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Ready for a soft landing Brady Chan is poised for liftoff at the annual Sarah Smith Elementary School Fall Festival on Oct. 24. The event featured carnival games, activities such as a haunted hall, tattoos and laser tag, and included an International Travelers week table, celebrating the country of Mexico. PHIL MOSIER
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Residents fight Galloway athletics facility in Sandy Springs BY JOE EARLE
joeearle@reporternewspapers.net
The Galloway School’s proposal to build an athletics facility in Sandy Springs is drawing sharp attacks from neighbors who argue it will create runoff problems and bring unwanted traffic. “There is not one single person in this community who wants you here,” Sandy Springs resident Sheila Cornelius told Galloway officials during an Oct. 27 meeting at Sandy Springs City Hall. “We don’t want you here. This is not good for our community. We want you to expand and grow your program, but we want you to go somewhere else.” Many among the more than 60 Sandy Springs and Buckhead residents who crowded into the City Hall meeting room applauded her. Galloway officials want to build a softball field, tennis courts, a concessions stand and SEE RESIDENTS, PAGE 3
Renovated Atlanta History Center opens its new front door BY JOE EARLE
joeearle@reporternewspapers.net
The Atlanta History Center is reopening its front doors. One recent Friday afternoon, construction workers were putting finishing touches on the building’s new 5,300-squarefoot atrium. One worker touched up drywall on the new ceiling. Another worker spray-painted letters to highlight the names of major donors that had been carved into the new limestone walls. Standing near the new front door, Jackson McQuigg, vice president of properties for the history center, pointed out how the new entrance and 30-foot-tall, glass-walled atrium would take future visitors directly to the large hallway leading to the center’s exhibits, and to the gardens and displays beyond. “It’s all coming together,” McQuigg said. “And it’s so exciting.”
After about 14 months of construction, the history center’s new entryway, part of a $21 million renovation of the building, is scheduled to open to the public on Nov. 7. The opening marks roughly the halfway point in a renovation and expansion that officials say is intended to make the history center’s home on West Paces Ferry Road more inviting and less, well, stodgy. “It’s not just the physical changes, it’s the cultural changes and the mindset changes we’ve had at this organization,” said Hillary Hardwick, vice president of marketing communications at the center. “It’s all about the visitor.” The new atrium is roughly twice the size of the old entryway and the design of the new facade – a curve of glass and limestone set on a granite base – is intended to make the building SEE NEW, PAGE 4
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Nancy Ballew highlights names of major donors carved into limestone walls in the Atlanta History Center’s new 5,300-square-foot atrium.
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Historic homes book in the works BY JOHN RUCH
johnruch@reporternewspapers.net
The fine houses of Historic Brookhaven could be coming to a coffee table near you, immortalized in a limited-edition book. ! ! . ! The book project, led by a Historic # , / Brookhaven Neighborhood Association / )*+0(&(0%)-) " / committee, is not just decorative. It’s an &,(- $ /. / . '-'', attempt to raise awareness of the area’s hisOffering a unique collection of home 678-424-1606 toric value as many houses are changed or decor, furnishings, and women’s accessories thefrontporchofvinings.com hand picked from across the US. 2949 Paces Ferry Rd, SE • Atlanta, GA 30339 demolished to make room for bigger, infill mansions. The book’s publication, which is not yet guaranteed, relies on pre-sales from homeowners and history-lovers in general. “Unfortunately, since [the book idea was raised] five years ago, many of those homes are either altered so significantly Register today for this Exclusive they would no longer qualify [as historic] Painting Experience for your child! or have been torn down,â€? said book committee member Lauren Jackson. “Things You will be able to drop your children off for a pre-scheduled are changing. This is a pretty unique session and our “Secret MudMonkey Elvesâ€? will help them with neighborhood.â€? selecting an item for a special loved one, oversee painting, “They’re losing these historic houses,â€? then after ďŹ ring ~ gift wrap for you to pick up! Call today to said Richard Diedrich, an architect and hold your spot for this fall. author of two coffee-table books about clubhouses who has agreed to write the Ages 3-5: 30 Minute Secret Elf Session. Ages 6-up: 1 Hour Secret Elf Historic Brookhaven book. He lives in a Session. $20 per child per session, plus pottery costs. 90-year-old house in the neighborhood. Historic Brookhaven is the neighborPeachtree Battle Shopping Center- 2385 Peachtree Rd. Atlanta, GA 30305 hood around the Capital City Club golf mudmonkeyonpeachtree.com 404-812-1750 course in Brookhaven. It straddles the border of Brookhaven and Atlanta’s Buckhead neighborhood. The book project is focused on a smaller area within the neighborhood—the official Historic District that has been on the National Register of Historic Places since 1986. The neighborhood dates back to a 1910 plan for what was then called the Brookhaven Country Club in an area of summer cottages. A community called Brookhaven Estates was plotted around Traditional Vietnamese classics with the club’s borders, soon followed by two our own modern twist... other subdivisions. Homes dating from the 1910 to 1942 era are now part of the Historic District. The National Register designation offers recognition and eligibility for preservation-related grants and tax credits, but does not protect buildings from demoliProudly serving tion. About 150 historic homes remain in authentic Historic Brookhaven, but at least 50 others have been demolished or heavily alVietnamese pho
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A Historic Brookhaven Neighborhood Association committee is seeking vintage photos for its proposed book.
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tered in recent years, Jackson and fellow book-planner Mike Elliot estimate. The book would feature high-quality photos of the houses’ facades mixed with historic photos. The Capital City Club, already featured in Diedrich’s previous books, would be included, too. Diedrich said the book idea gained momentum over the past year when the neighborhood association formed the special committee and the Historic Brookhaven Foundation created an LLC to publish it. The committee is relying on owners of the historic homes, as well as interested neighbors, to pre-purchase special, signed editions of the books for $250, with other extras available for bigger donations. They’re also seeking loans of historic photos of the houses from anyone. “We don’t want a book that is just a series of facades,� said Diedrich, explaining that vintage photos would show the “richness of the history.� It also allows residents who don’t own a historic home, but may own historic photos, to participate, he said. Jackson is an example of an interested neighbor, as she lives in the Buckhead side of the neighborhood, but not in one of the Historic District homes. The committee aims to publish the book in time for the holiday season in 2016. That means getting financial commitments and a production schedule in place much sooner. “You don’t want them to be dead-of-winter photos,� Jackson said. On Oct. 15, the committee held a private reception for the 150 homeowners. About 40 percent have responded, Jackson said, but more will have to participate to make the project feasible. “In small groups, one-on-one, everyone is really enthusiastic about the book because they’re enthusiastic about the neighborhood and they’re enthusiastic about the history. But that doesn’t mean it will come together,� Diedrich said of the project. “As you’d expect, we haven’t been overwhelmed with riches, but I really believe the committee will find a way to do it.� To see a map of the Historic District and more information on participating in the book project, visit brookhavenlibretto. com. BH
COMMUNITY Garden library raises $2.5 million The Cherokee Garden Library has raised more than $2.5 million for its endowment, reaching a goal set more than a decade ago, when the library merged with the Atlanta History Center. Gifts ranging from $30 to $300,000 from 150 individuals and organizations allowed the library to reach the fundraising goal as it celebrated its 40th anniversary, the history center said. “This type of support truly allows the center, and specifically the Cherokee Garden Library, to serve a broader community, expanding in ways that keep it relevant and engaging to future generations,” Atlanta History Center Vice President Hillary Hardwick said in an email. The library was founded by the Cherokee Garden Club of Atlanta in 1975. It now is one of the special libraries of the Kenan Research Center at the history center. The Cherokee Garden Library contains more than 30,000 books, photographs, postcards, seed catalogs and other gardening-related items.
Peachtree Creek trail could provide paths The first-draft design of the new Peachtree Creek Greenway at Brookhaven park and trail had a big surprise: not just one creekside path, but up to four paths of different types and uses. The creek, largely hidden behind buildings along Buford Highway and I-85, has a surprising “opportunity to create multiple experiences in the corridor,” said lead planner Carlos Perez, JOHN RUCH unveiling the draft design at an Residents examine a map of the Oct. 22 meeting at Brookhaven’s Peachtree Creek Greenway during an Briarwood Park. Oct. 22 meeting at Briarwood Park. The Greenway was conceived as a BeltLine-style linear park with a paved multi-use trail running roughly 3 miles through Brookhaven’s section of the creek. In some sections, the main trail could run parallel to an unpaved “nature trail” and a “creek trail” where hikers would be “actually jumping from rock to rock when the water is low,” Perez said. Regional connectivity is a larger goal of the plan. While the Greenway is getting a start in Brookhaven, the ultimate goal B RI E F S is a park and trail along the entire north fork of the Peachtree Creek, which runs from Mercer University in unincorporated DeKalb County to near the PATH400 trail in Buckhead.
