, high elevation plants. For more information: 404-876-5859 or atlantabotanicalgarden.org.
2
Meet William. A wine enthusiast (married to a wine expert), thinks baseball is the “beautiful game,” active introvert, and world traveler. He’s the guy who gets it all started, the first to greet each client and the last to sign off on a project. He’s always wanted more than “good enough.” He wants it “just right.”
Barnsley Gardens, Adairsville
In the 1840s, Englishman Godfrey Barnsley bought acreage in northwest Georgia and began building a mansion and formal garden for his wife, Julia. She died before the project was completed. Work stopped until Barnsley dreamed that Julia appeared in the garden and told him to finish the project. Barnsley’s descendants lived at the property until 1942. In 1989, Prince Hubertus Fugger Babenhause of Germany bought the land and restored the garden. The property now is home to the Barnsley Resort, which includes cottages, restaurants, a spa and golf course.
SOLUTION SEEKER. CONSENSUS FINDER. OWNER. AND THE BEST GUY TO BRING THE WINE.
Address: 597 Barnsley Gardens Road | Adairsville, GA 30103 Directions: Take I-75 north to Exit 306. Turn left and drive about 2.2 miles on Ga. 140. Turn left at Hall Station Road and travel south approximately 5.5 miles. Take a right at Barnsley Gardens Road (just past Mount Carmel Church). Travel 2.5 miles to the main entrance of the resort on the left. Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Saturday; noon to 5 p.m. Sunday. Call first on Saturdays to see if a private event is booked in the gardens. Cost: $10 for adults; $8 for seniors 55 and older; $5 for students and children aged 4 to 11; free for children younger than 4. What it’s known for: 19th century boxwood gardens, wildflower meadow, woodlands gardens. For more information: 1-877-773-2447 or 770-773-7480 or www.barnsleyresort.com.
Callaway Gardens, Pine Mountain
Learn more about our successful remodeling at www.MosaicGroupAtlanta.com or give us a call at 770-670-6022.
Kitchens & Baths Whole House Remodeling Decks & Porches Landscaping
Cason J. Callaway, a textile magnate from LaGrange, and his wife, Virginia, conceived of these gardens in the 1930s and began working on them in the 1940s, according to the garden’s website. Open to the public since 1952 and now operated by a foundation, this 2,500-acre resort complex offers golf, water sports and restaurants. The garden features a butterfly house, and claims to be home to one of the world’s largest azalea displays. Peak azalea blooms are expected in late March and early April.
D
Address: 17800 U.S. Hwy. 27 | Pine Mountain, GA 31822 Directions: I-85 south to I-185 south (Exit 21). Exit at U. S. 27 (Exit 42), turn left and proceed to Pine Mountain, then turn right onto Ga. 354 west and proceed to intersection with Ga. 18. Callaway Gardens’ main entrance is on the opposite side of this intersection. Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Cost: $20 to $25 (depending on type of ticket) for adults; $15 to $25 for senior citizens 65 and older; $10 to $15 for children 6 to 12; 5 and younger, free. What it’s known for: Azaleas, butterflies, cycling, seasonal special events. For more information: 1-800-4636990 or www.callawaygardens.com
DUNWOODY
& Rheumatology is proud to announce
5
Smith-Gilbert Gardens, Kennesaw
The 16-acre gardens grew up around the historic Hiram Butler House, which was built in 1880. Robert Gilbert purchased the property in 1970 and over the next 35 years, Gilbert and Richard Smith added the gardens and sculpture collection. The house and gardens, owned by the city of Kennesaw, now feature more than 3,000 species of plants. Address: 2382 Pine Mountain Road | Kennesaw, GA 30152 Directions: Take I-75 north to Exit 269. Head left on Barrett Parkway and go about 1.5 miles to Cobb Parkway. Turn right on Cobb Parkway and go about 3 miles to Pine Mountain Road. Follow Pine Mountain Road and go about a mile to the garden. Hours: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday. Cost: $7 for adults; $6 for senior citizens and active duty military; $5 for children aged 6 to 12. What it’s known for: The garden features 31 sculptures. For more information: 770-919-0248 or www. smithgilbertgardens.com.
the addition 28 of Dr. Elizabeth D. Butler Exit 28
I-285
Women's Center Parking Garage
980
The Tower at North-
Cardiology ICU Admissions
Emergency
Exit 4A
5545
Meridian Mark Plaza 5445
5669
Hospital 5665
Marriott
Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta
5673
Dr. Butler Offers Services For ’s Saint Joseph
Sun Trust Bank 993 C
GA-400
5671 5667
•Center Rheumatoid Arthritis Pointe 1100
• Lupus o dy
975
Cancer Center NORTHSIDE HOSPITAL
Johnson Ferry Road
993 D Exit 3
is Cobb Holl
Peacht ree Dun wo
Glenridge Point Parkway
960
875 Glenridge Connector
Parking
Lake Hearn Drive Marta
Women’s Center
GA-400
to our practice.
5780 Interchange
Parking
Exit 26
Retired landscape company founder James H. Gibbs started building a combination of 16 gardens in 1980 on 220 acres around his Cherokee County home, the gardens’ website says. He opened the house and gardens to the public in 2012. Address: 1987 Gibbs Drive | Ballground, GA 30107 Directions: Take Ga. 400 north to Ga. 369, turn left and go about 12 miles, turn right on to Yellow Creek Road, go about 6.4 miles to the gardens. Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday. Gate closes at 4 p.m. The garden opens March 1 this year. Cost: $20 for adults; $18 for seniors 65 and older; $10 and for children aged 6 to 17; free for children 5 and younger. What it’s known for: The garden promises millions of daffodils will bloom from March to mid-April. For more information: 770-893-1880 or www.gibbsgardens.com.
Peachtree Dunwoody Internal Medicine
Hollis Cobb Circle
Gibbs Gardens, Ball Ground
PEACHTREE
Meridian Mark
4
Call (404) 497-1020 for an appointment.
Trimble Road
3
5670
1
■
Medical Quarters 5555
• Gout • Osteoarthritis
5505
• Osteoporosis • Auto-immune Disease
Glenridge Connector
Dr. Butler is a board-certified rheumatologist who brings over three decades of practice experience. She offers excellent, personalized care to adult patients, as well as thorough preventive screenings for the diagnosis and treatment of medical problems before other complications arise.
875 Johnson Ferry Road NE, Suite 200, Atlanta, GA 30342 PeachtreeDunwoodyIM.com
12 | Commentary
Facebook.com/TheReporterNewspapers ■ twitter.com/Reporter_News
Oh, please! My doggone computer just died
WIN 8170 Reporter 1/4 horizontal ad 1.indd 1
2/18/16 12:37 PM
Help Mom be a Better Senior Driver ! SIMPLE STEPS TO ENSURE SAFE DRIVING ABILITIES � Keep her car in good working condition. Regular services, tune-ups and oil changes will ensure her car stays in tip-top shape. � Have her take a refresher course. Organizations like AAA believe that driving is a skill that should be continually improved, and to this end offer driver refresher courses to the public. � Have her plan ahead. Avoid driving during rush hour traffic, and in conditions that impair visibility such as bad weather or when it is dark outside. � Recognize her limitations. Monitor changes in vision, hearing and mobility. If her hands hurt when turning the wheel, try using a wheel cover that is softer and can be easily gripped.
Call us for a free consultation - 404-355-9901 www.HomeCareAssistance.com/locations/atlanta
My computer died today. I came downstairs to give it my morning greeting, powering it awake while brewing my coffee, and waiting for us to go through our simultaneous early routine of yawning and stretching and coaxing our groggy eyes open until we face each other and I scroll through emails and daily news, mug in hand. But I went downstairs this morning, powered it awake, and nothing happened. The screen remained a blank hazy blue, with no morning greetings, no field-of-lavender screensaver, no desktop. So I rebooted it, and this time the screen was not even an eerie blue, it was solid black -- it was collapse-of-asupernova black. It had contracted the dreaded “Black Screen,” which is the bubonic plague of all things digital. So my husband and I hustled over to the computer store, as I hoped that they could fix it. My husband announced that it was time for me to buy a new laptop. I really felt like that wouldn’t be necessary, reasoning that I’ve only had the thing about 3 1/2 years, which in my mind is just long enough to get it comfortably broken in, but then it dawned on me that computer years are akin to dog years, only about four times longer, meaning that a computer ages roughly 28 times faster than the average human. I was indeed lured into buying a new laptop rather than trying to repair the old one because 1). my laptop is 98 in human years, 2). they said they could transfer all the data by tomorrow night, and 3). I am gullible. I could have been happy about getting a brand-spanking-new computer, but I like my old one; it’s comfortable and familiar, like a favorite pair of jeans. And actually, I think that buying a new PC falls somewhere between buying a new pair of jeans and buying a new house -- and the cost of it falls somewhere be-
tween the two, as well. You know that the new Robin Conte is a writer jeans will and mother of four who never fit like lives in Dunwoody. She the old ones; can be contacted at you know robinjm@earthlink.net. there will be that breaking-in period; and that something about the rise or the length or the back pockets will be “updated.” And you might be excited about a brand new home, but there’s the hassle with the move, and you know that all of your furniture won’t fit and you’ll have to replace some of it, and that there’s always the risk of something getting lost in the move. And there are some things about that old house that you’re just going to miss, like your wallpaper. I like my fields-of-lavender wallpaper. And I’m wondering if it’s been discontinued and will I ever be able to see it again? So currently I’m typing on an old ASUS notebook that I unearthed. It’s about 84 in human years. It is exactly as functional as an actual spiral-bound notebook, but not as responsive and with less storage capacity. Now if you are like me, you manage your home, your business, your finances, your social life, your children’s lives and your distractions from your personal computer. When I sit down to mine each morning, I feel like I’m in the captain’s seat of the Starship Enterprise, and it’s fitted with a cup holder. Equipped now with only my feeble notebook and my smartphone, I feel like I’m running my world from the bottom of a La Brea tar pit, armed with a walkie-talkie and a slide rule. There’s nothing left to do but put on my favorite pair of jeans and wait for moving day.
