Inside Splitsville streetscape project now two phases CommuNitY 2
take a breath Ease kids, yourself back into school routine CommeNtaRY 6
Sandy Springs Reporter
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Aug. 9 — Aug. 22, 2013 • VOL. 7 — NO. 16
‘Walking’ on water
Bridge mix Classic card game still draws fans aRouNd toWN 7
DENT
City Council approves emergency road work BY DAN WHISENHUNT
Big heart
danwhisenhunt@reporternewspapers.net
Residents living along Lake Forrest Drive may not like this. It will be late September before the city can fix the section of the road between Lake Summit and Chevaux Court. Both lanes of the road were closed on Aug. 5, and it has been a one-lane road for several weeks while crews assessed its condition following multiple rock slides. Prognosis? Not good. Sandy Springs City Council at its Aug. 6 meeting gave city staff the OK to fix the road without going through the usual public bid process, saying the road’s condition is an emergency that threatens public safety. Public Works Director Garrin Coleman said consultants
Hospital volunteer brings smile, sweets maKiNg a diffeReNCe 8
open to all Jewish center’s interfaith programs welcome everyone faith 9
See CitY CouNCiL, page 4
panhandle residents should see faster fire response BY MELISSA WEINMAN
melissaweinman@reporternewsppaers.net
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pHiL MOsiER
Samantha Black listens to stand up paddleboarding instructions at morgan falls overlook park on July 18 in Sandy Springs. Local companies offer lessons on the Chattahoochee River. Story and more photos on pages 10-11.
The Sandy Springs and DeKalb County fire departments have entered into an automatic aid agreement to provide faster responses to emergency calls from people living on the border of Sandy Springs and Dunwoody. Beginning Aug. 1, units from DeKalb County’s fire station in Dunwoody will be the first to respond to fire and EMS calls to Sandy Springs residences and businesses in portions of the Sandy Springs “panhandle,” the area between the Chattahoochee River and the DeKalb County line. Sandy Springs Fire Chief Jack McElfish said the faster response time will improve the insurance rating for those See paNhaNdLe, page 22
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Sandy Springs has split the Sandy Springs Circle Streetscape project into two phases. phase 1 will involve the section of the road between mt. Vernon highway and Johnson ferry Road. phase 2, from mt. Vernon to hammond, is not yet fully funded. City spokeswoman Sharon Kraun said splitting the project allows the city to complete it more quickly.
City splits streetscape project into two phases BY DAN WHISENHUNT
danwhisenhunt@reporternewspapers.net
The city has decided to split a major streetscape project for its downtown into two separate projects in order to speed up the process. City officials announced that Sandy Springs Circle Streetscape will now consist of two phases. The first phase will be focused on the section of the road from Mount Vernon Highway to Johnson Ferry Road, which abuts Sandy Springs’ future city center. The second phase, which isn’t fully funded, will complete the stretch from Mount Vernon south to Hammond Drive. City spokeswoman Sharon Kraun said there is some funding for the second phase, which abuts the CityWalk shopping center. “It will utilize the federal funds we have,” Kraun said. “The city has applied for additional funding for (the second phase), but we have not received any approvals as yet.”
Kraun said splitting into two projects will allow the city to complete the first phase more quickly. The first phase will be locally funded, she said. “The local piece, we are able to pursue aggressively in completing,” Kraun said. “The piece utilizing the federal funding will take longer to complete, as we follow the needed guidelines to receive the funds.” The city has been acquiring property for its future downtown in the last few months. Since 2008, the city has owned the former Target property on Johnson Ferry Road. In recent meetings, the city has approved additional purchases. The city’s future downtown will be north of the intersection of Roswell Road and I-285. The first phase of the city center project will take a decade to complete, and will cost upward of $100 million, according to city estimates.
Sandy Springs government Calendar The Sandy Springs City Council usually meets the first and the third tuesday of each month at 6 p.m. at City hall, which is located at 7840 Roswell Road, Building 500 for the most up to date meeting schedule, visit http://www.sandyspringsga.org/Calendars/City-Calendar
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former Sandy Springs Society president Valerie Love, left, inspects a plaque honoring mayor eva galambos, right, as Council members Chip Collins, dianne fries and gabriel Sterling look on.
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danwhisenhunt@reporternewspapers.net
Mayor Eva Galambos, a towering figure in Sandy Springs politics, now has an enduring reminder of her leadership. During a special ceremony on July 31, the civic-minded Sandy Springs Society dedicated a white oak to the mayor, who is wrapping up her second and final term leading the city. The tree grows on a traffic island at the intersection of Mount Vernon Highway and Hammond Drive. There’s also a plaque noting the mayor’s service to the city. Before the city incorporated in 2005, Galambos and other civic leaders spent decades fighting for the right to be a city. Valerie Love, former president of the
Sandy Springs Society, said the white oak is the perfect symbol for what Galambos has meant to the city and its residents. “White oak trees radiate an aura of quiet calm, and they also symbolize dignity, durability and diligence, and those characteristics as you know definitely represent our mayor,” Love said. Galambos thanked the society for the honor and its efforts to spruce up the traffic island. In characteristically blunt fashion she said, “This island has been an eyesore as long as everybody can remember.” “I cannot thank you enough for this,” she said to Love.
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heritage Sandy Springs produces Civil War app History buffs are downloading and using a free phone app produced by Heritage Sandy Springs that leads users on a driving tour of historic Civil War sites. Heritage, a nonprofit group focused on local history, reported that more than 5,000 people have downloaded its “Heritage Civil War Tour” app. “This driving tour will take you to many of the historic sites around Sandy Springs, and reveal the story of that turbulent time in the summer of 1864, when
Union General William T. Sherman unleashed his army to cross the Chattahoochee River to take the city of Atlanta,” the product description reads. “The tour will take you from tranquil National Parks along the Chattahoochee to the bustle of downtown Sandy Springs, where along the way you will discover historical homes, intact earthworks, ancient fishing dams and memorable stories of men fighting their way across the countryside.”
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Community
Council approves road work Continued from page 1
boring into the soil along the road drilled down as much as 40 feet in some places before hitting solid rock. The quality of the soil beneath the road will mean costly fixes before road crews can stabilize it. “We have a lot less rock than we thought we had,” Coleman said. “We have little to no substantial [useable] rock in the rock face itself.” The road work could cost as much as $1.5 million, according to information Coleman gave the council. The road closure isn’t blocking any driveways, but it is disrupting Bing Maps a north-to-south route that many Lake Forrest Drive is closed between residents take to avoid the congesChevaux Court and Lake Summit tion of Roswell Road. Drive. For a larger version visit, Prior to the city closing both ReporterNewspapers.net. sections, residents living near the closed section of the road noted cumstances the work could be finished that some drivers were attempting to get within two months. He said the small size around the detour by heading north in the of the site will make the repairs challengsouthbound lane of Lake Forrest, a move ing for any contractor. they believed could’ve resulted in a serious Paulson said the project could have imaccident. Police officers issued tickets to plications for other roads in the city, too. drivers attempting to get around the road“This isn’t the only near vertical rock block. face in the city,” Paulson said. “We’ve City Councilman John Paulson, a pronow got a process in place to start lookfessional engineer, said under optimal ciring at the rest of these.”
IS YOUR ALARM REGISTERED? DEADLINE FOR REGISTRATION IS OCTOBER 1, 2013
REGISTRATION IS FREE AT SANDYSPRINGSGA.GOV/ALARM More than 96 percent of alarm calls are false alarms.
Registration must be renewed each year. Failure to register
Responding to false alarms takes public safety personnel
your alarm system will result in a $100 fine. In the case of
away from proactive patrol efforts in the community. To help
repeated false alarms (two or more), a series of graduated
reduce the number of false alarms, the City Council adopted
fines will be charged to the alarm user, ranging from $50 to
an alarm ordinance requiring all residents and business
$500 for each violation. To learn more about the alarm ordi-
owners to register their alarm system with the city.
nance, visit SandySpringsGA.gov/Alarm.
