4-1--2016 Buckhead Reporter

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APR. 1 - APR. 14, 2016 • VOL. 10 — NO. 7

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► Rep. Joe Wilkinson drops re-election bid, endorses former challenger PAGE 3

► ‘Religious liberty’ debate sparks look at city laws PAGE 4

Guide Inside

PAGE 24

‘Miss Jane’ wraps up ‘a great run’ at NYO

BY JOE EARLE joeearle@reporternewspapers.net The decorations in Jane Wilkins’ office say it all. An American flag built from baseball bats hangs above her desk. Autographed home plates commemorating championship teams decorate a wall. A side table displays autographed footballs. Jerseys hung here and photos posted there recall teams and players who have graced ball fields at Chastain Park. Wilkins is executive director of the Northside Youth Organization. Her office sits in a building in the See ‘MISS JANE’ on page 19

LEFT PHOTO, JOE EARLE; ABOVE, KATE AWTREY

MAKING A DIFFERENCE Other’s Day

“You see a block of

OUT & ABOUT Local farmers markets return

homes and you think, ‘That is all owner-

BY DYANA BAGBY dyanabagby@reporternewspapers.net

occupied.’ A significant

Sandy Springs police have agreed to install as many as 20 cameras in Sandy Springs as part of the Atlanta Police Department’s “Operation Shield” crimeprevention program, officials of the two cities say.

block of it is not.” Page 8

Brad Karfunkel senior data analyst for the NYU Furman Center See Real Estate PAGE 6

Atlanta expands its police camera network into Sandy Springs

Page 21

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2 | Community

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Legislature approves compromise to let Atlanta vote on MARTA sales tax BY JOE EARLE joeearle@reporternewspapers.net

Compromise legislation to allow Atlanta voters to impose a new sales tax to expand MARTA is “the most significant piece of legislation” for the transit system since the original MARTA act, the agency’s chairman says. “The authority we got will allow us to radically [improve] the way we provide services in the city of Atlanta,” MARTA Chairman Robbie Ashe said. “This will allow us to get off the X-Y axis, providing something more closely resembling a network or a spider web. As a native Atlantan, I am tremendously excited about the opportunity.” On the final day of the legislative ses-

sion, state lawmakers approved the proposal that allows Atlanta City Council to call an election in which Atlanta voters could impose the new half-cent sales tax to raise more than $2.5 billion over 41 years for MARTA projects, state and local officials said. If approved, the new tax would raise the overall sales tax in Atlanta to 8.5 cents on the dollar. Atlanta already imposes a 1 percent sales tax for MARTA operations. MARTA officials have until May 31 to present to Atlanta City Council a preliminary list of transit projects to be financed through the new tax, Ashe said. Projects to be proposed could include new light rail on the BeltLine, other light rail projects in the city, extending existing heavy rail projects or taking a new

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look at rail stations, he said. “It’s all pretty fluid at this point in terms of what the projects are,” he said. “We’re taking a look at a wide range of possibilities.” Ashe said MARTA and Atlanta City Council would approve the project list and decide whether to hold the election in 2016 or 2017. He said MARTA officials want to hold the tax referendum in November. “We don’t want to wait another year,” he said. Senate Bill 369 began its legislative life as a proposed law dealing with fireworks before it was gutted and reworked as a compromise version of the proposed MARTA tax. MARTA originally asked lawmakers to dedicate to transit half of a proposed 1-cent sales tax for transportation improvements in Fulton and DeKalb counties. But mayors of some cities in north Fulton County objected, saying they wanted the money to go to roads and bridges. “The north Fulton people have said, ‘We don’t really want rail,’” state Rep. Beth Beskin (R-Atlanta) told members of the North Buckhead Civic Association at their annual meeting March 29. The compromise legislation split the Atlanta and Fulton sales taxes and would allow voters to impose a .75-cent sales tax for transportation projects in portions of Fulton County outside the city of Atlanta. Fulton County Commission Chairman John Eaves told the Buckhead Business Association on March 24

“It’s all pretty fluid at this point in terms of what the projects are. We’re taking a look at a wide range of possibilities.” ROBBIE ASHE MARTA BOARD CHAIRMAN that the tax could finance transportation projects spread “from Alpharetta to Palmetto.” “We’re very, very excited about this,” Eaves said. The legislation also leaves open the possibility of a future vote for a MARTA sales tax in Fulton County, state and county officials said.

Gold Dome passes ‘rape kit’ reform, lets DeKalb CEO job remain R eform of evidence processing in sexual assault cases and the death of an effort to kill the DeKalb County CEO position were among the decisions of local interest as the Georgia Legislature ended its 2016 session just after midnight March 25.

A rundown of some bills of local interest:

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Bills to eliminate DeKalb County’s unique chief executive officer position, sponsored by Sen. Fran Millar (R-Dunwoody) and Democrat Rep. Scott Holcomb, did not pass.

The Legislature passed Senate Bill 304, originally a House bill sponsored by DeKalb Rep. Scott Holcomb, which requires police agencies to promptly process sexual assault evidence tests, or “rape kits.” The new law follows revelations last year that Atlanta’s Grady Memorial Hospital had 1,400 rape kits that had gone unprocessed.

The “adoptable dog” will become the official state dog following the passage of Senate Bill 168. The effort, meant to encourage adoption of any type of dog from shelters, began as a House bill sponsored by Rep. Joe Wilkinson (R-Sandy Springs), who was inspired by political consultant Todd Rehm, editor of the GaPundit.com news site, which frequently highlights dogs available for adoption. BH


APR. 01 - APR. 14, 2016

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Rep. Wilkinson drops re-election bid, endorses Silcox BY JOHN RUCH

“blindsided” by his campaign. McDonald and Paul have denied any surprises. But in his written announcement, Wilkinson State Rep. Joe Wilkinson is dropping stepped up his criticism. his re-election bid and endorsing former The statement blasts “those who would challenger Deborah Silcox in the May view our political offices not as belong24 Republican primary. In his unexpecting to the people who elect us, but as pried March 23 retirement anvate perks to be doled out to the nouncement after 16 years in ofprivileged few.” In an interview, fice, Wilkinson blasted the other Wilkinson said he was referring candidate in the race, former to Paul and Sandy Springs state Sandy Springs City Councilman Rep. Wendell Willard, a fellow Graham McDonald, as part of a Republican. The statement goes “plot” by Sandy Springs leaders on to claim that those officials to replace him. tried to get him to help McDonWilkinson said in an interald take the office. view that his decision to retire “They saw this as an opporwas based on his doctor’s adtunity to circumvent the elecDeborah Silcox vice and two new opportunities: toral process by urging me to his appointment by Gov. Nathan qualify to run again and then Deal to the Technical College withdraw at the last minute and System of Georgia board, and allow their candidate of choice consulting work with a comto step into office unopposed,” pany in Ireland making a movWilkinson’s statement says. “I ie called “Sgt. Stubby: An Amerflatly rejected this proposal. Yet ican Hero,” about a real-life they went ahead with their plot World War I military dog. and, at the last minute, qualified “My oncologist said, ‘You’ve their chosen candidate McDongot to slow down. You’ve got to ald. Their intention was to then pick and choose,’” said Wilkinpressure me to step aside with son, who successfully battled false claims that I have not been Joe Wilkinson prostate cancer in recent years. focusing on the needs of Sandy “I think it’s the right decision Springs.” for me personally, for my famiMcDonald said of the “plot” ly, for my business, and I think allegation, “I certainly never enalso for the district,” Wilkinson gaged in a plan of that type.” said. “Knowing that we had the Silcox said that as a first-time perfect candidate in Deborah candidate, she does not know Silcox, and one who is ready to what to make of the dispute. “I go and so well-qualified…If we have no idea. I just don’t,” she didn’t have Deborah in the race, said. I would have felt obligated to Mayor Paul issued a statestay.” ment of his own, saying there Graham McDonald Silcox, a Sandy Springs atwas “no grand plot” and that he torney, has said she is a friend is “sad on a personal level” about of Wilkinson and entered the the campaign dispute. House District 52 race only because Mc“I have had several conversations with Donald did first and opened up the camhim over the past two years about the impaign field. McDonald, an attorney, reportance of being in and involved with signed from the Sandy Springs City Council Sandy Springs, if he planned to continto run for the House seat and was endorsed ue to represent this area,” Paul said in the by Sandy Springs Mayor Rusty Paul. emailed statement. “When he ignored that “I did not have a heads-up” on Wilkinrequest, I urged him to retire so he could go son’s decision, Silcox said in an interview. out on his own terms. I have supported him “I have to say that Sandy Springs and Buckin every election for 16 years and there was head owe a huge debt to Joe Wilkinson for no grand plot, as he alleges. He knew well his service,” she said, noting the lawmakin advance that I planned to support Couner’s Buckhead roots and his lead sponsorcilman McDonald, if he chose to run. So, ship of a bill that allowed the city of Sandy there was no blindsiding as he also alleged. Springs to incorporate. “I’m so, of course, “I am sad on a personal level that it has honored and flattered that he would enreached this point,” Paul said in the statedorse me.” ment. “It was as a friend I tried to be frank “I have a high opinion of Rep. Wilkinand candid about my concerns in hopes he son as both a person and a representative out go out to the appreciation and univerof our district,” McDonald said in an intersal thanks from the community that he deview. “I can also appreciate how difficult reserves.” tiring from such a long-held position must House District 52 includes parts of be.” Buckhead, Sandy Springs and northwest Wilkinson previously claimed that he Atlanta. There are no challengers from othhad been grooming McDonald as a poer parties, so the Republican primary wintential successor in two years and was ner will take the seat. johnruch@reporternewspapers.net

BH

Political figures pay tribute to Wilkinson State Rep. Joe Wilkinson’s March 18 announcement that he will retire at the end of his term drew tributes from local political figures. Wilkinson has held the District 52 state House seat, representing parts of Buckhead, Sandy Springs and northwest Atlanta, for 16 years. He was the lead sponsor of a bill allowing the vote that created the city of Sandy Springs. Here are some of the statements paying tribute to him: “Few individuals have given more commitment to our party and state than Joe Wilkinson. Joe is a dear friend who has always led with principle and vision. Throughout his life–whether in public service or the private sector–Joe has chosen to give so much back to his city, state, and nation. I had the privilege and honor to serve with him in the Georgia state Legislature, and the wit, wisdom, experience and passion he brought to his responsibilities were on constant display. Betty and I wish Pat and Joe the very best in the years to come. We look forward to our paths crossing again. —U.S. Rep. Tom Price (R-Roswell) “Having served 22 years in elected offices myself, I can attest to the sacrifices public servants make, which are far beyond any monetary benefits. For such commitments we salute Joe with our appreciation and best wishes for his future. —Sam Massell, president of the Buckhead Coalition and former Atlanta mayor “What is left out of the political obituaries about Joe Wilkinson are several points I’d like you to know: 1. He served our nation for longer than he served in the Legislature, retiring as a captain in the United States Navy and a veteran of Desert Storm. 2. He was literally one of the first Republicans in the state, working on campaigns for Bo Callaway and Barry Goldwater. 3. He served in the White House press office under Presidents Gerald Ford and Ronald Reagan. —Todd Rehm, political consultant and editor of GaPundit.com

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‘Religious liberty’ debate sparks look at city laws BY JOHN RUCH johnruch@reporternewspapers.net

