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APRIL 3 — APRIL 16, 2015 • VOL. 6 — NO. 7
The swing’s the thing
Analyze this
High above Parking deck provokes ire COMMUNITY 6
ROBIN’S NEST 9
Cops crunch numbers, too PUBLIC SAFETY 29
Ga. 400 trail could be suburbs’ path to the BeltLine BY ANN MARIE QUILL With help from PATH400 and the Georgia Department of Transportation, the cities of Sandy Springs and Dunwoody could one day be connected via multiuse trails to Atlanta’s BeltLine. “Good stuff is happening with [PATH400],” Denise Starling, executive director of Livable Buckhead, said at a recent North Buckhead Civic Association meeting. With Phase 1 of the trail that runs along Ga. 400 complete from Lenox Road to Old Ivy Road, the organization is now working on Old Ivy to Wieuca, with future phases including Sidney Marcus to Miami Circle; Wieuca Road to Mountain Way Common; and Lenox Road to Peachtree Road via Tower Place Drive, and will eventually connect to the Atlanta BeltLine. Additionally in Brookhaven, work is under way on a trail along the north fork of Peachtree Creek which will eventually stretch as far south as the place the BeltLine and PATH400 will converge, and as far north as Duluth. But with pressure from cities like Sandy Springs and Dunwoody, SEE GA. 400, PAGE 6
Olympic women boxers scheduled for tourney BY JOE EARLE
joeearle@reporternewspapers.net
PHOTOS BY PHIL MOSIER
Top, Anderson Siverboard, 4, a member of the “Sand Gnats,” takes a cut during a t-ball game at the Marcus Jewish Community Center-Atlanta on March 29. Above, Anderson celebrates with his teammates and head coach Adam Greenfield, right, during the team’s first game of the season. See more photos on page 3.
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Terri Moss says she sort of stumbled into boxing. “A friend of mine wanted to learn how to do it,” she said, so Moss, who had studied to be a teacher and ended up working in law enforcement, went along for a visit to a local boxing gym. “I just went in and worked out and maybe three months later, I was still there and she was gone.” What was the appeal? “There’s something badass about being able to fight and being a girl,” Moss said with a laugh. Fifteen or so years after her inSEE TOURNAMENT, PAGE 28
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MARTA Needs Your Input!
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ARTA’s GA 400 Transit Initiative is moving forward! Come to a public meeting to learn more about the environmental process, comment on the locally preferred alternative, and discuss how the project fits into your community.
You have a choice of three meeting dates and locations! The materials presented at each meeting will be the same. Choose the one(s) that’s convenient for YOU and JOIN US for this important discussion! Tuesday, April 14, 2015 6:30 pm to 8:00 pm
North Fulton Service Center -- Community Room 7741 Roswell Road, #104 Sandy Springs, 30350
Thursday, April 16, 2015 6:30 pm to 8:00 pm
Georgia State University Alpharetta Center 3775 Brookside Pkwy, Alpharetta, 30022
Food Truck Thursdays return to Brook Run this month Food Truck Thursdays return this month and will continue weekly through Oct. 29, according to the Dunwoody Homeowners Association. The 2015 food truck gatherings were scheduled to begin April 2. The trucks are to assemble at Brook Run Park from 5 p.m. until dark on Thursday evenings through the spring and summer.
Former Dunwoody detective pleads guilty to running fraudulent warrant checks A former Dunwoody police detective has pleaded guilty to disclosing sensitive law enforcement information in exchange for receiving kickbacks for him and his family. Robert Pasquale Bentivegna, 64, of Woodstock, Georgia, pleaded guilty to computer fraud for accessing information in the GCIC database for an improper purpose. Sentencing is scheduled for June 1 before United States District Judge Leigh Martin May.
Previous city attorney elected to DeKalb GOP Former Dunwoody City Attorney Brian Anderson has been elected chairman of the DeKalb Republican Party. Elected leaders include First Vice Chairman (Membership) Travis Stegall; Second Vice Chairman (Precinct Development) Will Frishe; Third Vice Chairman (Events) Alejandro “Alex” Gimenez; Treasurer Bobbie Frantz; and Secretary Clare Steen.
Gated communities required to install devices to allow emergency access City Council on March 23 required all 39 gated communities in Dunwoody to pay for the installation and maintenance of an SOS/Trigger System at each gate to allow emergency and police vehicles access. Police Chief Billy Grogan made the ordinance request in response to City Councilman Terry Nall’s request to find a solution for problems associated with emergency access to gated communities. Because codes on the keypad entry systems change frequently, keeping track of the correct gate code has been difficult and could create an unnecessary delay for first responders, Grogan said in a memo. The council voted 6-1 to adopt the requirement, with City Councilman Denny Shortal opposed. Each device costs $599, and an additional cost of $20 is anticipated for the RFID tags on emergency response vehicles, which the city of Dunwoody will pay. Dunwoody’s total cost should not exceed $35,000. The gated communities will be responsible for paying about $500 for installation. They have 12 months to comply.
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Foot Golf. PHOTOS BY PHIL MOSIER
High fives and high throws Top, Isaac Greenfield, left, a member of the “Sand Gnats” t-ball team, receives congratulations from his father and head coach Adam Greenfield after a game at the Marcus Jewish Community Center-Atlanta on March 29. The “Sand Gnats” field a team consisting of four-year-old boys. Above, Julia Freedman, 8, front, left, and her friend Rachel Kurgan, 8, back, practice softball with Julia’s father Steve Freedman.
Coumcil OKs townhome development The Dunwoody City Council on March 23 approved a rezoning request to allow a 40-unit townhouse development at Old Spring House Lane and Chamblee Dunwoody Road. Providence Group wants to develop the 3.4-acre tract of land with threestory townhomes with brick and stone fronts. The proposal had the approval of staff, the community council, the planning commission and the Dunwoody DUN
Homeowners Association. Amenities will include a multi-use trail, internal sidewalks, a gazebo and pedestrian access to the Georgetown Plaza. The development will cap rentals at 10 percent. Providence Group President Warren Jolly said the project would likely be completed in two years, with the first units move-in ready in a year and a half. -Ann Marie Quill
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APRIL 3 – APRIL 16, 2015 | 3
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APRIL 3 – APRIL 16, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
Above and right, the Tudor Revival estate was built in 1929 on 400 acres. The property sits off Glenridge Drive and is divided by Abernathy Road. Ashton Woods Homes has contracted to buy the property.
Glenridge Hall demolition ‘extremely disappointing’ BY ANN MARIE QUILL The executive director of the Georgia Trust for Historic Preservation calls it “extremely disappointing” that owners of Glenridge Hall were issued a demolition permit for the historic mansion. Mark McDonald said the house should be saved for its historic and architectural value. “The house is an extensive work of architecture and is situated on beautiful setting, representing an era of Atlanta growth and prosperity in the early 20th century,” he said. Sandy Springs city officials issued the permit on March 9. McDonald said the Georgia Trust in October placed Glenridge Hall on its list of “10 Places in Peril” after an announcement that the property was for sale and “we felt like we had exhausted our efforts” with the owners. Ashton Woods Homes contracted to buy the property, which sits off Glenridge Drive and is divided by Abernathy Road. Mercedes Benz has announced it would relocate its corporate headquarters from New Jersey to a tract to the south of Abernathy. The Tudor Revival estate was built in 1929 on 400 acres of farmland by Thomas K. Glenn, a pillar of the Atlanta business community. In the 1980s, Glenn’s granddaughter, Frances Mayson, fought to preserve the property, which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.
Mayson and her husband restored the home with the purpose of it being available to the public, and the home has been host to numerous charity functions and retreats through the years. The home and grounds have also been used in movies like “Driving Miss Daisy” and the TV show “The Vampire Diaries.” The home is known to represent Atlanta wealth. After the Civil War, it took about 20 years for the then-rural Sandy Springs to come back to pre-war agricultural prices. Wealthy Atlantans began to use Sandy Springs as a get-away location, as it was still fairly difficult to reach from the city of Atlanta. Families began building mansions as showcases, with Glenridge Hall being the remaining one in Sandy Springs. While its placement on the National Register doesn’t protect the property from demolition, McDonald said that conservation easements and other tax incentives could work as an incentive to save the property. He suggested that the building could continue to host special events while the land around it was developed. McDonald said he maintains a little hope that the building could be saved. “I never doubt that people can have conversions at the last minute,” he said. DUN
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Taxes, ethics and sanitation dominate Jester’s town hall BY TIM DARNELL Residents in DeKalb County’s cities will soon be paying more for county services, and District 1 Commissioner Nancy Jester says the increases are the result of historically poor accounting. “I was very much against this budget,” Jester said recently at a town hall meeting in Dunwoody. “The county only increased the millage rate in incorporated areas and not the unincorporated areas.” Jester said only she and District 6 Commissioner Kathie Gannon voted against the budget. “I’m hopeful we’ll see some fluctuations as millage rates go down,” Jester told an audience of about 50 people at the Dunwoody Library March 30. “They did go up this year, and I argued against this tax increase.” Dunwoody’s and Brookhaven’s millage rates increased 10.8 percent, while Chamblee’s increased 21.5 percent. DeKalb’s $1.27 billion budget keeps the tax rate in areas of the county not located within cities at 21.21 mills. Jester also said she has grave concerns over recent developments in DeKalb’s Department of Watershed Management, which has been the focus of a grand jury investigation. “The grand
sonal expenses. Boyer’s husband, John Boyer, has jury has called attention to some seripleaded guilty to a related charge and is ous problems in the department,” Jestscheduled to be sentenced by Evans on er said. “The water department provides May 6. some vital services to everyAdditionally, suspended one in the county, and this DeKalb CEO Burrell Elis an issue we’re watching lis is set to be re-tried latvery closely.” er this year on charges of Meanwhile, other shaking down county conDeKalb officials have faced tractors for campaign concriminal charges. tributions. Former District 1 CounIn March, several highty Commission Elaine Boyranking officials abruptly er stood in a federal courtresigned after interim CEO room on March 20 and Lee May announced a spetearfully apologized to her cial ethics investigation family and also to the citheaded up by former Georizens of the county for gia Attorney General Mike misusing county money. Bowers. District 1 “To the people of DeKalb “I’m concerned about Commissioner County, I am deeply, deepthe cost of the Bowers inNancy Jester ly sorry,” Boyer said. vestigation (reportedly at Senior U.S. District $400 an hour), but this is Judge Orinda Evans sentenced Boyer a very opaque situation, and credibility to 14 months in federal prison on her has to be restored,” Jester said. “Reform guilty pleas in September to mail and by indictment is not a good thing, and I wire fraud charges. want to be part of any effort that brings Prosecutors say the veteran commispositive changes.” sioner, who resigned her post last AuCommission Chief of Staff Morgust, funneled county funds to personal ris Williams and Community Deaccounts, and used county funds to help velopment Director Chris Morris pay for family vacations and other perboth resigned on March 24, right af-
ter the Bowers investigation was announced. Watershed Director Dr. James Chansler announced his resignation back in February. “I think he resigned, perhaps, because he realized he couldn’t reform the department or perhaps out of frustration,” she said. “He has an excellent national reputation, and I’m glad he’s agreed to stay on through June.” Jester also highlighted the county’s new, one-day-a-week trash pickup schedule, which she said is standard for hundreds of communities. “It’s going to be rolling out this summer, probably in July, and you’ll be getting a much larger, blue recycling bin into which you can co-mingle everything,” she said. “Several neighborhoods have been part of the pilot program, which overall received very positive results.” Jester said the county’s recycling program has extended the life of its landfill “by about 70 years, which is a good thing.” “The small blue recycling bins that we have are being phased out. You can keep them if you want or the county can pick them up and they’ll be used for school recycling efforts.”
