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JUNE 26 — JULY 9, 2015 • VOL. 9 — NO. 13
Cooking up some history
PAGES 7-11
Streetcar expansion plan ruffles city development committee BY COLLIN KELLEY
ISADORA PENNINGTON
From left, actors Kate Kovach, Marvin-Alonzo Greer and Jasmine Waters demonstrate how slaves helped shape Southern food traditions during a Juneteenth program at the Atlanta History Center June 21.
A proposal to spend $3.6 billion to expand the Atlanta streetcar system to connect it with the Atlanta BeltLine was met with opposition not only by residents, but members of the Atlanta City Council’s Community Development Committee during a June 23 public hearing. Officials from the Atlanta BeltLine were on hand to discuss the plan to add 50 miles of streetcar lines around the city to connect with MARTA and the 22-mile Atlanta BeltLine loop. One of those streetcar lines would run from Buckhead to Fort McPherson on the south side of the city. However, it wasn’t the north-south line or any of the crosstown lines that were on the minds of the City Council members at the SEE STREETCAR, PAGE 19
‘Cycle of life’ keeps Argonne Forest neighborhood strong BY JOE EARLE
joeearle@reporternewspapers.net
Street signs keep disappearing from Marsha Sims’ neighborhood. “The Verdun and Marne sign always get taken,” she said with a laugh. “I think people are fascinated with the World War.” That’s the Great War, the one generally known as World War I. Argonne Forest, the Buckhead neighborhood where Sims and her family have lived for the past eight years, takes its name from a battle fought in that war. And major streets in the neighborhood also were named for World War I battles, including Verdun and the Marne.
Sims doesn’t know why her neighborhood, which was developed mostly in the 1950s, memorializes battles of the First World War. She and several of her neighbors describe their community as more or less the Where opposite of a place of conflict: an offYou the-beaten-track enclave in the heart Live of Buckhead that’s a kid-friendly place with a mix of young and old residents, a community social life all its own and yards big enough to hold pickup ball games. The neighborhood association throws an annual Christmas party and has a big communiSEE CYCLE, PAGE 4
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Nicholas Schramkowski, left, and brother Jack, play basketball at their home in Argonne Forest.
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Above, the Buckhead Men’s Garden Club greenhouse, based at the Atlanta History Center, will relocate to Oakland Cemetery this summer. Below, the cemetery’s current greenhouse is in disrepair, and plans to restore it never materialized.
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The Cyclorama painting’s move to Buckhead will require use of space on the Atlanta History Center campus now occupied by the Buckhead Men’s Garden Club’s greenhouse. So the club has offered the greenhouse structure to historic Oakland Cemetery. With the help of the History Center, the city of Atlanta’s Department of Parks & Recreation, the Urban Design Commission, Georgia State University, and other groups and private donors, Oakland Cemetery will relocate and reconstruct the 50-foot by 30-foot greenhouse this summer. That means the cemetery will have its first functioning greenhouse in more than four decades, representatives of the Historic Oakland Foundation (HOF) said in a press release. The greenhouse will help the cemetery staff grow plants historically found at Oakland, the foundation said, because staff members won’t be limited to
growing temperature-specific varieties. After the foundation’s establishment in 1976, plans were made to restore the greenhouse and other cemetery structures that had fallen into disrepair. However, that project never happened. Brick walls are all that remain of the greenhouse today. The men’s garden club’s greenhouse fits perfectly in those existing walls. This allows Oakland’s preservation team to restore the greenhouse while retaining its historic features and meeting preservation standards. “Having a working greenhouse will give us the opportunity to properly interpret this important part of our history. It will also open up other possibilities, from a more diverse palette of Victorian-era plants to the ability to hold classes and workshops,” said Sara Henderson, director of gardens at HOF. –Collin Kelley
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A 45,000-square-foot Publix could come to the intersection of Moores Mill and Bolton roads, an area residents say is a “food desert.”
Moores Mill Road project still faces challenge BY COLLIN KELLEY A decade-long effort by residents and city officials to get funding for an extension of Moores Mill Road still hangs in the balance even after a “yes” vote by the Atlanta City Council at its June 16 meeting. The road extension is needed for a mixed-used project that would bring a Publix supermarket to the corner of Moores Mill and Bolton roads on the site of an abandoned shopping center. Residents have declared the northwest Atlanta community a “food desert” since the closest grocery store is a Kroger in Smyrna. The Atlanta City Council voted to provide $800,000 to help complete the project since federal dollars for the extension are being held up in Congress, which has not reauthorized a transportation bill. Invest Atlanta, the city’s economic development arm, has already committed $500,000 to the project. But Mayor Kasim Reed could veto the City Council’s funding authorization.
City Councilmember Felicia Moore had ushered through the ordinance to use money from the city’s transportation impact fee fund before the developer walked away, but wound up voting against her own legislation when an amendment was added by Councilmember Keisha Lance Bottoms. Bottoms’ amendment allows all the City Council members to dip into the transportation impact fee fund account for projects in their own districts. The council was warned that spreading the unallocated impact fee funding to all the districts was not allowed under current city guidelines and could face a legal challenge. While the $800,000 was ultimately approved in a 10-5 vote, Moore voted nay because she did not want to open the city up to lawsuits. Edens, a South Carolina-based development company, is ready to move forward with the $40 million Moores Mill project, which would include a 45,000-square-foot Publix.
North Buckhead master plan gets city development committee approval The Atlanta City Council’s Community Development Committee signed off on the North Buckhead Neighborhood Master Plan at its June 23 meeting, forwarding it on to the City Council for consideration at its July 6 meeting. The approval by the committee comes after more than six months of work spearheaded by the North Buckhead Civic Association (NBCA), which held four public meetings and sent out surveys to the 9,000 residents of the district. NBCA board member Gordon Certain, a 40-year resident of the community, said the master plan was necessary to preserve the single-family homes of the neighborhood and to see mixed-use developments built in areas such as Roswell and Lenox roads. Preserving and creating green space and road improvements are also top priorities in the master plan. Certain said he believed North Buckhead would have 12,000 residents by the end of the decade. BH
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CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 me. And over there is a girl who’s a year ty blow-out on Halloween, said Walker older.” Sullivan, a 57-year-old financial plan“I like the backyard,” Jack added. ner who’s lived on Verdun for a quar“Me and my brother like to go out there ter century, so long some of his neighand play football.” bors jokingly call “We can all him “The Mayor” play together beIs there something special about of Argonne Forest. cause everybody your neighborhood? Let us know at At one time, the knows everybody,” 180-home comadded the third of editor@reporternewspapers.net munity even had the triplets, Nichits own Fourth olas Schramkowsof July parade, he ki. said. Kids on decorated bikes and trikes Parents get to know one another, too. marched down the street behind a city The Argonne Forest Association was crefire truck. ated about four years ago amid fears that “What’s great about [this neighborhood] is a sense of what I grew up with in Atlanta,” Sullivan said. “We used to have street parties. We used to have cakewalks. ... Kids knew kids. There were no cellphones. There were no texts. You picked up the phone and said, ‘There’s a baseball game in my yard.’ You could hang out and parents wouldn’t worry about you.” Sims’ 11-year-old triplets describe the neighborhood they’re growing up in much the same way. “We can go to a friend’s house without it being a 20-minute walk,” said Jack Schramkowski, one of Sims’ two sons. “It’s fun. I have a lot of friends in the neighborhood,” said Olivia Schramkowski, Sims’ daughter. She pointed one direction up the street, then another. Front row, from left, Nicholas, Olivia “I have a friend over there and Jack Schramkowski. Back, Tom who’s a year younger than Schramkowski and Marsha Sims. BH
WHERE YOU LIVE Atlanta Public Schools would redraw its attendance zones so Argonne Forest students would go somewhere other than Morris Brandon Elementary, Sullivan said. It also provides added security by hiring off-duty police officers to patrol the area, puts out a neighborhood newsletter and hosts community get-togethers, he said. “There is a closeness because people actually know people,” Sullivan said. “We’ve got ties that bind. ... People genuinely know each other and care about each other and rally when we need to, both for social occasions and causes, when it’s needed. I don’t think you get that in a lot of places anymore.” Many houses remain the single-level brick ranches popular the time Argonne Forest was developed. Some had been expanded. Sullivan, for instance, added a second floor to his home. Real estate websites show houses in Argonne Forest listed for sale at prices ranging from about $800,000 to several times that. One seller asks nearly $16 million for a mansion on West Paces Ferry Road. “We truly have a mix of people,” said Sims, who has represented Argonne For-
ll Mi s e or NW Mo oad R
West Paces Ferry Road NW
PHOTOS BY JOE EARLE; ABOVE, SPECIAL
Left, Walker Sullivan has lived on Verdun Road for 25 years. Some neighbors refer to him as “The Mayor.” Above, the neighborhood is bounded by West Paces Ferry, Arden, Moores Mill roads and Northside Drive. Right, resident Marsha Sims says street signs are frequently taken.
