Inside Walk this way Funds approved to widen Powers Ferry sidewalk community 2
Rise up Time for honest, open dialogue at North Atlanta commentary 6
Buckhead Reporter
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APS finds no discrimination at North Atlanta By Dan Whisenhunt
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There’s no evidence that teachers and administrators at North Atlanta High discriminated against black and Hispanic students, but investigators say the students who made these allegations acted “bravely.” That is the ultimate conclusion of a report released on Sept. 20 by Atlanta Public Schools. The report is a summary of an investigation into allegations of grade changing and racial discrimination at the high school. Though the report names several teachers at the public school, the Buckhead Reporter is declining to name them because there wasn’t sufficient evidence to support the allegations. Even though the report clears teachers and administrators of wrongdoing, the report makes it clear that there’s a
Two local pastors return to take the pulpit faith 8-9
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Garden Hills pool house construction under way By Dan Whisenhunt
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Graham Roberts, 2, doesn’t want to be disturbed as he creates his masterpiece alongside his sister Crosby, 6, at the Atlanta History Center’s Fall Folklife Festival on Sept. 28 in Buckhead. Another photo on page 15.
Residents of the Garden Hills neighborhood will soon get a new pool house, expected to cost $800,000. It’s scheduled for completion in April 2014, but there’s still about $150,000 needed to fully fund the project, according to Jeff Clark, president of the pool’s board of directors. The Garden Hills Pool and Park Association has planned several fundraisers throughout the fall. Clark said few outside of Garden Hills realize what a unique asset the community has. “There are 17 or 18 public pools in the city of Atlanta; 15 of them are ... right at I-20 or south [of I-20],” Clark said. see garden hills, page 3
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The Chastain Park Conservancy says the city of Atlanta recently put the organization closer to its goal of widening a precariously narrow sidewalk along Powers Ferry Road. Nearly 500,000 joggers, bikers and walkers annually use the sidewalk, part of a 3-mile PATH Foundation trail. The trail is 10 feet wide in most places, but narrows to 4 feet along Powers Ferry Road. There was $1 million in funding for the expansion in the Transportation Special Purpose Local Option Sales Tax referendum, but voters in 2012 overwhelmingly rejected T-SPLOST. At a Sept. 16 Atlanta City Council meeting, council members unanimously approved appropriating $1 million from a trust fund for park maintenance. City Councilwoman Yolanda Adrean said the trust fund receives money from a portion of the ticket sales at the Chastain Amphitheater. Adrean said the money will go toward fixing the Powers Ferry google maps portion of the trail. She said peoThe city of Atlanta approved $1 million ple who have studied it are surfrom a trust fund to be used toward prised the narrow sidewalk hasn’t widening a portion of a sidewalk along resulted in more pedestrian acci- Powers Ferry Road. For a larger version, dents along Powers Ferry. go to www.reporternewspapers.net. “I was walking [along the trail] with someone one time. I got caught up in someone’s dog leash and acis going to give you money unless they tually fell. That happens,” Adrean said. believe the project is going to move forRosa McHugh, director of developward,” McHugh said. ment at Chastain Park Conservancy, McHugh said the neighborhood has said the organization will need to raise been “really fortunate” that there haven’t an additional $1.2 million to complete been any pedestrians hit along Powers the project. The conservancy hopes to Ferry Road. break ground on the project in 2014. Adrean said she’s happy with the deShe said the city’s authorization of sign of the proposed sidewalk expansion. the funds will make it easier to convince “The design is beautiful,” she said. “It donors to contribute. uses most of the existing wall. The path “It’s fantastic because no major donor is a little more meandering.”
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“The remaining three are all private– public partnerships.” The Garden Hills pool is one of the three, Clark said. The other two are the Chastain Park and Piedmont Park pools. Clark said the cost of the project has been a subject of scrutiny from outside observers. Part of the expense involves making the building compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act. “While it does look pretty and we made a real effort to make it fit with the neighborhood, it is a very inexpensive building,” Clark said. According to a study by the Pool and Park Association, the Garden Hills pool attracts more than 500 patrons daily from May through September. The pool generated $357,200 in revenue in 2012. The original pool house was built in 1979, according to the study. In 2011,
pipes burst in the men’s bathroom and put the Pool and Park Association on the path to rebuilding the house. Clark said the pool house and the pool are an important part of the neighborhood’s identity. Every year, teenagers from the neighborhood start their first summer jobs working there. They are affectionately known as the “pool rats” by the neighborhood. “The parents love it,” Clark said. “They can put their kids on their bikes and send them to work.” Clark said the pool house expansion opens up other opportunities. Local schools, like North Atlanta High, might be able to utilize it for their athletics programs, he said. In the metro area, public pool space can be hard to find. “Unless you’re the member of a country club, you don’t have access to water to swim in,” Clark said. “There’s a huge demand.”
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Foreign language opportunities aplenty at North Atlanta High To the editor: I was disappointed that you did not include North Atlanta High School in your article about foreign language in schools. [“More schools push early language learning,” Buckhead Reporter, Sept.20-Oct.3.] Atlanta Public Schools has offered my children outstanding exposure to foreign language throughout their school career, and I would venture to say North Atlanta has one of the best foreign language programs in the state. The school offers French, Spanish, Mandarin Chinese and Arabic. Furthermore, because the school has a block schedule, students can take eight courses per semester, allowing them to study two foreign languages if they choose. My son, a 2013 graduate, studied French and Chinese simultaneously in high school. He was placed into Advanced Chinese at UGA, having scored a perfect score on the IB Chinese exam. (Further, he is not the only one from North Atlanta in that Chinese class.) Chinese and Arabic are both considered “critical languages” by the U.S. State Department, and our students differentiate themselves on their college applications after completing four years of study in either one or sometimes both of these difficult languages.
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North Atlanta is unique in our community for being the only school to offer Arabic. My son had a classmate who speaks Farsi and English at home, and learned Chinese and Arabic at North Atlanta. She received a full ride to Boston University. My children had 13 years of foreign language instruction through Atlanta Public Schools, travel abroad opportunities, and experiences hosting foreign exchange students. In high school, they took advantage of the full IB Diploma program, of which foreign language instruction is an integral part. And, being a diverse public school, my children met and befriended students from all over the world, including Bangladesh, the Philippines, Mexico, Jamaica, Bulgaria, China, Vietnam and India, just to name a few. I would venture to say that parents who are interested in foreign language opportunities for their children would be well served by North Atlanta High School. Martha Fair
Correction Two girls and their dogs were incorrectly identified in photo captions in the Sept. 20-Oct. 3 edition of the Buckhead Reporter. Anna Catherine Gansereit and her dog Winston are depicted at left. Frances Mosley and her dog Amos are at right.
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Commentary
Reporter Newspapers
District 4 BOE candidates ready to tackle issues
Our mission is to provide our readers with fresh and engaging information about life in their communities.
The Buckhead Reporter reached out to current candidates for the District 4 Board of Education seat, incumbent Nancy Meister and her challenger Taryn Bowman, for their reaction to the findings of an investigation into allegations of racism at North Atlanta High School. Investigators concluded that the allegations were unfounded.
Brookhaven Reporter | Buckhead Reporter Dunwoody Reporter | Sandy Springs Reporter www.ReporterNewspapers.net
I am glad that the investigation has concluded and that the report has been issued. The students and teachers at North Atlanta High School can now get back to teaching and learning. I look forward to the continued success of North Atlanta!
I am literally burning the candle at both ends to get into this office so I can offer solutions to things like institutional racism. My goal is to get on the board to deal with many issues we’ve been facing.