The state Legislature’s March 16 passage of a “religious liberty” bill in response to same-sex marriage sparked reviews and proposals for city non-discrimination laws protecting gays, lesbians and bisexual and transgender people. The city of Atlanta reviewed its LGBT non-discrimination laws—the strongest in the state—for potential conflicts before Gov. Nathan Deal announced his veto of the bill, and a Sandy Springs City Council member is calling for that city to adopt a similar anti-bias policy. HB 757 would have prohibited forcing religious institutions to conduct samesex marriages and allowed faith-based organizations to deny services or employment to LGBT people. The bill was heavily criticized by many large corporations and business associations. The Buckhead Coalition, an influential Atlanta group of 100 CEOs and community leaders, said its members “empathize with the many fearful of potential discrimination” from HB 757. The Sandy Springs/Perimeter Chamber of Commerce said in a letter to Deal that the bill “is an unnecessary self-inflicted stain on Georgia’s national reputation” with “provisions [that] precisely meet the definition of discrimination.” Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed, in a written statement, blasted HB 757 as “unprecedented in that it codifies employment discrimination and other types of discrimination as a ‘right’… HB 757 does not represent or uphold our city’s rich history of diversity and inclusion.” Atlanta has a comprehensive set of laws barring discrimination, including

“As a Sandy Springs councilman, I am obligated to ensure that discrimination has no place in our community, and in the governance and operation of our city. We are an open and tolerant community and I believe that formally adopting these policies is entirely consistent with our community values.” ANDY BAUMAN SANDY SPRINGS CITY COUNCIL

bias based on sexual orientation and gender identity, in any type of city decision as well as in many practices of private businesses and landlords, including the selection of customers. About 40 Georgia cities and several counties, including DeKalb and Fulton, have some type of non-discrimination policy covering sexual orientation, and

about 14 of those policies also cover gender identity according to the LGBT rights group Georgia Equality. But the majority of such policies only apply to the government’s own employment practices. That’s the case in Sandy Springs, where City Council member Andy Bauman on March 21 issued a call for a broader policy covering sexual orientation. Bauman called HB 757 a “thinly veiled and shameful attempt to sanction discrimination.” “As a Sandy Springs councilman, I am obligated to ensure that discrimination has no place in our community, and in the governance and operation of our city,” Bauman wrote. In a note to constituents, he added, “We are an open and tolerant community.” Sandy Springs already has a non-discrimination policy that includes “sexual preference”–an old term referring to gay people now widely considered offensive, according such LGBT groups as GLAAD– but it applies only to the city’s own hiring and employment. The city outsources the vast majority of its services, but the policy applies to contractors’ workers as well, according to city spokesperson Sharon Kraun. At least three of the firms that provide city services also have their own policies prohibiting discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity, Kraun said. Bauman’s proposed policy would cover all protected classes in federal and state law, as well as sexual orientation, which is not currently fully protected in either. The policy would apply to any organization doing business with the city or using public facilities, including public parks and the future performing arts center, he said.

PATH400’s Peachtree Park plan gets tweak Plans for PATH400’s route through the Peachtree Park neighborhood are getting tweaked after newer residents were surprised by a design other residents approved years ago. Four years ago, the multi-use trail was proposed to run along Highland Drive and Ga. 400, connecting to the Gordon Bynum Jr. pedestrian bridge. But some residents had concerns that the route is too steep and tight for southbound bicyclists. So a separate bicycle path was included to run on Park Circle and East Paces Ferry Road. But when Livable Buckhead presented a plan update with that route at a community meeting last fall, “Many neighbors were surprised and upset,” said Peachtree Park Civic Association president Wes Lyle. The previous discussions weren’t as inclusive as they could have been, and many newer residents weren’t aware of the plan at all, he said. The civic association now has formed a 40-member working group, representing every neighborhood street, to review the PATH400 route. The votes of residents on the directly affected streets will count more, Lyle said. “The Peachtree Park community is hashing out how they want PATH400 to come through their neighborhood, and we will be responsive to that feedback, as we were the first time they told us what they wanted,” said Livable Buckhead Executive Director Denise Starling. “This is a great example of a challenge with implementing long-term projects. People move in and expect to change things that have been in the works for years. It is a difficult balance to strike.” --John Ruch

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6 | Real Estate

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Study says: Metro home renters head to the suburbs BY JOE EARLE joeearle@reporternewspapers.net

The dream of suburban home ownership appears to be changing. Renters are heading to the suburbs. Not just to fill the stacks of apartments rising across Sandy Springs, Brookhaven and Dunwoody, but also in single-family homes. In metro Atlanta, as in big cities across the country, the percentage of renters of suburban homes is rising, according to a new NYU Furman Center/Capital One study. “You see a block of homes and you think, ‘That is all owner-occupied,” said Brad Karfunkel, senior data analyst for the NYU Furman Center and co-author of the study, which was released March 8. “A significant block of it is not.” The study’s authors crunched census data for the 11 largest metro areas in the U.S., including metro Atlanta, and determined the number and share of renters increased in both cities and surrounding suburbs from 2006 to 2014, and that rental housing stock grew faster than the “ownership stock” in all 11 communities. In metro Atlanta, the share of the population renting homes in the suburbs increased to 36 percent in 2014, as compared with 28 percent in 2006, according to the NYU Furman Center/Capital One study. At the same time, the share of renters in single-family homes or townhomes rather than apartments or condos increased to 44 percent in 2014, from 33 percent in 2006. And the number of rental units in the metro area increased by 26 percent from

2006 to 2014, the third highest rate among the 11 cities studied, the report says. “What we see going on in Atlanta is that there’s a pretty widespread increase in renters living in single-family homes and a large number of the renters are outside the city of Atlanta proper ...,” Karfunkel said in a recent telephone interview. “The renting population is very much in the suburbs.” The pattern holds true in Reporter Newspapers communities, too. When Karfunkel checked available data on Sandy Springs at the newspapers’ request, he found the share of the population renting homes increased to an average of 51 percent in the years 2010-14, up from an average of 42 percent from 2005 to 2009. “It’s gone up by more than 9 percentage points, which is a lot compared to suburbs of metro areas nationwide,” Karfunkel said. Little historical census data is available for the newer cities of Dunwoody and Brookhaven, Karfunkel said, but he was able to calculate that the share of population renting in 2010-2014 was about 41 percent in Dunwoody and about 52 percent in Brookhaven. Why the increase in suburban rentals? Karfunkel says he can’t tell just looking at the numbers, but said it may reflect the number of residents who lost homes in the recession and have not bought new ones. “It may well be that that some of the people living in these rental houses could be living next door to a house they used to own,” he said. Local real estate agents also have noticed the rise in home rentals in the suburbs in recent years and

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APR. 01 - APR. 14, 2016

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offer various possible reasons for the shift. Some suggest that more suburban houses are being offered for rent because demand for the properties is strong. On one recent day, zillow.com listed 39 houses for rent in Sandy Springs, 14 in Dunwoody and 24 in Brookhaven. Altogether, 767 houses were listed for rent in Fulton County and 590 in DeKalb County. “I think it’s being driven by a strong market. People say, ‘Why should I sell my house for X dollars when there are people are willing to rent?’” said Belinda Cook, an associate broker who represented one of the Dunwoody rental homes listed on zillow.com and who also handles her own rental property. “The market is hot” locally for both home rentals and sales, said Sandy Springs agent Avi Shemesh of Chapman Hall Realty. A three-bedroom, two-bath Brookhaven home he listed to rent at more than $4,000 a month attracted five potential tenants in less than a month, he said. Shemesh thinks local demand reflects interest in jobs in Atlanta. “More people are coming to Georgia,” especially in the movie and music businesses, he said.

Cook thinks the rising interest with suburban rentals lies with millennials. Some, she said, want to live in closein communities, but still want a yard. “They used to live in apartments more and I think they want to live in houses,” she said. “They’ve found friends they get along with [to share rent], and they want to have animals, and it’s hard to have a pet in an apartment.” The NYU Furman study found that despite the increase in overall rentals, the median household income of renters in the metro area actually has declined slightly, to $36,400 in 2014 from $37,000 in 2006. Over the same period, median gross rent has barely budged, to $980 in 2014 from $970 in 2006. “Of the 11 metro areas studied, Atlanta is among the more affordable metros, with 37 percent of the recently available units affordable to the median renter household in 2014,” the study said. Still, the population of renters grew by 40 percent between 2006 and 2014, faster than the number of available rental houses, which increased by 26 percent over the period. That, the study found, meant the rental vacancy rate dropped to 10 percent from 13 percent over the period.

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8 | Making a Difference

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Greenberg, of Dunwoody, had lost her grown son, Steven, in a car accident in 2002. The grief of not having him with her on those two special days in 2009 was enough to want to make her leave the country. “I said I wanted to go Canada because Canada doesn’t celebrate Mother’s Day on the same day” as in the U.S., she said. After some thought, however, she decided to stay home and create a day for children who have endured the loss of a parent or when a parent is not home for the holiday, a day SPECIAL PHOTOS she dubbed “Other’s Day.” Leslie Greenberg, right, creator of Other’s Day, with Howie “I thought of the ‘others’ the Great, left, a magician, who will entertain the kids. who step up to take care of these children … and instead of making BY DYANA BAGBY it a sad occasion I decided I could make dyanabagby@reporternewspapers.net something positive and happy,” GreenWhen Leslie Greenberg’s birthday berg said. and Mother’s Day fell on the same day This year marks the seventh anniverseven years ago, she told her family she sary of Other’s Day. The celebration will was going to Canada. be held Sunday, May 1, from 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the Concourse Athletic Club in Sandy Springs. The event is open to children ages 6-15 and will include food, face painting, games and an appearance by Howie the Great, a magician. Those invited include children who had a mother or father who passed away, whose parent is serving in the military and not at home, or is in foster care because their mother or father is unable to care for them, Greenberg said. Also invited are widows and widowers; military families; divorced parents; foster parents; and also grandparents, and aunts and uncles who have custody of the children. “My goal is to provide a comfortable and fun place for the kids, and help them cope with the absence of their parent,” Greenberg said. Greenberg, a former teacher at the Galloway School, also lost her father when she was young, so she knows what it’s like to grow up without a parent. “When I was 9, my dad died, and in my day there weren’t any single parent families. I felt as if I was a square peg in a round hole,” she said. By bringing children together to celebrate, Greenberg says she wants them to find joy and understanding with those who are going through the same issues in life. “Children meet others who have gone through similar experiences … and adults also find comfort talking with others,

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Other’s Day Sunday, May 1 2:30-4:30 p.m. Concourse Athletic Club 8 Concourse Parkway Sandy Springs, GA 30328 RSVP required OthersDayRSVP@gmail.com leslierg@bellsouth.net

404-520-0190 like foster parents, widows, grandparents,” she said. “Now for me, I get back so much more, and I look forward to this all year long.” Children who came as youngsters continue to come back year after year, Greenberg said. Many are now old enough to be volunKaylah shows off some of her creative skills. teers, greeting a new generation of children to a fun day that is all “My mom passed away when I was 7 about them. from breast cancer, and Ms. Leslie would Kristin Yin, 18, a freshman at Georcome to my father’s restaurant, Chopgia State University majoring in nurssticks, and she told him about Other’s ing, attended the very first Other’s Day Day,” Yin said. when she was 11. Her father took her to Now that she’s in college, Yin volunthe event after learning about it from teers, returning to set up the activities Greenberg. and ensure children attending are busy

Face painting is part of the fun.

having a fun time, whether watching the magician or getting their faces painted. “I go back every year to help because it is important to me. I understand what the kids are going through,” she said. Yin said the event has definitely grown since she began attending when she was 11 – last year nearly 40 people were on hand. “This is a day for everyone to come and have fun,” she said. “It brings joy to the kids and they can make friends, too. Parents can also hear and share stories.” Talking one-on-one with the children is also important, Yin said. “I understand that day can bring sadness, but the empty part of that day is filled up by Other’s Day for me,” she said.