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Residents fight Galloway’s athletics fields on High Point CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
bathrooms on 8.3 acres at the end of High Point Road, just inside the city of Sandy Springs. After discussions with neighbors, the proposal is to go to the city Planning Commission in December. Galloway’s athletics programs have outgrown its Buckhead campus and more fields are needed, school officials said. The school already has some off-campus athletics facilities on Defoors Ferry Road, Athletics Director Josh Burr told the crowd. The proposed Sandy Springs courts and field, Galloway lawyer Sharon Gay told the room, would not include lighting, bleachers or a sound system, and would only be used during daylight hours. Most players would be bused from the school’s campus at Chastain Park, representatives said, but the facility would include a parking lot. “We know High Point Road is narrow, and nobody wants us to park on BH
High Point Road,” she said. But residents argued the facility would draw too much traffic to an area they said now has relatively little. “It’s just a quiet, little residential area,” said Tom Ramseur, who said he’d lived in the neighborhood for more than 20 years. “I think the increased traffic would be bad.” Ramseur also worried that traffic noise from nearby Ga. 400 would be louder after the removal of trees for the athletics fields. Alan Toney wondered whether the project would require widening High Point at some places. “High Point Road, the last 300 yards of it, is basically a driveway for houses,” he said. “Are you going to have to widen it? Can you imagine what you are going to do to those people who live down there on a quiet street and you’re going to bring buses through there?” www.ReporterNewspapers.net |
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and coffee shop.” Jennifer Levison, founder and owner of Souper Jenny, called the move to the 4,017-square-foot location “a perfect fit for the culture of Souper Jenny.” “When the Atlanta History Center first approached me about the idea, I was skeptical,” she said in a press release. “I always had a preconceived notion about what the history center was and who they attracted, and didn’t think our bohemian café was a good fit. It is apparent their enthusiastic focus is to turn these old perceptions upside down.” The center says it also plans to install a bookstore featuring a mix of specialty sections and topics, including Atlanta history, Southern studies, architecture, gardening, children’s books and cookbooks. “We want to do more than just engage visitors with our buildings; we want to find ways to foster opportunities to connect with Atlantans on a daily basis and perhaps surprise them along the way,” center President and CEO Sheffield Hale said in a press release. Perhaps also to convince them to take more of a look around. As McQuigg pointed out features of the new entryway recently, he admitted the old layout often encouraged visitors to pass through quickly to wherever they were headed. The new one is supposed to encourage them to stick around. “We want people to linger,” he said.
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more visible from West Paces Ferry. Inside, McQuigg said, designers want to make it “feel like a true civic building.” “I’m hoping it will become a cultural landmark in years to come,” McQuigg said. The new entryway is part of a parade of changes from new exhibits to a new, 23,000-square-foot building to house the Cyclorama, which is moving from Grant Park. As part of the project, the history center plans to restore “Battle of Atlanta,” the circular painting in the display. The new structure housing the painting will rise 35 feet above the ground and extend 15 feet below ground level, McQuigg said. It will be connected to the center’s current building by a glass-enclosed breezeway containing “The Texas,” a Civil War-vintage train engine. McQuigg said the breezeway would be, in effect, “a giant display case,” and that the engine would be visible to passersby on West Paces. In January, the center plans to open a new temporary exhibit called “Atlanta in 50 Objects.” Then, next April, the center opens a new permanent exhibit on the history of Atlanta. Also in April, Souper Jenny plans to relocate its Buckhead location to the lobby of the history center building. In a press release, the center promised the café “will be a cross between a chic, funky local café
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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
CONTACT US Founder & Publisher Steve Levene stevelevene@reporternewspapers.net Editorial Managing Editor Joe Earle joeearle@reporternewspapers.net 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
Atlanta leads on climate change “We need to start worrying about what kind of world we are going to leave for Keith Richards.” I laughed SALLY when I read this “barBETHEA stool wisdom about GUEST COLUMN climate change” quote on a friend’s Facebook page. But was this just a clever statement about the longevity of one of the world’s most famous, hard-living rockers, or is climate change finally becoming a mainstream concern? Thankfully, the city of Atlanta and other major urban areas worldwide are not waiting to find out; they are leading the way. On Sept. 21, the Atlanta City Council unanimously passed a Climate Action Plan to achieve measurable reductions in greenhouse gas emissions by 2020 from multiple sectors across the city. Mayor Kasim Reed’s Office of Sustainability and its new director, Stephanie Stuckey Benfield, a former state
legislator, environmental attorney and community advocate, are overseeing the program. The decisions that cities make today will influence emissions tomorrow. To emphasize that point, 12 U.S. cities, including Atlanta, have formed a delegation to attend the 2015 United Nations Climate Change Conference in Paris in early December. Known as the Local Climate Leaders Circle, they are calling for a new international agreement to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and for widespread reform of policies and regulations that address climate, economic and energy challenges. Climate change impacts are already being felt at the local level and will only become more challenging. Increased climate variability and extreme events, such as prolonged drought and torrential rains, have economic and health consequences. The epic flooding that hit Atlanta in September 2009 – a “500-year event” in some areas – resulted in 10 deaths, damaged or destroyed nearly 17,000 homes and caused $193 million in economic damage, according to the city. Just two years earlier, an “exceptional drought” in the Southeastern U.S. claimed 200 lives and resulted in significant economic damage in the region, totalling $12 billion. Atlanta’s climate plan targets com-
mercial and residential buildings, energy production, wastewater treatment, transportation, solid waste, urban agriculture and green spaces. Fourteen percent of the 20 percent in emissions reductions to be achieved by 2020 will come from efficiencies in energy and water management. This will be achieved through changes in the operation of city buildings and wastewater treatment facilities, stronger and more effective local ordinances, and greater financial investment in retrofitting and infrastructure improvements. With 100 million square feet of commercial space already committed to the Better Buildings Challenge – thanks to Mayor Reed’s leadership – the city is well on its way to meeting its goals. Who knows? The city may even outlast Keith Richards. For more information about Atlanta’s Climate Action Plan, visit p2catl. com. To learn more about Atlanta’s Better Buildings Challenge, visit betterbuildingssolutioncenter.energy.gov/ partners/atlanta-ga. Sally Bethea is the retired executive director of Chattahoochee Riverkeeper (chattahoochee.org), a nonprofit environmental organization whose mission is to protect and restore the drinking water supply for nearly 4 million people.
Advertising Director of Sales Development Amy Arno amyarno@reporternewspapers.net Senior Account Executives Jeff Kremer Janet Porter Account Executives Susan Lesesne Jim Speakman Office Manager Deborah Davis deborahdavis@reporternewspapers.net Contributors Dyana Bagby, Phil Mosier
Free Home Delivery 65,000 copies of Reporter Newspapers are delivered by carriers to homes in ZIP codes 30305, 30319, 30326, 30327, 30328, 30338, 30342 and 30350 and to more than 500 business/retail locations. For locations, check “Where To Find Us” at www.ReporterNewspapers.net For delivery requests, please email delivery@reporternewspapers.net. © 2015 With all rights reserved Publisher reserves the right to refuse editorial or advertising for any reason. Publisher assumes no responsibility for information contained in advertising. Any opinions expressed in print or online do not necessarily represent the views of Reporter Newspapers or Springs Publishing, LLC.
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On the record Read these articles from our other editions online at ReporterNewspapers.net. “There’s no turning back ... We couldn’t decide we’re not going to build that performing arts center, or make it smaller.” --Sandy Springs City Councilman Gabriel Sterling, explaining the city’s commitment to financing and completing its City Springs city center project, despite last-minute confusion over the budget. “We’ve made positive changes. We’re a government for the people, and as long as [what we discuss] is not harming the citizens of the city, it will be public.” --Brookhaven City Councilman Bates Mattison, discussing the city’s transparency scandals at an Oct. 20 candidate forum sponsored by Reporter Newspapers. “Under no circumstance should the city of Brookhaven learn about economic development and tax abatements given away by the county through the newspaper.” --Wendy Butler, the attorney for the Brookhaven Development Authority, on tax breaks granted to two Brookhaven commercial properties by DeKalb County’s Development Authority without notice to city officials. “Social media actually kind of evens the playing field and makes what we’re doing available to everybody.” --Dunwoody Police Chief Billy Grogan, who wrote a book called “Twitter for Law Enforcement,” on how he uses social media to advance community-policing goals.
OCT. 30 – NOV. 12, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
“This is a celebration of good will. Let’s not let it devolve into a negative source of ill will that all will regret.” --Richard Jones, a Dunwoody Homeowners Association board member, about a controversy with the Dunwoody Preservation Trust over adding a menorah alongside a Christmas tree at the annual Light Up Dunwoody event. The event will remain at the Cheek-Spruill Farmhouse, but the tree and the new menorah will be placed across the street. “What keeps me awake at night is [the idea of ] an incident like a tornado or something where we can’t get people in for treatment.” --Sandy Springs Mayor Rusty Paul, describing concerns about the Pill Hill medical area’s traffic that he raised in a recent meeting with the three local hospitals, who agreed to work collaboratively on the issue. Traffic concerns are also delaying a controversial apartment plan in the area and sparking renewed talk of extending a roadway from the Perimeter Center Parkway bridge.