Atlanta INtown www.AtlantaINtownPaper.com
Nancy Meister, Candidate for District 4 BOE
Taryn Bowman, Candidate for District 4 BOE
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North Atlanta’s future depends on parents Black and white parents are locked in a cold war over the future of North Atlanta High. The conflict arises from a question that’s dogged the school for years. Is the high school’s system of dividing students into small learning communities also dividing students based on race? A recent report produced by Atlanta Public Schools found no evidence of this. Some in the Buckhead community cheered the report as a vindication. The investigators consoled students who made the allegations, telling them they acted bravely. Since the leadership changes at the school a year ago, new Principal Howard Taylor has reorganized some of the learning communities in response to the concerns. I think the report raises deeper issues. This episode taught the North Atlanta community some fundamentally flawed lessons. To the parents celebrating the report’s conclusions, you have nothing to celebrate. This report isn’t a vindication. It’s an embarrassment. It’s an indication that some of your fellow parents don’t feel comfortable openly discussing their concerns about North Atlanta. To the parents decrying racism, your students shouldn’t be commended for making allegations that turned out to be untrue. All of our students should feel welcomed and should be treated fairly. Teachers deserve to be treated fairly, too. False accusations could ruin their careers. If there’s any unequivocal fault here, it’s in the way APS addressed the concerns parents brought to their attention. This 166-page report produced by APS investigators is a contradictory and convoluted document. It’s clear the investigators took the position of “guilty until proven innocent” with regard to the allegations made against the school’s staff. The disagreements at North Atlanta cannot be resolved by anonymous allegations and partisan investigations. It requires openness and honesty. We have to remember that while the allegations made by black students and parents didn’t pan out, there is a history of discrimination in this country. The legacy of slavery and Jim Crow remains with us. Almost every major meaningful statistic measuring the quality of life in this country shows that we may all be created
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equal, but we don’t all live equally. According to the Pew Research Center, black Americans are three times more likely to live in poverty than white Americans. Pew also found that in 2010, “the incarceration rate for white men under local, state and federal jurisdiction was 678 inmates per 100,000 white U.S. residents; for black men, it was 4,347.” According to Pew, the median household income for reporter’s whites in 2011 was $67,175. It was Notebook $39,760 for blacks. White privilege exists. That Dan whisenhunt doesn’t mean all whites created it, but all whites do benefit even if we don’t realize that we do. Leveling the playing field is everyone’s moral responsibility. The source of the controversy at North Atlanta is also the solution. Quality education hastens equality and opportunity. Unfortunately, the grown-ups in charge at North Atlanta have turned the solution into a battleground. Kids have become proxies in a conflict between adults. If there’s any chance of something positive coming out of this, it will require real leadership. I will repeat what I suggested to North Atlanta parents a year ago when these allegations surfaced. North Atlanta parents should invite facilitators from the Southern Poverty Law Center into their school to conduct an equity audit. Unlike an APS investigation, auditors with no stake in the outcome would start an open dialogue. It’s an opportunity for both sides to talk about things rationally. Some of that discussion might be painful, but it will be necessary. If this flawed report is the final word on the matter, these allegations will continue to fester and divide North Atlanta. If there’s one thing that all parents at North Atlanta have in common, it’s the love they have for their children. Their future and the future of that school will depend on the next choices parents make. Make those choices as adults and make them count.
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Stars in their eyes for these new U.S. citizens The night before, Muna Omar had been too excited to sleep. “I was up almost all night,” she said. Saturday morning arrived as a bright, sunny fall day. Omar gathered her children from their Doraville home and took them to a small field on the banks of the Chattahoochee River in Sandy Springs. There, she joined 69 others who had come from communities scattered across Georgia and Alabama to take part in a ceremony that lasted only about an hour, but would change their lives and the lives of their families. As sunlight glinted on the river, geese honked downstream, and dozens of smiling family members stood and watched, these 70 people renounced their allegiances to their former home countries and became American citizens. “I’m so happy,” said Omar, who was born in Somalia and had lived a dozen years in the U.S. “I’m new. It’s a very, very big thing for me.” On Sept. 28, the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services celebrated National Public Lands Day by holding its first naturalization ceremony at the Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area. People from 35 countries, from Bangladesh to Vietnam and Laos to Liberia, became American citizens that morning. Naturalization ceremonies usually are held in government office buildings, but immigration officials said they hope the riverside gathering would offer something different. “We thought this was a change of atmosphere,” said Cheryl Johnson, section manager for the Atlanta Field Office of the citizenship and immigration services. The park, she said, provided “the view of the historic land [and] that scenery here.” Several of the soon-to-be new citizens, who sat on folding or stackable chairs set up in a newly mowed field, endorsed the park setting as they awaited the start of the ceremony. “I like it,” said Balvantkumar Prajapati, who was born in India and now runs a store in Rome, Ga. Segun Oshadige, born in Niger, found the surroundings “calming.” Occasionally, other park-goers jogged by or walked dogs in the vicinity. A small group launched a big rubber raft from the boat ramp where the field touched river. Deer wandered nearby in the forest. “It’s not what I expected, but it’s OK,” said Margaret Mungei, who was born in Kenya and lives in Hoover, Ala. Dora Blanco also was pleased. “It’s nice, instead of the four walls of the building,” she said. “We’re actually going to stay and walk around the park afterwards.” Blanco came to the U.S. from Mexico in 1994, when she was 9 years old. She lived much of her life in the U.S. in Whitfield County, and now lives in Marietta with two young children of her own. “It’s exciting,” she said of becoming a citizen. “It’s something I wasn’t go-
ing to do, and then came my children. ... You almost can’t believe it’s real.” Oshadige said he’s lived in metro Atlanta for 30 years. He AROUND makes his livtOWN ing driving a cab. BecomJoe earle ing an American citizen, he said, “is the greatest thing that’s ever happened to me.” He wanted to share in freedom and to have “a say in the government,” he said, “a voice.” Omar said she wanted to be part of the nation where her children were born. They’re all citizens of the U.S. and she wanted to be, too. “It’s my country,” she said. “All my kids were born here. I’m so happy. I’m one of them now.” Asked why she left the country of her birth behind, she waved off the ques-
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Muna Omar, right, joined others in becoming a U.S. citizen at a Chattahoochee River ceremony.
tion. “It was a war,” she said. “Killing and doing bad stuff.” She made it clear she’d rather talk about new beginnings than the past. During the ceremony, she was overwhelmed with emotion. At one point, a recording of Lee Greenwood’s song, “God Bless The U.S.A.,” played over the loudspeakers. She sang along, then had to stop to wipe away tears. Lensa, her oldest daughter, quietly massaged her mother’s shoulders. After the ceremony, her children crowded around her, laughing with her and snapping photos with their smartphones. All around them, families recorded the moment with photographs of smiling new citizens posing with their new citizenship papers. “It’s so great,” Omar said. “It’s unbelievable. It’s priceless. “I feel like I have a place, like I have a country. I feel like somebody now. It’s a big day for me and my kids.” She can sleep easier now.
