09-20-2013 Buckhead Reporter

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Buckhead Reporter www.ReporterNewspapers.net Scan here to get Reporter Newspapers in your inbox or sign up @ ReporterNewspapers.net Inside Uphold, honor Leases violate U.S. Constitution, says resident COMMUNITY 2 Left out Residents want more input on development projects COMMUNITY 3 Sharpshooters Local ‘Annie Oakleys’ enjoy blasting targets AROUND TOWN 11 No more chads Official promises a smooth Nov. 5 election COMMENTARY 10 sept. 20 — oct. 3, 2013 • vol. 7 — NO. 19 Dog days of summer PHIL MOSIER Frances Mosley, 12, and “Amos,” enjoy the water at the Garden Hills Pool during the 28th annual Peachtree Hills Animal Hospital Dog Swim on Sept. 15. Members and non-members had a chance to splash with their four-legged friends during the final swim of the 2013 season. More photos on page 8. BY DAN WHISENHUNT [email protected] Parents of North Atlanta High students are angry, confused and – above all – sus- picious of the latest drama surrounding the leadership at the school. Principal Howard Taylor was leaving, but was enticed to stay when Atlanta Pub- lic Schools officials offered him a promotion to oversee the entire North Atlanta Clus- ter. But the Board of Education on Sept. 17 wouldn’t vote to approve that promotion. at last development came just before a hastily arranged community meeting on Sept. 17 at Garden Hills Elementary. As- sociate Superintendent Steve Smith, Board of Education Chairman Reuben McDaniel, District 4 Board of Education member Nan- cy Meister and Seat 7 Board of Education member Courtney English were there to an- swer questions, or at least try. One parent summed up the general senti- ment of the NAHS community. “What in the hell has happened here?” she asked. “at’s the million-dollar question,” Smith said. Taylor was not at the Garden Hills meet- ing. Neither was Superintendent Erroll Da- vis. Smith’s explanation, in a nutshell: Taylor butted heads with central office staff at APS. He couldn’t hire the teachers he wanted and found the bureaucracy too burdensome. “What Dr. Taylor has in a general sense outlined to us was the inability to sometimes choose his own personnel, meaning what teachers would actually work in his facility,” Smith said. “e other thing he would out- line … is even when he did have the oppor- SEE NORTH ATLANTA, PAGE 5 North Atlanta leadership troubles continue More stories Buckhead ‘address of choice’ for apartments COMMUNITY 6-7 1 4 6 19 2 13 & 18 15 20 16 5 7 & 12 8 3 9 17 21 11 10 & 14 FALL EDUCATION GUIDE pages 13-28

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Transcript of 09-20-2013 Buckhead Reporter

Page 1: 09-20-2013 Buckhead Reporter

BuckheadReporter

www.ReporterNewspapers.net

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InsideUphold, honor

Leases violate U.S. Constitution, says resident

commUNity 2

Left outResidents want more input on development projects

commUNity 3

SharpshootersLocal ‘Annie Oakleys’ enjoy blasting targets

aRoUNd towN 11

No more chadsOfficial promises a

smooth Nov. 5 election

commeNtaRy 10

sept. 20 — oct. 3, 2013 • vol. 7 — NO. 19

Dog days of summer

phiL mOSieR

Frances mosley, 12, and “amos,” enjoy the water at the Garden Hills Pool during the 28th annual Peachtree Hills animal Hospital dog Swim on Sept. 15. members and non-members had a chance to splash

with their four-legged friends during the final swim of the 2013 season. More photos on page 8.

By Dan [email protected]

Parents of North Atlanta High students are angry, confused and – above all – sus-picious of the latest drama surrounding the leadership at the school.

Principal Howard Taylor was leaving, but was enticed to stay when Atlanta Pub-lic Schools officials offered him a promotion to oversee the entire North Atlanta Clus-ter. But the Board of Education on Sept. 17 wouldn’t vote to approve that promotion.

That last development came just before a hastily arranged community meeting on

Sept. 17 at Garden Hills Elementary. As-sociate Superintendent Steve Smith, Board of Education Chairman Reuben McDaniel, District 4 Board of Education member Nan-cy Meister and Seat 7 Board of Education member Courtney English were there to an-swer questions, or at least try.

One parent summed up the general senti-ment of the NAHS community.

“What in the hell has happened here?” she asked.

“That’s the million-dollar question,”

Smith said. Taylor was not at the Garden Hills meet-

ing. Neither was Superintendent Erroll Da-vis.

Smith’s explanation, in a nutshell: Taylor butted heads with central office staff at APS. He couldn’t hire the teachers he wanted and found the bureaucracy too burdensome.

“What Dr. Taylor has in a general sense outlined to us was the inability to sometimes choose his own personnel, meaning what teachers would actually work in his facility,” Smith said. “The other thing he would out-line … is even when he did have the oppor-

See NoRtH atLaNta, PaGe 5

North atlanta leadership troubles continue

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FaLL eDucatIon GuIDe pages 13-28

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2 | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

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atlanta Boe approves agreements after Sutton controversy

By Dan [email protected]

Atlanta’s Board of Education on Sept. 9 approved a lease over the objections of Chastain Park residents.

The BOE also approved more than a dozen use permits for facilities owned by the school system.

The Chastain Park Civic Associa-tion on Aug. 26 voted against the use of the former Sutton Middle School fields by Peachtree Road United Methodist Church, saying the church’s athletics pro-gram will add to their traffic problems.

The agreements would allow private groups to rent school-owned buildings and athletic fields, but some of the agree-ments already had been in effect before being approved on Sept. 9, according to Atlanta Public Schools records.

The lease has become a brewing con-troversy for Buckhead residents living around the community’s busiest park.

One Chastain resident, local attorney Mark Murray, told the BOE on Sept. 9 that approving a lease for Peachtree Road United Methodist Church was against school system policies. Murray said his inquiry into Peachtree Road United Methodist Church’s leasing of fields at the former Sutton Middle School also raised questions about use permits for the other schools.

“I guess in looking into this, it prompted them to figure out whether they were in compliance with policy or not,” Murray said.

APS did not explain why the board had not approved the permits until Sept. 9.

PRUMC has been renting fields at E. Rivers Elementary, but was forced to re-locate with the elementary school to the former Sutton campus. Sutton is now at the former North Atlanta High, and E. Rivers is at the old Sutton campus while the E. Rivers campus is rebuilt.

PRUMC officials have said the church is a long-time partner with At-lanta Public Schools, specifically with E. Rivers Elementary, and that the lease has

been helpful to both parties.In addition to approving a lease for

the former Sutton Middle School fields, the board also approved use permits for 13 other schools owned by APS. The meeting summary posted on the Talk UP APS blog shows that the permits were in effect before they were approved by the board. A permit for Peachtree Presbyterian Church to use Garden Hills Elementary fields has been in ef-fect since December 2012, according to APS records.

The BOE agenda said the school board needed to approve the permits to comply with a school system policy called “Policy KG.”

“Policy KG states that all requests for use of school facilities for a period lon-ger than one week shall be referred to the Board of Education for approval,” reads a summary of the action on the school board agenda. “Included is a list of permits that are being submitted for ratification and/or approval consistent with the Policy KG.”

Board member Cecily Harsch-Kin-nane asked for clarification on the permits, according to the TalkUP APS summary.

“This list will only include those that have not come to us for board approval?” she asked Superintendent Erroll Davis.

“I’m not sure, but if you haven’t ap-proved them they probably are on here,” Davis said.

In addition to violating APS policy, Murray also said the lease violates the Georgia Constitution and the United States because a church will be using the property.

“What we are requesting of this board is nothing more than what we can ex-pect as the individuals who elected you. We simply ask that you honor your oath to us and to uphold and observe the pol-icies of APS and the constitutions and laws of the United States and the state of Georgia,” Murray said at the Sept. 9 meeting.

BH

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Buckhead residents unhappy with GRta’s Gateway review

By MeLIssa WeInMan [email protected]

Buckhead residents are unhappy that a state review process for major devel-opments doesn’t include input from lo-cal residents.

At a Sept. 12 meeting of the Buck-head Council of Neighhorhoods, Lau-ra Beall spoke about her work with the Georgia Regional Transportation Au-thority, including a recent review of San-dy Springs’ “Gateway” project, a mixed-use development near Chastain Park designed to include 630 apartments, of-fices and retail space.

Due to the size of the development, GRTA recommended realigning the in-tersection of Windsor Parkway and Ro-swell Road, which is expected to cost $3.7 million. Sandy Springs plans to fund the road project through a com-bination of impact fees, money moved from other projects and potentially some bond financing.

But Buckhead residents and politi-cians have complained that the develop-ment, which is planned at the border of Sandy Springs and the city of Atlanta, will dump more traffic onto Buckhead roads.

Atlanta City Councilwoman Yolanda Adrean, who represents Buckhead, asked Beall about regional developments, such as Gateway, that affect two communi-ties. Because the project isn’t being built in Atlanta, the city doesn’t get any im-pact fees from developers.

“We get the bar bill, but we don’t get a drink,” Adrean said.

Beall suggested the best course of ac-tion would be for the two cities to work out an intergovernmental agreement for road improvements.

Beall explained that state law requires GRTA, established in 1999, to review all developments of regional impact, or DRIs.

The agency’s review process is all about the expenditure of state and feder-

al transportation funds, she said. GRTA does not judge the merits of the propos-als; that’s up to local governments to de-cide, she said.

“When GRTA is reviewing DRIs, we are not reviewing to approve as a land use,” she said. “I’m sure a lot of your concerns are because of the land use and intensity of what’s proposed.”

Beall said when she reviews projects, she aims to assess and mitigate the im-pacts of a proposed development, reduce congestion levels and maximize trans-portation investments.

“We’re trying to protect that public investment,” Beall said.

Jim King, president of the coun-cil, said neighbors worry that the proj-ect will increase traffic on West Wieu-ca Road, which is already congested. He said because of youth sports at Chastain Park and evening concerts at the Chas-tain Amphitheater, the area doesn’t have typical traffic patterns.

He said residents should be included early in GRTA’s review process.

“The policy flaw… seems to be that developers hire their own consultants,” King said. “The folks closest to an area or problem know it best.”

“I try not to do anything without weighing in with GDOT district offices, the Atlanta Regional Commission, and local governments,” Beall said.

But Adrean said communicating only through an employee of the city isn’t ef-fective.

“What we need is a mechanism to notify our local elected officials,” Adre-an said.

She said elected officials and resi-dents know the nuances of the streets in an area that engineering studies often don’t reveal.

“What you’re trained to do doesn’t always work in an old city with narrow roads,” Adrean said.

SpeCiAL

the drawing shows revised plans for the development at the intersection of windsor Parkway and Roswell Road near chastain Park. these plans were created when the proposal

was 700 units, not the 630 approved by Sandy Springs.

BH

Page 4: 09-20-2013 Buckhead Reporter

4 | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

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Page 5: 09-20-2013 Buckhead Reporter

C o m m u n i t y

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North atlanta leadershipwoes frustrate parents

tunity to have input on who would be in his building, [he was frustrated with] the processing time it took to actually get that person in the facility.”

When he resigned, APS officials of-fered him the job of executive direc-tor of the North Region. APS demoted Tony Burks to principal mentor in order to give Taylor the promotion. Both jobs are now vacant.

North Atlanta Parents met with Da-vis and administrators throughout the weekend, and thought Taylor’s pro-motion was a done deal when APS an-nounced it on Sept. 16.

Smith said Davis and other admin-istrators didn’t realize they needed the Board of Education’s approval to make the promotion.

“The superintendent has the ability to make direct appointments at the ex-ecutive director level or above,” Smith said. “The superintendent operated un-der the understanding that he had the ability to do that … However, techni-cally what we later learned … Dr. Taylor moving from the role of a principal to an executive director’s job would be a pro-motion. Thus, if it is a promotion, the superintendent has the ability to make the appointment, but the Board of Ed-ucation has to then approve that recom-mendation.”

Now the position is vacant, but Tay-lor can apply for it, Smith said. As things stood on Sept. 18, the day of the Buckhead Reporter’s publication dead-line, Taylor is principal until his resigna-tion in December. With Nov. 5 school board elections just around the corner, there could be new developments before his resignation takes effect.

Parents suspect much of the chang-es at North Atlanta are politically mo-

tivated. Last year, APS officials removed Principal Mark MyGrant, who already was going to retire, but had agreed to stay on as interim. APS officials also re-assigned MyGrant’s leadership team, re-moving officials who were familiar with students and the school’s routine.

Soon after the removal, APS officials confirmed they were looking into allega-tions of “institutional racism” at North Atlanta. Smith and Meister said the re-sults of that investigation are not a fac-tor in Taylor’s decision to resign. Parents asked if there are teachers who will be dismissed or reassigned due to that in-vestigation.

APS officials didn’t answer that ques-tion directly, but Meister did provide an update on where the investigation stands.

“The investigation was done with our internal team; it has been completed … whatever is in that investigation, I don’t know what it is, has been sent to person-nel, they are looking at that, then it will go to legal, then it will go to the super-intendent,” Meister said.

Meister told the parents at Garden Hills that during the Sept. 17 special called BOE meeting, she moved to ap-prove Taylor’s promotion but no one of-fered a second so the motion died. Mc-Daniel said he did not offer a second because he felt the board would not sup-port it and he didn’t want to see the pro-motion rejected outright. English had a similar explanation, saying he didn’t want to close the door on any potential opportunities.

Both men said they would’ve voted to approve the promotion, however.

