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Dunwoody Reporter
Spooktacular!
Name game
Park looking for moniker COMMUNITY 3
Water hazard
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OCT. 16 — OCT. 29, 2015 • VOL. 6 — NO. 21
Are local dams safe? COMMUNITY 12-15
Four take to the floor
COMMUNITY 9-11
DHA considers moving ‘Light Up’ event after Trust objects to tree and menorah BY ELLEN ELDRIDGE
elleneldridge@reporternewspapers.net
PHIL MOSIER
From left, Steve Chipka, Dunwoody Mayor Mike Davis, Chris Grivakis and Denis Shortal, all candidates for mayor, discuss their plans for the city’s future at a forum at Dunwoody High School on Oct. 11. The event, sponsored by the Dunwoody Homeowners Association, allowed candidates to answer citizens’ questions without fear of interruption or rebuttal. See addditional photos on page 6.
BY ELLEN ELDRIDGE
elleneldridge@reporternewspapers.net
While candidates for mayor agree they support the “three P’s” -- parks, police and paving -- they don’t agree on the fourth, planned development. “We need smart growth,” said mayoral candidate Chris Grivakis, who called for a focus on the high-density development proposed in the Perimeter area of the city. “I think we need to do a better job prioritizing our projects.” Grivakis recommended putting some studies, such as on the Westside Connector proposal, “at the bottom of the list” in favor of sidewalk projects. But Mayor Mike Davis said he has worked during his term with the region and the state to solve the city’s traffic problems that stem from clogged major highways. Davis said the Westside Connector and other projects are long-term solutions. “We can’t add enough lanes to make up for that [congestion],” he said. “We have to work with the region and the state.” The candidates for mayor and City Council discussed their visions for Dunwoody during a forum held Oct. 11
at Dunwoody High School. Former City Councilman Denis Shortal, who is running for mayor, reminded voters he co-chaired Dunwoody Yes and advocated from the beginning for incorporating as a city. He promised to return the City Council to “open and positive ethical leadership.” Steve Chipka, a retired BellSouth employee who’s lived in Dunwoody since 1981, said his experience with Dunwoody government, including facing fines levied by code enforcement officials, made him want to run for mayor. “I’ve had good experiences with DeKalb, and the last three or four years I haven’t had as good experiences with the city of Dunwoody,” he said. He said in December he received a registered letter from the Code Enforcement department saying his grass was taller than 10 inches. “That is one of several instances that happened that caused me to say I think it’s time for me to step up now and take part,” Chipka said. District 1 City Councilman Terry Nall and challenger SEE CANDIDATES, PAGE 7
The Dunwoody Homeowners Association is looking for a new location for its Light Up Dunwoody event. DHA president Robert Wittenstein said the organization is moving the annual holiday festival because the Dunwoody Preservation Trust, which owns the property where the event has been held for more than a decade, would not agree to display a 6-foot menorah alongside the lighted Christmas tree. “We felt those symbols should be displayed together,” Wittenstein said. The trust on Oct. 13 told the DHA it should not display either the menorah or the Christmas tree at the event. Trust co-President Dolores Lauderdale said that because some people believe a Christmas tree is a religious symbol, the trust had no choice but to ask the DHA to move the tree to another location. The homeowners group sponsors the Light Up Dunwoody event, which was scheduled for Nov. 22 at the Cheek-Spruill farmhouse, located at 5455 Chamblee Dunwoody Road. Wittenstein said Oct. 14 that the DHA SEE DHA, PAGE 3
FILE
The Light Up Dunwoody Christmas tree must find a new home.
COMMUNITY
Small school advocates prepare to fight BY JOE EARLE
joeearle@reporternewspapers.net
Dunwoody’s advocates of smaller school systems are gearing up to take their cause to state lawmakers again before and during next year’s legislative session. “I think this is our year,” State Rep. Tom Taylor told about 20 people attending at public meeting on the subject at the Dunwoody library branch on Oct. 12. “We’ve got this thing teed up.” Taylor, a Dunwoody Republican, and members of Georgians for Local Area School Systems, or GLASS, admit they face an uphill fight to convince legislators to call for a constitutional amendment to allow the creation of smaller school districts. “It’s a change of about three words [in the Constitution],” Taylor said, “but it’s a massive seismic shift.” Taylor’s legislation allowing a public vote on the amendment has repeatedly stalled over the past several years. Still, supporters aren’t giving up. Taylor and GLASS leaders recently hosted a pair of community meetings to try to stir renewed interest in the proposal. They encouraged people who attended the first of the two meetings to contact friends and family members across Georgia by phone and social media to campaign for approval of the legislation. “We need to reach out to all parts of the
state,” GLASS member Allegra Johnson said. She said proponents of the change need the backing of residents of areas other than Dunwoody in order to get the attention of lawmakers from other communities. She said she’d discovered that some state lawmakers care only about the interests of residents of their districts. “It has been an eye-opener to me to go down to the Capitol and be told, ‘You don’t matter.’” Johnson and fellow GLASS members Erika Harris and Evan Wetstone argued the change to allow smaller school districts was needed to improve education in the state. Smaller districts, they said, would allow more local control of the schools and better accountability. “It’s so much harder to hide things in a smaller district,” Wetstone said. Several members of their audience seemed to agree. “I think a smaller system is better for everybody, not just for Dunwoody, but everywhere,” Cheryl Christensen said. As for DeKalb County’s school system, she said: “It’s too big.” Georgia law now limits the number of school districts in the state to 180, Taylor said, which has created districts in metro Atlanta with tens of thousands of students.
Gwinnett County schools enroll 179,000 students and DeKalb County enrolls nearly another 100,000, he said. “What we have are large districts JOE EARLE that are incapaGLASS members Allegra Johnson and Erika Harris ble of meeting the and Rep. Tom Taylor (R-Dunwoody) discuss plans for needs of students,” renewing efforts to amend the state Constitution Harris said. to allow creation of new school districts. Not everyone was convinced. “I Dunwoody Homeowners Association and just don’t know that independent school a former Dunwoody City Councilman, systems are the solution,” said Rebekah said proponents should think how best to Morris, an English teacher at Cross Keys sell the idea in other parts of the state. He High School in Brookhaven, asked how said the backers of small school systems creating a school system in Dunwoody need to show their communities could would affect other students, especialpull out of larger school systems without ly poorer students, in the rest of DeKalb hurting them financially. County. “I think a better answer,” Wittenstein “If you’re not a part of DeKalb, you’ll said, “might be legislation that puts a burjust worry about Dunwoody,” she said. den on the [new] school system to help “Could there be a way for the bill to recushion the blow, so folks in other parts quire that independent school systems inof the county and other parts of the state clude some low-income kids?” will be comfortable that we’re looking out And Paul Maner predicted Taylor’s bill for everybody.” would never win approval in the state LegTaylor said lawmakers were looking at islature. “I see pigs flying first,” he said. how a new school system should be creat“It’s Republicans who have problems with ed. That legislation, he said, “is not about this bill.” education policy, it’s about the transfer of Robert Wittenstein, president of the assets.”
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OCT. 16 – OCT. 29, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
DUN
COMMUNITY
City Council defers decision to name park on Pernoshal Court BY ELLEN ELDRIDGE
elleneldridge@reporternewspapers.net
After a park naming contest generated only 24 votes for the winner, Dunwoody City Council voted to defer the decision on a name for its newest park, which is currently under construction. The “Name Your Park” contest began Aug. 5 and ran through Sept. 30. The contest provided an opportunity for city residents to vote on potential park names or provide a write-in name, city spokesman Bob Mullen said. Dunwoody resident Kim Brooks spoke during public comment at the Oct. 12 City Council meeting to advocate the park be named after Mack Hannah, who had a long history of helping residents and the Mack Hannah Dunwoody community before he passed away in August. Brooks started a Facebook page called “Vote Mack Hannah Park – Do the Next Right Thing” and before the voting closed on the city’s website, the Facebook page had 339 “likes.” Hannah was a dedicated volunteer who sat on the sidelines of every Dunwoody High School football game to encourage the players, Brooks said. He also pitched in to help the city. “He put on his overalls and raked and shoveled and did what was needed for Cleanup Dunwoody,” Brooks said. Brooks admitted there would always be a “wisecracker” in any write-in vote contest, but the majority of those choices supported her campaign. “It’s really hard to do a write-in cam-
paign,” Brooks said. “There were 73 total votes for Dunwoody’s five choices.” The five potential names for the nearly 5-acre park were Pernoshal Park, Hightower Trail Park, Muskogee Park, Old Buck Park and Magnolia Park. Muskogee Park had the largest number of votes at 24, but the number of people who wrote in a choice or selected none of the given choices made up more than two thirds of the total, Mullen said. Mullen said during the two months the contest was open, the website had 800 visitors and 262 votes. Brooks said of the 189 write-in votes, probably 185 were for Mack Hannah Park. Brooks told the mayor and City Council that she filed an Open Records Act request to find out what the write-in votes called for, but that information was not disclosed. She remained skeptical of a contest with such a low response rate. Councilwoman Lynn Deutsch said she has a problem with choosing a new park name based on such low numbers. Deutsch said she, too, wants to see the write-in votes “just because.” Brooks said during closing public comments, after the council voted to defer the park naming decision, that she wants to see the park named after “someone that most of us would aspire to be,” she said. “My intent is to honor a man who honored the community.” Councilman Doug Thompson said he would rather trust the park naming process to marketing staff rather than have the City Council decide. The new park when completed will be approximately 5 acres and it will be the largest newly built park created since the founding of the city. Construction is expected to be complete by the end of 2015.
ELLEN ELDRIDGE
DHA board member Stacey Harris shows a Light Up Dunwoody poster.
DHA looks for new location for Light Up Dunwoody event CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
had just begun looking for a new location for the event, but he was optimistic a new site would be found. “The DHA will look for another location for the tree, menorah and Light Up Dunwoody,” Wittenstein said. “Obviously, we have some work to do.” Wittenstein said the DHA board was looking for a new location before the trust’s board made its decision. “We had taken a vote of the DHA executive committee and we told them if the menorah wasn’t welcome, then the DHA was going to find another location for the tree,” Wittenstein said. DHA board member Stacey Harris said she and Wittenstein had received an email last year in which trust board members denied the menorah request outright. Wittenstein said during the DHA’s Oct. 4 meeting he was disappointed by that decision. “I wasn’t disap-
pointed, I was pissed off,” Harris said. “It’s the most offensive email I’ve ever read.” Wittenstein said on Oct. 14 he was surprised by the trust’s final decision not to include a menorah. In an email to DHA board members informing them of the vote, Wittenstein said he was “flabbergasted” by the response. “I want to express my disappointment and to some degree my amazement at their unwillingness to be more inclusive,” Wittenstein said. But Lauderdale said the decision was made in keeping with the trust’s mission of inclusivity. “It is their tree and they can put it anywhere they want, but we had to establish that we felt like we were excluding other organizations,” Lauderdale said. “This is a secular event and there are some individuals in the community that feel the tree is nonsecular, so we’ve had to say we can’t have any [symbols].”
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DUN
COMMUNITY
Nall, Springer seek council seat Dunwoody voters go to the polls Nov. 3 to choose among two candidates for the District 1 At-large seat on Dunwoody City Council and four candidates for mayor. The Dunwoody Reporter asked the candidates about their qualifications for office and their visions for the city’s future. Here are edited answers from the two atlarge council candidates. To see their full answers and those from the mayoral candidates, go to ReporterNewspapers.net.
Terry Nall
Occupation: CPA and senior financial services executive Elective offices held and previous elective or appointive offices held: Incumbent and at-large member of Dunwoody City Council since 2012. Previous community work: Saint Luke’s Presbyterian Church as elder and Clerk of Session; Boy Scouts and Cub Scouts leader, treasurer and merit badge counselor; national board member for Presbyterian Church (USA) Investment and Loan Program.
Q: Why do you want to be elected to Dunwoody City Council? A: I seek to continue building “A better Dunwoody,” where quality suburban values are preserved and enhanced against the backdrop of balanced economic development that keeps our taxes low and facilitates our quality of life that we have enjoyed for years past.