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FAITH
Churches welcome pastors back home By Melissa Weinman
“This was just farmland and a house on this corner,” Shivers said of the melissaweinman@reporternewspapers.net church property. Shivers grew up across the street from Life has led two local pastors back to where the church now sits, and spent a where they started. lot of time riding his bike around the Rev. James Neil Hollingsworth Jr. area. Shivers said took the pulpit as the church was a senior pastor at Secbig part of his childond-Ponce de Leon hood. Baptist Church “It was such in Buckhead – a a special place to church he often atgrow up,” Shivers tended as a teenagsaid. er. Second-Ponce And Rev. David de Leon BapShivers moved back tist Church votto Sandy Springs ed unanimously to in August to take call Hollingsworth, the helm as pasknown as Dock, to tor of First Baptist serve as its seventh Church of Sandy pastor. His first serSprings, a church he grew up in and Rev. James Neil Hollingsworth Jr. vice at the Peachtree Second-Ponce de Leon Road church was where his father, Baptist Church Sept. 22. E.B. Shivers, served Hollingsworth as pastor from 1958 has several connections to the church he to 1980. now leads. Growing up, Hollingsworth Shivers said he left the area to go to attended special events at Second-Ponce college and never moved back. Now 35 de Leon with his high school friends. years later, he’s exploring his hometown, And while at Mercer University as an which he’s found has changed quite a undergraduate, several of his college bit. friends attended Second-Ponce de Leon. According to the church, Hollingy nt 10 We ca r r a f™ sworth had no intention of staying when o a y n n e oo any ar w offe rw r he came to Second-Ponce de Leon as inr ar r yea ain-Pr Seale c o 5 nst ant 1 St nt ruc y terim preacher 15 months ago. He had fo r a ne tio m r n served as interim pastor at nine differe . P ent congregations over the past 12 years. Hollingsworth also worked at Mercer University’s Macon and Atlanta campuses for the past 18 years. He was assistant dean and assistant professor of leadership, and supervised ministry at Mercer University’s McAfee School of Theology. He was also executive director for The Center for Teaching Churches, according to the church. “I fully thought I would retire at McAfee, but the energy and possibility of this place has captured my imagination, and by God’s grace it would not let me go,” Hollingsworth said in an email. For nearly 20 years, the congregation Before Construction After Construction at First Baptist Church of Sandy Springs has been trying to get Shivers to come Specializing in Construction, Renovation, Repair & Maintenance back to Georgia and lead the congregation. Patios/Pool Decks Pools & Spas Outdoor Kitchens Arbors “The first time I got a call was probably around 1994. I had just started pasBrick & Stone Chimneys/Fireplace Decorative Concrete/Pavers toring a church in Mississippi,” ShivDecks • Driveways Efflorescence Cleaning Grading & Drainage ers said. “Life was happening. We were Historical Restorations Masonry Maintenance Contracts growing churches. It was just not the Before right time. I had to wait on God’s perRetaining Walls Stone Patio Restoration & Sealing fect timing.” Stone/Tile Deck Waterproofing & Leak Repair But Shivers said he’s always been interested in returning to First Baptist. “This has been a church I have prayed josh@southernoutdoorcd.com for since I could pray,” Shivers said. “I After have prayed for this church daily. It’s my first love, as far as churches go.” Serving your community Shivers said he hopes to return the www.southernoutdoorcd.com for 15 years church to the vibrancy he remem-
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FAItH bers from childhood. In its heyday, the Shivers admits the church has been church had about 700 members. But through some troubles lately. But he recently, it has dwindled to fewer than said he’s never really asked about why 100. the church has struggled in recent years. “This time when they called, and “I don’t really know why and I’m not told me they needed my help, the timgoing to look backward. I’m only going ing was right,” Shivers said. to look forward,” Shivers said. Shivers moved from a small town in He said he’s still taking stock of the Indiana, where the church and the closest traffic light community around was eight miles him to figure out away. the next moves for “I was in rural the church. But a America and loved social media presit,” Shivers said. ence, day care proHe said he led gram, and upa large, active condates to the church gregation in Indibuildings are likely ana, but with its ruon the horizon, he ral location, there said. wasn’t much room Despite his aspifor growth. “I was in rations for growth, rural America where Shivers said he enthe population of joys the familiarour county was ity of the Sandy 6,000,” Shivers said. Springs communiShivers said he’s ty. always wanted to “There’s still a lead a church to exsmall-town feelponential growth, “I love being at a place where ing about Sanand believes Sandy dy Springs,” ShivI know everybody. We just Springs’ population need to find a place where ers said. “Weekly, I provides that ophave run into peoportunity. “There’s people can feel comfortable ple I have had a so many peoconnection to that and connect to God and ple around [Sandy connect to each other. Where I haven’t seen in 35 Springs] who just years.” it stops growing, nobody don’t go to church He said he reor have stopped goknows, but it will grow.” cently got a call to ing for various reaofficiate a funeral sons.” for a woman who – REV. DAVID SHIVERS And so far, it’s used to attend the FIRSt BAPtISt cHURcH working, he said. church. Her neph“In six weeks, we’ve ew was shocked to grown,” Shivers learn that Shivers said. not only knew of Shivers said he’s not necessarily inhis aunt, but used to go fishing on her terested in creating a mega-church, property as a child. though. He said he likes being able to “There’s a reconnection that’s occurform relationships with everyone in the ring that’s benefiting this church,” Shivcongregation. ers said. “I love being at a place where I know Shivers’ office is decorated with old everybody,” he said. “We just need to family photos, including one of him find a place where people can feel comand his father fishing at that pond. fortable and connect to God and con“This church was very important to nect to each other. Where it stops growdad,” Shivers said. “I think dad would ing, nobody knows, but it will grow.” be pleased. I hope.”
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www.ReporterNewspapers.net |
Oct. 4 – Oct. 17, 2013 | 9
cOMMUNItY
UFO reports common among locals By Dan WHisenHUnT
danwhisenhunt@reporternewspapers.net
The last sighting happened in Sandy Springs on Sept. 16. A Sandy Springs resident walking their dog near High Top Road spotted something in the sky at 8 a.m. A few days later, the resident filed a report about the unidentified flying object on UFOstalker.com, a website that collects witness accounts and publishes them anonymously. “I was finishing my walk with our dog, walking through our courtyard, when I saw four round spheres in a line,” the resident wrote. “They were several hundred feet in the air, I would estimate 500 feet. They were in two sets of two, and basically stationary while slowly rotating. One was reddish in color, the oth-
er three, gray.” The resident later added, “I swear to the truthfulness of this sighting.” While the prospect of visitations from other life forms sounds unbelievable, people living in Sandy Springs, Dunwoody, Brookhaven and Buckhead have all filed reports with UFO Stalker. According to UFO Stalker, there are 13 different reports going back to 1994. In some cases residents report sightings years after the actual event. Seven of the alleged sightings happened in Sandy Springs. The Mutual UFO Network, or MUFON, is another clearing house for this information. Ralph Howard, who lives
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Drawing of object spotted in Sandy Springs in May 2011.
percent of all UFO sightings,” Sowell said. “Because it’s so bright, that when it’s near the horizon, the atmosphere can cause it to twinkle. It’s so bright amongst the trees when it’s down low. A lot of people who aren’t used to looking up in the sky don’t realize how bright Venus can be.” Howard said if there’s enough evidence in a report to warrant a followup, the reporters will receive a phone call from an investigator. He said investigators spend most of their time finding the simplest and most obvious explanations for each report. The internet makes the task more manageable. Investigators can look up the alignment of the planets and even the position of satellites at the time of the sighting. “You have to be methodical, so the few we cannot explain are the ones that carry weight,” Howard said. “It’s the ones we explain away that make the other ones so hard to deal with.”
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in Chamblee, is state director and field investigator for MUFON in Georgia. He oversees a team of 17 active investigators. Howard said the metro area generates fewer reports overall than the rest of the state. “I don’t think there’s anything special going on about Sandy Springs or Atlanta,” he said. “The remarkable thing might be that we do get some sightings every now and then that are hard to explain.” Howard said investigators have yet to come up with an explanation for an object spotted above Atlanta’s new Ferris Wheel on July 24. It’s most likely a kite or a balloon, but Howard says MUFON doesn’t know who put it in the sky. Finding pedestrian explanations is part of Howard’s and MUFON’s mission. Howard said in most cases UFOs can be explained by natural phenomena. He said the organization has seen an uptick in reports filed, but it could be because of greater awareness of reporting sites like UFO Stalker. There’s also an uptick in people using hobby drones and motor-powered kites that could explain the increase in reports, he said. “Some are deserving of actual scientific investigation,” Howard said. “I’m a scientist myself, I’m a geologist. We’ve got a real phenomenon here. It is real.” Jim Sowell, an astronomer at Georgia Tech, said taking into account what we know about physics, there’s almost no possibility of extraterrestrial life visiting our planet. For starters, the universe is almost incomprehensibly vast. The Voyager 1 space probe, for example, launched in 1977, and exited our solar system in 2012. Also, scientists are reasonably certain that traveling faster than light speed is impossible. Even at light speed, the distances would be unachievable in an average human’s lifetime. “The planet Venus accounts for 90
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Oct. 4 – Oct. 17, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
speCIal
Closed down The federal parks of the Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area closed Oct. 1 with the shutdown of the federal government. A park spokesman said all but eight of the park’s 40 employees were being furloughed. The closing would last until officials in Washington, D.C., could agree on a spending bill.