est on the board of the Buckhead Coalition of Neighborhoods for four years and who helped start the neighborhood association. Some of her neighbors, she said, have called Argonne Forest home for 40 years. Others are young families
attracted by the reputation of Morris Brandon Elementary. “What’s interesting to me is the turnover,” Sullivan said. When his nowgrown children were young, he said, “at one time, I counted 25 kids on my
street alone. It’s still that way today. It just keeps turning over. It’s this cycle of life that continues in the same vein. The continuation of the neighborhood is just terrific. ... The neighborhood is still very strong.”
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COMMENTARY Reporter Newspapers Our mission is to provide our readers with fresh and engaging information about life in their communities.
Q&A STRE E T TA LK
Q: More kinds of fireworks soon will be available for purchase in Georgia. Will you buy more fireworks for the Fourth of July?
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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“I never really bought fireworks…If it was sold here, we might buy them. We would never go out of state to try them.”
Herbert Groiss, with dog Amy
“We don’t buy them. We usually watch the fireworks display at Lenox Mall.”
Will and Sherry Preston
“I’ve never been into buying fireworks, so it’s not going to change my plans. I’m usually just an admirer. I don’t mess with fireworks; I like my limbs.”
Stephany Gill
Founder & Publisher Steve Levene stevelevene@reporternewspapers.net Editorial Managing Editor Joe Earle joeearle@reporternewspapers.net Intown Editor: Collin Kelley Staff Writers: Ellen Eldridge Copy Editor: Diane L. Wynocker Director of Creative & Interactive Media Christopher North chrisnorth@reporternewspapers.net
“Definitely. As a kid ... I lived in Augusta, so I could make the trip over to South Carolina [to buy fireworks]. It’s nice to know I don’t have to make a special trip.”
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“Yes, I think that we would enjoy using fireworks now that they are legal. With all the rain we’ve had it makes me feel safer that the grass is not too dry.”
“No. I’ll still go to Alabama [to watch fireworks].”
Joe Lynn
Marianna Lee
Advertising Director of Sales Development Amy Arno amyarno@reporternewspapers.net Senior Account Executives Jeff Kremer Janet Porter Account Executives Amber Friar Susan Lesesne Office Manager Deborah Davis deborahdavis@reporternewspapers.net Contributors Mary Helen Kelly, Phil Mosier, John Ruch
“Absolutely not. I love the Sandy Springs fireworks, but I probably won’t do them myself.”
“I am in support of it. You have to trust that people are going to use them correctly, and I like the tax revenue.”
“I don’t usually buy them, but usually people bring fireworks to my house. I think [the ordinance] will inspire them to bring more kinds to my house, which is OK with me.”
Diane Smith
Dan Weede
“We don’t drive out-of-state to go get them, but the fact they’re here? Sure, we’ll end up going to get some. Growing up, it was a rite of passage.”
“I’m planning to go to Virginia where they can do fireworks there, and I’m doing fireworks on a farm. I just enjoy it, but I don’t light them off or buy them myself.”
“No. We don’t buy many fireworks. We watch them, but we don’t buy many ourselves.”
Casey Mann
Stephen Stone
Garrett Spence
Free Home Delivery 65,000 copies of Reporter Newspapers are delivered by carriers to homes in ZIP codes 30305, 30319, 30326, 30327, 30328, 30338, 30342 and 30350 and to more than 500 business/retail locations. For locations, check “Where To Find Us” at www.ReporterNewspapers.net For delivery requests, please email delivery@reporternewspapers.net. © 2015 With all rights reserved Publisher reserves the right to refuse editorial or advertising for any reason. Publisher assumes no responsibility for information contained in advertising. Any opinions expressed in print or online do not necessarily represent the views of Reporter Newspapers or Springs Publishing, LLC.
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Derek Porter | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
BH
Perimeter Business A monthly section focusing on business in the Reporter Newspapers communities
The Price of Progress
With redevelopment looming, long-time tenants of one Sandy Springs shopping center face the wrecking ball BY JOE EARLE
joeearle@reporternewspapers.net
Charles Cuthbert knows moving day will come soon for his business. It’s the price of progress. He’s not sure when he’s moving, exactly, but he knows the dance studio he owns and operates in downtown Sandy Springs can’t stay put. He’s already looking for a new home. “We are looking for another place, however we haven’t found one yet,” he said. “It’s hard to find a place. It’s hard to find a place like we’ve had. We’re just trying to balance the realities between our wishes and our budget.” Cuthbert operates the Atlanta Ballroom Dance Centre, a 7,500-square-foot, mirror-walled dance studio in the Hilderbrand Court Shopping Center. His studio provides lessons in tango, swing, rhumba, cha-cha and a variety of other dance styles. The business, he says, has operated for more than half a century. Cuthbert bought it in 2005 and has operated in the same location the entire time. Now, Cuthbert and the owners of other businesses located at Hilderbrand Court suddenly find themselves looking for new locations. Hilderbrand Court stands at the intersection of Roswell Road and Hilderbrand Drive. That’s just a few hundred yards from Sandy Springs’ planned new City Center, a $200 million project city officials say will create a performing arts center, a city office building, parks, and places to live and eat. Developments such as the City Center spin off more development. Hilderbrand Court recently was rezoned for a new complex that will create more than 300 apartments and 40,000 to 50,000 square feet of new shops in place of the aging, single-story shopping center. The planned mixed-use complex, being developed by Mill Creek, is one of several projects proposed around the City Center project. “It’s like this whole Ro-
Charles Cuthbert has operated the 7,500-square-foot Atlanta Ballroom Dance Centre in the Hilderbrand Court Shopping Center since 2005, but will have to find a new location. A planned mixeduse project with shops and apartments is slated for the area.