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APRIL 3 – APRIL 16, 2015 | 5
COMMUNITY
Residents speak out against All Saints’ construction plans BY ELLEN ELDRIDGE
elleneldridge@reporternewspapers.net
Most of the residents who spoke at the March 23 City Council meeting backed All Saints Catholic Church’s plans to rebuild its sanctuary. But others questioned the church’s plans to build a three-story parking deck in the future, and a few argued the church should move if it wants to expand. Charlotte Stone Black called the church’s plans “irresponsible.” “If they want a larger church, then go to a site that can accommodate a bigger church,” she said. The church’s expansion plan requires a special land use permit, which Andrew Halloran, who represents Cornerstone Site Consultants, requested on behalf of the church. During the public hearing March 23, several residents spoke against the SLUP. The council deferred a decision on the SLUP until after a hydrology study is completed. Several residents said they support the church’s intention to bring water drainage systems up to date and im-
prove handicapped access to the sanctuary. But others said they object to seeing a parking deck rise above their homes. “We didn’t invest money in our homes to live next to a parking deck,” said Lyle Spencer, who said his driveway appears on a current design sketch for construction plans at the church site. All Saints has agreed to install four new detention ponds to control water runoff to improve its 35-year-old campus. Also, Halloran promised a 10-foot buffer of trees would be planted during the first phase of construction to help hide the area where the church hopes to build a parking deck in five or more years. That didn’t appease Spencer. “No matter how far we push the parking deck back, I am going to see a parking deck. I don’t care how many trees you plant, I am going to see a parking deck. I will see 90 to 75 percent of whatever is constructed there,” he said.
The first phase of PATH400 is complete, and Livable Buckhead has a timeline to finish other portions of the trail. To see a larger version, go to ReporterNewspapers.net.
Ga. 400 trail could be suburbs’ path to the BeltLine CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
who want to connect to the PATH400, that trail could also go north. “There’s a lot of pressure now com-
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SPECIAL
ing from Sandy Springs and Dunwoody to connect in to [the trail],” Starling said. “They are loving the idea of being able to access PATH400 and get to the BeltLine.” City officials in Sandy Springs, Dunwoody and Brookhaven as well as local nonprofits and chambers have recently signed resolutions urging GDOT to allow expansion of the trail network through the Ga. 400/I-285 interchange. To extend north into the suburban cities, PATH400 will need to cross I-285, which requires the cooperation of the Georgia Department of Transportation, which is planning a major revamping of the Ga. 400 and I-285 interchange. Ed McBrayer, executive director of the PATH Foundation, which is working on PATH400 with Livable Buckhead, said that his group met with GDOT several weeks ago, and the transportation agency said it would not preclude provisions for trails in its plans. He said his group plans to meet with GDOT again soon. McBrayer wrote in a recent column for “Reporter Newspapers,” “This interchange divides Atlanta, Sandy Springs, Dunwoody and Brookhaven into four islands with virtually no safe connection for pedestrians and cyclists. This is a perfect place to start knitting the region back together on a human scale.” He said he’s hopeful that as the interchange is being built, trails can be constructed along Ga. 400, extending PATH400 and also east-west along I-285. “I think there’s been a lot of interest from all different organizations and cities,” McBrayer said. “I haven’t heard anybody that thinks it’s a bad idea, and I don’t think GDOT thought it was a bad idea.” DUN
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ARC: Atlanta’s reputation ‘sullied,’ and must do better BY ANN MARIE QUILL The executive director of the Atlanta Regional Commission says metro Atlanta must address transportation and education issues to remain a vibrant community. Doug Hooker, who heads the regional planning agency, told business and community leaders gathered for a March 20 Perimeter Business Alliance luncheon in Brookhaven that the metro area had to have the resources to remain a vibrant and attractive place as folks continue to move to the fastgrowing region. Unfortunately, Hooker said, ANN MARIE QUILL the region’s reputation has Doug Hooker, Atlanta Regional been “sullied” by the failure of Commission’s executive director, was T-SPLOST, a regional tax to support transportation; by dethe keynote speaker at the March 20 clining water supplies; by the Perimeter Business Alliance luncheon. Atlanta Public School cheating scandal; and last year’s “Snowmagedhe said. don,” when traffic was snarled 24 hours “We have spread out very far in the during a winter storm. region, now we have to think about Hooker said the region is making spreading up,” Hooker said, adding that steps in the right direction. He said the mixed-use communities attract both Atlanta area reduced its water usage by young people and baby boomers look10 percent from 2000 to 2010, while ing to retire. adding a million people. He said that the area also needs more But, “it’s still not enough,” Hooker transportation options. said. He also said that while state lawHooker used the Perimeter area as makers propose a $1 billion transporan example, saying it was on the “cuttation package, that’s just a “down payting edge” of leveraging its MARTA stament.” They should look to be spending tions around living and working spaces. as much as $2.5 billion a year, he said. He said that large companies like State “If we don’t invest in us, how can Farm and Mercedes are relocating here we expect anyone else to invest in us?” because of access to transit. Hooker asked. Education is another area that needs The metro area needs to develop the support of everyone, Hooker said. more compact, walkable communities, “It is all of our issue.”
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COMMENTARY Reporter Newspapers Our mission is to provide our readers with fresh and engaging information about life in their communities. Published by Springs Publishing LLC 6065 Roswell Road, Suite 225 Sandy Springs, GA 30328 Phone: 404-917-2200 • Fax: 404-917-2201 Brookhaven Reporter | Buckhead Reporter Dunwoody Reporter | Sandy Springs Reporter www.ReporterNewspapers.net Atlanta INtown www.AtlantaINtownPaper.com
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United we thrive; divided we fail United we stand; divided we fall. We either hang together, or we hang separately. Those two aphorisms from the Revolutionary era show that the notion of a unified voice on major issues is as old and as important as the American Republic itself. Unfortunately, the local business community today speaks with splintered voices, and the split is growing. Why is this important? First, the cities of Dunwoody and Sandy Springs are working very cooperatively in developing policies to manage development in the Perimeter market – currently the Southeast’s hottest real estate market. Our goals are simple. How do we manage the area’s inevitable growth without drowning in vehicular traffic and destroying our quality of life? What policies are needed to reduce pressure on our road networks and encourage more commuters to use transit? We need a minimum increase in MARTA ridership of 15 percent to maintain mobility in this corridor, and we need the business community at the table to help us achieve this goal. Our challenge is, “Who speaks for the business community?” Dunwoody, Sandy Springs and the city of Brookhaven each has its own Chamber of Commerce, and the Perimeter CID is also now forming a Perimeter Business Association, which will act like a chamber. With such fractured voices, we cannot attain the multijurisdictional unity of focus, purpose and cooperation needed from the business community. Further, businesses don’t know which group to join, and they can’t afford them all. So, they choose one or choose not to engage. Creating a unified voice through a single, cooperative chamber would best serve us all. Dunwoody Mayor Mike Davis and I are in lock step when it comes to this issue. Since we truly are one commercial real estate market, we need one group representing the total business community on cross-jurisdictional policy questions. We cannot work with four different business groups when crafting policies affecting this market. We have both urged these chambers to develop an umbrella group to represent the entire business community and, if each city needs someone looking after local business needs,
Senior Account Executives Jeff Kremer Janet Porter Account Executive Susan Lesesne Office Manager Deborah Davis deborahdavis@reporternewspapers.net Contributors Tim Darnell, Jon Gargis, Art Huckabee, Phil Mosier, Martha Nodar, Ann Marie Quill
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operate city-specific business associations under the umbrella for that purpose. Yet, instead of unifying, the splintering continues. A case in point is the recent Mercedes decision. The state did not involve any of the local business groups to lay groundwork for this project. Why? The state faced the same challenge we have. RUSTY What group could work objectivePAUL ly across jurisdictions to help Mercedes decide its best location? The GUEST COLUMN answer is: with so many organizations, no one! Instead, it relied on the Metro Atlanta Chamber of Commerce and the Greater North Fulton Chamber of Commerce, which is based in Alpharetta. In fact, these two groups were engaged before the city government was involved because they were viewed as trustworthy, objective resources during the preliminary period when Mercedes was investigating several locations. Since Mercedes was primarily focused on the Perimeter market, wouldn’t it make sense to engage locally? Yes, but the state economic development team could not identify what entity best represented the Perimeter market. In the day-to-day operations of our cities, we encounter the same challenge. Without a unified voice to engage in conversation, we may simply make the best policy decisions we can without business input. If so, the result will be less than optimal. This is why I used my “State of the City” address to the Sandy Springs Perimeter Chamber of Commerce to again urge the business community to lay aside its jurisdictional and territorial divisions and work together to create one group with one voice to speak for the overall business community. I appreciate this opportunity to utilize this printed space to make that appeal one more time. Rusty Paul is mayor of Sandy Springs.
On the record Read these articles from our other editions online at ReporterNewspapers.net. “The loop is closed. The journey is over. The flag now is where it should be.” –Buckhead resident John Maltby found a singed Georgia state flag in the ashes of E. Rivers Elementary School when the school burned in 1948. The flag now hangs outside the principal’s office at E. Rivers. Maltby told the story of its return during a ribboncutting ceremony for a new E. Rivers building. “It’s the gateway [to Brookhaven]. What do we want that image to be? A multi-story apartment building with dozens of balconies would not create an inviting entrance to the city.” –Resident Tim Morrison on plans for an apartment building in a mixed-use development on Peachtree Road. “We have spread out very far in the region, now we have to think about spreading up.” –Doug Hooker, executive developer of the Atlanta Regional Commission, on future development in the region.
“I love it. It turned out better than I thought it might. … I think they did pretty well.” –Buckhead businessman Charlie Loudermilk on the renovated park that bears his name. The triangular park is located at the intersection of Peachtree and Roswell roads. “This is a special piece of property. It’s our gateway. ... I’m suggesting something new. I’d like the city to explore dividing up that property and at least taking the front half of it for a linear park or green space. ... We haven’t even begun to imagine the possibilities for this site.” –Brookhaven City Councilwoman Rebecca Chase Williams, proposing the city look at working with developers and property owners of land on Ashford-Dunwoody Road to create a new city entrance.