For the latest developments and to see video from the Sept. 17 meeting at Garden Hills, visit Reporternewspa-pers.net.

coNtiNUed FRom PaGe 1

BH

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By Dan [email protected]

Buckhead residents worrying about apartment traffic have new numbers to contemplate, courtesy of the Buckhead Coalition.

There are currently 6,737 planned units, accord-ing to coalition figures. That represents 21 different projects, including high-rises, which will bring ad-ditional residents into Buckhead, a 28-square-mile community taking in more than 40 distinct neigh-borhoods.

For neighborhood residents, the added homes mean additional traffic and students in local schools. The North Buckhead Civic Association has been vo-

cal about the need to plan for the traffic apartments may create.

The coalition, however, considers the number of apartments to be the highest compliment. Presi-dent and former Atlanta Mayor Sam Massell said the number of apartments shows Buckhead is “the ad-dress of choice” in metro Atlanta.

It’s also not the final tally, Massell said. “The exact total publicly announced is 6,737,”

Massell said. “However, you will note another com-plex has been reported, developed by AMLI at Rox-boro and East Paces Ferry. It is not in our total be-cause the number of units hasn’t been announced. It’s quite an impressive story, isn’t it?”

The coalition says estimates of the AMLI project

show it could add another 900 units to the overall number.

The largest announced project is a 702-unit devel-opment at Piedmont and Lenox Roads under devel-opment by Croker Partners. The largest project cur-rently under construction is Camden Paces on East Andrews, a 376-unit complex being developed by Camden Property Trust.

Massell has been quick to note that announced isn’t the same thing as finished. Several of these proj-ects may not pan out.

The coalition reports that as of Jan. 1, 2012, Buckhead had 12,704 mid- to high-rise apartments. Between 2000 and 2010, Buckhead’s population in-creased by 12,000 people, the coalition says.

apartment developers planning to add thousands of units

BH

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www.ReporterNewspapers.net | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | 7

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Page 8: 09-20-2013 Buckhead Reporter

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* Manufacturer’s mail-in rebate offer valid for qualifying purchases made 9/14/13 – 12/17/13 from participating dealers in the U.S. only. A qualifying purchase is defined as a purchase of any of the product models set forth above in the quantities set forth above. Offer excludes Nantucket™ Window Shadings, a collection of Silhouette® Window Shadings. If you purchase less than the specified quantity, you will not be entitled to a rebate. Rebate offers may not be combined; for each qualifying purchase, the higher applicable rebate amount will apply. Rebates will be issued in the form of a prepaid reward card. Funds do not expire. Subject to applicable law, a $2.00 monthly fee will be assessed against card balance 7 months after card issuance and each month thereafter. Additional limitations apply. Ask participating dealer for details and rebate form. © 2013 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas.

4 Duette® Architella® Honeycomb Shades(plus $25 rebate each additional unit)

2 Pirouette® Window Shadings or 2 Silhouette® Window Shadings or 2 Vignette® Modern Roman Shades(plus $50 rebate each additional unit)

1 Luminette® Privacy Sheer or Modern Drapery or 1 Skyline® Gliding Window Panelsor 1 Vignette® Traversed™ with Vertiglide™ Shade(plus $100 rebate each additional unit)

$100 rebate* with any of the following purchases:

Vignette® Modern Roman Shades

37203

Follow Us At Facebook or Twitter

Georgia Blinds & Interiors220 Sandy Springs Cir Ste 129 Atlanta GAM-F: 10am-5:30pm Sat. 11am-3pm 404-252-6991www.gablinds.com

The Art of Window DressingTM

ideas booklet

with this ad

SEPTEMBER 14 – DECEMBER 17, 2013

cheers. It’s time to decorate your windows for the holidays.

* Manufacturer’s mail-in rebate offer valid for qualifying purchases made 9/14/13 – 12/17/13 from participating dealers in the U.S. only. A qualifying purchase is defined as a purchase of any of the product models set forth above in the quantities set forth above. Offer excludes Nantucket™ Window Shadings, a collection of Silhouette® Window Shadings. If you purchase less than the specified quantity, you will not be entitled to a rebate. Rebate offers may not be combined; for each qualifying purchase, the higher applicable rebate amount will apply. Rebates will be issued in the form of a prepaid reward card. Funds do not expire. Subject to applicable law, a $2.00 monthly fee will be assessed against card balance 7 months after card issuance and each month thereafter. Additional limitations apply. Ask participating dealer for details and rebate form. © 2013 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas.

4 Duette® Architella® Honeycomb Shades(plus $25 rebate each additional unit)

2 Pirouette® Window Shadings or 2 Silhouette® Window Shadings or 2 Vignette® Modern Roman Shades(plus $50 rebate each additional unit)

1 Luminette® Privacy Sheer or Modern Drapery or 1 Skyline® Gliding Window Panelsor 1 Vignette® Traversed™ with Vertiglide™ Shade(plus $100 rebate each additional unit)

$100 rebate* with any of the following purchases:

Vignette® Modern Roman Shades

37203

Follow Us At Facebook or Twitter

Georgia Blinds & Interiors220 Sandy Springs Cir Ste 129 Atlanta GAM-F: 10am-5:30pm Sat. 11am-3pm 404-252-6991www.gablinds.com

The Art of Window DressingTM

ideas booklet

with this ad

SEPTEMBER 14 – DECEMBER 17, 2013

cheers. It’s time to decorate your windows for the holidays.

* Manufacturer’s mail-in rebate offer valid for qualifying purchases made 9/14/13 – 12/17/13 from participating dealers in the U.S. only. A qualifying purchase is defined as a purchase of any of the product models set forth above in the quantities set forth above. Offer excludes Nantucket™ Window Shadings, a collection of Silhouette® Window Shadings. If you purchase less than the specified quantity, you will not be entitled to a rebate. Rebate offers may not be combined; for each qualifying purchase, the higher applicable rebate amount will apply. Rebates will be issued in the form of a prepaid reward card. Funds do not expire. Subject to applicable law, a $2.00 monthly fee will be assessed against card balance 7 months after card issuance and each month thereafter. Additional limitations apply. Ask participating dealer for details and rebate form. © 2013 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas.

4 Duette® Architella® Honeycomb Shades(plus $25 rebate each additional unit)

2 Pirouette® Window Shadings or 2 Silhouette® Window Shadings or 2 Vignette® Modern Roman Shades(plus $50 rebate each additional unit)

1 Luminette® Privacy Sheer or Modern Drapery or 1 Skyline® Gliding Window Panelsor 1 Vignette® Traversed™ with Vertiglide™ Shade(plus $100 rebate each additional unit)

$100 rebate* with any of the following purchases:

Vignette® Modern Roman Shades

37203

Follow Us At Facebook or Twitter

Georgia Blinds & Interiors220 Sandy Springs Cir Ste 129 Atlanta GAM-F: 10am-5:30pm Sat. 11am-3pm 404-252-6991www.gablinds.com

The Art of Window DressingTM

ideas booklet

with this ad

SEPTEMBER 14 – DECEMBER 17, 2013

cheers. It’s time to decorate your windows for the holidays.

* Manufacturer’s mail-in rebate offer valid for qualifying purchases made 9/14/13 – 12/17/13 from participating dealers in the U.S. only. A qualifying purchase is defined as a purchase of any of the product models set forth above in the quantities set forth above. Offer excludes Nantucket™ Window Shadings, a collection of Silhouette® Window Shadings. If you purchase less than the specified quantity, you will not be entitled to a rebate. Rebate offers may not be combined; for each qualifying purchase, the higher applicable rebate amount will apply. Rebates will be issued in the form of a prepaid reward card. Funds do not expire. Subject to applicable law, a $2.00 monthly fee will be assessed against card balance 7 months after card issuance and each month thereafter. Additional limitations apply. Ask participating dealer for details and rebate form. © 2013 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas.

4 Duette® Architella® Honeycomb Shades(plus $25 rebate each additional unit)

2 Pirouette® Window Shadings or 2 Silhouette® Window Shadings or 2 Vignette® Modern Roman Shades(plus $50 rebate each additional unit)

1 Luminette® Privacy Sheer or Modern Drapery or 1 Skyline® Gliding Window Panelsor 1 Vignette® Traversed™ with Vertiglide™ Shade(plus $100 rebate each additional unit)

$100 rebate* with any of the following purchases:

Vignette® Modern Roman Shades

37203

Follow Us At Facebook or Twitter

Georgia Blinds & Interiors220 Sandy Springs Cir Ste 129 Atlanta GAM-F: 10am-5:30pm Sat. 11am-3pm 404-252-6991www.gablinds.com

The Art of Window DressingTM

ideas booklet

with this ad

SEPTEMBER 14 – DECEMBER 17, 2013

cheers. It’s time to decorate your windows for the holidays.

* Manufacturer’s mail-in rebate offer valid for qualifying purchases made 9/14/13 – 12/17/13 from participating dealers in the U.S. only. A qualifying purchase is defined as a purchase of any of the product models set forth above in the quantities set forth above. Offer excludes Nantucket™ Window Shadings, a collection of Silhouette® Window Shadings. If you purchase less than the specified quantity, you will not be entitled to a rebate. Rebate offers may not be combined; for each qualifying purchase, the higher applicable rebate amount will apply. Rebates will be issued in the form of a prepaid reward card. Funds do not expire. Subject to applicable law, a $2.00 monthly fee will be assessed against card balance 7 months after card issuance and each month thereafter. Additional limitations apply. Ask participating dealer for details and rebate form. © 2013 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas.

4 Duette® Architella® Honeycomb Shades(plus $25 rebate each additional unit)

2 Pirouette® Window Shadings or 2 Silhouette® Window Shadings or 2 Vignette® Modern Roman Shades(plus $50 rebate each additional unit)

1 Luminette® Privacy Sheer or Modern Drapery or 1 Skyline® Gliding Window Panelsor 1 Vignette® Traversed™ with Vertiglide™ Shade(plus $100 rebate each additional unit)

$100 rebate* with any of the following purchases:

Vignette® Modern Roman Shades

37203

Follow Us At Facebook or Twitter

Georgia Blinds & Interiors220 Sandy Springs Cir Ste 129 Atlanta GAM-F: 10am-5:30pm Sat. 11am-3pm 404-252-6991www.gablinds.com

The Art of Window DressingTM

ideas booklet

with this ad

SEPTEMBER 14 – DECEMBER 17, 2013

cheers. It’s time to decorate your windows for the holidays.

* Manufacturer’s mail-in rebate offer valid for qualifying purchases made 9/14/13 – 12/17/13 from participating dealers in the U.S. only. A qualifying purchase is defined as a purchase of any of the product models set forth above in the quantities set forth above. Offer excludes Nantucket™ Window Shadings, a collection of Silhouette® Window Shadings. If you purchase less than the specified quantity, you will not be entitled to a rebate. Rebate offers may not be combined; for each qualifying purchase, the higher applicable rebate amount will apply. Rebates will be issued in the form of a prepaid reward card. Funds do not expire. Subject to applicable law, a $2.00 monthly fee will be assessed against card balance 7 months after card issuance and each month thereafter. Additional limitations apply. Ask participating dealer for details and rebate form. © 2013 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas.

4 Duette® Architella® Honeycomb Shades(plus $25 rebate each additional unit)

2 Pirouette® Window Shadings or 2 Silhouette® Window Shadings or 2 Vignette® Modern Roman Shades(plus $50 rebate each additional unit)

1 Luminette® Privacy Sheer or Modern Drapery or 1 Skyline® Gliding Window Panelsor 1 Vignette® Traversed™ with Vertiglide™ Shade(plus $100 rebate each additional unit)

$100 rebate* with any of the following purchases:

Vignette® Modern Roman Shades

37203

Follow Us At Facebook or Twitter

Georgia Blinds & Interiors220 Sandy Springs Cir Ste 129 Atlanta GAM-F: 10am-5:30pm Sat. 11am-3pm 404-252-6991www.gablinds.com

The Art of Window DressingTM

ideas booklet

with this ad

SEPTEMBER 14 – DECEMBER 17, 2013cheers. It’s time to decorate your windows for the holidays.

* Manufacturer’s mail-in rebate offer valid for qualifying purchases made 9/14/13 – 12/17/13 from participating dealers in the U.S. only. A qualifying purchase is defined as a purchase

of any of the product models set forth above in the quantities set forth above. Offer excludes Nantucket™ Window Shadings, a collection of Silhouette® Window Shadings. If you purchase

less than the specified quantity, you will not be entitled to a rebate. Rebate offers may not be combined; for each qualifying purchase, the higher applicable rebate amount will apply.

Rebates will be issued in the form of a prepaid reward card. Funds do not expire. Subject to applicable law, a $2.00 monthly fee will be assessed against card balance 7 months after

card issuance and each month thereafter. Additional limitations apply. Ask participating dealer for details and rebate form. © 2013 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarks

used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas.