swell Road [area] is a giant Etch-A-Sketch and Sandy Springs is going shake, shake, shake...,” said Ian McPherson, owner of Ruin, a skateboard shop he started in 17 years ago in “this exact space” in Hilderbrand Court. His narrow shop, crowded with skateboards and clothes, is the only place his business ever has been located, he said. The coming change angers some affiliated
JOE EARLE
with current businesses. “It is heartbreaking that this development is forcing this [Atlanta Ballroom Centre] business to close,” Cindy Johnson, an instructor at the dance center, said in an email. “Atlanta Ballroom is a legend in the dance community. ... Most of the other businesses in the center have been in this location many years CONTINUED ON PAGE 10
Dunwoody company shoots for the moon...and Mars John Olds, a former Georgia Tech professor, is CEO of SpaceWorks Enterprises Inc., a private aerospace engineering company. JOE EARLE
BY JOE EARLE
joeearle@reporternewspapers.net
John Olds remembers watching the moon landing. He says he was about 5 years old then. He and his dad, a college physics professor in South Carolina, watched the landing on TV and then went outside to look at the moon and marvel. “I kind of got the bug for aerospace early on, watching the Apollo landing and the Apollo 13 rescue,” he said. “I set my sights on that.” He still sets his sights on space travel and the moon, but now he and others at his 15-year-old company also think about Mars, or asteroids, or high-altitude flight. Olds, a former Georgia Tech
professor, is owner and CEO of SpaceWorks Enterprises Inc., a Dunwoody-based, private aerospace engineering company. SpaceWorks consults with NASA, the U.S. military and private aerospace companies about engineering problems such as how to set up refueling stations around the moon or how to divert an asteroid headed toward Earth. “We live at the border of science fiction and science fact,” Olds, who’s 50, said one recent afternoon as he sat in his glass-walled office in the Pe-
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JUNE 26 – JULY 9, 2015 | 7
Brain Research Study
SEE YOUR BRAIN AT WORK! We are conducting a research study to determine which parts of the brain are used to find your way throughout the environment and remember where you are going. Eligible participants will perform memory and learning tasks while receiving magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans of the brain. Other studies which do not require MRI scans are also available.
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Taste the Difference
On June 4, Brent Morris, Chairman of the Dunwoody Chamber of Commerce Board, fourth from right, and Jonathan Perez, membership and business development for PartnerMD, fifth from left, were joined by chamber members, friends and PartnerMD staff at a ribbon cutting and Open House noting their facility, located at 755 Mount Vernon Highway NE, Suite 110, in Sandy Springs. PartnerMD is a concierge medical practice specializing in more personalized primary care and executive health.
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Fantastic Finds For Him, located at 220 Sandy Springs Circle, #157B, held a ribbon cutting on June 3. In attendance: Jim Derrick, Erica Rocker-Wills, Luis Amato, Paula Williamson, Antan Wilson, Mayor Rusty Paul, Cori De Francis, Patty Conway, Robert Winton and Dan Coffer. The store is a consignment shop designed exclusively for men. The Nantahala Outdoor Center recently opened an outpost at Powers Island, 1650 Riveredge Lane, in Sandy Springs. Those in attendance included, Charles Conner, NOC marketing director, William Irving, NOC COO, John McCraw, NOC Chattahoochee outpost manager, Sutton Bacon, NOC CEO, Steven Foy, NOC director of outposts, and Sandy Springs City Councilmen Gabriel Sterling, holding scissors, and Andy Bauman, back row, far right. The NOC offers rafting, tubing, kayaking and stand-up paddleboarding.
Atlanta History Center
filming
John Ford Samuel Fuller George Stevens
from Hollywood to Nuremberg
Through November 20, 2015 ELLEN ELDRIDGE
Commissioner Russell McMurry, with the Georgia Department of Transportation, spoke at a Dunwoody Chamber of Commerce luncheon on June 23, saying the new I-285/Ga. 400 interchange will save commuters eight hours of road time a year once completed.
New I-285/Ga. 400 interchange will save drivers time
Hollywood directors John Ford, George Stevens, and Samuel Fuller created American cinema classics, but their most important contribution to history was their work in the U.S. Armed Forces and Secret Services. An exhibition by the Mémorial de la Shoah, Paris, France.
George Stevens and his crew, France, 1944 © Courtesy of the Margaret Herrick Library, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Beverly Hills, CA
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AtlantaHistoryCenter.com/Filming
BY ELLEN ELDRIDGE
elleneldridge@reporternewspapers.net
Georgia’s transportation commission says each commuter using the I-285/Ga. 400 interchange will save eight hours of road time a year once a $1 billion project to ease congestion is completed. After 20 years, drivers could save 13 hours a year, which translates into money saved, he said. “Even though traffic will continue to grow, in the long haul, you’ll save more time,” Russell McMurry said to the Dunwoody Chamber of Commerce at a June 23 luncheon. McMurry was appointed Commissioner of the Georgia Department of Transportation by the State Transportation Board in January. The department’s biggest project is the $1 billion dollar remake of I-285/Ga. 400 that is intended to help alleviate congestion by adding access lanes. McMurry said a crowd of drivers equal to the population of Wyoming passes through the interchange every day. “That’s 500,000 cars a day, but you guys know that,” he said. “You live it.” Traffic congestion is made worse by crashes, McMurry said. But he predicts the number of traffic tie-ups will fall once the project segregates through traffic from local traffic. “We’re going to markedly im-
prove mobility,” he said. McMurry and the GDOT have an innovative plan to bring in a private contractor to help finance the project. After the initial 25 percent of the cost, which GDOT will bring to the table, one of four private contractors will be chosen to help “build a better mousetrap at a lower cost,” McMurry said. Their technical comments will help save the state money, he said. “These are not only the nation’s best but the world’s best contractors that have interest,” McMurry said. He described the selection process as complex, but said a decision would be made by December. After the spring of 2016, the 51-month project will commence. One of the most important technical aspects to consider is how to keep traffic flowing during construction. “Our daily lives still have to go on, and we have to move half a million people through the interchange while we’re building,” McMurry said. McMurry said a “red letter day” occurred recently when the major project got approval from the Federal Highway Administration, which is always the last step. “That means we can now start buying right of way,” he said.
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With redevelopment coming, neighbors face wrecking ball CONTINUED FROM PAGE 7
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also.” But Cuthbert, McPherson and other business owners say they aren’t surprised that they’re going to have to relocate. They’ve watched the public discussions about what’s coming. Cuthbert said he attended Sandy Springs Planning Commission meetings where the project was discussed. Some of the kind of shops in the old shopping center – nail salons, a smoke shop, a thrift store – don’t fit the image Sandy Springs city officials are shooting for in the city’s new downtown development, they say. “Here’s the deal: Sandy Springs is changing in an enormous way,” Cuthbert said. “When it became a city, that put Sandy Springs on a new trajectory. I think they’re making it a modern [city] on the perimeter of Atlanta. Where we are is directly across from where the new City Hall will be. I can’t imagine us having a dance studio in that valuable piece of property.” So, for long-time tenants of Hilderbrand Court, it’s time to move on. McPherson says he’s talking to a possible new landlord in Dunwoody, where the city operates a skate park. Bruce Alterman, owner of The Brickery, a two-decade-old restaurant that has
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Ian McPherson, owner of Ruin, a skateboard shop he started 17 years ago, will have to relocate.