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Perimeter Business A monthly section focusing on business in the Reporter Newspapers communities
Council cooks up ways to make Sandy Springs a dining destination BY JOHN RUCH
johnruch@reporternewspapers.net
The Savor Sandy Springs Restaurant Week, returning Nov. 2-8 for its second year, is one of many similar promotions boosting the dining business around the Perimeter and the nation. But there’s something special about the group organizing it, the Sandy Springs Restaurant Council, and about how Restaurant Week fits into its much bigger business plan. An initiative of the Sandy Springs/ Perimeter Chamber of Commerce, the Restaurant Council hosts expert speakers at monthly meetings and is organizing quarterly public events with the goal of putting the city on the metro Atlanta fine-dining map. The Restaurant Council model could become influential amid talk of Dunwoody and Sandy Springs possibly collaborating on future Restaurant Weeks, and as the young city of Brookhaven considers creating its own. “Basically, the purpose of the Restau-
rant Council is to make Sandy Springs a fine-dining destination,” said Karen Trylovich, the council’s chair. “People go down Ga. 400 to get to Buckhead and bypass Sandy Springs ... when we have over 500 restaurants in Sandy Springs.” The council made a splash in August with its new football season cookout party that drew hundreds of customers. At a recent council meeting, Jason Sheetz, the owner of the Hammocks Trading Company restaurant, praised the group’s model. “We have massive momentum,” Sheetz said, adding that with its Restaurant Week program, “You can absolutely see the increase in business year-to-year.” Restaurants Weeks are a collaborative promotion where various restaurants offer special menus with fixed prices. They are typically organized by either a private promotional company, as in Buckhead’s five-year-old RestauCONTINUED ON PAGE 10
The Sandy Springs Restaurant Council made a splash in August when it organized a football season cook-out party at the Prado Shopping Center on Roswell Road.
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Rick Tapia created his own brand of bourbon, J.R. Revelry.
JOE EARLE
Small batch bourbons becoming a hot commodity BY JOE EARLE
joeearle@reporternewspapers.net
Rick Tapia admits he got really interMiami for his job. But liquor companies ested in bourbon only fairly recently. He’d buy and sell one another all the time, he been a vodka man. said, and before his transfer was complet“Growing up in the Northwest, you ed, his company was bought by anothgrew up drinking vodka, rum, maybe er company and they found themselves some Jack [Daniels] and Coke,” he said. headed to Georgia, instead. “My wife and “I don’t recall any bourbon. It wasn’t sexy I were a bit surprised,” he said. at the time.” In Georgia, he discovered bourbon. But times change. Bourbon turned “When I moved here was when I learned sexy after all. And Tapia, who about it and started drinking it was born in Peru and grew up on a regular basis,” he said. near New York, now lives in P er imet er When his company was sold Sandy Springs and has created again a couple of years ago, he P r o f ile his own brand of bourbon, the and his family faced another favorite whiskey of the Amercorporate transfer, which would ican South. He hopes it will have required starting over in catch on as part of a new interest in small another town. So he decided to head off batch bourbons. on his own, “to create my own brand,” he He named his whiskey J.R. Revelry. said. The “J.R.” represents his initials; his full He knew what he liked in the bourname is Jesus Ricardo Tapia. The “Revelbons he drank himself, he said, so he “rery” part of the name suggests celebration, verse blended” his own brand to get a he said. And the design on the label of his smooth bourbon that would mix well in bottles – a black bowler – is a nod both to cocktails, he said. good times and his family’s roots in South And small batch bourbons now seem America, where the round-topped hats to be the hot commodity. “Things were still represent high fashion in some areas. changing. The whiskey thing was startTapia is quick to point out that his ing to happen,” he said. At the same time, bourbon is 100 percent American-made. in the world of selling whiskey, “the ecoIt says so right on the label, in Spanish. nomics of creating a brand had complete(“The Spanish on the label was for me, ly changed. Craft brewing had evolved to a personal thing,” he said. “I was saying, craft distilling.” ‘Hey, I’m Latino.’”) His bourbon, which Now Tapia takes bottles of J.R. Revelsells for $30 to $40 a bottle, is distilled in ry to golf tournaments, office parties, hapIndiana and bottled in Nashville, he said. py hour tastings - wherever he can find a Even the stoppers are made in the U.S., group of people willing to try a taste. He he said. figures it’s the best way to go up against the Tapia, who’s 44, comes by his interest big companies he used to work for. “Who in producing spirits through experience. knows? Maybe someday they’ll buy my He actually started out as an accountant company,” he joked. (In college, “I knew I couldn’t do a fluffy His whiskey now is sold in six states, degree,” he said.), but quickly moved to he said. But competition is tough. “There working as a promoter for various nationare new brands everywhere,” he said. “We al and international liquor companies. He say there’s the ‘browning of American polpromoted vodka, tequila, even the occaitics’ and then ‘the browning of Amerisional Scotch. He worked for various comca...’” Maybe the time has come, he said, panies during his 18 years in the business. for tastes to turn to darker drinks. About nine years ago, he and his wife “It fits,” he said. “It’s good for us. It’s planned to move from the Northeast to good for America.”
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Mercedes-Benz CEO discusses move to Perimeter headquarters
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BY JOHN RUCH
rkhurana@primrosesandyspringssouth.com
johnruch@reporternewspapers.net
Mercedes-Benz USA’s relocation to move brings it closer to its future U.S. Sandy Springs is sparking a “transforcustomer base, he said. mation” of the luxury automaker, PresCannon answered questions from ident and CEO Steven Cannon told a crowd of hundreds at the Oct. 20 Sandy Springs/ Perimeter Chamber of Commerce luncheon. Cannon also discussed Mercedes’ forthcoming new office tower and charitable programs. And he voiced his optimistic hope of having a 20-minute commute from his new Buckhead home. “What started as a move from Montvale, N.J., to Atlanta has been a transformaJOHN RUCH tion for the company,” CanMercedes-Benz USA President and CEO non said, describing Mercedes’ Steve Cannon, left, answers a question from move to the Perimeter as a cre- Jim Fitzpatrick, CEO of CBT Automotive ative shake-up. “It’s almost got a Network, at the Oct. 20 Sandy Springs/ start-up feeling to it at our tem- Perimeter Chamber of Commerce luncheon. porary headquarters.” That temporary site is in DunJim Fitzpatrick, CEO of CBT Automowoody, where the company will remain tive Network, a Sandy Springs-based authrough 2017, until the first phase of its tomotive industry news outlet. new headquarters off Abernathy Road CBT provided a comedic video about in Sandy Springs is built. Cannon dethe top 10 reasons for buying a Mercedes scribed the “open-floor, transparent” inhere, including use of an “exclusive Merterior design of the forthcoming towers. cedes HOV lane” and a self-driving car “I said to the architects, ‘Build a that would pilot itself to Sandy Springs’ building around a town hall concept,’” forthcoming City Walk apartments. where employees can quickly and easily Of course, local traffic and commutgather for meetings, he said. “The cubiing nightmares are no joke, and Mercle culture…that’s going away.” cedes is well aware of that part of its Cannon said that local hiring has move. The company is already facing gone better than expected. He said he challenges in Dunwoody. appreciates the welcome and offers of “We’re looking at some flex-time opsupport he has received here. tions” to stagger employee commute In a sign of the political part of that times, Cannon said in an interview afsupport, Cannon was seated at a table ter the luncheon. The new generation of with the mayors of Brookhaven, Dunemployees expect such flexibility in lifewoody and Sandy Springs. style, too, he said. “There’s a great migration going on in “Look, if you don’t offer millennials this country,” Cannon said, with many those kinds of options, you’re not gopeople moving from the North to the ing to hold onto them,” Cannon said. “smile states” of the Southeast, South “You’ve got to change the way you do and Southwest. In that sense, Mercedes’ business.”
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About 15 people attended a recent Sandy Springs Restaurant Council meeting at Seven Hens on Roswell Road.
Restaurant weeks strive to heat up local dining businesses CONTINUED FROM PAGE 7
Welcome
“Beautiful surroundings and a caring staff make Insignia a special place to live.”
We have elevated Senior living to a new level of luxury and style in a distinctive, BOUTIQUE community.
Make us Your New Home Visit our website for an online tour, or call to schedule one in person. www.insigniaofsandysprings.com 404-843-8857
690 Mount Vernon Hwy. NE, Sandy Springs, GA 30328 www.facebook.com/thecarltonalf
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.