4 Duette® Architella® Honeycomb Shades(plus $25 rebate each additional unit)2 Pirouette® Window Shadings

or 2 Silhouette® Window Shadings or 2 Vignette® Modern Roman Shades(plus $50 rebate each additional unit)1 Luminette® Privacy Sheer or Modern Drapery

or 1 Skyline® Gliding Window Panelsor 1 Vignette® Traversed™ with Vertiglide™ Shade

(plus $100 rebate each additional unit)

$100 rebate* with any of the following purchases:

Vignette® Modern Roman Shades

37203

Follow Us At Facebook or Twitter

Georgia Blinds & Interiors220 Sandy Springs Cir Ste 129 Atlanta GAM-F: 10am-5:30pm Sat. 11am-3pm 404-252-6991www.gablinds.com

The Art of Window DressingTM ideas booklet

with this ad

*�Manufacturer’s�mail-in�rebate�offer�valid�for�qualifying�purchases�made�9/14/13–�12/17/13�from�participating�dealers�in�the�U.S.�only.�A�qualifying�purchase�is�defined�as�a�purchase�of�any of the product models set forth above in the quantities set forth above. Offer excludes Nantucket™ Window Shadings, a collection of Silhouette® Window Shadings. If you purchase less�than�the�specified�quantity,�you�will�not�be�entitled�to�a�rebate.�Rebate�offers�may�not�be�combined;�for�each�qualifying�purchase,�the�higher�applicable�rebate�amount�will�apply.�Rebates�will�be�issued�in�the�form�of�a�prepaid�reward�card.�Funds�do�not�expire.�Subject�to�applicable�law,�a�$2.00�monthly�fee�will�be�assessed�against�card�balance�7�months�after�card�issuance�and�each�month�thereafter.�Additional�limitations�apply.�Ask�participating�dealer�for�details�and�rebate�form.�©�2013�Hunter�Douglas.�All�rights�reserved.�All�trademarks�used�herein�are�the�property�of�Hunter�Douglas.

220�Sandy�Springs�Cir.,�Ste.�129,�Atlanta�GAM-F:�10am-5:30pm,�Sat.�11am-3pm

404-252-6991 • www.gablinds.com

SEPTEMBER 14 – DECEMBER 17, 2013

cheers. It’s time to decorate your windows for the holidays.

* Manufacturer’s mail-in rebate offer valid for qualifying purchases made 9/14/13 – 12/17/13 from participating dealers in the U.S. only. A qualifying purchase is defined as a purchase of any of the product models set forth above in the quantities set forth above. Offer excludes Nantucket™ Window Shadings, a collection of Silhouette® Window Shadings. If you purchase less than the specified quantity, you will not be entitled to a rebate. Rebate offers may not be combined; for each qualifying purchase, the higher applicable rebate amount will apply. Rebates will be issued in the form of a prepaid reward card. Funds do not expire. Subject to applicable law, a $2.00 monthly fee will be assessed against card balance 7 months after card issuance and each month thereafter. Additional limitations apply. Ask participating dealer for details and rebate form. © 2013 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas.

4 Duette® Architella® Honeycomb Shades(plus $25 rebate each additional unit)

2 Pirouette® Window Shadings or 2 Silhouette® Window Shadings or 2 Vignette® Modern Roman Shades(plus $50 rebate each additional unit)

1 Luminette® Privacy Sheer or Modern Drapery or 1 Skyline® Gliding Window Panelsor 1 Vignette® Traversed™ with Vertiglide™ Shade(plus $100 rebate each additional unit)

$100 rebate* with any of the following purchases:

Vignette® Modern Roman Shades

37203

Follow Us At Facebook or Twitter

Georgia Blinds & Interiors220 Sandy Springs Cir Ste 129 Atlanta GAM-F: 10am-5:30pm Sat. 11am-3pm 404-252-6991www.gablinds.com

The Art of Window DressingTM

ideas booklet

with this ad

37203

Follow�us�on�Facebook�and�Twitter

SEPTEMBER 14 – DECEMBER 17, 2013

cheers. It’s time to decorate your windows for the holidays.

* Manufacturer’s mail-in rebate offer valid for qualifying purchases made 9/14/13 – 12/17/13 from participating dealers in the U.S. only. A qualifying purchase is defined as a purchase of any of the product models set forth above in the quantities set forth above. Offer excludes Nantucket™ Window Shadings, a collection of Silhouette® Window Shadings. If you purchase less than the specified quantity, you will not be entitled to a rebate. Rebate offers may not be combined; for each qualifying purchase, the higher applicable rebate amount will apply. Rebates will be issued in the form of a prepaid reward card. Funds do not expire. Subject to applicable law, a $2.00 monthly fee will be assessed against card balance 7 months after card issuance and each month thereafter. Additional limitations apply. Ask participating dealer for details and rebate form. © 2013 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas.

4 Duette® Architella® Honeycomb Shades(plus $25 rebate each additional unit)

2 Pirouette® Window Shadings or 2 Silhouette® Window Shadings or 2 Vignette® Modern Roman Shades(plus $50 rebate each additional unit)

1 Luminette® Privacy Sheer or Modern Drapery or 1 Skyline® Gliding Window Panelsor 1 Vignette® Traversed™ with Vertiglide™ Shade(plus $100 rebate each additional unit)

$100 rebate* with any of the following purchases:

Vignette® Modern Roman Shades

37203

Follow Us At Facebook or Twitter

Georgia Blinds & Interiors220 Sandy Springs Cir Ste 129 Atlanta GAM-F: 10am-5:30pm Sat. 11am-3pm 404-252-6991www.gablinds.com

The Art of Window DressingTM

ideas booklet

with this ad

SEPTEMBER 14 – DECEMBER 17, 2013

cheers. It’s time to decorate your windows for the holidays.

* Manufacturer’s mail-in rebate offer valid for qualifying purchases made 9/14/13 – 12/17/13 from participating dealers in the U.S. only. A qualifying purchase is defined as a purchase of any of the product models set forth above in the quantities set forth above. Offer excludes Nantucket™ Window Shadings, a collection of Silhouette® Window Shadings. If you purchase less than the specified quantity, you will not be entitled to a rebate. Rebate offers may not be combined; for each qualifying purchase, the higher applicable rebate amount will apply. Rebates will be issued in the form of a prepaid reward card. Funds do not expire. Subject to applicable law, a $2.00 monthly fee will be assessed against card balance 7 months after card issuance and each month thereafter. Additional limitations apply. Ask participating dealer for details and rebate form. © 2013 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas.

4 Duette® Architella® Honeycomb Shades(plus $25 rebate each additional unit)

2 Pirouette® Window Shadings or 2 Silhouette® Window Shadings or 2 Vignette® Modern Roman Shades(plus $50 rebate each additional unit)

1 Luminette® Privacy Sheer or Modern Drapery or 1 Skyline® Gliding Window Panelsor 1 Vignette® Traversed™ with Vertiglide™ Shade(plus $100 rebate each additional unit)

$100 rebate* with any of the following purchases:

Vignette® Modern Roman Shades

37203

Follow Us At Facebook or Twitter

Georgia Blinds & Interiors220 Sandy Springs Cir Ste 129 Atlanta GAM-F: 10am-5:30pm Sat. 11am-3pm 404-252-6991www.gablinds.com

The Art of Window DressingTM

ideas booklet

with this ad

SEPTEMBER 14 – DECEMBER 17, 2013

cheers. It’s time to decorate your windows for the holidays.

* Manufacturer’s mail-in rebate offer valid for qualifying purchases made 9/14/13 – 12/17/13 from participating dealers in the U.S. only. A qualifying purchase is defined as a purchase of any of the product models set forth above in the quantities set forth above. Offer excludes Nantucket™ Window Shadings, a collection of Silhouette® Window Shadings. If you purchase less than the specified quantity, you will not be entitled to a rebate. Rebate offers may not be combined; for each qualifying purchase, the higher applicable rebate amount will apply. Rebates will be issued in the form of a prepaid reward card. Funds do not expire. Subject to applicable law, a $2.00 monthly fee will be assessed against card balance 7 months after card issuance and each month thereafter. Additional limitations apply. Ask participating dealer for details and rebate form. © 2013 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas.

4 Duette® Architella® Honeycomb Shades(plus $25 rebate each additional unit)

2 Pirouette® Window Shadings or 2 Silhouette® Window Shadings or 2 Vignette® Modern Roman Shades(plus $50 rebate each additional unit)

1 Luminette® Privacy Sheer or Modern Drapery or 1 Skyline® Gliding Window Panelsor 1 Vignette® Traversed™ with Vertiglide™ Shade(plus $100 rebate each additional unit)

$100 rebate* with any of the following purchases:

Vignette® Modern Roman Shades

37203

Follow Us At Facebook or Twitter

Georgia Blinds & Interiors220 Sandy Springs Cir Ste 129 Atlanta GAM-F: 10am-5:30pm Sat. 11am-3pm 404-252-6991www.gablinds.com

The Art of Window DressingTM

ideas booklet

with this ad

all in!members, as well as non-members, of the Garden Hills Pool had a chance to swim with their four-legged friends on Sept. 15. the 28th annual Peachtree Hills animal Hospital dog Swim gave pets and their owners a chance to enjoy the final lap of the 2013 season. above, Jeff Joyce and “Romeo” are a twosome in the water. Left, anna catherine Gansereit, 11, gets “winston” ready to dive in with a tennis ball. Below, pooches and their two-legged companions get a little wet. Bottom, Lee Burdett and “Bear” know how to pose for the camera.

phOtOS By phiL mOSieR

BH

Page 9: 09-20-2013 Buckhead Reporter

C o m m u n i t y

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | 9

Come Live at Saint Anne’s Terrace in the Heart of Buckhead and Enjoy Retirement Living Your Way!

3100 Northside Parkway, NWAtlanta 30327

www.saintannesterrace.org

404-238-9200

What Bud Lovell loves about living at St. Anne’s Terrace:

“I can commune with nature from my apartment by looking out at the fruit trees changing color with the seasons and watching the birds on the two feeders outside my window.”

Meet William. A wine enthusiast

(married to a wine expert), thinks

baseball is the “beautiful game,”

active introvert, and world

traveler. He’s the guy who gets it

all started, the first to greet each

client and the last to sign off on

a project. He’s always wanted

more than “good enough.”

He wants it “just right.”

SOLUTION SEEKER. CONSENSUS FINDER. OWNER. AND THE BEST GUY TO BRING THE WINE.

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Before you buy or sell a car, call us!

Finally a car business who stands by their word – Chris in Madison

5-star Reviews from Cars.com

Terrific Experience! – Webb in Atlanta

Research indicates a connection between many neurological disorders and poor blood

flow in the brain. A condition called Chronic Cerebrospinal Venous Insufficiency

(CCSVI) can be associated with:

New ApproAch - BriNgs hope

call 404-941-2000 for an evaluation 455 East Paces Ferry Road, Atlanta, GA • ccsvi-atlanta.org

• Multiple Sclerosis• Chronic Lyme Disease• Chronic Fatigue Syndrome• Fibromyalgia• Neurological Disorders

Livable Buckhead makes first park purchase

The nonprofit Livable Buckhead an-nounced on Aug. 30 that it has closed on the purchase of a 1-acre parcel un-der Ga. 400, the group’s first park pur-chase.

Livable Buckhead said the purchase is part of a larger goal of adding 106 acres of green space to Atlanta City Council District 7, represented by Councilman Howard Shook.

“With that one action, LBI moved eight acres closer to its goal of adding 106 acres of public park space to Buck-head’s District 7,” Livable Buckhead re-ported in its Aug. 30 newsletter.

Livable Buckhead said it worked with partners to obtain a permit allowing the city of Atlanta to use underutilized Ga.

400 right of way as a park.“The 1-acre parcel just purchased will

provide access to another seven acres that will now officially become Moun-tain Way Common,” Livable Buckhead says in its newsletter.

“Located in North Buckhead and nestled 80 feet under Ga. 400 near the infamous cell tower ‘tree,’ Moun-tain Way Common is a scenic gem in the community with Little Nancy Creek running right through the middle of a wooded expanse.”

Mountain Way Common will be-come a part of PATH 400, a trail un-der development that will run along Ga. 400, Livable Buckhead’s newsletter says.

- Staff reports

NORth BUCkheAd CiviC ASSOCiAtiON

an acre beneath Ga. 400 recently purchased by Livable Buckhead is to become part of the proposed new park on mountain way.

the acre will provide access to seven more acres.

BH

Page 10: 09-20-2013 Buckhead Reporter

C o m m e n t a r y

10 | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

Editor’s note: Fulton County’s Registration and Elections board was widely criticized for voting problems during the 2012 elec-tion. Reporter Newspapers asked the county’s new elections direc-tor why residents should expect things to be better in 2013.

Elections are a conglomerate of moving parts. You have voters, poll workers, county elections staff, county depart-ments, municipalities, candidates, boards that oversee reg-istration, and elections offices and elected officials trying to work in sync. With people at the center of the spokes, as im-perfect as we are, it’s a wonder successful elections happen.

In addition to bureaucracy and people involved in an elec-tion, statutory requirements govern the process.

Having worked in three different counties in two states on the government side of elections, and 37 counties spanning eight states with two election system vendors, I have seen my share of smooth elections.

When I was the elections administrator for Williamson Coun-ty, Tex., for more than six years, I oversaw 31 successful elections. I know what it takes to administer a successful election.

A successful or smooth election is different from a perfect election. I am unaware of anyone that has seen a perfect elec-tion. Election offices can have internal miscommunications; poll workers can misinterpret instructions; a piece of electron-ic equipment can malfunction; or, a myriad of other miscues can occur.

How you manage issues that arise during an election is what separates counties that succeed from those that under-perform.

Fulton County has the charge of administering elections for many municipalities. Concerns have been raised as to wheth-er the Department of Registration and Elections can run a smooth election for the political jurisdictions of the county.

This department has had six directors since 2007, including me. During that time, municipal elections have run smoothly. In addition, in 2009-2010, during the tenure of one director, the Registration and Elections department conducted smooth elections across the board.

In spite of several challenges that are looming with regard to the state of Georgia’s new voter registration system, Elec-tioNet, I emphatically believe that we are going to run a suc-cessful election.

In July, Fulton County migrated from the old statewide

voter registration system, Legacy, to ElectioNet. Post-migration has been a major challenge for us. We are, however, moving closer to en-suring that the data for our voters is correct.