CITY OF SANDY SPRINGS, GEORGIA 7840 Roswell Road, Building 500, Sandy Springs, Georgia, 30350 Telephone: 770.730.5600
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Aug. 9 – Aug. 22, 2013
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Two more properties purchased for city center City Council approved the purchase of the Waffle House on Mount Vernon Highway and the old Mellow Mushroom building on Roswell Road. The purchases put the city closer to its goal of redeveloping its city center, located north of the intersection of Roswell Road and I-285. The city has entered into an agreement to buy the Waffle House for $1.15 million and the old Mellow Mushroom for $400,000. As part of the agreement, the city will pay to relocate the Waffle House to another site on Roswell Road after Jan. 1, City Attorney Wendell Willard said. “We’re very happy they’re going to stay in the community,” Willard said. Willard said the owners of the Mellow Mushroom building have asked to be able to use the property through the end of the year. Willard said it is the original Mellow Mushroom location, and the company wanted to use it in its 40th anniversary celebrations. –Dan Whisenhunt
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pHOTOs BY pHiL MOsiER
get your paddles ready the sixth annual Chattahoochee River Summer Splash attracted 750 water-lovers to morgan falls dam park on July 27. participants had a chance to float, canoe and raft down the river on a six-mile course to Cochran Shoals-powers island. top, pat mcKenna, left, and his son davis, sit tight during the misty morning. above, left, allee Smith organizes paddles for the event. above, right, Sandy Springs Police Officer Chris Caudell mans the department’s river rescue boat. Below, Boy Scout troop 463 members eli mcdaniel, left, and eric Schank, right, help put boats in the water.
NOTICE OF QUALIFYING FOR POSITIONS OF MAYOR AND COUNCIL CITY OF SANDY SPRINGS Qualifying for candidates in the November 5, 2013 municipal election is August 26 – 30, 2013 Candidates may download the application from the city’s website (www.sandyspringsga.gov/vote), or pick up the application at Sandy Springs City Hall between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. The qualifying fee is $750/mayor and $360/council member. All applications must be submitted in person by 4:00 p.m., August 30, 2013 to the City Clerk’s Office located at Sandy Springs City Hall, 7840 Roswell Road, Building 500, Sandy Springs Ga. 30350. Required qualifications:
No person shall be eligible to serve as mayor or council member unless that person shall have been a resident of the area comprising the corporate limits of the City of Sandy Springs for a continuous period of at least 12 months immediately prior to the date of the election for mayor or council member, shall continue to reside therein during that person’s period of service, and shall continue to be registered and qualified to vote in municipal elections of the City of Sandy Springs. In addition to the above requirement, no person shall be eligible to serve as a council member representing a council district unless that person has been a resident of the district such person seeks to represent for a continuous period of at least six months immediately prior to the date of the election for council member and continues to reside in such district during that person’s period of service. 7840 ROSWELL RD, BUILDING 500 WEB: SANDYSPRINGSGA.GOV/VOTE TELEPHONE: 770-730-5600 SS
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COMMENTARY Reporter Newspapers
From ‘me time’ to no time
Our mission is to provide our readers with fresh and engaging information about life in their communities.
Editor’s note: It’s time for kids to head back to school, a time that can be as stressful for parents as it is for students. We asked high school guidance counselor Sara Eden for some advice to share with parents as the school year begins.
Published by Springs Publishing LLC 6065 Roswell Road, Suite 225 Sandy Springs, GA 30328
As a parent, you may be contemplating the upcoming school year with mixed emotions. Maybe you are ready for some healthy time apart from your child. Perhaps you are mourning the loss of free time as a family. You may feel anxious when you think about getting back into carpools and the flurry of afternoon activities that come with the school year. So, my first bit of advice is to empathize with your child. Our kids are feeling the same range of emotions, more intensely, and have less experience managing them. It’s natural to struggle with transitions, so tolerate some ambivalence from your child about the new school year. If your child doesn’t “hit the ground running,” there is no need to jump to conclusions based on behaviors you see in the first couple weeks of school. Give him or her (and yourselves!) a little time to adjust. That being said, as parents, you can help ease your child back into a routine. For many children, though they resist at first, the structure of the school year is comfortable for them. So whether it’s family dinners or earlier bedtimes, start trying to integrate some of the school year routine back into your children’s lives. Depending on your child, you may be able to exert some influence over his or her bedtime to help with the adjustment. However, with a lot of teens, you may have to watch them walk zombie-like out of the house during those first couple of weeks until they self-impose an earlier bedtime. Parents can help children realize that they need the healthy meals at home, and more consistent exercise and sleeping habits that come with the school year to perform their best and to combat any stress they may face. As a parent, you may feel the need to have a conversation
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with your child about his or her goals for the upcoming year. In the workplace, a goal-setting conversation may serve to motivate and focus an employee, but the majority of teenagers will shut down as soon as they hear “So, what are your goals for this year?” Instead, initiate informal conversations with your children about what they are looking forward to in all areas of SARA school life: academic, social and exEDEN tracurricular. Reconnecting with friends is a GUEST COLUMN huge motivator for teens as they contemplate going back to school. Help your children focus on the positive aspects of the new year: new opportunities to get involved, new privileges, new friends. Reassure them that you are there to help if help is needed. Above all else, leave your agenda for your child’s school year out of the conversation, and focus on his or her thoughts and concerns. Getting kids excited or motivated to go back to school is a tough job for a parent. I would argue that it is almost impossible, as motivation really can’t be given. Instead, help your children embrace the responsibility of being a student. Be tolerant of their mixed emotions and behaviors as the new year begins, establish healthy routines, and emphasize the positive aspects of school life. Ultimately, you are in this together, working your way through one of life’s many transitions, and your modeling and guidance will help your child face future life changes down the road. Good luck, and welcome back to school! Sara Eden is a licensed clinical social worker and the upper school guidance counselor at Pace Academy.
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on the record Read these articles from our other editions online at ReporterNewspapers.net. “It seems to me we are making a lot of law-abiding citizens into law breakers.” – Dunwoody City Councilwoman Lynn Deutsch upon realizing the city’s zoning ordinances limit to three the number of pets in a household. “Although moving a historic building intact is always preferred, partial disassembly is a tried-and-true preservation approach.” –Wright Mitchell, president of Buckhead Heritage, on the upcoming move of the historic Randolph-Lucas House from Buckhead to Ansley Park. “They’re happy to see us and we’re definitely glad to be here.” –Brookhaven Police Lt. Brandon Gurley on the creation of the city’s new police department.
“That wasn’t necessarily in the city of Brookhaven’s best interest. It was in the city of Chamblee’s best interest.” –Brookhaven Mayor J. Max Davis, on a November vote to annex the Century Center office complex into Chamblee. The owners of the complex have asked to be annexed into Brookhaven. “I’m nervous. I feel like a freshman again.” –A student passing through the metal detectors on the first day of school at the new North Atlanta High School campus. “I think at the end of the day, the idea of the first in-town Atlanta golf cart community, it has a lot of appeal.” –Brookhaven City Councilman Bates Mattison, proposing to bring golf carts to the city.
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COMMENTARY
‘Bridging the gap’ with a card game favorite When he was young, Jack Feagin had no use for bridge. It was the card game his parents played. Back then, in the 1960s, he thought the game “ridiculous.” But after he went off to college, things changed. One night, when he thinks he probably should have been studying for exams, somebody got up a bridge game in his dorm and convinced Feagin to play a few hands. He suddenly realized he needed to know how to play this game. “It became an obsession,” the Sandy Springs lawyer said. “You can get addicted to bridge. Each hand is different. It’s so challenging. Then there’s the competition of it. You meet lots of interesting people...” He wasn’t the only one who got hooked on bridge. When Patty Tucker was growing up a few years later, she had quite a different feeling about the card game she watched her parents play with their friends. She thought it looked cool.
about once a decade. Tucker ran a portion of the tournament for players aged 19 and younger, the Youth North American Bridge AROuND ChampiTOWN onship. She also taught Joe eaRle a course in how to learn bridge in a day. Both, of course, planned to play in the tournament. “I like the game too much [not to play],” Feagin said recently during a chat over coffee at a Sandy Springs restaurant. Tucker, too. Now she teaches others the card game she learned to love as a child. She wants to see bridge survive the sea changes in how people spend their leisure time. “Think about how our culture has changed in the last 30 years,” she said. “It used to be, when bridge was in its heyday, you didn’t Joe eArle have hundreds Left, Jack Feagin chairs the host committee for the North of stations on TV. There was, I American Bridge Championship in Atlanta this month. Bridge teacher Patty Tucker, right, also will participate. think, a lot more social interaction by having people “I’d hear them talking about hands at over to your house.” breakfast the next morning... how they After all, when visitors came, hosts should have played differently, how the had to find some way to entertain them. opening lead changed the hand,” she Bridge offered a natural answer. “There’s said. “It just seemed so complex, with so only so much time you can spend talkmany parts to it, so many intricacies.” ing,” Tucker said. “It’s good to have a She took to the game early, when buffer, like a bridge game.” she was just 11. “I’ve played bridge ever Decades after Feagin and Tucksince. I love it,” said Tucker, who now er watched their parents socialize over lives in Dunwoody. “Everyone should bridge tables, the game stilll plays a big play bridge.” part in their lives. They play often. Both During the first 11 days of this married people they met playing bridge. month, there were parts of metro At“Seeing people playing bridge tells lanta where it may have seemed everyyou a lot about them. It’s the same as one does play bridge, or at least wants tennis. [It shows] the way they handle to. Thousands of players from around themselves ...,” Tucker said. “Bridge is the world planned to gather at a downgoing to make you look stupid. If you’re town hotel during the period from Aug. a smart person, you don’t want to be 1 through 11 for the North American laughed at. The way you handle that says Bridge Championship, one of the top a lot about you.” competitions in the bridge world. In fact, she says she and her husband Feagin and Tucker, now rated as life worried that getting married might masters of the complicated card game, break up a perfectly good bridge partwere in the thick of things during plannership. “I think that’s why we waited so ning for the international gathering. long to get married,” she said one recent Feagin chaired the local host commitmorning at a Dunwoody coffee shop. tee for the event, the fourth time he has “We had a good bridge partnership.” headed the committee for the nationStill do. Like Jack Feagin and his al competition, which comes to Atlanta wife, they’re still partners playing bridge.