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Lovett School (Lov86l) 1st proof Buckhead/Sandy Springs/Brookhaven Reporter 4.94w x 4.08h 4c
rant Week, or by the local Convention and Visitor’s Bureau, as in Dunwoody. The goal is usually a modest one: boosting business during a traditionally slow week. “It’s a unique way for residents and visitors to try restaurants they wouldn’t try otherwise, and to try them at a fixed price point,” said Katie Bishop, executive director of the Dunwoody CVB, which has organized a Restaurant Week in collaboration with the city and the Dunwoody Perimeter Chamber each June since 2011. This year’s Dunwoody Restaurant Week had 17 restaurants offering lunch menus and 24 offering dinner menus. Dunwoody copied the Restaurant Week idea from other places, Bishop said, but the CVB has tried some homegrown efforts, too. One example was the “Wine-ing About Winter” event, running in January of 2013 and 2014, with restaurants offering discounted meals or bottles of wine during a dead-of-winter week. “We just want to affect the bottom line that week,” Bishop said. “We’re just trying to drive business into what is a slower week for restaurants.” She and other Restaurant Week organizers acknowledge that measuring the impact is difficult. “Each restaurant owner has their own way of doing things,” said Trylovich, “so it’s really hard to know what that impact is.” The debut Georgia Restaurant Week, a statewide event in July arranged by the Buckhead-based Georgia Restaurant Association, in collaboration with the state Department of Economic Development, shows how the measurements can be tricky. At first glance, an association report looks pretty good: total sales over $900,000; 500 meals ordered from the special menus; 42 percent of customers showing up to try a new restaurant and 81 percent
“highly likely” to return. But with 96 participating restaurants, that means each location sold less than one Restaurant Week menu meal per day. The sales figure includes all restaurant revenue, not just any above-average bump that week. And only 35 customers responded to the survey. Thirty percent of the restaurants saw a business boost, said association spokeswoman Melanie Charyton. She emphasized it was the statewide Restaurant Week’s first year, adding that “we hope to build on this next year and create more revenue for our restaurants.” The Sandy Springs Restaurant Council is aiming beyond the quick-hit Restaurant Week model to brand the city as a dining hotspot like Buckhead or Midtown. The council formed in late 2013 when Mayor Rusty Paul was serving as the Chamber’s board chair and heard the call for more restaurant promotions. “As far as greater Atlanta is concerned, Sandy Springs is a restaurant desert,” Paul said at a recent City Council meeting about the Restaurant Council effort. About 15 people attended a recent council meeting at Seven Hens, including restaurant owners and representatives from the city, the chamber and the Perimeter Center Improvement Districts. One agenda item was the Restaurant Week’s cross-promotion with an older tradition, the Sandy Springs Society’s Elegant Elf event. (Several restaurants will serve “Elf-tini” cocktails.) “It’s been collaborative amongst us. It’s not a competitive thing,” said Tisha Rosamond of Nothing Bundt Cakes, describing the council as a “partnership as well as friendship.” Barbara Boukater, whose 5 Seasons Brewing hosted the football kickoff event, said the collaboration is “driving home that this is a neighborhood effort. Keep it in Sandy Springs.”
PERIMETER BUSINESS
Businesses mark new beginnings
The Dunwoody Chamber of Commerce helped celebrate the reopening of Adult Day, located at 1 Dunwoody Park South, Suite 123, on Oct. 21. Attendees included Mayor Mike Davis. The facility is an all-day adult health services center.
Employees with Hand & Stone Massage and Facial Spa, located at 5610 Roswell Rd., Suite D-120, in Sandy Springs, celebrated with a ribbon cutting on Oct. 26. Front row, from left, owners Mark de la Vega, Luis Pardillo and David de la Vega.
O pening s
On Oct. 17, Total Nutrition Atlanta marked the opening of their store with a ribbon cutting. From left, Jeff Darwin, Derron Collins, Kenea Yancey, owner Ashley Tolisano, owner Derek Fedo, Shawn Macchia, Pete Macchia and Lucas O’Hara. The company, located in Abernathy Square, 6597 Roswell Rd., #21, in Sandy Springs, sells vitamins and supplements.
We treat fractures. Even on holiday breaks. Our pediatricians are standing by this Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s Day. And with our online scheduling, you can get in line before you leave home. Learn more at choa.org/urgentcare.
©2015 Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, Inc. All rights reserved.
5 NEIGHBORHOOD LOCATIONS IN METRO ATLANTA HOLIDAY HOURS: 9 AM TO 7 PM If you think your child’s illness or injury is life-threatening, call 911. We accept walk-in patients during business hours. Hours may be affected by unanticipated circumstances. Visit choa.org/urgentcare for real-time updates.
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OCT. 30 - NOV. 12, 2015 | 11
out& about
BROOKHAVEN • BUCKHEAD • DUNWOODY • SANDY SPRINGS
SEASONAL ACTIVITIES
Jewelry Show
Elegant Elf Marketplace
Friday, Nov. 6, 10 a.m. - 9 p.m. and Saturday, Nov. 7, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. – The ninth
Saturday, Nov. 7, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m., and Sunday, Nov. 8, 11 a.m. - 5 p.m. – The
annual Atlanta Contemporary Jewelry Show brings together 30 of the country’s finest contemporary jewelry artists and displays of their handcrafted work at the Atlanta History Center. A “meet the artists reception” takes place Friday evening from 6 to 9 p.m., and offers a time to relax and chat with the artists about their work. Admission to the reception is included with ticket price. A portion of proceeds from the show benefits CERF+, the Craft Emergency Relief Fund, a national service organization providing relief and assistance to craft artists who have suffered from natural disasters or other catastrophic events. Tickets are $10 each and include access to the Atlanta History Center. 130 W. Paces Ferry Rd., NW, Buckhead, 30305. To find out more, see atlantacontemporaryjewelryshow.com.
Sandy Springs Society presents this festive, highend gift market showcasing around 80 local and regional artists, gourmet food purveyors and vendors. This year’s session includes an entertainment lineup with informative holiday demonstrations, book signings, theatrical performances, dancers and carolers from area school choirs. Admission is $5 each; free for children 10 and under. Funds support education, the arts, the environment, and heritage in the Sandy Springs community, including the hosting school. Lake Forest Elementary School, 5920 Sandy Springs Circle, Sandy Springs, 30328. Find out more information online at sandyspringssociety.org/elegant-elf.
Pumpkin Smash! Saturday, Nov. 7, 3 - 4 p.m. – After Hallow-
RECYCLE
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een has come and gone, there is finally a fun use for your decaying pumpkins. Families of all ages are welcome to the Dunwoody Library for a pumpkin smash. Drop your old jack-o’-lanterns and pumpkins off by 2:30 p.m. on Nov. 7, and be there at 3 p.m. for your chance to smash a pumpkin and even possibly find a prize inside of one. The remnants will be turned into compost and donated to a local garden. Free and open to the public. Registration not required. 5339 Chamblee-Dunwoody Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. For additional details, go online to dekalblibrary.org or call 770-512-4640.
Holiday Festival Friday, Nov. 13, 5:30 - 8:30 p.m. and Saturday, Nov. 14, 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. – The Dun-
woody United Methodist Church presents their 24th annual Holiday Festival. The festival features handmade arts and crafts by more than 120 talented artisans, an online silent auction, attic treasures, casseroles-to-go, children’s activities, a gourmet shop, photos with Santa and more. All proceeds from the event will be used to build two homes for Atlanta Habitat for Humanity next year. Friday night’s hours are a preview night for shopping, with no children’s activities. On Saturday, the day begins with a pancake breakfast at 7:30 a.m. All other activities start at 9 a.m. Free to attend and open to all. Need more information? Go to dunwoodyumc.org.
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Fall Bazaar Saturday, Nov. 14, 10 a.m. - 3 p.m. – Celebrate the season with this fall festival at St. Martin in the Fields Church in Brookhaven. The event features a kid’s carnival, silent auction, penny social, bake shop, artisan crafts, Christmas shop and a raffle. Tickets are $1 each and you do not need to be present to win. Tickets may be purchased the day of the event or in the church office, Monday to Friday 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. 3110 AshfordDunwoody Rd., NE, Brookhaven, 30319. Go to stmartins.org to learn more.
out & about
Lunch Buffet
Mon-Thurs $9.99
Grand Lunch Buffet
FOR KIDS & FAMILIES
Fri-Sun $12.99
Family Movie Night
Daffodil Project
Tuesday, Nov. 3, 5:30 - 7:30 p.m. – Fam-
Sunday, Nov. 15, 3 p.m. – The Daffodil Proj-
ilies are invited to the Brookhaven Library for a screening of the film “Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day. ” Movie is rated PG. Open to the first 25 participants. Light snacks provided. 1242 N. Druid Hills Rd., Brookhaven, 30319. More details? Go to dekalblibrary.org or call 404-848-7140.
Farmers Market Saturday, Nov. 7, 9 a.m. - 12 p.m. – Come out and enjoy the fall weather for this rain or shine farmers market. Stock up on fresh produce, meats, eggs, artisan oils, freshly baked breads and pastries, prepared foods, coffee and sweet treats. This weekly event takes place every Saturday through Dec. 12. Free and open to the public. University Baptist Church, 1375 Fernwood Cir., NE, Brookhaven, 30319. More information can be found at facebook.com/brookhavenmarket or brookhavenfarmersmarket.com.
Free Park Day Wednesday, Nov. 11 – In honor of Veterans Day, the National Park Service offers a free park day at select locations across the nation. One such participating park is the Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area, and visitors are invited to enjoy the grounds and property with no entrance fees. More information can be found at nps.gov/ findapark/feefreeparks. Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area, 1978 Island Ford Pkwy., Sandy Springs, 30350.
Happy Tails
ect aspires to build a worldwide living memorial in remembrance of the children who perished in the Holocaust, and support children who continue to suffer in humanitarian crises today. The public is invited to participate in the planting of daffodil bulbs at the Hammond Drive Park entrance. The shape and color of the daffodils represent the yellow stars that Jews were forced to wear during the Holocaust, and yellow is the color of remembrance. The Daffodil Project is a service project of Am Yisrael Chai!, a nonprofit Holocaust education and awareness organization. For more information, visit www.daffodilproject.net or contact Mike Weinroth at mikeweinroth@ aol.com. Free and open to the public. 705 Hammond Dr., NE, Sandy Springs, 30328.