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10 | Dining Out

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enjoy it before doing I can the dishes before going barely keep to bed to get up in the count of all morning and do it all the posiover again. tive changes that signThe more time I can ing up for a Fresh save – by delivery, by automation, by remindHarvest subscripers – without going over budget, the happier tion has brought I am and the more time I have to actually ento my life. joy my food and my family. By my count, the Dining Out $55 I spend on Fresh Harvest every month The good people saves me about $10 in gasoline and six hours Megan Volpert of FH deliver a giMegan Volpert lives in ant box of extremeof shopping time. Decatur, teaches in Roly local and entireThe baskets come with cute notes, hapswell and writes books ly organic produce py thoughts, recipes, pictures, profiles on about popular culture. to my front door local farmers, information on charitable every two weeks. It’s just my wife and I at endeavors, and so on. The FH people themhome, so we get their smallest basket: $26.78, selves are always looking for ways to imincluding taxes and delivery. There are no prove community and health through food. hidden fees and no items I’m forced to eat if I I’ll skip the rant on food deserts, because we don’t like them. I get an email reminding me all know Atlanta has several. I mean, how to customize my basket and another letting close do you personally live to the nearest me know when I’ve been billed. Trader Joe’s, let alone the nearest farmer’s market? If you can see it out your front winBeyond what’s in my basket, I can add all kinds of other local products. Yes, Holedow, good for you, but most of us can’t. FH is reasonably priced enough to help bridge man + Finch baked goods can now be had in some of those neighborhood grocery gaps. your own home. Yes, you can add that juice cleanse package from Press Together JuicThe baskets themselves have all been so terrific, each in different ways. There’s the es you’ve been wanting to try. You can try one that caused me to call my mother and a pound of ground beef or a three-pound ask what I should do with shallots. There’s rump roast or experiment with bone marthe one that caused row. Get your milk and my wife to jump up eggs. Do you like granola? and down, squealing Do you know what raspthat parsnips are her berry kombucha tastes favorite thing ever. like? Are you running low There’s the one that on chia seeds, or coffee finally got me to learn beans, or ground turmerhow to peel a mango. ic, or brown rice? There’s the one where Like women everyI bartered a bunch of where, I do not have time Freebies are included in each delivery. fennel with a neighto work all day and then hit up two different grocery stores for all bor for two lemons from her own delivery. my ingredients, prep an amazingly fresh And often there are presents! Freebies dinner with those, then sit down to try to I’ve gotten so far: juice, granola, coffee, red

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Dining Out | 11

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cabbage, lemon. I’ve been preaching Fresh Harvest to basically every caring-but-busy person I know. I know about a lot of things, but I have no real idea what good produce looks like in the dead of winter or when fruits are precisely at peak of their season. Fresh Harvest is so awesome because these people – who are just over in Clarkston –

save me time and money, educate me and improve my health through access to better quality food, and encourage me to support local farmers and to be more neighborly. Fresh Harvest delivers to Intown, so give it a try at freshharvest.deliverybizpro.com. Megan Volpert lives in Decatur, teaches in Roswell and writes books about popular culture.

Quick Bites

Souper Jenny was expected to open her new flagship café April 2 on the Atlanta History Center campus. The new Souper Jenny will feature the familiar menu, but will have more seating (including an outdoor area) and a bookstore with titles by local authors and featuring Georgia history. CT Cocina & Taqueria plans to open later this spring in Sandy Springs, according to a report from Tomorrow’s News Today. The new fast-casual restaurant will open in place of Dickey’s Barbecue Pit, 6631 Roswell Road, which closed last month. CT will offer Mexican tacos and Latin dishes with a touch of international flavors.

19 north Georgia counties. Participating restaurants range from local favorites who have participated for over 15 years, such as The Colonnade, Agavé, Taqueria del Sol, Eclipse di Luna and Nicola’s, to more recent additions to the restaurant lineup, including Table & Main, Century House Tavern and White Oak Kitchen & Cocktails. For more information on Dining Out for Life and Open Hand, as well as to stay up-to-date on events and volunteer opportunities, visit diningoutforoh.org and openhandatlanta.com.

Chris Edwards has been named executive chef of Restaurant Eugene. Edwards was originally sous chef at the restaurant before leaving to helm the kitchen at Holeman and Finch Public House. The Tasting

Dining Out for Life to benefit Open Hand Atlanta is set for April 20 at more than 100 restaurants around metro Atlanta. Participating restaurants will donate 25 percent of the customer’s bill for breakfast, lunch or dinner to Open Hand. Proceeds will help the organization and its thousands of volunteers continue to prepare, pack and deliver over 5,000 healthy meals every day to underserved, chronically ill individuals across

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12 | Commentary

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Healthy Volunteers Needed for Inpatient Research Study

You may be eligible if you: ■ Are a healthy adult between 18 - 65 years of age. ■ Are unable to have children (e.g., vasectomy, tubal ligation, hysterectomy or post menopausal) or have no sexual behavior that could result in conception (e.g., gay men or lesbian women; or only sexually active with someone unable to have children). ■ Not a smoker and willing to not use alcohol, caffeine, and grapefruit products for 2 weeks. ■ Are not taking medications that cannot be stopped for 25 days.

The Study Involves: ■ 1 screening visit. ■ Taking an oral research medication once daily while in the hospital for 8 nights. ■ 5 Follow-Up clinic visits. ■ Compensation for time & travel; $50 for screening visit; $200 for each hospital day & $75 for follow-up visits.

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Waste not, want not I’m a “waste not, want not” type of gal. I believe I got that sensibility from my mother, who never met a scrap of wrapping paper that she couldn’t line shelves with. Whatever the reason, I’ve been reducing, reusing and recycling since green was a color, not a lifestyle. I was green before it was cool, before recycling was a household word, when people like me were merely called thrifty or frugal…or cheap. It started when I was in elementary school. I wrote assignments on both sides of my notebook paper until my teachers objected (and I was overruled). Still unable to justify an unused side of paper, I now recycle my kids’ schoolwork through our home printer. I’ve broken a $200 copy machine because I was using the back of an assignment that had a staple in it, but I still feel like I’m saving the planet, one reused sheet of paper at a time. It might be noble or it might be a sickness − you decide. But I won’t waste a handful of stale corn chips. I come from a long line of green women. My mother got her sense of resourcefulness from her mother and those of The Greatest Gener-

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ation whose attitudes permeated their society. They had no blue recycling bins, but that generation reused things until they were no longer Robin Conte is a writer recognizand mother of four who able. lives in Dunwoody. She I can be contacted at watched robinjm@earthlink.net. my Nana when I was young, and her approach made an impression on me. She, who grew zucchini and tomatoes, could create something wonderful out of the gnarly quince apples from her backyard. She, who would buy a whole chicken and use every bit of it, eating the livers fried with onions and cooking the gizzards in broth, then feeding them to the dog. She, who would tear old sheets into rags and use old nylons to stuff pillows and dolls. We’ve gotten away from that. We clean our homes with paper towels and we’re not making sock monkeys any more. And, let’s be honest − when’s the last time you stuffed a pillow? I’ve tried to adopt some of my Nana’s ways. I boil our Thanksgiving turkey carcass to make broth − all I get is tasteless greasy water, but it’s tasteless greasy water that I can feel good about. I’ve started growing tomatoes and zucchini. I use unmatched socks as dust rags. Like my mother, I’ll reuse the same piece of tin foil until there’s barely enough of it left to wrap a lemon rind. And I have become a woman who fills her kids’ plastic Easter eggs with leftover Christmas candy. There’s so much more that I could do. I could throw my abundant coffee grinds into my flower beds. I could follow Nana’s example by putting inedible vegetables into my blender and using that gross liquid to fertilize plants. I could make Cream of Unwanted soup out of broccoli stalks and asparagus stems. I could peel my own carrots. But for now I’ll continue with my daily habits of green living, like saving butter wrappers to grease baking pans…and take heart in the fact that there is more in my recycle bins than there is in my trash can. Robin Conte is a writer and mother of four who lives in Dunwoody. She can be contacted at robinjm@earthlink.net.

Robin’s Nest Robin Conte


APR. 01 - APR. 14, 2016

Commentary | 13

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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

Opinion/Park system turns 100 My two sons spent formative summers working in national parks. Our adventures in these spectacular landscapes provide memories that I hold particularly dear: paddling through Hance Rapid on the Colorado in Grand Canyon, meeting our Appalachian Trail thru-hiker in Shenandoah, sitting be-

for kings or the very rich,” wrote Burns, “but for everyone, for all time.” For the past century, people have shared experiences with family, friends and strangers in the more than 400 park units (totaling 84 million acres) that make up the national park system: passing on a love of land and place to the

side the Merced River in Yosemite with night approaching the granite face of Half Dome, catching a glimpse of wolves in Yellowstone, tubing the Virgin River in Zion and exploring the cliff dwellings in Mesa Verde. The invention of the national park system, said author Wallace Stegner, was America’s best idea: “absolutely American, absolutely democratic, they reflect us at our best rather than our worst.” In his six-part documentary, “The National Parks,” filmmaker Ken Burns told the story of this big idea, noting that we take for granted this unique American thing called national parks, just as we take for granted the air we breathe and the water we drink. “Great sections of our natural landscape set aside not

next generation. On August 25, 2016, the National Park Service – the federal agency charged with managing and protecting park units throughout the United States – will turn 100. A centennial celebration has already kicked off a second century of stewardship of America’s national parks with a focus on engaging people through recreation, conservation and historic preservation. Georgia is blessed with 10 national park units: three historic sites, three monuments, one recreation area, one seashore, one battlefield park and one military park. In 2012, about 5.8 million people visited the three national parks in metro Atlanta: Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area (NRA), Kennesaw

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 Staff 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 Office Manager Deborah Davis deborahdavis@reporternewspapers.net Contributors Robin Conte, Phil Mosier, Meagan 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. BH

Letter to the Editor

To the editor: The hopelessness of Atlanta’s congestion is evident by the responses in your community survey [“What do you think is the best way to address metro Atlanta’s transportation problems?” Reporter Newspapers March 18-March 31.]. All of your possible options involve the problem (more development), so therefore cannot be a solution in part or whole. Why didn’t you have the option to

curb development altogether? If the masses think that more development will yield less traffic and congestion woes, well, this is just plain dumb. Given the relatively high income groups of respondents, I think it is quite

Mountain National Battlefield Park and Martin Luther King Jr. National Historic Site. Ranking in the top 30 mostvisited national parks in the country, the Sally Bethea Chattahoochee River NRA annually offers recreation to 3.2 million people. With 6,500 acres, it also provides two-thirds of all the protected green space in metro Atlanta. America’s “best idea” should never be taken for granted, nor should it be overlooked that our parks must have adequate funding to operate, maintain and protect these national treasures. Park friends groups, such as the Chattahoochee Parks Conservancy, help build a community of support by raising funds and public awareness and providing volunteers for needed projects. One hundred years ago, the great conservationist Teddy Roosevelt could imagine all of us when he protected millions of acres for future generations. While we enjoy the fruits of his vision, we must do all we can to ensure that these places will continue to provide inspiration and connections for the next century. During this year of centennial celebration, I hope that you’ll visit as many national park units as possible, here in Atlanta and throughout the country. For more information about Atlanta’s national parks, visit nps.gov/chat, nps.gov/ kemo and nps.gov/malu. To learn about Chattahoochee Parks Conservancy and get involved, visit chattahoocheeparksconservancy.org.

likely that many own or are in businesses that thrive on high-density population and all the construction that goes with it. So, for these folks, a curb on construction will just not do. Rob Branson