Robin’s Nest Robin Conte
MAR. 4 - MAR. 17, 2016
■
Commentary | 13
www.ReporterNewspapers.net
Reporter Newspapers Our mission is to provide our readers with fresh and engaging information about life in their communities. Published by Springs Publishing LLC 6065 Roswell Road, Suite 225 Sandy Springs, GA 30328 Phone: 404-917-2200 • Fax: 404-917-2201 Brookhaven Reporter | Buckhead Reporter Dunwoody Reporter | Sandy Springs Reporter www.ReporterNewspapers.net Atlanta INtown www.AtlantaINtownPaper.com
C O NTA C T US Founder & Publisher Steve Levene stevelevene@reporternewspapers.net Editorial Managing Editor Joe Earle joeearle@reporternewspapers.net Associate Editor: John Ruch Intown Editor: Collin Kelley Sta�f Writer: Dyana Bagby Copy Editor: Diane L. Wynocker Creative and Production Creative Director: Rico Figliolini Graphic Designer: Harry J. Pinkney Jr. Advertising Director of Sales Development Amy Arno amyarno@reporternewspapers.net Senior Account Executives Jeff Kremer Janet Porter Account Executives Susan Lesesne Jim Speakman O�fice Manager Deborah Davis
Opinion/Traffic is a challenge Congestion is the most important challenge we face as a community. Without constructing another building in Sandy Springs, traffic will, in fact, get worse. The growth rate of metro Atlanta’s population is twice the national average, with our numbers expected to rise from 6 million to 10 million during the next 20 years. We must change the way we move people or traffic will drown us, because we cannot move that many people in one-person-per-vehicle increments. I am a strong advocate for extending MARTA as far north as we can. We also need an east-west MARTA line connecting the Doraville station with the I-75 area. (Note: Since Mayor Paul’s “State of the City” address, the Georgia Senate killed the MARTA extension bill for this legislative session.) A recent study conducted under “Next Ten,” our long-range land use reform effort, shows that 70 percent of Sandy Springs residents would avoid driving if they had a timely, safe and efficient option that took them where they want to go. That’s a reflection of how difficult it is to drive around here and the evolving attitude change toward transit. The study also found that reducing vehicular traffic by just 10 percent would profoundly ease congestion. To help put that into perspective: how well do you know the precise time school starts and stops? Your morning commute knows. A back-of-the-envelope calculation shows approximately 10,000 Sandy Springs public and private school students arrive by car each day, which translates into 40,000 vehicular trips a day (school, and back in the morning and afternoon). That is the traffic equivalent of a sold-out Falcons game five days a week, nine months a year.
Even if we get a MARTA extension approved, 10 years will pass before transit moves a single new passenger in our area. We can’t wait 10 years for congestion relief. Governor Deal gave us a great gift in the rebuild of the Ga. 400/I-285 interchange and the managed lanes for Ga. 400 and I-285. But the interchange help is four years away and the managed lanes even longer. Short term, we will experience disruption that always accompanies massive road projects. In the meantime, the Fulton County Commission and the county’s 14 mayors are working toward a program to generate more resources for intermediate road improvements. If voters approve, the north Fulton cities, rather than spend their allocation only in their jurisdictions, are developing a plan to allocate
The city of Sandy Springs is investigating all possible transportation options.
some of those resources toward coordinated regional transportation projects. Regional solutions are vital to easing local congestion. A recent study measured 102,000 daily trips coming from outside Sandy Springs into the city and another 84,000 trips leaving Sandy Springs for other locations. Only 7,000 daily commutes stay solely within the city. In other words, other communi-
ties flood Sandy Springs with traffic, while simultaneously, our residents congest other communities with our drivers. State law requires a unanimous vote by all Rusty Paul 14 mayors and Rusty Paul is the the county commayor of Sandy Springs. mission to presHe adapted this column ent voters with a from his “State of the plan; it is a near City” address on Feb. 23. impossible bar to cross in a diverse county with varied needs and opinions. Yet, we are working diligently to get there. The final piece is Perimeter area traffic reduction. Working with Dunwoody, Brookhaven and the Perimeter Community Improvement Districts, we are looking for innovative solutions for moving people within the corridor, called “last mile connectivity.” It’s about connecting Perimeter MARTA stations and large area employment centers more efficiently. This is where the media picked up our conversations about monoFILE rails, gondolas and other non-traditional transit forms. Candidly, we are investigating all possible options for cost-effective, practical ways to move large volumes of people without engaging the street network. Plus, we may find a way to make travel there less grueling and more fun. Will it work? We don’t know yet. However, we would be remiss if we don’t consider all alternatives and seriously ascertain whether they are viable for this unique district within our community.
deborahdavis@reporternewspapers.net Contributors Robin Conte, Phil Mosier, Megan Volpert
Free Home Delivery 60,000 copies of Reporter Newspapers are delivered by carriers to homes in ZIP codes 30305, 30319, 30326, 30327, 30328, 30338, 30342 and 30350 and to more than 500 business/retail locations. For locations, check “Where To Find Us” at www.ReporterNewspapers.net For delivery requests, please email delivery@reporternewspapers.net.
© 2016 with all rights reserved Publisher reserves the right to refuse editorial or advertising for any reason. Publisher assumes no responsibility for information contained in advertising. Any opinions expressed in print or online do not necessarily represent the views of Reporter Newspapers or Springs Publishing, LLC. SS
On The Record
Read these articles from our other editions online at ReporterNewspapers.net
“If we are interested in a theater being part of our community, this is the most economical way to do that. We think this is a worthwhile project. But it is up to you.” Danny Ross, president of the Brook Run Conservancy, addressing Dunwoody City Council on the conservancy’s proposal to preserve the theater at Brook Run Park. City o�ficials estimate it would require spending $10 million to $12 million to renovate the now-closed theater.
“Why are they going to change the name? We’ve been Buford Highway for so long. Imagine your name is Jim and you change it to Tom. Everybody’s still going to call you Jim.” Cross Keys High School student Lisa Sims, on proposals to replace the name “Buford Highway” with “Buford Boulevard” in Brookhaven.
Have something to say?
Send letters to editor@reporternewspapers.net
“More and more city dwellers are discovering that it is possible, and enjoyable, to raise their own chickens. ... The chickens eat insects, as well as some kitchen scraps, providing an environmental benefit, along with the fresh eggs.” Stephanie Van Parys, executive director of the Wylde Center, a nonprofit that seeks to inspire environmental stewards, on the center’s fifth annual “Chicks in the City” symposium, which is being held at the Atlanta History Center in Buckhead.
14 | Community
Facebook.com/TheReporterNewspapers ■ twitter.com/Reporter_News
Two more Hammond Drive lots purchased for road widening BY JOHN RUCH johnruch@reporternewspapers.net
The Sandy Springs City Council on March 1 approved spending almost $840,000 to buy two more Hammond Drive properties as placeholders for a long-planned street widening. The burst of land purchases for a road project that is years away, if it happens at all, is making local residents “extremely concerned,” said Councilman Graham McDonald. He and Councilman Tibby DeJulio were slated to meet with residents March 2. Councilman Andy Bauman suggested maintaining a house involved in the latest deal as affordable rental housing for Sandy Springs police officers or firefighters. McDonald said the city promised to tear down any such homes, but Trisha Thompson, president of the Sandy Springs Council of Neighborhoods, spoke in support of Bauman’s idea.
In February, the city authorized spending $375,000 to buy a residential lot at 590 Hammond. City Manager John McDonough called it a “protective buy” to secure right of way as infill housing makes property costs skyrocket. McDonough said at the time that the city might make more such purchases. Now the city will acquire residential properties at 372 Hammond and 521 Hammond following a unanimous March 1 council vote. The roughly half-acre lot at 372 Hammond, at the intersection with Harleston Road, is the midst of a tear-down redevelopment for what city officials say is a $979,000 house. The city negotiated to buy the property for a half-million dollars. The site will be cleaned up and maintained as a grassy lot, council members said. The 521 Hammond house is on the market, listed at $350,000, city of-
Do not regret...Act Now! Spring is the best time to SELL/BUY your home... Let us help you!
FEATURED LISTING
UNDER CONTRACT 6120 Riverwood Drive - $1,149,000
Angie Ponsell 404-226-2002
200 Sheridan Point Lane - $695,000
Jennifer Pollock Crim 404-408-9172
www.isellsandysprings.com
Restore, Relax, Refresh.
5
Present this coupon and save an additional
$
OFF* ANY SPA ENHANCEMENT
Choice of: Foot Treatment, Hand Treatment or Peppermint Scalp Massage Reg. $15. with your Massage or Facial
ficial said, adding that it can be acquired for $338,000. Bauman suggested renting that house in the meantime to police officers or firefighters. The council previously discussed the general issue of such public safety officials being unable to afford living in the city they served. The council’s vote was only about purchasing the properties, not their future uses. “We don’t want to make this a dormitory,” Bauman said, but added, “Is there a way we can find a police fami-
Ten-year lawsuit against adult businesses won by city BY JOHN RUCH johnruch@reporternewspapers.net
Sandy Springs has won a decade-old federal lawsuit that alleged its code restrictions on adult businesses are unconstitutional. That means an adult bookstore and two strip clubs must move or shut down unless they file and win an appeal, city officials said. “Ten long years we had to litigate the case,” said City Attorney Wendell Willard, announcing the verdict at the March 1 Sandy Springs City Council meeting just hours after a judge delivered the “105-page decision upholding the city’s position on every point.” The plaintiffs—the bookstore Inserection and the strip clubs Flashers and Mardi Gras—have 20 days to appeal the verdict, Willard said, adding, “I’d be very surprised if they didn’t.” “We are still reviewing the opinion,” said Cary Wiggins, an attorney for the businesses. “We know the court put tremendous effort into the case, but, respectfully, we just view the law differently. So we’ll press on.” The case began in 2006, when the businesses challenged new city codes suggested by Scott Bergthold, a Tennessee attorney who specializes in municipal laws cracking down on sexually oriented businesses. The codes aimed to ban the sale of booze—a major source of revenue—in
Authentic New York style sandwiches!
strip clubs and to place strong zoning restrictions on where such businesses could operate. The businesses filed suit in federal district court, claiming the city was violating the First and 14th Amendments. The city tweaked its codes several times while the lawsuit was pending, including a change last year to allow adult businesses in more areas, which contributed to the length of the court battle. In her March 1 opinion, U.S. District Judge Leigh Martin May ruled that the city was not violating the Constitution. The city is still facing two other lawsuits about its adult-business restrictions. A challenge from another strip club, the Main Stage/Coronet Club, is still pending in Fulton County Superior Court, Willard said. And another suit filed by Inserection challenging the city’s obscenity law, which bans the sale of sex toys, was recently won by the city, but is under appeal, Willard said. Meanwhile, the City Council on March 1 approved another of Bergthold’s legal ideas: a code change that allows the city to seek the shutdown of massage parlors that offer illegal sexual services as “public nuisances.” The code will allow a court to order an injunction against landlords even on the property itself, possibly removing the zoning that allows the massage parlor use, according to Assistant City Attorney Cecil McLendon.