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The trail through Murphey Candler Park takes visitors for a walk along treelined Murphey Candler Lake. A seat in a picnic shelter or a bench alongside the lake should provide hikers a place to relax while admiring the fall leaves, their reflection in the lake, and the odd duck or goose that drifts past. Br iar Location: wo 1551 W. Nancy Creek Drive, Brookhaven, 30319 Hours: 7oa.m. to sunset d Cost: Free For more information: www.murpheycandlerpark.org ta
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through an old hardwood forest. d During the day, the cenBlv ter offers some of the bestd leaf-peeping in Dunwoody, exIn ecutive director Alan Mothner says. Trails around the center take walkers through wetlands, meadow and forest. On Oct. 11 and 25, the center plans free nighttime hikes so hikers can experience the forest after dark. Location: 5343 Roberts Drive, Dunwoody, 30338 Oakc liff Hours: Dawn to dusk Cost: Free For more information: www.dunwoodynature.org
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This small park built byINDIAN the city of Sandy HILLS Springs offers a leaf-lover’s delight from its vanCOUNTRY tage point above a broad,CLUB tree-lined bend in the Chattahoochee River. The park provides picnic pavilions, a children’s playground, a hiking trail, a fire pit and restrooms, but for fans of fall color, the real draw may be porch swings set up to provide comfy places to view the scenery. Location: 200 Morgan Falls Road, Sandy Springs, 30350 Hours: Dawn to dusk Cost: Free CHATTAH OOCHEE AT LANT A RIVER For more information: www.sandyspringsga. COUNTRY NATI ONAL CLUB RECREAT ION org/City-Departments/Recreation-and-Parks/ AREA Parks-and-Facilities/Morgan-Falls-Overlook-Park
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Come fall, communities in the Georgia mountains justly are celebrated for their seasonal shows of colorful leaves. But you don’t have to drive very far wy to find places where Georgia hardwoods are putting on autumn airs.rietta H a Here are a half dozen spots in Reporter Newspapers com- M munities where we’ve found you can take in fall’s colorful displays much closer to home.
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www.ReporterNewspapers.net |
Oct. 4 – Oct. 17, 2013 | 11
Buy Early & Save!
out& about
BROOKHAVEN • BUcKHEAD • DUNWOODY • SANDY SPRINGS
“Vera Stark is a fabulous force of nature!”
An aspiring actress breaks the mold of stereotypical African American film roles of the 1930s.
LEARN SOMEtHING!
Night Hike
Natural Cosmetics
Friday, Oct. 11, 7-8 p.m. – Visitors get a chance
Tuesday, Oct. 8, 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m. – It is human nature to want to look and feel our best. Unfortunately, many mainstream cosmetics have harsh chemicals and synthetic toxins that are linked to multiple health risks and can be harmful to the environment. As a result, there is a growing request for natural and organic alternatives. Come learn about the benefits of what nature has already provided. Free and open to members of the Cancer Support Community. Lunch provided. RSVP to 404-843-1880. 5775 Peachtree Dunwoody Rd., Building C, Suite 225, Atlanta, 30342. To learn more, visit: www.cscatlanta.org.
to connect with nature after-hours at the Dunwoody Nature Center! The family-oriented hike follows trails around the wetlands and back forests of Dunwoody Park. Center educators will guide you as you hear the night time sounds of owls, bats and other nocturnal creatures. Tour is followed by cocoa, stargazing and a warming fire. Free and open to all. Strollers not recommended. 5343 Roberts Dr., Dunwoody, 30338. Questions? Call 770-394-3322 or go to: www.dunwoodynature.org.
By Pulitzer Prize winner Lynn Nottage Directed by Leah Gardiner
– Pearl Cleage
cOMMUNItY
October 16–November 10 Tickets @ 404.733.5000 | alliancetheatre.org/verastark | Groups 404.733.4690
Chili Cook-Off Saturday, Oct. 12, 11 a.m.-7 p.m. – Come out
and enjoy a relaxing afternoon of food, fun and live entertainment, while sampling great chili at the 2nd annual Brookhaven Chili Cook-Off! Have a taste from over 60 local restaurants, businesses or amateur teams. Free admission to the festival; open to the community. Limited tasting spoons available for $5 via website, or at the gate for $10. 2740 Apple Valley Rd., Brookhaven, 30319. Visit: www.brookhavenchilicookoff.com.
Series on the Alliance Stage
Gun Safety Tuesday, Oct. 8, 7-8 p.m. – Join others at
The Epstein School for the presentation “Why and How To Talk With Your Children About Gun Safety (Even If You Don’t Own Guns).” A certified firearms safety instructor hosts a 30-minute multimedia presentation about the steps parents can take to reduce the risk of their children being injured or killed in a gun-related accident. Free and open to the community. Childcare available. RSVP via email: melanie.mailman@epsteinatlanta.org or by calling 404250-5770. www.epsteinatlanta.org.
Breastfeeding & Back to Work Saturday, Oct. 12, 1-4 p.m. – Learn how to maintain your milk supply while working. Develop a pumping and feeding plan, and understand how to properly collect and store your breast milk. Get helpful hints on how to talk to your boss about creating a breastfeeding-friendly work environment. Discover why you don’t and shouldn’t have to stop breastfeeding after returning to work, including legislation that increases protection and support for you. $32. Northside Hospital, Interchange Building, Suite 400, Classroom 425, 5780 Peachtree Dunwoody Rd., NE, Atlanta 30342. Call 404-845-5555 to register or to find out more.
Defensive Driving
Tuesday, Oct. 15, 3-6 p.m. – AARP offers a
Featuring
Prologue BRAD MELTZER 10.24
ELIN HILDERBRAND 11.9 CHRIS MATTHEWS 11.10 ALAN DERSHOWITZ 11.16 PAT CONROY 11.17
SCOTT TUROW 11.2 CLARK HOWARD 11.6 JEFFREY TOOBIN 11.7
PRESENTING SPONSORS: Barbara and Ed Mendel, Greenberg Traurig, PNC Bank • SPONSORS: The George Stern Family, Atlanta Gastroenterology Associates, Marriott Perimeter Center, PJ Library, A Caring Approach, Bessemer Trust, David L. Halpern, Northside Hospital, Georgia Humanities Council, Publix Supermarkets Charities, Target, The Zaban Foundation • IN-KIND SPONSORS: Atlanta Magazine, Atlantajewishnews.com, Atlanta Jewish Times, Classic Tents and Events, Creative Loafing, Jewish Federation of Greater Atlanta, WABE 90.1 FM, Neighbor Newspapers, Jewish Georgian, Reporter Newspapers, Scoutmob, Ali's Cookies, Goodfriend's Grill • PARTNERS: ABO Global Ground Transportation, A Cappella Books, Canterbury Press. (As of press time)
atlantajcc.org/bookfestival
5342 Tilly Mill Road, Dunwoody GA 30338
12
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TICKETS: 678.812.4005 OR ATLANTAJCC.ORG/BOOKFESTIVAL INFORMATION: 678.812.3981
Oct. 4 – Oct. 17, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
two-day defensive driving class for adults and teens aged 15 and up. Class continues on Wednesday, Oct. 16, 3-6 p.m. Participants must attend both classes. AARP workbook is required, which is $14 for nonAARP members and $12 for members. Registration required by calling 404-851-6157. Leave local area code and phone number when registering. Sandy Springs Branch Library, 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328. Email: comments@ co.fulton.ga.us for more information.
Strengthen Your Bones Wednesday, Oct. 16, 6-8 p.m. – Learn the tricks of leaning into your bones. Effective use of your skeleton helps you gain bone strength and balance. Find out how your mind tricks you into creating stress and anxiety, and treat yourself to some centering techniques. Free and open to members of the Cancer Support Community. RSVP to 404843-1880. 5775 Peachtree Dunwoody Rd., Building C, Suite 225, Atlanta, 30342. To learn more, visit: www.cscatlanta.org.
KIDS’ StUFF
Crafty Tuesday Tuesday, Oct. 8, 4:30-5 p.m. – Join oth-
er youngsters in making a fun craft. Free and open to everyone. Appropriate for ages 5-12. Brookhaven Branch Library, 1242 N. Druid Hills Rd., NE, Brookhaven, 30319. Call 404-848-7140 to learn more about the activity.
Songs for Children Thursday, Oct. 10, 10:30-11:15 a.m. – The
Alicia Etchison concert includes acoustic fingerstyle guitar songs for children of all ages which are “story songs as peaceful and invigorating as sunset on the beach.” Free, and all are welcome to attend. Suggested audiences: infant, toddler, preschool, elementary school youth. Buckhead Branch Library, 269 Buckhead Ave., NE, Atlanta, 30305. Email: comments@ co.fulton.ga.us or call 404-814-3500 for details.
Turtle Tours Saturday, Oct. 12, 11 a.m.-12 p.m. – Heritage Sandy Springs’ “Turtle Tours,” an educational series appropriate for children ages 2- 5, continues. In this program, museum mascots “Sandy” the Chipmunk and “Spring” the Turtle learn how to use their senses. Free; donations encouraged. 6075 Sandy Springs Circle, Sandy Springs, 30328. For more information, email: kbrigance@heritagesandysprings.org, call 404-851-9111 or visit: www.heritagesandysprings.org.