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Residents give cautious nod to Perimeter Center, Pill Hill plans BY JOHN RUCH AND JOE EARLE Adding hundreds more housing units and a couple of hotels to Perimeter Center and Pill Hill is often a recipe for controversy. But two plans to do that at the Concourse Center and the Peachtree-Dunwoody Pavilion got a cautious welcome from residents for their smaller-scale, live-work concepts at March 22 meetings. “I think there is a lot of potential to take traffic off the roads, if people work and live right here,” said Trisha Thompson, president of the Sandy Springs Council of Neighborhoods, about the Concourse plan. Regents Partners LLC plans is proposing to build a 125-room hotel, 260plus apartments and a pair of restaurants in a $90 million addition to the Concourse development, home to the iconic “King” and “Queen” skyscrapers, at Peachtree-Dunwoody and Hammond roads. The company also plans to include a multi-use path along portions of Peachtree-Dunwoody Road and Hammond Drive, Sheldon Taylor, Regent’s chief financial officer, told about 14 people who attended the March 22 meeting at Concourse. That Concourse portion of the path would continue

northward the multi-use path Georgia DOT is building as part of the I-215/Ga. 400 interchange. “We’re really interested in PATH400,” Taylor said. “We just think it’s great.” Company officials hope to begin construction on the project by the end of the year and complete it within 22 or 23 months, he said. The company decided to add restaurants to Concourse, the development with the iconic “King” and “Queen” towers rising alongside I-285, after surveying tenants of the mixed-use development. The project is intended to “create a sense of place in Concourse, creating a place where people want to come,” he said. “We’re excited,” he said. “We really look forward to bringing the restaurants.” The restaurants, hotel and apartments are intended for an area of Concourse near the intersection of Hammond Drive and Peachtree-Dunwoody Road. “It’s going to change the look of the corner,” said Doug Falciglia, one of several members of the Sandy Springs Council of Neighborhoods who attended the meeting. Just a couple of blocks south at the 20-acre Peachtree Dunwoody Pavil-

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Sheldon Taylor, Regent Partners’ chief financial officer, explains company plans for a 125-room hotel, 260-plus apartments and a pair of restaurants at the Concourse Center.

“village-like environment” and enhance ion office park, the Simpson Organizaaccess to the pond. Along Peachtreetion plans a huge mixed-use redevelopDunwoody, he said, “the idea is we’re ment built around a new “Main Street” getting a more urban edge” with some with a bicycle trail. The plan includes a street-front retail space and the hotel. hotel and retail space; a 250-unit mulThe plan includes indirect access tifamily housing complex; an 11-story to the adjacent Medical Center MARoffice building; a 6-level parking deck; TA station. The developers were conand new restaurants around an existsidering a possible pedestrian bridge, ing pond. Three of four existing office but Halter said the plan now is for acbuildings on the site would remain. cess via a new parking garage with elThompson, the Council of Neighborevators that could carry bicycles. The hoods president, said at the March 22 access would not be directly into the meeting at the site that it’s good that station, but to an outdoor area near its the project includes much less densientrance. ty than allowed under its zoning. But, she added, “connectivity” and PeachtreeDunwoody traffic increases will be a concern. A traffic study is still pending and project officials said a widening of A Dunwoody Pavilion site rendering as seen from Lake Hearn Drive. Lake Hearn Boyd Simpson, president of the Drive at Peachtree-Dunwoody is a posSimpson Organization, said after the sibility. meeting that the hotel would include “It’s nice that it’s a downsizing,” some extended-stay rooms to be marThompson said. “It’s nice that it’s a keted to people visiting Pill Hill hospimix [of uses]. It’s nice that it’s going to tals. be bringing retail and restaurants into The developer is still seeking a partthis area, which is very needed.” ner for the multifamily housing porProject architect Bill Halter of the tion and no decision has been made on firm Cooper Carry showed “our big whether they would be rentals or ownidea, the Main Street.” The new road ership units, Simpson said. would curve through the site, connectThe developer is seeking rezoning ing Peachtree-Dunwoody Road and to allow the mixed use and a use perLake Hearn Drive through what is now mit for increased building height. The a patchwork of parking lots. The curproject is in an early stage and has not rent Peachtree-Dunwoody driveway been formally filed with the city yet. If would be moved about 120 feet north the project is approved, the earliest confor the new road. struction start would be late this year, A paved bike trail would run partly Simpson said. He estimated the new alongside the road and partly behind road and parking garage would take the housing at the site’s rear. Halter about a year to build, with the hotel and said a “bike valet” for visitors is a posmultifamily portions taking another 18 sibility. to 24 months. Halter said the plan would create a BH


APR. 01 - APR. 14, 2016

Community | 15

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New BIA head caught up in controversy at previous post

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forthright and candid about events surrounding her husband’s actions during her initial interview with the BIA The new head of the Board,” Langley said in a stateBrookhaven Innovation ment. Academy was caught up in a “As with every employee, controversy at her previous BIA undertook an extensive post in California, forcing her and thorough vetting process to resign before officially bewhile considering Dr. Kimginning a new job last year in brel’s overall qualifications. Chicago. Dr. Kimbrel is immensely Dr. Laurie Kimbrel was anqualified, and we are fortuDr. Laurie Kimbrel nounced as BIA’s new head of nate to have her on our team,” school on March 16. Last year, Langley stated. “Dr. Kimbrel’s though, she was selected to be the superenthusiasm for teaching children is evintendent of Chicago’s Township High ident, and her experience in the classSchool District 113 but resigned after room and as a superintendent made her the school district learned her husband the stand-out choice among 60 other was accused of cyberbullying while the highly qualified candidates. couple lived in California. “I’m very pleased as a mom of two fuAn independent investigation by the ture BIA students that she was chosen as Tamalpais Union school board cleared Head of School after multiple rounds of Kimbrel of any wrongdoing. in depth interviews she had with 10 indiBIA Board Chair Jennifer Langley viduals from our selection committee,” said she and other board members were Langley stated. aware of Kimbrel’s past before hiring Kimbrel issued a statement saying her. she is “honored and excited to be named “The Brookhaven Innovation Acadethe BIA head of school because the mismy board is fully aware of the facts sursion of the school is a close match with rounding Dr. Laurie Kimbrel’s husband. my professional passion and expertise.” We appreciate the fact that she was very dyanabagby@reporternewspapers.net

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16 | Community

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Transportation experts talk BeltLine transit, streetcar BY JOHN RUCH johnruch@reporternewspapers.net

2989 N. Fulton Drive, Suite B, Atlanta, GA 30305

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live and work at Canterbury Court:

Mattie Hickey-Middleton Exercise Specialist since 2005 Dancer • Swimmer • Exercise Therapist • Teacher Music Lover • Volunteer • Canterbury Court Ambassador

My motto is exercise AND socialize.

IT’S ALL ABOUT HAVING FUN! Running 17 exercise classes each week, plus private sessions with people recovering from injury or surgery, would surely exhaust an average person. Of course, Mattie’s far from average. She’s a bundle of energy who loves to dance, works a variety of music into her classes, and joins Canterbury’s walking club whenever she can, especially when they’re training for the annual Peachtree Road 10k. She says residents and staff are so much like family that she’s always encouraging people to move here.

Mattie invites you to discover her Canterbury Court.

3750 Peachtree Road, N.E. - Atlanta, Georgia 30319 - (404) 261-6611

ca nterb ur yco ur t.o rg Atlanta’s premier non-profit continuing care retirement community

cause it’s a “starter line” that will grow once it connects to other transit. And that could happen, he said, now that the state Legislature just passed a bill allowing Atlanta to seek a MARTA-funding sales tax increase. Parker said he thinks the Atlanta transportation package that will go before voters this fall “will include a healthy dose of what we think are smart connectors” linking Atlanta’s BeltLine path/park

MARTA aims to fund transit on Atlanta’s BeltLine this year and Sandy Springs just might run a streetcar on Roswell Road. Those were some of the ideas floated by experts, including MARTA CEO Keith Parker, at a March 29 “transportation summit” hosted by Leadership Sandy Springs at the Wyndham Atlanta Galleria hotel. The experts preached a “multimodal” solution to Perimeter commuter traffic, where many different types of transportation— walking, biking, driving, public transit—are all good and JOHN RUCH interconnected op- Sandy Springs Mayor Rusty Paul gets a front-row seat as (from left) MARTA CEO Keith Parker, Sandy Springs Assistant City tions. That’s a comManager Bryant Poole, PCIDs president and CEO Yvonne mon topic in local Williams and Christopher Tomlinson, executive director transportation discusof the Georgia Regional Transportation Authority talk at the Leadership Sandy Springs “transportation summit” sions, but the experts March 29 at the Wyndham Atlanta Galleria hotel. gave a few new insights and ideas. system and MARTA. The panel featured Parker, Bryant Parker called the potential AtlanPoole, Sandy Springs’ assistant city manta funding of MARTA a “very positive ager in charge of transportation planning; first step” in future expansion into FulGeorgia Regional Transportation Authoriton County. ty Executive Director Christopher Tomlinson; and Yvonne Williams, the Perimeter I-285/Ga. 400 traffic Center Improvement Districts president The Perimeter highway is both a soand CEO. The moderator was David Rublution and a problem to the transportainger, publisher of the Atlanta Business tion experts. Williams explained that the Chronicle and a Sandy Springs resident. state’s expansion of the I-285/Ga. 400 interchange, slated to begin early next A Roswell Road streetcar? year, will cause short-term traffic headSandy Springs has drawn attention in aches and long-term benefits, including recent months for talking about possible toll lanes that can double as future bus or futuristic mass transit, such as a monorail transit. rail or gondola system, for the Perimeter Williams said she expects the interCenter area. PCIDs and its three cities are change construction contract to be cerabout to launch a new study of such altertified by the state April 8, followed by a native transit options. clearer construction schedule. She said At the summit, Poole pitched yet anothshe expects the Ga. 400 work will be done er idea: “Trolley service up and down Rofirst because the state still has some land swell Road.” He said the city is considering acquisition issues along I-285. that as one of many options in its master Another big impact coming to I-285 planning process. A Roswell Road streetnext year is the new Atlanta Braves stacar might require taking away one lane in dium in Cobb County. While there is a each direction from private vehicle traffic, lot of talk about game-day impacts, Poole he said. “I’m already seeing the reaction on said the overall mixed-use development people’s faces” that they find the idea imaround the stadium “is what we all should possible, Poole said, but noted some other be scared of” in traffic terms, suggesting cities are making streetcars work. an ongoing traffic boost. “We’re looking for the future. We’re Many different solutions are in dislooking for the greatest technology to cussion. Tomlinson and Williams are make things better,” Poole said. working on expanding GRTA’s Xpress commuter bus service between Cobb and Perimeter Center. And Poole said the city MARTA expansion continues to talk with Cobb about a poAtlanta has a new streetcar that isn’t tential bigger interchange at I-285 and doing so well, but Parker said that’s bePowers Ferry Road.

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Community | 17

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Piedmont Healthcare has received a gift of $75 million from the Marcus Foundation to support the growth of Piedmont Heart Institute.