become a Sandy Springs landmark, says he’s looking at a bigger location elsewhere in the city. He said he and his wife, Sally, are also seeking an operating partner interested in getting involved with the business. “Over the next several months, The Brickery will no longer be operating at its current location,” he said. Other business owners also expect to have to find new locations by the end of the year. “We’ve got to just move,” said David Besay, who said he’s managed the Paint Unlimited store in the shopping center for nearly 18 years. “I’ve never had to move before. I know that’s a lot of work. ...It’s sad to see business leaving Sandy Springs.” Kwang Lee W. Yi, owner of Sushi Mio, says he plans to take his time before deciding what to do after closing his restaurant, which has been in operation at the center since 1999 and which he’s owned since 2003. “I don’t have any plan,” he said. “I need to take a break. Since I came to this country 25 years ago, I have never taken a break, taken a vacation.” Still, he thinks he’s too young to retire, so he plans to take several months off and then he’ll figure out what to do next. Several of Hilderbrand Court’s business owners worry they will face higher rents after moving. They also expect rents for space in the new development will be higher than those in Hilderbrand Court. In fact, McPherson said it was the shopping center’s low rents that helped him get his business up and running when he started the shop as a 22-year-old skater being financed by his mother. He opened his shop in Sandy Springs originally, he said, because it lay at the center of the area where metro Atlanta skateboarders lived. “No one would lease to me – because it was a skate shop – except this mall,” he said one recent afternoon as he assembled a skateboard for a customer. “Can we find someone to lease to us [now]? Well, now we’ve been around 17 years, paying rent.” So he believes he’ll find a new landlord. Several other business owners believe they will, too. They just know they have to move quickly. “The wrecking ball is coming sometime this year,” Cuthbert said.
PERIMETER BUSINESS
SpaceWorks shoots for the moon ... and Mars, too Oaks. “Anybody who wants to be an engineer should test it out through something like this.” Olds started SpaceWorks while teaching at Georgia Tech. He says he learned about science from his father, but he was inspired to go into business by his entrepreneurJOE EARLE ial grandfather, who SpaceWorks interns, left to right, Nick Becker, lived in Tennessee. “I wanted to try my Ty’Niyah Harris, Alex Rogers, Jennifer Wang hand at owning my and Nathan Smith hold aloft their “cubesat.” own business.” CONTINUED FROM PAGE 7 About a decade ago, he moved to rimeter area. SpaceWorks fulltime. “We had maybe five Computer-drawn renderings of past people and I would come in on Fridays,” projects and space memorabilia decorate he said. “Then we had a couple of big projthe walls. The break room is decorated ects from NASA and I thought, ‘I need to with posters of classic science-fiction movbe more involved in that.’” ies. A model of the Space Shuttle sits on a SpaceWorks now employs about 15 table. The company slogan, printed on his people, he said. They’re looking 15 to 20 business card, is “Space Is Go.” years into the future, Olds said. “I can’t re“We typically work on next-generation member what I wore to work yesterday, things,” Olds said. Asked to point to projbut I can imagine what 10 years from now ects underway that outsiders might recogwill look like,” Olds said. “It’s a little bit nize, he smiled and said, “People wouldn’t science fiction and a little bit science.” recognize [things] we’re working on because they haven’t happened yet.” In summers, Olds and others on SpaceWorks’ staff try to share a little of that enthusiasm for things space-based with interns from metro Atlanta high schools. SpaceWorks sponsors and hosts a program it calls Aerospace Summer Training and Research Opportunity, or ASTRO. The E REST! H T O D program is in its third year. L ’L TION... WE Students spend three weeks workA N I G A M I ing together on tasks as varied as buildAND YOUR S O T O ing a tower of spaghetti or designing paH P R per airplanes. They also are assigned one BRING YOU large group project, which Olds calls “an immersive design challenge.” One team of five students completed their internships June 19, formally presenting to an audience composed of their parents, other relaPHOTO BOOKS SCAN & TRANSFER tives and SpaceWorks’ staff members. We’ll design it for you! Digitally archive your memories! The task: Design a “cubesat,” a 10-cenJust bring your photos and your imagination! Bring in your photos, VHS tapes & 8mm movies! timeter cube usually sent up into space on a rocket. The interns were told to design and make a cube fitted with sensors to serve as a sort of weather station. It would collect information on humidity, temperature and air pressure. After designing the system, the interns manufactured the cube As low as $50 plus cost of book* NEVER MAIL YOUR MEMORIES - Trust Chuck! on SpaceWorks’ 3-D printer. It’s due for a test flight in July, when an airplane flies it above Cartersville for about 90 minutes. “This was a fantastic experience,” said Alex Rogers, a rising senior at the Atlanta International School, one of the five June interns. His teammates came from a variety of metro area schools: Lovett School; *see store for details Norcross High; the Gwinnett School of SPECIAL OFFER from Chuck! Mathematics, Science and Technology in Lawrenceville; and the Academe of the Oaks in Decatur. Coupon expires Sept 1, 2015 “It was amazing,” said Ty’Niyah Haroswell oad ris, a rising junior at the Academe of the www.ReporterNewspapers.net | JUNE 26 – JULY 9, 2015 | 11
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den talent? Love to make signature ice cream flavors? The SPdL’s Got Talent Show will feature a talent performance, cookout, ice cream competition, and prizes. Adult tickets, $5; children’s tickets, $2.50. Second-Ponce de Leon Baptist Church, 2715 Peachtree Rd., NE, Buckhead, 30305. For more information, go online to spdl. org. To sign up as a performer, email susannelson337@gmail.com or call 404-266-8111.
Breakfast with Butterflies Sunday, July 12, 10 a.m.-12 p.m. – The Chattahoochee Nature Center hosts a familyfriendly breakfast and live butterfly encounter. General admission tickets, $20; CNC members, $15. Register online by July 7 or call 770992-2055 ext. 237. 9135 Willeo Rd., Roswell, 30075. For more information, go online to chattnaturecenter.org.
GET ACTIVE
Soccerfest II
Dunwoody Cycle
Friday, July 3, through Sunday, July 5, hours vary. – Soccerfest is a three-day festi-
Sunday, July 5, 3 p.m. – Bike Walk Dunwoody
val featuring kids’ games, food trucks, DJs, film screenings, soccer games, FIFA competitions and a Women’s World Cup viewing party. Free and open to the public. Suitable for all ages. Brookhaven Park, 4158 Peachtree Rd., NE, Brookhaven, 30319. For more information, go to atlantasoccerfest.org or email info@atlantasoccerfest.com.
presents this monthly bike ride through Dunwoody Village. The 4.5 mile route is mostly right turns and suitable for riders of all ages. Children 10 and under must be accompanied by an adult and helmets are required for all participants. Recurring on the first Sunday of each month through November. Riders gather at Village Burger, 1426 Dunwoody Village Pkwy., Dunwoody, 30338. For more information, go online to bikewalkdunwoody.org.
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Get Listed! In print and online. email your event to calendar@reporternewspapers.net 12
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JUNE 26 – JULY 9, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
Book Club
Altered Books
Tuesday, July 7, 10:30-11:30 a.m. – The Sandy Springs Literary Society Book Club meets for a discussion about “The Language of Flowers” by Vanessa Diffenbaugh. All are invited to join the club and attend monthly meetings. Free and open to the public with valid library ID. Sandy Springs Branch Library, 395 Mount Vernon Hwy., Sandy Springs, 30328. For more information, go online to afpls.org or email comments@ co.fulton.ga.us.