The issues we have with Electio-Net are far from unique to us. From what I have discovered, other metro counties and most counties across the state are having issues.

Even Kennesaw State Univer-sity, the institution that builds the ballots and programs the elections for counties, is frustrated by Elec-tioNet. They need our data to build our ballots. Whether the data is sound, they are going to build our ballot.

Last week we finished entering reapportionment changes and exceptions in our voter registration database. Now, our Geographic Information Systems department is underway au-diting that data. Once we receive the results of the GIS audit, we will send the results to each municipality in order for each jurisdiction to reconcile the data.

I am confident that these audits and the reconciliation pro-cess will result in sound data.

We are changing the way we are training poll workers, too. Poll workers are so important to the success of our elections. They are the face of our department. We have the responsibil-ity to train them professionally, to respect their efforts, and to provide them with the tools to succeed.

My staff shares commonalties with the counties to which I referred above, those where I have witnessed smooth elections. They are dedicated, hard-working, smart-working, proactive, and able to adapt and react to changing circumstances.

When you combine our efforts to reconcile our voter reg-istration data, our commitment to deliver quality training to poll workers, and the quality and character of my staff, I am confident that we are going to run a smooth, successful mu-nicipal general election.

Richard L. Barron is the director of the Fulton County Board of Registration & Elections.

Fulton election director: ‘We are going to run a successful election’

RichaRd l. BaRRON

Guest coLuMnIst

on the recordRead these articles from our other editions online at ReporterNewspapers.net.

“We learned the hard lesson that we weren’t considered a very desirable tenant.”

–Jed Beardsley on the search for a location for Brookhaven’s City Hall.

“It’s a vindication for me.” –Dunwoody City Councilmember Adrian Bonser after being

cleared of an ethics complaint in which she was accused of being condescending to a constituent.

“It doesn’t apply to homeowners the way it applies to build-ers and developers. It’s the equivalent of passing speeding laws and only applying it to trucks.”

–Resident Bill Harrison on Sandy Springs proposed trees ordinance.

“I think you could sum it up by saying there doesn’t seem to be a preponderance of people saying they’re so concerned about this issue that it needs to be addressed immediately.”

–Brookhaven resident Bill Roberts on the city’s ongoing legal issues with the Pink Pony.

“We are a great county. I truly believe that. But we haven’t been operating great all the time.”

–Interim DeKalb County CEO Lee May.

“There’s a significant part of Druid Hills that doesn’t want any part of this.”

–Resident David Armstrong speaking out against Druid Hills being included in the proposed City of Briarcliff.

BH

cONtact uS

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advertising. Any opinions expressed in print or online do not necessarily represent the views of

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Creative and Production

Director of Creative & Interactive MediaChristopher North

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Graphic Designer: Walter Czachowski

Advertising

Director of Sales Development Amy Arno

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Senior Account ExecutiveJanet Porter

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Contributors

Phil Mosier

Page 11: 09-20-2013 Buckhead Reporter

C O M M E N T A R Y

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | 11

They named their club after An-nie Oakley, that famous 19th and ear-ly 20th century woman-with-a-gun. In casual conversation, these shotgun-car-rying metro Atlanta sportswomen refer to themselves simply as “the Annies.”

Members of the Annie Oakley Shoot-ers gather the first Monday of nearly ev-ery month to shoulder shotguns and blast clay targets that fly like game birds.

“In golf and tennis, nothing blows up,” said Debbie Avery of Sandy Springs. “In this sport, things blow up. It’s in-stant gratification.”

The Annies grew out of a charity shooting tournament for women, said Mary Huntz, one of the originators and self-described “mother hen” of the group. “We decided, ‘why let all these guys have all the fun?’” This year, their Annie Oakley shooting tournament reaches its 10th year. Over that period, the club has raised $365,000 for chari-ty, she said.

The group’s mission is to encourage women to learn the sport of shooting. New shooters must take lessons. “Most of our women never held a shotgun be-fore,” Huntz said. “I like to say we are peashooters and sharpshooters.”

The club has about 150 women on its email list. They live in communities spread from Cobb County to Monroe. Some months, 60 or more women join the shoots on “Annie Mondays.” On this season’s opening day in September,

about 40 women took part in a shoot at the club’s home, a private hunting and shooting club near Social Circle.

They shouldered 12-gauge or 20-gauge shotguns or packed them into golf carts or hand-pulled carts that look surprisingly like strollers. Then they headed into the woods to shoot glow-in-the-dark orange or green clay targets that fluttered from the trees or darted from the bushes or flew into the sky.

Dentist Laura Braswell, who prac-tices in Buckhead, joined the group six or seven years ago. She had done some shooting in college, she said, but had laid aside her shotgun. She decided to take it up again to have an outdoor sport to share with her son. He’s in high school now and they still go shooting to-

gether.Now she

shoots regu-larly with the Annies. “I’m just happy to get out in the woods,” she said

She likes being with the other women. “You meet differ-ent people. You have fun. There’s a little bit of networking, but mostly it’s just social,” Braswell said.

Christy Roberts learned to shoot growing up in Texas, where she’d hunt deer. She’s been shooting with the An-nies for about five years. “It’s obviously fun to be with a different group of ladies than the usual,” she said.

They shoot “sporting clays,” which means no two shots are exactly the same. They work a course of 15 stations, mov-ing from one to the next like golfers on a course. Targets fly in several different di-rections and offer combinations of high and low flights. They mimic the various flight patterns of different birds and, in one case, the cross-the-ground scurry of a fleeing rabbit, shooters said.

“It’s a lot like golf to me. To me, it’s easier than golf. Golfing is a little more

frustrating,” said Jo-hanna Tate of Dun-woody. “[Shooting] is something my hus-band and I can do to-gether.”

On opening day, Avery, her friend Car-ol Beerman of San-dy Springs, Braswell and I set off as a four-some. We were ac-companied by in-structor Cheng Ma, a 68-year-old com-petitive shooter and hunting guide who grew up hunting in

California and now teaches clients how to properly wield a shotgun.

Avery brought her dog, a German shepherd puppy. “I want to make sure she’s good with gunfire,” she joked.

Avery’s husband introduced her to shooting. Now they hunt together, even going so far as Argentina to find birds to hunt. Other Annies also have traveled in pursuit of a good shoot. Tate, for in-stance, says she’s hunted in Scotland.

Avery introduced her friend Beerman to the sport. She took right to it and she says she was amazed at how many wom-en are active shooters. “I’ve just kind of fallen in love with it,” Beerman said. The attraction? “I like the challenge of it,” she said. “And maybe it’s the pow-er of the gun.”

These ‘Annies’ get their guns, head into the woods to shoot

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Annie Oakleys Shooter Debbie Avery, right, fires at flying targets while instructor Cheng Ma looks on. At

left, Carol Beerman practices sighting the target.

Page 12: 09-20-2013 Buckhead Reporter

out& about

12 | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

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F O r k i d S

Teen DrivingWednesday, Sept. 25, 6-8 p.m. – Free, two-hour class designed by Sandy Springs Police to help parents and their new (or soon to be) teen drivers ages 14 to 16. No attendance restrictions except a parent must accompany each teen. The class covers: Joshua’s Law; graduated driver licensing; parent coaching; teen responsibility; occupant protection; crash dynamics. Pre-registration is mandatory. For more information or for a registration form, email: [email protected] or call 770-551-3291. 7840 Roswell Rd., Suite 301, Sandy Springs, 30350.

“Wreck-it Ralph”Friday, Sept. 27, 6 p.m. – Enjoy a family-friend-ly movie, on a large, outdoor screen. Ac-tivities and refresh-ments begin at 6 p.m.; movie starts at dusk. “Wreck-it Ralph” is about a vid-eo game villain who wants to be a hero, and sets out to ful-fill his dream, but his quest brings havoc to the whole arcade where he lives. Rated PG. Free and open to all. Pets and alcoholic beverages not per-mitted. Sandy Springs United Methodist Church, Hitson Center Lawn, 86 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328. Visit: www.facebook.com/SandySpringsMoviesByMoonlight with questions.

Hispanic HeritageSaturday, Sept. 28, 3-4 p.m. – Story time cel-ebrates Hispanic Heritage Month. Ms. Leah shares a seasonal story time and related activities for the whole family. Sign up required and started Aug. 31. Space is limited. Free and open to the community. Suggested audiences: preschool and elementary. San-dy Springs Branch Library, in the Story Time Room, 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328. Email: [email protected] or call 404-303-6130 for details and to register.

L e A r n S O m e t h i n g

Mental Health FairSaturday, Sept. 28, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. – Are you or a loved one looking for mental health resources? NAMI Northside Atlanta invites the community to a fair with exhibitors and other resources. Free. RSVP to Neitcha Thomsen at: [email protected] or call 678-760-5502 to find out more. Peachtree Presbyteri-an Church, 3434 Roswell Rd., Atlanta, 30305. Go to: http://naminorthsideatlanta.org for details.

PCOS awarenessSaturday, Sept. 28, 2-5 p.m. – September is Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome awareness month. Join specialists for a free PCOS symposium about the latest options from diagnosis to treatment, in-cluding: nutrition, medication and exercise. Includes panel discussion/Q&A. Registration required; space is limited. Go to: www.pcoschallenge.org/pcos-am2013 to register and to learn more about the speakers. The Cathedral of St. Philip, 2744 Peachtree Rd., NW, Atlanta, 30305.

Primitive SkillsSunday, Sept. 29, 12-5 p.m. – Take part in a day all about surviving and thriving in the wild at the Chat-tahoochee Nature Center. Learn to make lean–tos, forts and spider shelters. Create a hideaway using branches, pine needles and other natural materials. Enjoy guided tours, Native American and early settlers’ games, hear stories, and check out interactive primitive skill dem-onstrations. Free for CNC members; non-members, included in general admission: $10 adults, $7 seniors and students; $6 children, under 2 free. 9135 Willeo Rd., Roswell, 30075. Call 770-992-2055 or visit: www.chattnaturecenter.org for additional details.

All About PerennialsSaturday, Oct. 5, 10-11:30 a.m. – Perenni-als add year-to-year color and form to your gardens, whether you have sun, shade or a mixture of both. Topics include: soil preparation, planting perennials, dividing mature plants, watering, mulching and weed control, fertilizing, pinching and deadheading, end-of-season cleanup, selecting plants, and easily-grown varieties. Free and open to the public. Registration required by going to: http://gardeningbythesprings-oct.eventbrite.com. Presented by North Fulton Mas-ter Gardeners, and hosted by Heritage Sandy Springs, 6110 Bluestone Rd., Sandy Springs, 30328.

Page 13: 09-20-2013 Buckhead Reporter

FALL 2013

Education Guide

www.ReporterNewspapers.net

Mastering another language gives students ‘an edge in life’By MELissA WEinMAn

[email protected]

Just a few weeks into the school year, Ashford Park El-ementary School Principal LaShawn McMillan said she watches in wonder as her kindergarten students count and sing songs in German.

“I’m just amazed at what the children have been able to do already,” McMillan said.

This year, the Brookhaven elementary school began a “dual-immersion” language program in which kinder-garten students spend half of their school day learning in German.

Ashford Park is one of six elementary schools that re-ceived state funding this year to implement dual-immer-sion programs, with a goal of helping students become fluent in a foreign language by the fifth grade.

Students typically don’t walk into their first foreign

language class until middle or high school. But educators are beginning to prioritize learning a second language much earlier in life.

Kevin Glass, headmaster at Atlanta International School in Buckhead, said research has found that young children are much better equipped to learn a new lan-guage than adults.

“Every human baby is born with … the ability to sound every language on God’s earth,” Glass said. “If you don’t stimulate those young brains, you’re not going to get as much neuroplasticity, you’re not going to get those synaptic connections.”

Glass said schools have been “notoriously slow” to ap-ply this knowledge.

“Adults often find it really, really difficult to learn an-

other language because their ears have been tuned to only the sound of their mother tongue,” Glass said. “Re-tun-ing those ears becomes more difficult the older we get be-cause we lose neuroplasticity.”

Glass said Atlanta International School has offered a dual-immersion curriculum in German, French and Spanish for 28 years. Once the students leave elemen-tary school, they may continue their language studies through middle and high school with the International Baccalaureate program, Glass said.

Two years ago, Glass said, the Atlanta International School began offering a “full-immersion” preschool pro-gram for 3 year olds and 4 year olds. In that program, all preschool activities are taught in French, Spanish or German.

The program has been a “phenomenal success” be-cause the young children are able to learn so quickly,

see sTuDeNTs, PAge 14

More schools push early language learningFrom left, Nicholas

Thompson, Madame Tiphaine

Chauvel and Jacob Wolf go over a

lesson in French at the Atlanta International

School’s early Learning

Center in Sandy springs. Two years

ago, the school began offering a

“full-immersion” preschool program

for 3 and 4 year olds, with all

activities taught in German, Spanish

or French.

Phil Mosier

Junior Achieverslocal students win

national ja competition

PAge 20

ViEw our school dirEctory onlinE @ reporternewspapers.net

Page 14: 09-20-2013 Buckhead Reporter

EDUCATION GUIDE

14 | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

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St. John Children’s CenterEarly learning in a loving environment

students ‘soak in’ other languages

Glass said.“They’re like little spong-

es, soaking it all in,” Glass said. “They’re rapidly able to function in that language.”

The Georgia Department of Education gave seed money to six schools to help establish dual-immersion language pro-grams for the 2013-2014 school year, said Gregory Barfield, pro-gram specialist for international affairs. The Georgia General As-sembly reserved the funding for the dual-immersion programs as part of the Georgia Workforce Initiative.