SPECIAL

Piedmont Healthcare receives millions from Marcus Foundation BY GEORGIA HEALTH NEWS

to participate with Piedmont in this exciting endeavor that will bring the best Piedmont Healthcare has received of cardiac care to the city of Atlanta a gift of $75 million from the Marcus and the state of Georgia. The new faFoundation to support the growth of cility will enable Piedmont to achieve Piedmont Heart Institute and help degoals that would have only remained velop a major project at the dreams at the present locasystem’s Buckhead camtion.’’ pus. The Marcus Foundation The foundation gift is gave $20 million to Piedthe second largest ever mont in 2012 to establish a made to a community hosheart valve center. pital in the United States, The Marcus FoundaPiedmont said. tion has made other huge The vision is to create gifts to Atlanta health a “destination’’ heart procare. Two years ago, Grady SPECIAL gram that will be a nationBernie Marcus, coHealth System received founder of Home Depot al draw, like the Cleveland $30 million from the Marand chairman of the Clinic in Ohio, and ensure cus Foundation to help exMarcus Foundation, that “no Georgian has to wants to create a pand its hospital’s emerleave Georgia for heart “destination” heart gency department, and its program at Piedmont. and vascular care,’’ Kevstroke and neuroscience in Brown, Piedmont presicenter. dent and CEO, told GHN. That was the second major gift to “This gift is unbelievably generous,’’ Grady from the foundation. he said. A gift of $20 million in 2009 paved Bernie Marcus, co-founder of Home the way for the opening of the Marcus Depot, and chairman of the foundation, Stroke and Neuroscience Center the said in a statement that “we are happy following year.

Eaves: County will address AIDS, jail BY JOE EARLE joeearle@reporternewspapers.net

A group of Buckhead businesspeople were told on March 24 that Fulton County officials plan to address the spread of HIV/ AIDS and criminal justice reform. Fulton Commission Chairman John Eaves said 15,000 people in the county have been diagnosed with HIV/AIDS, one of the highest rates of infection in the nation. “We’re going to address HIV/AIDS in some aggressive ways,” Eaves said. Eaves said county officials plan to expand testing for HIV/AIDS through county public health centers and Grady Hospital, which he said was the way many people BH

discover they have contracted the virus. He also called for an end to school sex education programs based on teaching abstinence. “I think the day of having an abstinence-based sex education in our school system is over,” he said. Eaves said criminal justice reform was needed to reduce the number of people in local jails. “We’re beginning to look at reform of our criminal justice system to make sure the people who drop out of school don’t end up in the criminal justice system,” he said. “Jails can’t be the default system for how you house people who are mentally ill.”

18th Annual Montag Family Community Lecture Series Patricia Kuhl, Ph.D. Internationally renowned expert on early language acquisition, brain development and learning

presents

Building the Baby Brain: The Importance of a Child’s First 2000 Days Why are young children the most creative creatures on the planet, and how do they learn more in the first 5 years of life than during any other 5-year period in their lifetimes? Dr. Kuhl will take you on a visual tour of brain development through the first 2000 days of a child’s life, and illustrate infants’ remarkable abilities to learn and the role we play in developing a child’s mind in the early period that prepares them for school and for life.

Thursday, April 14 7:00 pm Atlanta Speech School Love Auditorium

There is no charge to attend but space is limited. Reserve online at atlantaspeechschool.org/montag by April 12. Contact Pam Crockett at pcrockett@atlantaspeechschool.org for more information.

This event is made possible by the support of the Montag family, our faithful friends and supporters of the Atlanta Speech School.


18 | Education

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School officials call for parents to support SPLOST extension

Andrew Wu

Pace Academy, senior

the technical, small-scale Andrew Wu is into a details involved in those bit of everything. He’s a joeearle@reporternewspapers.net same scientific developmember of Pace Acadments.” emy’s robotics team, a Atlanta school officials are askThe activity Andrew participant in the poliing parents to turn out in the May is most passionate about, cy simulation programs 24 election to support an extension however, is writing his Model Arab League and of the special local option sales tax. book: “Space, Time, and Model United Nations “We believe [the tax is] importhe Universe: A Compreand active in the Junior tant to provide safe and vital plachensive Guide to the Finer Classical League. He also es for our children to learn,” school Points of Astronomy and plays the violin in Pace’s board member Cynthia Briscoe Astrophysics.” He’s been strings ensemble. Brown told about 40 people atworking on it since sevOutside of school, AnAndrew Wu tending the March 23 meeting of enth grade. He’s intensedrew interned with the the North Atlanta Parents for Publy interested in astrophysics and says he National Center for Civil and Human lic Schools. “We need you to get the JOE EARLE hopes to introduce the subject to a largRights in the summer of 2015, frequentword out.” Atlanta school board members, left to er audience. ly volunteers with the Atlanta CommuniThe 1-cent-on-a-dollar sales tax right, Matt Westmoreland, Cynthia Briscoe “I enjoy learning all different subty Food Bank, and has traveled on several Brown, Nancy Meister and Jason Esteves is expected to raise about $465 miljects as well as many outside of the main service trips with his church. talk with parents at Bolton Academy. lion for the schools over five years, And he spends his free time Brown told parents gathered at writing a book on astrophysics. Bolton Academy. It would extend the sales tax first imposed in 1998, she said. “I would like to emphasize the About $330 million raised through the 2016 SPLOST will be spent on construction importance of every activity I have projects and maintenance, she said. participated in, since they have Another $47 million would go to improvements in technology, she said, while $16 each contributed an aspect of unmillion will be spent on buses, $9 million on safety and security improvements, and anderstanding the world,” said Another $9 million on athletic facilities. About $36 million will be used to pay debts owed school curriculum,” said Andrew. drew. “Scientific committees at Modby the district, she said. His love of learning finds admirers at el UN conferences showed me the inner “If we don’t have this to spend on needs and maintenance, we have to divert monPace. workings of global politics and how it ey,” she said. “Every dollar we don’t get from SPLOST is a dollar we have to divert [from “Andrew has a never-ending supply of functions with scientific developments other district needs].” intellectual curiosity, a truly breathtakon a large scale, while robotics taught me ing intuitive grasp of grammar and synty tax, and an unparalleled work ethic,” said i W n 1 mu . str 0 yea e can m Andrew’s Latin teacher Elizabeth Kann. o u s r of c tu w ar rc ral arra fer a His achievements have been recyou 15 ye n g con t v i n ver str y on ognized in many different ways, on a u S e r fo r o ct i Ins ed on. ure school, state and national level. ens d Lic Andrew has received the Faculty Award for Scholarship, the University of Pennsylvania Book Award, the Georgia Certificate of Merit and the Oxford Classical Dictionary Memorial Award. He is a member of the National Honor Society, the Cum Laude Society and is an AP Scholar with Distinction. He also is one of Pace’s two 2016 STAR students for his high SAT score. Andrew also enjoys video games, watching movies, writing, and playing the violin, tennis and soccer. “Andrew is going to make a difference, wherever he chooses to direct his myriad of talents and unparalleled motivation to learn,” Kann said. What’s Next: Andrew plans to attend Princeton University, where he hopes to Patios/Pool Decks Pools & Spas Outdoor Kitchens Arbors study physics, philosophy and psycholoBrick & Stone Chimneys/Fireplace Decorative Concrete/Pavers gy, and then pursue a career in astrophysics. Decks • Driveways Efflorescence Cleaning Grading & Drainage This article was reported and written by Historical Restorations Retaining Walls Stone Patio Restoration Catherine Benedict, a senior at The West& Sealing Stone/Tile Deck Waterproofing & Leak Repair minster Schools. BY JOE EARLE

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CORRECTION The wrong photograph appeared with the Standout Student article about Luke Muehring published in Reporter Newspapers editions dated March 18-March 31. Here is his photograph.

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‘Miss Jane’ wraps up ‘a great run’ at NYO Continued from page 1 center of Chastain’s ball fields, where thousands of boys and girls from Buckhead, Sandy Springs and other metro Atlanta communities have learned about sports and competition through the teams of the Northside Youth Organization. Some NYO players have gone on to play for local high schools, for colleges, for teams in the major leagues or NFL. “There’s not a [youth sports] program anywhere like this,” Wilkins said proudly as she sat at her desk one recent morning and fielded a steady stream of questions from volunteers who were working on NYO leagues and teams. Wilkins, who’s 75, plans to retire at the end of this season, so in March, NYO added a new honor to the resume of the gre-

garious woman everyone seems to know simply as “Miss Jane.” The manicured baseball field just up the hill from Wilkins’ office, the premier field, now bears her name. A new scoreboard marking “Jane Wilkins Bronco Field” was unveiled during NYO’s opening day ceremonies. “It’s my field,” she said with a grin. Wilkins says the NYO sports program, which turns 67 this fall, now includes about 5,000 participants in five sports – baseball, football, softball, boys’ and girls’ basketball and cheerleading – and has become the largest and oldest multi-league sports program in the South. She’s quick to credit others with the growth of the program that started with football for middle-school-aged boys. “We have two commissioners who have been with us more than 20 years,” she said. “The

success has been the board and commissioners and ladies’ auxiliary. The children are our stars. That’s the special part.” But parents who gathered to honor Wilkins in March were quick to give her a share of the credit. “She’s just the best,” parent Alan Roos said as volunteers wearing red “Jane Wilkins Opening Day” T-shirts laid out small squares of cake to celebrate Wilkins’ final season. “This is her family,” Roos said. “It’s always been her family. What makes Miss Jane special is she treats everybody like family. Her office door is always open.” Wilkins has worked for the organization for 40 years – “five years as a volunteer, 35 of them paid,” she said. In the beginning, she worked out of her home, she said. NYO papers covered her dining room table back then. Over the years, she’s done a lit-

10 Reasons why you’ll love us...

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tle bit of everything for NYO: put together yearbooks, raised money, headed the ladies’ auxiliary. “I was just a sucker for it. I loved every minute,” she said. “And I just kind of worked up the ladder.” It paid off. “She’s held this whole thing together through thick and thin – and there have been some thin years. She’s been a constant source of strength,” said Geoff Anderson, who said he’d coached NYO teams for 16 years. She’s just class,” Anderson said. “A real sort of Southern finesse. She can say difficult things without making it sound rude or bad. It’s a real gift. She’s always got a smile.” Wilkins said the best thing about her job at NYO involved people she got to know. Continued on page 20

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20 | Community

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‘Miss Jane’ wraps up ‘a great run’ at NYO Continued from page 19 She’s watched three generations in some families take the field. “The friendships I’ve made, that’s the great part,” she said. “I’m going to a wedding next month of a child who played here. I’ve known her since she was itty-bitty.” Wilkins hopes to stay “somewhat active” at NYO after retirement. “What do they say? ‘Close a door and open a window?’ Maybe that’s what will happen. It’s all good. Whatever it is, it is.” She said she’s been named an emeritus member of the organization’s board. “I’ll get to keep my finger in the pie, if you will,” she said. Besides, she said, she likes to work the scoreboard on the field that now bears her name. “I don’t want to stay too long...,” she said. “It’s bittersweet. I’d like to come and visit and hug the children and do the parts I love. It is time to turn it over ... As they say in sports, ‘It’s been a great run.’” Top right, going clockwise, the Northside Youth Organization launched its new season March 19 at Chastain Park with thanks for Jane Wilkins, center, for her 35 years of service to the organization. Wilkins retires after the baseball season. Far right, Wyatt Botha, left, and Ray Rooker, pose during the Opening Day parade. Right, Klyce Thomas, center, watches the festivities. Below, NYO alumni take “a bow” on the field. At left, Buckhead Baseball also started its new season on March 19 at Frankie Allen Park in Buckhead. Will Rogers, back, assists Bentley-Grace Hicks run the bases during Buddy Baseball. PHOTOS BY KATE AWTREY

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Out & About | 21

Local farmers markets reopen for the season

Warm weather has returned, bringing with it the annual rebirth of daffodils, dogwoods and community farmers markets. Here are some markets sprouting locally. Brookhaven Farmers Market Brookhaven’s market opens April 16. It operates on Saturdays from 9 a.m. until noon, and is scheduled to continue operation through Dec. 10, according to the market website. It is to be located at 1375 Fernwood Circle NE and Dresden Drive, the website says. Information: brookhavenfarmersmarket.com. Heritage Sandy Springs Farmers Market The Sandy Springs market opens April 16 at Century Springs East, 6100 Lake Forrest Drive. The market is scheduled to open from 8:30 a.m. until noon on Saturdays through Oct. 29. Mini-markets with shorter hours are planned in November and December. The market features live music and up to 50 vendors offering fresh, local produce, pasture-raised meat, fresh eggs, dairy products and a variety of prepared foods. Information: sandyspringsfarmersmarket.com or facebook.com/sandyspringsfarmersmarket. Peachtree Road Farmers Market Located in the parking lot at Cathedral of St. Philip, 2744 Peachtree Road in Buckhead, the market reopens for the season on April 2 from 8:30 a.m. to noon and continues every Saturday through mid-December. There will also be a new Wednesday night market from April 13 to Oct. 26 from 4:30 to 8 p.m. Information: peachtreeroadfarmersmarket.com.