Journey to Literacy Saturday, Oct. 12, 2:30-3:30 p.m. –
Junior League of Atlanta volunteers provide an interactive reading of a favorite children’s book with related craft activities. Each family gets a copy of the book to keep. Free. Open to the public. Appropriate for ages 3 to 6. Sandy Springs Branch Library, in the Story Time Room, 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328. Email: leah.germon@fultoncountyga.gov or call 404-303-6130 for additional information.
Kids in the Kitchen Saturday, Oct. 12, 4-5 p.m. – “Kids in the
Kitchen” promotes child health and wellness by empowering children to make healthy lifestyle choices, preventing obesity and its associated health risks, and by involving kids and their parents in a handson environment that focuses on preparing healthy foods. Free and open to the community. All ages welcome. Sponsored by the Junior League of Atlanta. Sandy Springs Branch Library, in the Story Time Room, 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328. Email: comments@co.fulton.ga.us or call 404-303-6130 with questions.
VISUAL & PERFORMING ARtS
Images Around Georgia
“Nature in Transition”
Sunday, Oct. 13, 5:30-8 p.m. – Join oth-
Saturday Oct., 19, 5-7 p.m. – The public is
ers for the opening reception of the Georgia Nature Photographers’ Association exhibition, a juried show of wildlife, landscape and macro images. Free, and the public is welcome. Chattahoochee Nature Center, in the Discovery Center, 9135 Willeo Rd., Roswell, 30075. Call 770-992-2055 or go to: www. chattnaturecenter.org for details. Visit: www.gnpa. org to find out more about the association.
welcome to attend the opening of “Nature in Transition” in the Blue Heron Gallery at Blue Heron Nature Preserve. Exhibition is a national show from the Society of Layerists in Multi-Media. Free admission. Sales benefit the nature preserve. 4055 Roswell Rd., Atlanta, 30342. To learn more about the artists, visit: www.slmm.org. Go to: www.bhnp. org or call 404-345-1008 for further details.
Brookhaven Arts Fest
Creole Music
Saturday, Oct. 19, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. – More
Sunday, Oct. 20, 4-7 p.m. – Jeffery Brous-
than 125 juried artists will be displaying and marketing their fine arts. Event continues on Sunday, Oct. 20, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Live music both days. Held on Apple Valley Road, 30319, directly behind the Brookhaven MARTA station. Free admission and parking at the station. For additional information, go to: www.brookhavenartsalliance. com/arts-festival.
Big Thinkers Science Wednesday, Oct. 16, 4:30-5:30 p.m. – Work-
shop focuses on the past, present, and future of space travel. Discuss propulsion, parts of the rocket, launch safety, and how space travel has affected our life on Earth. Sign-up required and started Oct. 1. Space is limited. Free and open to the community. Suggested audiences: middle school and elementary school youth. Sandy Springs Branch Library, in the Meeting Room, 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328. Email: leah.germon@fultoncountyga.gov or call 404-303-6130 to sign up or to ask questions.
Delicious
is a company asset. Boss’s Day October 16th Celebrate all week.
Island Ford Ramble Saturday, Oct. 19, 10 a.m.- 3 p.m. – Take a guided hike on woodland trails with park Ranger Jerry Hightower, then go fishing! For kids of all ages. Free. Open to all Sandy Springs residents. Island Ford, 1978 Island Ford Parkway, Sandy Springs, 30350. To sign up or for more information, email: info@sandyspringsconservancy.org.
Practice SAT Saturday, Oct. 19, 2-6 p.m. – Test your
knowledge with Kaplan, Inc.’s four-hour practice SAT test. Test results will be mailed to participants within a week. A great way to see which areas you need to improve. For high school youth. Registration required by emailing: marlan.brinkley@fultoncountyga.gov or calling 404-303-6130. NOTE: Kaplan requires at least 15 people to sign up to run the test. Free and open to the public. Sandy Springs Branch Library, in the Meeting Room, 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328.
GET LISTED!
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sard & the Creole Cowboys deliver Creole classics and Zydeco. $17; $5 for students. Free beginners Zydeco dance lesson 3:30-4 p.m. Cajun food for sale; cash bar. For more details, go to: www. aczadance.org or call 404-825-9768. Knights of Columbus Post 660, 2620 Buford Highway NE, Atlanta, 30324. To learn more about the band, visit: www.jefferybroussard.com.
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Sonya Halpern, left, board chair, National Black Arts Festival, and Myra Bierria, board chair, Girl Scouts of Greater Atlanta and vice president and corporate secretary, AGL Resources, were honored with over 100 other women on Sept. 10 at the Cherokee Town and Country Club in Buckhead for their support of the Girl Scouts of Greater Atlanta.
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Spin for the win Oumima Bassig shows off her winning hula hoop moves during Dunwoody Springs Elementary’s “Back to School Bash” on Sept. 21. The event offered up face painting, a cake walk, movie and more.
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Left to right, Paddy Collins, Port Wilson, Chip Wade and Casey Moon, front, a foursome from the HGTV television series “Elbow Room,” participated in the Hacker’s Ball at the North Fulton Golf Course in Chastain Park on Sept. 28 in Buckhead. Proceeds went to the Wounded Warrior Project.
Here’s Looking at You!
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What’s for dinner? Nathan Boster, left, and his daughter Katie, 9, learn about early cooking techniques from Ava Shuster, back, during the Atlanta History Center’s Fall Folklife Festival on Sept. 28 in Buckhead.
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Up, up there! The Atlanta Audubon Society hosted a bird walk at Morgan Falls Overlook Park in Sandy Springs on Sept. 21. Far right, pointing, Audubon instructor Nikki Belmonte helps, front left, counterclockwise, twin brothers Sachit and Shlok Bharadwaj, mom Shaila, dad Shantaram, Amparo Velez, son Samuel, 9, Kate Brosnan, 7, mom Beth, and dad Denis, locate 24 species of birds sighted that day.
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Kids are the stars The circus was in town - at St. Jude the Apostle Catholic School in Sandy Springs. Middle school students got to perform “under the big top” in the gym. Left, “Globe Trotter” Zach Brecker deftly balances Maggie Fason on his shoulders. Right, the “SpiderMan” act featured Ethan Barlow, left, and Will Cooper, right, flying through the air. www.ReporterNewspapers.net |
Oct. 4 – Oct. 17, 2013 | 15
Come and Celebrate Living!
EDUCATION
photos by joe earle
Peregrine’s Landing at Peachtree Creek Where Fathers are celebrated
Sen. Fran Millar (R-Dunwoody) and state education department Deputy Superintendent Martha Reichrath, left, debated the Common Core initiative with Jane Robbins and Sen. William Ligon (R-Brunswick), right.
Common Core initiative sparks debate By Joe Earle
joeearle@reporternewspapers.net
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Oct. 4 – Oct. 17, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
Here’s a multiple-choice test for parents. The state’s new Common Core education initiative is: a) a reasonable way to make sure Georgia students measure up against others across the country; or b) a national takeover of what’s taught in Georgia’s schools that erodes local control. Which way to answer that question touched off extensive debate among Republicans and education experts during a panel discussion sponsored by the Fulton County Republican Party Sept. 26. About 75 people, many of whom loudly applauded opponents of the
Common Core initiative, attended the town hall at Mount Vernon Presbyterian Church in Sandy Springs to discuss the Common Core standards, which state educational officials have adopted, but now are taking another look at. Georgia joined 44 other states in adopting the Common Core curriculum, a set of core standards for kindergarten through high school in English, language arts and mathematics, and in grades 6-12 for literacy in science, history/social studies, and technical subjects, according to the state education department. The standards are intended to “provide a consistent framework to prepare students for college and/or the 21st century workplace,” the department said. During the town hall meeting, State Sen. Fran Millar (R-Dunwoody) defended the Common Core, saying education officials and teachers around the state endorse it. “It’s about standards,” he said, arguing the Common Core offered a way to make sure Georgia students were keeping up with students in other states. “We have kids going to college in this state, where between 35 and 50 percent of them require mediation,” Millar said. “We’ve got a problem.” But Sen. William Ligon (R-Brunswick) argued the Common Core curriculum had been drawn up by outside groups and large corporations, and that Georgians would lose control of what was taught in the state’s schools. “The issues of Common Core are as much about governance as about education,” Ligon said. Jane Robbins, a senior fellow at the American Principles Project and Ligon’s partner in opposition to Common Core, called the development of the Common Core “elitism run amok.” “It assumes Georgia parents and Georgia teachers are incapable of educating our students without help from really smart people ... in Washington, D.C.,” she said. But Martha Reichrath, state education department deputy superintendent for curriculum, instruction and assessment, said Common Core’s standards were tougher than previous state standards. “It is more rigorous,” she said. “It’s more rigorous in many areas.” But Robbins called Common Core “a work-force development scheme.”