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APRIL 3 – APRIL 16, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
DUN
COMMENTARY
‘Yay! It’s spring!’ Let’s sing a gay little spring song (tra la la) This is the season to sing So I’d like to suggest That we all do our best And warble a song about spring. I lifted those lyrics from the movie “Bambi,” of course. I know you’ve watched the scene—it’s the one where all the woodland songbirds couple up and flutter among the sumptuously painted backdrop of a blossoming forest, singing so loudly and cheerfully that they awaken the sleeping owl. And doesn’t that scene capture exactly how we feel in our glorious Atlanta springtime? If we could flit along on the wing and alight on the branch of a budding cherry tree, and then perhaps, chirp out a happy little tune on behalf of the season, wouldn’t we? Or given the restraints of our wingless bodies, wouldn’t we like to step outside, stretch our legs, and at least clap our hands together and shout, “Yay! It’s spring!” and then maybe punctuate that emotion with a wee pirouette…? I think we would. Yet, having grown into adult sensibilities, we settle for walking with a spring in our step. Yes, I think that idiom is less about a wound-up piece of wire and more about a new season of budding colors and blossoming flowers. Because when springtime rolls around, we walk with the bounce of a fresh beginning. It’s the jubilance of warm breezes and Easter bunnies, of greening grass and nodding daffodils. It’s sort of a controlled inebriation. So I think Disney got that right— all creatures, whether walking on four legs or two, whether endowed with the gift of flight or not—celebrate spring in some way. And we humans, as the relatively inhibited species, find a way to greet the new season with joy, by soak-
ing in the ROBIN JEAN sun or cuddling up with MARIE CONTE an attractive companion, ROBIN’S NEST by reveling with composed exuberance. Here in metro Atlanta, we’ve had our dustings of snow, our pre-emptive closings, our few days of cold snaps. We haven’t been pummeled like those in Boston and the rest of the Northeast. No one in our fair city has dived from a second story balcony into 8-foot-deep snow drifts or skied down a powder-packed main thoroughfare…but that doesn’t mean that we don’t appreciate spring when it gets here. Our civil Southern climate is why we live here, after all. So take a look around and you’ll see it: the spring of spring. It’s there when we walk our dogs and drive our kids to soccer practice. It’s beneath the lights that are strung cunningly across the outdoor patio of a neighborhood restaurant, where we laugh and dine and clink wine glasses together. It’s in the jogs around Piedmont Park and the tills in the backyard garden. That spring is there even when we’re lounging at an outdoor concert or standing in the yard with a cold beer, greeting the neighbors. When the dogwoods bloom and the azaleas burst and the entire city is filled with fluffs of color, that’s when we smile broadly and sing our own little spring song. Robin Conte is a writer and mother of four who lives in Dunwoody. She can be contacted at robinjm@earthlink.net.
Summer internship position available If you’re a college student majoring in journalism or a related field, you may be a candidate for a summer internship with Reporter Newspapers and Atlanta Intown. In this paid position, you’ll work with our editorial team on a variety of assignments. These include researching and writing news and feature stories, and working on special projects and sections. To be considered, you should have experience with a college-level publication such as a student newspaper, be familiar with the communities we serve, and have excellent computer and social media skills. Please send your resume (and clips, if available) to publisher@reporternewspapers.net.
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APRIL 3 – APRIL 16, 2015 | 9
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A study for transit-oriented development around the Brookhaven MARTA station calls for a mix of retail, office and residential. MARTA developments require that 20 percent of residential units meet affordable/workforce housing standards.
Leaders cite need for affordable housing BY ANN MARIE QUILL
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While Mercedes has plans to bring and employ hundreds in Sandy Springs, those employees may not be able to afford to live in the area, and have been scouting locations like Alpharetta and Crabapple. “In Sandy Springs we have an abundance of housing for upper income, and an abundance for lower rental income,” said Sandy Springs Mayor Rusty Paul. “We’ve heard from Mercedes families that they can’t afford to live in Sandy Springs.” Paul said that points to a larger problem for the city and its workers overall, and that the lack of affordable workforce housing contributes to traffic congestion. “What’s missing is owner-occupied housing in Sandy Springs that police, firefighters, teachers, nurses and medical personal can afford to live in,” he said. “This is a major issue; our congestion issues are built around the fact that an overwhelming number of people who work here live elsewhere. Our population of 100,000 grows to 200,000 during the day. If we could create an environment where employees could live in Sandy Springs, that would have an enormous impact on traffic congestion.” A look at Atlanta Regional Commission housing statistics shows Sandy Springs dominating metro-area ZIP codes for three-year average home prices from 2012 to 2014. In the 30327 ZIP code area, which includes Sandy Springs, the average home price was $691,467. In the 30342 area, it was $401,971. ARC’s Executive Director Doug Hooker echoed the need for affordable housing during a recent Perimeter Business Alliance luncheon. He said that areas like Sandy Springs, Brookhaven and Dunwoody that are striving to become more walkable and mixed-use friendly need to have folks who work in the communities living there as well. “Our charge is how do we get more af-
fordable housing in those communities, so the retail workers that work at Perimeter can afford to live close,” he said. Paul said that while there’s no firm plan in Sandy Springs yet, he and other members of the council are exploring solutions. “Part of it is how we work with developers,” he said. “What kind of incentives can we offer to get them to sell at lower price points.” He explained that the problem can be complex because the goal to not drive down real estate also exists. Hooker pointed to MARTA’s transitoriented development program as another solution. The transit agency is looking at created mixed-use developments around its stations, and is requiring that 20 percent of the residential units on a property qualify as workforce/affordable housing. A study for development at the Brookhaven MARTA station said the 2013 median income for the Atlanta region is $66,300, which means a family of four with a $53,000 income per year qualifies for workforce housing. The study claimed that income was comparable to the average starting salary of a Brookhaven police officer. Jack Honderd, a member of the Brookhaven Peachtree Community Alliance, a group whose goal is to guide development, said that striving toward more workforce housing is going to be a challenge in Brookhaven, where apartments and small houses are being torn down to make way for high-end rental units and larger homes. He said a variety of housing “creates vibrant, stable neighborhoods," and that the community benefits when, for example, its police are living in its neighborhoods. Paul added, “Not only is [providing affordable housing] a matter of doing what I think is the right thing, it makes sure folks who work here can live here.”
REAL ESTATE
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Schools, retail, restaurants make Buckhead an easy sell
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BY COLLIN KELLEY From single-family homes to townthe community and its unwavering rephomes and condos, Buckhead real esutation,” Robinson said. tate continues to hold its own, even as George Heery, who with his brother the community gets an injection of new Neal, make up The Heery Brothers team luxury residences, shops and within Atlanta Fine Homes restaurants at the Buckhead Sotheby’s International ReAtlanta project, according alty, said he’s seen the bar for to local real estate agents. a luxury home move to the Lisa Robinson, a broker $1.2 or $1.3 million mark if with Engel &Volkers Buckit’s a resale, and $1.5 to $1.6 head Atlanta, said the avermillion if it’s a new home. age price for a single-famHe recently sold a condo for ily home in Buckhead is $900,000. $1 million, with an aver“There has been a shift age price of $585,000 for in what buyers are looking a townhome. The average for in a home,” Heery said. number of days a home is “Kitchens with big, square on the market is about 70. counter islands, a dedicated “I've noticed that luxury space for an office, laundry Travis Reed homes listed under $2 milrooms connected to master lion are selling extremely closets and more energy-effast,” Robinson said. “Once you hit $2 ficient homes are on many buyers’ wish million, the average days on the market lists.” increases to 90 days. But Heery said a decade the story remains the same. ago, most Buckhead buyIf a house is priced well and ers would have placed walkshows well, it will sell.” ability to shops and restauShe said homebuyers rants near the bottom of moving to Buckhead are their “must-have” list, but looking to capitalize on the that has inverted with the proximity to the best private opening of PATH400, the and public schools, and the Atlanta BeltLine and Buckconvenience to both Midhead Atlanta. town and downtown AtlanTravis Reed of Harry ta. And the new Buckhead Norman Realtors said “luxAtlanta development at the ury” is a relative term. intersection of Peachtree “There are luxury conand Roswell roads is a madominiums in Buckhead Lisa Robinson jor draw. that sell for $400,000 and “Home prices are on the rise around luxury townhomes in the $500,000 to Atlanta, but what keeps drawing home$600,000 range,” Reed said. “You can buyers to Buckhead is the consistency of CONTINUED ON PAGE 13
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APRIL 3 – APRIL 16, 2015 | 11
REAL ESTATE
Snapshot: Recent single-family home sales Sandy Springs: 30350 Avg Sold Price $260,756 Sandy Springs: 30328 Avg Sold Price $314,404 Sandy Springs: 30342 Avg Sold Price $527,400 Buckhead: 30305 Avg Sold Price $572,578 Buckhead: 30327 Avg Sold Price $1,016,132 Brookhaven: 30319 Avg Sold Price $434,394 Dunwoody: 30338 Avg Sold Price $375,562
Avg List Price $273,154
Units Sold 48
Avg. Days on Market 103
Avg List Price $324,770
Units Sold 107
Avg. Days on Market 109
Avg List Price $552,460
Units Sold 59
Avg. Days on Market 96
Avg List Price $603,773
Units Sold 83
Avg. Days on Market 100
Avg List Price $1,079,889
Units Sold 44
Avg. Days on Market 171
Avg List Price $449,398
Units Sold 87
Avg. Days on Market 110
Avg List Price $388,643
Units Sold 58
Avg. Days on Market 83
This information is compiled from First Multiple Listing Service (FMLS) from February 2015. This information is deemed reliable but not guaranteed, and is not a complete list of activity. Data provided by Judy Soden, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage Sandy Springs office.
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A supremely expressive story-teller in song, British tenor Ian Bostridge creates performances of intensity, conjuring melody, words, and a nuanced range of tone qualities to extraordinary emotional effect. “After the final notes of Schubert’s “Im Walde,” he seemed rapt, and the audience held its breath, and applause, until he finally gave the signal that life could resume. That kind of hold on an audience can’t be faked” (The Boston Globe). PROGRAM Franz SCHUBERT Winterreise, D.911 (Performed without intermission)
Dunwoody Sandy Springs Brookhaven Buckhead
The map above, prepared by the Atlanta Regional Commission using demographic data from ESRI, shows areas with these median home values:
● $557,028 to $1 million in red ● $307,471 to $557, 028 in orange ● $185,560 to $307,471 in yellow ● $109,564 to $185,560 in green ● lower than $109,564 in blue For a larger version of this map, go to ReporterNewspapers.net.
Where Great Music Thrives
Wenwen Du
Benjamin Grosvenor
Benjamin Grosvenor, PIANO Sunday, April 26, 2015 | 3 PM | $54
Young British virtuoso Benjamin Grosvenor, a “remarkable, exciting talent” who gives “fearless and thrilling” performances (Gramophone), “is a Romantic pianist, almost from another age. He doesn’t deconstruct, or stand at a distance. He jumps inside the music’s soul” (The Times, London). PROGRAM Jean-Philippe RAMEAU Gavotte and Variations in A minor J.S. BACH (trans. Busoni) Chaconne in D minor César FRANCK Prelude, Chorale, and Fugue Frédéric CHOPIN Barcarolle, Op. 60; Two Mazurkas Enrique GRANADOS Valses poeticos; Three Pieces from Goyescas
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APRIL 3 – APRIL 16, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
This program is supported in part by the Georgia Council for the Arts through the appropriations of the Georgia General Assembly. GCA also receives support from its partner agency – the National Endowment for the Arts.
REAL ESTATE
Buckhead’s strong reputation means quick, easy home sales CONTINUED FROM PAGE 11 home” as one priced at over $1 million, but the median price of the 918 transacbuy a beautifully renovated ranch in tions in Buckhead over the 12 months north Buckhead for $1 million, but I ending in February was $1,667,961. think the price point where the upper “In the last 12 months, bracket begins now is $2.2 290 homes have sold for to $2.4 million. Homes at over $1 million, in conthis price point will be in trast to 255 homes over $1 the most desirable neighmillion selling in the preborhoods, with nice lots, ceding 12 months,” Rogtop-of-the-line amenities ers said. and large square footage.” Rogers said the progress Reed said upper brackat Buckhead Atlanta has reet condos are selling at reinforced homeowner conficord prices per foot, with a dence in Buckhead. three-bedroom penthouse “As rents increase in at Terminus selling for $2 commercial space, Buckmillion. head residential property Another change from also continues to increase 10 years ago that Reed has in value, and the increased noticed is that buyers are Michael Rogers number of retail and dinlooking for high quality. ing establishments brought “Really high-finish levels, by Buckhead Atlanta and surrounding custom-imported hardware, luxe bath commercial developments increase the fixtures, commercial- grade systems are rich array of amenities offered to Buckall more important than during our last head homeowners boom,” Reed said. in close proximity “Named archito their residences,” tects are a big draw, Rogers said. pools, steam showHe said Buckers, and wine celhead would remain lars are in higher a draw for home demand than ever, buyers because it while theaters are has larger lot sizes less popular. Buyers than many neighare also more energy borhoods inside and environmentalthe city of Atlanly conscious. Buyers ta, access to excelwould rather have a lent restaurants and whole house generaworld-class shoptor than a sixth bedThe Heery Brothers ping opportunities, room.” high-testing public Michael Rogelementary schools and nationally recers, president of Dorsey Alston Realtors, ognized private schools. said most people still define a “luxury
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APRIL 3 – APRIL 16, 2015 | 13
For over 40
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Farmers markets spring back to life in April BY JON GARGIS April means the reopening of local farmers markets, bringing fresh fruits and vegetables, hearing music, and smelling newly baked breads and pastries. Below are farmers markets opening in Reporter Newspapers communities.