Help Mom be a Better Senior Driver !

Experience matters. Let us show you why. By any measure, 28 years of experience in senior living is a lot. And through the years, we’ve helped many people find a lifestyle perfectly suited to them. Our secret? We listen. And we’ve found that every person’s need or desire to move is incredibly unique. We’ve created equally unique places to live with great social opportunities, fine dining, accredited care services, and more. All with you in mind. Come see how good it feels to have experience on your side. Please call The Piedmont today to schedule your complimentary lunch and tour.

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.

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22 | Out & About

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BROOKHAVEN

CHOOSE ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS Preschool Open House K-6th Grade Open House 7th-12th Grade Open House Campus tours

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Saturday, April 9, 8:30 a.m. It’s time for the 34th annual Pace Race, on a flat course, right in the heart of Buckhead. Starts and ends at Pace Academy, just minutes from the Governor’s Mansion. 1-mile Fun Run starts at 8:30; 5K at 9 a.m.; 10:15 awards ceremony. $35. Tshirt, Peachtree qualifier. Food trucks, live music. Proceeds benefit school’s Booster Club. 966 W. Paces Ferry Rd., Atlanta, 30327. For details and registration: paceacademy.org.

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FAMILY DNA Thursday, April 7, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Parents and children use hands-on activities to learn how DNA makes us unique. Additional session at 1 p.m. Free. All are welcome. For those ages 5 and up. Space is limited. Registration required and started Jan. 5. Visit the Sandy Springs Branch Library, call 404-303-6130 or email: leah.germon@fultoncountyga.gov with questions or to sign up. 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328.

CHASTAIN CHASE Sunday, April 17, 8 a.m. Join others for the annual 5K/1-mile walk/run Chastain Chase, benefiting the Cancer Support Community of Atlanta. $30. Tot trot also available. Race winds through Chastain Park. Treats from Fresh Market at finish line. Meet at The Galloway School, 215 West Wieuca Rd., NW, Atlanta, 30342. For questions and to register: cancersupportcommunityatlanta.org.

LEARN SOMETHING! Monday, April 4, 10 a.m. Join others at Perimeter Adult Learning & Services, Inc. Select from: Indian tribes of the Great Plains; music; Atlanta/Dunwoody real estate market; finance; early U.S. presidents; art of the Middle Ages, part 2; Election 2016; Shakespeare’s battle of the sexes; Bridge; and Mahjongg. Detailed brochures available by calling 770-698-0801 or visiting: palsonline.org. Classes continue through May 23. Dunwoody United Methodist Church, 1548 Mount Vernon Rd., Dunwoody, 30338.

FUNCTIONAL MEDICINE Restoration by Henry Schwartz www.papermilldental.com 404-596-5727

disease instead of just the symptoms. Understand how to integrate functional medicine into your health care. For adult audiences. Sandy Springs Branch Library, 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328. For additional information or to register, call 404-441-2380 or email: Cassandraw@mixwithintegrity.com.

Wednesday, April 6, 6:30-8 p.m. Learn about the benefits, risks and limitations of genetic testing for breast and ovarian cancer. Q&A session follows presentation. Free. For members of the Cancer Support Community. RSVP to 404-8431880. 5775 Peachtree-Dunwoody Rd., Building C, Suite 225, Atlanta, 30342. For further details: cancersupportcommunityatlanta.org.

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Saturday, April 16, 7:30 p.m. Garden Hills Elementary School holds its 27th annual Evening in the Garden fundraiser at MercedesBenz of Buckhead. Includes both silent and live auctions, entertainment and food. Tickets: $65 in advance; $75 at the door. Proceeds benefit the school’s programs. 2799 Piedmont Rd., NE, Atlanta, 30305. Purchase tickets and find out more: eveninginthegarden.com.

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WILD EDIBLES Saturday, April 9, 10-11:30 a.m. Interested in urban foraging? Join Jerry Hightower of the National Park Service for an interactive program about wild edibles of the urban forest. Inspect plant specimens up close, then hike Blue Heron Nature Preserve and discover “treats” on the property. $10, adult; $5 child; 3 and under, free. RSVP to 678-315-0836. 4055 Roswell Rd., Atlanta, 30342. Information and register: bhnp.org.

SHEEP TO SHAWL Saturday, April 9, 10:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. Learn about cloth making though demonstrations ranging from sheep shearing and dyeing to spinning and weaving. Day includes open hearth cooking, blacksmithing, candle making and more at Smith Family Farm. Free for Atlanta History Center members. Non-member adults: $16.50; seniors/students: $13; children: $11. 130 West Paces Ferry Rd., NW, Atlanta, 30305. Get tickets and details at: atlantahistorycenter.com or call 404-814-4000.

PROPERTY BROTHERS Wednesday, April 13, 7:30 p.m. HGTV’s “Property Brothers,” identical twins Jonathan and Drew


APR. 01 - APR. 14, 2016

Out & About | 23

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Scott, reveal secrets from their book, “Dream Home: The Property Brothers’ Ultimate Guide to Finding & Fixing Your Perfect House.” $10, MJCC members; $15, nonmembers. Marcus Jewish Community Center - Atlanta, 5342 Tilly Mill Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. For more information, visit: atlantajcc.org or call 678-8124000.

UKRAINIAN EGGS Saturday, April 16, 2-3:30 p.m. Come learn the history of Ukrainian Easter traditions, and the symbolism and basic techniques of Ukrainian Easter egg painting. Have fun and paint, and make an Ukrainian-style Easter egg. Free and open to all. For adults, ages 18 and up. Open to the first 25 participants. Call 770-512-4640 or visit the Dunwoody Branch Library to sign up. 5339 Chamblee-Dunwoody Rd., Dunwoody, 30338.

GO ARTSY PLANT & ART SALE Thursday, April 7, 11 a.m.-7 p.m. The Dunwoody Community Garden and Orchard celebrates spring with a plant sale and art show. Check out vegetables, flowers and other plants at the greenhouse opposite the Brook Run skateboard park. Sale continues through April 17. Learn more: www.dcgo.org. In addition, the Dunwoody Fine Arts Association showcases art for sale at the greenhouse “barn,” April 8-April 10. Go to www.dunwoodyfineart.org for details. 4770 Georgia Way S. Dunwoody, 30338.

JAZZ SHOWCASE

Thursday, April 7, 7:30 p.m. Enjoy this rare Atlanta appearance by one of the most acclaimed men and boys’ choirs in the world, from Cambridge, England. Choir has recorded on international labels including EMI, Decca, Chandos, Hyperion and Naxos. Tickets: $10 to $150. The Cathedral of St. Philip, 2744 Peachtree Rd., NW, Atlanta, 30305. Find out more by calling 404365-1000 or going to: stphilipscathedral.org.

SOUTHERN CRESCENT CHORALE

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

SPOTLIGHT Tuesday, April 12, 5:30-9 p.m. For one night only, the Marcus Jewish Community Center-Atlanta’s Blonder Family Department for Special Needs’ theater company holds auditions for its new program, Spotlight. Free for special needs adults 18+. Participants meet weekly Aug. 26-April 30, 2017. Must have appointment to audition. Morris & Rae Frank Theatre, 5342 Tilly Mill Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. Call 678-812-4073 or email: auditions@atlantajcc.org to schedule a time.

‘MOON OVER BUFFALO’ Friday, April 15, 8 p.m. “Moon Over Buffalo” is a comedic farce, centering on a couple of fading stars in 1953 who have a last shot at stardom when director Frank Capra attends one of their performances. Of course, everything that can go wrong does go wrong! Tickets: $15$23. Go to: act3productions.org for additional show times, details and tickets. Act3 Productions, 6285-R Roswell Rd., NE, Sandy Springs, 30328. Call 770-241-1905 with questions.

Sunday, April 17, 2-4 p.m. The Jewish Tower, in conjunction with Jewish Family and Career Services, hosts their annual “Art Out Loud” show. Features artists in age from 5891. Browse abstract paintings, watercolor and collage. Enjoy tasty treats, music videos and a live raffle. Jewish Tower Rec Room, 3160 Howell Mill Rd., NW, Atlanta, 30327. Call 770-6779300 x9344 for further information.

KIDS’ STUFF

POTTERY & ART SALE Friday, April 8, 10 a.m. Check out a wide variety of high-quality ceramics, glass, jewelry and more created by Spruill Center students and instructors at this 10th annual sale. Free and open to the public. Additional dates: April 9, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. and April 10, 12-5 p.m. Spruill Education Center, 5339 Chamblee-Dunwoody Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. For further details, visit: spruillarts.org or call 770-394-3447.

Session 1: June 6 - July 1 Session 2: July 11 - August 5

Sunday, April 10, 7:30-9:30 p.m. Georgia State University’s Jazz Ensemble Band performs a night of authentic jazz, with a Georgia twist. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. Tickets: $22.50 for first-come, first-served table seating; $17.50 for lawn seating. Cash bar available; no outside alcohol. Learn more and buy tickets: chattnaturecenter.org. Chattahoochee Nature Center, 9135 Willeo Rd., Roswell, 30075. Call 770-9922055 for additional information.

‘ART OUT LOUD’ ST. JOHN’S CHOIR

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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 t u r e , I n s p i r a t 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!

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has an extensive Frequently Asked Questions section for first-time camper families and several enjoyable videos!

Read all of our publications online FAMOUS ARTIST

Friday, April 8, 4-4:45 p.m. Join others for stories and discussions about Kandinsky, the feaSunday, April 10, 4 p.m. Southern Crescent Chotured artist of the month. Then, be inspired rale has performed in cathedrals in Milan, Berto create a masterpiece of your own! Free. lin, Vienna and Spain, entertaining with choral Open to the first 10 participants. Appropriate works, opera, spirituals and Broadway favorfor ages 7-12. To register or find out more, call ites. Hear them accompany the Bosendorfer Im770-512-4640. Dunwoody Branch Library, 5339 perial Grand Piano in Dunwoody United MethChamblee-Dunwoody Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. odist Church. Suggested donation, $10. 1548 Mount Vernon Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. Learn more: southSUBMIT YOUR EVENT LISTING WITH US AT erncrescentchorale.org. calendar@ReporterNewspapers.net

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24 | Community

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APR. 01 - APR. 14, 2016

Community | 25

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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 Margie at (404) 252-4244 ext: 1 or lessons@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

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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

SUMMER CAMPS REGISTER TODAY! Hawks.com/jrhawkscamps 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 | Community

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BEYOND CAMP FREE W EEK *

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Spend the summer in our creativity lab exploring art, getting messy, and having a blast. Sign up now for your chance to flex your art muscles in one of our awesome weeklong camps. Dates: June 13–17 | June 20–24 | June 27–July 1 | July 11–15 | July 18–22 | July 25–29 | Aug 1–5*

For information or to register, visit high.org/camp or call 404-733-4586. * No camp July 4–8.