FREE DANISH with new Soho Loyalty Club Membership Saves 10% Off all future purchases*
Call now – 404-523-7800 5610 Roswell Rd.
FREE
Located at the Prado Shopping Center by Target *$5 OFF valid on any Spa enhancement with any One Hour Massage or Facial. Coupon is nontransferable. *Mini cold stone facial does not apply. Not valid for gift cards. No cash value. Offers may not be combined. Rates and services may vary by location. Present coupon at time of service. Valid at this location only. EXPIRES 3-31-2016 ©2016 Hand & Stone Franchise Corp. Independently Owned & Operated.
ly?...We got a house in good shape…I’m not ready to authorize tearing it down.” McDonald replied that the city previously “made assurances to the surrounding neighborhood that we would be tearing [any purchased houses] down.” But Thompson said she believes the community is concerned about lowerquality rental houses. “I do think Mr. Bauman should have had more support” for his public safety housing idea, she said.
6 BAGELS
Voted 5/5 for Best Bagels by AJT
$2 OFF
Any Lunch Special Combo* Sandwich, 1 Side & Drink
Buy 6 bagels & 8 oz. of cheese spread at regular price and get 6 bagels of equal or lesser value FREE*
FREE Pastry $399 BREAKFAST SPECIAL Buy one pastry and
Monday-Saturday 7am - 6pm Sunday 8am - 5pm
Deli Now Open Till 6pm M-W-F SohoBakeryCafeAtlanta@gmail.com
get the 2nd pastry of equal or lesser value FREE*
Breakfast bagel with egg & cheese plus small coffee*
*Not valid with other offers or promotions. Must present coupon. Expi. 11/31/15.
Soho Bakery & Deli | 334 Sandy Springs Circle, Sandy Springs, GA 30328
404-549-8385
SS
MAR. 4 - MAR. 17, 2016
■
Community | 15
www.ReporterNewspapers.net
Glenridge Drive study to suggest bike lanes, roundabouts BY JOHN RUCH johnruch@reporternewspapers.net
A narrower Glenridge Drive, with pedestrian-friendly medians, protected bike lanes, more left-turn lanes and several roundabouts. That’s the vision in a conceptual study that will contribute to Sandy Springs’ future “complete streets” policy for all major roadways. The idea of a “complete streets” plan for Glenridge between Roswell Road and the Glenridge Connector was presented at a Feb. 17 City Hall meeting. Only two residents attended. The study, which is just conceptual, is being done by the Washington state-based Walkable and Livable Communities Institute. “If we plan for cars and traffic, we get cars and traffic,” said Robert Ping, the institute’s executive director. “If we plan for people and places, we get people and places.” The “complete streets” concept, adopted by many cities nationwide, means streets accommodate all sorts of users, not just motor vehicles. “It feels like a rural, country road to me,” Ping said about Glenridge Drive, explaining that encourages speeding. “If we want to slow people down, we’ve got to narrow down the road.” The City Hall event began with Ping ex-
PHOTOS BY JOHN RUCH
Left, Robert Ping, left, executive director of the Walkable and Livable Communities Institute, listens to Glenridge Drive resident Carol Thorup’s concerns at the Feb. 17 Sandy Springs City Hall meeting. Right, Joe Seconder, left, of Bike Walk Dunwoody, suggests bicycle improvements on Glenridge Drive at the meeting.
plaining that cities with some denser development and better bicycle and pedestrian access are healthier, safer and more efficient to maintain and police. Carol Thorup, who has lived on Glenridge since 1972, wanted to know about ways to improve car access to her neighborhood and safer crossings to the local post office. Joe Seconder of Bike Walk Dunwoody, an advocacy group, backed the idea of bike lanes and pedestrian-protecting medians. The agenda did not include the institute’s own specific ideas, which will be
Cancer Care that Treats the Mind, the Body and the Spirit? Yes. Now at the Cancer Center at WellStar Kennestone Hospital.
For more information, call 1-877-366-6032. SS
coming as a draft report in about a month. But Ping gave a preview in a post-meeting interview. The general idea is narrowing the street to two travel lanes with a median and eight-foot-wide bike lanes protected by yard-wide buffers of green space or painted lines. All right-turn lanes would be eliminated, while some left-turn lanes would be added. Roundabouts are proposed at several intersections, including High Point and Greenland roads; Colton and Northland drives; along the Connector; and as ac-
Introducing the new Cancer Center at WellStar Kennestone Hospital. Redesigned inside and out to ensure our vision of world-class cancer care is experienced by both patients and families. By changing patient flow, adding new services and enhancing the overall care experienced, a new focus on Mind/Body/Spirit has arrived. With recognition by Becker’s Hospital Review’s “100 Hospitals and Health Systems with Great Oncology Programs,” our redeveloped cancer program offers: •
Cyberknife® and Tomotherapy®: the only health system in Georgia offering both forms of radiation therapy.
•
Pancreatic Hepatobiliary Program structured to reduce the time of diagnosis to treatment.
•
Center for Genetics, the largest in Georgia
•
Nationally recognized STAT clinics for lung and prostate cancer.
•
Nurse Navigators for patients and families
•
Clinical psychologist for emotional needs
•
Integrative treatment including acupuncture
•
Patient and Family Advisory Board
cess onto I-285. “We are big fans of roundabouts,” Ping said during the presentation. “They’re a lot safer than a signalized intersection.” Also likely to be proposed are two new I-285 ramps and a new roadway across the Connector to Glenridge Point Parkway. Those are intended to reduce traffic backups by providing more connection points. The concept basically leaves alone a plan to realign the Roswell Road intersection as a traditional four-way intersection. However, Ping said the institute will propose a “gateway” treatment there.
16 | Community
Facebook.com/TheReporterNewspapers ■ twitter.com/Reporter_News
Construction cranes: Who keeps them safe?
Continued from page 1
Republican presidential candidate John Kasich speaks to a crowd at Sandy Springs City Hall on Feb. 23.
JOHN RUCH
Kasich visits City Hall, praises ‘Uber-ized’ local government BY JOHN RUCH johnruch@reporternewspapers.net
Republican presidential candidate John Kasich praised Sandy Springs as a model for “Uber-izing”—or privatizing—government during a Feb. 23 campaign stop at City Hall. Kasich was among several candidates who made swings through Georgia before the March 1 Super Tuesday primary elections. It didn’t help him statewide, where he finished last in the GOP primary among active candidates. He did a bit better in Fulton County, finishing fourth with about 12.5 percent of the vote. At its founding a decade ago, Sandy Springs made national headlines for using private contractors to run most city departments and services. Speaking to hundreds of people in a town hall event, Kasich repeatedly likened the city to the driver-hiring app Uber, which has up-ended the traditional taxi industry. “What I like about what they’re doing here is, they’ve really Uber-ized the government,” Kasich said. “Government at every level ... has to be Uber-ized.”
tor,” said Jason Kenna, Heede Southeast general manager. At Crane Safety Associates of America, a crane inspection and operator training business in McDonough, Ga., president and CEO Shane Adams has seen it all. He displays one scary inspection souvenir used in training— a crane’s pulley wheel, or sheave, with the pattern of a steel rope imprinted into the metal by the massive pressure of an improperly handled load. But Adams said that giant construction cranes don’t make him nervous. It’s the truck cranes operated by small, local businesses that give him worries, he said. “I have more concern with a guy going out there pulling a tree off your house,” Adams said. Benjamin Ross, the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s deputy regional administrator for Enforcement Programs in the Southeast, agrees. “I see a lot of things that should not happen,” Ross said, but most of those violations are on small home-delivery truck cranes, he said. In
“Providing Safe and Joyful Environments where Seniors Feel Loved and Valued!” Personal & Memory Care Community Please call or come in to see how we can be of assistance for your loved ones.
690 Mount Vernon Hwy. NE, Sandy Springs, GA 30328
404-843-8857 www.InsigniaofSandySprings.com
his 38 years on the job, Ross said, he has not seen a fatal tower crane accident in the Southeast. But he also knows the stakes are high, because he did see a fatal crane accident early in his career in Cincinnati, Ohio. He said an overloaded crane’s arm collapsed onto a street, crushing cars and killing four, including a 5-year-old child. “Any failure in a crane itself—there’s no return,” Ross said. “It’s kind of like an airplane.”
‘You inspect every nook and cranny’
The airplane comparison comes up often in industry talk about cranes. Both are complex machines under enormous stresses and with high stakes for failure. And like airplanes, cranes undergo regular and complex inspections for structural or mechanical problems. There’s a daily spot inspection for any obvious problems, usually performed by the crane’s operator. “That’s their butt up in the seat,” said Kenna. “They want to go over it top to bottom and make sure it’s safe.” Then there are formal inspections done roughly once a month, usually by in-house inspectors who keep a file of their findings. Heede does theirs every six weeks. “We go over our crane with a very fine-tooth comb,” Kenna said. OSHA requires a formal inspection at least annually, sometimes more often if a crane is heavily used, and that is often performed by an NCCCO-accredited independent company like Crane Safety Associates. OSHA may perform its own inspection, too, but usually only arrives if there’s a complaint or accident. “You inspect every nook and cranny of the crane,” said Adams, whose company currently focuses on mobile cranes. Any issues are written up and given to the crane owner to return with a signed note about whether repairs were made, Adams said. Sometimes a crane owner tries to bully the inspectors into getting a result he or she wants, Adams said. On a recent inspection in Tennessee, Adams said, the owner “ended up running [the inspector] off because the list of deficiencies was too long.” But when a crane does fail, it’s usually not a pure equipment failure, the experts said. “The majority of the time, it’s human error,” Adams said. Kenna said a tower crane is designed to withstand hurricane-force winds and is anchored to the ground with a concrete cube so massive it often is left there as a permanent part of the building’s foundation. But it could come down if someone overloaded it or made SS
MAR. 4 - MAR. 17, 2016
■
Community | 17
www.ReporterNewspapers.net
A crane in action at the Three Alliance Center Development at Pharr Road and Maple Drive in Buckhead on Feb. 26.
a mistake while erecting it. “We feel a tower crane is probably the most overengineered piece of equipment on a construction site,” he said. “But the human element…that’s the wild card.”