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APRIL 3 – APRIL 16, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
Serving your community for over 15 years
Location: Cathedral of St. Philip, 2744 Peachtree Rd., NW, Atlanta, 30305. Saturdays, April 11-Dec. 19. Hours: 8:30 a.m. to noon through September; 9 a.m. to noon October through December. This farmers market, the largest in the area, boasts more than 70 vendors, 50 of which are on-site every week. The market also features live music, chef demonstrations and children’s events, including a petting zoo on April 25, the day noting the market’s ninth birthday. “We require that all of the produce and meat at our market is either certified organic or certified naturally grown, so they’re [customers] getting fresher, cleaner food to put on their table,” said Market Manager Lauren Carey. For more: peachtreeroadfarmersmarket.com.
Heritage Sandy Springs Farmers Market Location: 235 Sandy Springs Circle, 30328, through April; corner of Mount Vernon Highway and Lake Forrest Drive beginning in May. Saturdays, April 11-Oct. 31 Hours: 8:30 a.m. to noon Expect to see 45 or so vendors in attendance — 10 or so farmers, half a dozen artisans selling items from pottery to wearable art and accessories, and more than two dozen prepared foods, from coffee to fresh tamales to barbecue sauce. “It’s a great gathering place. You see your neighbor, we have local politicians come to the market, so you can really touch and feel your community,” said Lori Coombs, manager of the market. For more: http://sandyspringsfarmersmarket.com.
Brookhaven Farmers Market Location: University Baptist Church, 1375 Fernwood Circle, NE, Brookhaven, 30319. Saturdays, April 18-Dec. 12 Hours: 9 a.m. to noon Patrons returning this year will find it in its new location across from the fire station. Regular vendors include Blue Donkey Coffee, cheesemaker Orobianco and FarmMobile, a mobile farmers market truck where you can purchase local veggies, eggs, grassfed beef and more. For more: brookhavenfarmersmarket.com.
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Buckhead ‘brushketeers’ showcase work at library BY MARTHA NODAR Three members of the Buckheadry Painters” exhibit alludes to the three based Atlanta Artist Center (AAC) join primary colors – red, blue and yellow – efforts in an upcoming art exhibit at the which are the basis for all other colors. Buckhead Branch Public Library. One of Christie’s paintings included “Primary Painters,” which opens in the exhibit is “Massimo,” a tribute to April 11 and runs through May 23, conthe culinary arts and a realistic portrait sists of approximately 80 oil paintings. of Massimo Mariano, an Atlanta-based A reception, free and professional chef and open to the public, is Christie’s son-in-law. scheduled for April 25. Christie says what The three paintmatters the most to ers -- Robert Christie him when making porof Brookhaven, Geri traits is to “capture the Zaki and Lynda Ellis -spirit of the person.” have been painting toThe painting won gether for several years, Christie first place at a and regularly attend show sponsored by the weekly sessions at the Portrait Society of AtAAC to enhance their lanta, which meets at skills. the artists center stu“We are the three dios on Grandview Av‘brushketeers,’” Zaki enue. said. “After a session, Zaki, Ellis and we compare thoughts Christie credit the cenand learn from each ter with providing a other.” forum where they can The nonprofcontinue to grow in it, member-supporttheir craft. “AAC has ed center, which says terrific monthly reon its webpage that it ceptions where we get has been supporting to meet new people,” artists in the commuZaki said. Robert Christie nity since 1954, hosts “I like the structure classes, lectures, demoffered by the weekonstrations and exhily meetings,” Christie bitions. aded. “AAC is a definite powerhouse of the A newcomer to the center, Gabriella arts in Buckhead, and one of the best Baetti, agreed. training programs to get artists on their “AAC is a great resource for emergown feet and known to the public,” said ing artists trying to gain experience and Cheryl D’Amato, who has functioned to network with other artists around Atas a long-time volunteer coordinator of lanta,” she said. AAC exhibits at the Buckhead Library. To learn more about AAC, visit Christie said the name of the “Primaatlantaartistscenter.org.
“My favorite part about living here is the flexibility to be as active and sociable as I want!” Meet Christie Kinsaul, who moved to Canterbury Court to downsize and simplify her life. Little did she know how much she would love her new lifestyle. “Maintaining a two-story townhouse and everything in it was taking considerable time and effort. I was ready for some changes, and I wanted to make the move on my own terms.” Christie didn’t expect to find such luxurious living in a one-bedroom apartment, which she says “is plenty big” and comes with full services and amenities. She was also delighted to discover an abundance of activities designed for resident interests, including outings to local events. As a retired music teacher, she’s especially fond of going to the Atlanta Symphony and the opera. Along with more flexibility to spend her time as she chooses, Christie’s move to Canterbury Court has given her peace of mind knowing that on-site health services are available, should she ever need them. Call (404) 365-3163 to see our warm, inviting community and furnished model apartments, including our diamond collection one-bedroom residences. 3750 Peachtree Road, N.E. Atlanta, Georgia 30319 canterburycourt.org Canterbury Court is Atlanta’s first and foremost continuing care retirement community, non-profit, and committed to welcoming all people.
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APRIL 3 – APRIL 16, 2015 | 15
Now Open in Brookhaven!
out& about
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Send your calendar listings to calendar@reporternewspapers.net FOR KIDS
“Stories by the Springs” Thursday, April 16, 3:30-7 p.m. – Heritage Sandy Springs presents an inaugural Storytelling Festival, featuring performances, workshops and activites. Open to all ages. Free. Heritage Sandy Springs, 6110 Bluestone Rd., Sandy Springs, 30328. Go to: www.heritagesandysprings.org, call 404-851-9111 ext. 4 or email events@heritagesandysprings.org for additional details.
Homeschool Enrichment Program Monday, April 20, 5 p.m. – The Sandy Springs Homeschool Enrichment Program holds a meeting open to the public at the Sandy Springs Library, 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328. For more information, visit: www.SandySpringsHomeschool.org.
COMMUNITY
Holocaust Remembrance Day
“The Civil War & the Forging of Character” Wednesday, April 15, 6-8 p.m. – On the 150th anniversary of the death of President Abraham Lincoln, The Lovett School presents the final lecture in “The Civil War and the Forging of Character,” a four-year lecture series presented by Lovett to mark the sesquicentennial of the Civil War and the Battle of Atlanta. Reservations required. Go to: www.lovett.org or call 404-262-3032, ext. 1717 to learn more and to register.
Friday Night Hikes April 17, 7:30 p.m. – The Dunwoody Na-
ture Center, normally closed at sundown, will host a night hike featuring stargazing, hot cocoa and a fire. 5343 Roberts Drive, Dunwoody, GA 30338. Free. Go online to www.dunwoodynature.org /Friday-Night-Hikes or call 770394-3322 for more information.
Artsapalooza Saturday, April 18, 10 a.m.-6 p.m., – Celebrate the arts with the annual Sandy Springs Artsapalooza art sale. The event features the artwork of 150 artists and will have food trucks, children’s activities and live music. Continues April 19, 11 a.m.6 p.m. 6100 Lake Forrest Dr., NE, Sandy Springs, 30328. Go online to www.sandyspringsartsapalooza.com or call 404-873-1222 to learn more.
Evening in the Garden
Sunday, April 12, 3:30-4:30 p.m. – The Marcus Jewish Community Center of Atlanta (MJCCA) invites the entire community to come together and remember the victims of the Holocaust with a special program commemorating Yom HaShoah (or Day of Holocaust Remembrance) at the MJCCA’s Besser Holocaust Memorial Garden. Free. Rain or shine. MJCCA, 5342 Tilly Mill Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. For more information, visit www.atlantajcc. org, or call 678-812-4161.
Saturday, April 18, 7 p.m. – Garden Hills Elementary School holds its 26th annual Evening in the Garden fundraiser at MercedesBenz of Buckhead. Includes both silent and live auctions, dancing, and food catered by local Buckhead restaurants. Tickets: $60 in advance; $75 at the door. Mercedes-Benz of Buckhead, 2799 Piedmont Rd., NE, Atlanta, 30305. For tickets or sponsorship information, visit: www. eveninginthegarden.com.
GET ACTIVE
Intro to Water Sports
Lemonade Days Wednesday, April 15, 4-10 p.m. – The an-
nual Lemonade Days festival returns to Brook Run Park in Dunwoody. The event features rides, food, performances,and vendors. Continues April 16, 4 p.m.- 10 p.m., April 17, 4 p.m. - 11 p.m., April 18, 10 a.m. - 11 p.m., and April 19, 12 p.m. - 6 p.m. 4770 North Peachtree Rd, Dunwoody, 30338. Suitable for all ages. Free. Go online to www.dunwoodylemonadedays.org or call 770-668-0401 for more details.
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Saturday, April 11, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. –
Sandy Springs Recreation and Parks Department, along with the High Country Outfitters, Inc., hosts the Canoe, Kayak and Paddleboard Intro & Demo Day to introduce the communi-
ty to paddling as a life sport emphasizing safety, enjoyment and skill acquisition for entry levels. Morgan Falls Overlook Park, 450 Morgan Falls Rd., Sandy Springs, 30350. Free, children welcome with adult supervision. Pre-registration requested. Visit: www.highcountryoutfitters.com for details.
Plant & Art Sale
$7 Meal Deal
Try our new
A single classic cheeseburger, fresh cut fries and a medium drink. Cannot be combined with any other coupon. Expires 4/30/15
Sandy Springs
Pace Race Saturday, April 11, 8:30 a.m. – Pace Acad-
emy invites all members of the Atlanta community – runners, walkers and spectators – to its 33rd annual Pace Race. The Pace Mile begins at 8:30 a.m., followed by the Pace Race 5K at 9 a.m. Register, sign waivers and make payments online at: www.paceacademy.org/pacerace. For more information, contact Juli Owens at juliowens@bellsouth.net or Cara Lubin at bambi5226@aol.com.
Dance Party & Potluck Sunday, April 19, 4-7 p.m. – The Atlanta
Cajun Zydeco Association celebrates spring with a dance party featuring Zydeco tunes and Cajun jitterbug, waltzes and two-steps. Bring a dish and/or a beverage to share. Garden Hills Community Center, 337 Pinetree Dr., NE, Atlanta, 30305. $5 entry. To find out more go to: www.aczadance.org, email: info@aczadance.org or call 877-338-2420.