Atlanta InTown April 2016.indd 1

3/17/16 3:28 PM


APR. 01 - APR. 14, 2016

Community | 27

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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

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28 | Classifieds

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APR. 01 - APR. 14, 2016

Community | 29

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Remembering history amidst rapid progress BY DYANA BAGBY dyanabagby@reporternewspapers.net The sounds of trucks rumbling through parking lots and MARTA roaring overhead are not enough to drown out the tranquility of the Stephen Martin Cemetery. Tucked behind the strip mall where Best Buy is located, in the shadows of the looming State Farm headquarters under construction and next to the proposed Crown Towers high-rise development on the Gold Kist site, this small slice of land remains untouched by the rapid advancement of Perimeter Center. The cemetery is not new to major development. Dunwoody historians say I-285 was rerouted because of the cemetery, said Jim Williams, vice president of property for the Dunwoody Preservation Trust. At one time, a road ran alongside the cemetery and was used as a cut through to Ashford-Dunwoody Road. That road is long overgrown and a rusty chain remains that was hung from trees years ago to deter the traffic. The proposed Westside Connector roadway would also run right next to the cemetery. “This is an isolated, unknown treasure,” said Traci Rylands, a self-described “cemetery nut” who writes the blog “Adventures in Cemetery Hopping.” “It’s very precious. It’s a piece of Dunwoody history that can’t be replaced,” she said. Finding the Stephen Martin Cemetery is not easy. The main access is by parking behind the strip mall and seeking out the mostly grass path that leads into the cemetery. A small sign put up by the Dunwoody Preservation Trust also signals its entrance. Built in the 1850s, the cemetery has 44 known tombstones. The cemetery is named for Stephen Martin. Two of his daughters, Naomi and Sophia, married into the Spruill family, a prominent family in the history and creation of Dunwoody. The Spruill family owned the farm land

where the malls are located and sold it to developers in the early 1970s, Rylands said. But they made sure to protect the small plot of land where their ancestors were buried.

‘Should get more respect’

Glen Fuse, a volunteer with the Dunwoody Preservation Trust, began clearing the overgrown lot two years ago and the cemetery remains in the care of the trust today. Many of the plots are unmarked or marked by unlabeled rock mounds or walls. “The last burial was in 1992. A Confederate veteran is buried here and also a World War I veteran,” Fuse said. “Who knows how many are really buried here.” Fuse said he had heard about the cemetery and decided to look for it. When he found it, the weeds were high and a small path leading to the cemetery overgrown. Now he takes it upon himself to mow and weed and generally care for the cemetery. “I thought they should get more respect,” he said of those buried there. Fuse also enlisted the help of the Dunwoody High School football team who spent hours last summer clearing out heavy brush to expose the tombstones and other unmarked field stones that mark graves. Eagle Scouts have built benches for the cemetery and a kiosk that includes a history of the cemetery.

Encroaching development

When the proposed Crown Towers development came into the picture, members of the trust met with the property owner, Crown Holdings Group. Williams said both sides want the cemetery to remain as it is. The developers have also said they see the land as a bonus for those living in the highrises to look down and see a spot of peacefulness along all the rapid development of the 21st century, said Williams. “It’s a piece of the past, and that’s why

DYANA BAGBY

From left, Glen Fuse, a volunteer with the Dunwoody Preservation Trust, his grandson, Cesare Granozio, and Jim Williams, vice president of property for the Dunwoody Preservation Trust, take a look at the Stephen Martin Cemetery near Best Buy.

the Dunwoody Preservation Trust was formed,” Williams said. “While it’s a small plot, people in tall areas [in the highrises] can look down on this. Our view is this is an amenity for them.” Fuse said it’s not unusual to see people sitting on the benches reading their phones or eating lunch. Williams said Crown Holdings Group have been accommodating neighbors so far and the developers have even suggested funding landscaping projects to ensure the cemetery remains an amenity for those living in the condos and working in the office buildings. Rachel Black, the cemeteries expert at the Historic Preservation Division at the Georgia Department of Natural Resources, said as development increases, the situation of development encroaching on cemeteries comes up more and more. But this is not a new issue – back in the 1980s when strip malls were being built, they often abutted family cemeteries, she

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Saturday, April 9, 2016 – Buckhead Baptist Church, 4100 Roswell Rd NE between 9:00 am – 5:00 pm. There will be live music, a bouncy house with face painting for the kids and delicious food for sale. Call 404-255-5112 or email: info@ buckheadbaptist.org for more information.

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Driveways & Walkways – Replaced or repaired. Masonry, grading, foundations repaired, waterproofing and retaining walls. Call Joe Sullivan 770-616-0576. Property Management and Maintenance Services – any type of property. Good record keeping, 24 yrs experience and References available. Email: Alphaco@comcast.net or call 770-804-9931.

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said. State law mandates that if there is an abandoned cemetery, no development or use of property can change without a permit from the local government, she said. Relocating a cemetery is not an easy process, nor a cheap one. And when a cemetery is obviously being cared for, developers often work with families and caretakers to work out a solution together to protect the integrity of the cemetery, she said. Williams predicts there will only be more development and eventually the cemetery will be blocked in by highrises. “This strip mall will eventually be torn down to make way for towers,” he said. “You can’t stop progress. So you might as well work with the system, and I think that’s what we’re doing,” he said. “I think this cemetery will be remembered even more as the development comes along.”

Drivers Wanted Senior Services North Fulton, a non-profit organization, has an opportunity for drivers in their transportation voucher program. If you live in the Sandy Springs or Roswell area of north Fulton, would like to earn some extra money, set your own hours, like to drive, have a car, and like to be of service to seniors, please contact Mobility Manager at

(770) 993-1906 ext. 242

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30 | Public Safety

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Police Blotter / Buckhead Buckhead police reports recorded from March 6 through March 19 The following information was provided to the Buckhead Reporter by the Zone 2 Precinct of the Atlanta Police Department and is presumed to be accurate.

R O B B E RY  600 block of Morosgo Drive – During

the day on March 8, a taxi driver told police he picked up three young men from Eastside Avenue. The men told him to stop at a gas station. Then they put something behind his head and demanded his money. The taxi driver said he gave them $49, and then the three fled on foot and jumped on a MARTA train to escape. A phone number used to call the cab was saved.

R E S I D E N T I A L B U R G L A RY  300 block of Garden Lane NW – On

March 6, sometime during the day, a safe containing a passport was taken from a house.  3600 block of Cloudland Dr. NW –

On March 9, during the day, a man told police someone bent the garage door rod to his home, and the door connect-

ing the garage to the home interior was damaged. A Stihl backpack blower and Home Depot weed eater were taken. The burglar only entered the garage.  300 block of Hillside Dr. NW – On

March 9, someone pried open the window to a house, but entered through an unsecured window after the prying was unsuccessful. Taken during the daytime burglary were an Xbox One, iPad Air, studio headset, camera lens and film, and sterling silver items.  2600

block of Forrest Ave. NW – On March 10, someone shattered the side kitchen window of a house during the day. Two flat screen TVs, a MacBook Pro and a MacBook Mini taken from the residence.

 1300 block of Collier Road NW – On

March 11, during the evening, a woman told police she went out the back door of her apartment to walk her dog. When she came back in she saw two young men in the front of her apartment. She yelled, “Hey, what are you doing?” The men grabbed her iPod from the counter and ran out the front door. 

200 block of Colonial Homes Drive NW – During the morning shift on March 16, the front door of an apartment was damaged. The resident, who was out of town, told police she could see two men inside her home via home security cameras.

 1100 block of Moores Mill Road NW – On March 17, during the day, someone entered a home through the back door and took a TV, shotgun, silverware, an Xbox One and multiple power tools.  3200 block of Lenox Road NE – On an

unknown date and time, the door lock of a house was pried off and a laptop computer and $200 in cash were taken.  1100 block of Lavista Road NE –

During the day on March 17, the front door deadbolt of an apartment was pried open. A Toshiba laptop, Samsung Galaxy tablet, a Xbox One, NXW watches and Ray Ban sunglasses were taken.

the front door from forced entry.  3300 block of Piedmont Road – Dur-

ing the day on March 15, a hotel employee told police three rooms were entered using a floor key. Three LG 40-inch flat screen TVs were taken from the unoccupied rooms.  2000 block of Peachtree Road NE –

On the morning of March 15, a rock was thrown through the front door of a business. Gucci, Louis Vuitton and Chanel bags, valued at $50,000, were taken. Surveillance footage shows six to eight men get out of a white Jeep and break the window.  2500 block of Piedmont Road NE –

On the morning of March 15, someone used a crow bar to pry open the door to a cellphone store. A MiFi Hotspot (mobile WiFi) was stolen.  1800 block of Emery Street NW – On

March 19, someone pried open the rear door of a construction trailer. A flat screen TV, Home Depot credit cards, three Makita drills and two laptops were taken.

THEFTS/LARCENIES  There were 33 thefts from vehicles and

26 other thefts, including shoplifting, reported be-

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ietta Blvd. NW – On an unknown date and time, someone stole miscellaneous kitchen items and other household possessions from an unlocked storage unit.  300 block of Peachtree Hills Avenue

NE – During the morning of March 9, a woman told police she had locked and secured a business, but when she returned the following morning, she found the front door open. She said an Apple desktop, an Apple laptop and a black-and-white laptop were taken. Visible damage was caused to the floor near

tween March 6 and March 12. There were 38 vehicle thefts from vehicles and 19 other thefts reported between March 13 and March 19.

AU TO T H E F T S  There were eight auto thefts reported

between March 6 and March 12. Six auto thefts were reported between March 13 and March 19.

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APR. 01 - APR. 14, 2016

Public Safety | 31

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Atlanta police set up some ‘Operation Shield’ cameras in the suburbs

‘Criminals don’t respect boundaries’

“We let them know funding has come available and with the understanding that criminals don’t respect boundaries,” Trone said. Suspects leaving Atlanta and into Sandy Springs can be easily tracked with the additional cameras. With cameras in place in Sandy Springs, Atlanta police can alert Sandy Springs officers if a suspect has fled to their streets, he added. APD is also in talks with police in other cities, including Roswell and Conyers, and with DeKalb County police. Some initial talks have been made with Dunwoody and Brookhaven, also, Trone said.

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Operation Shield was created in 2007 under the administration of Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin and Police Chief Richard Pennington and through federal funding from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security following Sept. 11. It is an initiative of the Atlanta Police Foundation and the APD. The Atlanta Police Foundation raises funds to purchase cameras, through corporations and private individuals. Putting cameras on the street in these key target areas were part

eras, Trone said. The cameras owned by APD are typically located on public right of ways and data collected on these cameras are stored for only 30 days, Trone said. The Atlanta Police Foundation approached Sandy Springs earlier this year to propose a partnership to locate cameras near the Atlanta border, Trone said.