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Aug. 9 – Aug. 22, 2013 | 7
MAKINg A DIFFERENCE
Lindy Farley greets people at the front desk of Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta at Scottish Rite.
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Children’s hospital volunteer known for sweet treats By MaRTHa nodaR
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Lindy Farley has been volunteering person,” said Betty Shults. at the Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta Shults, a resident of Sandy Springs, at Scottish Rite in Sandy Springs for 15 has been volunteering at Scottish Rite years. for 12 years. Many of those years she “I always felt fortunate, blessed, to have has been at the neonatal intensive care had healthy children,” the Dunwoody resunit, where Farley used to volunteer sevident said. “After my eral years ago. children went away to Both Shults and Do you know an organization or college, volunteering Farley are also part of individual making a difference at a children’s hospia special group of volin our community? Email tal seemed like a good unteers who are ineditor@reporternewspapers.net venue for me to help volved in hosting a others.” reception for those Once a week, Farattending the annuley mans the information desk in the al Candle Lighting Memorial Service at front lobby, directing parents where to Scottish Rite. go and answering any questions they This event is held at the hospital’s may have. She said that in some cases, chapel on Sunday afternoons every Dewhen she senses the parents may need cember for the family members of the a little more guidance, she escorts them children who have passed away at the to their destination in an effort to make hospital. their visit a little less stressful. “Each family that attends the ser“The goal is to make their time at the vice is given a candle to light after their hospital as pleasant as possible,” she emchild’s name is called by the chaplain dophasized. ing the service,” Shults said. Farley said that as soon as she arrives Brenda Green, the coordinator for at her desk, she checks the list of patients chaplaincy and clinical pastoral educato see if there is anyone she knows. In tion at Scottish Rite, said the idea of havsuch cases, she makes a point to visit ing an annual memorial service emerged them and may even stop at the gift shop approximately 20 years ago from beon her way to their room. reavement groups that met at the hospiShe also is well-known among partal each month. When the groups met, ents, fellow volunteers and hospital staff some hospital staff members joined the members for her skills in making desfamilies to mourn children who had serts. passed away. Farley’s fellow volunteers appreciate Shults said the annual event has beher dedication. come a tradition among a group of par“Lindy is a very generous person with ents who come year after year, expecta big heart,” said Terry Ingwersen, a 10ing to see Farley there, and eager to try year volunteer, who works at the oncolthe special sweet treats she prepares for ogy and hematology outpatient clinic. them. “And her sweet treats are fabulous.” “Lindy brings a lot of joy to those “Lindy is such a warm, welcoming around her,” Ingwersen said.
FAITH
Interfaith families find support, education at MJCCA By MeliSSa WeinMan
melissaweinman@reporternewspapers.net
When Leslie Mintz’s children started coming home singing the Hebrew songs they learned at day care, she decided she wanted to learn them, too. Mintz grew up Episcopalian, but she married a Jewish man, and they decided to raise their children in the Jewish faith. “It kind of hit me that I didn’t know a lot about it,” sPeCiAl Mintz said. “When I was 25, From left, Jason, 7, Leslie, Ryan, I agreed to one day raise these 10, and Andrew Mintz. children Jewish, and here I am. I want to be an involved mom, and this isn’t my religion.” to Judaism. She began attending a program at the “It jump-started my interest and Marcus Jewish Community Center of learning about the cultural and religious Atlanta for non-Jewish mothers raising side of Judaism,” Mintz said. Jewish children. The group was called Glusman said conversion isn’t the the Mother’s Circle. goal of the programming at the MJC“It was education, but it was also a CA, however. nice support group because other wom“My job is to make sure people in inen would share challenges they were terfaith relationships can find a place in having,” Mintz said. the Jewish community,” Glusman said. The Mother’s Circle is one of the out“We don’t demand anything of them.” reach programs the Jewish Community Glusman said he’s trying to make all Center offers for interfaith families, said programming at the MJCCA more acRabbi Brian Glusman, director of memcessible and welcoming for everyone. He bership outreach and engagement. “So believes isolating interfaith families into many of our couseparate programs ples and families can be counterproare interfaith on ductive. some level,” Glus“I think that “in the old days, if a child man said. it is distancing married someone of a Glusman said and off-putting different faith, a parent for both Jews and for some people,” non-Jews, it has Glusman said. might have gone into become more com“Th ey don’t want mourning over that. that mon and accepted to be singled out. doesn’t happen anymore.” to marry someone They want to be from a different included. All our religious backprograms are open – RABBI BRIAN gLuSMAN MJCCA DIRECTOR OF MEMBERSHIP ground. to all, no matter OuTREACH AND ENgAgEMENT “There’s just their faith or oriena greater opentation. I guess you ness now,” Gluscould call them ‘all man said. “In the faith.’” old days, if a child married someone of a Shelly Buxbaum is the director of the different faith, a parent might have gone Lisa F. Brill Institute of Jewish Learning into mourning over that. That doesn’t at the MJCCA. She and other instruchappen anymore.” tors teach a variety of courses for adults Glusman said couples from different about Judaism, including an Introducreligious backgrounds often begin to setion to Judaism course, which she said is riously discuss the role of faith in their popular with interfaith families. lives once they have children. “Parents of young children want to “After the thank-you notes are writseriously look at these issues and core ten following the wedding … there are a values, and understand what their chilhost of challenges for people who are in dren are learning, and to bring the coninterfaith relationships, especially with versation home,” Buxbaum said. children. Children seem to be the catShe said the courses are discussionalyst for addressing these issues,” Glusbased, and offer a pluralistic view of Juman said. daism. While attending the Mother’s Circle, “It makes it meaningful for people Mintz learned about other programs, who are on a journey, who would like to and started attending more events at the learn about Judaism, who would like to center. She went on a community trip to hear a spectrum of opinions,” Buxbaum Israel, and eventually decided to convert said.
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Patricia Fulton tries her hand at stand up paddleboarding on the Chattahoochee River. The sport, which uses boards 10-12 feet tall and long oars, has exploded in popularity in recent years.
Paddleboarding on the Hooch provides ‘sensory overload’ By Sandie Webb Samantha Black’s first experience on a paddleboard came in the Atlantic. She and her husband tried the sport while vacationing at Hilton Head. But one recent evening, she stood on a long, surfboard-like paddleboard and tried the new craze in a new place – the Chattahoochee River. It was her first experience with inland paddleboarding. “There’s much less distraction here than in the ocean,” she said. “[It’s] smoother, quieter.” High Country Outfitters is one of three companies that contracts with the Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area to provide outdoor adven-
ture sports in the string of parks along the Chattahoochee. The other companies are Urban Currents and Chattahoochee Outfitters. All rent equipment and offer classes for paddleboarding on the Hooch. High Country started selling paddleboards three years ago, general manager John Sloan said. It now offers regular Thursday night demonstrations at Morgan Falls Overlook Park in Sandy Springs to introduce newcomers to stand up paddleboarding. Paddleboarding, Sloan said, isn’t really new – it originated in Hawaii more than 50 years ago – but participation in
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He tied your shoes Samantha Black, front left, along with Katie Devitt, center, and Kelly Berrall, right, listen to instructor John Sloan give tips on stand up paddleboarding.
stand up paddleboarding has exploded in the last seven years, due in large part to YouTube and videos posted there. A paddleboarder stands on a long board and powers it with a long oar. Most paddleboards stand 10 feet to12 feet tall and are wider than surfboards. The extra width helps stability; however, since a longer board glides faster, stand up race boards are 12 feet 6 inches to 14 feet. Sloan, a certified stand up paddleboard teacher, said he still recalls his first time on a paddleboard six years ago. “Standing on water is a new sensation,” he said. “[It offered] a total sensory overload.” One recent Thursday, he showed members of a class how to mount and dismount a paddleboard, and how to stand after paddling a short distance. Kneeling is the position recommended if you get tired or hit rough water, he said. Although most of the people attending the demonstration appeared a bit shaky at first, everyone eventually was able to stand up on a board. When asked why paddlers stand,
Sloan replied, “It’s just fun!” “You might go faster on your knees or sitting,” he said, “but standing and looking down in the water is much more fun. Plus, it’s a better workout.” Rudy Evenson, information officer with the Chattahoochee recreation area, said paddleboarding is no more dangerous than rafting. Still, he said, a paddleboard is considered a vessel under Georgia law, so paddlers must adhere to the same rules as boaters. Every paddler must have a personal floatation device with him or her. And paddlers, like other river sports fans, should avoid excessive use of alcohol, he said. “Alcohol use on the river is the biggest danger with any water sport,” he said. “But I don’t think it would be easy to drink while standing up and paddling with both hands.” First-timer Katie Devitt, a runner who also enjoys yoga and rock climbing, was the first to mount a board. By the end of the evening, she was hooked on the sport. “It was so relaxing, something great for unwinding after work,” she said.