5975 Roswell Rd., Sandy Springs Next to Lowe’s
404-600-2484
April 20, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. – The Dunwoody
Buckhead
Community Garden and Orchard and the Dunwoody Fine Art Association will be selling plants and artwork from local artists. Free and open to the public. Hours are 9 a.m.–5 daily for the plant sale, and Friday, Saturday and Sunday from 11 a.m.–5 p.m. for the art sale. Brook Run Park, 4770 North Peachtree Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. To learn more about the art exhibit and sale, contact Julie Marshall at marshallgator@comcast.net or visit www.dunwoodyfineart.org.
4365 Roswell Rd., Atlanta Roswell-Wieuca Shopping Center
678-732-9531
MONEY MATTERS
Women & Money
Saturday, April 11, 1-3 p.m. – Women are
encouraged to attend and learn how to deal with financial challenges and achieve financial security. Participants receive a free workbook containing key information, worksheets and questions. Sandy Springs Branch Library, 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328. Registration required. To register, contact Clare Stefan at 770-799-7016 or email: clare. sten@lfg.com.
PERFORMING ARTS
Organ Music Sunday, April 12, 3 p.m. – Organ virtuosa Gail Archer plays a program of music from many historic periods, including works based on familiar hymn tunes, Baroque and Romantic fireworks, and more. Free. St. Phillp Episcopal Cathedral, 2744 Peachtree Rd., NW, Atlanta, 30305. For additional details, call 404-365-1000 or visit stphilipscathedral.org.
Peachtree’s Got Talent
$5 OFF
Mexican Restaurant
Lunch or dinner
2042 Johnson Ferry Rd NE
(at the corner of Ashford-Dunwoody Rd. in Brookhaven)
(770) 452-9896
Hours: 11am to 10:30pm
Minimum $20 purchase Not valid with any other offers. Not valid on Fridays, must present newspaper ad to redeem. Expires 04/30/15
2009 Best Chinese-The Sunday Paper 2001-2002 Best Chinese by Atlanta Jewish Times readers 1998-2012 Best Chinese by Creative Loafing “Mouth-watering Chin Chin spices things up.” –The Atlanta Journal Constitution “Most Memorable Meal” –Where Atlanta Magazine - 21/2 stars–Knife & Fork • DELIVERY (LIMITED AREA, MIN. $10) • CARRY OUT • CATERING • FULL BAR SERVICE WATCH OUR OPEN KITCHEN & EXPERIENCE THE ART OF CHINESE COOKING!!
Chin Chin Chinese Restaurant
Friday, April 17, 6:30 p.m. – Check out LaAmistad’s annual talent show, which attracts tal-
ent from all over the area. Event provides an opportunity to showcase talents by letting your child or group shine in the spotlight in front of peers, family and the local community. Tickets: $10 for adults; $5 for children under 12. The Lodge in The Summit Room, 3417 Roswell Rd., Atlanta, 30305. For more information go to: www.laamistadinc.org.
Curtains, the Musical Friday, April 17, 8 p.m. – Act3 Productions closes its 2014-2015 season by presenting Cur-
tains, a comedy set in 1959. Curtains is a Tony Award-winning musical based on the original book and concept by Peter Stone, with book by Rupert Holmes, lyrics by Fred Ebb and music by John Kander. Additional lyrics are by Kander and Holmes. Show continues through May 9. Tickets: $15-$28. Purchase them at: www.act3productions.org. Act3 Playhouse, 6285-R Roswell Rd., Sandy Springs, 30328. Questions? Call 770-241-1905.
3887 Peachtree Road, Buckhead/Brookhaven And Other Locations 404-816-2229 | www.ChinChinAtlanta.com
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APRIL 3 – APRIL 16, 2015 | 17
Summer Camps Atlanta International School Summer Camps 2015
PLAY. Passion.
Purpose. Language Camps and More! ESL • Spanish • Orchestra • Chinese • French • German • Adult ESL •
Whether your camper is a budding scientist, a theater enthusiast or a social entrepreneur, The Children’s School has a camp that satisfies every interest!
Chess • 3D Game Design • Stardust-Theatre • App Design • Mod Design • Filmmaking • Photography • Rockets & Racecars • Sports • Camp • Keyboarding • Grade Six Study Skills • 3D Printing • Band • Orchestra • Ecology • Mixed Media Arts • Traditional Day •
June 8 – July 31, 2015
Visit http://tinyurl.com/TCSSummer or call 404-873-6985 to find out where your adventure begins!
Register Now! www.aischool.org/summercamp Convenient Buckhead location (404) 841-3865
Summer Horse Camps
An independent elementary school serving students age three through sixth grade 345 Tenth Street NE, Atlanta, GA 30309
SUMMER CAMP IN SANDY SPRINGS
Chastain Horse Park - convenient Buckhead location! Mon-Fri 8:00am-1:00pm Camp includes daily riding lessons, crafts, and games! Lots of fun!
R E C R E AT I O N
A N D
PA R K S
Contact Bergen at 404-252-4244 or lessons@chastainhorsepark.org Boarding * Riding Instruction * Therapeutic Riding Professional Clinics * Pony Parties * Camps
APRIL 3 – APRIL 16, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
W EEK
CAM
FROM
|
ER
G
18
$35
P
www.chastainhorsepark.org 404-252-4244
The City of Sandy Springs offers quality summer camps at affordable prices. Sports, Gymnastics, Art and Enrichment camps are available for preschoolers, children and teens. Learn more at sandyspringsga.gov/camps.
STARTIN PS
Summer Camps Oglethorpe University Volleyball Summer Camps
Experience the summer in dramatic fashion!
Individual Camp Team Camp Private Lessons Contact Richie Tang, Oglethorpe Head Coach
> Drama > Improv > Musical Theatre > Half-day camp for age 3
404-364-8480
Grades
Enroll now at
K–12
rtang@oglethorpe.edu JOA SUMMER C
1 ew 20 N 4 s In p am
alliancetheatre.org/dramacamp | 404.733.4700
5
Westminster Summer Programs www.westminster.net/summer
ALL AGES
June 15-19 from 9:30am - 3pm Temple Sinai, Sandy Springs Staffed by nationally recognized artists. Call: 770-992-2559 SPONSORS:
404-367-7868 1424 West Paces Ferry Rd Atlanta, GA 30327 Camps for 4 -18 Years June 1–July 10 9 am– 4 pm
www.jazzorchestraatlanta.org
Summer at Prep Holy Spiritbots o
þ build r occer þ play s classic þ read a w friends e n e k a m þ Atlanta e r lo p x e þ
Summer camps for students ages 3-12th grade
www.holyspiritprep.org/summer
Accepting applications for 2015-16
2015
SUMMER SESSION I: JUNE 1 - JUNE 26 SESSION II: JULY 6 - JULY 31
Registration begins February 1st The Camp at St. Martin’s offers fun for children in rising Pre-K through 8th grade.
The Camp at St. Martin’s 3110-A Ashford Dunwoody Road, Atlanta, GA 30319 (404) 237-4260, ext. 380 • www.stmartinschool.org Owned and managed by St. Martin’s Episcopal School. Director of Summer Programs: Mark McDaniel
WEEKLY THEMES:
Sports Zone, Nature, Space, Pets are People Too, God Bless America, DIY (Do It Yourself) Projects and much more! All day Summer Camp Starting May 26 Kindergarten through 5th Grade 7:00am - 6:00pm, lunch included Weekly themed entertainment & field trips! $200.00 per week* *$100.00 registration fee ($50.00 before May 1)
www.ReporterNewspapers.net |
404-843-8375
550 Mt. Paran Rd., Sandy Springs office@stjohnchildren.org www.stjohnchildren.org
APRIL 3 – APRIL 16, 2015 | 19
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APRIL 3 – APRIL 16, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
Summer Camps MJCCA
SUMMER DAY CAMPS 2015
BEYOND CAMP
S
EE BU FR TRANSPO
TO
RTATION
MJCCA
REGISTER NOW AT atlantajcc.org/camps NEW FOR 2015
JOIN TODAY AND GET A
PERFORMING ARTS CAMPS AT EMORY UNIVERSITY
FREE WEEK
OF SUMMER DAY CAMP!*
Galloway’s g360 Summer Camp is open to all children ages 3 and up and is held on our campus in beautiful Chastain Park.
Restrictions apply. Please visit atlantajcc.org/specials for full details.
TRADITIONAL • SPORTS • SPECIALTY PERFORMING ARTS • TEEN FOR RISING PREK-10TH GRADE
Register now for Summer 2015! gallowayschool.org/camp
5342 Tilly Mill Road, Dunwoody • 678.812.4004 • camps@atlantajcc.org •
EPSTEIN SUMMER ADVENTURE C AMP
AC ADEMICS CREATIVE SPORTS
AND
GESHER HEBREW IMMERSION CAMP
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ESA CAMP
Your neighborhood camp experience. JUNE 8TH–JULY 2ND • Over 40 adventures for 2yrs–8th grade • Multi-week discounts available • Before and after care available • Half and full day options • Snacks provided • Outstanding air-conditioned facility THE EPSTEIN SCHOOL
Solomon School of Atlanta or Contact usSchechter at 404-250-5606 visit us at EpsteinAtlanta.org/esa.
THE EPSTEIN SCHOOL Solomon Schechter School of Atlanta
Summer fun is just around the corner! www.paceacademy.org/SummerPrograms
3 3 5 C O L E WO O D WAY S A N DY S P R I N G S , G A 3 0 3 2 8
THE EPSTEIN SCHOOL Solomon Schechter School of Atlanta
| www.ReporterNewspapers.net 4829 esa ads_prf4.indd 1 THE EPSTEIN SCHOOL
| 21 APRIL 3 – APRIL 16, 20151/20/15 1:47 PM
Summer Camps Camp Chamblee
Available for children ages 6-12, Camp Chamblee offers a variety of activities including sports, games, arts & crafts, swimming, field trips, and more.
EXPLORE A WONDERFUL WORLD OF READING, WRITING AND FUN THIS SUMMER AT SWIFT SCHOOL
Camp hours are as follows: Drop off 7:30-9:00am Scheduled activities 9:00am-3:30pm Pick up 3:30-6:00pm. Camp fees are $75 per week for City of Chamblee residents and $100 for nonresidents. Parents will be charged $5 for each 15 minutes they are late picking up their child starting at 6:01pm. Space is limited to 60 campers per week and reservations must be made in advance.
Camp is held in the Community Building in Keswick Park at 3496 Keswick Dr. and campers have all the amenities of the park available throughout the week. More details and online registration can be found at www.chambleega.gov Call 770-986-5016 with questions.
July 6 - July 24, 2015 All Rising 1st-8th Grade Students Welcome
Art Summer Camp June 1 – August 21 Ages 3-7 / 2 week sessions, including Art, Cooking, Gardening, Science and Water Play
Register Now !
SUMMER CAMPS 2015
Students learn using the Orton-Gillingham approach
•
Establish, maintain, and enhance skills and concepts taught during the academic year
•
Complementary activities in art, drama, STEAM/STEM classes, crafts, amazing science experiments and reading through magic. 300 Grimes Bridge Road Roswell, GA 30075 678-205-4988 www.swiftschool.com
1036 Lindbergh Drive NE Atlanta, GA, 30324 404.949.0053 www.carlislemontessori.com
CELEBRATING MORE THAN A DECADE OF EXCELLENCE
•
5-STAR SPORTS SPORTS 101 FUN & GAMES INDOOR SOCCER BASKETBALL JR. GOLF GYMNASTICS & CHEER BOYS GYMNASTICS CO-ED GYMNASTICS TINY TUMBLERS PRINCESS BALLERINA PRIMA BALLERINA CO-ED HIP HOP BOYS HIP HOP DANCE INTENSIVE MUSICAL THEATRE JR. BRIDGE ABRAKADOODLE
Regist
rat ion is ope n
Reg
ister
10 one-week sessions for kids ages 2-13, beginning June 1!