Wednesday, July 8, 2-3:30 p.m. – Give old
books new life as altered art. This workshop for teens covers a variety of methods for book alterations, and participants will take home a book to alter themselves. Registration recommended. Free and open to the public with valid library ID. Buckhead Branch Library, 269 Buckhead Ave., NE, Buckhead, 30305. For more information, go online to aflps.org, and to register email amy.alexander@fultoncountyga.gov or call 404-814-3500.
Center Ice Arena
Sandy Springs New Ice Skating Arena
5750 Roswell Road Sandy Springs, GA 30342 www.centericearena.org 404-549-8425
Daily public ice skating sessions
Live DJ Friday, Saturday, and Sunday public sessions
$8 admission, $4 skate rental Kids 5 & under $6 admission, $4 skate rental Kids 3 & under free
Saturdays, July 4 and July 11, 8:30 a.m. -12 p.m. – This weekly event is sponsored by Her-
every Wednesday night through October 29 and features a selection of food trucks, live music, and a bounce house for the kids. Free and open to the public. Blackburn Park, 3493 AshfordDunwoody Rd., NE, Brookhaven, 30319. For more information, go online to facebook.com/ brookhavenFTN or call 404-719-3257.
itage Sandy Springs and takes place each Saturday morning through November. The market sells fresh produce, baked goods, local dairy products, regional meats and other specialty foods. Free and open to the public. 235 Sandy Springs Cir., NE, Sandy Springs, 30328. For more information, go online to sandyspringsfarmersmarket.com or call 404851-9111.
Dunwoody Food Truck Thursdays Thursdays, July 2 and July 9, 5 p.m. till dusk – This weekly event takes place ev-
ery Thursday through October 29 and features a variety of food trucks and live music. Free and open to the public. Brook Run Park, 4770 N. Peachtree Rd., Dunwoody, 30346. For more information, go online to dunwoodyga.gov or call 404-754-3211.
Buckhead Food Truck Fridays Fridays, July 3 and July 10, 11 a.m. -2 p.m. – Livable Buckhead, in collaboration
with the Atlanta Street Food Coalition, presents a weekly food truck lunch event near the corner of Piedmont and Peachtree. Each week will feature three to five food trucks. Free and open to the public. Buckhead Place, 3314 Piedmont Rd., Buckhead, 30305. For more information, go online to livablebuckhead.org or call 404- 842-2680.
ONE IT ADM
Peachtree Road Farmers Market Saturdays, July 5 and July 12, 8:30 a.m. -12 p.m. – This weekly market features produc-
er-only goods that are grown, raised or made by the vendors. In addition to fresh produce from local farms, the market also offers chef demos, health screenings, kids’ events, gifts and other products from local makers. Free and open to the public. Cathedral of St. Philip, back lot, 2744 Peachtree Rd., NW, Buckhead, 30305. For more information, go online to peachtreeroadfarmersmarket.com or call 404-365-1078.
Brookhaven Farmers Market Saturdays, July 5 and July 12, 9 a.m. - 12 p.m. – This weekly market runs through Decem-
ber 12, and features locally sourced and sustainable foods. The market has recently relocated to the University Baptist Church, 1375 Fernwood Cir., Brookhaven, 30319. For more information, go to brookhavenfarmersmarket.com.
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“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.”
The Dunwoody 4th of July Parade is the largest in the metro area. It steps off at 9 a.m. July 4 at the corner of Mount Vernon and Jett Ferry roads. There will be floats, marching bands and after-parade activities.
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.
The Sandy Springs Stars and Stripes Celebration is actually on July 5, with music from Shiloh at 7:30 p.m. followed by fireworks at 9:45 p.m. at the King and Queen buildings. The official viewing area will be located on the lawn at the Concourse Corporate Center, located at Five Concourse Parkway. Visitors are encouraged to pack a snack, bring a blanket, and enjoy an evening under the stars. For more information, visit sandyspringsga.org.
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.
Chamblee’s Fourth of July Celebration features fireworks, a bike parade and performances by The Rockaholics and Rupert’s Orchestra. Events start at 5 p.m. July 4 at Keswick Park. The quarter-mile-long bike parade rolls from Chamblee Middle School on Sexton Woods Drive shortly before 5 p.m.
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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Parades, fireworks and more for Independence Day Break out your red, white and blue. Independence Day is near and it’s time to don your patriotic best and grill some burgers, knock back some cold drinks and ooh and ahh as brass bands march past or explosions fill the sky. Here are some of the places in and around Reporter Newspapers communities where you can get your Fourth on.
Call (404) 365-3163 to see our warm, inviting community and furnished model apartments, including our diamond collection one-bedroom residences.
14
PHIL MOSIER
Fourth of July fireworks over the Concourse in Sandy Springs last year.
JUNE 26 – JULY 9, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
The 46th annual Peachtree Road Race kicks off the holiday with 60,000 people taking part in the massive morning jog from Buckhead to Midtown. As usual the race starts at Lenox Square and makes its way down Peachtree Street to 10th Street and Piedmont Park. The wheelchair race begins at 6:43 a.m. and the foot race at 7:30 a.m. Spectators are strongly encouraged to take MARTA, which will begin running at 5 a.m. on race day. Many restaurants and bars will be open along the route to watch the race, so check with your favorite wa-
tering hole. For more information, visit peachtreeroadrace.org. The Legendary Fourth of July at Lenox Square features live music and one of the biggest fireworks displays in the country. Lenox Square shops and restaurants will be open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on July 4. Entertainment begins at 6 p.m. with Gump Fiction and Party on the Moon. Fireworks are scheduled to begin at approximately 9:40 p.m. Parking will be almost impossible, so visitors are encouraged to take MARTA. Pets are not allowed. For more information, visit simon.com. The Centennial Olympic Park’s 4th of July Celebration will begin at 6 p.m. with fireworks scheduled around 9:40 p.m. There will be entertainment and live music, too. Visitors are encouraged to take MARTA to Philips Arena/ GWCC or Peachtree Center stations, and don’t forget the Atlanta Streetcar stops at Centennial Park. For more information: centennialpark.com. Decatur’s July 4th Pied Piper Parade will wind through downtown Decatur on July 4 and the community is invited to join in by decorating your wagon, riding a bike, skating or walking in the event. Line-up is at 5:30 p.m. at First Baptist Church of Decatur; the parade begins at 6 p.m. and ends at the Community Bandstand on the courthouse square. The Callanwolde Concert Band will play at 7 p.m. and fireworks will follow at dark. For more information, visit visitdecaturgeorgia.com. The Georgia Aquarium Red White & Brew is July 4 from 7 to 10 p.m. with beer, food and live music in the Oceans Ballroom. Guests will move to the aquarium’s parking deck rooftop to watch the fireworks at Centennial Park around 9:40 p.m. Tickets range from $15 to $55, and proceeds go to the aquarium’s educational and summer camp programs for kids. For more information, visit georgiaaquarium.com.