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Let it Snow ANNOUNCING THE
Footprints Road Race Saturday, Nov. 14, 8 a.m. – The Sandy Springs
Education Force presents the second annual Footprints for the Future 5K and Family Fun Run, a certified Peachtree Qualifier. The event also includes a pre-race warm-up at 7 a.m. led by fitness professionals, live entertainment, vendor booths and a 1K family Fun Run starting at 8 a.m. T-shirts and swag bags given to all race participants. Lake Forest Elementary, 5920 Sandy Springs Cir., NE, Sandy Springs, 30328. Additional details and registration information can be found online at sandyspringseducationforce.org/roadrace.
Reed & Barton Baby’s First Stocking #84645 $119
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Children aged 5 and up are invited to work on skills by reading to trained and registered therapy dogs. Sedona, a golden retriever, and Dugan, a border collie mix, are great listeners, and will be on hand. Sign up for 15-minute sessions by emailing amy.alexander@fultoncountyga.gov. Registration required, but free to participate. Buckhead Branch Library, 269 Buckhead Ave., NE, Buckhead, 30305. Questions? Go to afpls.org or call 404-814-3500.
Wallace Grande Baroque Cross 20th Edition #84635 $109
3164 Peachtree Road, Atlanta GA 30305 404.261.4009 • 800.270.4009 • www.beverlybremer.com
LEARN SOMETHING
Estate Planning Sunday Nov. 8, 10:15 a.m. - 12 p.m. – Con-
Saturday, Nov. 14, 11 a.m. - 12 p.m. –
Gorham Snowflake 46 th Edition #84624 $109
Lunt Star 21st Edition #84638 $95
Celebrating 40 YEARS
Sat, Nov 7 • 8:00 PM
gregation Or Hadash presents a special discussion, “Estate Planning for the Heart: The Importance of Sharing our End of Life Wishes” to explore how to share your wishes for end-of-life care with loved ones and physicians. Rabbis Analia Bortz and Mario Karpuj lead the program, with four local physicians who will share their experiences and perspectives. Free and open to the community. Registration requested by calling 404-250-3338 or emailing dlee@or-hadash.org by November 5. Congregation Or Hadash, 7460 Trowbridge Rd., Sandy Springs, 30328. Go to or-hadash.org to find out more.
Paco Peña: FlaMeNcura The Soul of Flamenco
“Extraordinary…The rich rhythms of flamenco music... are conjured with an apparent effortlessness that makes an audience relax: we are in the hands of an artist.” – Telegraph (UK) SEPT. 15 – DEC. 7, 2015
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Co-chair of 24th annual Jewish book festival sees it as ‘our gift to the community’ BY JOE EARLE
joeearle@reporternewspapers.net
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Earn Your Turkey
November 26 - Turner Field A Thanksgiving tradition for the entire family with the Half Marathon, 5K, One Mile & 50m Dash!
Register at atlantatrackclub.org 14
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OCT. 30 - NOV. 12, 2015 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
Susan Tourial could barely contain The festival’s appeal also is based on her enthusiasm. the authors it chooses to present and “I’m ready to go already. How much how it presents them, Tourial said. More longer?” she asked one recent afternoon than 200 volunteers are involved in 14 as she sat at the kitchen table of her Sandifferent committees that put on the fesdy Springs home. “I’m ready to start. tival, according to the MJCCA. Get this party started, already!” From 75 to 100 volunteers are inShe wouldn’t have to volved in the author sewait much longer. The lection process, Tourial party she eagerly awaitsaid. Some read books ed is the Marcus Jewand rate them. Some ish Community Center take part in one annuof Atlanta’s 24th annual event, held in New al book festival. It starts York, that functions as Nov. 5 and continues sort of “speed dating” through Nov. 22. between writers and Tourial’s enthusiasm book festival officials is understandable. This from across the counyear, she co-chairs the try, she said. Other auevent. She’s been inthors are chosen after volved with the festival their publicists contact for five or six years and festival officials to prostarted working on this mote their work, she year’s edition last Janusaid. ary. Is it worth all the Besides, she thorwork? “I think it’s an JOE EARLE oughly enjoys this animportant thing to Susan Tourial, co-chair nual showcase of Jewish do,” Tourial said. I think of the Marcus Jewish writing that has grown it’s an important culturfrom presenting just Community Center’s 24th al festival for the whole annual book festival. three authors in its first community. Atlanta’s a year to hosting more big community. I grew than 40 this year, inup in a Jewish Atlanta cluding such recognizable names as Ted where there were maybe five synagogues. Koppel, Alan and Arlene Alda, Mitch Look how many there are now.” Albom and Dr. Ruth Westheimer. “We Besides, she said, “I love to read. feel like this is our gift to the communiWhen I started going to the book festity, to have the caliber of some of these val, I realized how much I enjoyed hearauthors,” Tourial said. ing an author talk about their process.” Besides, she said, “it’s so much fun. So, after months of putting the fesIt’s probably the most fun volunteer tival together, Tourial is eager to get thing I have ever done.” things started. Through the years, the festival also “I really and truly enjoy it,” she said has been fun for the writers, too, she enthusiastically. “It’s fun.” said. More than 13,000 book fans are expected to attend the festival’s events this year. And they buy books, Tourial Marcus Jewish said. “Over 24 years, Atlanta has built up a really good reputation for the numCommunity Center’s ber of people in our audience, the way we treat authors and the fact we sell 24th annual book books,” Tourial said. festival Author Joey Reiman of Buckhead, who will discuss his book, “Thumbs Authors as varied as Mitch Albom, Up! Five Steps to Create the Life of Your Arlene and Alan Alda, Judy Blume, Dreams” on Nov. 22, calls the Marcus Alan Dershowitz, Jonathan and Faye Center festival “one of the most imporKellerman, Ted Koppel and Dr. Ruth tant festivals that has ever been creatWestheimer talk about their books. ed.” Part of its appeal comes from its atWhen: Nov. 5-22 tachment to the Marcus Center, which was named for Home Depot co-founder Where: 5342 Tilly Mill Road, DunBernie Marcus, Reiman said. “In Jewish woody nomenclature, there is something called Cost: varies by event a mensch,” he said. “A mensch is a genuine human being in the moral and ethiFor more: 678-812-4005 or atlantacal arena. When I see Bernie is involved jcc.org/bookfestival with an organization, the word mensch comes up.”