Q: Why should the voters choose you? A: Running for and serving on City
Council is about having leadership qualities and a vision for the community. I have a proven track record of “Promises Made... Promises Kept,” as well as numerous other successful accomplishments, such as facilitating “dual accreditation” of our high schools as a backup to protect HOPE and other scholarships, as well as stabilize property values, when the DeKalb County School District SACS accreditation was in serious jeopardy.
Q: How do you see Dunwoody in 10 years? A: In 10 years, I see Dunwoody as a
city that preserved its traditional, suburban values with the added amenities of paved roads, an extensive network of sidewalks, fixed intersections that allow traffic of local residents to flow better, fields at Brook Run to serve our youth sports without fields today, and easily accessible shopping, dining and entertainment amenities in and near the Perimeter area. This is possible in 10 years if we keep a laser-like focus on our basic “needs versus wants.”
Becky Springer
Occupation: Former manager in financial industry; currently strategic doDUN
mestic manager Elective offices held: none Previous community work: Two years on Austin Elementary PTA; two years on Redfield Home & Garden Board; volunteer at Dunwoody United Methodist Church and lay speaker.
Q: Why do you want to be elected to the Dunwoody City Council? A: I have always been interested in the political landscape, whether on the national or local level. I supported Dunwoody becoming its own city because I felt that it would allow us to better preserve the integrity of our city. However, several decisions made recently are threatening to undermine that integrity. I see a void in the council’s ability to manage its people, projects and our money. Instead of the City Council, I think it should be called the “Citizen’s Council” to reflect the idea that our council members are there on behalf of its citizens. We need new blood on the council, a voice for the people, and a leader to negotiate and make sound financial decisions for our city. Q:
you?
side I-285. As the city grows, more people move here, and that creates more traffic, more apartments, overcrowded schools and a strain on our city’s resources. I believe that to preserve our way of life we need to have clear lines of demarcation on where and how big projects can reside. Is it appropriate to zone an area on AshfordDunwoody Road for up to a 16-story condo building that backs right up to a residential neighborhood? As a city, we need to be sensitive to the amount and location of multifamily units that are built in Dunwoody. The council needs to be protective of its citizens’ privacy and home values, while making prudent, logical and respectful decisions about commercial ventures in the PCIDs and elsewhere.
Q: How do you see Dunwoody in 10 A: I see a healthy, happy thriving city
years?
with a refurbished downtown, that looks
more like a downtown Roswell or Decatur, with more good restaurants and stores. Perhaps a destination place where friends and neighbors want to be on a Friday night with their children, eating, playing and shopping. We would be enjoying our new school system that was created by allowing us to have our own school district, or maybe we had decided to set up a state-funded charter school like Brookhaven, where in either case we were hiring our own teachers and setting our own curriculum. Crime would be greatly reduced, because we streamlined our police budget, hired the appropriate number of officers, and concentrated police patrolling in critical crime areas. Police presence is one of the best deterrents of crime. I have great hopes for the future of Dunwoody, but we need to have strong leadership to achieve our goals. We need to bring tenacity, integrity and accountability back to our City Council. UNDERLYING RATINGS: MOODY’S “Aaa” STANDARD & POOR’S “AA+”
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Why should the voters choose
A: If the qualifications for the job are: an intelligent, independent thinker, who has the ability to manage people and projects on a deadline, while researching and finding creative solutions to problems, and working with peers to implement those solutions in an efficient and effective manner, then I am perfectly suited for the job. While at INVESCO for nine years, I was promoted three times, and managed people and projects with tight deadlines. Our department was sales, and my group wrote RFPs to secure business. So, I know how to read RFPs to solicit vendors for the city. Sometimes, the cheapest vendors aren’t the best, if they don’t have experience. They end up making mistakes, and costing the project much more money. Additionally, I have been in sales my whole life; this experience is integral in negotiating projects, so that the deal is mutually beneficial, not just us as a city giving away huge incentives to builders when it isn’t necessary.
Q: What do you see as the most significant issue facing the city right now? How will you address that issue? A: The most significant issue addressing the city presently is one that really doesn’t affect citizens on a daily basis, however it greatly impacts the direction of the city over the next 10-15 years: zoning. Atlanta has experienced urban crawl over the last 20 years. Initially businesses resided downtown, until rental costs became too prohibitive. So, businesses moved to Midtown, then to Buckhead and now to Dunwoody and surrounding areas out-
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COMMUNITY
“My background is financial management, corporate business, making decisions. We need to hold people accountable.” – STEPHEN CHIPKA
“Our two big issues are traffic and schools. I’m the one who has been walking the walk and talking the talk…and I’m the only candidate up here who has donated his own money to our advocacy group, GLASS.”
“We are at a critical juncture in our city’s history. If we don’t manage the Perimeter area properly and manage the density, the change will be permanent. Traffic in that area is already unbearable.”
– MAYOR MIKE DAVIS
– CHRIS GRIVAKIS
07-29-15_PerimeterPediatricDentistryFinal_Layout 1 7/27/15 9:18 AM Page 1
“It’s my honor to be one of you. I consider myself to be one of you. I do not consider myself to be a politician. I will listen to you.” – DENIS SHORTAL PHOTOS BY PHIL MOSIER
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DUN
COMMUNITY
Candidates discuss parks, police and paving at forum CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
Becky Springer argued heatedly about allegations of corruption Springer made in a League of Women Voters of Georgia voter’s guide, which the Atlanta Journal-Constitution published. Before the forum, Springer said she believes, “something’s going on behind the scenes,” in development deals, but she said she didn’t know for certain that anyone did anything illegal. Springer said she’s concerned about the John Wieland “PVC Farm” project, also known as Project Renaissance, and the State Farm project. Both candidates responded to a question asking Springer to clarify her accusation of council members accepting “kickbacks.” Springer did not provide evidence of wrongdoing, but qualified her statement as a reaction to development deals. “That is me looking at several deals the city’s made,” Springer said. She referenced the deal with Wieland publicly. “We basically take all the risk,” she said. Nall responded by saying Springer’s allegations of criminal activity are a “shame” and go beyond “political trash talking.” He said anyone with evidence of wrongdoing should come forward. During her opening statement, Springer said she voted for Nall four years ago in part because he promised a “balance of growth and development” and an “appropriate level of police protection.” She said the State Farm project and “rampant crime” show Nall has broken his promises to the city. Nall, who gave his opening statement first, talked about the “promises made and promises kept” during his term and highlighted his accomplishments, such as dual accreditation for all DeKalb County high schools and an initiative for more rigorous building code requirements of concrete and steel for buildings over three stories.
He said Springer’s campaign included two “patently false” allegations beyond her accusation of council members receiving kickbacks: that crime is up 85 percent over last year and that City Council zoned a 16-story apartment building off Ashford-Dunwoody Road. Nall said no new apartments have been approved in the last four years and the City Council removed around 1,700 planned apartments that were previously entitled by DeKalb. Concerning discussion about the police department, Shortal, a retired Marine, said he supports the police and wants more “boots on the ground” and “eyes on the target.” He suggested part-time officers and civilian patrol. Grivakis said he was astounded by a 39 percent increase in the police budget over the last two years. He said the police budget has gone up too much because of “too many supervisors.” “I don’t get why we don’t do citizens patrol,” Grivakis said. “As mayor, that’s something I will enact immediately.” Chipka said he doesn’t like seeing Dunwoody officers outside their jurisdiction when he hears about needing more police officers. Davis said he looks at two things when the police chief makes annual requests: the number of officers per thousand people in the city and the percentage of time the officers are unavailable when a call comes in to the police department, which is currently 25 percent, he said. Davis said he’s looking to technology, such as body cameras, cameras in parks and ways to use money for public safety that don’t involve putting more officers on duty. Davis closed by saying he wants to add a “fourth P” to the parks, police and paving trio. “Pay as you go” will help the city move forward without borrowing money, he said. PHIL MOSIER
City Councilman Terry Nall, left, and Becky Springer are both running for the District 1 At-large seat. The two attended a forum for candidates at Dunwoody High School on Oct. 11.
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The Dunwoody City Council usually meets the second and fourth Monday of each month at 6 p.m. at Dunwoody City Hall located at 41 Perimeter Center East Suite No. 103. For a complete and up to date schedule of Dunwoody City meetings, visit http://www.dunwoodyga.gov/Residents/Calendar.aspx DUN
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COMMENTARY Reporter Newspapers Our mission is to provide our readers with fresh and engaging information about life in their communities. Published by Springs Publishing LLC 6065 Roswell Road, Suite 225 Sandy Springs, GA 30328 Phone: 404-917-2200 • Fax: 404-917-2201 Brookhaven Reporter | Buckhead Reporter Dunwoody Reporter | Sandy Springs Reporter www.ReporterNewspapers.net Atlanta INtown www.AtlantaINtownPaper.com
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Q&A “I find it ironic he says he hired some consultants to investigate and he didn’t like their findings. At this point, I like the fact we have a small city in Brookhaven and more cities want to take control of government in DeKalb County. It shows we want to come together to make government more accountable. [Should May resign?] He should step down and let someone else come in. We need to do a better job of cleaning house.”
Von Terry
Associate Editor: John Ruch Intown Editor: Collin Kelley Staff Writer: Ellen Eldridge Copy Editor: Diane L. Wynocker Creative and Production Creative Director: Rico Figliolini Graphic Designer: Isadora Pennington Advertising Director of Sales Development Amy Arno amyarno@reporternewspapers.net Senior Account Executives Jeff Kremer Janet Porter
“I think they should respond swiftly and sternly. We can’t afford to have yet another CEO that’s taking advantage of taxpayer dollars. Absolutely, he should resign.”
Mary Winslow
ST R E E T T A LK Investigators looking into corruption in DeKalb County’s government recently reported the county was “rotten to the core” and suggested Interim CEO Lee May should resign. What’s your reaction to their report? Should May resign?
“If there’s any validity [to the report] it should be investigated and government has a civic duty to uphold it— to work for the people in the community they represent. Sure, [May should resign]. Anyone responsible and who is participating in corrupt practices should be held accountable.”
Michael Davis “I’m completely tired of the corruption in DeKalb County. I think it’s ridiculous. I think the position of CEO should be eliminated.”
Peter Pizzo “It’s unfortunate. ... [Should May resign?] I don’t know if he’s had a fair shake.”
Alexandra Cannada
“I think we need to get some better communityminded people [into government]. I think we need to privatize the financial sector of government and leave the other half to public interest. [Should May resign?] I think there needs to be more investigation. It’s early ... but if things are discovered that warrant his resignation, at that point ask for it.”
John Morrison “[The officials should respond] with honesty, with sincerity and transparency. Nobody’s a fool. I think [May] has been doing a good job so far and he deserves a chance, and he should be given the benefit of the doubt for now. He’s making an effort to clean things up and improve things in the county.”