“[State Superintendent] Dr. [John] Barge has said what he would like to happen is the ‘20 by 20’ -- at least 20 dual im-mersion programs in Geor-gia by the year 2020,” Barfield said.

The dual-immersion pro-grams are not mandatory, so parents can choose whether or not they would like for their children to participate. Barfield said. This year, the schools start-ed with two dual-immersion classes at the kindergarten level, and will contin-ue the program each year until it is avail-

able through the fifth grade. Each school selects which language it would like to offer, Barfield said.

McMillan said the German language was a natural fit for Ashford Park.

“Our middle school, Chamblee Mid-dle School, and Chamblee High School have nationally recognized programs for German, and our children will feed into those schools,” McMillan said.

There are also a lot of German busi-nesses located near the school, she said. “Germany has invested a lot in this com-munity,” McMillan said.

McMillan said German officials have pledged resources and materials for the

program, and Germany’s Minister of Education is scheduled to visit Ashford Park in late September.

McMillan said she was excited about bringing the dual-immersion program to Ashford Park to give students some-thing unique.

“As the principal, I felt like it would be a great opportunity for my students to get a global perspective. And the op-portunity to be bilingual is a wonder-ful opportunity for my kids, and it gives them an edge in life,” McMillan said. “What we’re seeing more and more is it’s so important for kids to know another language.”

CONTiNueD FROM PAGe 1

Phil Mosier

Nicholas Thompson, left, and Antonella Pervanas enjoy preschool lessons taught exclusively in French at the Atlanta international School. AiS says the program has been a “phenomenal success.”

Page 15: 09-20-2013 Buckhead Reporter

EDUCATION GUIDE

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | 15

October 24, 2013 9:00 am - 1:00 pm

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appropriate for grades 2 – 12.

Call 770-387-3849to register your

school group today!

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students can explore the westwithout leaving the south!

- Living History Demonstrations- Native American Programming- Chuck Wagon Cooking- Western Encampments- Includes - Includes Admission to Booth Western Art Museum

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Triple Accreditation • Engaging Academics • Exceptional FacultyWorld Languages • Fine Arts & Athletics • Contemporary Judaism

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Come see for yourself! Call 678-527-3300 to schedule a private tour or to RSVP

to these “Get to Know Davis” Events:

Proud Affiliate of:

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Sunday, October 27 – Rick Recht Community Concert for Preschoolers, 10 am

Parent Information Sessions: Sunday, Nov. 3 at 10 am Wednesday, Dec. 11 at 10 am

“While I don’t now study a language in school, i am studying Japanese on my own after five years of studying it in school. i think the ability to read and speak another language broadens opportunities, as well as understanding. Cultural context can be tricky, and having a language other than english is one early step to that.”

Xavier Flournoy

Riverwood International Charter High School

“i study French, because my family has an interesting history with the country and the language. Two generations ago, my grandfather and his family hosted a foreign exchange student from France, and ever since our families have kept in touch. Last summer i had the amazing experience to visit France on my own,

and i stayed with this same French family.understanding French and being in France, one can be exposed to so much culture. As an added bonus, it is true what they say; learning one foreign language makes it immeasurably simpler to learn another language. After not having a Spanish class since elementary school, as a high school senior i clearly understand many basic sentences in Spanish with little to no guidance. it is as if there have been many doors opened up to me, and i can follow many into my future. Learning a language is an amazing experience that i would encourage anyone who can to pursue.”

Joseph Martin

Mount Vernon Presbyterian School

hALL tALk

Q&Awhich foreign language do you

study? why did you choose it? do you think the ability to

speak or read a foreign language will help you in the future?

“i’ve been taking French for five to six years now. … I really want to go to Paris and be able to speak to the people. The French language is so artful.”

Elizabeth Lamar Riverwood International Charter High School

“Throughout middle school and high school, i have taken German. While it was required in previous grades, I have chosen to continue taking it, as i feel it helps in understanding english. i hope the studying German will open opportunities in college for traveling abroad and comprehending other cultures.”

Mollie Simon Chamblee Charter High School

Page 16: 09-20-2013 Buckhead Reporter

EDUCATION GUIDE

16 | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

Opensrecording

studio

Joinsdebate team

AP musictheory

Voice tutorfor kids

Music businessdegree

Conservatoryscholarship

Choralcompetition,

Vienna

Musicindustrymajor

Singswith opera

Manages a rock band

Music lawpractice

Professor of music

Makes honor band

Justin breathes

music

Musicpublisher

Starts music therapy

program

Open House: Sunday, December 8, 1 - 4 p.m.

Where will your child go and how will he get there? The Society of Mary founded Marist School more than 100 years ago to provide an education quite unlike any other. Our faculty and curriculum inspire excellence in all of our students. Beyond the classroom, we offer a comprehensive array of extra-curricular activities to pique students’ interests and uncover their hidden talents. Through it all, we instill a sense of personal responsibility, foster spiritual growth, and teach the joy of serving others. Learn more about what Marist has to offer. Please visit marist.com or call Jim Byrne, director of admissions and financial aid, at 770-936-2214. Help your student prepare for his or her future—no matter where it leads.

“I take French 3. I went to Paris this summer and it really helped me understand what was going on and respect their culture more.”

Charlotte Spaeth, Riverwood International Charter High School

“I chose to continue studying German because I had invested so much time into it, and I wanted to master it. I think on a resume, putting “bilingual” is a big plus, but also just through the process it has taken to learn a language, I have learned so much more about myself. Whether the language itself will be useful is hard for me to predict, but learning the language and learning about a new culture has really opened my eyes and made it worth it. ”

Kunal Goel, Chamblee Charter High School

“They offered a seminar last year as a French 1 student. We had a speaker come in who was fluent in French and how it effects his career. … I’m really excited to learn French.”

Lilly Schreiner North Springs Charter High School

Hall talK

Q&A

Page 17: 09-20-2013 Buckhead Reporter

EDUCATION GUIDE

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | 17

Inquiry is fueled by curiosity and discovery.

When students explore their questions, passions,

and interests in a hands-on, experiential learning

environment, they grasp subject matter on a

deeper level. They make connections that inspire

original ideas. They understand how context and

action impact their world.

Prepared to be college-ready and globally

competitive, Mount Vernon students are the new

generation of innovative thinkers, engaged citizens

and compassionate leaders.

How can ( i ) build a new modelto take us from here to there?

Preschool–12. Family. Community. /// mountvernonschool.org

Group Tours Preschool–Grade 6: Oct 9, 9:30 a.m. Grades 7–12: Oct 17, 9:30 a.m.

LEARNING AND LEADING BY EXAMPLE.

“I have studied Hebrew for three years to connect with my Jewish roots, and I am currently in my fifth year of Spanish. I believe it is important for me to learn Spanish because it is one of the most spoken languages worldwide, and in the future, being bilingual will be very beneficial in my career. As the world becomes more closely connected, it is important to be able to communicate with people whose first language is not English. ”

Lauren Rein, The Weber School

“My language of study in school is Mandarin Chinese. I chose to study Chinese because I have always been interested in Chinese culture and the language itself. Mandarin is such a unique language, and I’ve always known that I wanted to explore more into Chinese culture, ever since I went to China for the first time when I was 6 years old. In my opinion, Chinese is such a valuable language to learn because of China’s recent rise in world stature. We have so many more opportunities to interact with China now, and we will have even more in the future. So, I think learning Chinese is becoming one of the most useful languages to know.”

Aggie Fricke, Lovett School

“I do study a foreign language – two actually, German and Spanish. German I was born with (I lived in Germany for seven years) and my school allowed me to continue German from primary to high school. I picked up Spanish in the eighth grade as a choice; I was allowed to either continue Latin or pick Spanish or French. I believe that foreign languages are important because they can help people communicate and immerse themselves in new cultures.”

Felipa Schmidt Atlanta International School

Page 18: 09-20-2013 Buckhead Reporter

EDUCATION GUIDE

18 | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

Open House Dates:

Lower School (Pre-First - 5th)Saturday, Dec. 7, 2013 | 10:30 a.m. – Noon

Middle School (6th - 8th)Friday, Dec. 6, 2013 | 12:30 – 3:30 p.m.Friday, Jan. 10, 2014 | 12:30 – 3:30 p.m.

Upper School (9th - 12th)Saturday, Dec. 7, 2013 | 2:00 – 4:00 p.m.

Vibrant. Personal. Captivating.

Come explore our challenging academic environment rooted in Christian values.We’d love to meet you.

The Westminster Schools | www.westminster.net | 404-609-6202The Westminster Schools celebrates diversity and practices a nondiscriminatory admission policy.

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An extraordinary, curious, open mind. A sense of wonder nurtured and inspired. Lessons experienced, not just taught. Collective engagement and personal success.

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ATLANTA’S FIRST MONTESSORI SCHOOL

“I’ve been taking Spanish since 1st grade, so I stuck with it. I want to study abroad in college, so if I know another language, like Spanish, that really expands my options.”

Grant Knoechel Holy Innocents’ Episcopal School

“I take Latin. I’m really interested in Italian culture. I’ve been looking into study abroad programs and some of the requirements are learning Latin and Italian.”

Dionna Green North Springs Charter High School

“I study Spanish. Not only does learning a language widen my cultural understanding, but it also opens new doors through which I can communicate with fascinating people. A second language also gives me a competitive edge when finding a job. I especially think that Spanish will become essential in the workplace.”

Cailin Kellum, Riverwood International Charter High School

“I study Spanish. I have been studying the language for the past seven years. I chose Spanish because it is a common language spoken in the United States and in the world. In the future, I am very interested in international journalism, and because so many countries in the world are Spanish-speaking, I believe that it could enhance my personal relationships.”

Ane Wanliss Holy Innocents’ Episcopal School

“I study Spanish because I think it is a beautiful language and I love listening to people speak it. I believe the ability to speak another language connects people to each other, and makes the world a smaller place. It also creates opportunities that might not have been available before.”

Phoebe Jones Riverwood International Charter High School

Hall talK

Q&A

Page 19: 09-20-2013 Buckhead Reporter

EDUCATION GUIDE

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | 19

Lovett School 1st proof Lov51eBuckhead/Sandy Springs/Brookhaven Reporter4.94w x 4.08h 4c

Developing young men and women of honor, faith, and wisdom with the character and intellect to thrive in college and in life. Learn more at www.lovett.org.

LovettThe Lovett School practices a nondiscriminatory admission policy. Financial aid is available.

Join us for an open House:SaTuRday, NovemBeR 9

Kindergarten, 1:00 pm

SuNday, NovemBeR 10Grades 1 - 5, 1:00 pm

Grades 6 - 12, 3:30 pm

Online studentLindsay Little enrolled in an accounting class while studying abroad.

Step up the pace.

Be Fearless.

Are you juggling work and family and just need one class to graduate? Or maybe you want to start college by taking just an art or history class? In any case, GPC offers eight-week fall courses to fit your busy schedule. Second-half registration* is now open for classes starting October 14!*Future student applications must be completed and evaluated on or before Sept. 29.

gpc.edu/secondhalf

“I take Latin. I chose Latin because I thought it was similar to Greek, because I already speak Greek fluently. I thought it would help me with reading and understanding words.”

George Gavalas Mt. Vernon Presbyterian School

“I study Spanish because I want to be able to communicate in the business world and on the streets. As America -- and Atlanta specifically -- becomes more bilingual, it will be crucial for everyone to speak the same languages. Also, the Hispanic culture is fascinating to learn about and expose myself to, and I can’t wait to travel and study in Spain and South America!”

Margaret Langford, Atlanta Girls’ School

“I originally picked Latin as my foreign language class in fifth grade because I thought it would help my vocabulary, and I thought I would have the most fun. I also thought it was relatively unique and original.I didn’t know it then, but this was probably the most important and best decision I made while in Lower School. Seven years later, I realize that taking Latin has had a major effect on my life, taking me all the way to the Georgia Governors Honors Program in the summer of 2012, four Junior Classical League conventions and a national convention. It has also given me many of my best friends and relationships.

I plan to take Latin in college because of the incredible effect it has had on my life, and I truly enjoy everything about the subject and culture. Taking the language has definitely improved my vocabulary and made me a more articulate person. I know that for many people taking a foreign language is just another class in high school, but for me, my decision changed my life.”

Jaclyn Lund, Pace Academy

“I study French, because its unique in that it’s not very common in America, but it’s available in a lot of other countries. I think it will help me in a possible job later on, and in meeting new people and being able to communicate.”

John Rhodes, The Westminster Schools

Page 20: 09-20-2013 Buckhead Reporter

EDUCATION GUIDE

20 | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

Mt. Bethel Christian Academy supports me so I can be my best.

David | 6th Grade at MBCA

Open HOuse: Nov 14 at 10amtours offered every Wed at 10am

mt. Bethel Christian academy is a K-8 Christ-centered preparatory school located at 4385 Lower roswell road in marietta, Georgia. visit us online at www.mtbethelchristian.org or call (770) 971-0245 to schedule a tour today.

Roswell-Wieuca Shopping Center • 4407 Roswell Rd., Atlanta • 404-252-8881Toco Hills Promenade • 2953 N. Druid Hills Rd., Atlanta • 404-636-4000

“An Exceptional School for Exceptional Students”

650-A Mt. Vernon Highway, NE, Atlanta, GA 30328(404) 835-9000 • www.cumberlandacademy.org

College prep and vocational accredited academy for grades 4-12 and postgraduate students with high functioning Autism, Asperger’s, ADD, ADHD and other learning differences.