EDUcAtION
Beautiful for the long term.
Standout Student
Student Profile:
Beth Galaid The Weber School, senior Community service is nothing new to Beth Galaid. The Weber School senior regularly volunteers her time with a variety of groups and projects. She helps homeless families at the Nicholas House in downtown Atlanta get back on their feet, delivers meals for Open Hands Atlanta, and helps younger students at Weber learn Hebrew after school. “Beth is a student that encompasses everything that Weber represents in its ‘head, heart and hand’ philosophy, from the way she makes herself available to her peers to her involvement in the community through her volunteer efforts,” said Nicole Brite, Beth’s advisor. “She is always willing to help others, get involved and take action without hesitation. ... Her generous spirit is one of the many reasons Beth is loved and respected by her peers and faculty alike.” At Nicholas House, which provides shelter for homeless families, afterschool
care and youth programs as well as adult education and training programs, Beth helps tutor children. With Open Hands Atlanta, she delivers food to those who can’t get it for themselves, including low-income men, women and children who are dealing with a critical, chronic or terminal disease, and homebound seniors. At Weber, she found herself drawn to working with younger students after school. “I would spend three hours a week there every time I went, and I went three to four times a week.” Beth said. Beth says another extremely important aspect of her life is her family. As an only child, Beth admits to being very close with both her parents, as well as considering people at Weber as members of her extended family.
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Beth’s two main current college preferences are the University of Colorado at Boulder and the University of Georgia. She hopes to continue working with nonprofit service organizations. This article was prepared by Emma McCabe, a junior at Riverwood International Charter School.
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Oct. 4 – Oct. 17, 2013 | 17
EDUcAtION
Standout Student
Student Profile:
Veronica Sondervan, junior North Springs Charter High School
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Furthering Your Education Takes Courage.
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Veronica Sondervan has always had a passion for the sciences. “I’ve always loved science since I was a little kid,” Veronica said. “It was one of my favorite subjects in school. In kindergarten and first grade we had this after-school program called ‘Mad Science,’ where people would come and do lots of fun and interesting science experiments.” Veronica’s passion for science has paid off. She recently was selected to be one of the few students around the world – as well as the only student from Georgia – to attend the three-day Global Youth Institute hosted by the World Food Prize Foundation in Des Moines, Iowa, this October. The 16-year-old won a place in the Global Youth Institute by researching and writing a five-page paper discussing strategies to assist Indonesians in gaining more and better access to food. Delegates to the institute are able to discuss their research papers with other delegates, as well as scientific leaders. “I am so proud of her,” said North Springs Advanced Placement environmental science teacher, Science Bowl and Science Olympiad team sponsor, Patti Lawrimore, who will accompany Veronica to the conference. “She will be presenting her paper to a team of global leaders and researchers, while interacting with Nobel and World Food Prize laureates, and participating in other planned events associated with the prize. ... It’s a real honor.” Institute participants are also eligible to apply for a free, eight-week summer internship doing research in the participant’s choice of one of many countries worldwide. The Global Youth Institute is not Veronica’s first scientific foray. At North Springs Charter High, Veronica is enrolled as a dual science and visual arts magnet student. She’s found-
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What’s Next: Veronica hasn’t settled on a college yet, but knows she wants to do something related to science. This article was prepared by Blake Flournoy, a student at Riverwood International Charter High School.
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er and president of the school’s computer science club, and in 2012 was awarded the Steve Fowler Emerging Scientist Award for the school’s most promising science student. After school, she volunteers at Fernbank. In 2011, Veronica founded Potcake EARS, an international, ongoing behavioral study of the potcake dog breed from the Bahamas. The study has had nearly 400 participants so far from across the United States, Canada, the Bahamas, and the Turks and Caicos. “I volunteered with an animal rescue called Royal Potcake Rescue for two years. Along with rescuing cats and dogs around Atlanta, they would frequently bring stray potcake puppies from Abaco to Atlanta for adoption, and worked to set up clinics to control the overgrown stray population,” she said. “It is difficult for potcake owners to learn about their dogs, since, unlike other dog breeds, there are no guidebooks describing them or their personalities. So I decided to research them and their behaviors so potcake owners could learn more about their pets. I think it’s nice to be able to know more about your pet and to be able to identify with other potcake owners.”
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Oct. 4 – Oct. 17, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
e d u c a t i on
Cultural Experience Project shows students new world By Collin Kelley A decade ago, Camille Russell Love and a friend were planning to meet up at the Woodruff Arts Center for an afternoon of art and culture. Love extended the invitation to her friend’s daughter, whose response was, “Where’s the Woodruff Arts Center?” “I thought… wow! This young woman has lived in Atlanta her whole life and has never been to the Woodruff. It truly disturbed me,” Love recalled. As the director of Atlanta’s Office of Cultural Affairs, Love decided to do something about it. She had dreamed of partnering with Atlanta Public Schools to offer cultural field trips to students, but wasn’t sure how to coordinate, much less fund, such a mammoth undertaking. Nine years later, the Cultural Experience Project just began a new season and more than 275,000 APS students have been exposed to free art and cultural institutions in Atlanta. The program provides Pre-K through 12th grade students the opportunity to visit a cultural destination each year free of charge as part of a class field trip. CEP kicked off the 2013-2014 school year in September with Pre-K students visiting the Atlanta Children’s Museum, and kindergartners viewing the flora and fauna at the Atlanta Botanical Garden. As the school year continues, Atlanta students will check out plays, concerts, performances and exhibitions at the Atlanta Ballet, Chattahoochee Nature Center, Ballethnic Dance Company, Cyclorama and Civil War Museum, Alliance Theatre, Michael C. Carlos Museum, High Museum of Art, Georgia Shakespeare, Atlanta Opera and the Rialto Center for the Arts. Love said that each grade level is matched with an event, exhibition or experience that is germane to what is being taught during the academic year and the students’ age. “We wanted to make sure this wasn’t a fluff trip,” Love said. Love also recalled 10 years ago going before the Atlanta City Council to
request free admission for all APS fifth graders to the Cyclorama as a “beta test” for what would become CEP. Love immediately saw a snag: transportation. “We offered free admission so the parents could take the students anytime, but we found out that many couldn’t pay for the transportation, and that was a barrier,” she said. As Love and her office began reaching out to the arts organizations in the city – which were all receptive to CEP from the outset – she also picked up the phone and called Turner Broadcasting, and asked them about funding transportation for the students during the school year. “They were all for it,” Love said. “It is an honor to be a founding partner of the Cultural Experience Project,” said Kristina Christy, director, corporate responsibility, at Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. “One of the primary barriers for youth being able to attend cultural events is the cost of transportation, so we decided that’s how we would get involved. To date we’ve provided more than 6,000 bus trips for the program.” APS’ Assistant Superintendent of Teaching and Learning Dr. Linda Anderson said she was excited about the continued partnership with CEP. “Our students have been able to participate in rich learning opportunities that introduce them to some of our city’s premier venues for the arts, while deepening their understanding and appreciation for the arts as well,” Anderson said. Love calls CEP and its partners a “win-win” for everyone involved. “I am excited that students of all ages are getting to know this part of their city,” Love said. “Some of these kids would never go to a play or museum, but we are getting them out of their community and showing them there is a much bigger and different world. It’s inspiring and thrilling.”
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public safety
Buckhead Police Blotter From police reports dated Sept. 8 through Sept. 21. 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.
Assault 2100 block of Lenox Road, NE –An aggravated assault was reported on Sept. 11. A woman said while she and her husband were arguing, her husband raised a shovel he held in his hand and threatened there would be bad trouble if she called police. The suspect left the location.