Juan Rodriguez
Account Executives Susan Lesesne Jim Speakman
AP history biased
vatives.) In the review section at the end of the chapter there are five multiple choice deborahdavis@reporternewspapers.net [Re: ‘Who decides what should be questions. Three questions concern Clintaught in U.S. history?’ Reporter Newston and two on George Bush. Of the Contributors papers Education Guide, Sept. 18-Oct. Clinton quesPhil Mosier, Megan Volpert 1)]. tions, it is clear The bias in the AP history that the intent is curriculum is easily provable by LE TTE R TO to have students Free Home Delivery a simple review of the key conthink of Bill ClinTHE E DITOR cepts that are taught. 65,000 copies of Reporter Newspapers are delivered ton in a positive In the 2011 AP study guide by carriers to homes in ZIP codes 30305, 30319, E-mail letters to light and Bush in 30326, 30327, 30328, 30338, 30342 and 30350 and editor@reporternewspapers.net (edited by Stephen Armthe negative. to more than 500 business/retail locations. strong), I reviewed the section For examFor locations, check “Where To Find Us” labeled “Prosperity in a New at www.ReporterNewspapers.net ple, Question 1 World Order (1988-2000).” For delivery requests, please email discusses the “defining characteristic” delivery@reporternewspapers.net. The first thing you note is that the tiof the Clinton presidency. Not one of tle of this section gives away a secular © 2015 With all rights reserved the five choices refers to impeachment, Publisher reserves the right to refuse editorial or agenda – only the Left promotes the which any objective historian would at advertising for any reason. Publisher assumes notion of a world order that is govno responsibility for information contained in least provide as a possible answer. The advertising. Any opinions expressed in print or erned by people that share their views. online do not necessarily represent the views of “correct” answer is B – pragmatic poli(Hint: the elite leaders are not conserReporter Newspapers or Springs Publishing, LLC. cy making. | | 8 OCT. 16 – OCT. 29, 2015 www.ReporterNewspapers.net Office Manager Deborah Davis
As for Bush – all questions promote negative views. Question 2 begins with the statement “George Bush alienated many conservatives by …”. Question 3 begins “Critics accuse Bush of lacking vision because…”. The chapter also emphasizes Clinton’s success in the economic arena, when in fact he simply presided over an economy that was in the midst of the Internet revolution – a trained monkey could have been president during the Clinton years and (incorrectly) gotten the same credit. It is clear that the people that create American History curriculum are predominantly liberal (as polls consistently show) and you have to look no further than the study guides to confirm this fact. Rob Branson DUN
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The Burke family, from left, Kate, Owen, 5, Wells and Margaret, 3, go crazy over Halloween. They also help the dads by having a bucket of beer at their door.
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elleneldridge@reporternewspapers.net
Kate Burke grew up in Kentucky, where her mother made every Halloween costume she ever wore, she said. “We wouldn’t dream of buying a storebought costume,” Burke said. Burke, her husband, Wells, and her two kids, Owen, 5, and Margaret, 3, live in the Margaret Mitchell neighborhood in Buckhead, where every year her neighbors gather for a Halloween party before the kids head out to trick-ortreat. She said they love the festivities so much that Burke’s mother comes to visit so someone is home to hand out treats. “I want to do it all, so I have to have my mom man the door,” she said. Suburban Atlantans go crazy for Halloween. Families in neighborhoods spread from south Buckhead to Dunwoody North get into the spirit of the Halloween holiday. They celebrate with friends, organize cul-de-sac parties, bring in food trucks, and plan parades to supplement their trick-or-treating. In Brookhaven, the Redding Road neighborhood has someone who organizes a donation collection to help residents buy candy every year, nearby resident Sonja Greeley said. “They have the street shut down, and last year a person took charge of soliciting candy donations because so many people come to Redding. It was a polite gesture so everyone who lives there doesn’t go broke handing out candy,” Greeley said. And in Dunwoody, the Briers North neighborhood has become so well known for its Halloween celebration that the neighbors close subdivision streets from 5:45 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. and won’t let cars inside. Drivers park at a nearby church that collects donations to benefit its school. Briers North resident Joe Bowen said he’s been decorating for more than 15 years and he’s flattered when people
comment favorably about the neighborhood’s celebration, but he’s nervous about attracting more attention. “The problem is that the number of visitors is at critical mass. That is not an exaggeration,” Bowen said. “The streets are so crowded (5,000 plus based on candy count) that it is difficult for volunteers to walk the streets.” Karen Siegel, who organizes the event and handles media requests, said Halloween has become increasingly stressful for the homeowners. “We are now at a critical juncture as the number of visitors is continuing to rise and is overwhelming our subdivision and stressing out many of our homeowners,” Siegel said. “Even with hiring three off-duty Dunwoody police officers to handle the outside traffic and over two dozen resident volunteers handling the inside visitors/children, many in our small neighborhood think it’s simply gotten too large.” Bowen said the neighborhood spends several thousand dollars for candy, and even more for decorations. Others see Halloween as a chance to raise money for charity. In Sandy Springs, Jeff Marcus erects an extravagant yard display to raise awareness of autism, a developmental disorder characterized by emotional detachment and impaired communication. He collects donations from passersby as well as online at Scareawayautism.com. He said last year he raised almost $20,000 for the cause. “It kind of just evolved because my daughter, who’s autistic, loves Halloween,” Marcus said. “My wife says it got out of hand.” Burke’s Buckhead neighbors start their party with food trucks at the nearby school, she said. CONTINUED ON PAGE 10
Dan Sasser loves coming and going as he pleases. That’s just one of many reasons he chose Canterbury Court to be his home. “I left a tenured position so I could live wherever I wanted. Then I retired at 60 and was working part time when I discovered Canterbury Court. I thought, ‘How wonderful it would be to live there.’” When he decided to move to Canterbury Court, he chose a studio apartment, which he says “is more than big enough for me.” The maintenance-free lifestyle also lets him keep a second home in Florida and take frequent road trips. Dan says people are “missing the boat” by not moving to a retirement community sooner. “Here you have several restaurant options, all kinds of activities and excursions, a theater with daily showings, a heated pool and wellness center, 11 acres of beautiful gardens ... it’s like being on a permanent vacation!”
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Halloween means decorations, candy and... beer? CONTINUED FROM PAGE 9
“The Morris Brandon Primary Center is right down the street so the entire neighborhood congregates there,” Burke said. “It’s a do-not-miss event in our neighborhood.” Burke said her house has become popular with neighbors because of the goodies for kids and their parents, she said. “We have a bucket of beer for the dads,” Burke said. “You’ll see people who don’t know us as well and kids will say, ‘My dad wants to know if he can have a beer.’” Marsha Sims gets ready for fall with her 11-year-old triplets, Olivia, Jack and Nicholas Schramkowski, by decorating the yard in the Argonne Forest neigborhood in Buckhead. Sims said she grew up on the other side of town and went to Druid Hills High School. “We always went trick-or-treating,” she said. “Neighborhoods got all decked out for Halloween.” But Sims said the gatherings weren’t as big back then. Her daughter said on
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Halloween the neighborhood gathers at the Chateau Drive cul-de-sac, with a food truck from the Varsity that opens at about 5:30 p.m. “We go and eat and then while the adults are eating—because adults normally talk—the kids trick-or-treat on the street and little by little everyone starts migrating around the neighborhood,” Olivia Schramkowski said. Though Olivia said she normally climbs into her pajamas and eats chocolate with her friend after about an hour of collecting candy, her brother, Jack, stays out late to reap the late-night rewards. “Sometimes, we knock on people’s doors and they’re watching something and say, ‘You’re our lucky winners’ and the guy comes with two huge bowls of candy and gives one to my brother and one to me,” Jack Schramkowski said. He added that he might go as a baseball player this year and he’s almost as excited to watch sports before the neighborhood gathers and the kids get candy.
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Buckhead residents Marsha Sims, center, with two of her children, Jack Schramkowski, left, and Olivia Schramkowski, decorate their yard for Halloween. They also take advantage of a Varsity food truck that parks in their neighborhood during the evening of Oct. 31.
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It’s time for tasty treats, spooky fun and crazy costumes BY ISADORA PENNINGTON Whether you’re in it for the costumes, the parties or the candy, there’s something for everyone to look forward to on Halloween. We compiled a list of some of our favorite events in our communities to share with you and yours this season. Have a spooky good time! Haunted Halloween at the Atlanta History Center Friday, Oct. 23, 6:30 - 9:30 p.m. Get ready to be scared at Atlanta History Center’s newest after dark program. The center’s historic houses are transformed into fictional haunted experiences. Festivities include classic Halloween movie screenings, costumed character photo ops, Monster Mash and Thriller dance lessons, and lots of history mixed in with the haunted home displays. Snacks, beer, wine and specialty cocktails available for purchase. Tickets are $10 for members, $15 for nonmembers, and $8 for children. 130 West Paces Ferry Rd., NW, Atlanta, 30305. To buy tickets and learn more, go to atlantahistorycenter.com/family or call 404814-4000. Chattahoochee Nature Center Halloween Hikes Friday, Oct. 23, Saturday, Oct. 24, and Friday, Oct. 30, 7 - 10 p.m. If you have been searching for a non-scary alternative to traditional Halloween festivities, check out the Chattahoochee Nature Center’s evening Halloween Hikes. This well-lit tour of the trails includes entertainment and education relating to the woodland creatures that live at the center. Groups of 2025 will walk the trails that last roughly 45 minutes. Campfires, s’mores, world music and crafts also available during the event. Admission is $9; free for kids 2 and under. Ticket sales are available from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. each night. CNC members can purchase their tickets in advance at the Visitor Services Desk in the Discovery Center. Please leave pets at home for this event. Bring cash for snacks. 9135 Willeo Rd, Roswell, 30075. Visist chattnaturecenter.org or call 770992-2055 for more information. Haunted Farm Tour & Festival Saturday, Oct. 24, 3 - 9 p.m. Boy Scout Troop 477 hosts its annual Haunted Farm Tour and Festival at the Donaldson-Bannister Farm House. This family-friendly event features a haunted tour, games, live music, s’mores and snacks. Recommended for kids elementary school age and younger. Free parking at Independence Square (corner of Chamblee-Dunwoody at Peeler) with regular shuttle bus service to the property. Additional parking can be found at the Vermack Swim Tennis Center. This fundraiser
helps send boys to summer camp who might otherwise not be able to afford the experience. 4831 Chamblee Dunwoody Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. Questions? Call 770-451-5180. Chamblee Halloween Spooktacular Saturday, Oct. 24, 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. Get a head start on Halloween with this outdoor event at Keswick Park. Visitors will enjoy a spooky fun house, hay rides, pumpkin painting, pony rides, a free costume contest at 1 p.m., food, music, face painting, bounce houses and a cupcake walk. Costumes are encouraged. Event suitable for all ages. Free and open to the public. Keswick Park, 3496 Keswick Dr., Chamblee, 30341. To learn more or to get involved, contact Chris Madden at cmadden@chambleega.gov or call 770-986-5016. Halloween Hunt Monday, Oct. 26, 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. School-age kids are invited to the Brookhaven Library for a Halloween scavenger hunt. Equipped with a scavenger hunt sheet from the circulation desk, kids will solve puzzles and search for clues throughout the library, and winners will receive a prize. Recommended for ages 3 to 12 years. Free and open to the public. 1242 N. Druid Hills Rd., Brookhaven, 30319. Go online to dekalblibrary.org or call 404-848-7140 for additional details. Haunted Sandy Springs Friday, Oct. 30, 6 - 7:30 p.m. and 8 - 9:30 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 31, 1 2:30 p.m. Take a walk through historic Sandy Springs with a spooky twist. The tour begins at the Williams-Payne House, where you can enjoy hot apple cider, light snacks and scary stories. Tour guides then lead participants to the original spring site and over to the Sandy Springs United Methodist Church Cemetery. Tours last approximately an hour and a half. Tickets are $15 each and tours are limited to 20 people per group. Must be 15 years or older to participate. Go online to heritagesandysprings.org to purchase tickets. 6075 Sandy Springs Circle, Sandy Springs, 30328. Have questions? Call 404-851-9111, extension 2.