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Paddleboarding on the Chattahoochee River Classes: High County Outfitters offers public classes on stand up paddleboarding on Thursdays through August, weather permitting. Classes start at 6:30 p.m., at Morgan Falls overlook Park, 200 Morgan Falls Road, Sandy Springs, 30350. Additional sessions may be scheduled during September. See Facebook for last-minute schedule changes: www.facebook.com/HighCountryOutfitters. Classes cost $25. Urban Currents offers an introduction to stand up paddleboarding at 9 a.m., noon, 3 p.m. and 6 p.m. on saturday and sundays during non-holiday weekends at the Power Island Unit of the Chattahoochee river National recreation Area, 5820 interstate North Parkway, Sandy Springs, 30328. Sessions cost $92. Chattahoochee Outfitters offers classes Tuesdays at 10:30 a.m. and Saturdays at 10:30 a.m., and noon through end of September, and perhaps longer. Classes are held at Azalea Park, 203 Azalea Drive, 30075. Cost is $30. Contacts: High Country Outfitters, www.highcountryoutfitters. com; Urban Currents, urbancurrents.org; Chattahoochee Outfitters, www.shootthehooch.com..
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August 17 ~ 10am to 4pm at the Dunwoody Nature Center “Birds of Prey” Show
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COMMuNITY
Stop Hunger Now
River Ride
Saturday, Aug. 17, 8 a.m. – Dunwoody United Methodist Church kicks off the fall with “Foodstock 2013,” by putting together at least 300,000 meals for Stop Hunger Now. The goal is to involve the entire community, so they can work together for a great cause. Free and open to everyone. 1548 Mount Vernon Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. Call 770394-0675 or go to: www.dunwoodyumc.org/2013 for more details and to reserve a time slot.
Friday, Aug. 16, 5:30-8:30 p.m. – Paddle with
Family Field Day Saturday, Aug. 17, 10 a.m. – Join others on
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the St. James United Methodist Church’s Sanctuary Lawn for a Family Field Day! Wear tennis shoes and gym clothes – this isn’t your school’s fall carnival! Participate in games, and compete for prizes. Free events; snacks and drinks will be for sale. All ages are welcome, and the public is invited to attend. 4400 Peachtree Dunwoody Rd., Atlanta, 30342. Questions? Visit: www.stjamesatlanta.org or contact Emily Gantert at 404-261-3121.
a ranger! Bring your own canoe or kayak and join a park ranger for a leisurely float through the Palisades, a section of the Chattahoochee River. As twilight fades, you will load your boat and depart the park just as darkness arrives. Reservations required by calling 678538-1200. Space is limited. $3 daily park pass or annual pass. Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area, 5450 Interstate North Parkway, Sandy Springs, 30328. Go to: www.nps.gov/chat to find out more.
Pool Party Sunday, Aug. 18, 4-6 p.m. – Join lots of other
young people for BBYO Connect’s Kickoff Pool Party! Appropriate for 6-8th graders. Open to the community. $10 by Aug. 12; $15 after. Marcus Jewish Community Center - Atlanta, 5342 Tilly Mill Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. For more information, email: stacie.graff@atlantajcc.org or call 678-812-3972.
“The Croods” Friday, Aug. 23, 6 p.m. – Enjoy a family-friend-
Butterfly Festival Saturday, Aug. 17, 10 a.m.- 4 p.m. – The Dunwoody Nature Center holds its annual Butterfly Festival. This year’s event has twice as many butterflies with two tents, and also features games, crafts, animal encounters and discovery stations. Participate in a nature scavenger hunt and find hidden treasures within Dunwoody Park. Get your face painted like a butterfly, enjoy live music, a Birds of Prey show, and other entertainment. On-site concessions available (cash only). $10 for adults; $5 for children. Rain or shine. 5343 Roberts Dr., Dunwoody, 30338. To find out more, call 770-394-3322 or visit: www.dunwoodynature.org/Butterfly-Festival.
ly movie, on a large, outdoor screen. Movie starts at dusk. “The Croods” is about a caveman family that must trek through an unfamiliar world with the help of an inventive boy. Rated PG. Free and open to everyone. Pets and alcoholic beverages not permitted. Sandy Springs United Methodist Church, Hitson Center Lawn, 86 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328. Visit: www.facebook.com/SandySpringsMoviesByMoonlight with questions.
Walk, Wag, N’ Run Saturday, Aug. 24, 7:30 a.m. – Join others for the Walk, Wag, N’ Run to help the human and animal victims of domestic violence. Proceeds benefit the Ahimsa House. $25 early bird through Aug. 17; $30 after; $35 day of race. I-mile Fun Run, $15, and begins at 8:45 a.m. Participants receive t-shirt, goodie bag. Flat to rolling hills course that ends in Lenox Park. Event is a 2014 Peachtree Road Race qualifier. Race starts at 1025 Lenox Park Blvd.; vehicle parking at 2180 Lake Blvd., Brookhaven, 30319. Register and learn more at www.active.com.
Saturday, auguSt 24, 2013 5k starts at 7:30 am | 1 mile starts at 8:30 am
Celebrating its 30th year, the 2013 Magnolia Run and Walk for Epilepsy features a 5k run and 1 mile walk in honor of those effected by epilepsy across the state. Held annually at Perimeter Mall, the event brings awareness to epilepsy and the Epilepsy Foundation of Georgia. Last year’s event brought out over 1200 people! All funds raised benefit EFGA’s programs, including education, camps, medication assistance and awareness. Come join us for fun-filled morning of exercise, food, fun and philanthropy! For Registration and More Information, Please Visit
www.epilepsyga.org or call 404-527-7155
12
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LEARN SOMETHINg!
FOR KIDS
Find Your Balance Wednesday, Aug. 14, 6-8 p.m. – Balance is a concern for many, and balance seems to diminish as we age. Why wait until it is too late? Learn some simple tricks to help find your balance from the inside out. Learn about alignment and body mechanics so you can improve your balance, and learn how to use your body more effectively. Free. Open to members of the Cancer Support Community. Workshop is appropriate for everyone, including those who cannot get on the floor. RSVP to 404-843-1880. Cancer Support Community, 5775 Peachtree Dunwoody Rd., Building C, Suite 225, Atlanta, 30342. Go to: www.cscatlanta.org for details.
Tinnitus Support Saturday, Aug. 17, 10 a.m.-12 p.m. – The
Atlanta Tinnitus Support Group invites all to join them at their next meeting, where Melissa Wikoff, Au.D., Doctor of Audiology at Atlanta Hearing Associates, will speak. Socializing from 10-10:30 a.m.; lecture beings at 10:30 a.m. Dunwoody Public Library, in the Meeting Room, 5339 Chamblee-Dunwoody Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. For more details, email: Erica at elcatl@aol.com.
Wedding Savings Saturday, Aug. 17, 3-4:30 p.m. – Feeling
overwhelmed by wedding costs? This workshop tells how to plan a “dream wedding” at a reasonable price by using a little creativity and research. Come learn the simple, cost-saving strategies that are often overlooked. Have twice the wedding for half the price! Free and open to the public. Sandy Springs Branch Library, 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328. For additional information, visit www.sashajevents.eventbrite.com.
STARLAB Sunday, Aug. 18, 1-2 p.m. – Stay cool at the
Chattahoochee Nature Center, while learning the stars and constellations in the August night sky as you journey into STARLAB, a portable planetarium. Two, 25- minute sessions. Appropriate for ages 5 to adult. General admission: $10 for adults; $7 for seniors; $7 for students 13-18; $6 for children; free for CNC members, and kids 2 and under. 9135 Willeo Rd., Roswell, 30075. Call 770992-2055 or go to: www.chattnaturecenter.org for information.