Welcome Friends!

Junior entrepreneurs win national competition

By Dan [email protected]

Junior Achievement of Atlan-ta, which is headquartered in Sandy Springs, teaches high school students the fundamentals of running businesses.

This year, students in that club showed their mastery of the subject in a national competition.

This past summer, teenagers from the Atlanta area won the National Ju-nior Achievement Company of the Year Competition for starting up a business that sells customizable coasters.

The appropriately-named Custom Coasters was founded by 15 teens from area high schools. Students from North Springs Charter High School, The We-ber School, Riverwood International Charter School, The Galloway School, W.D Mohammed Schools and Pace Academy each had representatives in the winning company.

Leonard Shutzberg, a volunteer advi-sor for Junior Achievement and CEO of Americo Manufacturing Co., said there was something special about this year’s team.

“They were all sophomores, up against juniors and seniors,” Shutzberg

said. “They knew they had a great com-pany.”

Shutzberg’s daughter, Alison Shutz-berg, was a Custom Coasters executive who was on the team that represented Atlanta in the Junior Achievement com-petition. She is now a junior at North Springs High School. Other representa-tives were: Bilal Gutu, now a junior at North Springs High School; Jan Ber-land, now a junior at Riverwood High School; Matthew Kurzweil, now a ju-nior at The Weber School; Jenna Kahn, now a junior at The Weber School.

Home Depot co-founder Bernie Marcus is a supporter of Atlanta’s Junior Achievement program and a member of the Junior Achievement U.S. Business Hall of Fame. Shutzberg said he was in the program in high school.

“The experience that these kids get is they start off as naïve ninth graders and when they leave, they are confident,” Shutzberg said. “They learn about pre-sentation, about management and lead-ership, and how to overcome obstacles. These are real-life scenarios. These are not make believe.”

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www.ReporterNewspapers.net | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | 21

What would it be like to be an American Hebrew Academy student? Join us for a weekend to find out!

Reserve your space today. Student housing is limited. Experience classes, a campus tour, Shabbat and what it is like to be a part of the Academy community.

Special programs for prospective students and parents will take place throughout the weekend.

Registration Deadline: January 20

For schedule, hotel information and registration forms, please visit www.americanhebrewacademy.org/psw

For additional information, contact a member of the Admissions Team.

4334 Hobbs (Tanger) Road • Greensboro, North Carolina 27410 tel 336.217.7100 • toll-free 855.855.4334 • fax 336.217.7011

[email protected] • www.americanhebrewacademy.org

American Hebrew AcademyAn International Jewish College Prep Boarding School

Prospective Student Weekend - November 8-10, 2013

Registration Deadline: October 30

Katherine and JacobGreenfield Hebrew Academy

בית הספר היהודי ע,,ש גרינפילד www.ghacademy.org

http://www.facebook.com/ghacademy

Investigate the Possibilities

at GHA!

Join us at a Family Open House

(10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.)Sunday , October 27, 2013

orSunday, December 15, 2013

Check our website for “Mommy & Me” dates!

For more information please contact: Bonnie Cook, Director of Admissions

678.298.5377 [email protected]

Shutzberg said in the Junior Achieve-ment program, students learn about running a business from beginning to end. They also pick up other skills along the way like budgeting and making pre-sentations.

“They’re put in a room with 15 to 20 kids they don’t know, and then they have to form a company and come up with a name,” he said. “They decide on a product or service they want to sell. They spend four months running the company. Then after that, they liquidate the company. They write a report and pay a dividend.”

Custom Coasters is a website that sells coasters with custom designs and logos.

“A customer would prepay $15 and submit via the website a digital im-age,” Shutzberg said. “They would have nine produced, but only eight were in the set. They would keep one as a sam-ple they would show. They figured out they didn’t need to raise a lot of capi-tal because they didn’t need to raise a lot of money. They sold $6,000 worth of coasters in four months.”

It was a good deal for investors, too, he said. A $5 investment returned a div-idend of $86.

Members of this year’s team said the experience taught them skills that can apply to other areas of life outside of a corporate board room.

“I learned to overcome my fear of stage fright, and in the process learned to be a better leader and better public speaker,” Gutu said.

Others said they appreciated learning the challenges – and rewards – of run-ning a business.

“The thing I liked most about the whole Junior Achievement Experience was learning what it takes to create and run a successful business,” Kahn said. “Coming in to Junior Achievement as a complete beginner, I had absolutely no idea how much effort, risk, and work it took to make a business. When I fin-ished this year, I looked back and real-ized how much I had learned, and I en-joyed each part of it.”

For Alison Shutzberg, the joy came from the growth and personal develop-ment of her teammates.

“The most enjoyable part of this experience was seeing my team-mates grow and improve immense-ly throughout the year,” Alison Shutz-berg said. “I am so incredibly proud of how far they have come, and I know we are all thrilled that all of our hard work has finally paid off.”

Special

From left, Jenna Kahn, Jan Berland, Matthew Kurzweil, Alison Shutzberg and Bilal Gutu at the National Competition.

Page 22: 09-20-2013 Buckhead Reporter

EDUCATION GUIDE

22 | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

At Riverside Military Academy, we change what our cadets think is good enough in terms of effort and achievement. Please call today to schedule your personal campus tour. 800.462.2338.

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The Epstein Difference

THE EPSTEIN SCHOOL OPEN HOuSEFor 18 months–8th GradeTuesday, November 5, 2013 from 9:45 am–11:30 am. rsVP required as space is limited. Contact 404-250-5607 or [email protected] Colewood Way, nW | sandy springs, Ga 30328

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Fall school festivals

promise fun and food

School carnivals are back. Now that the new school year is under way, PTA parents and school volunteers are dust-ing off bean-bag toss games and blowing up inflatable bouncy houses to prepare for their annual schoolyard fundraisers. If you feel the fall call of the cake walk, here are schools in Reporter Newspapers communities that plan fundraising fests this autum.

Ashford Park Elementary Fall Festival

When: Nov. 2, 11 a.m. until 3 p.m.Where: 2968 Cravenridge Drive,

BrookhavenOfferings: Rock wall, spider jump,

inflatables, fall festival games, dunk tank featuring some school faculty mem-bers and local community leaders, food trucks and craft vendors.

Cost: Admission is free. Rides and games range from $1 to $5.

Atlanta International School WorldFest

When: Oct. 20, 12:30 p.m. until 4 p.m. Rain or shine.

Where: 2890 N. Fulton Drive, NE, Buckhead

Offerings: Visit six continents in one day at WorldFest, a community-wide event that celebrates the cultures and diversity of AIS. Attractions and events include global cuisine at the Taste of Nations, international per-formances, games and rides, and crafts from around the world. Proceeds sup-port the Parent Organization Fund.

Cost: Free admission. Concessions and some activities will incur an addi-tional cost.

For more information: Go to www.aischool.org or call 404-841-3840.

Davis Academy Holiday Bazaar

When: Nov. 17, 10 a.m. until 2:30 p.m.

Where: 8105 Roberts Drive, Sandy Springs

Offerings: Lcal vendors, gifts, home goods, jewelry, raffles.

Cost: Free admission.For more information: vanessaf-

[email protected] or [email protected].

Dunwoody Springs Elementary Back To School Bash

When: Sept. 21, 6 p.m. until 9 p.m.Where: 8100 Roberts Drive, Sandy

Springs

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EDUCATION GUIDE

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Join Us for our Early Learning Program“See Us in Action” Day

• Visit during regular school day, meet with current parents to see campus and observe the three-and-four-year-old classes in action

• Please call 404-873-6985 or email [email protected] to reserve your time.

Thursday, October 17 8:45 a.m. or 10:00 a.m.

The Children’s School is a progressive, independent elementary school that welcomes families of all races, faiths and cultures.

We’re an elementary school. We educate young children. We give them the solid academic foundation upon which all future learning is based. We teach them respect, kindness and compassion. We prepare them for the world as it is and give them confidence in their ability to make their mark on it.

serving students age 3 years old through sixth grade

345 10th Street, NE I Atlanta, GA 30309 404-873-6985 www.thechildrensschool.com

LITTLE DA VINCIINTERNATIONAL

SCHOOLwhere learning

inspires the mind

The Little DaVinci International School does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, sex, religion, national origin, age, or disability in anyemployment practice, educational program or any other program, activity, or service.

Early experiences determine how the brain is wired. Are you eager to know more about Little Da Vinci Interna-tional School success? How the school is sustaining a

50% growth each year? How our students are building strong foundations and how bilingualism and flexible

mindedness are fostered?

2 YEARS OLD THROUGH KINDERGARTEN (Spanish/English; French/English; Mandarin/English)

EXCELLENCE THROUGH DIFFERENTIATED LEARNING

FULL DAY PROGRAM AVAILABLE 2013-14!

BILINGUAL MANDARIN/ENGLISH PROGRAM

TRILINGUAL ELEMENTARY SCHOOL 2013-14 Spanish-English-Mandarin OR French-English-Mandarin

INNOVATIVE LEARNING THROUGH PLAY APPROACH

INTEGRATED MUSIC, SPORTS, ARTS, COOKING, NATURE, OUTDOOR CLASSROOMS PROGRAM

AMAZING MULTILINGUAL SUMMERCAMP EXPERIENCEVisit our website for detailswww.littledavincischool.org

4055 Roswell Road,Atlanta, GA 30342At the Blue Heron Nature Preserve

678-510-1214

Join Us For OurOpen House

Saturday, December 1410:00am - 1:30pm

Offerings: Games, inflatables, cake walk, screening of “Madagascar 3: Eu-rope’s Most Wanted”

Cost: $2 (cake walk entries cost $1 extra)

For more information: dscspta.wordpress.com

E. Rivers Elementary Fall Festival

When: Oct. 5, 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. Address: 4360 Powers Ferry Road,

BuckheadOfferings: Games, activities, events.Cost: $25 for unlimited rides.

The Galloway School Fall Fun Fest

When: Oct. 5, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Rain or shine.

Where: 215 W. Wieuca Road, NW, Buckhead

Offerings: Moonwalks, mazes, games, marshmallow guns, face paint-ing, fake casts, tattoos, photo booth, food truck and bake sale. Proceeds benefit school’s annual Giving Cam-paign.

Cost: Free admission. Tickets/wrist-band purchase required to enjoy the rides, crafts and other activities. Conces-sions for sale.

For more information: Contact Jen-ny Gruel at [email protected] or 404-583-5140.

Garden Hills Elementary Fourth Fall Carnival

When: Nov. 2, 11 a.m. until 3 p.m.Where: 285 Sheridan Drive, Buck-

headOfferings: 80-foot obstacle course,

bungee run, 80-foot slide, games and activities.

Cost: Wrist bands are $25 per per-son.*

*not included: concessions, arts-n-crafts, and cupcake walk. Individual tickets are 4 for $1.

High Point Elementary Fall Festival

When: Sept. 28, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.Where: 520 Greenland Road, Sandy

SpringsOfferings: Rock wall, spider bungee

jumps, bouncy house, carnival games, face painting, arts and crafts.

Cost: None listed.

Kingsley Charter School Fall Festival

When: Oct. 13, 10 a.m. until 2 p.m.Where: 2051 Brendon Drive, Dun-

woodyOfferings: Food court, pumpkin

sale, games, face painting, dunk tank. Cost: Tickets for games and con-

cessions; three for $1 on festival day.For more information: www.kings-

CoNtiNued oN pAGe 24

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EDUCATION GUIDE

24 | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

A Christ-centered college preparatory school for grades PK4 – 12

WhitefieldAcademy.com678.305.3000

Informational Coffee for Parents

Friday, November 22, 20139:00 a.m.

Family Open HouseSaturday, January 25, 2014

2:30 p.m.

Please join us for:

St. Benedict’s Episcopal Day School

S

t. Benedict’s

Episcopal Day Schoo

l

• Daily Spanish Instruction• Small Class Sizes• Inclusive Community

• Diverse Faculty and Student Body

• Certified Teachers

2160 Cooper Lake Road Smyrna, GA 30080 • 678-279-4300www.stbenedictsdayschool.org

Every Child. Every Day.

Preschool to 6th Grade (7th in 2014, 8th in 2015)

leycharter.org/fall-festival.

Morris Brandon Elementary Jamboree

When: Oct. 20, 1 p.m. until 5 p.m.Where: 2741 Howell Mill Road,

BuckheadOfferings: Games, arts and crafts,

inflatables, food trucks and a new Haunted Hall.

Cost: Wristbands are $30 each, payable by cash, check or credit card. Tickets will also be available for sale.

Pace Academy’s 50th Annual Pace Fall Fair

When: Oct. 19, 10 a.m. until 4 p.m.

Where: 966 W. Paces Ferry Road, Buckhead. Shuttles will provide trans-portation from the Church of the Apostles, 3585 Northside Parkway.

Offerings: Inflatables, laser tag, bungee jumps, carnival games, refresh-ments from local vendors such as King of Pops.

Cost: Free

Sarah Smith Elementary

Annual Fall Festival When: Oct. 26, 10 a.m. until 2

p.m.Where: Primary Campus, 370 Old

Ivy Road, NE, BuckheadOfferings: Obstacle course, inflata-

bles, crafts, face painting, toddler play zone, carnival games.

Cost: $8 admission; some special events charge an additional fee, such as $7 for the bungee jump and $2 for the Haunted Hallway.

Spalding Drive Charter Elementary Fall FunFestWhen: Oct. 18, 5:00 p.m. until

8:00 pmWhere: 130 West Spalding Drive,

Sandy SpringsOfferings: Balloon twisting, face

painting, fall craft contest, Toddler Fun Zone, cake walk, baseball toss, goldfish bowl, other carnival games, popcorn, candy.