GA Peach Trick or Treat Saturday, Oct. 31, 2 - 4 p.m. Join the GA Peach Authors for a literary costume event at the Buckhead Library. Authors Marissa Monteilh, Norlita Brown, Jade Jones and Marlon McCaulsky will be featured, and visitors can participate in a costume contest, enjoy trick-or-treat goodies and enjoy readings during the afternoon. All ages welcome. Free and open to the public. 269 Buckhead Ave., NE, Atlanta, GA 30305. Find out more at afpls.org or by calling 404-814-3500. Halloween Storytime Saturday, Oct. 31, 3 - 4 p.m. Ms. Leah presents a fun seasonal story time with related activities for the whole family. Registration is required and space is limited, so stop by the library during normal hours, email leah.germon@fultoncountyga.gov or call 404303-6130 to sign up. Recommended for kids aged 3-7; free and open to all. Sandy Springs Branch Library, 395 Mount Vernon Hwy., Sandy Springs, 30328. Halloween at Briers North Saturday, Oct. 31, 6 - 9 p.m. Looking for a fun spot to bring your kids and go trick-or-treating? Look no further than Briers North, a quiet Dunwoody neighborhood that goes all out on Halloween. decorations. Rain or
shine. Free and open to the community. Suitable for all ages. Pets not allowed. Candy will be distributed from 6-9 p.m.; no admission to the subdivision after 8:30 p.m. No parking inside the subdivision, so participants are encouraged to find suitable street parking nearby. Brier North Road (off Tilly Mill Road), Dunwoody, 30338. Go online to briersnorth.org for more information and to see pictures from previous years. A Social Mess Halloween Party Saturday, Oct. 31, 8 p.m. - 2:30 a.m. Costumes, drinking and partying - oh my! The popular Social Mess Halloween Party returns for its sixth year to the Buckhead Theatre. This event draws thousands of partiers and promises an evening of top-rated DJs and adult beverages. 21+ only; no refunds. General admission tickets are $23 each.Group tickets can be purchased for $20 each, minimum 10 guests. 3110 Roswell Rd., NE, Atlanta, 30305. Go online to asocialmess. com to buy tickets and learn more. Monster Bash 2015 Saturday, Oct. 31, 8 p.m. Join the celebration at a Latin and international Halloween party at Eclipse di Luna in Dunwoody. Returning for its 17th year, this party offers Latin and international music, a costume contest with $2,000 in cash prizes, drink specials and other giveaways. Ladies must be 18+ for this event; guys must be 21+ to attend. Costumes required. Admission is free until 10 p.m. 4505 Ashford Dunwoody Rd., Atlanta, 30346. Find out more by visiting monsterbashatl. com.
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These 11 dams could cause extensive damage should they fail The following list shows the current conditions of the 11 local “highhazard” dams as reported in state Safe Dams Program files. Unless otherwise noted, the owners of record did not respond to questions. Capital City Country Club Lake Dam, W. Brookhaven Drive, Buckhead Built 1925. Latest inspection information from 2014 indicates it is in good condition. Cherokee Country Club Lake Dam (middle lake), Hightower Trail, Sandy Springs Built 1966. Latest inspection information from 2013 reported some erosion that needed to be repaired. A 2010 inspection found erosion that “should be closely monitored.” Dunwoody Club Crossing Dam, Dunwoody Club Crossing, Dunwoody Built 1988. No clear inspection information on file. Lake Forrest Dam, Lake Forrest Drive, Sandy Springs Built circa 1945-1950. The city of Sandy Springs is in the process of examining its condition. Charles Wilson of Schnabel Engineering previously expressed concerns about signs of a leaking pipe within the dam, but a formal exam was still pending. Murphey Candler Lake Dam, W. Nancy Creek Drive in Murphey Candler Park, Brookhaven Built 1953. Latest report is from 2012, reporting relatively minor maintenance issues, when DeKalb County still owned the park and lake. The city of Brookhaven did not have an immediate report on its current condition. Lake Northridge Dam, Northridge Road, Sandy Springs Built 1970. Latest inspection report from 2014 said the main dam parts are in “excellent” condition. The homeowners association said the dam is regularly
inspected by its engineer. Peppertree Lake Dam, Dunwoody Springs Drive, Sandy Springs Built 1939. Trees and brush removed this year from the spillway. A follow-up state report in July said the tree stumps should be removed and noted an unmarked and submerged drain. The report also advised against a request to place park benches in the spillway. Powers Lake Dam, Powers Lake Drive, Sandy Springs Construction date unknown. A 2014 report shows trees and brush were removed and an animal hole filled in. “To my knowledge, according to the state, our dam is in excellent shape,” said Donald Dutson Jr., the owner of record. Scott Candler Reservoir Dam, Peeler Road, Dunwoody Two reservoirs built: one in 1942; the other in 1953; dam expanded 2004. Latest reported information from 2012 called for relatively minor repairs and maintenance issues. DeKalb County did not respond to questions.
Buckhead
SPECIAL
Eleven dams in the Buckhead, Dunwoody, Sandy Springs and Brookhaven areas have been classified as “high hazard” in the Safe Dams Program files.
Silver Lake Dam, off Ragley Hall Road, Brookhaven Originally built in 1911 and rebuilt since then. An inspection in May by Piedmont Geotechnical found some minor maintenance issues. Regular inspections say the dam is in “very good condition, according to James Gallo of the Silver Lake Civic Association. The state reported concerns about a “bolt-
ed cover” on an drainpipe, but Gallo says the pipe was never intended as an emergency drain and appears to be an old construction artifact. Tera Lake Dam, Burdette Road, Sandy Springs Built circa 1958. Latest inspection information on file showed issues of
“seepage” and a spillway in a “deteriorated condition.” Safe Dams Program spokesman Kevin Chambers said the owners’ engineers “have met with our office, but no further progress.” Mike Johnson and Mark Pollack of Pollack Shores Real Estate Group are among its owners, the state says. Neither responded to phone calls.
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State monitors ‘high-hazard’ dams BY JOHN RUCH
johnruch@reporternewspapers.net
When record-breaking rains hit South Carolina earlier this month, the deadly floods were made worse by the failure of little-known dams on privately owned lakes. Many were built decades ago with dubious engineering and were monitored by an underfunded state agency that sometimes struggled to identify the dams’ current owners to order repairs, according to local media reports. Georgia dodged the historic rains, but has similar challenges with more than 4,200 dams. The state Safe Dams Program lists more than 40 dams in Brookhaven, Buckhead, Dunwoody and Sandy Springs, most built decades ago during a boom in suburban leisure lakes and still the responsibility of private owners. The state categorizes 11 of those local dams as “high hazard,” meaning that if they were to fail, the flood likely would kill people downstream. The “high-hazard” category is based on the size and location of the dam, not its current condition. Statewide, 474 dams are currently categorized as high-hazard. Some of the local highhazard dams are well-known and publicly owned, like the lake in Brookhaven’s Murphey Candler Park. But many dams impound private lakes hidden behind backyards and possibly unknown to neighbors living downstream. When the state categorizes a dam as high hazard, the owners have 180 days to get an operating permit, which includes filing an assessment of the dam’s condition. But in reality, determining the ownership and condition of such dams can be tough. The Lake Forrest Dam on the Buckhead/Sandy Springs border is a classic example. The tree-covered dam is easy to miss even though Lake Forrest Drive runs right atop it. The state declared it high hazard six years ago, only to discover the dam’s complicated ownership tangle involving a homeowners association and the cities of Sandy Springs and Atlanta. Sandy Springs agreed to take the lead on assessing the dam’s condition and any repairs, which has turned out to be a slow and labor-intensive process. Currently, the lake above the dam is half-drained, with some fish removed by boat, which in turn required lopping down many trees. There is still no final report on the dam’s integrity. “It’s just kind of sitting on hold,” said Hansell Roddenbery, president of the Three Lakes Corporation, the local homeowners association. “We’re just not real sure what’s going on.” Sometimes, the state can’t find any owner at all. In other cases, local homeowners are entirely on the hook and can be taken to court by the state if they don’t properly maintain their dams. State records show homeowners actively
monitoring many of the local dams, but often at great effort and expense. Lake Northridge on Northridge Road in Sandy Springs is one example. Gordon Elkins, president of Lake Northridge Inc., the local homeowners association, said he was pleasantly surprised when he moved into his home to learn of the beautiful, well-hidden, 88-foot-deep former quarry turned into a recreational lake in 1970. “I was shocked because I had no idea…this thing was even here,” Elkins said. A far less pleasant surprise was the maintenance duties of dealing with “beavers, geese and a Class I [high-hazard] dam…It comes with a lot of responsibility, too.” The homeowners association contracts with a private engineer who inspects the dam three or four times a year, Elkins said. Inspection reports are posted on the association website, lakenorthridge.com. The latest, from November 2014, reports the dam’s main parts in “excellent” shape. State records on the 11 local highhazard dams show only one safety issue presented as significant, and it may not
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The city of Sandy Springs is assessing the condition of Lake Forrest Dam, built circa 1945-1950.
Well-known dams on list CONTINUED FROM PAGE 13
be a real issue. A “bolted cover” on an emergency drainpipe on Brookhaven’s Silver Lake Dam could have “catastrophic consequences,” according to an engineer’s report dated in May of this year. But James Gallo of the Silver Lake Civic Association, which maintains the 27acre lake, said that pipe appears to be a non-functional leftover from 1980s dam reconstruction and was “never intended as emergency relief.” Regular state and private inspections show the dam is in “very good condition,” Gallo said. While state records do not show significant issues with most other dams, the records range from formal engineering reports to personal emails. For some, the most recent information dates to 2012. Some files show the state cajoling owners for years to conduct maintenance. The management company responsible for the 76-year-old Peppertree Lake, which is tucked behind apartments off Peachtree-Dunwoody Road in Perimeter Center, recently removed trees that could have blocked an emergency flow of water from its dam. Re-
cords show a state engineer wrote it took more than a decade for the trees to be removed, and that the stumps still have to go as well. That company, Working Solutions, did not respond to a phone call. While the maintenance issues can be minor, the stakes can be high. The Safe Dams Program was created after a 1977 dam failure in Toccoa, Ga., killed 39 people. In 1978, state inspectors found Silver Lake Dam to be so unsafe that the governor declared it “a real and immediate threat of a disaster.” The lake was drained and the dam demolished. The civic association restored it in the 1980s. The local dams withstood metro Atlanta’s historic rainfalls and floods of 2009—in some cases with significant damage—but that doesn’t mean they will survive the next disaster. Georgia’s Safe Dams Program faces staffing shortages and budget cuts, according to damsafety.org, an informational website run by the Kentucky-based Association of Dam Safety Officials. In South Carolina, there is talk of requiring reinforcement of old earthen dams and boosting the state inspection program.
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The last report on Murphey Candler Lake Dam, built in 1953, outlined relatively minor maintenance issues.
COMMUNITY
Other local dams on state inventory The following is a list of other local dams that are on the state’s Safe Dams Program inventory.
Brookhaven
D’Youville Lake Dam, D’Youville Trace
Buckhead
IBM Lake Dam, North Atlanta High School, Northside Parkway Lake Moore Dam, Rickenbacker Drive Reeder Lake Dam, Rilman Lake Court Rivermeade Dam, Rivermeade Drive Stern and Early Pond, Harris Valley Road
Dunwoody
Brooke Farm Lake Dam, Brooke Farm Drive Fountain Square Lake Dam, Peachford Road Kingsley Lake Dam, N. Peachtree Road Meadowlake at Dunwoody Dam, Lakesprings Way Meadowlake Dam, Meadowlake Lane Mill Glen Lake Dam, Mill Glen
Read all of our editions online
Drive Zaban Park Lake Dam, Womack Road
Sandy Springs
Arlington Memorial Park Dam, Arlington Cemetery on Mount Vernon Highway Carroll Manor Lake Dam, Carroll Manor Drive Century Springs Lake Dam, Hammond Drive Cherokee Country Club Lake East and West Dams, Hightower Trail Dunwoody Country Club Lake Dam, Dunwoody Club Drive Glen Errol Lake Dam, Glen Errol Road Glenlake Dam Nov. 2, Abernathy Road at Glenlake Parkway Hartrampf Lake Dam, Huntingdon Trail Huntcliff Lake Dam, Huntcliff Trace Huntingdon Lake Dam, Huntingdon Trail Innsbruck Lake Dam, Innsbruck Drive Lake North Dam, Colquitt Road Laubman Lake Dam, Powers Lake Drive Mission-Sandy Springs Lake Dam, Roswell Road
ELLEN ELDRIDGE
A dam at Arlington Memorial Park in Sandy Springs is among dozens in local neighborhoods included on the state’s Safe Dams Program list.
Natures Acre Lake Dam, Byrnwycke Road Orkin Lake Dam, Monterey Parkway Small Pond Dam No. 1, Powers Chase Circle
RECYCLE
Spalding Lake Dam, Spalding Lake Court Turners Lake Dam, Long Island Drive Wildercliff Dam, Wilderlake Court
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Atlanta History Center
from Hollywood to Nuremberg
Through November 20, 2015 Hollywood directors John Ford, George Stevens, and Samuel Fuller created American cinema classics, but their most important contribution to history was their work in the U.S. Armed Forces and Secret Services. An exhibition by the Mémorial de la Shoah, Paris, France.