‘A driver’s license for crane operators’
That’s why a movement toward professional operator training has been underway since NCCCO’s founding 20 years ago amid concerns about outdated rules and accidents. Today, only 17 states and six American cities require crane operators to be licensed. And OSHA’s attempt to establish a national certification has stalled over debates about “qualified” (experienced) versus “certified” (classroom-tested) operators. Technically speaking, virtually any adult in Georgia could operate a crane without any training. But in practice, any major company will require NCCCO certification, which has become “like a driver’s license for crane operators,” Kenna said. Workers who give signals to the operator or hook loads onto the crane typically also must be certified. NCCCO requires both classroom and practical tests, as well as physicals. It has a substance abuse policy and code of ethics, and operators must recertify every five years. The written test includes math, crane jargon and calculation of how much load a crane can carry. At his McDonough facility, Adams explained the practical test—a zigzag course between poles that have tennis balls mounted on them. Operators must maneuver a chain and a heavy weight through the course, losing points for knocking a ball down or bumping a pole. Adams notes that, much like with a regular driver’s license, testing is not the same as training or experience. The industry prizes “seat time”— the hours of real-world experience operators get over the years. But, Adams said, “no employer in his right mind is going to give you a million-dollar crane” based SS
PHIL MOSIER
on a certification card alone; they’ll require a display of the operator’s skills on-site, too. “We think certification has proved itself,” said Graham Brent, the CEO of NCCCO. “It’s been demonstrated to save lives.” It works for Heede, according to Kenna, who said his company has never had a significant crane accident, a claim partly backed by recent OSHA records. “Knock on wood,” he added with a rap on his desk.
Enjoy Financial Peace of Mind with our
LIFETIME RENT FREEZE! Independent Senior Living at its Finest!
Monthly rate starting as low as $1,945 As low as ZERO down Community fee/Non-refundable deposit.
Call now to lock in your rate for life! (404) 267-4799 335 Hammond Drive | Sandy Springs, GA 30328 | HammondGlen.com 2203781985
It’s more than hospitality. It’s anticipating your needs in new ways. Welcome to the Club Lifestyle. Like having your own personal concierge who knows what matters most to you: Towne Club Windermere will take customer service to a whole new level. Your preferences. Your desires. Your satisfaction! That’s the Club Lifestyle. All new, all the best in rental senior living. Opening soon: the Club Lifestyle at Towne Club Windermere.
Call
770-844-7779
Resort-Style Retirement Living
3950 Towne Club Parkway, Cumming, Georgia 30041 NP/Reporter/3-16
TowneClubWindermere.com
18 | Community
Facebook.com/TheReporterNewspapers ■ twitter.com/Reporter_News
At Lost Corner, city embraces its newest park Continued from page 1
Perimeter North Family Medicine Offering a full range of adult and pediatric services, our board-certified physicians proudly offer the highest quality care to keep you and your family happy and healthy. We accept most insurance plans and offer same-day appointments and extended hours at many of our locations.
Our services include: • Physical examinations and wellness care for men, women and children • General and chronic care for geriatric patients • Immunizations • Acute illness treatment for colds, fevers, flu and more • Comprehensive women’s health services
lic Land, the Sandy Springs Conservancy and the city came together to planned for,” said Trisha Thompson, a purchase 22 acres of the property for friend of Miles who joined Cheryl Barabout $830,000. About $167,000 of that low in forming Friends of Lost Corner came through donations raised by the to organize support for the park. friends group with help from the late Lost Corner has had only a handful Fulton County Comof owners and surmissioner Tom Lowe. vived largely undeMiles died that year. veloped since the The city soon beearly 1800s, when gan restoration work white settlers drove and formed a citizen out Native Ameristeering committee cans, according to that recommended the park’s friends trails, security and group. First known parking. Since then, as Falling Branch— 2 more acres were still the name of purchased and varthe creek running ious park improvethrough the propments have come erty—the land was into use, during a a farm before and long “soft opening” during the Civil War. of the park. ComMiles’ family munity gardens bought the land in opened to public use 1913 and built the in spring 2013 and cottage, where Pega renovation of the gy was born in 1922. cottage was completThe cottage was ed in 2014. among the first loThe grand opening cal houses to have will highlight more electricity because improvements over Peggy’s father, Fred, the past year. Some, sold power from like hiking trails, are the then new Morwell-known. Others gan Falls dam. Fred may be little surprisMiles dubbed the es, like the beehive property Lost Corpersonally tended by ner because visiMayor Rusty Paul, tors to the then rewho reportedly calls mote area often got it the “Beta Beta Beta lost trying to find sorority.” The properit, according to the ty also now features friends group. a greenhouse donatPeggy Miles lived ed, along with more alone at the properthan 100 plants, by ty in her later years, the Mayson family PHOTOS BY PHIL MOSIER where Thompson from Glenridge Hall. Top, Lost Corner Preserve showcases and Barlow often A grander historic many large trees. Above, Peggy Miles’ visited her, talking family bought the land in 1913, and she Sandy Springs famion the porch or in was born on the property in 1922. ly property, a portion the book-filled front of the Glenridge Hall room. On one visit in estate off Abernathy Road, also will be2006, Barlow brought her young chilcome part of a public park, but without dren along, inspiring Miles to preserve the historic mansion, which was demolher property for other generations. ished last year. In 2008, the Georgia Trust for Pub-
Call (770) 395-1130 for an appointment 3400-A Old Milton Parkway, Suite 130, Alpharetta, GA 30005
960 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 300, Atlanta, GA 30342
pnfm.com
SS
MAR. 4 - MAR. 17, 2016
â–
Community | 19
www.ReporterNewspapers.net
The Lost Corner cottage, flanked outside by gigantic old oak trees, has charming architectural touches inside: a large gas fireplace with built-in benches and detailed leaded-glass windows. The cottage will not be open to general park visitors, but will be available for city and community events, including the Sandy Springs Council of Neighborhoods annual meeting March 23. The Friends of Lost Corner will host an open house on the March 17 weekend, too. Photos of Lost Corner’s landscape, wildlife and history decorate the walls. Looking down on the main meeting room is Peggy Miles in her 1940 highschool graduation photo with a smile that will embrace many celebrations to come at Lost Corner.
Lost Corner Preserve ribbon-cutting
Thurs., March 17, 11 a.m. 7300 Brandon Mill Road
Cottage open house hosted by Friends of Lost Corner Thurs., March 17 through Sat., March 19, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. More information: sandyspringsga.gov or friendsoflostcorner.org
PHOTOS BY PHIL MOSIER
The city of Sandy Springs is set to embrace a new public park, Lost Corner Preserve, on March 17, a 24-acre property at 7300 Brandon Mill Road. Above, clockwise, the park contains nature trails, wildlife, a greenhouse, community and landscape gardens, and the cottage home of the late Peggy Miles, whose wish was to preserve the land for future generations.
$25.00
BLOWOUT
New Clients Only with Appointment Bring ad to the appointment
$100 OFF
Our Services for New Patients
Our Dental Practice has been in Sandy Springs for over 30 years! Our Patients love us, and refer us to their family & Friends!
Cosmetic Dentistry
Crowns and Bridges
Dental Implants
Teeth Whitening
185 Allen Rd. Suite 150 | Sandy Springs, GA 30328
(404) 255-6782 www.StartSmiling.com SS
We are the only blow out salon that uses Phyto product, all organic botanical base product from France. Hours of Operation Tues- Sat 9-7 Sunday 12-5 Closed Mondays
parksideparlor.com
404.252.9099 5920 Roswell Road Suite C-205 Sandy Springs, GA 30328 (Located next to Tuesday Morning just outside of 285 off Roswell Road)
20 | Education
Facebook.com/TheReporterNewspapers ■ twitter.com/Reporter_News
Comprehensive Women’s
Editor’s note: With this issue, Reporter Newspapers starts a new regular feature to showcase the work of outstanding teachers and school o�ficials in our communities. Like our recurring Standout Student features, these Exceptional Educator profiles will focus on people who have been identified by their schools as in�luential teachers and administrators. We start with Jill Stedman, a history and government instructor at Holy Spirit Preparatory School in Sandy Springs, who has been teaching for 19 years. If you would like to recommend an Exceptional Educator, please email editor@ReporterNewspapers.net.
Health
Lynley S. Durrett, M.D.
Jill Stedman
Holy Spirit Preparatory School
Obiamaka Mora, M.D. State of the art Pelvic & Bladder Surgeries Minimally Invasive Hysterectomy daVinci Robotic Surgery Bio Identical Hormone Therapy Services offered
» Incontinence Testing & Treatment » Abnormal Bleeding Treatment » Annual Exams & Contraception » Nutrient Deficiency Screening & Counseling » Saliva Testing & Pellet Hormone Therapy » Plus Aesthetic Services
Jessica Guilfoil Killeen, WHNP-BC
Lindsey A. Nichols, NP-C Contact us today for an appointment at one of our convenient locations! Main Office:
Piedmont Hospital Campus
105 Collier Rd NW, Suite 1080 Atlanta, GA 30309 404-352-2850 Satellite Office:
Northside Hospital Campus
960 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 336 Atlanta, GA 30342 404-352-2850 www.mcdanielanddurrett.com
Jill Stedman teaches Advanced Placement U.S. History, Advanced Placement U.S. Government and Politics, U.S. History, U.S. Government.