Basic Gardening Saturday, Aug. 24, 10 a.m. – North Fulton Master Gardeners, along with the University Of Georgia Cooperative Extension, present “Basic Garden Maintenance.” Learn tips for year-round success in your garden. Topics include: when to fertilize, prune, seed lawns, plant annuals, cut and divide perennials, plant bulbs and veggies, and more. Free and open to the public. Registration necessary by visiting: http://gardeningbythespringsaug.eventbrite. com. Heritage Sandy Springs, 6110 Bluestone Rd., Sandy Springs, 30328, in the Community Room. Call 404-851-9111 with questions.
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Librarian Pie Toss Saturday, Aug. 17, 2 p.m. – Over 75 middle and
high school youth have surpassed the Teen Summer Reading Challenge goal at the Sandy Springs Branch Library! Due to their excellent summer reading habits, they now have the opportunity to throw a pie in a librarian’s face. For middle and high school youth. Free. 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328. For additional information call 404-303-6130.
PERFORMINg ARTS
Summer Sing Saturday, Aug. 17, 10 a.m.-12 p.m. – All are invited to the Choral Guild of Atlanta’s “Summer Sing,” an open house for interested singers to get acquainted with the conductor and chorus. Meet up with old friends, and preview music planned for the first concert, the works of Benjamin Britten. Free. No age or talent requirement needed for this event. Coffee and conversation start at 9:15 a.m. St. Luke’s Presbyterian Church, 1978 Mount Vernon Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. Questions? Call 404-223-6362 and leave message or email: info@cgatl.org.
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Downtown Chamblee at City hall
Musical Showcase
Friday, aug. 23
Saturday, Aug. 17, 7 p.m. – The 5th annual
summer concert to benefit the Tim Redovian Memorial Fund gets under way, with past recipients of TRMF scholarships showcasing their musical talents in “Look at Us Now!” All are welcome. Free admission; donations accepted. Reception follows the show. TRMF provides funding and scholarship awards to high school students pursuing education in the performing arts. Dunwoody Baptist Church, 1445 Mount Vernon Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. For more information, visit www.timredovian.org.
Springs Concerts Sunday, Aug. 18, 7 p.m. – Concerts by the
Springs welcomes back Gwen Hughes & The Retro Jazz Kats, after their earlier performance was rained out. The band features elegant jazz and classic swing music. Free. No pets, no smoking. Picnic baskets, coolers and blankets are welcome; no outside tables. Food and beverages available for purchase. Heritage Green, on the Sandy Springs Entertainment Lawn, 6110 Bluestone Rd., Sandy Springs, 30328. Call 404-851-9111, ext. 4, visit: www.heritagesandysprings.org or email: information@heritagesandysprings.org to learn more.
KinChaFoonee Cowboys 7-10 pm • Free
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Automotive Group
Jim ellis maserati test drives available onsite at 6 p.m. Sign up in advance through Chamblee Parks & recreation.
ViP tables available for purchase. Food & Drink vendors onsite.
www.chambleega.com • 770.986.5016 Park at Chamblee Plaza and ride the Old Time Trolley to the concert in Downtown Chamblee from 6:00-10:30 p.m.
Tia Rix & Friends Friday, Aug. 23, 7:30-9:30 p.m. – Check
out favorite jazz standards and more at the Church of the Atonement’s free summer concert series. Doors open at 7 p.m. Dessert and coffee provided; BYOB. The public is welcome. Babysitting services provided. Bring a can or non-perishable item for theCommunity Action Center Food Bank. 4945 High Point Rd., NE, Sandy Springs, 30342. Call 404-252-3324 or go to: https://atonement.episcopalatlanta.org to find out more.
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Presents…. Steve Dolinger, Ed. D, President
of Georgia Partnership in Excellence for Education Georgia Partnership in Education, an Atlanta based non-profit organization, is dedicated to improving public schools across Georgia through research, advocacy and communication. Join us as Mr. Dolinger discusses current issues our education systems face in today’s market and how the Georgia Partnership in Excellence for Education is hard at work in improving student achievement in Georgia. Tuesday, August 20, 2013 7:30 am to 9:00 am The Capital Grille Perimeter
Chamber Members $15 Future Chamber Members $25 Early Registration Recommended
For info about Chamber membership or upcoming events visit
dunwoodycommerce.org or call (678) 244-9700
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Aug. 9 – Aug. 22, 2013 | 13
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Combat crime Left, the city of Sandy Springs participated in the annual “National Night Out” event on Aug. 6, an evening meant to help build strong, safer communities. The public was invited to Hammond Park to enjoy games, popcorn and snow cones, and meet their local First Responder personnel. The city of Dunwoody also participated. Below, Police Chief Billy Grogan welcomes the Botwinik family and their dog “Tracker” to festivities at 100 Perimeter Center Place. sPeCiAl Photos
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Seed money
sPeCiAl
Ison Springs Elementary School in Sandy Springs received a STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) grant, and will use the funds for a robotics after school club. Back row, from left, Irene Schweiger, Sandy Springs Education Force executive director, Sara White, Ison Springs Elementary School principal, Ian Gornall, Ison Springs teacher, Julia Bernath, Sandy Springs Education Force chairwoman. Front, students Logan Everson, left, and Rue Rosetti.
Here’s Looking at You!
LEADERSHIP SANDY SPRINGS PRESENTS
S A N DY S P R I N G S
To view photos from your community visit www.ReporterNewspapers.net. To submit your photos email photos@reporternewspapers.net
Ê FREE in Sandy Springs • Fridays On Sandy Springs United Methodist Church Activity Center Lawn at Mt. Vernon Highway and Sandy Springs Circle
Friday, Aug. 23 The Croods Friday, Sept. 6 Ê Oz, The Great & Powerful Wreck It Ralph Ê Friday, Sept. 27 sPeCiAl
Time for a party Lenbrook, a continuing care retirement community in Buckhead, recently celebrated its 30th anniversary, with 450 residents, staff and invited guests enjoying Baked Alaska in the plaza gardens, accompanied by live music. From left, outgoing board chairman John Gillin and wife Marty, with Lou Stormont and husband Dick, a former board member, enjoy the festivities.
Ê
FESTIVITIES START AT 6 P.M. – MOVIES START AT DARK
Bring a blanket or lawn chair; picnic or buy food onsite…then enjoy a fun-filled evening watching movies on a giant 30-foot outdoor screen. Free admission! Free parking! Visit leadershipsandysprings.org for details and directions.
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Strings attached A children’s sextet from Franklin Pond Chamber Music performed for the Horizons Student Enrichment Program at Holy Innocents’ Episcopal School on July 23 in Sandy Springs. From left, Christopher Castro, Harrison Stenson and Dayana Baltazar get hands-on with a cello.
• Patios/Pool Decks • Pools & Spas • Outdoor Kitchens • Arbors • Brick & Stone • Chimneys/Fireplace • Decorative Concrete/Pavers • Decks • Driveways • Efflorescence Cleaning • Grading & Drainage • Historical Restorations • Masonry Maintenance Contracts • Retaining Walls • Stone Patio Restoration & Sealing • Stone/Tile Deck Waterproofing & Leak Repair josh@southernoutdoorcd.com
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Before
After Serving your community for 15 years
Aug. 9 – Aug. 22, 2013 | 15
EDuCATION
End-of-course tests results show percentage not making the grade The Georgia Department of Education recently released results for the end-of-course tests given to high school students. This table shows the percentage of students in public high schools in Reporter Newspapers communities that did not meet standards in the 10 subject areas tested. In some cases, due to curriculum changes, not all schools took the same tests or there weren’t enough students taking them to provide a general assessment. The scores here are provided by the Department of Education and presumed to be accurate.
North Atlanta high
Cross Keys high
Chamblee high
Dunwoody high
Riverwood high
North springs high
Physical science
47.7%
32.6%
48.9%
28.6%
21.2%
26.6%
U.s. history
29.9
25.0
10.1
18.2
19.5
10.8
9th Grade literature American literature
14.1
32.8
9.0
13.4
8.9
9.8
6.5
31.5
4.3
9.2
7.5
4.1
Math i
73.2
53.4
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
Math ii
42.6
16.4
15.9
33.6
N/A
N/A
Geometry
42.6
16.4
15.9
33.6
N/A
N/A
biology
27.4
9.6
19.7
15.9
21.9
7.2
economics
16.2
11.9
14.7
18.4
11.6
8.6
Coordinate Algebra
65.9
72.9
56.4
55.0
65.5
71.9
test
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Aug. 9 – Aug. 22, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
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EDUCATION File
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Some ‘school survival’ tips include making sure your child eats a good breakast, and selecting the right backpack.
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Back to school ‘survival tips’ for parents, students
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By Collin Kelley By the time you read this, some schools will already be back in session for 2013-14. Atlanta Public Schools resumed classes Aug. 7, and Fulton and DeKalb county schools on Aug. 12. Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta has offered up some survival tips for kids and parents as the school year routine begins anew. These tips are some basics for eating properly and maintaining study habits, as well as selecting a backpack that is safe and comfortable.