Samuel Fuller’s Bell & Howell Camera © Courtesy of the, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Beverly Hills, California, Coll. Christa Fuller
filming
John Ford Samuel Fuller George Stevens
AtlantaHistoryCenter.com/Filming
Brain Research Study
SEE YOUR BRAIN AT WORK! We are conducting a research study to determine which parts of the brain are used to find your way throughout the environment and remember where you are going. Eligible participants will perform memory and learning tasks while receiving magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans of the brain. Other studies which do not require MRI scans are also available. We are looking for men and women volunteers who are: 1. In generally good physical health 2. 60 years of age and older You will be reimbursed for your participation. If you are interested in learning more about our studies, please contact us at moffatneurolab@gmail.com or (404) 385-0523.
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OCT. 16 – OCT. 29, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
out& about
BROOKHAVEN • BUCKHEAD • DUNWOODY • SANDY SPRINGS
FOR KIDS & FAMILIES
‘Lions in Illyria’ Thursday, Oct. 22 and Friday, Oct. 23, 7 p.m. – Separated from her brother after a storm at
sea, Violet, a young lioness, must brave an unknown country all alone. This family-friendly, one hour show is a re-imagining of Shakespeare’s 12th Night told through animals, humor and music. Tickets are $5 each and support the MVPS Arts program. Black Box Theater, 510 Mount Vernon Hwy., NE, Sandy Springs, 30328. To purchase tickets in advance and for more information, go to mountvernonschool. org or call 404-250-5880.
Family Movie Night Friday, Oct. 23, 6:30 p.m. – The All Saints Catholic Church in Dunwoody presents a screening of the popular classic “The Wizard of Oz” in the Social Hall. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. and the movie starts at 7 p.m. This event will be Chastain style; guests are encouraged to bring a blanket and food, and watch the movie. 2443 Mount Vernon Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. Go to allsaints.us or call 770393-3255 for additional details.
Blue Heron Birthday Saturday, Oct. 24, 11 a.m. - 3 p.m. –
Come out and learn about the Blue Heron Na-
ture Preserve’s 30-acre property nestled in the heart of the city during this fall festival that celebrates the Preserve’s 15th birthday. Participants will enjoy interpretive walks of the grounds and exhibits, plus first-hand knowledge about the preserve’s stewardship of the environment, conservation and educational initiatives. The event feature sfood and cake, scavenger hunts for kids, honey bee demonstration with a local beekeeper, live plant seed harvesting, music, rescued urban animals with AWARE, bird walks with the Atlanta Audobon, a ribbon cutting and historical data from Buckhead Heritage. Free and suitable for all ages. 4055 Roswell Rd., NE, Atlanta, 30342. Find out more by going to bhnp.org or by calling 404-345-1008.
Seussical the Musical Friday, Oct. 30 and Saturday, Oct. 31, 7 p.m., and Nov. 1, 3 p.m. – The Dun-
woody United Methodist Church presents an all-ages musical adaptation of Dr. Seuss’ stories. The skits pull from the “Cat in the Hat,” “Horton Hears a Who!” and other well-loved stories. General admission tickets are $20 each. Student tickets are $10 when purchased at the door. Show up in costume for half-price tickets. 1548 Mount Vernon Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. Go online to dunwoodyumc.org or call 770394-0675 with questions.
GIVING BACK
Great Day of Service
Volunteer Day
Saturday, Oct. 24, 9 a.m. – The Dunwoody
Saturday, Oct. 24, 9 a.m. - 12 p.m. –
United Methodist Church Great Day of Service provides opportunities to participate in one of over 40 projects at the church or in the community. Start the day with a breakfast followed by a variety of projects to get behind, including Stop Hunger NOW! food packing, Potato Drop for the Atlanta Community Food Bank, make blankets for Project Linus, and much more. Off-site service projects like yard work and home repair also available. Lunch provided afterward. Free and open to the public. 1548 Mount Vernon Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. Go to dunwoodyumc.org for more details.
Come out for a morning of giving back at Brook Run Park. Volunteers will be working with Trees Atlanta to plant new trees in the park as part of Dunwoody’s Volunteer Day. Free and open to the public. Brook Run Park, 4770 N. Peachtree Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. To find out more information and to register as a volunteer go to treesatlanta.org.
LECTURES
Fast Forward
Ovarian Cancer
Wednesday, Oct. 21, 7 p.m. – Martin Ford,
Thursday, Oct. 29, 7 p.m. – The Ovarian
author of the best-seller “Rise of the Robots,” Trung Le, a designer of learning ecologies, and screenwriter and educator Joe Conway headline Holy Innocents’ Episcopal School’s speaker series at the Atlanta History Center. The evening also includes Larry Friel from the FIDO Project, an ongoing research project at Georgia Tech’s Animal Computer Interaction Lab, that researches ways to improve communication between working dogs and the humans they assist. Tickets are $25 each and can be purchased online at hispeakerseries.org/tickets. Atlanta History Center, 130 West Paces Ferry Rd., NW, Atlanta, 30305.
Cancer Institute hosts “A Modern Approach to Ovarian Cancer” event at B’nai Torah. Lecture by Dr. Benedict Benigno, founder and CEO of The Ovarian Cancer Institute and Northside Hospital’s Director of Gynecologic Oncology. Q&A and panel follow presentation. Free and open to the public. Donations appreciated. RSVP at kharper@ovariancancerinstitute. org or 404-300-2997. B’nai Torah, 700 Mount Vernon Hwy. NE, Sandy Springs, 30328. Need more details? Go online to ovariancancerinstitute.org.
out & about
SAINT MARTIN IN THE FIELDS EPISCOPAL CHURCH
FESTIVALS
Apple Cider Days
Wednesday, Oct. 21 through Sunday, Oct. 25, hours vary. – Bring the whole fam-
ily out for carnival rides, amusements, food and vendors. This annual fall fundraising event is hosted by Dunwoody Preservation Trust. Free to attend; bring cash for rides and snacks. Perimeter Mall, 4400 Ashford-Dunwoody Rd., Dunwoody, 30346. Find out more by going online to appleciderdays.org.
Fall Festival Saturday, Oct. 24, 1 - 5 p.m. – Enjoy the crisp weather at Lynwood Park with a fall-themed get-together for the entire family. The event will have food, a bounce house and other activities. Free and open to the public. Lynwood Park, 3360 Osborne Rd., Brookhaven, 30319. Go to brookhavenga.gov to learn more.
the school. For more information, email harvestfestival@hfeeaglealliance.org. Heards Ferry Elementary School, 6151 Powers Ferry Rd., Sandy Springs, 30339.
Ashford Park Fall Fair Saturday, Oct. 24, 11 a.m. - 3 p.m –The Ashford Park School Fall Fair is a community tradition that helps support on-going professional development for teachers, STEM classroom and student enrichment programs, and special events throughout the year. Activities include a rock wall, inflatables, festival games, sand art cart, petting zoo, food trucks, raffle prizes, craft vendors and School of Rock. Free and open to the community. All-inclusive wristbands are $15; purchase by Oct. 20 and pay only $12. Adults do not need a wristband. Children 2 and under play for free. 2968 Cravenridge Dr., Brookhaven, 30319. Go to ashfordparkschool. com or call 678-676-6702 to learn more.
Dia De Los Muertos
Harvest Festival Saturday, Oct. 24, 11 a.m. –
3 p.m. – The 2nd annual Heards Ferry Harvest Festival includes carnival games, interactive attractions, a rock wall, arts and crafts, a school-wide pumpkin auction, holiday cake auction, cupcake walk, a live DJ and several local food vendors. Wristbands provide unlimited access to most of the activities, and are $25 for children over five and $15 for children under five. Tickets also be available in $10 increments for individual games and attractions. Parking available at the Fulton County Office building next door to
Sunday, Nov. 1, 12 - 5 p.m. –
Visitors of all ages are invited to learn about and experience a Day of the Dead Festival at the Atlanta History Center. The event features storytelling, crafts, authentic Mexican food and entertainment, plus a display of altars honoring lost family and friends that are decorated with flowers, favorite foods and beverages. This event takes place on free admission day, and is open to all ages. 130 West Paces Ferry Rd., NW, Atlanta, 30305. Call 404-814-4000 or go online to atlantahistorycenter. com for more details.
St. Martin in the Fields Episcopal Church invites you to join us at our new adult Sunday School Class, Church in Today’s World, a weekly speaker series from 10:10 a.m. – 11:00 a.m. on Sunday mornings. October 25, 2015 – Rev. Stefanie Taylor and Arthur Taylor, Ph.D. will discuss Virtuous Living in a Post-Globalized World. November 8, 2015 – Carl McColman, a contemplative writer, speaker, retreat leader, spiritual companion and author of several books, including Befriending Silence, Answering the Contemplative Call, and The Big Book of Christian Mysticism, will discuss “Christianity and the Nones”. November 15, 2015 – Sean McConnell, National Director of Engagement for the Episcopal Relief & Development Fund (“ER&D”), will discuss how ER&D is creating deep and lasting transformation in the lives of the people it serves.
3110 Ashford Dunwoody • Atlanta, 093015_Gillys_Layout 1 9/28/15 4:15 Rd PM Page 1
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Sunday, Oct. 25, 1 - 4 p.m. – Calling all artists! The city of Brookhaven hosts an afternoon of art in Blackburn Park. The day features art contests, treats and a bounce house for the kids. Artists of all ages are encouraged to participate. Paper and art supplies provided. Winning entries will be displayed at City Hall. Free and open to the public. Blackburn Park, 3493 Ashford-Dunwoody Rd., Brookhaven, 30319. For more information, go to brookhavenga.gov. To sign up as a judge or to inquire further about the event, email news@brookhavenga.gov or call 404-637-0508.
Rivers Shivers 5k Saturday, Oct. 31, 8 a.m. – Get active and sup-
port the students at E. Rivers Elementary School in this 5K along Peachtree Battle Avenue. Race proceeds benefit the E. Rivers PTA. Race day check-in and same day registration opens at 7 a.m. and closes at 7:30 a.m. Tickets start at $30 each for 5K participation and $15 for the 100-yard run. E. Rivers Elementary School, 8 Peachtree Battle Ave., NW, Atlanta, 30305. Find out more at eriverselementary. com or by calling 404-802-7050.
Duck Duck Goose 5K Saturday, Oct. 24, 9 a.m. – The Murphey
Candler Park Conservancy presents the second annual Duck Duck Goose 5K and one-mile fun run. This fundraiser supports the conservancy and their efforts to maintain and promote the park. Online registration is $30 for the 5K and $20 for the one mile until Oct. 21. Runners are encouraged to arrive by 8:45 a.m. 1662 West Nancy Creek Dr., Brookhaven, 30319. More information? Go to murpheycandlerpark.org.
Sample Sundays featuring David Bengal with a live Band 7pm til 10pm
Monday: Bingo 7 pm
Ladies’ Night half price drinks, 70¢ wings
Tuesday: Trivia 7 pm
Karaoke at 9:30; Half rack of baby ribs $9.99 with hot slaw and baked potato
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Garden Talk & Tour Saturday Oct. 24, 9 a.m. - 12 p.m. – The
Dunwoody Community Garden at Brook Run Park hosts a DeKalb County Master Gardener seminar, plant sale and garden tour. Visitors will have a chance to learn about “Square Foot Gardening” and “Nature-based Play,” followed by a plant sale and an outing to the nearby garden. Pre-registration is recommended by going online to dcgo.org. Tickets are $20 until October 23; $25 at the door. Brook Run Park, 4770 North Peachtree Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. To learn more about this event, go to cvbdunwoody.com.
Party with the Past Thursday, Oct. 29, 6:30 - 9 p.m. – The At-
lanta History Center hosts a program designed to introduce Atlanta’s young professionals to the history of Atlanta. This free history series takes place at different historically significant spots all around the city. Every Party With the Past features a free history lesson from a guest speaker, a cash bar and food for purchase, as well as activities and prizes. Bring a blanket and have a picnic on the main quad. Costumes encouraged. Food and beverages are available for purchase. Oglethorpe University, 4484 Peachtree Rd., Brookhaven, 30319. Learn more at atlantahistorycenter.com.