Q: What attracted you to teaching at first? A: During my first two years of college, I competed on my university’s competitive speech and debate team. As my coursework became more intense, I decided I needed to give up competition because it required so much travel. However, I did not want to give up my involvement in competitive public speaking. I was invited to serve as volunteer speech and debate coach at Georgetown Prep. I had recently completed an internship on Capitol Hill, and though I have always loved politics, I did not feel the same sense of fulfillment in my work for my congressman as I did when I was coaching. Soon after, I decided I would be happiest teaching the subject about which I was most passionate – government and politics. Q: Has the appeal of teaching changed for you over 19 years? What keeps you going year a�ter year? A: Not at all. There are moments when teaching where everyone is so intensely engaged in the story of U.S. history, wanting to know the outcome of the event, that the desire “to know” is almost palpable. Those are the best moments. When a teacher can craft lessons in such a way as to generate that strong desire for knowledge, the teacher has the ability to get students to really dig deeply into a subject. It is those cliffhanger moments in a lesson when the students are on the edge of their seats with that desire “to know” that keep me in the classroom. Q: What do you think makes a great teacher? A: Great teachers love the subject area that they teach, but even more so, they are passionate about sharing their content expertise with their students. Enthusiasm is contagious, but that enthusiasm must be channeled into growth. Beyond enthusiasm, a great teacher knows how to share their knowledge in a way that makes learning accessible, manageable and attainable for students. A great teacher is eager to find ways to support and promote each student’s learning potential. Q: What do you want to see in your students? A: I want my students to be well informed, engaged citizens. I hope they will seek knowledge and truth, and I hope they are courageous enough to stand up for that which they believe to be right. I hope they will actively serve those who are in need and that they will use their voices to promote polices that create a fair, just society. I believe my role is to help my students develop the skills that they will need to fulfill this potential. Q: How do you engage your students? A: I try to be very cognizant of the fact that students have different preferred means of learning, so I use a variety of learning strategies and activities within each lesson. I also make a very conscious effort to use a variety teaching materials (visual, auditory, kinesthetic) with the goal of addressing multiple learning modalities within each lesson. Q: What do you hope your students take away from your class? A: The day after the Iowa Caucus, my AP Government class reviewed the caucus results. My students were remarking on the closeness of the results between Clinton and Sanders when one of my student’s exclaimed, “and people say that one vote doesn’t matter!” This same student is so excited to cast her first vote on Super Tuesday; she plans to be present when her precinct opens. On my classroom bookshelf, I keep a framed quote from President Kennedy that reads, “One person can make a difference, and everyone should try.” I hope my students take away the belief that their civic actions matter, that they know that they can make a difference, and that they are inspired to try. Note: This article was edited for space. For a full version of the questions and responses, go to ReporterNewspapers.net. SS
MAR. 4 - MAR. 17, 2016
■
Dining Out | 21
www.ReporterNewspapers.net
With Beatles tunes and smoked trout beignets, Venkman’s rocks off to a strong start t
Dining Out Megan Volpert
Megan Volpert lives in Decatur, teaches in Roswell and writes books about popular culture.
ew
au
non Klee, formerly the bookie at Eddie’s Attic, entrusted with engineering success behind the scenes. Despite a less-than-stellar table far from the stage, we nevertheless got psyched for the menu, on which nearly everything is suitable for sharing, and more than half the items are either vegetarian or gluten-free. We dug in on two starters, the mushroom lettuce cups and smoked trout beignets. The former involves a heaping pile of crushed peanuts under which is a bowl of mushrooms treated like bacon with a tangy BBQ vinaigrette. Playful, crunchy, and even sort of refreshing because of the little gem lettuce now fashionably circulating everywhere. But those beignets were the best dish of the night, no question. A good beignet of any kind is often hard to find in Atlanta, and a seafood beignet even more so. The best I’ve had is Anne Quatrano’s crab beignet at Fish Camp in Ponce City Market. But Melvin is a New Orleans native,
rant Re
vi
Res
Where does a 30-something go for food and music now? I’ve been on the lookout for a place that can cover all my bases: above average bar, food that I would eat even if there were no music, and good music. Venkman’s is going to be a huge success for the Old Fourth Ward and Atlanta at large, if it can keep its heads on straight. One head is Chef Nick Melvin, who did great things at Serenbe, then Parish, then Empire State South, then Rosebud all in the blink of an eye. Another head belongs to Nick Niaspodziani and Peter Olson, better known as the bandleader and bassist of Yacht Rock Revue, the Venkman’s house band and unquestionably Atlanta’s reigning cover band. The triumvirate rounds out with Rhian-
Continued on page 22
$5 OFF a purchase of $25 or more
Sandy Springs 5975 Roswell Road Suite A-103 (404) 236-2114
nothingbundtcakes.com Expires 4/1/16. Limit one offer per guest. Cannot be combined with any other offer. Redeemable only at bakery listed. Must be claimed in-store during normal business hours. No cash value.
22 | Dining Out
Facebook.com/TheReporterNewspapers ■ twitter.com/Reporter_News
With music and food, Venkman’s rocks off to a strong start Continued from page 21 and Venkman’s is consequently doing it better with a fishier fish and a fearlessly creamy center. The star of the dish is an apple ketchup. It’s not apple butter; it’s got some cider vinegar in there for a smoother sauce and a polite little kick at the end. For entrees, we had the chili shrimp and burger with fries. Both showcased Melvin’s refined, precise sense of sours: one of his overall best assets. The chili shrimp was a Chinese-Southern fusion that displayed surprising balance, while the burger’s fancy combo of pickle slaw, dill mustard and tomato jam added loads of flavor and variety without a palate burnout. When a manager stopped by to see how we were doing, I asked him to cough up the secret to getting a table. If walking in 30 minutes before doors open with tickets purchased 30 days beforehand doesn’t get me to the front row, what does it take? He checked for cancellations and immediately moved us to a table, notably skirting my question. As it turns out, the tables aren’t front row anyway because there will be a gaggle of 30-somethings danc-
ing in front of the stage as soon as the band gets going. The crowd here is more classy than at Andrews Upstairs and less attentive than at Eddie’s Attic. On this night, the band was doing the Beatles. If you shut your eyes, the fidelity of sound is incredible. Yacht Rock Revue has several extra players beyond the Fab Four and several extra instruments (theremin, surprise!), but they replicate the original work thoroughly enough that a sing-along quickly ensues. There was a definite good time vibe floating over the crowd. Venkman’s, located at 740 Ralph McGill Blvd., reallly does seem poised to be the best of all possible worlds, though they need some time to work out the ticketing and service kinks. That’s not a reason to stay home, however. The place has gotten a strong start and I’m going back momentarily myself, to drill down into their extensive wine list while seeing the world’s greatest Fleetwood Mac cover band for $8. For more information on Venkman’s: 470-2256162 or venkmans.com.
SPECIAL PHOTOS
Left, chili shrimp, a Chinese-Southern dish, displaying a “surprising balance.” Above, smoked trout beignets with apple ketchup. Previous page, the burger with pickle slaw, dill mustard and tomato jam.
SOLERA® SOFT SHADES
Oriental & Area Rug Hand Washing
• gentle •Wash thorough Atlanta's Only Unique safe Submersion & Compressed Air Cleaning
Restoration & Repair • Pet Urine Removal Padding & Storage • Moth & Stain Treatments Free Pickup & Delivery • Serving Atlanta for Over 25 years
404.355.2126 MicroSeal of Atlanta
A DIVISION OF S&S RUG CLEANERS
Stoney Green & Steve Arroll, Owners 1710 Chattahoochee Ave., Atlanta, GA 30318
TheRugCleaners.com EPA RATED & NON-ALLERGENIC Mention this NON-TOXIC ad for Winter cleaning discounts!
Make the smart choice today. Save energy year-round. Ask about rebates on energy-effi cient Hunter Douglas window fashions.
Georgia Blinds & Interiors
220 Sandy Springs Cir Ste 129 Atlanta GA M-F 10:00-5:00 Sat. 11:00-3:00 404-252-6991 www.gablinds.com
Save $100* or more with rebates on qualifying purchases from
January 30 – April 11, 2016
55730 * Manufacturerʼs mail-in rebate offer valid for qualifying purchases made 1/30/16 – 4/11/16 from participating dealers in the U.S. only. Rebate will be issued in the form of a prepaid reward card and mailed within 6 weeks of rebate claim receipt. Funds do not expire. Subject to applicable law, a $2.00 monthly fee will be assessed against card balance 7 months after card issuance and each month thereafter. Additional limitations may apply. Ask participating dealer for details and rebate form. © 2016 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas. WIN16MB4
■
Quick Bites Castellucci Hospitality Group will move its Italian restaurant concept Double Zero from Sandy Springs to the former Ink & Elm space in Emory Village in June 2016. For more information, visit doublezeroatl.com. Sprouts Farmers Market has opened in Morningside at 1845 Piedmont Ave. The 30,000-square-foot store offers fresh, natural and organic foods. For more information, visit facebook.com/ SproutsAtlantaMorningside. Chris Edwards has been named executive chef of Restaurant Eugene in Buckhead. Leaving his post helming the kitchen at Holeman and Finch Public House, Edwards heads home to Restaurant Eugene where he originally became sous chef in March 2014. Pe�ite Auberge Restaurant, 2935 North Druid Hills Road, is offering a New Orleans Food Festival menu every Offering you: evening, from 4 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. through March 12. This special dining event of• Compassionate and fers acremation Cajun appetizer, soup, entrees and burial services • Same day cremation services available • Comfortable private visitation “BecauseOffering Your Pet Isyou: a Member of the Family” rooms • Compassionate
• Life celebration cremation and burial services services • Same day
• Beautiful chapels cremation services available
• Urns, paw print • Comfortable impressions, and private visitation memorial jewelry rooms Life celebration • •Free monthly services Pet Loss Support • Beautiful chapels Group • Urns, paw print impressions, and memorial jewelry
Dining Out | 23
www.ReporterNewspapers.net
Migraine And Tmj Disorder Treatment Botox relief of Muscle stress
dessert. Reservations are recommended at 404-634-6268. The Shops Buckhead Atlanta has announced an exclusive restaurant partnership with UberVIP in Atlanta. Riders who use Uber more than 10 times per month are eligible for VIP status in Atlanta. As part of their status, UberVIPs will be eligible for special offerings, exclusive menu items and discounts at 10 restaurants at The Shops, including Shake Shack, Gypsy Kitchen, Le Bilboquet and Fado Irish Pub. Pinkberry frozen yogurt has closed its location inside Perimeter Mall in Dunwoody. Dickey’s Barbecue Pit has closed its location in Sandy Springs at Abernathy Square shopping center, according to Tomorrow’s News Today. The Texasbased barbecue franchise still has a dozen locations in Georgia including restaurants in Alpharetta, Kennesaw and Peachtree City.
“Because Your Pet Is a Member of the Family” Georgia’s Only State Certified Crematory, Preferred by Offering you: Veterinarians for • Compassionate 43 years cremation and burial services • Same day cremation services available • Comfortable private visitation rooms • Life celebration services • Beautiful chapels • Urns, paw print impressions, and memorial jewelry • Free monthly Pet Loss Support Group
• Free monthly Pet Loss Support Group
4991Chamblee, Peachtree Road,GA Chamblee, GA 30341 4991 Peachtree Road, 30341 770-457-7659 • www.deceasedpetcare.com 770-457-7659 • www.deceasedpetcare.com
4991 Peachtree Road, Chamblee, GA 30341 770-457-7659 • www.deceasedpetcare.com
Pain
Migraines
Ringing
Clicking
Stiff & Aching
Clenching
BO TOX
MAR. 4 - MAR. 17, 2016
290 Carpenter Drive, 200A, Sandy Springs, GA 30328
R ight S mile C enter .com
404-256-3620
“My favorite part about living here is the flexibility to be as active and sociable as I want!” Meet Christie Kinsaul, who moved to Canterbury Court to downsize and simplify her life. Little did she know how much she would love her new lifestyle. “Maintaining a two-story townhouse and everything in it was taking considerable time and effort. I was ready for some changes, and I wanted to make the move on my own terms.” Christie didn’t expect to find such luxurious living in a one-bedroom apartment, which she says “is plenty big” and comes with full services and amenities. She was also delighted to discover an abundance of activities designed for resident interests, including outings to local events. As a retired music teacher, she’s especially fond of going to the Atlanta Symphony and the opera. Along with more flexibility to spend her time as she chooses, Christie’s move to Canterbury Court has given her peace of mind knowing that on-site health services are available, should she ever need them. Call (404) 365-3163 to see our warm, inviting community and furnished model apartments, including our diamond collection one-bedroom residences. 3750 Peachtree Road, N.E. Atlanta, Georgia 30319 canterburycourt.org Canterbury Court is Atlanta’s first and foremost continuing care retirement community, non-profit, and committed to welcoming all people.