cremation and burial services
out & about
Local model railroads highlighted by tour BY JOHN RUCH
johnruch@reporternewspapers.net
There’s a train that runs past a drive-in theater showing “Gone with the Wind,” over Savannah’s famous River Street, alongside an Atlanta Steel plant, and into the Georgia mountains. It’s called the My Way Railroad, and it makes the entire trip in a basement on Nesbit Ferry Road. Mike and Lee Dunn’s enormous model train layout was one of several Sandy Springs stops on Oct. 25 on an open-house tour called the Piedmont Pilgrimage. Hundreds of model railroad fans
who’s writing a book about her husband’s ancestor. She pointed out some of the layout’s small details that were often charming or humorous, such as “Wicked Wanda’s,” a miniature railroad brothel. Small details and family roots were themes in all the local layouts. At Joe Nichols Jr.’s Ridgemont Drive home, father Joe Sr. helped him run a recreation of 1917-era Colorado gold-hauling train. Joe Jr. and Joe Sr. share a name, a profession—they’re both surgeons—and the family hobby. They’re both NMRA-certified “Master Model Railroaders,” only the third father-son pair to have the status, Joe Sr. said. The elder Nichols will open his home on the Nov. 7 Piedmont Pilgrimage date, and his son will return the favor by helping to run it. “He’s got one of the biggest layouts in town,” around 1,000 square feet, said Joe Jr. The space, cost and SPECIAL time needed to build Mike and Lee Dunn’s model train layout is one a layout mean that most hobbyists get into it later of several Sandy Springs stops on an openin life, Joe Jr. said. house tour called the Piedmont Pilgrimage. “The biggest limitamade the trip, and will visit more layouts tion is cost,” he said. “The second limitain Dunwoody and Sandy Springs as the tion is getting permission from your wife.” open houses continue through November. That’s Lynn Nichols, who confirmed some “It gets bigger every year,” said Dave complex negotiations underway about Bennett of Woodstock’s Train Installasome extra basement square-footage. tions, who built the layouts for the Dunns Many of Joe Jr.’s Colorado mountains and many other model-railroaders. were still unfinished Styrofoam carvings, In fact, Sandy Springs is an epicenand he isn’t picky about the complexiter of the old-school hobby. The regional ties of switches and signals on the miniaPiedmont Division of the National Modture railroad. “I don’t care if they derail,” el Railroad Association meets monthhe said, explaining that he enjoys building ly at Holy Innocents’ Episcopal School, the train models more than running them. sometimes drawing 100 members. BenFor Robert Young, who runs a minianett stays busy working with many memture Pennsylvania Railroad in his Hunters bers, making home visits in a locomotiveTrace Circle basement, the appeal is crestyle van outfitted with a cowcatcher and ating trackside scenes—people fishing, a smokestack. He also maintains the train fire trucks leaving a station and hundreds layout running in the Children’s Healthmore events packed into the landscape. care hospital on Pill Hill, an item donated “It’s vignettes,” said Young. “You pick by one of his customers. an area and it tells a little story. That’s the Building a model train layout can take part I enjoy, is detailing it.” years and cost $1,500 to $15,000—or way Young has worked on his layout since more, for layouts such as the My Way line, 2006. His love for the hobby was passed said Bennett. The Dunns’ layout fills a on by his father, who built a layout about 30-by-25-foot room with 500 feet of track 50 years ago. Some components of that and realistic murals providing a 360-delayout are in Young’s setup today. gree background. The Piedmont Pilgrimage “I guess it’s in the genes,” said Mike Dunn. He got hooked on model trains model train tour as a kid in Los Angeles, then became an entrepreneur and a fan of trap-shooting. When: weekends through Nov. 22, Years later, after coming South, he learned with stops in Dunwoody and Sanhis great-great-grandfather was a trapdy Springs on Nov. 7 and Nov. 15 shooter and president of the Central of Cost: Free Georgia Railway. For more: piedmontpilgrimage.com. “I’m the historian,” said Lee Dunn,
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OCT. 30 - NOV. 12, 2015 | 15
FAITH
Diwali celebrated as Hindu festival of lights BY ELLEN ELDRIDGE
elleneldridge@reporternewspapers.net
Nearly every fall, Viju Rao and his color.” family throw a huge party. Although the Raos don’t attend the They invite crowds of guests to their local temple or consider themselves relihome — “everybody that we meet on the gious Hindus, “we are cultural Hindus,” street in Dunwoody, plus Viju Rao said, and happy to all of [daughter] Devika’s celebrate the holiday. friends,” Rao said. “Most “The cultural part is of them have started asking, very peaceful, very secular,” ‘When’s Diwali this year?’” Devika Rao added. This year, Diwali, the Viju Rao said a HinHindu festival of lights, will du guides himself with two be celebrated Nov. 11. Piybooks, one of which is the ush Behre, a volunteer with “Ramayana,” an 8,000the Hindu Temple of Dunword epic poem written in woody, said the holiday is Sanskrit about the story of mostly celebrated in homes. Lord Rama. “These stories Diwali commemoare not religious,” Rao said. rates “the day Rama comes “They’re just mythology.” SPECIAL back to his kingdom after Sunitha GandavaAshby Fox and 14 years—that’s why all the di teaches Sanskrit to chilDevika Rao lights,” Viju Rao said. “The dren at the Hindu Temple kingdom lights up and evof Dunwoody. She, too, says erybody celebrates the return of the culture and spirituality outweigh reliking.” gious dogma. “We just say we are HinIn Dunwoody, Hindu families hang dus because of the festivals we celebrate,” on to their cultural heritage by celebratGandavadi said. ing the stories and the traditions. DeviShe added she and her friends “are not ka Rao described the celebration as “fire religious in a way that would look down sparklers, food, friends, family and lots of on another religion.” “We don’t,” Gandavadi said. “Even back in India, we went to Catholic schools.” When people understand the messages in myths, such as tales about Lord Rama, Rao said, the stories teach about morality. “The fact is it’s a very intelligent, smart way to teach a commoner,” Rao said. “If you spend a little time thinking about it, and reading about Indian spirituality, you start to understand why they told these stories.” He says his family is celebrating the new year when he invites people for Diwali, which mirrors Christmas because people exchange gifts and sweets. Accountants get their books blessed “so they can cheat for the rest of the year,” Rao joked. Last year, the Hindu Temple of Dunwoody opened at 2029 Pernoshal Court. The owners of Indian Bazaar grocery store converted a warehouse they own into the temple space, Gandavadi said. CALL NOW Gandavadi said the local temple brings families together, with dancing and celeDunwoody/Sandy Springs brating festivals. “We do pot luck festi678-500-8185 vals,” she said. Gandavadi and Sunitha Umashankar Decatur/ N. Druid Hills moved to Dunwoody in the late 1990s. They said they are thankful for the tem404-963-9904 ple, which introduces children to their Indian culture and their community. Lake Oconee/Greensboro “Everybody who comes here is part of 706-438-4227 Dunwoody,” Umashankar said. The temple offers yoga, Hindi lanLake Sinclair/Milledgeville guage and religious classes, she said. 478-607-7576 The women of the temple teach children how to pray and about moral valwww.HearAtlanta.com ues, Gandavadi said. “It’s not really about religion,” she said. “We teach them the good stuff.”
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COMMUNITY
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The computer name game: ‘Always write,’ yet somehow still always wrong I finally decided to follow my son’s ThroughTumblr account, seeing as he’s currently out this exerROBIN JEAN on the other side of the globe and at one cise, however, MARIE CONTE point interviewed the opposition leadthe Tumblr er in some sort of uprising in Macedosite offered ROBIN’S NEST nia. His activities have piqued my inme a collecterest enough for me to make the effort tion of new and unsullied usernames, to logon and sign up. such as “SecretPhilosopherBouquet,” His activities have piqued my interand “AtomicBluebirdFart,” which were est enough for me to make the effort to admittedly tempting, but didn’t quite logon and sign up.. feel right. So, no. And what an effort it was! UsuStill on the flower theme, I tried “honally it’s my password that doesn’t pass eysucklerose,” but that was also taken. I muster, which is why I now have apcould be “bat-honeysucklerose,” which proximately 43 variations on my origdoesn’t even make sense, or “honeysuckinal (six-letter/one-digit) password-oflerose-stuff,” which is equally inane. choice, each with a slight deviation of No, and no. Tumblr, meanwhile, ofcapitals, digits and letters, and therefore fered me “TenaciousFuryStudent,” and all now completely im“UnadulteratedNinpossible to recall. But jamoon,” but neither again, this time I was of those really define able to slip by easily me, so, no. with my newly updatI was getting testy ed, backup eight-letnow. Our ample bowlter/one-digit passwordful of Halloween candy of-choice (which I will prompted me to go allstill probably forget). out with “99%chocThis time, it was the olate,” a name which username that got me. not only describes my Of course “robdiet, but also my fain” wouldn’t work— vorite Lindt chocoI didn’t even attempt late bar. I came awfulthat. But I had created ly close with that one, a handy new username, but was informed that “alwayswrite,” that I “Tumblrname can only SPECIAL have used before on contain letters, numRobin’s latest computer other sites and considbers and dashes,” alered somewhat clever username contains chocolate. though I could choose in a punny sort of way, “omg99chocolateand which I can actually remember. blog,” which again, for reasons menSo I keyed it in, but that one was tioned, I would never do. taken. I could chose “I-alwayswriteOn the suggestion of one of my blog,” which completely loses the pun, twins, I typed in “99chocolate” and was or “awesomealwayswritelove,” which finally admitted to an entirely new page, is an awful username. So, no. I could but then demurred, because I was not also choose “youralwayswrite,” which I ready to abandon the qualifying “%.” would never, ever do, because your in So I backtracked, and of course, this case should actually be the contrachad to start all over again. But I was retion you’re, and I would rather melt my warded with a new offering: “Teenagekeyboard into a useless metal blob than DoughnutEarthquake,” which my own choose a username that so defiles one of teenage son thought fit me perfectly, the most basic grammar rules. and which convinced me that checkI could, of course, revise the name to ing out username suggestions on Tumread “youralwayswritemother,” but that blr could become a habit. also blows the pun right out the winCommitted to my username decidow. So, no. sion, I typed in “99percentchocolate,” The feeble flicker of username crewhich did indeed and at last work. ativity that I possess had already been But now I was forced to reveal my age expunged upon the name “alwayswrite,” (because Tumblr did not accept “old so I looked around for inspiration. My enough” and because I cannot tell a geraniums are still in bloom in the blue lie, not even to Tumblr). I then assured pot on my back deck, so I typed in, “geTumblr that I am not a robot, and that ranium.” was all it needed to know in order to I was stunned to be informed that present me with a veritable landslide of “someone has already claimed your Tumblr accounts prime for the followusername,” even when it was so coming. pletely random, and I was offered the It doesn’t understand. I’m only here names “geranium-things,” “a-geranito follow my son. um,” (both of which are stupid, I’m sure Robin Conte is a writer and mother of you agree), and “omg-geranium,” which four who lives in Dunwoody. She can be is not only stupid, but juvenile. So, no. contacted at robinjm@earthlink.net.