24/7
@w
ww.
dbc.
!
org/
cam
pun
ite
Convenient before and af ter care hours!
www.dbc.org/campunite REGISTER NOW: thegymatpeachtree.org 22
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APRIL 3 – APRIL 16, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
Camp options for preschoolers each week!
New for 2015:
Drama and cheerleading for ages 6-13! Lee Bryan, That Puppet Guy, is coming for 4 shows for our preschoolers!
t
au
rant Re
vi
Res
DINING OUT: Farm Burger
ew
RESTAURANTS
BY ART HUCKABEE Spring has sprung. It’s time to get back in tune with nature. It’s time to get healthy. What say we do both by having a burger and fries? Never has the classic all-American combo made one feel so environmentally friendly and downright healthy, than does the one at Farm Burger, the local chain that combines the everlasting gourmet burger craze with the ever trendy farm-totable craze. This place is craze-ee popular. Who knew that there were so many health nuts eating burgers? There’s usually a line. You’ll need the time to scan the five or six menus that adorn the walls. Paper menus are available which make it easier to navigate the array of choices. The basic premise is to build a burger. Choose from 100 percent grass-fed beef or chicken or veggie quinoa, and top it with over 30 condiments ranging from roasted garlic to oxtail marmalade. If that’s too many choices there are six pre-decided “Blackboard Burgers” as well. Order at the bar, get a number, and
find a table. The food arrives quickly. Our burger purist ordered a plain cheeseburger. He pronounced it as awesome. He’s 12. The grass-fed beef is very lean, so if you’re a medium-well- to well -done carnivore, you might want to dial the level of doneness back a notch to avoid arid burger syndrome. We tried the “Blackboard Burgers.” The No.1 Farm Burger had aged Vermont white cheddar cheese, caramelized onions and FB sauce, a riff on Thousand Island dressing. The beef held up surprisingly well under the flavor bomb of cheese and sweet. Dry-aged beef has a beefier, slightly funky note. The No. 6 was another beef patty adorned with bacon, a sunny side up egg, pepper jack cheese and Salsa Verde. The egg and the green sauce made the burger, adding moisture and flavor. The No. 4 chicken burger was the hit of the meal. A juicy chicken patty was dressed with smoked Gouda, kale coleslaw, crispy onions and a sherry-date barbecue sauce.
No. 1 The Farm Burger
The flavors from the cheese and barbecue sauce, and the textures from the slaw and onions made this a memorable dish. The No. 2, the veggie quinoa burger, was a slightly dry patty, soft in texture and lacking that satisfying chew that one associates with a burger. The mixed greens, marinated beets, balsamic onions and garlic aioli helped both texture and flavor, but the letdown was palpable from the burger lover in our crowd who had gone veggie for the cause. There are a myriad of sides, salads and soup. The fries had good crunch and the right amount of seasoning. The onion rings were more breading than onion; only three came in an order of fries ‘n rings.
Thank goodness they weren’t a hit. The sweet potato fries were limp, begging for texture. The Farm Burger Soup was an amalgam of lentils, carrots, potato, sweet potato, squash, onion and Swiss chard, with a dollop of sour cream. It had a nice homey taste and would be a good choice on a cool spring day. The Superfood Salad was lacinato kale, also known as black kale, beets, pecans, roasted carrots, caramelized onions, dried cranberries, tahini dressing and nutritional yeast, which is often used as a cheese substitute. You know this dish is good for you from the first bite, and it was surprisingly tasty as well needing perhaps a little more tahini dressing and a dash more acidity. There’s an interesting beer selection and a handful of wines. Milkshakes and floats made with Morelli’s gourmet ice cream are also available. We didn’t order any as we were there for only the healthy stuff. Farm Burger has locations in Decatur, Dunwoody and Buckhead. For more information, visit farmburger.net. Art Huckabee is one of Yelp’s Elite Reviewers, as well as a pilot, gourmet cook and food lover. Send feedback to atlantafoodwriter@gmail.com.
Summer Camps Katori Education Co., LLC Summer Programs at Georgia Tech University Game Design
Writing
Weeklong, Enriching Day Programs Ages 8-12 2015: June 1st-5th & June 8th-12th • Hands-on Projects • Real-world Experiences
Tel 678.880.7094
katorieducationco.com
IT’S ALWAYS SWIM SEASON
Visit: ymcadaycamping.com
Visit: Visit: ymcadaycamping.com Visit: ymcadaycamping.com ymcadaycamping.com
:: Certified Instructors :: Heated saline pools are open year round 8 Concourse Parkway | Sandy Springs, GA :: Available to Members and Non-members Immediately off South GA400 Exit 4C :: Year round swim team preparation for ages 5-15 :: Quality Lessons and Classes for Beginners, Masters and Triathletes For more information, contact Tracy Meazell at tmeazell@wellbridge.com or 770.698.2090 today.
www.ReporterNewspapers.net |
APRIL 3 – APRIL 16, 2015 | 23
The Davis Academy is proud to be a 2015 Top Workplace!
RESTAURANTS
Quick Bites: News you can eat Buckhead Restaurant Week will be held April 18-26. Brunch, lunch and dinner cuisine from participating restaurants will be available on $15, $25 or $35 prix fixe menus. Prices are per person and exclude alcohol, tax and gratuity. Visit atlantarestaurantweeks.com to see a full list of participating restaurants. Olde Blind Dog Irish Pub in Brookhaven was chosen as Irish Pub of the Year by the Irish Pubs Global Federation based in Dublin. “The Irish Pub of the Year award is given to the inspirational pub which has reached benchmark standards that should inspire others,” said John Byrne, CEO of Irish Pubs Global Federation. “Olde Blind Dog meets those standards.” SweetWater Brewery and United Distributors recently presented a check for $55,547 to The Giving Kitchen. The brewery’s partnership with The Giving Kitchen dates back to 2013 when the two organizations came together to brew Second Helping, a juniper IPA to raise funds for the organization. The Giving Kitchen is a nonprofit dedicated to assisting restaurant industry workers who have experienced some sort of unanticipated emergency or hardship. For more, visit thegivingkitchen.org. Brookhaven’s The Cook’s Warehouse will close in mid-April after a slump in sales. CEO Mary Moore said, “We opened our second store in Brookhaven in 2002. This location has not kept up with the growth of our other stores – Midtown, Decatur and East Cobb. With a growing need for additional retail and teaching space, as well as increased demand for parking with better ingress/egress, I determined it best to not resign our lease.” Moore said she was seeking another location, possibly in Brookhaven.
The Alfred & Adele
Davis Academy
Where the Journey Begins Atlanta’s Reform Jewish Day School Mechina: Kindergarten Prep through 8th Grade www.davisacademy.org
Proud Affiliate of:
JUST ADD IMAGINATION.
New Japanese restaurant Doraku Sushi is open at Buckhead Atlanta offering a “refined twist” on traditional Japanese fare, drawing inspiration from Asian and Latin flavor profiles. For more, visit buckhead-atl.com. Glaze, a “doughnuts, bacon and barista shop,” will open in Brookleigh Market in Brookhaven this June, according to Atlanta Magazine. Fifth Group Restaurants plans to open new locations of South City Kitchen and La Tavola Trattoria. South City Kitchen will occupy 6,000 square feet on the first floor of the 3350 Peachtree building in Buckhead. The company is also looking to open a new 4,500 to 6,500-squarefoot La Tavola Trattoria location in a yet-to-be-decided “metro-Atlanta neighborhood.” Sisters Katherine Kallinis Berman and Sophie Kallinis LaMontagne have opened Georgetown Cupcake Buckhead at 267 East Paces Ferry Road. For more, visit georgetowncupcake.com.
Buckhead restaurants take top spots on new Zagat list On March 10, Zagat, the restaurant review website, released its new list of Atlanta’s 50 best eateries for 2015. Buckhead restaurants claimed six of the top 10 spots. Here’s Zagat’s new top 10. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.
Bone’s Restaurant (Buckhead) Aria (Buckhead) Antico Pizza Napoletana (Home Park) Umi Buckhead (Buckhead) Chops Lobster Bar (Buckhead) Pampas Steakhouse (Johns Creek) Tomo Japanese Restaurant (Buckhead) Fogo de Chao Churrascaria (Buckhead) 9. Rathbun’s (Inman Park) 10. Bacchanalia (West Midtown) Source: zagat.com/best-restaurants/atlanta
1 ANY GARMENT DRY CLEANED EZONEPRICECLEANERS.COM $ 99
CARPET
RUGS
STONE
CERAMIC
WOOD
NOW TWO LOCATIONS BUCKHEAD AND SANDY SPRINGS COMING SOON CHESIRE BRIDGE 6223 Roswell Rd. 404-255-2431 Mon-Fri 8:30-5:30, Sat 10-4
24
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APRIL 3 – APRIL 16, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
6358 Roswell Rd, Sandy Springs GA, 30328 - 470-440-5450 4314 Roswell Rd, Atlanta GA, 30342 - 678-974-8377
RESTAURANTS
Yelpers have some suggestions when you crave Thai food Editor’s note: Yelp is a website and a mobile app – free to use – that connects you with local businesses, organizations and events. Reporter Newspapers has partnered with Yelp for a monthly feature on Yelper’s favorite eats, treats and more in Reporter Newspapers communities. Yelp Associate Regional Marketing Director Colleen Burns compiled this list. When you're craving Thai food, nothing else will do. Spicy and creamy curries, oodles of noodles, and fried rice with pineapple and raisins. If you're not familiar, the complexity of the cuisine will amaze you.
Buckhead Tuk Tuk Thai Food Loft - 1745 Peachtree St. NE, 30309.
Boasting a wide variety of Thai cuisine, the menu offers a selection to please just about every palate, but not so many items that you're overwhelmed. Don't miss their Mieng Kum, a popular item. Annie’s Thai Castle - 3195 Roswell Road NE, 30305. Serving ATL for 25 years, and yes, you can actually meet Annie! Go for the coconut soup, stay for curries.
Brookhaven The One Sushi + - 2523 Caldwell Rd. NE, 30319. The + equals so much more than just sushi, including various Thai flavors. Everything is made fresh daily in house, using seasonal ingredients sourced lo-
cally when possible. They rotate menu items frequently, so stop in various occasions to experience unending options. Bua - 705 Town Boulevard, 30319. "Bua" which means "lotus" in Thai language, has Yelpers crazy about the drunken noodles - "they are a must if you are a Thai noodle fan."
Dunwoody Singha Thai - 5554 Chamblee Dunwoody Rd., 30338. Extensive Thai cuisine with sushi on the side. Looking for a spicy treat? Check out the basil duck or spicy catfish. Simply Thai - 4639 N. Shallowford Rd., 30338.
With lunch specials for under $10, this place is sure to curb your cravings. Buy any three beers and get the fourth one free, but don't forget to enjoy the Thai tea.
Sandy Springs Erawan Organic Thai - 7537 Roswell Rd., 30350. The crew at Erawan have been cooking original Thai cuisine spanning 15 years. You like it hot? Ask for Thai hot, and indeed, they will make it spicy! Bangkok Thyme - 4969 Roswell Rd. NE, 30342. Perfect setting for a girls’ night out or even a getaway with your significant other, enjoy the Happy Hour Specials from 5 to 7 p.m. daily.