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Lisa Bartlett offers a simple reason she agreed to provide a booth for the first Elegant Elf marketplace: the mayor asked her. Bartlett, who owns a Sandy Springs landscaping and decorating shop called Gramma B’s, recalls when Sandy Springs’ former mayor, the late Eva Galambos, dropped by the shop to talk up the new holiday marketplace, a fundraiser for the Sandy Springs Society. Galambos’ sales pitch worked. “I’ve had a booth since Year One,” Bartlett said. “And we expand every year.” This year, the Elegant Elf ’s fifth, Bartlett again is expanding her presentation as the market tries something new. The two-day holiday market is offering live performances for the first time, and Bartlett is scheduled to take to the stage for about an hour to demonstrate how to make holiday decorations such as wreaths or “winterscapes” encased in apothecary bottles. “It’s kind of do-it-yourself [displays], anything you can do at home with your girlfriends or with children,” she said.
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Her appearance is one of more than a dozen performances scheduled during the marketplace, which takes place Nov. 7 and Nov. 8 at Lake Forest Elementary School, 5920 Sandy Springs Circle. The committee that puts together the annual market decided to add live performances this year to “enhance the excitement of the market,” said Valerie Love, past presValerie Love ident and advisor to the Elegant Elf. “I call it the ‘sparkle,’” Love said. “That’s what the holidays are all about.” Performers other than Bartlett who are scheduled to take part range from dancers to choral singers to Patricia Barnes, the Elegant Elf ’s honorary chair, who’s known for her Sister Schubert Homemade Rolls and is scheduled to demonstrate cinnamon bread pudding. Others on the schedule: string players from Holy Innocents’ Episcopal School; the Mount Vernon Upper School Chamber Winds; actors from Act3 Productions; the Ridgeview Singers; the Weber Chorus; the Highland Dancers; Chef Jamie Adams, who will provide a cooking demonstration and tasting; and Atlanta author Mary Kay Andrews, who will sign books. During a brainstorming discussion after last year’s market about how to expand, someone suggested using the stage in the Lake Forest cafeteria for performers. The idea quickly caught on, Love said. “It just kind of kept snowballing,” she said. “Everybody we approached in the community was excited to be part of this.”
The Elegant Elf Holiday Gift Market When: 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. Nov. 7; 11 a.m. until 5 p.m. Nov. 8
Where: Lake Forest
Elementary School, 5920 Sandy Springs Circle
Admission: $5 For more:
sandyspringsociety.org/ elegant-elf.html
out & about Money raised through the marketplace goes to the Sandy Springs Society, a 27-yearold nonprofit that provides grants to support other local charities in Sandy Springs. The Society says it has raised and distributed more than $3 million. “We love the idea of pulling everyone in from the community,” Love said. “There is something gratifying about getting our community to come together to support this ‘shopping for a cause.’ We just think we have amazing talent here in Sandy Springs. The goal from the start was to bring in the best of local and national vendors.” In addition to the live performers, more than 80 vendors are scheduled to show and sell their wares during the marketplace, Love said. Bartlett plans to be back with her holiday display, which she said now
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covers the area usually used by four separate booths and provides a greenery-covered entrance to the holiday marketplace. “All my little elves have been working as we speak,” she said one recent afternoon as she sat on a park bench in the plant-filled yard outside her Hammond Drive shop. Working the marketplace gives her a chance to chat with clients she seldom otherwise sees, she said. But the main reason she takes part year after year is to give something back to the community. “Anything to support the Society, I’m there,” she said.
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Raising The Standard of Care
Our team has grown... thanks to you! Above, Lisa Bartlett, owner of a landscaping and decorating shop in Sandy Springs called Gramma B’s, has had a booth at the Elegant Elf marketplace since its first year. This year the marketplace is offering live performances, and Bartlett will take to the stage to demonstrate holiday wreath decorations. PHOTOS BY JOE EARLE
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OK Café has reopened at the corner of Northside Parkway and West Paces Ferry in Buckhead after a fire damaged much of the interior nearly a year ago. Taka Sushi and Passion is reopening in Sandy Springs next year after closing its Pharr Road location in Buckhead. Tomorrow’s News Today reports that the restaurant will open in the Gateway mixed-use development, which is also home to Sprouts Famers Market. Here to Serve Restaurant Group has closed all 10 of its restaurants, including Smash Kitchen & Bar and Noche in Brookhaven and Twist and Prime in Buckhead. The company, which also recently shuttered Aja in Buckhead and Goldfish at Perimeter Mall, said it is looking for investors to help re-launch in the future. Petite Auberge, 2935 North Druid Hills Road, will host its annual Oktoberfest Party on Oct. 24 from 6:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. The event will feature a buffet with all-you-can-eat traditional German and Bavarian cuisine. The cost is $40 person and includes coffee, tea, tax and gratuity. Reservations are requested by calling 404-634-6268.
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The Palm Restaurant in the Westin Buckhead Hotel, known for its first-class steaks, and outrageously large Nova Scotia lobsters, is marking its 20th anniversary with a renovation. Andrei Caciula has been named the new general manager. The redesign includes two private dining rooms and a hand-painted feature wall that highlights Atlanta’s landmarks. There’s also a new bar that opens to the hotel lobby. For more information, visit thepalm.com. Atlanta Les Dames d’Escoffier International hosts its 15th annual Afternoon in the Country at Serenbe on Nov. 8. Chefs from Atlanta’s top restaurants paired with the area’s best farms will be set up in a tasting format alongside fine wines and premium microbrews. There will also be live music, cake raffle featuring sweets from Atlanta's top pastry chefs, hayrides, children's activities and a silent auction offering dining and travel packages, food and wine merchandise and original art by local artists. Proceeds from Afternoon in the Country benefit Georgia Organics, Wholesome Wave, Global Growers Network, The Giving Kitchen, The Wylde Center, The Atlanta Community Food Bank and Atlanta Les Dames d’Escoffier International’s scholarship fund for women in the culinary, beverage and hospitality arts. For more information and tickets, visit ldeiatlanta.org. --Collin Kelley
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Important Information about FDIC Deposit Insurance Coverage: First Landmark Bank and its divisions Midtown Bank and Bank of Sandy Springs are the same FDIC-insured institution. Deposits held under First Landmark Bank or the trade names Midtown Bank and Bank of Sandy Springs are not separately insured, but are combined to determine whether a depositor has exceeded basic federal deposit insurance limits. Advertised APY and rate apply to the initial term onlyAPY of 1.36% is accurate as of 8/28/15APY assumes that interest remains on deposit until maturity. Withdrawal of interest will reduce earningsEarly withdrawal penalty is six month’s interest on the amount withdrawnFees may reduce earningsOffer is subject to change or end at any time without noticeOffer available on new and existing moneyOffer not valid for business or retirement CDs, brokerage deposits, institutional investors, public funds or in conjunction with other promotional offer
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Angie Ponsell ~ 404-226-2002 Jennifer Pollock Crim ~ 404-408-9172 www.isellsandysprings.com
RESTAURANTS
All things Southern at Revival BY MEGAN VOLPERT
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we ate a complete meal out of the leftovers the next day; we finally finished the last bites on the third day; we only paid about $40 a piece for this much face-stuffing. Everybody around here knows that Chef Gillespie knows what he’s doing. When you go in, the only hipsters are the ones behind the bar making two terrific kinds of punch (go with the Chatham Artillery). Revival is not a place for trying out edgy new concepts. The interior is blue and white with actual Gillespie family photos hanging everywhere. All the food is the very best possible version of exactly what you think it is. My wife ordered a beef and pork meatloaf that was, naturally, wrapped in bacon. I order the fried chicken, which was neither greasy nor overcooked. We both swooned over the fatback-fried silver queen corn, and actually raced for the last bite of hickory-smoked greens. Most of the time, neither of us will even go near the greens! This is all very telling, because even as Gillespie is delivering exactly the Southern menu you desire, he is most considerately tweaking the details to provide a surpris-
rant Re
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Decatur is beginning to suffer from an overabundance of choices. You can get French, Thai, Korean, Greek, Spanish, Italian, Indian, Irish and 17 unusual kinds of ice cream, all within a couple of blocks. It’s delightful; it’s a great way to raise your kids right – unless your kid wants to eat nothing but pickles and mac and cheese. Well, you can still order them some junk off the kids’ menu while you enjoy your higher class food, can’t you? Except your awesome eatery doesn’t really focus on having a great pickle and mac and cheese for the kids. Decatur needs a reminder of the familial food things at the heart of the South – it needs a Revival! Enter Atlanta native Kevin Gillespie with a treasure trove of classic home-style recipes under his arm, courtesy of Grandma Geneva. Naturally, my wife and I ordered the Family Style Dinner. We each got to pick an entree and dessert off the regular menu, and the kitchen took care of the rest – meaning finger sandwiches and pickles, bread service, a salad to share, five gigantic sides of the chef’s choice, and coffee or tea. We ate until we were overfull;
ingly unique plate. Take the cornbread, for example. It’s brown and crispy on the outside, thanks to a light dose of bacon fat. The inside is completely fluffy; no hint of the usual flaking or crumbling you’d expect after an outside with such crunch. They’re shaped like triangles instead of slices or muffins. The butter is sculpted, not simply scooped. This is a bread service that speaks to a thousand, loving little considerations – the time and attention lavished upon you by grandma. Revival is a deeply hospitable place, and more than just the familial food style makes it so: the place owes its soul to Kevin Gillespie’s little sister, Kayla. You don’t have to ask around to figure out which one she is. The Gillespie siblings share twinkling blue eyes, flaming red hair, mischievous grins and serious charm. Kevin works the kitchen magic, and Kayla works her spell over the dining room. She told us some great stories about the stuff on the walls, helped
us decide on desserts, and kept all the servers in good spirits so they remained just as friendly and helpful as she was. Every time she approached a table with a little kid digging happily around in a blue ramekin of perfect mac and cheese, Kayla would talk to the children first and the guardians last. She reminds me of my favorite cousin – the one I most often got to see when we all ended up at grandma’s house for dinner. As much as Decatur certainly appreciates a celebrity chef making dinner in the neighborhood, Revival is truly at its best when it reminds us of our roots and traditions. Couldn’t we all use a little more Sunday dinner in our lives? Revival, 129 Church St., revivaldecatur.com. Megan Volpert lives in Decatur, teaches in Roswell and writes books about popular culture.
Earn Your Turkey
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2nd Annual Golf Tournament Honoring Joel Neuman, Chairman of the Board 2013-15 2015 Golf Tournament Chair, Shai Robkin
Monday, October 26, 2015 The Standard Club 6230 Abbotts Bridge Road Johns Creek, GA 30097
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OCT. 16 – OCT. 29, 2015 | 21
EDUCATION
Developing young men and women of honor, faith, and wisdom with the character and intellect to thrive in college and in life. www.lovett.org
Please join us for an Open House: Sat. Nov. 14 Kindergarten, 1:00 pm
Sun. Nov. 15 Grades 1–5, 1:00 pm Grades 6–8, 3:30 pm
Thu. Jan. 21 Grades 9–12, 6:30 pm
The Lovett School practices a nondiscriminatory admission policy. Financial aid is available. Lovett School (Lov86l) 1st proof Buckhead/Sandy Springs/Brookhaven Reporter 4.94w x 4.08h 4c
CHOOSE
Joy.
Respect and understanding On Oct. 1, Peace by Piece members from The Weber School hosted their counterparts from Marist School and the W. Deen Mohammed High School for an interfaith program to learn about religious, symbolic and cultural aspects of Judaism, including learning to make and braid their own challah. The program brings together sophomores, juniors and seniors from the three schools to help understand each other’s faiths through conversation.