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EDUCATION
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made 1,950 lunches for hungry children. This school year, John is serving as president of ONE Apostolate. The sandWhile many Atlanta-area high school wich ministry is not as active during the students spent the summer lying out school year, so the organization focuses by the pool, Holy Spirit Preon volunteering at soup kitchparatory School junior John ens and sewing sleeping bags Arnold was feeding hungry for the homeless. children. Last summer, John When not engaging in coordinated a communitycommunity service, John is wide lunch-making effort in a competitive archer. He still partnership with Action Minfinds time to excel academicalistries that made 300 lunchly, too, and counts Latin, AP es per week for disadvantaged Calculus and AP U.S. History children in College Park and among his favorite classes. East Point. “John is very bright and “I was so enthralled with very driven,” said Jill Stedman, this ministry because it struck John’s AP U.S. History teachme that there were children in John Arnold er and ONE Apostolate advithis nation, a nation with so sor. “He is one of the best critmuch global affluence and respect, who ical thinkers I have taught during my relied so heavily on the public school career. John will be able to accomplish systems and private donations for someanything he sets his mind to. He has a thing as simple as a peanut butter and strong work ethic, and he has a personjelly sandwich,” John said. ality that inspires his peers to be excited During his sophomore year, John and engaged in their work.” spent every Sunday and Tuesday night “John’s maturity, respect for others with his family making lunches for Acand love of ideas is inspiring,” added tion Ministries, but he was not satisfied John’s homeroom teacher, Archie Deen. with this level of commitment. Upon re“John’s ability to relate to all sections of alizing that many children go hungry in our school community, and his respectthe summer when they are unable to reful and engaging connection with his ceive free or reduced-cost lunches from teachers speaks to the wonderful young school, John organized a weekly sandman he has become.” wich-making mission in the main hall of Holy Spirit Catholic Church. What’s Next: “I was the person going through the John is looking at University of Georprocess of coordinating dates for sandgia, Vanderbilt, Wake Forest, Harvard wich making, figuring out how many and Yale. He hopes to take what he has people could show up, actually making learned through the sandwich ministry the lunches, as well as delivering all the to college to operate a “feed the hungry” lunches to the sites,” said John. service group. He plans on a career in The sandwich-making ministry soon law. became a part of ONE Apostolate, Holy Spirit Prep’s community service organiThis article was reported and written zation that serves the homeless. By the by Catherine Benedict, a senior at The end of the summer, the initiative had Westminster Schools.
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PUBLIC SAFETY
Video network receives funding BY COLLIN KELLEY The city of Atlanta announced $2.1 lic safety plan on Oct. 13. “We will demillion has been raised to fund a sigploy new policing strategies in District nificant expansion of its state-of-the-art 8 with a network of high-tech public video surveillance network, the Loudsafety security cameras and license plate ermilk Video Integration Center, inreaders. cluding $450,000 in city funding. “District 8 will be the first council City officials say the expansion will district to develop a district-wide masenhance public safety in District 8 in ter plan,” Adrean said. In addition to Buckhead and surrounding neighborthe funding, Adrean has committed hoods. $300,000 from her district budget on This announcement comes after this community safety initiative. Mayor Kasim Reed pledged to take In 2011, the Atlanta Police Departadditional measures to address crime ment opened the Loudermilk Video throughout the city. Those efforts inIntegration Center. The VIC is an exclude establishing a Repeat Offender tension of traditional police work and Unit to monitor repeat offenders after allows officers to monitor images from their arrests, launching special police thousands of cameras throughout the details that will control possible DUI city. activity after hours, and expanding the “The Video Integration Center is an video integration center to track more essential tool that increases the departthan 5,700 security cameras in private ment’s ability to monitor and secure and public sector facilities. city streets,” said Atlanta Police Chief “With the help of community partGeorge Turner. “The VIC is an excelners, we are making another significant lent example of how public and private investment in cutting-edge technology partnerships can benefit the communithat will assist our officers in preventing ty, and today’s generous donation is key and reducing violent crime,” said Reed. to identifying and capturing criminals “The safety of our residents and visitors in order to keep Atlanta safe.” is a top priority for my administration, and I am committed to providing every resource our police department needs to ensure that we keep criminals off our streets.” “I am pleased that the city is partnering with the Atlanta Police Foundation, our neighborhood civic associations, businesses and other stakeholders in an effort to make our community safer,” SPECIAL said District 8 City CouncilThe Atlanta Police Department’s Video woman Yolanda Adrean, who met with citizens along with Integration Center uses strategically placed surveillance cameras to deter crime and city leaders to unveil the pubcapture incidents as they happen.
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OCT. 30 – NOV. 12, 2015 | 19
Thank you Atlanta
PUBLIC SAFETY
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Buckhead Police Blotter From police reports dated Oct. 4-17 The following information was provided to the Buckhead Reporter by the Zone 2 precinct of the Atlanta Police Department from its records and is presumed to be accurate.
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a handgun approached a woman from behind as she walked on Huff Road. He took her gold MCM leather purse containing $451 and ran toward Marietta Boulevard.
1800
block of Howell Mill Road—A man entered a drugstore and asked about a product. When the employee located the product and proceeded to ring him up, the man placed a note on the counter demanding all the money. The employee told him she didn’t have any money, to which he responded, “Yes you do, I have a gun, don’t make me kill you. Open the register now.” The employee gave the suspect $166 from one register. He then demanded she open the other register. When she said she could not, he came behind the counter and attempted to place handcuffs on her. After he placed one handcuff on her, the employee saw a passerby and started screaming. When
the passerby saw what was happening, he yelled for help, startling the suspect. 1500
block of Northside Drive— A man with a possible Glock handgun came up to another man, who was unloading items from his vehicle. “Do you want to die,” the man with the gun asked, and then he said, “You know what you did.” The man at his car ran back into the store. A second suspect assisted the first suspect in removing a MacBook Pro laptop, two iPads, hard drives and a 12-inch Beringer speaker from the man’s vehicle. The two suspects got into a black Hyundai Sonata driven by a third man.
700
block of Berkley Avenue—Four males with covered faces and armed with handguns pulled up in a late model blue CONTINUED ON PAGE 22
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Buckhead Police Blotter CONTINUED FROM PAGE 20
or grey Chevy Cavalier as a group of people were standing outside a music studio smoking. The group gave the suspects their wallets, cellphones and car keys. 3200
Lenox Road—A man exiting a bus at the Lenox MARTA station was approached by two men, one of whom asked, “What’s up?” The man replied to the strangers and kept walking. When he turned around, he saw them running toward him with pistols in hand. They demanded his property and he gave them $30. They then demanded his cellphone. When he stood still, a gunman struck him in the face with a pistol and took his cellphone. The gunmen were last seen running back toward the Lenox MARTA station.
2400
block of Noble Creek Drive--A white vehicle approached a woman unloading items from her car outside an apartment. A man with a silver gun told her not to move and he took her laptop, cellphone and purse from the trunk.
3100
block of Piedmont Road—Four men armed with handguns and wearing hoodies drove in a silver Honda or Hyundai sedan up to a group of pedestrians as they were walking. The men in the car pointed their guns at the walkers and demanded their belongings. The walkers gave the men their wallets and cellphones.
100
block of E. Andrews Drive— Two men wearing skull caps entered a parking lot in a blue Honda and backed into a parking space. They got out armed with handguns and demanded property from a group of pedestrians. The group gave the men
their cellphones and wallets. 2000
block of Peachtree Road—A man at an apartment grabbed a woman’s arms and pushed her around the room. He then grabbed her cellphone and purse and ran. A security officer at the complex chased the man down the street, but was unable to catch him.
AGGRAVATED AS S AULT 3100
block of Peachtree Road—Police officers arrived at a bar and saw a man lying on the ground, surrounded by several patrons. They could only say the man was involved in a fight with several other men and was knocked unconscious. There was a visible laceration to his forehead and he said he was intoxicated.
2400
block of Piedmont Road—A man heard a tapping noise on his vehicle while he was driving. When he confronted three men standing nearby, they said, “No, and if we did, what are you going to do?” When the driver said he would call the police, one of the men pulled a replica firearm (BB gun) and pointed it at him. An arrest has been made.
600
block of Bellemeade Avenue—A verbal argument turned physical when a man choked and pushed a woman, causing her to twist her ankle. A witness recorded the man saying he would kill her. He was arrested.
RESIDEN TI AL BUR GLARY 1900
block of Main Street—A 50-inch Samsung TV and a HP computer were taken from a house.
1100
block of Collier Road—Police responded to an alarm call and discovered the front door lock damaged with a hole drilled into the lock. No items were taken. Still photos captured two men.
1000
block of Peachtree Park Drive— An ASUS laptop with a teal and orange case, a MacBook Pro laptop and an Adderall prescription were taken from an apartment; Another apartment in the same complex reported stolen two MacBook Pro laptops and a PlayStation.
4200 block of West Club Lane—A saw,
air hose, compressors, nails and trim guns were taken from a house.
900
block of East Paces Ferry Road— A J. Crew wallet, credit cards, iPad, MacBook, two Lenovo laptops and a Lenovo work bag were taken from an apartment.
2500
block of Forrest Avenue— A TV was pulled off the wall; it later was discovered on the ground near a locked gate.
800
block of Morris Street—Several pieces of copper piping were taken from a house.
2100
block of Peachtree Road—A Rolex watch and $3,000 in cash were reported missing.
1300
block of Peachtree Park Drive— A backpack was emptied and a MacBook
Air laptop in a yellow case was taken from an apartment. 3800
block of Stratford Park Drive— A vehicle parked in the driveway was entered and a remote used to gain access. A set of Titleist golf clubs and the remote were missing.
4100
block of Haverhill Drive—Several pieces of expensive jewelry, a Mac Air laptop, two iPads, a Samsung flat screen TV and clothing were taken from an apartment.