Survival Tips • Eat breakfast. The old saying “breakfast is the most important meal of the day” is never more true than when you’re going to school. Students are more alert and perform better in class if they eat a good breakfast. • Get enough sleep. Studies show that teens need at least 8½ hours of sleep each night to feel rested. Sleep deprivation can lead students to fall asleep in class (embarrassing if you’re caught!) and can also make it hard to concentrate. It can be more productive to get the sleep you need than it is to stay up late cramming: A recent study found that students who got adequate sleep before a math test were nearly three times more likely to figure out the problem than those who stayed up all night. • Do more at school and you’ll have less to do at home. Take advantage of those times during the school day when you’re not in class: Review notes, go to the library or computer lab, get a head start on your homework, or research a term paper. You’ll be thankful later while you’re at the mall or a concert and your classmates are stuck at home cramming. • Be a joiner. One of the best ways to make friends and learn your way around is by joining school clubs, sports teams and activities. Even if you can’t kick a 30-yard field goal or sing a solo, getting involved in other ways – going to a school play, helping with a bake sale, or cheering on
friends at a swim meet – can help you feel like a part of things.
Among the fascinating people who
live and work at Canterbury Court:
Tips for Choosing and Using Backpacks • Consider the construction. Before you grab a new bag off the rack, make sure it’s got two padded straps that go over your shoulders. The wider the straps, the better. A backpack with a metal frame like the ones hikers use may give you more support (although many lockers aren’t big enough to hold this kind of pack). Make use of another hiking tip: Look for a backpack with a waist belt, which helps to distribute the weight more evenly across the body. Backpacks with multiple compartments can also help distribute the weight more evenly. • Balance the load. Before you load your backpack, adjust the straps so the pack sits close to your back. If the pack bumps against your lower back or your butt when you walk, the straps are probably too long. Always pack your backpack with the heaviest items closest to your back. Don’t drop all your stuff in the main compartment (using the side pockets will distribute the weight more evenly). Wear both straps over your shoulders. • Try a pack with wheels. Lots of kids use these as an alternative to backpacks, but there are guidelines and considerations to keep in mind with this kind of pack, too. Many schools don’t allow rolling packs because people can trip over them in the halls. • Don’t overdo it. Doctors and physical therapists recommend that people carry no more than 10 to 15 percent of their body weight in their packs. This means that if you weigh 120 pounds, your backpack should weigh no more than 12 to 18 pounds. Use your bathroom scale to weigh your backpack and get an idea of what the proper weight for you feels like.
T.J. & Lois
ANDERSON Residents since 2012 Composer • Conductor Orchestrator • Professor Volunteer • School Librarian Book Reviewer
We appreciate spirited discussions and connecting with
NEW INTERESTING FRIENDS. The idea of retirement community living never really occurred to the Andersons. Their daughters wanted them close by and willingly did the research, visiting several communities, and eventually choosing Canterbury for its welcoming feeling. With T.J. actively composing most days, their newly renovated apartment had to provide a gracious home for his piano, as well as expansive art and book collections. That it also offered a great view of Peachtree fireworks was icing on the cake.
The Andersons invite you to discover their Canterbury Court.
3750 Peachtree Road, N.E. - Atlanta, Georgia 30319 - (404) 261-6611
c an t e r b u r yc o u r t . o r g Atlanta’s premier non-profit continuing care retirement community www.ReporterNewspapers.net |
Aug. 9 – Aug. 22, 2013 | 17
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EDuCATION
Ben Karlin has a record of starting new endeavors. During his freshman year, he was the starting pitcher for the Weber School baseball team’s firstever state playoff game. That same year, when he did not see a quality, baseball summer camp he wanted his younger brother to participate in, he started a new one with his friend Joseph Brickman. Not only does Ben start anew, he finishes what he starts. He just completed his third year running the baseball camp, and has now made it to three state playoff games with his Georgia Independent School Association region 1-AAA team at Weber. Weber head baseball coach Patrick Wright describes Ben as a team leader “both on and off the field.� “When I first came to Weber, he was a young, eager sophomore still learning things, but he has developed into a mature, young man,� Wright said. “He has done a great job leading in both the classroom and the weight room.� In addition to being a pitcher at Weber in the spring, Ben has participated on traveling teams during the fall and summer since he was 13, most recently playing for the last three years with the 643 DP Jaguars. Ben, who was the captain of the Weber Rams for the 2013 season, started playing catch with his dad when he was 2 or 3 years old, and has loved sports ever since. “When I was younger, I played baseball, basketball and soccer, but I decided that baseball was my favorite and the one I wanted to pursue,� said Ben. Through his summer camp and by teaching private lessons on pitching, hitting and fielding, he has worked to pass his passion on to others.
The camp has grown from 10 participants to 21 in only three years, and he hopes to keep it up through college and expand it from one week into two separate, week-long sessions. “It has been a great learning experience,� Ben said. “Each year it has become easier knowing what to do, how to plan it, how to send emails to parents, and how to work with the kids.� When he is not exercising his school spirit on the field, Ben works as a “student ambassador� to encourage younger kids to consider attending Weber. He visits middle schools, escorts visiting students to classes, and works to get to know students looking at the school. “Weber is a great place, and I really love it and want to get as many people to go to the school as possible,� said Ben.
What’s Next: Ben plans to play baseball in college, and is looking for a school with strong academics where he can possibly study psychology or economics. Inspired in part by an entrepreneurship class at Wesafeto•ultimately gentle •find thorough ber, he hopes a job that combines his passions for business and baseball. This article was reported and written by Mollie Simon, a rising senior at Chamblee High School.
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EDuCATION
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Ready to start Sandy Springs teachers participated in a “Back to School” luncheon at dunwoody Baptist Church on aug. 1. above, left to right, ivy freeman, dunwoody Springs elementary, Brent mcBride, heards ferry elementary, amy gamble, Woodland elementary, harvey oaxaca, Lake forest elementary, Sara White, ison Springs elementary, and Lisa Nash, high point elementary, address the group. Left, teachers gather to listen to guest speaker Kim Bearden, cofounder, executive director and language arts teacher at the Ron Clark academy. Below, left, taylor pratt, new assistant principal at ison Springs, talks with Lisa Nash, high point principal, and Sara White, principal of ison Springs, right.
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Aug. 9 – Aug. 22, 2013 | 19
PuBLIC SAFETY
Police Blotter The following incidents and arrests are some but not all of the reports filed with SSPD over the listed period, dated through aug. 2. The following information was provided by the Sandy Springs Police Department from its records and is presumed to be accurate.
R o BBeRY 8700 block of Roswell Road 30350 – On July 23 a man reported that he was in the parking lot of the Bank of America just before 10 p.m. He exited his car and was approached by a man who had a gun. The man took the victim’s wallet and contents.
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Aug. 9 – Aug. 22, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
1st block of Cedar Run 30350 – On July 20 a man reported that between 9:25 and 10:30 p.m., someone came into his apartment and took a laptop, Xbox 360, PS3 and several other items.
CAPTAIN STEVE ROSE, SSPD srose@sandyspringsga.gov 5000 block of Riley Terrace Road 30328 – On July 27 a contractor said that he had secured the house he was working in, but the next day he found that someone had been inside and had trashed the place, leaving liquor bottles, beer cans, wine bottles, and other junk in the home. a neighbor said they saw teenagers at the home earlier. 300 block of Sandy Springs Circle 30328 – On July 29 someone broke into the “Just Quality Cleaners” and took $100 cash and an ipad.
1700 block of Sandalwood Drive 30350 – On July 20 the victims were gone overnight, and when they returned home, they found someone had broken into the apartment and had taken several things. They had a juvenile suspect as being on the short list.