COME VISIT! OPEN HOUSES: Preschool
Mon, October 26
Grades K- 6
Tue, October 27
Grades 7-12
Wed, October 28
An independent Catholic school for students age 6 months-12th grade. www.holyspiritprep.org | 678.761.7992
“Mom’s memory loss has taken a lot, but it hasn’t taken away her amazing cookies” When it comes to your loved one, EVERYTHING matters and it MATTERS to us. Phoenix Senior Living is dedicated to making our facilities a great home for your loved one. Each Phoenix senior Living community offers innovative and personalized services for seniors. • Assisted Living • Memory Care
Stop by for a tour and a complimentary guide on tips for communicating with your aging loved one. THE PHOENIX AT ROSWELL (770) 521-9913 11725 POINTE PL.
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THE PHOENIX AT DUNWOODY (770) 350-2393 4484 N. SHALLOWFORD RD
OCT. 16 – OCT. 29, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
Helping our neighbor
Students and faculty from Holy Innocents’ Episcopal School, front row, from left, Jackson Miller, Brittany Hickman, Beth Harrison, Jasper Pilkenton, back row, Warku Chekol and Associate Head of School Dorothy Sullivan, gathered water on Oct. 6 to ship to areas of South Carolina damaged by flooding.
EDUCATION
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Channeling their inner chefs
Pace Academy sixth-grade students, from left, Matthew Mathias, Henry Smith, Raina Moseley and Leah Favero get hands-on experience with kitchen utensils, part of the school’s study on global food issues.
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Sandy Springs Rotarian Fred Ferrand, left, welcomes four students from China’s Mingde High School during The Rotary Club of Sandy Springs’ Oct. 5 luncheon meeting. The students were visiting from Sandy Springs’ sister city of Taicang, China, and attending North Springs Charter High School for one week.
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Striking a balance Natan Slobodien Rodriguez, a pre-K student at The Epstein School, searches for the center of gravity as he attempts to balance a stick with clay balls on the top of a bottle. Natan’s grandfather, nuclear physicist Michael Slobodien, visited the school to share some of his expertise.
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OCT. 16 – OCT. 29, 2015 | 23
EDUCATION
Discovering Everything Except Their Limits.
Standout Student Student Profile: John Willingham Mount Vernon Presbyterian School, senior
In the right atmosphere, students will take chances and seek out challenges. With the right mentors, students will discover interests and passions they never knew they had.
All-School Open House
Saturday, December 5 at 11:00 a.m.
www.hies.org 404-255-4026
A community of 1,375 students, ages 3-years-old through 12th Grade.
John Willingham has set his bar high. High in the sky, in fact. John started two clubs during his high school career: rocketry club and Bible study club. He participates in a variety of other school activities -- robotics club, business club, community service club -- and is Head Prefect at Mount Vernon Presbyterian. And somewhere along the way, he found time in his schedule to get his pilot’s license. “I’ve always been interested in flying,” he said. Asked what attracted him, he struggled for the words, “You know, the actual…being able to fly off ...and to have that sense of freedom.” John obtained his license to fly when he was 17 years old. He’s a member of the Civil Air Patrol unit based at DeKalb-Peachtree Airport. The nonprofit CAP consists of about 60,000 volunteer youth and adults nationally, and performs services for the federal government as the civilian auxiliary to the U.S. Air Force and for states and local communities, according to
Share in the Spirit Marist School provides an education where the joy of achievement exists within a spirit of humility and generosity. Students are challenged by an extensive college-preparatory curriculum while an array of extracurricular activities inspire exploration and uncover hidden talents. Through it all, students gain a unique strength of character and skill and a joy of serving others that prepares them to be compassionate, confident leaders. Come visit to experience Marist’s spirit yourself. Open House Sunday, December 6, 1-4 p.m. Learn more at marist.com or call (770) 457-7201
AN INDEPENDENT CATHOLIC SCHOOL OF THE MARIST FATHERS AND BROTHERS
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OCT. 16 – OCT. 29, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
the organization’s website. John was promoted recently to 2nd Lt. Deputy Commander and was awarded the Billy Mitchell Award, the highest award given to cadets. Only 2 percent of cadets receive this award, he said. “John is an exceptional young man and is not one to let obstacles stand in his way when it comes to something he wants to achieve,” said his dad, Bill Willingham. “He’s always setting and pushing to complete more difficult goals. Receiving his private pilot’s license was a very special day for him, and it’s one goal his Mom and I enjoyed very much seeing him achieve.” John said that getting his pilot’s license was, like his other passions, worth the work it required. “Having that interest to get up every morning and keep working at it,” he said, “it’s definitely reachable.” John’s dad was his first passenger. “Once John passed his [Federal Aviation Administration] check flight this past summer in Orlando, he asked me if I would be his first passenger. Of course, I said, ‘Yes,’ and we flew to The Villages, Fla., to see his grandparents waving up at us from their house. “This was the first time I had the chance to see him in action, and was impressed in how he communicated with the tower and Flight Watch. He didn’t seem to be nervous at all and even requested and was given clearance to fly over the parks because he wanted to show me all the people standing in line. All in all he handled everything like he’d been flying for years. It was a very special day for both of us.”
What’s Next: John hopes to attend Georgia Tech next year to study aerospace engineering. This article was prepared and written by Ricky Cao, a student at Dunwoody High School. Do you know a standout high school student? Send nominees to editor@reporternewspapers.net.
D
COMMUNITY
Sandy Springs plans experimental pond
Meanwhile, an experimental pond and wetland that will capture and treat stormwater runoff—and double as a new city park—is now under construction on Johnson Ferry Road just north of Sandy Springs Circle in Sandy Springs. Work began last week and should finish by next June. For residents, the 2-acre Marsh Creek Headwaters Bio-Retention facility will include a fountain, benches and educational displays. For the Georgia Environmental Protection Division, which contributed a $388,000 grant to the total $4.6 million cost, it’s a pilot project for the state. Small bio-retention facilities, which use trees and plants to suck up pollutants, are fairly common in medians and parking lots. But, says city stormwater services manager Sharon Izzo, “Doing it on this scale is unusual. Doing it as this scale is kind of visionary.”
Peachtree Dunwoody Internal Medicine & Rheumatology is proud to announce the addition 28 of Dr. Elizabeth D. Butler Exit 28
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875 Johnson Ferry Road NE, Suite 200, Atlanta, GA 30342 PeachtreeDunwoodyIM.com
Sunday Worship North Campus, 86 Mt Vernon Hwy South Campus and Activities Center, 85 Mt Vernon Hwy Sandy Springs, GA 30328 404-255-1181 www.ssumc.org
North Campus 9:45 AM Sunday School for All Ages 11:00 AM Worship
Youth Basketball
Three years after settling a parking dispute that exploded into a freedomof-religion lawsuit, the Church of Scientology of Georgia is finally preparing its new church in Sandy Springs. Heavy interior and exterior work has been underway since the summer on the mansion-like former real estate office at 5395 Roswell Road at the intersection with Glenridge Drive. The Church of Scientology of Georgia, currently based in Doraville, did not respond to questions about an opening date, but a person answering its phone said the church still plans to move in. The church bought the property around 2005, but first sought rezoning DUN
5669
• Lupus o dy
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In Sandy Springs, a request to more In Brookhaven, Children’s Healththan double the $12.6 million early concare of Atlanta plans to build an 8-stostruction budget for the massive City ry ambulatory care center at I-85 and N. Springs downtown redevelopment— Druid Hills Road. Construction would and to delay setting the final budget unbegin next year and continue through til January—confused Sandy Springs 2107. City Council at its Oct. 6 meeting. “It will be one of the only centers of The council put off any big decisions its kind in Georgia and will attract pauntil its Oct. 20 meeting, when a new tients from all around the state,” said budget estimate will be available from Children’s spokeswoman Patty Gregory, Holder Construction. adding that an estimated 300,000 annuThe City Springs project’s schedal patient visits are expected. ule and overall budget—previously an“We have engaged a traffic consulnounced at about $220 tant, and we are working million—are not changto develop plans,” Greging, City Manager John ory said of possible trafOn Our Borders McDonough said. The fic impacts. request came because The 300,000-squareHolder is struggling to esfoot facility would “protimate an updated budget due to plans vide outpatient clinic services for kids that still lack details, city consultant Enwith chronic and complex diseases,” nis Parker said. In turn, the budget may Gregory said. force significant changes to the plan— It would have about 900 employees, including possibly removing a surface though it has not been determined how parking lot proposed along Mount Vermany would be new jobs and how many non Highway. would transfer from other locations.
DUNWOODY
Glenridge Point Parkway
for use as a place of worship in 2009. The church, then based in Dunwoody, proposed a $3 million renovation and said it had about 100 active members.
PEACHTREE
Glenridge Connector
News knows few boundaries. Here are some of the local news stories breaking in neighboring communities that could be of interest to Dunwoody residents.
Call (404) 497-1020 for an appointment.
Ages 4-14 Registration closes Oct 20 Mandatory Evaluations Oct 23 & 25 Practice begins Nov 2 www.ReporterNewspapers.net |
OCT. 16 – OCT. 29, 2015 | 25
PUBLIC SAFETY
Police stay local for better benefits, pay and family feel BY ELLEN ELDRIDGE
elleneldridge@reporternewspapers.net
The Sandy Springs Police Department started with 86 police officers. The Dunwoody opened with 40 and Brookhaven began with 54. The departments have expanded through the years as they have become better established -- Sandy Springs is up to 128 officers; Dunwoody has grown to 52, with openings for two more and a request to hire even more in 2016; and Brookhaven has 70 sworn officers patrolling its streets. In the beginning, the city departments had little trouble attracting new officers. Brookhaven Chief Gary Yandura said he received 1,600 resumes from would-be Brookhaven police. Sandy Springs police recruiter Officer Nick Smith said new police departments typically add a “bit of persuasion” to their salary scale and benefits to bring in the best people. “When you start out a city and you have nobody, you don’t have the manpower or ability to train brand new officers, so you have to incentivize it to the point where your pay and your benefits are going to attract some of these people that are in locked pensions to move over,” Smith said. But officials of the young police agen-
cies say they still have little trouble attracting new officers as they grow, at least in part because they typically offer higher pay, better benefits and more training opportunities than some other, older departments, Smith said. Some officers say these departments also attract and retain officers for other, less tangible reasons. “We know a lot about one another and we’re a big family,” said Sgt. Andrew Fondas, who helps recruit for Dunwoody police. “In a big agency you’re sometimes just a name and a badge number. Here, you’re a real person.” In Sandy Springs, some of the original hires of the police department say they’ve stayed put because they value the high caliber of their co-workers. In some cases, recruits from other cities who started five or six years ago might be making less money because of the recent recession and a lack of raises in their departments, Sandy Springs recruiter Smith said. “They are not upset or disgruntled,” Smith said about officers who leave other city or county departments to work for Sandy Springs. Instead, they see that the SSPD has given cost-of-living raises of between 1 percent and 3 percent for the last six years, so
they decide to make a change, Smith said. “Word of mouth is big for us, for Sandy Springs,” Smith said. “We set a high standard and we don’t lower our standard just to fill a position. We will go without if we don’t have a qualified applicant.” Brookhaven Officer Celeste Rausch left Smyrna police to join the DeKalb city’s department in February. She traded the rank of sergeant, and working as a shift supervisor in charge of nine people, for the rank of police officer because she’d be making more money and working for a better agency. “I like the management here. I feel like they let you do your job,” Rausch said. “The people who are in charge here have all made their names somewhere else...it wasn’t about proving themselves.” Yandura said law enforcement goes through cycles in which there are times it’s more attractive as a career than at other times. “It is more difficult to be a police officer now, with what’s going on in the country, so you have people who are a little leery of getting into law enforcement,” Yandura said. “But you’re always going to have people interested in law enforcement.” Dunwoody, Brookhaven and Sandy Springs police officials say that they aren’t losing their officers to other agencies. In Dunwoody, for instance, Fondas
ELLEN ELDRIDGE
Sandy Springs police recruiter Officer Nick Smith.
said the department has retained most of its workforce and when officers leave, they are either changing fields or moving out of state. Many who left went to work for federal agencies, he said. While leaving the Sandy Springs Police Department isn’t the norm for officers, Smith said some people have come and gone. “One person this year left because he went to work for Waffle House as a manager,” Smith said. “In the long run, he’s going to make a lot more money and I guess that’s what drives him.”