FAITH
Local pastors, rabbis respond to Charleston killings BY JOHN RUCH AND MARY HELEN KELLY Church, Rev. Dan Brown tossed out his planned sermon to tackle the horrific killing. He pointed to a remarkable moment after the murders—victims’ family members telling suspect Dylann Roof at a court hearing that they forgive him. “I thought, ‘Yes! This is how Christians respond in the darkness of deep hurt,’” Brown said in a video posted on YouTube. “They allow the light of Christ to shine at its brightest.” Dock Hollingsworth, senior pastor at Buckhead’s Second-Ponce de Leon Baptist Church, said he was already committed to preaching from Job, the Bible’s classic tale of suffering. “I didn’t deal head-on with the racial implications” or other aspects of the shooting because of the pre-planned sermon, Hollingsworth said. But he did use Job to shed light on the response to the crime. “When I got to the part about Job’s anger at God for what seemed to be senseless suffering, I did reach over and touch that shooting to say Job’s questions are our questions,” Hollingsworth said. “Job gives us permission to be angry.” Temple Emanu-El in Sandy Springs, like many Jewish synagogues, already
SPECIAL
Rev. Marthame Sanders, pastor at Brookhaven’s Oglethorpe Presbyterian Church, delivered a sermon after the Charleston shootings calling for communion with people who are different from ourselves.
was keenly aware of the type of hatedriven violence inflicted on the Charleston church, and provides on-site security, said Executive Director Mark Flaxer, a member of a group of Atlantaarea temple executive directors that will make a donation to Emanuel AME. “The Jewish community is very attuned with the incident that happened in Charleston,” Flaxer said, adding that Senior Rabbi Scott Colbert, who is cur-
rently on a trip to Israel, “did a sermon about dealing with tragedy and dealing with peace in the community.” At Dunwoody United Methodist, Brown said, “Make no mistake about it, dear friends: hurt and heartache, tragedy and grief, violence and sorrow are not the final word. The final word belongs to God…,” Brown said. “There will come a day when there will be no more racial division.”
The Frederick Brown Jr. Amphitheater
SUMMER CONCERTS
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Don’t Miss Our Spotlight Concerts:
July 11
MJ LIVE! Michael Jackson Tribute Concert
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June 26
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KC and the Sunshine Band
July 24
Good will overcoming hatred. Hope beating despair. Good triumphing over evil. Those were messages local pastors and rabbis delivered in their first sermons following last week’s mass murder at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, S.C. “People come to worship looking for some word about the moment that gives them something to do and gives them hope,” said Rev. Marthame Sanders, pastor at Brookhaven’s Oglethorpe Presbyterian Church. Over the weekend, churches across Reporter Newspapers communities addressed the Charleston slayings and the young racist accused of killing nine churchgoers after attending a prayer meeting at the historic black church. Buckhead Church joined in a national commemoration, said Billy Phenix, the congregation’s lead pastor, by opening its service with a chime of nine bells. “We also prayed for the city and specifically for Emanuel AME Church as they gathered with heavy hearts that morning.” The Roman Catholic Cathedral of Christ the King in Buckhead held Masses for the victims, the families and Emanuel AME in the days following the shooting. Rev. Msg. Francis McNamee, the church pastor, preached his Sunday sermon on the theme of Jesus’s disciples in a boat with him during a storm. “In the storm of life, who do we look to?” McNamee said he asked. “I said, ‘Nine people went to be with the Lord… The senseless act occurred, and it would be very easy to look away from the Lord. But we have to look toward him.” At Oglethorpe Presbyterian, Sanders’ sermon was a call for communion with people who are different from ourselves. “My refrain this morning comes from Paul: ‘When one part of the body suffers, all suffer with it,’” Sanders said in a text of his sermon, which he posted online. “There is no asterisk next to the statement, listing exceptions based on race, or nationality, or gender, or age, or sexuality, or denomination.” In the wake of the Black Lives Matter movement, Oglethorpe Presbyterian began building a relationship with Atlanta’s historic black church First Congregational, Sanders said. Last Sunday, some of Sanders’ church members chose to worship at First Congregational, which he referred to in the sermon. “In the grand scheme of things, it’s a symbolic gesture—but it is something,” Sanders wrote. “Here at Oglethorpe, we can, and will, pray for the victims and the perpetrator in Charleston. We can, and will, pray for the church on Earth to look a little bit more like the kingdom of heaven. And yet, when we can still talk about black churches and majority white churches, it is clear that we still have a long way to go.” At Dunwoody United Methodist
201 McIntosh Trail • Peachtree City, GA 30269 www.ReporterNewspapers.net |
JUNE 26 – JULY 9, 2015 | 15
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The Pace Academy Class of 2015 boasts nine boys who earned the rank of Eagle Scout. Front row, from left, Ted Hobbs, Richie Everett, Jack Spencer, Blake Murphy, Peter Hurley. Back, from left, Hank Assaf, Dustin Hadley, Patrick Moore and Davis Miller.
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JUNE 26 – JULY 9, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
Turn that earth Above, on June 12, the Chastain Park Conservancy celebrated the launching of construction on its 40,000-square-foot outdoor natural learning environment, Play Chastain. Attendees included CPC Executive Director Rosa McHugh, former Atlanta Mayor Sam Massell, Atlanta City Council Member Yolanda Adrean, Jay Smith, Cynthia Gentry, Bill Caldwell, Michael Halicki and Andrew Lindsay. Construction is scheduled to be completed December 2015. At left, Leland Jones, 12, addresses the crowd. Leland sent a letter back in 2013 requesting more space to play. Play Chastain will serve 85,000 children within a 5-mile radius of Chastain Park.
Skirt is now taking summer clothing. Come by anytime and let us help you get ready for all of your summer fun!
COMMUNITY
New high end consignment for women in Fountain Oaks Shopping Center. Taking current clean and cute womens consignment clothing. Would love to see you. –Janet and MC 4920 Roswell Rd. Ste. 5, Sandy Springs GA, 30342 Mon-Fri, 10-6; Sat, 10-5; closed Sunday | 770.286.6432
SPECIAL
Hold those shiny objects The Sandy Springs Storm 12U softball team defeated West Cobb 3-0 to win the Murphey Candler All-Star Showdown Championship. Proudly holding their trophies, front row, from left, Caroline Chitlik, Averie Bielski, Virginia Fuss, Bella Dishman. Middle row, Katharine Linnihan, Ella Cannon, Amanda Foy, Jessica Hopper, Olivia Torri, Kendall Slayden. Back row, Coaches Mike Hopper, Jonathan Worrell and Brian Linnihan.
Let the experts at Home Care Assistance answer your questions.
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What can I do to help my mom prevent memory loss 5 TIPS FOR BRAIN HEALTH
• Stimulate your mind Engage in cards, Sudoku, reading or puzzles. These activities help stimulate and exercise the brain, keeping it stronger longer.
• Exercise your body Exercise stimulates the circulatory system which promotes the removal of toxins and increases blood flow to the brain. • Eat right Fish, nuts, dark chocolate, blueberries and olive oil are super brain foods because they promote heart health and heart health increases blood flow to the brain. • De-stress Stress actually shuts down systems in the body including the part of the brain that allows you to learn. Try yoga, meditation or prayer to calm stress. SPECIAL
Trophies for all A team of 11-year-old Sandy Springs boys won the Silver Bracket Championship, beating the Druid Hills Blue Claws 9-6. Above, the Eagles, seeded #7, went on a tear, winning three games in a row, knocking off the #1 Blue Claws.