24 | Educa�ion
Facebook.com/TheReporterNewspapers ■ twitter.com/Reporter_News
Ag e s
3–5 gr A Des
K–12
Drama // Improv // Musical Theater RegisteR
Spring Break Drama Camp
alliancetheatre.org/dramacamp 404.733.4700
AprIl 4–8, 2016 e satellit s n locatio e l avail ab
Summer Drama Camp
REGISTER NOW!
BegIns MAy 31
creative focused expression exploration
left brain
encouraged curiosity
engaging activities
hands-on learning right brain
Summer Explorations
Discover a galaxy of possibilities • Focus on reading, writing and fun • Reinforce and enhance academic skills • Learn using the Orton-Gillingham approach • Engage in enriching art, drama, STEM, and craft activities
A summer program where students shine their brightest
July
5 22
Open to all students, rising grades 1st through 5th
300 Grimes Bridge Rd. Roswell, GA 678.205.4988 theswiftschool.org
DISCOVER YOUR
BEST SELF
YMCA CAMP THUNDERBIRD YMCA Camp Thunderbird’s 1.7 mile shoreline provides the ideal backdrop for life-changing experiences. We encourage campers to find their wings and soar to new heights both on and off the water.
REGISTER TODAY! Find out more about dates, rates and online registration at campthunderbird.org
Educa�ion | 25
MAR. 4 - MAR. 17, 2016 ■ www.ReporterNewspapers.net
Pony Pals Summer Camp Chastain Horse Park - convenient Buckhead location!
Discovering Everything Except Their Limits.
Developing skills and understanding the importance of safety are important themes for our youngest riders (ages 4-7/8 yrs), as well as fostering a love of horses and riding. Camp includes daily riding lessons, games, and crafts! Space is limited so please sign up now to reserve your child’s week of fun! Enrollment is limited to 10 campers per session. Advanced Horse Camp is available for riders 8 yrs. and older who have had prior horse and riding experience. We are offering this one week this summer.
Contact Katie Herman at 770-378-0629 or kt.herman@chastainhorsepark.org
In the right atmosphere, students take chances and seek out challenges. With the right mentors, students discover interests and passions they never knew they had.
Hours & Tuition: 8:00 am – 1:00 pm Pony Pals $700/session Advanced Riding Camp $700/session
Pony Pal Camp Dates
Learn more and apply online at www.hies.org.
June 13-17 • June 20-24 • June 27-July 1 • July 11-15 • July18-22 July 25-29 - August 1-5 Advanced Horse Camp • June 6-10
www.chastainhorsepark.org
404-252-4244
A community of 1,375 students, ages 3-years-old through 12th Grade. Jan_2016_HIES_Reporter.indd 1
12/3/15 12:19 PM
SPORTS BROADCASTING CAMP is back for our 9th year in Atlanta
July 18-22, 2016
Boys and Girls 10-18 will have an opportunity to learn from the Pros Meet Sports Celebrities Make Sports Anchor Tapes
Nation’s #1 Sports Broadcasting Camp
Make Play-By-Play Tapes of the Super Bowl & NBA Finals Make Reporting Tapes from a Pro Stadium Participate in Sports Talk Radio and Pardon The Interruption (PTI) shows and much more
Day/Overnight options available. For more info: 800.319.0884 or www.playbyplaycamps.com facebook.com/sportsbroadcastingcamps • youtube.com/sportsbroadcastcamp
Atlanta International School
Summer Camps 2016 Language Camps and more! June 13 - July 22, 2016 French • German • Chinese • English as a Second Language • Spanish • Orchestra • Science & Technology Through Photography • Theater • Chess • MOD Design • Filmmaking & Editing • 6th Grade Study Skills • Keyboarding • Fun Weird Science • Taekwondo • Rockets & Racecars • 3D Character Design • 3D Printing • 3D Game Design • Server Design • Ecology • And More!
Register now at www.aischool.org/summercamp Convenient Buckhead location 404.841.3865
26 | Educa�ion
Facebook.com/TheReporterNewspapers ■ twitter.com/Reporter_News
EPSTEIN SUMMER ADVENTURE C AMP
AC ADEMICS CREATIVE SPORTS
ESA CAMP
JUNE 6TH–JULY 8TH
Your neighborhood camp experience. Camp adventures for 2 years—8th grade including: Band Camp Circus Camp Robotics Science Adventures Cooking Camps Hands-On Art Preschool and more! ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■
FREE W EEK *
*Vi
a sit
ta
s ail et
.
tl
an
jcc .
org
ld /ca mps for ful
■ ■ ■ ■
Multi Week Discounts Before and After Care Half and Full Days Outstanding AirTHE EPSTEIN SCHOOL Solomon Schechter Facility School of Atlanta Conditioned
Contact us at (404) 250-5606 or visit us at EpsteinAtlanta.org/esa. THE EPSTEIN SCHOOL Solomon Schechter School of Atlanta
3 3 5 C O L E WO O D WAY S A N DY S P R I N G S , G A 3 0 3 2 8
THE EPSTEIN SCHOOL Solomon Schechter School of Atlanta
4956 ESA ads_ajc_f.indd 1
THE EPSTEIN SCHOOL Solomon Schechter School of Atlanta
THE EPSTEIN SCHOOL Solomon Schechter School of Atlanta
THE EPSTEIN SCHOOL Solomon Schechter School of Atlanta
THE EPSTEIN SCHOOL Solomon Schechter School of Atlanta
SUMMER CAMPS 2016
CELEBRATING MORE THAN A DECADE OF EXCELLENCE
SUMMER CAMPS 2016
CELEBRATING MORE THAN A DECADE OF EXCELLENCE
Summer fun is just around the corner! www.paceacademy.org/SummerPrograms
1/11/16 3:46 PM
5-STAR SPORTS LITTLE SPORTS MVP FUN & GAMES JR. GOLF GYMNASTICS & CHEER BOYS GYMNASTICS CO-ED GYMNASTICS TINY TUMBLERS PRINCESS BALLERINA PRIMA BALLERINA CO-ED HIP HOP BOYS HIP HOP DANCE INTENSIVE MUSICAL THEATRE ABRAKADOODLE ...and More
REGISTER NOW: thegymatpeachtree.org
Educa�ion | 27
MAR. 4 - MAR. 17, 2016 ■ www.ReporterNewspapers.net
R E C R E AT I O N
SUMMER CAMPS
A N D
PA R K S
g Celebratin
S 10 YEAR r
REGISTER TODAY! Hawks.com/jrhawkscamps
of Summe Camps
The City of Sandy Springs offers quality summer camps at affordable prices. Sports, Gymnastics, Art and Enrichment camps are available for preschoolers, children and teens. Registration begins February 29, 2016 at sandyspringsga.gov/camps.
Summer Day Camp April 4 to 8, June & July Alpharetta
BEYOND CAMP Galloway’s g360 Summer Camp is open to all children ages 3 and up and is held on our campus in beautiful Chastain Park.
Register now for Summer 2016! gallowayschool.org/camp
Art, Archery, Farm Animals, Horseback Riding & more! Ages 5 to 13; CIT ages 16 & 17 Bus Service & Extended Day! Als o Birthday Parties, Lessons & Fiel d Trips
Register online today! www.camp
magnolia.com
Creative Arts, ages 5-6 Visual Arts, ages 7-10 Performing Arts, ages 7-10 Specialty Camps, ages 11-14 10 Weeks of Camp - 9:30am-3:00pm - Before & After Care Multi-Camp Discount with 3+ Camp Registrations spruillarts.org | 770-394-3447 x0
28 | Educa�ion
Facebook.com/TheReporterNewspapers ■ twitter.com/Reporter_News
SUMMER CAMP 2016 JUNE 1 - AUGUST 5 Space is limited. Register today!
Have a Blast! with us this summer! Our professional staff has prepared another exciting summer of fitness and educational fun. We will encourage each child to express his or her own creativity as well as explore and discover new activities. For more information or to register, contact Ashley Donnerson at 770.698.2017 or adonnerson@wellbridge.com
summer fun
1&2 week sessions for ages 6-16!
Session 1: June 6 - July 1 Session 2: July 11 - August 5
On top of Lookout Mountain on the banks of Little River...
Only 1.5 hours east of Huntsville and 2 hours from Atlanta, Nashville & Birmingham
ACTIVITIES Horseback Riding Swimming (Heated Pool) Ropes Course Climbing Tower Tennis Canoeing Golf Gymnastics Dance Cheerleading Flag Twirling Archery Arts and Cras Knitting Chorus and Drama Outdoor Living Skills Basketball Volleyball Soccer Riflery Trip Day River Water Blob Campfire every night Counselor-In-Training Christian Leadership
We l c o m e t o R i v e r v i e w C a m p f o r G i r l s ! Yo u r Aw a r d Wi n n i n g C a m p E x p e r i e n c e ! C o n fi d e n c e , C h a r a c t e r, Ad v e n tu r e , In s p i r at i o n ! When you attend our summer camp or our mother-daughter weekends, you will have an amazing time on a mountain top, sharing moments of fun, faith, and adventure! Recognized as one of the South’s favorite private summer camp for girls, Riverview’s exciting programs are appreciated by both campers and parents! Girls from the South and International campers as well, are among our camp families!
Dr. Larry and Susan Hooks, Owners/Directors For more information and a free DVD: www.riverviewcamp.com 800-882-0722
Spring & Fall Mother-Daughter Weekend Also Available! Sign up online!
learn. create. experiment. explore.
Mon-Fri 8:30 a.m. - 3 p.m Rising Pre-K through 8th Gr. After camp available Register: stmartinschool.org 3110-A Ashford Dunwoody Road Atlanta, GA 30319 404.228.0709 | stmartinschool.org
WESLEYAN
Sign Up Today!