PERIMETER NORTH FAMILY MEDICINE Offering a full range of adult and pediatric services, our board-certified physicians proudly offer the highest quality care to keep you and your family happy and healthy. We accept most insurance plans and offer same-day appointments and extended hours at many of our locations.
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OCT. 16 – OCT. 29, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
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from Upper Cervical care. We believe that you should be able to have a conversation, without making a commitment. That is why we offer a Complimentary Conversation. We listen to you, and then determine if your problem is an Upper Cervical problem. If your problems are being caused Here’s what some of my patients by an Upper Cervical problem, then have to say: there is no one more qualified to “I quit taking pain medication help you. I utilize a highly specialtwo weeks prior to starting care with ized adjusting technique (only 300 Dr. Acosta so that I would know if doctors in the world use this) in my his care was helping. I am now drug office to better serve you. I’m here to free, and the terrible pain I lived with serve you and make a difference in for years is now gone. Chiropractic your life. I’ve been entrusted to take is a way of life for me and I love it.” care of tiny babies to 98 year olds for (Carol C.) over ten years now. My assistant; my wife Ashley is “I had been told that the only great and absolutely full of love. Our way to relieve my back and neck pain was to live on pain medication office is both friendly and warm and because surgery was not an option. we try our best to make you feel at home. I had scoliosis as a child and back We have a wonderful service, surgery at 15. Since Dr. Acosta’s care I have virtually eliminated all offered at an exceptional fee. Our office is called UPPER CERVICAL the medications including aspirin CHIROPRACTIC of GA and is that I used to take to get through located at 310 Hammond Drive the day. My husband, both my NE. Sandy Springs GA 30328. children, and myself have benefitOur Website is www.Getwellga. ed greatly from Dr. Acosta’s care” com. Our phone number is 404(Shelly H.) 796-9010. Call us today for an appointment. We can help you. Being a chiropractor can be tough because there’s a host of soThank You. called experts out there. They tell people a lot of things that are just Dr. René Acosta plain ridiculous about my profesUpper Cervical Structural Chirosion ... usually it’s “My neighbor’s practor for Children & Adults sister’s friend said...” Let me ask you, do you make your healthcare P.S. As part of our Re-Grand decisions based on honest facts or opening receive $50 off a biased opinions? Interesting quesComplete Upper Cervical tion, isn’t it? NOW... Find out for yourself if Structural Examination upon you and your family can benefit completion of a consultation. www.ReporterNewspapers.net |
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City’s violent crime rate rises, despite overall decline BY ELLEN ELDRIDGE
elleneldridge@reporternewspapers.net
Police Chief Billy Grogan recently grabbed attention by saying his department was “woefully understaffed” to handle the recent rise in certain types of crimes in the city. Now candidates for City Council have joined the debate. The Dunwoody Police Department publishes comparative stats monthly at its website. Through July, crime was down 7.9 percent overall, but crimes against persons were up 85 percent, Grogan said. By August the department recorded 63 crimes against persons, Grogan said, representing a 66 percent increase of crimes against people. That percent represents a small number of crimes, though, City Councilman Terry Nall said. Nall said any incident of crime is unacceptable, but the sub-category of crime against persons represents just a sliver of crime in the city. Nall said that because there are few such crimes reported, any yearover-year change in the number of in-
October is National Domestic Violence Awareness Month Please Join Us for Our 5th Annual Community Resource Fair and Symposium on BUILDING BRIDGES, MAKING CONNECTIONS: COORDINATING A COMMUNITY RESPONSE TO DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2015 8:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. (free breakfast to begin at 8:00 a.m.) OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
Manuel Maloof Auditorium
1300 Commerce Drive, Decatur, Georgia RSVP BY OCTOBER 19, 2015 TO: Deputy Chief SVU/Community Outreach SONJA BROWN 404.371.2234 snbrown@dekalbcountyga.gov PLEASE BRING YOUR USED CELL PHONES TO DONATE THROUGH VERIZON’S HOPELINE
Sherry Boston DeKalb County Solicitor General www.dekalbsolicitorgeneral.org 404.371.2201
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MAKING DEKALB SAFER FOR ALL
OCT. 16 – OCT. 29, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
“I don’t need a police report to tell me that in the past four years, my church, my bank, my friends and my neighbors have all been robbed several times.” – BECKY SPRINGER CANDIDATE FOR DUNWOODY CITY COUNCIL
cidents results in a large percentage jump up or down. “Facts show the vast majority of Dunwoody crime is larceny, which includes shoplifting in the Perimeter area,” he said. But Becky Springer, who is challenging Nall for the District 1 seat on the council, said she wasn’t surprised to hear crime was up. “I don’t need a police report to tell me that in the past four years, my church, my bank, my friends and my neighbors have all been robbed several times,” she said. “My neighborhood has cars broken into multiple times a year. So, when the police chief says that we are ‘woefully understaffed,’ my first question is why aren’t we filling these already available positions? Where is the management?” Springer said she blames City Council and the police chief, who spent much of 2014 as acting city manager. “The violent crime rate is up and what has our police chief been doing? He’s been acting as interim City Manager, filming award-winning videos, and writing and publishing his new book,” Springer said. “We need to be proactive, not reactive. The buck stops with the council; they are ultimately responsible for managing city employees.” Crime statistics for eight months year-to-date through August reveal 1,354 incidents of property crime, eight reports of rape and 29 reports of armed robbery. The high percentage increase in rape and armed robbery represents relatively low numbers. Dunwoody has not had a homicide in more than two years. Through August, Dunwoody’s overall crime is down more than 8 percent. “I encourage everyone to evaluate crime claims with real numbers and not misleading percentages based on small numbers,” Nall said. “Dunwoody is a very safe city.” DUN
PUBLIC SAFETY
Dunwoody Police Blotter From police reports dated Sept. 25 through Oct. 8
1100
were made. 4500
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road—On Sept. 26, 27, theft of articles from a vehicle was reported and/or arrests were made.
The following information was pulled from Dunwoody’s Police-to-Citizen Portal Event Search website and is presumed to be accurate.
4700
2500
block of Kings Point Drive—On Sept. 28, burglary was reported.
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road—On Sept. 26, 28, 29, 30, Oct. 1, 4, 5, shoplifting was reported and/or arrests were made.
First
6700
BURGLA RY
block of Perimeter Center East— On Sept. 30, an arrest was made for burglary.
700
block of Potomac Road—On Oct. 1, burglary was reported.
2200
block of Dunwoody Crossing— On Oct. 2, burglary was reported.
was reported. 2200
block of Abercorn Avenue—On Oct. 6, theft of a motor vehicle was reported.
4800
block of Twin Lakes Trail—On Oct. 7, motor vehicle theft was reported.
1300
block of Center Drive—On Oct. 4, burglary was reported.
A U TO THE FT 100
block of Perimeter Center West— On Oct. 3, motor vehicle theft was reported.
4600
block of Peachtree Place Parkway—On Oct. 5, a motor vehicle theft
THE FT/LAR CEN Y 4300
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road—On Sept. 26, 29, shoplifting was reported and/or arrests were made.
4400
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road—On Sept. 26, theft of a bicycle was reported; On Sept. 27, 28, 29, Oct. 3, shoplifting was reported and/or arrests
block of Peachtree-Industrial Boulevard—On Sept. 26, theft of articles from a vehicle was reported.
100
block of Perimeter Center Place— On Sept. 27 and Oct. 5, shoplifting was reported.
300 block of Perimeter Center North—
On Sept. 27, theft of articles from a vehicle was reported.
100
block of Perimeter Center West— On Sept. 27, larceny from a building was reported; On Sept. 30, shoplifting was reported.
6900
block of Peachtree-Industrial Boulevard—On Sept. 28, an arrest was made for shoplifting.
block of Hammond Drive—On Sept. 28, shoplifting was reported and an arrest was made.
4900
block of Winters Chapel Road— On Sept. 30, an arrest was made for begging and soliciting alms by accosting.
1500
block of Summerford Court— On Oct. 2, theft of articles from a vehicle was reported.
4600
block of North Shallowford Road—On Oct. 4, larceny was reported.
200
block of Asbury Commons—On Oct. 4, larceny was reported.
5100
block of Hidden Branches Circle—On Oct. 5, theft of articles from a vehicle was reported.
1400
block of Lake Ridge Lane—On Oct. 6, theft of articles from a vehicle was reported.
A S S A U LT First
block of Perimeter Center East— On Sept. 27, an arrest was made for simple battery of a family member. CONTINUED ON PAGE 30
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PUBLIC SAFETY
Dunwoody Police Blotter CONTINUED FROM PAGE 29 6800
block of Peachtree-Industrial Boulevard—On Sept. 27, aggravated assault and battery with a weapon was reported.
5000
block of Vernon Oaks Drive— On Sept. 29, simple assault was reported.
2300
block of Dunwoody Crossing— On Oct. 2, simple assault was reported.
Ashford-Dunwoody
Road at Perimeter Center West—On Oct. 2, an arrest was made for aggravated assault and battery with a gun.
Road—On Sept. 26, credit fraud was reported and an arrest was made; On Oct. 6, credit fraud was reported. 4600
block of Ridgeview Road—On Sept. 27, credit fraud was reported.
5300
block of Brooke Farm Drive— On Sept. 28, fraud by impersonation was reported.
First
block of Perimeter Center East— On Sept. 28, fraud was reported.
block of Cotillion Drive—On Oct. 3, a sexual assault was reported.
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road—On Sept. 28, fraud was reported; On Oct. 1, an arrest was made for fraud by swindle.
2400
1000
1800
block of Mount Vernon Road— On Oct. 3, family battery was reported.
400
block of Asbury Commons—On Oct. 5, assault by intimidation was reported.
9300
block of Peachford Circle—On Oct. 5, assault by intimidation was reported.
4400
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road—On Oct. 7, assault by intimidation was reported.
F RA U D 4400
block of Ashford-Dunwoody
4300
block of Ashwood Parkway—On Sept. 29, credit fraud was reported.
2300
block of Delverton Road—On Sept. 30, fraud was reported.
2700
block of Amberly Way—On Sept. 30, fraud by impersonation was reported.
4700
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road—On Sept. 30, credit fraud was re-
ported.
6600
100
block of Perimeter Center West— On Oct. 1, fraud was reported.
4400
block of Chamblee-Dunwoody Road—On Oct. 5, credit fraud was reported.
block of Peachtree-Industrial Boulevard—On Sept. 28, two arrests were made for loitering violations.
4300
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road—On Sept. 30, an arrest was made for disorderly conduct; On Oct. 1, an arrest was made for criminal trespass.
2000
block of Mount Vernon Road— On Oct. 6, fraud was reported.
3000
100
I-285 at Chamblee-Dunwoody Road—
block of Ashford Gables Drive— On Oct. 6, fraud was reported.
AR R ES TS First
block of Perimeter Center East— On Sept. 26, an arrest was made for failure to appear; On Sept. 28, an arrest was made for reporting false information; On Oct. 1, a wanted person was located and arrested; On Oct. 7 and 8, arrests were made for prostitution and pimping.
2200
block of Cotillion Drive—On Sept. 27, an arrest was made for driving while license was suspended or revoked.
4600
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road—On Sept. 27, an arrest was made for DUI.
6800
block of Peachtree-Industrial Boulevard—On Sept. 28, an arrest was made for disorderly conduct; On Oct. 2, an arrest was made for driving without a license.
block of Peeler Road—On Sept. 30, an arrest was made for DUI. On Sept. 30, an arrest was made for failure to register a vehicle and driving without a license; On Oct. 4, an arrest was made for possession of marijuana.
4800
block of Tilly Mill Road—On Oct. 1, an arrest was made for driving while unlicensed.
4300
block of Dunwoody Park—On Oct. 1, an arrest was made for disorderly conduct.
4700
block of North Peachtree Road— On Oct. 1, a wanted person was found drinking in public and was arrested.
4400
block of Ashford-Dunwoody Road—On Oct. 2, an arrest was made for possession of marijuana; On Oct. 3, an arrest was made for DUI.
6700
block of Peachtree-Industrial Boulevard—On Oct. 2, a wanted person was located and arrested.
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