400
block of Armour Drive—A PlayStation 4, $3,500 in cash, two MacBook Pro laptops, a smart balance wheel, a yellow Movado watch and a black Techno marine watch were taken from an apartment.
C O MME R C I A L B U R G L A RY 3200
block of Piedmont Road—A vehicle rammed a clothing boutique and items were taken.
4300
block of Roswell Road—A fast food worker entered a restaurant and noticed the alarm was not on. Police found no signs of forced entry. The safe had been cut open and $6,300 in currency was taken. Interior cameras had been disabled.
3200 block of Peachtree Park Drive—A
60-inch Sony TV and two MacBook Pro laptops were taken.
300
block of Armour Drive—A front door was smashed with a rock and a side door was pried off its hinges. An Apple desktop monitor and an Apple laptop were taken.
Reporter Classifieds HELP WANTED Administrative Assistant – Part time, 1:00 – 5:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, Dunwoody CPA Firm. Previous office experience helpful. Strong computer skills a plus. Pleasant phone manner. Good communication skills, both written and oral. Nonsmoking office. Fax resume to Human Resources, 770-551-5868. Computer/IT - Consulting Manager (70% travel), Implementation Consultant (20-30% travel), Senior Software Engineer, Software Engineers and Software Engineer IIs, Atlanta, GA. Apply: www.air-watch.com Vernon Woods Animal Hospital – Kennel Assistants needed for our three locations in Sandy Springs and Brookhaven. Experience preferred, some weekends included. If you are interested in long term employment, please contact: Dr. Jay Empel, Dr. Andrew Empel or Cindy Martin. Call 404-252-1641, Fax 404-2527401 or Email: vernonwoodsah@gmail.com.
Computer/IT - Software Engineers and Principal Software Engineers, Alpharetta, GA. Apply: www.deposco.com Administrative Assistant - Well-established family law firm in the Sandy Springs area is currently seeking an administrative assistant to greet clients, answer phones and provide administrative support to our team. An ideal candidate will have experience within a family law firm. However, more importantly, the applicant should have a positive attitude and a willingness to learn. Basic knowledge of Microsoft Office Suites is a necessity. Candidate must be reliable and on-time each day. Office hours are 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM. Salary will be commensurate to experience/skills. This is an immediate opening. Please send your resume to crobinson@mgefamilylaw. com (LinkedIn Profile Address must be provided within your resume).
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WINDOWS & SIDING Offering vinyl, wood and composite windows – All types of siding. Factorytrained installation. Family-owned, Familypriced. Angie’s List ‘A’ Rated. BBB ‘A+’. 33 Years In Business. Quinn Windows & Siding. 770-939-5634.
SERVICES AVAILABLE Driveways & Walkways – Replaced or repaired. Masonry, grading, foundations repaired, waterproofing and retaining walls. Call Joe Sullivan 770-616-0576.
CEMETERY PLOTS Arlington Memorial Park Sandy Springs – Two spaces in the Garden of Roses (Section D - Lot 42B). Side by Side, $2000 single or $3500 both. Call Karen Brock, 256-2440203 or email: kjbrock1991@aol.com. Arlington Memorial Park – 2 Prime lots in Lakeside. Asking $17,000. Call 912-6950094.
CLEANING SERVICES
Detail Cleaning Services – Houses, apartments, offices and more. Affordable prices excellent references. I will beat any advertised price. Call 770-837-5711.
FOR SALE Fall Sale! - Arborvitae, Leyland Cypress, for beautiful privacy borders, FREE delivery & planting start @ $59 each. 404-839-4736 or visit southeastevergreens.com
Annual Fall Accumulation Sale Christmas décor, furniture, clothes, jewelry, luggage, glassware, books, treasures & more! Thursday, Nov. 19 9am-4pm Friday, Nov. 20 9am-2:30pm (Half Price Day)
CANTERBURY COURT
3750 Peachtree Road, NE • 404-261-6611
ONSITE PARKING AVAILABLE
BH
Personal & Professional Services Directory 7875-A Roswell Rd Sandy Springs, 30350
House Cleaners
404-917-2200, ext 110 Affordable. Display. Frequency.
404-889-0482
Home Services Directory Appliance Repair ALL WORK GUARANTEED
Call Kevin 24/7 770.885.9210
• All Major Appliances & Brands FREE Service • Stoves, Ovens, Dishwashers • Refrigerators, Disposals Call with • Washers, Dryers Repair or $25 Service • 30 Years Experience Charge Servicing All of Metro Atlanta
North Georgia Lawn Care
To Advertise, call 404-917-2200 ext 110
Trash, Junk Hauled For Less
35 – $150
$
per load
Oriental Rug Cleaning
We will pick up appliances, furniture, tree limbs, construction debris, basement and foreclosure clean-outs.
Call James
cell (404) 784-5142 home (770) 455-6237
Antique Repair Specialist • Speciality Care Hand Wash Cleaning (front and back with plenty of water) • No Chemicals Used Air Dried, Scotch Guard • Mothproof, Padding, Storage Appraisal & Insurance Statements • Pickup and Delivery Available
15% O With
FF
This A d
In the heart of Buckhead
404-467-8242 • 3255-5 Peachtree Road NE, Atlanta GA 30305
poern ou c stom u 0 c $ 5 e per
Bennett Painting & Remodeling, LLC. Commercial/Industrial/Residential
On
Honest Affordable Dependable Free estimates
Hair Stylists
Insurance Agents
Tuesday-Sunday
770-401-7945
Pet Sitters
Life Coaches
Next to Johnny’s Pizza
www.mygoodrascal.com
Lawyers
Positive, Gentle Methods
Health Instructors
Barbers
GINA
Private Training In Your Home
Place your SERVICES ad here! Accountants
Certified Dog Trainer
Now cutting hair at Tangles!
Caregivers
Good Rascal Dog Training
• Most Air-Cooled Models In Stock and Ready To Install • Most Air-Cooled Models In • Automatic Standby Generators Stock Ready To Install • Most Air-Cooled Models In • Automatic Standby Generators Stock Air-Cooled Ready To Install • Most Models In (770) 251-9765 • Automatic Standby Generators
(770) 251-9765
Call Tony 404-402-5435
Stock Ready To Install www.generatorstore.com www.generatorstore.com • Automatic Standby Generators (770) 251-9765
EST 1975
Wallcovering, Special Coatings, Pressure Washing Ronnie Bennett 404-432-0385 bennettpaint56@att.net
www.generatorstore.com
Skilled Handymen at Your Service (770) 251-9765
www.generatorstore.com ELF Home Improvement
• Roofing • Gutters • Painting
& Repair
Pre-screened Providers. Pre-negotiated Rates.
HVAC, Plumbing, Carpet Cleaning, Pest Control, Moving Services & More
YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD ROOFING COMPANY
470-222-4369 housedox.com
justTRASHit!
™
Commercial & Residential Junk Removal Recycling 770-399-6605 www.justtrashit.com Licensed Insured
Free Estimates
Locally Owned Since 1997
• Kitchens • Decks • Bathroom • Fences • Windows • Doors • Electrical • Plumbing • Various Repairs
404-875-2299 www.imbrexroofing.com
Call for an Estimate! Ed Fulcher • 678-630-4543 Mark McCoy • 404-542-2495
Belco Electric
Fall & Holiday
• Family Owned since 1972 • Fast, Dependable Service by Professional, Uniformed Electricians
Atlanta’s Premier
• Window Cleaning • Gutter Cleaning • Pressure Washing • Family Owned • Licensed and Insured • FREE ESTIMATES
since 1968
Your home. Our help. 770-455-4556
Check out our new website www.BelcoInc.com and follow us on
404.355.1901
www.WindowCleanAtl.com
Windows • Siding • and More! • Free Estimates • BBB A+ • Family Run • References Available 35 years experience
770-939-5634
www.quinnwindows.com
The Handyman Can • Plumbing • Electrical • Sheetrock • Floors • Tile • Framing • Kitchens • Painting • Roofwork • Concrete • Stained Glass • Antique Door Restoration as well as many other issues...
John Salvesen • 404-453-3438 thehandymancanatlanta@gmail.com
Get help around the house by calling one of our Home Services and Services Available advertisers. Tell them you saw their ad in Reporter Newspapers! BH
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OCT. 30 – NOV. 12, 2015 | 23
T N A I G Y A T S ! A T N A L AT
® . S E S S E M H G ON TOU E K A T O T ® ENGTH R T S * E Y H T T N U U O O Y B E . V S I V G S S EL SHEET ® APER TOW ® AS MORE P Y H N W BRAWNY A R B , D AN
HELP US BREAK A WORLD RECORD THIS NOVEMBER!
GO TO FACEBOOK.COM/BRAWNY FOR MORE DETAILS ©2015 Georgia-Pacific Consumer Products LP. All rights reserved. Brawny, The Brawny Man image, Flextech emboss, Strength to Take On Tough Messes and Georgia-Pacific logo are trademarks owned by or licensed to Georgia-Pacific Consumer Products LP. *vs. comparable paper towel roll and sheet size Bounty is a trademark of Procter & Gamble
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T STAY GIAN
™
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