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2500 block of Brookwood Drive, NE – An aggravated assault was reported on Sept. 16. A woman was inside her house when she saw a man at her side entry door, but was not alarmed due to ongoing construction at houses on both sides of her home. She noticed him looking through the living room windows, and saw he was carrying the green diaper bag she kept in her vehicle. When he saw her inside the house, he ran to a black Ford F-150, pointed a small, silver semi-automatic handgun out the window and yelled “I’m gonna shoot you.” The suspect reversed the vehicle northbound before turning on Lakeview Avenue.
3200 block of Colonial Homes Circle, NW – An aggravated assault was reported on Sept. 17. A man had his neighbor over, and they got into an argument after the victim told the suspect he was too loud and his roommate was sleeping. The suspect became irate, cursed the victim and threatened to “Get the tool and bring it his way.” The victim escorted the suspect to his front door and the suspect turned around as if he wanted to fight. The suspect went into his house and came back out with a long-barreled gun, assumed to be a shotgun, with a black trash bag around it to catch shell casings. When the victim saw the gun, he took off running to a neighbor’s house around the corner. The victim’s roommate stayed on the phone with him and said the suspect got into his truck and drove around the complex.
I-85/Ga. 400 – An aggravated assault was reported on Sept. 16. A woman said while she was traveling on I-85 northbound at Ga. 400 northbound, a white Chevrolet Camaro followed closely behind her, then sped around her vehicle and cut her off. She honked her horn, drove around the Camaro, and made an insulting gesture to the other driver. The oth-
3500 block of Peachtree Road, NE – A commercial robbery was reported on Sept. 8. A man stole a Polo shirt, and when he was approached by security officers, he pulled out a screwdriver and attempted to attack them before running away.
Robbery
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1100 block of Woodland Avenue, NE – An aggravated assault was reported on Sept. 16. A woman said her boyfriend grabbed a broom and struck her in the face and stomach, causing lacerations. He damaged a door and wall, and threw a glass at her before he ran out of the apartment.
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2600 block of Peachtree Park Drive, NE – An aggravated assault was reported on Sept. 14. The suspect was witnessed beating his wife, and during this altercation, he grabbed a knife and chased her.
er driver then slowed down, then sped up, pointed a silver hand gun at her and her female passenger, and attempted to run her off the road. She got behind the suspect’s car and took a picture of the Camaro. The suspect hit her brakes several times while the victim was behind her, and left Ga. 400 at the Lenox Road exit.
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public safety 1900 block of Peachtree Road, NE – A pedestrian robbery was reported on Sept. 11. A man said while walking to Piedmont Hospital, occupants in a white pick-up truck robbed him at gunpoint. The suspects stole his watch, wallet, $80, credit cards and his cellphone. I-75/Howell Mill Road, NW – A pedestrian robbery was reported on Sept. 16. As soon as a woman drove onto the I-75 northbound ramp, an older man with a flashlight got in front of her car, told her he had run out of gas, a tow truck was on the way, and Atlanta police had his wife and baby. He told her his name, what company he worked for, and said he would pay her back in the morning if she was able to lend him a hand. She grabbed her wallet and started to take a few dollars out of it when the suspect grabbed her hand and told her he needed more than that. When she said that was all she had, he tightened his grip on her hand and demanded she give him everything in her wallet. She gave him $19. The suspect apologized and the victim drove off.
Burglary 3400 block of Piedmont Road, NE – A commercial burglary was reported on Sept. 9. An unidentified woman was seen on video, unlocking the door with a key, then going into the office where $3,000 was taken. 1800 block of Windham Park, NE – A residential burglary was reported on Sept. 9. The rear patio door was smashed. Approximately 100 pieces of costume jewelry were taken from the master bedroom closet, and a collectible coin was taken from one of the children’s rooms. The alarm was not set because the victims were expecting their cleaning lady. 3700 block of Tuxedo Road, NW – A residential burglary was reported on Sept. 11. The side door to the garage was found open. Paint was smeared on the side of the house and a light fixture was smashed. A sheet and a pillow were laid out on the floor in a back room in the garage. A bowl of soup and a birthday cake were taken from the refrigerator in the garage.
woman’s property while she was moving into the apartment. 3300 block of Peachtree Road, NW – A commercial burglary from a department store was reported on Sept. 13. The victim said that a man broke the glass cases containing watches and took about 100 watches valued at $500,000. 700 block of Channing Drive, NW – A residential burglary was reported on Sept. 14. The rear bathroom window was shattered. Items were disturbed, but nothing was taken. The victim’s security cameras captured the suspect walking on his property and looking into windows with a flashlight 1900 block of Greystone Road, NW – A residential burglary
was reported on Sept. 15. The residence’s rear door was damaged. The motion sensor outside the rear door was disassembled. A camera, Cartier clock, watch, blue bag, two diamond rings, necklace, tennis bracelet and costume jewelry were taken.
2000 block McKinley Road, NW – A residential burglary was reported on Sept. 15. A man said entry was made into his residence and a safe and a coin collection were missing. No forcible entry was made into the residence. He said he just moved to the location about a month ago, and it took three people to move the safe to its former location.
3400 block of Peachtree Road, NE – A larceny from a restaurant was reported on Sept. 10. A customer presented two credit cards for payment of the $697 tab, and both were declined. The customer said he left other means of payment in his hotel room, and asked the manager to let him get the funds and return to pay the bill. The manager agreed as long as a wallet with ID was left. The customer left his wallet and a copy of his passport, but did not return to pay the bill.
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COMMUNITY
No evidence of discrimination found at North Atlanta High CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
perception of unfair treatment of black and minority students that must not be ignored. It also commends the students who made the ultimately unfounded accusations against their teachers. “It should also be noted that although there was no finding of racial discrimination as prescribed by law, there was compelling testimony and statistical data which overwhelmingly substantiate racial disparity and disharmony that should not be ignored,” the report concludes. “To do so would severely harm students who bravely asserted their claims, and are hopeful their concerns will be addressed.” The executive summary of the report suggests, “Perhaps the entire faculty and student population of NAHS could benefit from some form of sensitivity/tolerance training to address the race perception” at NAHS, but offers no specific suggestions about how to move forward. However, the report itself offers no evidence of overwhelming statistical data substantiating racial disparities in the school. In every instance of alleged discrimination described within the
166-page document, it found the allegations were not backed up by the actual data. In one example, black students told investigators they felt a teacher was using dress code violations to unfairly target them. Investigators combed over two years of in-school suspension data. The report concluded, “While the (in-school suspension) logs reflected more minority students receiving ISS for dress code violations, the insignificant amount of dress code referrals (13 documented dress code violations out of 985 incidents which were referred to inschool suspension) was not sufficient to support a trend of disparity.” In another example, investigators probed the racial makeup of North Atlanta’s four Small Learning Communities, essentially schools within schools that concentrate on different disciplines, like performing arts and business. White students accounted for 47 percent of students in the International Studies program. Black students accounted for 34 percent, Hispanics accounted for 8 percent and Asians accounted for 6 percent. To put that in
“It should also be noted that although there was no finding of racial discrimination as prescribed by law, there was compelling testimony and statistical data which overwhelmingly substantiate racial disparity and disharmony that should not be ignored.” – APS REPORT
perspective, the total student population of the entire school was 1,418 students for the years studied. There were 731 black students enrolled, 324 white students, 275 Hispanic and 30 Asian. Approximately 72 percent of the school’s white population was in the IS program, the report found. Did that mean it was a discriminatory program? No, the investigators concluded.
Reporter Classifieds HELP WANTED Advertising Sales/Reporter Newspapers & Atlanta Intown – We’re hiring another great salesperson—join our team! You should have a record of success selling products or services to small and mid-sized businesses, know the local market and enjoy working in a fast-paced, deadline-oriented, entrepreneurial company. Unlimited earning potential with base salary + commission + company-paid health insurance. Contact publisher Steve Levene at 404-917-2200, ext. 111 or email stevelevene@reporternewspapers.net Bartender - Teela Taqueria – 5 years experience in a restaurant environment. Fun, fast. Must qualify for liquor permit, have own transport and available for all shifts Email resume to teelarestaurants@gmail.com or apply in person Executive Director part-time position – Sandy Springs Tennis Association. Start January 1, 2014. Responsibilities include overseeing all of activities/ programs. Forward resume to guillenmc@aol.com. Deadline - October 20.