WE TREAT 21,000 BREAKS AND SPRAINS A YEAR
AND STILL COUNTING. When a child or teen gets a fracture, he needs special care. So trust the doctors with the expertise to fix growing bones and growth plates the right way. Find out more at choa.org/fracture.
©2015 Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, Inc. All rights reserved.
DUN
www.ReporterNewspapers.net |
APRIL 3 – APRIL 16, 2015 | 25
EDUCATION FREE
LED Light Bulb
20.00
$
Offer valid to the first 100 customers Limit 1. Valid while supplies last. Offer valid on in-stock products at participating locations. Not valid with other offers or business pricing. Some exclusions may apply. Must present coupon in-store; not valid for online purchases. No cash value. See store for complete details. Expires 6.30.15. FREELED1
Standout Student
Off Smartphone/Tablet Screen Repair
Student Profile:
Sarah Corning The Lovett School, Junior
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Last summer, Lovett junior Sarah Corning sought out a trip that included medical studies while also tying in her Spanish speaking skills. She found that 4418 Roswell Rd., N.E 51 Cobb Pkwy. SE 4101 Roswell Rd. Georgia Public Service Academies’ twoAtlanta Marietta Marietta (East Cobb) week medical brigade to Guatemala was 404-256-0310 770-421-0220 678-539-6761 Mon-Fri 8 - 9, Sat 8 - 9, Sun 10 - 7 Mon-Fri 8 - 9, Sat 8 - 9, Sun 10 - 7 Mon-Fri 8 - 8, Sat 8 - 8, Sun 10 - 6 the perfect fit. Before embarking, Sarah worked as a www.batteriesplus.com translator at the Good Samaritan Health Center in Atlanta to accustom herself with medical vocabulary, and to fine-tune her Spanish. Once in Guatemala, a typical day included in the Aprilteaching 1– June 13,classrooms 2014 and volSilhouette Window Shadings unteering in the local clinics. A brilliant way to While teaching, Sarah focused her lesuse natural light. sons on personal hygiene, specifically about the spread of germs through handsSilhouette® Window on activities. In her demonstration, one Shadings diffuse student whose hands had been covered * Silhouette Window Shadings diffuse thefilling sun’s rays, creating soft Now through®April 25, 2015 the sun’s rays, in glitter shook hands with other students and spread the glitter to each person. The homehome. with soft, light that naturally illuminates Save now with valuable * your your ON SELECT HUNTER DOUGLAS $ kids enjoyed this active way of learning, rebates. Ask for details. natural light. Pretty WINDOW FASHIONS and were eager to practice washing their OR MORE WITH REBATES smart. Ask for details. on qualifying purchases of ® hands, she said. Silhouette Window Shadings Hunter Douglas window fashions “When someone gets you out of your The Art of Georgia Blinds & Interiors regular class lecture, you get excited,” Window Dressing ideas booklet she joked. “They were attentive, learned Select Georgia Blinds & Interiors 220 Sandy Springs Cir Ste 129 quickly, and clearly retained the informa220 Sandy Springs Cir Ste 129 Offer2 with this ad Atlanta Atlanta GAGA tion we were teaching them.” M-F: 10:00 AM - 5:30 PM In the clinics, Sarah recorded vital signs M-F: 10am-5:30pm Sat. 11:00 AM - 3:00 PM Sun. Closed and also shadowed some of the doctors. Saturday 11am-3pm 404-252-6991 Afternoons consisted of individual Spanwww.gablinds.com 404-252-6991 ish lessons to help strengthen the student Manufacturer’s mail-in rebate offer valid for qualifying purchases made 2/1/15 – 4/25/15 from participating dealers in the U.S. only. Offer excludes Nantucket™ Window Shadings, a collection of Silhouette® Window Shadings. Rebate will be issued in the form of a prepaid reward card and mailed within 6 weeks of rebate claim receipt. Funds do not expire. Subject Us At speaking Facebook or Twitter volunteers’ skills. to applicable law, a $2.00 monthly fee will be assessed against card balance 7 months after www.gablinds.com card issuance and each month thereafter. Additional limitations may apply. Ask participating Follow dealer for details and rebate form. © 2015 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas. WIN15MB3 Sarah said her most meaningful expe* Manufacturer’s mail-in rebate offer valid for purchases made 4/1/14 – 6/13/14 from participating dealers in the U.S. only. Rebatewhile will bein issued in the form was of a prepaid rience Guatemala her interLegalclaim Advertisement reward card and mailed within 6 weeks of rebate receipt. Funds do not expire. Subject to applicable law, a $2.00 monthly fee will be assessed against card balance action with the mothers and children in 7 months after card issuance and each month thereafter. Additional limitations apply. Ask participating dealer for details and rebate form. © 2014 Hunter Douglas. post-natal care. “Reaching the communiAll rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas. SPG14MB3 41522 ties who would not even come into the clinic and making sure they were well nourished and their baby’s growth was on
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NOTICE OF NONDISCRIMINATORY POLICY AS TO STUDENTS Cumberland Academy of Georgia, Inc. admits students of any race, color, national and ethnic origin to all the rights, privileges, programs and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the school. It does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national and ethnic origin in administration of its educational policies, admission policies, scholarship and loan programs, and athletic and other school-administered programs. Cumberland Academy of Georgia, Inc. 650 Mt. Vernon Hwy NE, Atlanta, GA 30328 • 404-835-9000.
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APRIL 3 – APRIL 16, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
track was probably our most important work,” she said. Back in the U.S., Sarah continues working with GPSA and plans on returning to Guatemala during the summer to implement another public health project. She is working with Dr. Robert Malkin of Duke University to help design a dental health program. Her biggest goal is teaching a program that is sustainable and will make an impact after she leaves. Dr. Malkin said he believes Sarah will have no problem meeting that goal. “She should be able to provide the community with insight on the connection between food choices and dental health,” he said. In addition to being a world-traveler and volunteer, Sarah is a tutor at La Amistad, and a member of both the varsity debate team and varsity basketball team at Lovett. Sarah also fills leadership roles in the World Cultures Club and the Teens Against Prejudice Organization.
What’s Next: Sarah will start the college application process this August, and sees herself majoring in Biomedical Engineering or Economics, in hopes of pursuing a career in public health care. This article was written by Amanda Gibson, a student at Holy Innocents’ Episcopal School.
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Going ‘cuckoo’ for collards Above, from left, Chesnut Charter Elementary School students and Ecology Club members Sofia Renals, Jordan Wade and Madison Hummel cook “coconut collards” as school counselor Betty Sule, back, looks on.
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Almost 50% of Baby Boomers say they’re experiencing difficulty hearing.* That’s because they haven’t met Lyric.
GPC professors lecture on popular appeal of frightening futures Two Georgia Perimeter College professors will present a public lecture on how recent movies and books such as “The Hunger Games” portray the future as places where people are unhappy and treated unfairly. Associate Professor of English Hank Eidson and Assistant Professor of philosophy Eric Morton will explore why dystopian worlds have become a major part of our popular culture over the past few years. They’ll also look into why the idea of a dystopian future continues to strongly fascinate audiences. Georgia Perimeter’s Sarah Larson Lecture Series will host the “Dystopian Futures Now: Anxiety in an Age of Uncertainty” event on Thursday, April 9, from 1 to 2:15 p.m. on the college’s Dunwoody Campus. The lecture is free and open to the public in the GPC-Dunwoody auditorium, 2101 Womack Road, NC building, room 1100. DUN
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APRIL 3 – APRIL 16, 2015 | 27
COMMUNITY
Tournament brings Olympic-level women boxers to local gym CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
troduction to boxing, Moss still hangs out at the gym. In fact, she owns the place now. The former pro champion boxer, known as “The Boss” in the ring, is boss of her own place, the Buckhead Fight Club, which is actually located in the basement of a shopping center on Buford Highway in Brookhaven. Now a 49-year-old grandmother, she trains other, younger fighters these days. But she keeps an assortment of padded gloves in a ringside gym bag and she says she only officially retired from boxing about a year ago. “I gave my headgear to one of the boys,” she said. “This signifies my retirement.” Next month, Moss’ gym will host an international boxing event she says will attract Olympic-caliber women boxers from around the world. USA Boxing’s Women’s International Clash of Champions, scheduled April 20 through April 25, is set to bring teams of boxers from China, Bulgaria, the U.S. and other countries to compete in a round-robin tournament. About 40 athletes, including Americans Claressa Shields and Marlen Espinoza, both medalists in the 2012 Olympics, are scheduled to take part, Moss said. “It’s a big deal,” said Moss, who also puts together local “Corporate Fight Nights.” “Some of these boxers are going to be seen in the Olympics on television. We know that. We just can’t say which ones.” Moss said she intends to give the visiting fighters a taste of American boxing, “an all-American sports experience.” “American sports are huge,” Moss said. “[Sports] are large in other countries, too, but American sports have a certain level of excitement and noise
er rhythm-and-blues tunes blared from the PA. “There’s a lot in this little bitty basement,” Moss said. “They’ll come down to this underground fight club in a parking lot on Buford Highway, the melting pot of Atlanta,” she said. “I hope to let them see what it feels like to be in America and an American boxer.” And while they’re there, she said, she plans to feed them homecooked Mexican food, Philly-style cheesesteak sandwiches and breakfast from the International House of Pancakes. Moss came to boxing late. She was 36 years old when she made her pro debut, she said. Although some folks told her she was too old JOE EARLE to box, she fought for five more Terri Moss, a 49-year-old grandmother, years. “Some of us just love the says her gym is a “family place.” sport,” she said. and chaos.” She named her gym after a She thinks her gym will show visiting boxers somecult movie and has decorated parts of it with quotes thing different than what they’re used to. The atmofrom the film, but she sees the Buckhead Fight Club sphere in her gym is different, she said, from the quiet, as a family place. “Whole families spend every evening dignified boxing gyms she’s seen when traveling overhere,” she said. “A lot of it is because of the communiseas. ty that comes to this gym. I really think that because it’s Her 15,000-square-foot facility is decorated with run by women, it gives it a different vibe.” graffiti and bright street-art-style murals. Moss calls the “I love being in the gym,” she said. And it shows. décor “an urban American theme.” One recent morn“I’m almost 50 years old,” she said, “and I skip ing, Sam and Dave’s “Hold On I’m Coming” and otharound the gym like a little kid.”