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EDUCATION
Standout Students
Student Profile:
Josh Doman The Westminster Schools, rising senior Josh Doman found his flair for physics in a freshman science class. “Projects in that class used realworld applications,” he said. “In a crime scene activity, we were able to solve a crime based on a few pieces of information and our knowledge from physics. I found that fascinating.” Fascination soon turned to passion. Passion led to prizes. Josh recently competed in the United States Physics Olympiad and was awarded a Silver Medal. Josh was one of four Southern Silver Medalists, and he is the highest scoring Southeastern competitor. He plans to continue studying for the next Physics Olympiad in hopes of winning a Gold Medal and a spot on the United States physics team. “Josh is the most driven student I have ever encountered, which is why he has been so successful,” said his physics teacher, Meghan Bjork. “Working with Josh, it is clear that his motivation is internal and that he has a great deal of passion for physics.” Josh’s first physics competition came in “The Physics Bowl,” a 45-minute test that is designed to interest kids in competing in the more challenging Physics Olympiad. After placing eighth in the bowl, and winning the southern region, Josh realized his aptitude for physics and started seriously preparing for the Olympiad. As a sophomore, Josh took two classes through Stanford University’s online high school program. That summer he attended a String Theory seminar at Columbia University with 11 other stu-
dents from around the world. During his junior year, he convinced the board of The Westminster Schools that he could take AP Physics C, something a junior had never done before. But Josh wasn’t sure that even these classes were sufficient preparation for the competition. So, over Christmas break, he took part in a physics boot camp. “I was learning things just because I wanted to learn them, so I wasn’t really sure if I was on the right track,” he said. “Participating in the boot camp gave me an idea of what I needed to work on.” Through this process, Josh realized that this southern state lacks a physics presence, which he’d like to change. He hopes to use his experience to train other students to compete in the Physics Olympiad.
What’s Next: Josh is weighing college options, but he is interested in Harvard and Dartmouth because their physics programs would allow him to also pursue business studies. This article was reported and written by Amanda Gibson, a student at Holy Innocents’ Episcopal School.
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COMMUNITY
Streetcar expansion plan ruffles city development committee members
Student Profile: Bonnie Watkins Atlanta International School, rising senior When Bonnie Watkins isn’t on the soccer field, or living in France, or studying French culture, she turns her attention to human rights issues. In the coming school year, she will spearhead Atlanta International School Against Human Trafficking. Bonnie has been studying French since pre-school. Her parents enrolled her in the AIS French program, immersing her in a learning environment taught half in French and half in English. For the past two summers, she’s spent time in France. Last year, she studied at the Saint-Denis International School. This year, she is an au pair to an English-speaking American family in Aix-en-Provence. “You do notice more cultural differences, especially working for Americans that don’t speak French,” she said. After spending so much time in France, she said she couldn’t decide whether her favorite aspect was the food or the people’s attitudes. “They remind you to slow down and enjoy the moment,” she said. Soccer also plays a large role in Bonnie’s life. She plays club soccer, and the AIS school team she captains made history by winning its region championship.
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
She says her favorite part of the past season was a trip the team took to Savannah to play. It made her happy to see all of the team drawing together on the bus rides down and back. “The bonds we created over that trip made us more successful as a team,” she said. Bonnie’s coach, Veronica McDaniel, describes her as “a community leader in the classroom, on the soccer field, or doing service for anti-human trafficking.”
What’s Next: While her college search is not complete, she is interested in George Washington University in Washington, D.C., and McGill University in Montréal. This article was prepared by Sam Wimpfheimer, a rising junior at The Galloway School.
Avenue SPECIAL ENCORE!
meeting. Instead, it was the streetcar expansion’s failure to include the southwest corner of the city – including the Greenbriar, Cascade Road and Campbellton Road areas – that drew heated criticism. Rather than sending the proposal on to the full City Council, the issue was tabled, and additional review and community meetings were called for to address what Councilwoman Keisha Lance Bottoms, who represents Southwest Atlanta’s District 11, called the “inequity” of the plan. “It’s disturbing to me that Southwest Atlanta is left out of this plan,” Bottoms said. “We don’t have a rail station and only a portion of the BeltLine touches a small portion of District 11, which is growing.” Bottoms said the streetcar expansion planned as presented isolates many communities around the city. “If you can run a streetcar from Peachtree Road in Buckhead and then on to Lee Street to connect with Fort McPherson, why can’t one be run on Campbellton Road?” BeltLine officials didn’t have a clear answer, but indicated that MARTA was currently completing a study about the possibility of running a rail line to the area and increasing the number of buses. There was also mention that the streetcar could eventually be run there after the completion of the 50 miles already on the table. Bottoms wasn’t buying it. “I’m ticked off that the streetcar isn’t a consideration now,” she said. “We’re trying to get businesses to invest in the community and telling them to wait for 30 or 40 years and we might get some transit won’t work.” Bottoms said she would vote no on the current streetcar expansion plan, and she was joined by fellow councilors who shared her sentiment. Councilman Ivory Lee Young said any expansion of the streetcar and BeltLine should come with a workforce initiative to train residents to become “transit specialists.” Councilmember Kwanza Hall said he was alarmed by the “glaringly obvious” omission of Southwest Atlanta from the expansion plan.
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PUBLIC SAFETY
Police Blotter
al things from the suspect’s vehicle. The woman met the suspect on Instagram and he later flew her to Atlanta from California with arrangements for her to live with him. When she discovered that he already had a live-in girlfriend, she was not happy with the arrangements. Shell casings were found at the scene where two vehicles were damaged during the incident. A black 9-millimeter handgun was recovered inside the victim’s vehicle on the floorboard. A warrant was taken out and flagged after the victim picked the suspect out of a line-up.
From police reports dated May 31 through June 13 The following information was provided to the Buckhead Reporter by the Zone 2 precinct of the Atlanta Police Department from its records and is presumed to be accurate.
ROBBERY 100
block of West Wieuca Road—On June 10, a man was sitting in his vehicle when three men armed with handguns took his iPhone, wallet and keys. The suspects were last seen entering a red Nissan or Toyota four-door sedan. Police attempted to track the phone, but it was turned off.
4500
block of Harris Trail--An Uber driver was blocked in by a dark-colored sedan as she pulled into a driveway to turn around. Two men emerged from the rear of the sedan and approached both sides of her vehicle, demanding money. She said she had no money and offered her cellphone instead. The suspects took a Galaxy 6 phone and her white Volvo XC90. The victim injured her ankle as she ran across the street for help.
1000
block of Chattahoochee Avenue—On June 9, a man approached another man from behind as he was using an ATM. The robber displayed a handgun and threatened to shoot if the man at the ATM did not withdraw all of his money. A second gunman yelled, “Shoot him. Just shoot him.” The first robber patted the victim down, taking his wallet and blue Samsung Galaxy Note 3. Both suspects left in the victim’s grey 2010 Honda Accord. They also took $350 from the victim’s account.
1900
block of Monroe Drive—On
June 12, a woman reported she was carjacked by four men in a white Chevy Tracker as she was parking outside a 4000 block of Paces Ferry Road— parking deck. Two men armed with small On June 9, a construction worker was black handguns exited the Chevy; one punched in the face during an argument approached and demanded the woman’s after telling someone that the entrance to vehicle while the other pressed a handgun the construction site was closed. to her ribs. One of the suspects took the woman’s gold 2005 Toyota Prius, while 2300 block of Bolton Road—A womthe other returned to the Chevy. An iPad an was pumping gas when a man pulled a mini, an iPhone 5S, black/silver handan LG cellphone, a gun from his back pack full of Read more of the waistband and Police Blotter online at clothing, $1000 in pointed it at her. www.reporternewspapers.net cash and a ring of She ran inside the keys also were takstore. The gunen. The suspects man made no dewere last seen driving away in the wommands and did not say anything. an’s Toyota, followed by the Chevy. Patrol units attempted to track the victim’s iPad.