Cost: $10 for unlimited game play, individual tickets 10 for $5, cake walk $1. Food and drinks priced separately.

Sandy Springs United Methodist Preschool & Kindergarten 50th

CelebrationWhen: Sept. 20, 11 a.m. worship;

lunch and family fun (reservations re-quired) 12 p.m. until 2 p.m.

Where: 86 Mount Vernon High-way, Sandy Springs (for worship); the Activity Center, 85 Mount Vernon Highway for lunch and family fun.

Offerings: Barbecue lunch, boun-cy houses, tours of the facilities, and treats.

Cost: Free, however, reservations are required via [email protected]. You must have an association (former or current) with the school.

Springmont School’s 19th annual Montessori Mile and Third Annual Middle School Festival

When: Oct. 12, 8:30 a.m. Where: 5750 Long Island Drive,

Sandy SpringsOfferings: 1-mile race, Dip-

er Derby, chalk art contest, games, tattoos, face painting, food truck, bake sale and chili cook-off. Rain or shine.

Cost: Race fee, $15 by Sept. 30; $25 day of event. Register at: www.springmont.com/MM-Registration. Free admission to Middle School festi-val. No fee to participate in chili cook-off.

For more information: Contact Andrea Restifo at 404-252-3910 or [email protected].

Local school festivals offer up fun and food this fall

CoNtiNued FRoM pAGe 23

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EDUCATION GUIDE

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | 25

Sandy Springs United Methodist Preschool and Kindergarten

> Ages 12 months - Kindergarten> Hours: 9:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.> Early Drop Off & After School> SACS Accredited> Certified School of Excellence

Limited openings available

Call now for tour! 404-250-945585 Mt. Vernon Hwy., Atlanta 30328

www.ssumc.org | Email: [email protected]

Special

eat your beetsAbove, from left, Caryline porter, dean Kahn, Jaiden Swamy, Joshua Griffith, Sam Gipson, Miller Meeks, phoebe Finch, Francesca Jepson

and Liam Adams, students at Montgomery elementary School in Brookhaven, play in the dirt during the school’s Garden day of Service. Left, Whole Foods volunteer Jess

Loud ensures the new garden boxes are ready for plants.

Special

Sing it loud!

the dunwoody Singers, from dunwoody elementary School, were selected to perform the National Anthem at a recent Atlanta Braves

game. the choral group, made up of 3rd, 4th and 5th grade students, only had a few weeks to prepare and rehearse for the big stage.

Page 26: 09-20-2013 Buckhead Reporter

EDUCATION GUIDE

26 | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

Which Test: SAT or ACT? As founder of Applerouth Tutoring, I often help parents think through the difficult task of college admissions. Parents know the ACT is an alternative to the SAT, but often do not know how they can help their student choose between the two tests.

Students tend to feel more comfortable with one test format over the other. Over the past twelve years, I’ve seen time and time again how that extra comfort can translate into a significantly higher score to send to colleges. It’s important to make as informed a decision as possible about your student’s test preparation.

Making an Informed DecisionStudents become familiar with the SAT format when they take the PSAT in 10th grade, but not all students take the ACT equivalent, the PLAN. Parents often ask me how they can use just a PSAT score to make this important decision.

If your student’s PSAT results are close to his/her SAT goal, focus on SAT prep. By the end of junior year, if your student has not seen meaningful gains on the SAT, I recommend that you schedule a mock ACT to determine if that test is a better fit.

If your student struggles with the PSAT, I always recommend you schedule a mock ACT as early as the beginning of junior year. If his/her ACT score is in a significantly higher percentile than the PSAT score, I recommend that you focus on ACT prep right from the beginning. It is a great idea for students to invest 3 hours and take a real or mock ACT. There is zero risk!

When students find out early which test is a better fit, they can avoid a lot of unnecessary stress and frustration down the road.

Find Out MoreYou can speak with me and learn more about the SAT and ACT at one of our upcoming FREE events:

Preregister at applerouth.com/reporter or call 404-728-0661

September 30th7:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.Mount Pisgah UMC

9820 Nesbit Ferry RdJohns Creek, GA 30022

October 16th7:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.

Wyndham Atlanta Galleria6345 Powers Ferry Rd NW

Atlanta, GA 30339

2880 Dresden Dr., Atlanta | 404.303.8722 | sophiaacademy.org

College prep school for those

with mild to moderate

learning differences

and traditional learners.

Wednesday ToursCall Today!

S P O N S O R E D

Oglethorpe opens school year with brand new student center

By Melissa [email protected]

Even early in the morning, Ogletho-rpe University’s new Turner Lynch Cam-pus Center is already showing signs of life: students sitting at tables and work-ing on their laptops, eating breakfast in the dining hall, sipping coffee under the yellow patio umbrellas at the Starbucks coffee shop.

“I call this our living room,” Ogletho-rpe President Lawrence Schall said.

On Aug. 9, Oglethorpe Universi-ty opened the doors to its $16 million,

50,000-square-foot campus center. Schall said the new facility replaces a

poorly designed, 1960s-era campus cen-ter that wasn’t serving the student body well.

“It just wasn’t a place anybody want-ed to come,” Schall said. “It was old and tired … people came in to eat and they left.”

As a result, there wasn’t really a good central location for students to gather on campus. But Schall said just a few weeks

photos by melissa weinman

The Turner Lynch Campus Center opened Aug. 9 at Oglethorpe University. President Lawrence Schall says

the center serves as a gathering spot on campus.

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EDUCATION GUIDE

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | 27

The Suzuki School is a SACS-accredited private preparatory preschool for infants, toddlers, and preschoolers. Our curriculum surrounds children with activities and experiences designed to maximize emerging growth in all areas of development. Please visit our website for details about our programs and facilities.

■ Infants through Kindergarten ■ Enrichment programs include French, Spanish, Ballet, Sports Movement, Violin, and Music

■ Low pupil/teacher ratios ■ Midtown Campus (at the new Ponce City Market) opening in August, 2014

■ Suzuki/Montessori collaboration provides children with the very best early childhood education experience

Founded 1976 ■ 2 convenient Buckhead locations404.869.1042 ■ www.suzukischool.com

We presently have a limited number of spaces available for toddlers and 4-year-olds

3110-A Ashford Dunwoody Rd. Atlanta, GA 30319

St. Martin’s is a school of intentional design. Our curriculum, opportunities and facilities encourage our students to uncover the unexpected. Through discovery, they expand their individual skills, talents and interests.

Our social and spiritual community combined with challenging academic and enrichment programs provide a unique sense of place for learning. Students graduate prepared to thrive when entering Atlanta’s top-ranked high schools, and ready to create their own place in the world.

Questions? Call Blythe Marsau,

Director of Admission, at

404.228.0709 or visit

stmartinschool.org

Explore the possibilities we can offer your child.

discoverythrives here

Beginners Program

(3-year-olds) through

8th Grade

into the school year, the new cam-pus center is already bringing more ener-gy to Oglethorpe.

“It’s both a re-sult of and symbol-ic of the growth and change at the uni-versity,” Schall said.

The stone exteri-or blends with the Brookhaven uni-versity’s signature Gothic architec-ture, but the inside of the facility is a sleek, modern space for dining, meet-ing and studying. It includes a campus book store, dining hall, coffee shop, and a new program called the Atlanta Laboratory for Learning – or A Lab for short.

The A Lab focuses on the “experien-tial” side of education – study abroad programs, internships, service projects and undergraduate research opportuni-ties. “The A Lab is just starting, and I think it’s going to span a lot of interest-ing ideas and programs,” Schall said.

Oglethorpe isn’t done yet with its building program, Schall said.

University officials have plans to in-crease the student body from about 1,100 to 1,500 students, incrementally adding 30-40 students per year. Along with plans for growth, Schall said the university is looking to add more stu-dent housing and a new academic building to the 100-acre campus by the year 2020.

“There’s plenty of demand for a place like Oglethorpe,” Schall said. “But we’ll still be a small, residential college.”

Left, a fire pit provides an outdoor recreational area for students. Right, the campus center features a dining hall on the top floor and lounge on the bottom floor.Oglethorpe has plans to continue growing its student body over the next few years, so more new buildings could be on the horizon.

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EDUCATION GUIDE

28 | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

up

It takes courage to

step

215 W. Wieuca Rd NW | Atlanta, GA 30342 | 404.252.8389

At The Galloway School, students age 3 through grade 12 are encouraged to explore their interests and discover their individual strengths.

Schedule a tour today at

gallowayschool.org

>

Gall_EdGuide_Ad_ML.indd 1 9/16/13 8:41 AM

Age-appropriate programs for infants through Pre-K:

At the MJCCA’s NAEYC-accredited preschools, our loving, highly-trained, and experienced teachers guide your child through our exceptional program.

THE WEINSTEIN SCHOOL

5342 Tilly Mill Road, Dunwoody

678.812.3834 • [email protected]

For Ages 6 weeks - Pre-K

• Dramatic Arts• Computer Play• Music

• Judaics• Baby Sign Language• Zoo Phonics

• Preschool Garden• Handwriting Without Tears• Ready, Set, Go...to Kindergarten

atlantajcc.org

Flexible School Options:Full- and half-day programs; 2-day, 3-day and 5-day

ST. JUDE THE APOSTLE CATHOLIC SCHOOL

The Tradition Continues… FAITH • FAMILY • FRIENDS

Nurturing the formation of Saints and Scholars

OPEN HOUSE – October 27, 2-4pmPrincipal’s presentation at 2pm

Tours by appointment – 770-394-2880 ext. 423Application Deadline: January 31, 2014

7171 Glenridge Drive NE, Atlanta, GA 30328 • www.saintjude.net

Holy Innocents’ announces new head of school

Paul A. Bar-ton is scheduled to take over next summer as the new Head of Holy Inno-cents’ Episco-pal School, the Sandy Springs school an-nounced.

Barton has headed schools for 14 years, most recently at the Avery Coonley School near Chicago, Holy Innocents’ said in a Sept. 16 announcement. Barton will begin work at Holy Innocents’ on July 1, 2014. He succeeds Head Gene Bratek, who took the post in 2011.

During his career, Barton has worked as a teacher, coach, dean, senior ad-ministrator and admissions officer, and worked at both public and pri-vate schools, including faith-based and nonsectarian schools, boarding and day schools, Holy Innocents’ said.

North Springs turns 50

North Springs Charter High in San-dy Springs is inviting alumni to return and neighbors to visit on Oct. 25 to mark the school’s 50th anniversary.

The school will mark its anniversary with special events the week of its home-coming celebration, which it is calling “A Blast From The Past.” The school will start the celebration with a parade – the first such parade in nearly a decade – featuring the North Springs marching band, cheerleaders and student floats, the school said in a press release. The Spartans football team hosts Cambridge

High in the homecoming game. On Oct. 22, starting at 6 p.m., the

North Springs Chorus -- joined by students from Sandy Springs Middle School and Woodland, Ison Springs and Dunwoody Springs elementary schools -- will present an outdoor concert at Morgan Falls Overlook Park. On Oct. 24, North Springs will celebrate “Inter-national Night” at the school.

For more information: www.north-springshigh.com or the Friends of North Springs Foundation at www.friendsof-northsprings.com/index.html.

Pace students compete to solve

transportation problems

Students from Pace Academy are tak-ing on metro Atlanta’s transportation problems. The Buckhead school’s Social Entrepreneurship Initiative has joined the Atlanta mayor’s office and the Global Studies Center to create a program called the Pace Academy Social Entrepreneur-ship Challenge.

Student teams will be paired with men-tors to try to solve the city transportation issues “through entrepreneurship and in-novation,” the school said. Students will present their ideas to a panel of judges next April. The winning team will receive $10,000 seed money to help launch the team’s enterprise, Pace said.

“We want to encourage students to think outside the box, take risks and consider the social impact of their ac-tions,” Pace Head of School Fred As-saf said. “Our goal is to build creative thinkers and leaders who want to make the world a better place.”

BRIEFS

Page 29: 09-20-2013 Buckhead Reporter

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | 29

Comfortable, Fun Bistro AtmosphereBest Wine list in the City

Full Bar with great cocktail specials

Upscale, affordable food with a French Twist

1418 Dresden Drive, Atlanta, GA 30319404-254-5277 | PourWineBrookhaven.com

886 Huff Road | Atlanta, GA 30318 www.arteefabricsandhome.com

Unique fabrics and personal service

404-554-1215Mon.-Sat. 10am - 5pm

Your one-stop Needlepoint Shop!

The Needlepoint Experts

404.816.46123137 E. Shadowlawn Ave, NE Atlanta, GA 30305 • institchesatlanta.com

AAUW Book FairMonday, Sept. 23, 5:30-9 p.m. – The 54th annual American Association of University Women (AAUW) book fair includes more than 75,000 gen-tly-used books in over 50 categories at bargain pric-es. Visitors can find Southern authors, mysteries, sci-ence fiction, reference, business, history, politics, biography, romance, foreign language, cookbooks, arts, travel, military and children’s books. Audio tapes, cassettes, CDs and DVDs also available. Opening night admission, $10; all other times, free. The pub-lic is welcome. Sale continues through Sept. 29, mall hours. Cash and checks only. Perimeter Mall, in the Dillard’s Court, 4400 Ashford Dunwoody Rd., At-lanta, 30346. Call 404-261-7646 or go to: http://bookfairaauw.org to learn more.