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APRIL 3 – APRIL 16, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
DUN
PUBLIC SAFETY
The data side of law enforcement: number-crunching cops BY ELLEN ELDRIDGE
elleneldridge@reporternewspapers.net
Amanda Head turns numbers into narratives. She’s a crime analyst with the Dunwoody Police Department. In her job, she collects and analyzes crime data, and prepares statistical crime reports for other officers to pinpoint areas where crimes are likely to occur. “I look at what [crimes] occurred the day before and look at trends like entering autos or burglaries, and connect with other local analysts to compare across the board,” she said. She recalled one incident where officers caught two burglars she helped link to many other open burglary cases in Dunwoody and surrounding cities. “Big win for me after only being on the job for about eight months,” Head said. In Brookhaven, Dunwoody, Sandy Springs and Atlanta, analysts such as Head help police departments predict and try to prevent future crime by using data from past crimes. “Analyses of trends, patterns and hot spots provide law enforcement officials with the who, what, when, where, how and why of emerging crime in the community,” Brookhaven crime analyst Kathy Esque said in an email. “Data analyzed can be used to develop effective tactics and strategies, interceding as soon as possible, preventing victimization and reducing crime.” Sandy Springs Crime Analyst Pat Graham provided this example of how analysts work to prevent crime: “We see a suspect likes to break into cars every Wednesday at lunch time in the 5000 block of Roswell Road,” Graham said. “Patrols actually look for this suspect during this time frame and location.” Atlanta police Lt. Peter Ries said of-
ficers can check crime data from their patrol cars. A computer program called PredPol provides up-to-date information and predicts crime on an ongoing basis, he said. “It’s an additional tool that helps us,” Ries said, noting the program doesn’t replace the need for the tactical crime analysis unit he leads, which includes eight sworn officers, a sworn supervisor and three civilian analysts. Head said she’s been interested in criminals’ mindsets and their activities since she was about 10 years old. She’s a civilian employee who wants to help officers from her desk inside the department. She jokes that she doesn’t have the “guts” needed to hit the streets and police the community as a sworn officer. Head earned a bachelor’s degree in criminology from the University of West Georgia in 2009, and started with Dunwoody police in 2011. She became the crime analyst in February 2014, and then attended four classes over the course of a year at California State University for certification. Crime analysts describe their statistics-based jobs as exciting. Esque said she likes her role in investigations because she gets to see an entire case through from lead to conclusion. “As an officer, you don’t often get to see what happens after the arrest,” said Esque, who switched careers from accounting to law enforcement. “The entire case develops right in front of me and I do love doing it.” Esque said that her accounting background led her to the data side of law enforcement. In her first law enforcement job, as a jailer in Newton County, other officers would ask her to “pull
Police Blotter
ELLEN ELDRIDGE
Amanda Head, a crime analyst with the Dunwoody Police Department, collects data and prepares statistical reports for officers.
numbers.” She moved from working in the jail from 2007 to 2009 to earning her crime analyst and intelligence certification in 2013. She joined Brookhaven police in January as the department’s first crime analyst. And she’s already seen crimes solved. “Two serial armed robbery suspects have been identified, one has been arrested and charged, and warrants have been obtained on the other,” Esque said. “A serial burglary suspect has been identified, arrested and charged.” Sandy Springs’ crime analyst unit includes a civilian crime analyst manager and two crime analysts (one sworn officer and one civilian), department spokesman Sgt. Ron Momon said. Atlanta’s team also includes a mix of civilians and sworn officers. Ries said applications for crime analysis jobs often come from people with
backgrounds in statistics. “They could have worked in private industry, but they applied with the APD,” Ries said. One Atlanta analyst transferred his experience in working with the federal government to analyzing crime data for Atlanta, Ries said. Ries said over the course of his career, which started in Atlanta in 2003, he has grown to appreciate the benefit to seeing how crime affects the entire city. He said when working with narcotics units in just one of the six zones patrolled by Atlanta police, he stayed focused on that particular area. “It’s really opened my eyes to different issues across the city,” Ries said. “It’s a larger challenge than just the zone. I like trying to help the zone commanders and the chiefs see where the crime is, and as a team re-evaluate and fight crime to make the community safer.”
6600
reported and an arrest was made; On March 18, shoplifting was reported; On March 20, shoplifting was reported; On March 23, shoplifting was reported.
block of Peachtree Industrial Boulevard—On March 26, a burglary to a residence, without using forced entry, was reported.
From police reports dated March 11 through March 26.
AUTO T H EFT
The following information was pulled from Dunwoody’s Police-to-Citizen Portal Event Search website and is presumed to be accurate.
200
ROBBERY
100
4900
block of Winters Chapel Road— On March 22, a strong arm robbery in the street was reported.
BURGLA RY 2300
block of Dunwoody Crossing— On March 12, a burglary to a residence, without using forced entry, was reported.
4700
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road—On March 18, a burglary to a residence, using forced entry, was reported.
DUN
block of Perimeter Center Parkway—On March 19, a recovered stolen auto was reported. block of Perimeter Center West— On March 22, a stolen auto was reported.
First block of Dunwoody Park South—
On March 20, a burglary to a residence, using forced entry, was reported.
4000
block of Dunwoody Park—On March 23, four incidents of burglaries to residences, using forced entry, were reported.
5400
block of Saffron Drive—On March 24, a burglary to a residence, using forced entry, was reported.
TH EFT/LAR CEN Y 4600
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road—On March 11, shoplifting was reported.
4300
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road—On March 11, shoplifting was reported; On March 13, shoplifting was reported; On March 15, shoplifting was reported; On March 15, shoplifting was www.ReporterNewspapers.net |
4400
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road—On March 11. March 13, March 15, March 20 and March 23, incidents of shoplifting were reported; on March 14, theft of articles from a vehicle was reported and shoplifting was reported; on March 15, March 19, March 21 and March 23, thefts were reported; on March 21, theft of articles from a vehicle was reported.
4700
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road— Reports of shoplifting were made on March 11, March 20, March 21, March 23, March 24, March 25 and March 26. Arrests were made in connection with shoplifting reports on March 13, March 14 and March 17. CONTINUED ON PAGE 30
APRIL 3 – APRIL 16, 2015 | 29
PUBLIC SAFETY
Dunwoody Police Blotter CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29 5000
block of Vermack Road—On March 12, a larceny was reported.
AS S A U LT 300 block of Perimeter Center North—
On March 14, simple assault and battery was reported.
1000
block of Crown Pointe Parkway—On March 14, a report was made of aggravated assault with a weapon and an arrest was made.
5000 block of Winding Branch Drive—
On March 17, a family simple assault was reported and an arrest was made.
First
block of Perimeter Center East— On March 19, a family offense, no violence, was reported.
4800
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road—On March 20, simple assault and battery was reported.
6700
block of Peachtree Industrial Boulevard—On March 20, family battery/simple battery was reported.
5400
block of Chamblee-Dunwoody Road—On March 22, simple assault and battery was reported.
4000
block of Dunwoody Park—On
March 22, a family offense, no violence, was reported. 2900
block of Four Oaks Drive—On March 23, a family offense, no violence, was reported.
5300
4400
block of Tilly Mill Road—On March 13, disorderly conduct was reported.
4400
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road—On March 13, suicide threats were reported.
block of Claridge Square—On March 23, family 4500 block battery/simple batof Ashford-Duntery was reported. woody Road— Read more of the On March 14, Police Blotter online at 4700 block of www.reporternewspapers.net disorderly conAshford-Dunduct was reportwoody Road—On ed; On March 25, March 24, assault through intimidation a civil dispute was reported. was reported. 5300 block of Winters Chapel Road— On March 14, animal complaints were O T H ER reported. 4400 block of N. Peachtree Road—On March 11, criminal trespass was reported.
300
block of Perimeter Center—On March 11, a wanted person was located.
First
block of Perimeter Center East— On March 12, a wanted person was located; On March 13, harassing communications were reported; On March 26, damage to property was reported.
1600
block of Bishop Hollow Run— On March 12, a wanted person was located.
4700
block of Ashford Dunwoody Road/Ashford Center Parkway—On March 15, a wanted person was located.
N.
Peachtree Road/Dunwoody Crossing—On March 15, fleeing/attempting to elude officer was reported.
4600
block of Peachtree Place—On March 16, damage to private property was reported.
4400
block of Chamblee-Dunwoody Road—On March 17, disorderly con-
duct was reported. 10200
block of Peachford Circle—On March 17, heroin possession was reported.
1000
block of Crown Pointe Parkway—On March 18, a wanted person was located.
2200
block of Pernoshal Court—On March 20, harassing communications were reported.
2100
block of Bucktrout Place—On March 21, harassing communications were reported.
6800
block of Peachtree Industrial Boulevard—On March 22, a noise violation was reported.
2300
block of Dunwoody Crossing— On March 22, harassing communications were reported.
100
block of Perimeter Center Place— On March 22, a wanted person was located.
4000
block of Dunwoody Park—On March 24, suicide threats were reported.
5500
block of Chamblee-Dunwoody Road—On March 26, lost and found property was reported.
Reporter Classifieds HELP WANTED Sr. DB Analyst (Axiall Corporation; Atlanta, GA). Req Bach’s deg or foreign equiv in CS, informatics, biotech, info syst, or rltd tech fld, & at least 5 yrs exp in job offered or at least 5 yrs exp managing SQL or Oracle DB. All stated exp must incl exp w/ DB replication, incl log shipping & DB mirroring. Must have at least 2 yrs exp in following: data warehouse devl’t; bus intelligence; IBM – Infosphere change data capture (CDC); & ETL tools, incl SSIS & IBM Datastage. Must also have exp in network-related hardware/SW & rltd peripherals, practices, policies, & procedures. Plan, design implement, manage, & maintain corporate DB syst. Send resume to: N. Walker, Axiall Corporation, 1000 Abernathy Rd., Atlanta, GA 30328. Ref: SrDBA5.
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APRIL 3 – APRIL 16, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
Furniture, clothes, kitchenware, collectibles, books & more! 3750 Peachtree Rd NE • 404-261-6611
Thursday, April 23 9-4, Friday, April 24 9-2:30 (Friday is half price day) Parking Available in front & side of building
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LEGAL NOTICES The business records of the following customers of Access Information, 5405 Buford Hwy NW, Norcross, GA 30071, have been abandoned: Cumulus Broadcasting, Crescent Mortgage Services Inc, Georgia Mutual Insurance, Ge Energy, Hampton Inn Perimeter Center, Prebula & Associates, W3CPAS & Consultants. All records will be shredded 60 days after publication of this notice. Anyone claiming to have an interest in the records should contact Access Information in writing at: 6902 Patterson Pass Rd, Suite G, Livermore, CA 94550, Attn: Collections Dept, Tele No 925-724-2065 The business records of AECOM, a customer of Access Information (795 Georgia Avenue, Gainesville, GA 30501 and 1846 Montreal Road, Tucker, GA 30084) have been abandoned. All records will be shredded 60 days after publication of this notice. Anyone claiming to have an interest in the records should contact Access Information in writing at: 6902 Patterson Pass Rd, Suite G, Livermore, CA 94550, Attn: Collections Dept, Tele No 925-724-2065.
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404-759-7021
770.885.9210
• All Major Appliances & Brands FREE Service • Stoves, Ovens, Dishwashers • Refrigerators, Disposals Call with • Washers, Dryers Repair or $25 Service • 30 Years Experience Charge Servicing All of Metro Atlanta
• Plumbing • Electrical • Sheetrock • Floors • Tile • Framing • Kitchens • Painting • Roofwork • Concrete • Stained Glass • Antique Door Restoration as well as many other issues...
John Salvesen • 404-453-3438 thehandymancanatlanta@gmail.com
Your home. Our help.
Get help around the house by calling one of our Home Services and Services Available advertisers. Tell them you saw their ad in Reporter Newspapers! DUN
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Reporter Newspapers
It’s official: Our readers prefer Reporter Newspapers for local news and information over any other community publication by a margin of 4 to 1!
Other local publication(s)
We’ve just completed our first, independent readership survey and the results speak for themselves • Reporter Newspapers get the highest marks for covering the local news that matters most to our readers and are the preferred source of this information. • The four Reporter editions are “most preferred” by four times as many respondents as the next closest community publication.
More circulation
More local stories
More advertisers
Thanks for your vote of confidence! Our readers choose Reporter Newspapers because we reach more homes and cover more news in our communities than any other local publication—in print and online. We’re proud to be your newspaper and look forward to growing the local ties that matter most to our readers and advertisers alike. Buckhead Reporter
Brookhaven Reporter
Dunwoody Reporter
Sandy Springs Reporter
100,000+ copies delivered to homes and businesses in five great communities! PUBLISHED BY SPRINGS PUBLISHING LLC • www.ReporterNewspapers.net • www.AtlantaINtownPaper.com 32
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APRIL 3 – APRIL 16, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
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