R ES I D EN TI AL BUR GL A RY
AGGRAVATED AS S AULT 3300
block of Peachtree Road NE— On May 31, police responded to a shots fired call and discovered a man with a towel wrapped around his right leg. The victim was shot by a male acquaintance of a female he met on Instagram. The female called the victim after she came to the mall with the suspect, but she did not want to return home with him. The victim and suspect got into a verbal argument over the phone when they discussed arrangements to get the woman’s person-
Read all of our publications online ReporterNewspapers.net
800
block of West Paces Ferry Road— Rear doors to a house were discovered damaged, possibly by a drill. The resident believes contractors damaged her doors; no items were taken.
1000
block of Seaboard Avenue— Clothing and seven bottles of wine belonging to the resident’s ex-boyfriend were taken from a house.
200
block of Colonial Homes Drive— A Victor Knox silver/gold watch, a sterling silver plate, a wooden humidor that contained several cigars, a Tumi briefcase that contained a silver Apple 64GB iPad, a silver Michael Kors watch, three silver rings, a gold medallion with “04/21/2011” inscribed on it, a gold and silver rosary, a black Canon Rebal T31 camera and a Lenovo ThinkPad were taken from an apartment.
First
block of Peachtree Valley Road— A white Apple MacBook laptop, two HP touch laptops, a 3T camera, a pair of Beats by Dre headphones, assorted jewelry, 10 pairs of sunglasses, a make-up bag, a Guess purse and a Michael Kors purse were taken from an apartment where the resident had not been since April.
8200
AtlantaINtownPaper.com 20
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JUNE 26 – JULY 9, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
block of Brookwood Valley Circle—The front-door deadbolt lock had been drilled after the lock was changed to secure the front door by management while the victim was out of town. Approximately $3 in change was taken.
3100
block of Alexander Circle—
An Apple MacBook Air laptop, an Apple MacBook Pro, a Louis Vuitton bag, and $500 in currency were taken from an apartment. 4200
block of Alexander Circle—The front door to an apartment was pried or forced open and a safe with 10 $2 bills and change inside, a Dyson handheld vacuum, a jewelry box with multiple items, an iPad mini, a Cannon SD630 camera and an iPod Nano were taken; A second apartment resident reported stolen a Lenovo ThinkPad, a black Coach purse, two pairs of David Yurman earrings, a Gucci purse, two Michael Kors purses, a pair of black Prada sunglasses a Kindle and various heirloom earrings were taken from an apartment; a third apartment reported missing a Toshiba laptop, a Social Security card and various coins. A witness told police two men in a car tailgated him inside the gate when he arrived to the location.
3200
block of Alexander Circle—An Xbox, an Apple TV, a 32-inch flatscreen TV, a Samsung Galaxy 10 tablet and unknown amount of change was taken from an apartment.
400
block of Lindbergh Place—A safe that contained checkbooks, a Social Security card and a spare key was taken from the closet of a house.
400
block of Armour Drive—The victim’s brother lost the key to the apartment a few days prior. A Samsung 55inch Curve TV, a Burberry shirt, a pair of Balman jeans, True Religion jeans, several pair of sneakers, a PlayStation 4, a Louis Vuitton Doctor bag, a Louis Vuitton keep all bag, a rose gold necklace, two pairs of Jimmy Choo pumps, two pairs of RS Louboutins shoes, a pink face Movado watch, a Tacori green and diamond drop earrings and a Tiffany silver bead bracelet were taken.
2000
block of Monroe Place—The resident arrived home and thought a person was inside holding the door knob closed because the latch continued to turn when he attempted to open it. Police forced open the door, but found no signs of anyone inside the location. No items were disturbed or taken.
A U TO T H E F T 900
block of Peachtree Battle Circle— A 1994 Ford 2-door Econo Van was reported stolen from a construction site. The owner said he left the keys in the vehicle along with a wallet containing his driver’s license, green card, $230 in cash, a check worth about $1,800, two SunTrust Bank cards, a Bank Of America card, two SunTrust checkbooks, multiple power and hand tools worth approximately $1,000, and multiple pieces of CONTINUED ON PAGE 22 BH
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PUBLIC SAFETY
Buckhead Police Blotter CONTINUED FROM PAGE 20
fresh wood worth approximately $500. 2700
block of Defoors Ferry Road— A 2004 Jeep Liberty was reported stolen from an apartment complex parking lot. A woman heard loud noises and saw a man inside her vehicle and yelled at him. He got out of her car and entered the Jeep Liberty that belonged to the neighbor.
2100
block of Spink Street—A 1998 Jeep Cherokee was reported stolen from the driveway of a residence. The owner heard loud noises and observed a man in the passenger seat of his vehicle. He also saw a white or beige SUV running in front of his house. He tried to follow the suspects, but lost sight of them in the area of James Jackson Parkway and Browntown Road.
1500
block of Carroll Drive—A 2012 Ford F650 Coca Cola Delivery Truck was reported stolen from a parking lot. The truck contained several tools, straps, a Garmin GPS, signs, a Honda generator,
lockers and other equipment. 1900
block of Main Street—An attempt to steal a silver 2002 Jeep Liberty from a residential driveway was reported when the owner discovered the right rear passenger window broken. block of Chattahoochee Avenue—A GMC Yukon was reported stolen from a trailer park parking lot. The driver left her vehicle running while she was inside the location. The suspect was seen entering the vehicle and driving off. An arrest has been made.
was reported when the owner discovered the rear glass window broken and steering column stripped; A 1996 Jeep Cherokee was reported stolen when the owner discovered glass on the ground and her vehicle missing. 1700 block of Ridgeway Ave—An attempt to steal a cream 2006 Jeep Liberty from a residential driveway was reported after the owner discovered the right rear passenger window broken.
1500
block of Howell Mill Road— A green 1999 Infiniti I30 was reported stolen from a tire store parking lot. The owner dropped his vehicle off for service and asked them to leave the keys under the mat so he could pick up the vehicle.
3300 block of Peachtree RoadA 2006 BMW 530I was reported stolen from the parking lot at a mall; A 2008 Jeep Grand Cherokee was reported stolen from a hotel. Valet work pulled the vehicle up and left the keys inside the vehicle. A young man was seen jumping into the vehicle and driving off. A second man was seen running toward the vehicle.
2700
2900
1700
block of Noble Creek Drive— An attempt to steal a 2006 Jeep Liberty
block of Macaw Street—A 2002 Jeep Liberty was reported stolen after
the owner discovered her vehicle missing from in front of her residence. 2000
block of Marietta Boulevard—A yellow 2004 Jeep Wrangler was reported stolen from the parking lot at an auto parts store. A Galaxy CB radio and a Voodoo 4x12 guitar cabinet were also taken.
3800
block of Roswell Road—A gray 2011 Volkswagen Jetta was reported stolen from a parking lot at a restaurant.
3500
block of Piedmont Road—A green 2012 Moped and black Kona Racing Bicycle were reported stolen from a condo parking deck.
THEFTS/LARCENIES: Between
May 31 and June 6, a total of 37 thefts from automobiles were reported and an additional 32 reports of other larcenies, including shoplifting, were made. Between June 7 and 13, a total of 54 thefts from automobiles were reported and 38 additional larcenies were reported.
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