6900 block of Roswell Road 30328 – On July 30 police were called to an apartment where a man said a burglary was in progress. The victim knew the men who were listed as suspects. The call turned out to be unfounded, however a woman, listed as a witness, was found to Read more of the 6300 block of be wanted in Newpolice Blotter online at Powers Ferry Road ton County on a www.reporternewspapers.net probation violation 30342 – On July 20 originating from an cops were called to earlier methamphetthe Wyndham Hoamine arrest. tel and met with a 21-year-old man who said someone accessed his room and took cash, 4800 block of Lake Forrest Drive 30328 – two iphones and other items. The victim said On July 30 a man reported that he was gone he fell asleep just before 6 a.m. and when from 10:45 a.m. until 1:45 p.m. When he rehe woke at 7:40 a.m., the items were gone. turned home, he discovered that someone had broken into the house by kicking in the 200 block of Summer Drive 30350 – On carport door. Several items were taken inJuly 21 the apartment resident said that when cluding a 50” TV, laptop, weapons and cash. she and her male friend arrived home at 9:30 p.m., they could not get into the apartment 700 block of Marsh Trail Circle 30350 – because the deadbolt was locked. They went On July 31 a woman reported that while she around to the back of the apartment and saw was out running errands, someone came into a man exiting from a window. He ran, and the her apartment between 10 a.m. and 2:30 male friend ran after him, but lost sight. at p.m. The front door had been forced open by the time of the report, nothing was missing. a prying tool. nothing was reported missing at the time of the report. 100 block of Parc Du Chateau 30328 – On July 24 someone entered the victim’s garage 200 block of Franklin Road 30342 – On and apparently unsuccessfully tried to steal July 31, sometime between 9:30 a.m. and 6 a motorcycle. p.m., someone entered the victim’s apartment and took a laptop and jewelry. 5600 block of Roswell Road 30342 – On July 24, sometime between 7:30 and 10 a.m., someone came into the victim’s apartment a S S a u Lt and took two televisions and a laptop. A man called police to complain that he 5300 block of Long Island Drive 30342 – was illegally “chest bumped” during a conOn July 24, sometime between 9 a.m. and frontation over a man wanting more alcohol 1:30 p.m., someone forced a French door and while they were out that evening. entered the residence. The burglar took cash and possibly jewelry. Cops responded to Spring Creek Lane on 300 block of Summerset Lane 30328 – On July 24, sometime between 7:30 a.m. and 8 p.m., someone forced entry into the victim’s apartment and took some jewelry items. 5600 block of Roswell Road 30342 – On July 25 officers met with a woman who came home and found her door and window open. The occupant was gone from about 9 p.m. to 4 a.m. it appears that someone came in through the living room window by force. several items were taken.
a domestic call on July 29 around 3:47 a.m. They met with a woman who said her livein boyfriend hit her in the mouth. The man’s finger was bleeding from where he said she bit him. He looked, smelled and later confirmed that he had been drinking. The woman who called the police immediately lost credibility when she gave the cops a false birth date. She said he was mad when he got home because dinner wasn’t ready. The argument started, escalated, and moved to the parking lot, where he slugged her. She had
SS
593 Amberidge Trail
Public Safety signs of being hit. The man was arrested for domestic violence. The woman was arrested for giving false information to the police. She said she did so because she is currently undergoing immigration hearings. She said she is a citizen of Kenya. All went to jail. 1300 block of Old Hammond Chase 30328 – On July 29, while officers were speaking to two parties over a dispute, a man who was related to one of the parties walked up and began causing a disruption while the officer was trying to settle it down. He was arrested. 400 block of Morgan Falls Road 30350 – On July 29, while an officer responded to a disturbance call, a man pulled up in front of the patrol car and attempted to provoke the man to whom the officer was talking to. The officer told him to back off, which he ignored, and the man continued to try and fight the other man. The officer had to physically restrain the man. He was later arrested.
Arr ests Riverview Road 30342 – On July 22 cops were called on a domestic complaint. The caller said that she and her husband were in bed sleeping when suddenly, without provocation, her husband rolled over and took the blankets with him. Exposed, she pulled them back over her, and this caused her husband to become angry and curse at her. He pushed her out of bed, causing her to injure her leg. The husband was somewhat vague over the details and said there may have been some pushing, and she may have hit her head on something. He was arrested on domestic violence charges. 1100 block of Mount Vernon Highway 30328 – On July 23 officers responded to the
passenger, he found that the passenger was wanted in Cobb County on a failure to yield on a previous marijuana charge. He was arrested. The driver was given a warning and continued on. 5600 block of Roswell Road 30342 – On July 23 Target store security observed and videotaped two persons who walked around the store, stealing items and placing them in a cart, and trying to leave without paying. The pair was arrested for stealing over $400 in store items. Northridge Road 30350 – On July 25 the victim said that he was walking along Northridge Road and Colquitt just after 3 a.m. when a car drove past him, turned around, and stopped. He walked past the car and a man got out and pulled a gun on him. The man said “Give me everything you have!” The man gave up his cell phone, and the suspect re-entered the car and left. Just before that robbery, on Northridge Road, it appears the same suspect robbed a man at 2 a.m. He was in a Chevy Impala, silver in color. An officer had the Chevy Impala pulled over on a traffic offense when the lookout was broadcast. The officer secured the two men in handcuffs and found the stolen phones in the car. The two are in jail awaiting a hearing on robbery charges.
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threatening text that said “play’in b*!$% ill kill ya son too hoe.” grammar was so bad that we cannot tell if the suspect is talking about role playing, her son or some farming tools.
Tilted Kilt on a person who had been kicked out of two taxi cabs because he was too intoxicated and too belligerent. They found the intoxicated man standing outside of the restaurant. He was one of those drunks that everyone hates - he had just enough motor skills going to insult everyone around him, saying the employee who called police was a “snake.” The officers found that he was from California, and was staying here somewhere at a hotel. They tried to get the man to give them the name and phone number of his wife so she could come get him. However, he responded to the questions with “What do you think?” Eventually he gravitated to “F--- you,” which means “Officers, please take me to jail.”
A man reported that he and his sister got
An officer stopped a car on I-285, and during the conversation with the driver and
has been text messaging her and threatening her by saying “I’m about to deal with you real speak.”
into a verbal argument over the fact that he had given their dog away to someone else.
An officer was in the Chattahoochee Na-
tional Park on Roberts Drive on an unrelated call. During that time he passed a wooden picnic table where a man was sitting, pants at his knees, and who appeared to be masturbating. The man said he wasn’t masturbating, but had fallen into the mud earlier and thought he would clean himself up while no one was looking. He was cited for public indecency.
SANDY SPRINGS NOTICE OF REZONING Petition Number:
201301810
Petitioner:
Jeffrey Spillane
Property Location:
4920 & 4940 High Point Road
Present Zoning:
R-2 (Single Family District)
Request:
To rezone the subject property from R-2 (Single Family District) to R-3 (Single Family Dwelling District) to allow for 5 lots.
Public Hearings:
Planning Commission August 15, 2013 at 7:00 p.m. Mayor and City Council September 17, 2013 at 6:00 p.m.
Location:
A woman reported that her ex-boyfriend
SANDY SPRINGS NOTICE OF REZONING
SANDY SPRINGS Petitioner:
City of Sandy Springs
Request:
Resolution to Authorize the Transmittal of the Annual Capital Improvements Element (CIE) Update to the Regional Development Center and State for Review and Comment.
Public Hearings: Mayor and City Council August 20, 2013 at 6:00 p.m. Location:
SS
Sandy Springs City Hall Morgan Falls Office Park 7840 Roswell Road Building 500 Sandy Springs, Georgia 30350 770-730-5600
Sandy Springs City Hall Morgan Falls Office Park 7840 Roswell Road Building 500 Sandy Springs, Georgia 30350 770-730-5600
Petition Number:
201301778
Petitioner:
Traton Homes
Property Location:
611,641,661 Mabry Road
Present Zoning:
R-2 (Single Family District)
Request:
To rezone the subject property from R-2 (Single Family District) to R-4 (Single Family Dwelling District) to allow for 20 single family lots.
Public Hearings:
Planning Commission August 15, 2013 at 7:00 p.m. Mayor and City Council September 17, 2013 at 6:00 p.m.
Location:
Sandy Springs City Hall Morgan Falls Office Park 7840 Roswell Road Building 500 Sandy Springs, Georgia 30350 770-730-5600
www.ReporterNewspapers.net |
Aug. 9 – Aug. 22, 2013 | 21
PuBLIC SAFETY
Cities begin registration of home, business alarms BY DAN WHISENHUNT
CoNtiNued fRom page 1
danwhisenhunt@reporternewspapers.net
The cities of Atlanta, Sandy Springs and Dunwoody are rolling out registration programs as part of recently adopted false alarm ordinances. If you live in Sandy Springs or Dunwoody, you have until Oct. 1 to register your burglar alarm or face a $100 fine. Registration of home alarms is free. In Dunwoody, registration of commercial alarms costs $25. In Atlanta, the new ordinance takes effect Sept. 15, but the deadline to register is Feb. 1, 2014. The city imposes a $150 fee for residents who fail to register. Under the new ordinances, excessive false alarm calls can result in fines ranging from $50 to $500, depending on the number of false alarms generated by a particular residence or business. In Atlanta, fines start with the second false alarm. In Dunwoody, fines kick in after the third false alarm. The costs escalate with successive false alarms. The new registration and fines are part of a system being implemented by the cities in an attempt to reduce the number of false alarm calls. Dunwoody Police Chief Billy Grogan said the concern about false alarms isn’t
panhandle residents should see faster emS response
Registering your alarms in sandy springs, register your alarms at www.sandyspringsga.gov/alarm. sandy springs residents who are unable to use the website can call 1-855-725-7101 or email the city at sandyspringsga@ publicsafetycorp.com.