SUMMER PROGRAMS ATHLETICS • FINE ARTS • ENRICHMENT
www.riverviewcamp.com
has an extensive Frequently Asked Questions section for first-time camper families and several enjoyable videos!
Offering full-day and half-day camps. Before and After Care available.
WWW.WESLEYANSCHOOL.ORG/SUMMERPROGRAMS
MAR. 4 - MAR. 17, 2016
■
Classifieds | 29
www.ReporterNewspapers.net
Classifieds & Home Services Directory
To Advertise, call 404-917-2200 ext 110
North Georgia Lawn Care 15% O With
FF
This A d
In the heart of Buckhead
404-467-8242 • 3255-5 Peachtree Road NE, Atlanta GA 30305
Appliance Repair ALL WORK GUARANTEED
Call Kevin 24/7 770.885.9210
• All Major Appliances & Brands FREE Service • Stoves, Ovens, Dishwashers • Refrigerators, Disposals Call with • Washers, Dryers Repair or $25 Service • 30 Years Experience Charge Servicing All of Metro Atlanta
Get ready for
Spring
Atlanta’s Premier
Trash, Junk Hauled For Less
35 – $150
$
Call Tony 404-402-5435
Belco Electric 770-455-4556
cell (404) 784-5142 home (770) 455-6237
Check out our new website www.BelcoInc.com and follow us on
$5O0ne per cus
770-899-0003 www.southernroofingsolutions.com
CONSIGNMENT SALE March 18 & 19 9 a.m. - 2 p.m. Saturday is 1/2 Price Day!
St. James United Methodist Church Fall/Winter Kids' Consignment Sale 404-261-3121 4400 Peachtree Dunwoody Rd NE stjamesatlanta.org/consignmentsale SS
Free Estimates
Locally Owned Since 1997
2
Get Your Roof Inspected!
Commercial & Residential Junk Removal Recycling 770-314-9867 www.justtrashit.com
=c
justTRASHit!www.generatorstore.com
Experienced Math Tutor / Teacher 2
The251-9765 Handyman ™ (770)
• 10-Year No Leak Warranty • Free Architectural Upgrades • Licensed & Insured • Excellent References Always Available
www.QuickQuote.Life
Algebra through Calculus Single and Group Rates In person or online
Need Expert Attention in Math?
Call
(770) 251-9765
678-641-8871 or
email: keithsawyer@bellsouth.net
Stock Ready To Install www.generatorstore.com www.generatorstore.com • Automatic Standby Generators (770) 251-9765
www.generatorstore.com
FIND OUT IF YOU QUALIFY FOR A NEW ROOF!
AM Best “Superior” Carriers 10, 15, 20, 25, 30 Years & to 100
+b
• Most Air-Cooled Models In Stock Ready To Install • Most Air-Cooled Models In • Automatic Standby Generators Stock Air-Cooled Ready To Install • Most Models In (770) 251-9765 • Automatic Standby Generators
404.355.1901
STORM DAMAGE?
“Guaranteed Lowest Rates”
2
• Automatic Standby Generators
Licensed Insured
Instant Life Insurance Quotes No Contact Info Required
a
• Most Air-Cooled Models In Stock and Ready To Install
www.WindowCleanAtl.com
404-875-2299 www.imbrexroofing.com
www.beverlybremer.com
Bud@BudOtto.com
• Window Cleaning • Gutter Cleaning • Pressure Washing • Family Owned • Licensed and Insured
YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD ROOFING COMPANY
404.261.4009 / 800.270.4009
3164 Peachtree Rd, NE Atlanta, GA 30305 sterlingsilver@beverlybremer.com
BUD OTTO, CLU (404) 855-2804
pon c o u tomer
since 1968
• Roofing • Gutters • Painting
Polished.
With two professional in-house polishers, we can make your silver flatware, tea sets, bowls, and trays more beautiful than ever before. Bring it by or call us for an estimate today and get polished for the holidays! Missing A Piece of Your Pattern? ® 1,200 patterns in stock.
• Family Owned since 1972 • Fast, Dependable Service by Professional, Uniformed Electricians
per load
We will pick up appliances, furniture, tree limbs, construction debris, basement and foreclosure clean-outs.
Call James
get
Honest Affordable Dependable Free estimates
Oriental Rug Cleaning Antique Repair Specialist • Speciality Care Hand Wash Cleaning (front and back with plenty of water) • No Chemicals Used Air Dried, Scotch Guard • Mothproof, Padding, Storage Appraisal & Insurance Statements • Pickup and Delivery Available
Personal & Professional Services
Can
• Plumbing • Electrical • Sheetrock • Floors • Tile • Framing • Kitchens • Painting • Roofwork • Concrete • Stained Glass • Antique Door Restoration as well as many other issues...
John Salvesen • 404-453-3438
Keith Sawyer, MSCIS, MS Applied Math
New Client Special!
Keratin Treatment - Value $300 up for only $125 Parital Highlights for only $75 with style
Brazilian Hair Studio By Vanilda
thehandymancanatlanta@gmail.com
6810 Roswell Rd, Suite 1E – Sandy Springs
SERVICES AVAILABLE
SERVICES AVAILABLE
The Technology Squad
Tranquil Waters Lawn Care – Pressure washing, flower beds, trimming, tree/ shrubs installation, hauling of debris, etc. Free estimates. Discounts for Seniors & Veterans. No contracts needed. Call Mike 678-662-0767 or Andrew 678-672-8552.
Quinn Windows – Family owned and operated. Window replacement and home remodeling company since 2980. Visit www. QuinnWindows.com or call 770-939-5634.
Refresh and beautify your home with Quality Work…Great Prices! Painting – Interior & Exterior. Spray painting of cabinets, garages, furniture, etc. Pressure cleaning – houses, driveways, decks. Decks – sealed & stained. Wallpaper installation, tile work, flooring and more. Free estimates. Polite service – call now Leticia or Craig 404-447-0177. Jack’s Tax Service – Federal and state taxes prepared by CPA. Mobile Service, we pick up documents and deliver tax returns. E-filing available. Call 770-417-8231 or email jb4tax@gmail.com Driveways & Walkways – Replaced or repaired. Masonry, grading, foundations repaired, waterproofing and retaining walls. Call Joe Sullivan 770-616-0576.
CLEANING SERVICES I will clean your house at a reasonable rate – My cleaning is excellent! Fully trained, experienced & dependable. Call Charlotte 404-604-7866. House Cleaning Services – Fast & Affordable. Call Elle at 404-903-2913. I will do laundry also – ask for rates. Detail Cleaning Services – Houses, apartments, offices and more. Affordable prices with excellent references. I will beat any advertised price – call 770-837-5711.
CEMETERY PLOTS Arlington Memorial Park – Four spaces, Two vaults, Two markers. Oak Hill section $12,000 OR Best Offer. Current retail value - $28,000. Call Bob at 770-457-7124.
404-914-7156
“People Helping People with Computers”
770-843-9904
$
25Off with this Ad
• Virus/Spyware Removal • Data Back up & Recovery • PC & Mac Tune-Up • Network Setup
www.thetechnologysquad.com
On Site Repairs for your Computer Emergency
30 | Public Safety
Facebook.com/TheReporterNewspapers ■ twitter.com/Reporter_News
Police Blotter / Sandy Springs Sandy Springs Police blotter Feb. 13-26 The following information was provided by Capt. Steve Rose of the Sandy Springs Police Department from its records and is presumed to be accurate.
ARRESTS 1000 block of Johnson Ferry Road –
Peachtree City Police Department requested assistance on a wanted person at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta. A PCPD detective, following up on a separate case, found an active probation violation warrant on an individual. The officer arrived and arrested him. The report mentioned that the subject was a big man requiring two sets of hand-
cuffs. Next door at Northside Hospital, security and the offduty SSPD officer found a man sleeping in the lounge area. That man was checked and found to be wanted in Cobb County on probation for larceny. 1500 block of
Huntcliff Village Court – Officers were called to the fitness center
of the apartment complex regarding juveniles smoking marijuana in the bathroom. They were located and released into the care of their respective parents after being charged with possessing the marijuana. Ga. 400/Abernathy – A patrol officer
Captain STEVE ROSE, SSPD srose@sandyspringsga.gov
BANK OF SANDY SPRINGS
8200 block of Dunwoody Place -- Of-
A Division of First Landmark Bank
1.36% 1.35% Annual Percentage Yield (APY)
Interest Rate
23-MONTH TERM OPT-UP CD1 For Deposits of $10,000 or more3 Deposit $10,000 or more into an Opt-Up CD to get these features: • Interest rate can be increased once during the 23-month term by contacting the bank. • The maturity date will not be extended if you exercise the Opt-Up option.2
noted a car stopped in the right lane of travel. He walked to the car and spoke with a 21-year old woman who was crying. She said that her boyfriend stopped the car and walked away. The officers saw bruising and scratches on the woman and later determined the boyfriend had assaulted her. The pair lived nearby. The woman was given a ride home at which time the boyfriend showed up. He was arrested at the scene and taken to jail.
404.334.8600
• Opt-Up option is based on the published rate for the standard 24-month CD. Advertised APY and rate apply to the initial term only. 1Opt-Up option is based on the published rate for the standard 24-month Certificate of Deposit and can be exercised by contacting us when the published rate exceeds the initial advertised rate and APY. 2The maturity date will not change. Therefore, if the rate change is executed in the 10th month, the new rate will be in effect for the remaining 13 months. Annual Percentage Yield of 1.36% is accurate as of 2/15/16. The APY assumes that interest remains on deposit until maturity. Withdrawal of interest will reduce earnings. 3Minimum deposit to open a CD for this offer is $10,000 (new and existing money) to earn advertised APY. Term is 23-months. Early withdrawal penalties may apply. Offer is subject to change or end at any time without notice. Offer not valid for retirement CDs, brokerage deposits, institutional investors, public funds or in conjunction with other promotional offers. Interest compounds daily and may remain in the CD or be paid monthly or quarterly by check or transferred to an account with us. CD is automatically renewed into a 24-month standard CD at maturity unless we receive contrary instructions from you. Important Information about FDIC Deposit Insurance Coverage: Midtown Bank and Bank of Sandy Springs (Divisions of First Landmark Bank) and First Landmark Bank are the same FDIC-insured institution. Deposits held under First Landmark Bank or the trade names Midtown Bank and Bank of Sandy Springs are not separately insured, but are combined to determine whether a depositor has exceeded basic federal deposit insurance limits. Bank of Sandy Springs | 6000 Sandy Springs Circle Atlanta, GA 30328 | 404.334.8600
ficers were called to a convenience store regarding an assault. They located a 33-year-old woman who was bleeding from the face and crying hysterically. EMS was called and responded. Witnesses said the woman was assaulted by a male who ran away toward Roberts Drive. The suspect was identified as the victim’s fiancé. At some point, in the car, both parties began to fight. The fight increased to a point where the man struck her in the face, causing the injury. The man said to the woman after beating her that he wasn’t going to jail, then ran away— he was later found by another officer located hiding in some bushes, arrested, and charged with battery related to domestic violence. 7700 block of Colquitt Road – On Feb.