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“During the course of the investigation, students interviewed indicated that the (International Studies Small Learning Community) was composed of almost all Caucasian students,” the report says. “However, the data reflects that 53 percent of the students in the IS SLC are, in fact, minority students (when combining all minority races). Also, the preponderance of evidence obtained via student interviews also revealed that a student’s choice of SLC was their own. Nonetheless, the students’ perception was likely gleaned from the fact that 72 percent of the school’s Caucasian population is in the IS SLC.” It was also concluded that accused teachers at North Atlanta did not change grades based on student race. Investigators focused on Grade Change Forms generated by the IS program. The finding is a vindication of former Principal Mark MyGrant and his leadership team. Last fall, APS officials removed MyGrant and the leadership team on a Friday afternoon. At the time, school officials blamed the school’s academic performance for the leadership overhaul.
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Information Architect
Driveways & Walkways – Replaced or repaired. Masonry, grading, foundations repaired, waterproofing and retaining walls. Call Joe Sullivan 770-616-0576.
Design, develop & test databases for varied business applications and customer specifications in multiple industries; Create Business Intelligence road maps to complete BI project life cycles; Utilize SQL skills, renew object and data models and metadata reporting to organize for better management and quicker access; Identify business requirements, perform data cleansing, utilize data quality, data reporting, modeling and architectural concepts; Define functional and process designs & build dimensional databases; Evaluate and analyze reusability of current data for additional analysis. Drug screening, criminal and educational background checks required. Bachelor’s degree in Information Science or related IT field, plus five years experience in business intelligence, & data management, or a Master’s degree in Information Science or related IT field, plus three years’ experience in business intelligence, & data management. 75% travel within Atlanta metropolitan area required based on company/client need. Resumes to: Denise Pacelli, Daugherty Systems, Inc., 3438 Peachtree Road, Ste. 950, Atlanta GA 30326.
Psychic Consultation by Mrs. Madison – Receive two free questions - will answer all questions in life over the telephone. Open 7 days per week 9AM – 9PM. Call 347754-7816
FURNITURE
CEMETERY PLOTS
Furniture Care – Onsite repairs & touchups. Cell/Text 770-882-5132. Linton’s Furniture Shop Matthew’s Handy Services – Small jobs and chores is my specialty, flexible scheduling, carpentry, drywall, painting, plumbing and cleaning. Call 404-547-2079 North Georgia Lawn Care – Honest, affordable and dependable. Free Estimates. Tony 404-402-5435. Local Woodshop – Built In’s & Mudroom Storage; Kitchen & Bath Cabinets; Islands & Bars; Headboards; Furniture; Re-Claimed Wood. the Carpenter’s Co-op 404.914.0412 carpenters.coop@gmail.com
CONSULTATION
I love to clean houses Spic and Span! – Call for the Linton Furniture Shop – Buy, Sell, Trade. Cell/Text Arlington Memorial Park – Two plots, Section F, Lot 770-882-5132. 79C - spaces one & two - $5000. Call 404-237.5412. best prices in town!! 678-333-3898.
Unified Technology Concepts Computer/Phone Repair & SEO Webpages • Mobile apps Perform onsite repairs Solutions tailored to your needs 678-439-7829
INSTALLATION 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. 770-939-5634.
GARAGE SALE Multi Family Garage Sale – October 11-12 - 8am-3pm, 3910 & 3925 Spalding Bluff Dr. Peachtree Crns (Norcross) 30092 Household items, lamps, furniture pictures, tools, books, Christmas items, collectible plates, and lots more. Annual Yard Sale in Historic Garden Hills – 40+ families participating. Sat., Oct. 19 from 9-3 (rain date Oct. 20 from Noon-4). Download neighborhood map at www.gardenhills.net Flea Market/Bake Sale – United Methodist Children’s Home, 500 Columbia Dr, Decatur. October 11 & 12 - 9 AM - 4 PM. Bargains galore - rain or shine!
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!
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OCT. 4 – OCT. 17, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
BH
Home Services Directory LET’S GET
ORGANIZED!
FEEL LIGHTER TODAY! BUY 2 HOURS, GET 1 FREE
BECKY
* Organizing Goddess *
404-982-7128
www.beckywhetzell.com
Fred Martin Welding Co., Inc. Mobile and Shop Service. Wrought iron repair and fabrication
404-525-3106 536 Edgewood Ave., Atlanta, GA fredmartinwelding@gmail.com fredmartinwelding.webs.com • Family Owned Since 1938! •
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
HADDAD LANDSCAPING
404-461-9724
$25 Off with this ad! Trash, Junk Hauled For Less
$35 - $150 per load
We will pick up appliances, furniture, tree limbs, construction debris, basement and foreclosure clean outs.
Call James
Cell (404) 784 5142 Home (770) 455-6237
• New Construction • Additions • Basements • Kitchens/Baths • Siding • Driveways • Brick & Stone Work
• Painting • Roofing • Tile • Carpentry • Handy Man Service • Electrical • Plumbing
678-691-9852
www.TheContractorCrew.com
Oriental Rug Cleaning
15% O
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
With
FF
This A d
In the heart of Buckhead
404-467-8242 • 3255-5 Peachtree Road NE, Atlanta GA 30305
“We restore the WOW! back into your Marble, Granite, Travertine and other natural stone and tile!”
www.AtlantaStoneAndTileCare.com • 678-662-0110
and follow us on
A Complete Plumbing Service Center
To place a Classified or Service Directory ad call Deborah at 404-917-2200 x 110.
Residential Landscape Design and Installation. Professional Lawn and Landscape Maintenance. Bermuda / Zoysia Specialist
Oriental Rug Shop Antique and Decorative Rugs since 1976
Best Rug Cleaning & Repair 5548 Peachtree Blvd. Atlanta, GA 30341 404-995-8400
Since 1974
404-622-2211 Bob Haddad, owner
1.5 miles inside 285 in Chamblee Plaza
www.PersianRugParadise.net
% 20 OFF
Cleaning & Repair of All Rugs
With coupon. Minimum $40 charge. Expires 10/31/13.
Summer
Window Cleaning
Services Include
• Gutter Cleaning • Pressure Washing • Family Owned • 3rd Generation • Licensed and Insured • FREE EstImatEs
404.355.1901
www.WindowCleanatl.com
Roofing Re-roofing Roof repairs
Free estimates • 770-251-0707 Creedon
W.S.B. Custom Contracting, Inc. Renovations & Additions Serving Atlanta for 30 years
404.626.8976
wsbcontracting@comcast.net
Gutter covers Gutter installation and siding
Carpet & Upholstery Cleaners, LLC Carpet • Upholstery • Rugs • Tile • Stone Commercial • Residential Our business was built on referrals for over 50 years Family Owned & Operated since 1960
www.creedoncarpetcleaners.com 404-256-4355 office | 404-784-1514 mobile
is Save th e ceiv re & d a
ff o 15fo% ents li c w e rn only
The Handyman Can • Plumbing • Electrical • Sheetrock • Floors • Tile • Framing • Kitchens • Painting • Roofwork • Concrete • Stained Glass • Antique Door Restoration • Gutters
John Salvesen • 404-453-3438 thehandymancanatlanta@yahoo.com BH
Automatic Standby Generators www. generatorstore.com www.ReporterNewspapers.net |
Most Air-Cooled models are in stock and ready to install CAll todAy for A free quote
Oct. 4 – Oct. 17, 2013 | 23
Meet the Most Dedicated Real Estate Team in Atlanta REALTORS OF CHOICE FOR BROOKHAVEN AND NORTH ATLANTA • 22 years of full-time experience selling real estate, specializing in Brookhaven and North Atlanta. • The most strategic, regimented team to assist you in selling, buying and negotiating seamless transactions. • Charter Member in the #1 Residential Real Estate Office. • A former Marine plus a Georgia Tech Engineer: there‘s no more committed team to meet your home selling or buying needs. Caroline & Kent Gipson
• Hardworking and native to Brookhaven, with a proven success rate.
Whether you are looking, listing or both - call us. We look forward to serving your real estate needs. r
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f i r s t
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at l a n ta
We grew up in and live in Brookhaven. We know the most popular neighborhoods and the qualities that make each special. ©2013 All rights reserved. This information is deemed reliable but not guaranteed. If your property is currently listed with another real estate broker, please disregard. It is not our intention to solicit the offerings of other real estate brokers.
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CAROLINE GIPSON KENT GIPSON info@gipsonteam.com
Oct. 4 – Oct. 17, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
• •
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678.468.7778
678.468.7788 www.gipsonteam.com BH