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Atlanta seeks to put 10,000 cameras on streets

of a plan to ensure safety to tourists and residents, said Marlon Trone, vice president of programs for the Atlanta Police Foundation, which oversees Operation Shield. “These cameras are not specifically a law enforcement tool; we view them as a public safety tool,” he said. “We’re not in personal security business. We’ve partnered with City Council to identify key areas that affect the placement of cameras.” Operation Shield owns approximately 200 cameras but is connected to some 6,000 cameras through the Loudermilk Video Integration Center where officers can monitor images from thousands of cameras throughout the city. When the program is complete, the APD will be monitoring 10,000 cameras, Trone said. The majority of cameras are privately owned – such as by Coca-Cola, CNN and college campuses, Trone said. Because the APD is integrated with these private corporations’ surveillance cameras, officers in the integration center can see inside buildings and on camDERMATOLOGY ASSOCIATES puses in real time. “All that data is their own; we don’t own or collect data” from private cam-

To Better Serve

The cameras are set up in the southern part of Sandy Springs, near the city’s border with Atlanta, said Sandy Springs Police Capt. Rose. One camera, engraved with the APD logo, is readily visible at the intersection of Roswell Road and Forest Hills Drive, more than a mile inside the city limits. Another camera is located on Crest Valley Drive, Rose said. “They [APD] approached us about 2 1/2 months ago. This is an extension of what APD is doing,” Rose said. Rose said approximately seven cameras are online in Sandy Springs and the goal is to install as many as 20 within the city limits. Rose declined to say where cameras are located or where they will be located. Currently, SSPD does not have access to the data collected from the cameras, Rose said. Only APD can see what the cameras in the city see from its video integration center in downtown Atlanta. The SSPD is working on an integration system so it can also access data from the cameras. “We can’t see them yet,” Rose said. “They brought this to us …and networking and sharing information among law enforcement is critical. Our IT de-

partment is working on the integration part on how we would integrate [APD’s] programming into our existing software.” Sandy Springs can access the data by requesting APD for surveillance videos, Rose said. The cameras located and to be located in Sandy Springs will be placed at this time in public right-of-way, such as on utility poles, Rose said. “All we’re interested in is roadways. We’re not going to put one in someone’s driveway,” he said. “On the right of way officers can see a suspect vehicle and determine the path.” Sandy Springs is not spending money on the APD cameras, Rose said. After three years, the cameras will become the property of Sandy Springs and expenses for maintaining the cameras and other costs will be transferred to the city. How much that will cost is not known at this time, he said.

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An Atlanta Police Department Operation Shield surveillance camera is located at the corner of Roswell Road and Forest Hills Drive. Sandy Springs has entered into a partnership with APD to locate more cameras in the city.

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the items in this particular museum show seem familiar. They’re all part of Atlanta. Each was chosen to represent some important the city, the exhibit’s feature of curators say. The exhibit, “Atlanta in 50 Objects,” which opened Jan. 16 and is to be on display through July 10, is intended to show, in what makes Atlanta its own way, Atlanta. “I think my favorite thing is the King manuscript,” guest curator Amy Wilson said on the day before the show opened, as she and History Center exhibitions director Dan Rooney made last-minute tweaks to the exhibit. She pointed toward a case holding a series of handwritten pages from a yellow legal pad on which the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. had written the acceptance speech for his 1964 Nobel Prize. “It’s the original manuscript.”

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Ana Avilez, 14, a member “Dia de Los Reyes”of the Danza Aztec Dance Group, festival at the Atlanta History prepares for a performance during the Three Center on Jan. 10. See additional Kings Day or photos on page 15.►

Center expand s under Atlanta’s own puppet master

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‘Lynwood Integrators’ honored for courage during desegregation

is working with Atlanta-based a new mobile 1Q, to survey market research residents BY JOHN topics of state and local interest.RUCHof our communities periodically firm, Inrternewspapers. Religious Freedom johnruch@repo our first poll, about we ask about Restoration Act net BY DYANA BAGBY ers.net the proposed ture. Nearly two-thirds being considered eporternewspap A 200 dyanabagby@r in the state holerespondents of in the sidewalk reactions to the Legislasaidnear would the bill a Dunkin’ law. Read Donuts should be rejected. at 6060 Run Theater more about Roswell the poll Road Here are two Page 18 Renovating Brook andmarks and fit local comments a fire hydrant where $7.5 million was knocked on page 11. ► comdown by a vecost approximately hicle nearly a city of Dunwoody’s year ago and BY DYANA BAGBY Wilson and remains misseasily into the ing. And for the a new feasiRooney started according to last four months dyanabagby@r work on the prehensive plan, Conserof 2015, eporternewspap if firefighters project in NovemThe Brook Run had needed water ers.net I’m so sick of Georgia ber 2014. The bility study from to battle a blaze there, they original idea Eugenia Calloway would Even behind the exhibit have found a looking like backward vancy. that we flipped through hydrant across having fire a proposal – gathering pages of the 1968 to let you know the Teenage friends objects that buf-the streetofgone “I am pleased has a Cross Keys High as well. foons. This is just Such long represent imporyearbook, glancing School that Dunwoody repair times a religious freedom tant themes and uncertain create clothing are now certain over the photographs there is siginspections for law or events in of many white legalized discrimina the city’s seems facility and that histoto be ry – had been 4,000 public for faces. But in a step in the need for this private tion, and line to teach used in a few the back of fire hydrants the yearbook in the community othplain and simple. areright she found first er high-profi an ongoing direction... nificant support President cernIffor Sandy conle museum shows the boys’ basto ketball team Conservancy that start Springs states and then the fire officials. and books, such entrepreneurship isn’t enough, it’sRescue Chief Keith having that need,” to the coungirls’ basketball Fire considermore as “The Smithteam. a Jan. 15 letter bad Sanders is now Page 19 sonian’s History Danny Ross in ing up a for the state economica ation for gearof America in tighter, “That’s me,” religion, period. accountable she said, pointing cil. lly. Stepmore tion system. inspecnew theater at Continued page smiling girl at to the to construct a one: bringing cost 14 the far right milThe A 44-YEAR-OLD A 34-YEAR-OLD $24.5 hydrant inspections in-house in the girls’ varsity team WOMAN WOMAN size would cost instead photo. One other The Atlanta History WHO LIVES about the same WHOofLIVES using private contractors, black girl IN BROOKHAVE was on the far IN SANDY SPRINGS study states. Page 42 as the exhibition, “Atlantacenter’s left; all the players PHIL MOSIER lion, the feasibility has done N PHOTOS BY city sent its feasibility and the coaches in between since its Objects,” showcases in 50 breaks The conservancy unique, were white. recently Anjanice Cutno founding. local items like player members a varsity “That’s when Council this katana from court during High School basketball I had the most study to City “The Walking come up at the “The At left, Dunwoody as she heads down her home Wolverines on Jan. 15. fun, when Dead” TV show. I was playing 2016 Tillie O’Neal-Kyles, is expected to pack basketball,” she and the issue founder of Every High School Lady away from the inspections said. named the city’s the Miller Grove Calloway was 25 meeting. 2016 Humanitarian Woman Works, a nonprofi game against one of 17 students council’s Jan. will be done t that Nash talks of the Year, at Jamie Chatman, that there is support integrated Cross who Coach Angela the 10th annual helps achieve financial independence, one of the “Lynwood While Ross argues Keys High School he may Rev. Martin Luther who integrated by the SanAbove, Lady Wildcats with her players. Integrators,” personal growth PHIL MOSIER ly 50 years ago, nearCross Brook Run Theater, King Jr. Day celebration over strategy and family leadership, part of that for renovating council.by graduates of Keys High School nearly 50 attends a Rev. Martin Luther King dy Springs at City Hall on first group was years ago. The Lynwood High of black students battle from the Jr. Day dinner Jan. 18. Story top, 62-37, and Jan. School, Cross on page 15.► to attend an still face an uphill came out on PHIL MOSIER fire depart22 Keys High School 18 program, held at Lynwood and celebration honoring are 8-9 all-white school in DeKalb The Lady Wolverines the 17 and Chamblee Park Recreation Continued on page The Lady Wildcats County and now Charter High a 12- 8 record. Center, featured students ment,” Sandon page 15.► School. See additional currently have as the “Lynwood known comments additional photos Integrators.” photos on page this season. See ers 13.► said. Reporter Newspapers “That way, I Continued on page is working with Atlanta-based 12 a new mobile know all hy1Q, to survey market research residents of our Reporter Newspapers topics of state firm, drants have communities firm, and local interest. is working with periodically about market research Atlanta-based In our first poll, Religious Freedom a new mobile a new mobile been touched 1Q, to survey we ask about market research Restoration Act periodically about is working with residents of our the proposed topics of state ture. Nearly two-thirds firm, being considered communities communities and have been and local interest. Reporter Newspapers the proposed residents of our in the state periodically of 200 respondents about survey ask to In Religious we 1Q, our reactions to the about Legislafirst poll, we Freedom Restoration said the bill should inspected.” LegislaAtlanta-based In our first poll, law. Read more ask in the state be rejected. Here Act being considered about the proposed about the poll ture. Nearly two-thirds and local interest. are two Page 18 being considered are two and local comments That will mean topics of state in the state be rejected. Here of 200 respondents Restoration Act reactions to the on page 11. ► Legislasaid the bill should said the bill should “more accuracy, law. Read more Religious Freedom on page 11. ► of 200 respondents be rejected. Here more about the poll local comments Page 18 are two accountability, and local comments ture. Nearly two-thirds more about the poll and ” Sanders said, on page 11. ► law. Read adding it will also give reactions to the firefighters hands-on I’m so sick of Georgia edge of where knowlthe city’s hydrants BY DYANA BAGBY case they need looking like backward are in Even having a BY JOE EARLE to find them in rnewspapers.net proposal I’m so sick of Georgia dyanabagby@rep bufan emergency. joeearle@reporte orternewspapers.n foons. This is just proposal of a religious freedom et Even having a the city’s looking like backward Even having a But those inspections Page 18 law law sound off on legalized discrimina seems to be a step proposal City officials to are where the The chance to bufdepartment’s 120 people are preparing fire of a religious freedom I’m so sick of Georgia buffoons. This is just of a religious freedom direct control more than to look for a new city manager in the plain and simple. tion, right direction... in the of the crucial parks drew on Jan. 12. safety devices law to replace Marie seems to be a step start looking like backward library branch ends. The 2,910 legalized discrimina to start seems to be a step rett, who held GarDunwoody’s hydrants to room, standon city streets the job since isn’t enough, it’s If that having more considerBrookhaven’s into a meeting are actually owned inception. right direction... foons. This is just tion, bad plain and simple. tion, right direction... in the They packed ideas on a city of Atlanta’s by the the state economica for to voice their ation for religion, to start Department of A national search ing room only, having more considerWatershed legalized discrimina parks plan. isn’t enough, it’s If that Management, having more considerperiod. lly. for a new city city’s five-year which can take If that period. ager was expected bad manrewrite of the months to a bit familmake repairs. A 44-YEAR-OLD A 34-YEAR-OLD to plain and simple.bad for ation for religion, the state economica for ation for religion, the discussion WOMAN WOMAN tails of a separation begin as soon as deSome found WHO LIVES period. lly. WHO LIVES Sanders called between the city WOMAN IN BROOKHAVE isn’t enough, it’s lly. IN SANDY SPRINGS that situation Garrett could iar. A 34-YEAR-OLD N to all these A 44-YEAR-OLD a “challenge,” though be reached. Council and A 34-YEAR-OLD ago, we went he added he is WOMAN IN SANDY SPRINGS WOMAN bers met behind mem“A few years the state economica not aware of WHO LIVES 12 WHO LIVES any recent fire WHO LIVES closed doors with IN BROOKHAVE IN SANDY SPRINGS where firefighters Continued on page and a mediation Garrett N WOMAN had trouble finding a attorney on Jan. working hydrant A 44-YEAR-OLD N 20 to try to work out an on a public agreement. IN BROOKHAVE WHO LIVES Mayor John Ernst Continued on page and members 14 of City Countinued on page 14

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OUT & ABOUT Puppetry Arts Center expand s under Atlanta’s own puppet master

Survey: No to ‘Religi

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OUT & ABOUT Puppetry Arts s Center expand under Atlanta’s own puppet master

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