14 at around 4 a.m., officers met with a cabbie who said four passengers bolted without paying their $40 fare after he drove them to an apartment complex. The driver pointed out the approximate location and officers checked several apartments until they found the apartment the offender had run to. The offender opened the door but would not talk to the officers. They remained at the scene and initiated the report process with the victim, causing aggravation to the offender who opened the door, stepping out to complain that the cops were threatening him. He was then taken into custody. 300 block of Hammond Drive -- An of-
ficer checked a business around 9 a.m. on Feb. 14 and came into contact with a subject whom he knew had an active warrant on him. The man was arrested on the warrant. 6700 block of Roswell Road – On Feb.
14, police arrived and found a man staggering on the sidewalk near some condos. The cops asked for his address in
hopes of getting him home but instead, the man called them bad words, wishing someone would shoot (the cop) in the head and then violate his children. He was arrested for public drunkenness. 7500 block of Roswell Road – On Feb.
15, a grocery store security guard detained a woman after observing her concealing items in her green, eco-friendly shopping bag. She paid for some but not all of the items in the bag. She was given a copy of charges with a court date to appear on shoplifting charges. 5500 block of Roswell Road – On
Feb. 15, security at a department store watched as a woman placed items in her purse and then tried to leave without paying. Five containers of Similac Baby Formula, valued at $95, were recovered. She was arrested. 7800 block of Roswell Road – On Feb.
16, a man came in to get a permit to serve alcohol at his job. The background check showed he was wanted on a warrant. He was arrested for a probation violation. A 28-year-old man said his live-in boy-
friend assaulted him, leaving a cut on his face from the suspect’s fingernail. The suspect was located and arrested.
A S S AU LT Spalding Drive – On Feb. 13, an 18-year-
old woman on Spalding Drive told officers that she was living with the offender for the past few months. The offender got angry at her one evening and hit her in the face with his open hand and ordered her out. 4600 block of Roswell Road – On Feb.
13, a 20-year-old woman said her ex-boyfriend came to her workplace and hit her in the face. This took place in the parking lot and was over possession of a phone and content. First block of Northwood Drive – On
Feb. 14, a 19-year-old man said someone came up from behind and hit him on the head, pulled a gun, took his jeans and hoodie from him, along with the man’s MARTA card, ID and phone. The victim was left with only his underwear. The suspect wore a red bandanna over his face. The victim said a second suspect stood nearby. An officer, while checking a suspicious
person in the 7100 block of PeachtreeDunwoody Road, discovered the man wanted in Douglas County for FTA on traffic charges. He was arrested and turned over to Douglas County Sheriff’s Deputies. A 30-year-old woman reported that on SS
MAR. 4 - MAR. 17, 2016
■
Public Safety | 31
www.ReporterNewspapers.net
Feb. 22, while she was at a restaurant at The Prado, she was assaulted by her ex-boyfriend’s current girlfriend. She said she was hit, scratched and her hair pulled. The suspect fled prior to arrival.
LARCENY 6800 block of Roswell Road – On
Feb. 13, a woman reported that a woman named “Lia” came into her business and requested to receive eyelash services, costing $99. She paid only $44 and said she would pay the balance when her ride got there. She later left without paying. 8700 block of Roswell Road – On Feb.
14, a man left his iPhone 6 at a fast food restaurant after forgetting it. He returned and it was gone. The victim told officers he had a minor altercation with another person during that time and suspected him of taking it. The phone’s GPS showed it in the 300 block of Winding River Drive, nearby, before going offline.
was left at the home with the girlfriend. The friend was gone for an hour and, when he showed up, he had no food. He took her home and the money was gone. She thinks that he gave her a fake name (Pharaoh) and discovered he deleted her from his Facebook page. 6000 block of Roswell Road – On Feb.
22, the manager of a fast food restaurant reported that a staff member had stolen just over $100 from the day’s cash money. The manager told each of the employees that the money needed to be returned. One of the employees later walked out without finishing up the day’s work and failed to show the next day. 4900 block of Roswell Road – On Feb.
23, a soda vendor at a grocery store said he left his iPad at one of the aisles on a shelf. He soon realized it and returned, but discovered it had been taken.
Between Feb. 14-18, there were four re-
– On Feb. 15, two men entered a store around 5:15 p.m. One appeared to distract the employee while the other filled a shopping cart and fled out the front door. The other man then ran out the door.
ports of thefts from vehicles. Between Feb. 20-23, there were four reports of thefts from vehicles.
man was moving out and hired a cleaning service to clean the apartment for him. He let them use his Hoover Wet Vacuum to do a cleaning and apparently they took it with them. 7500 block of Roswell Road – On Feb.
17, a car dealership reported three Georgia dealer license plates were stolen. 5500 block of Glenridge Drive – On
Feb. 20, a 2016 Yamaha R6 motorcycle, yellow with black and white accents, and damage to the left rear, was reported stolen. 6600 block of Roswell Road – On Feb.
20, a 58-year-old man reported that his belongings were in a locker inside a gym. Someone cut or removed the lock and took a wallet, keys and $110 cash. 5500 block of Roswell Road – On Feb.
20, a 39-year-old woman told police that on Feb. 15 she told a male friend of hers that she was acquiring some money. The friend stayed at her residence that night. The following day, she noticed a set of house keys missing. The friend went with her to pick up $3,000, and then returned to her home where she put the money inside her bedroom. The friend suggested they go out,
Independent Senior Living at its Finest! SOMETHING MonthlyEXPECT rate starting as low as $1,895 MORE
MEMBERSHIP
TM
As low as ZERO down Community fee/Non-refundable deposit.
B U R G L A RY
Call now to lock in your rate for life! (678) 534-2382 EXPECT
200 block of Northwood Drive – On
Feb. 13, someone entered the apartment through a sliding door, took two watches valued at $40, then left through the front door.
INSURANCE
SOMETHING MORE TM
4355 Georgetown Square | Dunwoody, GA 30338 | DunwoodyPines.com
600 block Hampton Drive – After 5
TRAVEL
p.m. on Feb. 14, while the victim was gone for only a few minutes, someone forced the victim’s apartment door open. Apparently the burglar entered the apartment but was confronted by a small but aggressive dog and left without taking anything.
AUTOMOTIVE
EXPECT SOMETHING MORE
EXPECT SOMETHING MORE TM
Book at the show and save! Free Admission
Saturday, March 12, 2016 11:00 am- 2:00 pm Georgia Aquarium Location
someone entered a new construction residence and took a Kitchen Aid microwave oven. 5400 block of Mt. Vernon Parkway
– On Feb. 16, two furnaces, valued at $15,000 total, were taken from a home under construction. Another furnace from a nearby home, also under construction, was taken as well. 600 block of Highland Park Trail –
On Feb. 16, a resident returned home to find that her front door had been kicked open. A gun was taken. A second and third burglary was reported in the same complex. 1000 block of Brentwood Way – On Feb.
17, the resident said someone came into his apartment and took a PS4 video game system and other video accessories.
www.ReporterNewspapers.net
2203781985
AAA TRAVEL
TM
200 block of Elden Drive – On Feb. 14,
which they did. They went to the suspect’s brother’s girlfriend’s house. The friend said he would go out READ MORE OF THE POLICE BLOTTER ONLINE AT and get them all food. The victim SS
LIFETIME RENT FREEZE!
THEFTS FROM VEHICLES
1100 block of Mount Vernon Highway
Calibre Springs Way – On Feb. 16, a
Enjoy Financial Peace of Mind with our
225 Baker St. NW in Atlanta
RECEIVE UP TO
500
$
Plan a Better Vacation – Here’s How ■
IN SAVINGS OR ONBOARD CREDIT IF YOU ATTEND THE EXPO*
■
■
■ ■
BOOK and SAVE! TOTAL TRIP COST*
SAVINGS or ONBOARD CREDIT
$1,000-$1,999 ................... $25 $2,000-$2,999 ................... $50 $3,000-$3,999 ................... $75 $4,000-$4,999 ................... $100 $5,000-$7,499 ................... $125 $7,500-$9,999 ................... $200 $10,000-$14,999 ............... $250 $15,000-$19,999 ............... $350 $20,000 or more ................. $500 Savings amounts vary depending on total trip cost and travel partner.
Listen and learn from seminars by well-known travel professionals Talk with AAA Travel Consultants and set up private appointments Enjoy Day-of-Show Specials and Early Booking Incentives Enter for a chance to win our Grand Prize Drawing** Book at the show and receive up to $500 off from AAA, plus individual travel partner offers Enter for your chance to win our Grand Prize
7-Day Caribbean or Mexico Cruise for Two!** Sponsored by Princess Cruises®
Register to attend at AAA.com/TravelEvents or call:
404-843-4500
*Save up to $500 on a new Tour Reservation, or receive an onboard credit of up to $500 on a new Cruise Reservation, if you book on day of show or within 10 business days of attended event with select AAA Travel Preferred Partners. Final savings amount is based on trip cost, not including airfare, government fees/taxes and other charges Savings may be substituted for onboard credit on select cruise partners. Reservations must be made through Auto Club Group AAA Travel locations using event promotional code. Offer is per booking, not retroactive and applies to new reservations only. Offer is combinable with AAA Travel partner cruise/tour member benefits, may not be combined with other AAA Travel-sponsored promotions, is subject to change or withdrawal without notice and is nontransferable and not redeemable for cash. Savings will be issued at time of final payment. Other restrictions may apply. If booking is canceled after final payment, offer received will become void and any gifts/money received must be returned to AAA and this offer will not be re-credited. Coupon/offer may not be reproduced. See your AAA Travel Consultant for complete details. Participating travel partners subject to change without notice. The Auto Club Group is not responsible for errors or omissions in the printing of this advertisement. **See terms and conditions at AAA.com/Terms12 15-TR-0605C
32 |
Facebook.com/TheReporterNewspapers â– twitter.com/Reporter_News
SS