new. “I do believe they will make a significant impact on our false alarm calls, and I believe we will see a reduction in these types of calls,” Grogan said. “The issue of false alarms has not suddenly become a concern. It has been a concern for some time. However, it takes time to enact an ordinance such as this.” City officials say false alarms are a drain on police resources. “It is estimated that at least 95 percent of all alarm calls are false alarms,” a joint press release from Dunwoody and Sandy Springs said. “In 2012, 8,739 of 9,096 Sandy Springs police calls were false alarms. In 2012, Dunwoody police responded to more than 4,000 alarm calls and the majority of those were false alarms.
property owners. “It’ll go from Class 10 to Class 3. It’ll save literally hundreds of thousands of dollars for people in that area,” McElfish said. “It’ll help both the county and the city.” Sandy Springs Battalion Chief Daryl Smith said the two departments worked out the agreements after metrics for measuring fire risk changed. The new metric put properties farther than five miles from a fire station into a higher risk classification. “It was a 10 because the new ISO rating came into effect and that area’s response time from our Station 1 at Spalding and Roberts was greater than five miles,” Smith said. Smith said Sandy Springs will still be responding to emergency calls in the panhandle. “Our units are also responding as well, but [DeKalb] will be there before us because they’re less than five miles,” Smith said. “The benefit is that we’re going to have better coverage in that panhandle area as far as structure fires and get people on the scene quicker.” Sandy Springs City Councilman John Paulson, who represents the
Reporter Classifieds EMPLOYMENT
Sandy Springs panhandle, said he thinks it’s a good arrangement for his district. “I believe it benefits both communities to have this more formalized,” Paulson said. Bob Mullen, a spokesman for the city of Dunwoody, said the city is grateful for the agreement between the two fire departments. “We’re grateful for not only assistance from [DeKalb County Fire] Chief [Edward] O’Brien but also Sandy Springs Fire Department to make sure residents are going to have the best service possible,” Mullen said. Smith said Sandy Springs already has an automatic aid agreement with the city of Atlanta. Sandy Springs’ Station 4, located near the intersection of Roswell and Wieuca roads, will respond to calls in Buckhead while Atlanta’s Station 27 on Northside Drive will respond to calls in Sandy Springs. Smith said the departments have plans to expand the automatic aid agreement to all areas with contiguous borders. “We’re eventually going to branch out and do the entire Sandy Springs/ DeKalb County border,” Smith said.
To place a Classified or Service Directory ad call deborah at 404-917-2200 x 110. SERVICES AVAILABLE
Esthetician needed – Will also do manicures, pedicures, Licensed Insurance Representative – Join a State eye lashes and facials. The best location in Atlanta. Call Farm Agency winning team - P/C & L/H license PLUS 2+ Yrs. Agcy exp. (State Farm/a plus). Organized? Love 404-709-1816. people? Help build & develop customer relationships Antiviral Resistance Microbiologist – Work with within the community, promote products: auto, home, life genetics and sequence analysis. Conduct laboratory & Bank. Email resume rotaryfran96@gmail.com analysis of viral gene sequences. Worksite: Atlanta, GA. Send resume to Corp. Hdq. at: Battelle Memorial Institute, Attn: Angela Fox, 505 King Avenue, Columbus, OH 43201
Driveways & Walkways – Replaced or repaired. Masonry, grading, foundations repaired, waterproofing and retaining walls. Call Joe Sullivan 770-616-0576.
JAVA Software Engineer – (Ravello Solutions, LLC; Atlanta, GA). Req Master’s or foreign equiv in CS or rltd tech field & coursework in JAVA applications & software tools. Resp for all tech design, utiliz of proper tech, project planning & insurance workflows implemented. Send resume to: T. Rosencrants, Ravello Solutions, LLC, 7000 Central Parkway, Suite 1150, Atlanta, GA 30328. Ref: JSE2.
Private Care Giver for your loved ones – References Available. Call 404-397-9429.
FOR SALE
Avon Products – Get your Avon products – Thomas Pope 678-237-7959. “Every Day can be a Spa Day with Avon.” Please visit www.youravon.com/formen. Mt. Vernon Towers – 1br/1ba, remodeled kitchen, fresh paint, new carpet. Only $35,000. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage, Burt Cloud, 404-626-3114/404252-4908.
Computer IT – Oracle Fusion Developer, Atlanta, GA. Kirby 2012Upright Vacuum – New $2000 Sale $950. Apply: www.Verizontelematics.com. 404-231-7410
Reporter Classifieds will work for you.
North Georgia Lawn Care – Honest, affordable and dependable. Free Estimates. Tony 404-402-5435. Rosie’s Cleaning Service – Weekly, Biweekly, Monthly or One Time Service. Move-in or Move-out. Free estimate call 678-914-8878.
Matthew’s Handy Services – Small jobs and chores is my specialty, flexible scheduling, carpentry, drywall, painting, plumbing and cleaning. Call 404-547-2079 Care Giver / Household Technician – Let me take care of your loved one. Call Robin 770-572-6441. Full-time, Part-time or Overnight. References available. Furniture Care – Onsite Commercial or Residential cleaning, polishing, repairs or touchups. Linton Furniture Shop. Phone/Text: 770-882-5132 or email: LintonDanny@gmail.com
I love to clean houses Spic and Span! – Call for the best prices in town!! 678-333-3898
FURNITURE FOR SALE
INSTALLATION
Dining Room Set – American Drew, Grand Inheritance. Beautiful, Dark Cherry Oval w/ inlays, 2 lvs 6 chs 2 arm 54” China w/ details. $2800. 404-255-2886.
Offering all types of windows, All types of siding – Factory-trained installation. Family-owned, familypriced. Angie’s List (A rated), BBB (A+ rating). 33 Years in Business. Quinn Windows & Siding. 770939-5634.
Linton Furniture Shop – Lots of unique, used, reconditioned, furniture. Dressers, Chest, Bookcases, etc. We Buy, Sell or Trade. Free pickup and delivery. Phone/Text: 770-882-5132 or email: LintonDanny@ 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!
22
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home Services directory Handyman Services moving & delivery too! No job too small References Available
Fred Martin Welding Co., Inc. Mobile and Shop Service. Wrought iron repair and fabrication
404-525-3106
678-927-9336 Cell/803-608-0792 Cornell Davis, Owner
To place a Classified or Service Directory ad call deborah at 404-917-2200 x 110.
536 Edgewood Ave., Atlanta, GA fredmartinwelding@gmail.com fredmartinwelding.webs.com • Family Owned Since 1938! •
Oriental Rug Cleaning Antique Repair Specialist • Speciality Care Hand Wash Cleaning (front and back with plenty of water) • No Chemicals Used Air Dried, Scotch Guard • Mothproof, Padding, Storage Appraisal & Insurance Statements • Pickup and Delivery Available
15% O With
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404-467-8242 • 3255-5 Peachtree Road NE, Atlanta GA 30305
Belco Electric
• Family Owned since 1972 • Fast, Dependable Service by Professional, Uniformed Electricians
770-455-4556
With two professional in-house polishers, we can make your silver flatware, tea sets, bowls and trays more beautiful than ever before. Bring it by or call us for an estimate today!
Check out our new website www.BelcoInc.com
Automatic Standby Generators Most Air-Cooled models are in stock and ready to install CAll todAy for A free quote
www. generatorstore.com
and follow us on
HADDAD LANDSCAPING A Complete Plumbing Service Center
404-461-9724
$25 Off with this ad! Trash, Junk Hauled For Less
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We will pick up appliances, furniture, tree limbs, construction debris, basement and foreclosure clean outs.
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Residential Landscape Design and Installation. Professional Lawn and Landscape Maintenance. Bermuda / Zoysia Specialist
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“We restore the WOW! back into your Marble, Granite, Travertine and other natural stone and tile!”
www.TheContractorCrew.com
wsbcontracting@comcast.net
www.AtlantaStoneAndTileCare.com • 678-662-0110
Providing Premium Quality Replacement Windows & Doors for over 20 years!
South Eastern
The Handyman Can
404-262-3357 764 Miami Circle Atlanta, GA
• Residential & Commercial • Window & Skylights • Exterior & Interior Doors • New Construction or Remodel
www.windowconcepts.com SS
• Plumbing • Electrical • Sheetrock • Floors • Tile • Framing • Kitchens • Painting • Roofwork • Concrete • Stained Glass • Antique Door Restoration • Gutters
Fans - Installation • Fixtures Indoor/Outdoor Lighting Outlets/Switches • Wiring/Rewiring Circuit Breaker Boxes
John Salvesen • 404-453-3438
404-391-9272
thehandymancanatlanta@yahoo.com
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