Book SaleThursday, Sept. 26, 1-4 p.m. – The Friends of the Dunwoody Library hold their book sale. Browse thousands of titles and take home some good books! Magazines, CDs, DVDs and much more at great prices. Members only from 1-4 p.m. All are welcome 4-8 p.m. No admission fee. Sale continues Friday and Saturday, Sept. 27-28, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday, Sept. 30, from 10 a.m.-8 p.m., is “Bag Day.” Buy a bag for $6 and fill it up! Proceeds benefit the Dun-woody library. 5339 Chamblee Dunwoody Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. Email: [email protected] with questions.

Hacker’s Ball Friday, Sept. 27, 4-11 p.m. – The Hacker’s Ball is a charity golf tournament benefitting the Wound-ed Warrior Project. Come to golf or mingle...every-one’s invited! Tee off is 4 p.m. Rain or shine. Event includes golf, drinks, whole hog bar-b-que, live mu-sic, silent auction, exotic car display and Harley Da-vidson corral. $150 for golf and party; $75 for par-ty only. Chastain Park’s North Fulton Golf Course, 216 W. Wieuca Rd., Atlanta, 30342. Call 678-776-0628 or go to: http://hackersball.eventbrite.com for event details.

Sandy Springs Sprint Saturday, Sept. 28, 7:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. – Woodland Elementary School holds its first-ever Sandy Springs Sprint, a 5K Family Run/Walk fun-draiser. Adults, $20; child, $10. No charge or reg-istration for children 3 years and under. Rain or shine. No pets, bikes or scooters. Strollers allowed. Kids’ Fun Run begins at 9 a.m. Proceeds benefit the school. Park at North Springs High School, 7447 Roswell Rd., Sandy Springs, 30328. For further in-formation and to register, go to: www.sandyspringss-print.com/Home_Page.php.

CV ClassicSaturday, Oct. 5, 8 a.m. – Peachtree Charter Middle School hosts its 4th annual CV Classic 5K run and 1-mile Fun Run. The event starts and ends at the new PCMS track. Rain or shine. Celebrate the new track! Ribbon cutting at 7:50 a.m. $25 by Sept. 27 for individuals to run/walk. Parking available at Peachtree and Chesnut Elementary schools. Register at: www.peachtreechartermiddleschool.org.

Howl-O-Weenie

Saturday, Oct. 5, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. – The an-nual festival which benefits DREAM Dachshund Rescue. Free admission. All are welcome to enjoy. Festivities include howling contest, costume contests and doxie races. Also features an artist’s market, raf-fles, face kissing contest, hot dog lunches and beer for sale. $5 fee per contest participation. Brook Run Park, 4770 N. Peachtree Road, Dunwoody, 30338. For additional details and the schedule, visit: www.dreamrescue.org.

Vintage AffairSaturday, Oct. 5, 6-11 p.m. – The Vintage Affair is Sandy Springs’ Commu-nity Action Center’s larg-est annual fundraiser. The 11th annual Vintage Af-fair features live and silent auctions, musical enter-tainment, food samplings from local restaurants and food establishments and wine tastings. Tickets, $110 per individual; $200 per couple. Dressy cocktail at-tire. Holy Innocents’ Episcopal Church, 805 Mount Vernon Highway, NW, Sandy Springs, 30327. Go to: www.vintageaffair.org for additional information or to buy tickets.

F u n d r a i S e r S

c O m m u n i t y

River CleanupSaturday, Sept. 28, 8:30 a.m.- 1 p.m. – All are welcome to help clean up the Chatta-hoochee River at Morgan Falls. The 11th annual event is hosted by the Sandy Springs Conservan-cy and GA Power. Families and volunteer groups welcome; children must be accompanied by par-ent or guardian. Bring your kayak/ canoe or re-serve one (canoes and safety equipment available on a first-come, first-served basis). T-shirt and lunch provided for all registered participants. GA Power Hydroplant, 380 Morgan Falls Rd., Sandy Springs, 30350. For information and to sign up, visit: www.sandyspringsconservancy.org.

p e r F O r m i n g a r t S

Swamp Funk QuartetSaturday, Oct. 5, 7-9 p.m. – The Dunwoody Nature Center’s concerts in the park series is back! Bring a chair, blanket and picnic dinner, and cool off while enjoying a night of music in the center’s newly- restored meadow. Swamp Funk Quartet “inhabits the space where funk, soul, blues and reggae overlap.” Free for DNC members; $5 for non-member adults, $3 for students. 5343 Roberts Dr., Dunwoody, 30338. Call 770-394-3322 or go to: www.dunwoodynature.org for details. Visit: www.reverbnation.com/swamp-funkquartet to learn more about the band.

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[email protected]

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30 | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

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Here’s Looking at You!

To view more photos visit ReporterNewspapers.net. Submit photos @ [email protected]

Presented by

special

Much thanksFrom left, Wes Vawter and Deane Johnson, with Atlanta Fine Homes

Sotheby’s International Realty, honored Dr. Brenda Green,

chaplaincy director of Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, and Rev. Steve Yander, chaplain at St.

Joseph’s Hospital, for their work, along with Bernadine and Jean-Paul

Richard, at an “Appreciation Tea and Garden Tour” in Sandy Springs.

special

Fun with the family

Above, Marisol Stevenson, 4, center, with her grandparents Bob Simon, left, and Jo Simon,

celebrate Grandparents Day at the Primrose School in Dunwoody on Sept. 6. Right, Connor Gorli, 5,

enjoys the event with Paul Hayes.

special

Lookin’ goodBoy Scouts Drake Chastain, John Farrell,

Logan Housden and Noah Sitar, from Troop 494 in Dunwoody, helped spruce up the North DeKalb Cultural Center by giving the theater

lobby a new coat of paint. The four were assisted in their efforts by Stage Door Players

Artistic Director Robert Egizio and board members Michael Magursky and Jim Adkins.

The volunteers are readying the facility in time for the Stage Door

Players’ 40th season opening.

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C o m m u n i t y

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | 31

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dunwoody, Brookhaven homes on tour

By Joe [email protected]

Homes in the Historic Brookhaven neighborhood, Dunwoody and Sandy Springs will open to the public during fundraising tours in October.

The Dunwoody Home Tour, the ma-jor annual fundraiser for the Dunwoody Woman’s Club, features five homes, in-cluding one this year that happens to be in Sandy Springs. The tour – the 41st put together by the Woman’s Club, is scheduled for Oct. 2.

The Dunwoody tour is expected to draw up to 1,000 people, Sharon Doyle, publicity chairwoman for the Wom-an’s Club, said in an interview. Mon-ey raised through the tour is used to fi-nance local programs. “It goes right back into the community,” Doyle said.

The Historic Brookhaven Candle-light Tour, a fundraiser for Atlanta Ron-ald McDonald House Charities, fea-tures four homes located in the Historic Brookhaven neighborhood in Buckhead and Brookhaven. That tour is sched-uled for Oct. 24. “All proceeds from the tour will help provide temporary hous-ing and support services to families of ill and injured children treated at local hos-pitals,” tour committee member Donna Davidson said in a press release.

The Dunwoody tour features remod-eled homes and offers a chance to see how some residents have remade their “typical Dunwoody house,” a Geor-gian-style home sometimes described as a “five over four with a door” because it

features five second-floor windows and four first-floor windows with a central door.

“It’s a nice variety of examples of what can be done with the standard Dunwoody home,” Doyle said.

The tour will include homes that have been renovated to give them a new look, including one redone in a New Orleans style, complete with wrought-iron balconies, and another remade into a Craftsman-style home, Doyle said.

“I marvel at what people have accom-plished in terms of their older homes,” Doyle said.

Seeing houses41st annual dunwoody Home tourdate: Oct. 2 time: 9:30 a.m. until 3 p.m. Cost: $25 in advance, $30 on day of tour For more information: www.dunwoodywomansclub.org Historic Brookhaven candlelight tour of Homesdate: Oct. 24 time: 5:30 p.m. until 8:30 p.m. Cost: $40 in advance, $50 on day of tour For more information: www.armhc.org/tourtickets

SpeCiAL

the millers’ dunwoody home, a French colonial revival, is on the tour. Built in 1971 and bought by the millers in 1993, the Louisiana natives were drawn by the New Orleans flavor

of the two-story front porch and wrought iron railings.

Reporter Newspapers Email updatesBe in the know R

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32 | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

c O m m u N i t y

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Buckhead Coalition tackles sports

injuries The Buckhead Coalition has an-

nounced a partnership to address inju-ries in youth sports.

On Sept. 9, the coalition, a nonprof-it civic association, announced a part-nership with Gas South Co. For Buckhead resi-dents who en-roll in Gas South utility services, the company will provide funding to the Shepherd Center which has “the country’s only adolescent spinal care program,” the coalition says.

“Through Oct. 5, 2013, Gas South will provide a $50 credit to Buckhead residents and businesses that enroll in the program,” a coalition press release says.

“All Buckhead natural gas consumers are eligible for a discount off Gas South’s published rates for as long as they remain customers. Additionally, Gas South will waive the $60 connection fee for estab-lishing service at a new residence. The initial funding payable to the Shepherd Center is $5,000, and will increase an-nually based on program participation. It is the goal of Gas South and the Buck-head Coalition that funding will eventu-ally reach $25,000 per year.”

The coalition press release said res-idents can visit www.gas-south.com/buckhead and use the promo (promo-tional) code “BUCKHEAD” or call 1-855-281-1688 to join the program.

Woman paralyzed in Buckhead bar

assault seeks help Consuela Pippins, 38, was attend-

ing a birthday party at Wet Willy’s bar in Buckhead on Aug. 3 when an uniden-tified man picked her up and dropped her on her head, paralyzing her from the neck down.

Atlanta Police have not made any ar-rests in the incident.

Pippins’ friends and family said she

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C o m m u n i t y

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | 33

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Running 17 exercise classes each week, plus private sessions with people recovering from injury or surgery, would surely exhaust an average person. Of course, Mattie’s far from average. She’s a bundle of energy who loves to dance, works a variety of music into her classes, and joins Canterbury’s walking club whenever she can, especially when they’re training for the annual Peachtree Road 10k. She says residents and staff are so much like family that she’s always encouraging people to move here.

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was uninsured at the time of the assault and her medical bills are “astronomical.” She also has four children and lives in a Habitat for Humanity Home in south-east Atlanta.

The Faith Hope and Deliverance Temple, a church attended by Pippins’ family, is trying to raise money to help pay Pippins’ medical bills.

Pippins currently is at the Shepherd Center and is due to be released in Oc-tober.

Interested parties can also make do-nations at any Bank of America location to the Medical Trust Fund for Consuela Pippins, according to a press release from the church.

Dunwoody open house planned on Ga. 400 toll

demolition projectThe State Road and Tollway Author-

ity (SRTA) plans to hold a public infor-mation session in Dunwoody to provide details on the ending of tolls on Ga. 400 and tollbooth demolition at the Ga. 400 Toll Plaza.

The meeting is scheduled for Oct. 24 from 4 until 7 p.m. at the Crowne Plaza Ravinia, 4355 Ashford-Dun-woody Road. Another meeting is set for Sept. 24 from 4 until 7 p.m. at the

North Fulton Chamber of Commerce, 11605 Haynes Bridge Road, Alpharet-ta. Two additional meetings are planned in Cumming.

During the open house, residents can learn more about preliminary plans for the end of toll collections and the de-molition of the toll booths on Ga. 400. There will be no formal presentations, but transportation representatives will be on hand to share information.

The Ga. 400 tolls are slated to end on Nov. 21 and demolition of the toll plaza will begin in early 2014.

Northridge Bridge replacement begins

next monthThe Georgia Department of Trans-

portation will begin replacing the Northridge Road Bridge over Ga. 400 in October, a month before the state re-moves the tolls from the highway.

Sandy Springs City Hall hosted GDOT officials on Sept. 10 as members of the public showed up to view the lat-est plans.

The bridge replacement and inter-change improvements will cost $9.3 million. The project will take more than two years to finish. Beginning in fall 2014, the bridge will be closed to pedes-trian traffic for one year, something that has MARTA officials concerned.

BH

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34 | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

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jOe eARLe

taking a momentthe dunwoody charter commission opened its Sept. 11 meeting with

a brief ceremony to remember the victims of the terrorist attacks.

at left, commission chairman max Lehmann, left, and Rev. terry davis, right, minister of

Northwest Unitarian Universalist congregation in Sandy Springs,

prepare to light a memorial candle.

above, from left, dunwoody Police Lt. oliver Fladrich, deKalb Fire

Department firefighter Mark Davis and deKalb emt Gregg trieschman

joined the remembrance.

color forceBlackburn Park in Brookhaven hosted its second Food truck event on Sept. 11, which also included a 9/11 remembrance ceremony. Right, the colors are presented by the JRotc from cross Keys High School.

phiL mOSieR

phiL mOSieR

Jogging memoryU.S. army Sgt. chris Sims, right, starts the RPm 9/11 Victory

5K Run at chastain Park on Sept. 8. the race honors the memory of Ryan means, who served in afghanistan.

RememberingSept. 11, 2001

This month, residents and local officials throughout the Reporter News-papers communities commemorated the anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

Page 35: 09-20-2013 Buckhead Reporter

P u b l i c S a f e t y

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cinct of the Atlanta Police Department from its records and is presumed to be accurate.

aSSaULt � 3500 block of Peachtree Road, NE – An ag-

gravated assault was reported on Aug. 26. A man said that the suspect placed a knife in his face and threatened to kill him if he didn’t give him money for gas while they were at the mall.

� 500 block of E. Paces Ferry Road, NW – An aggravated assault was reported on Aug. 26. A woman and her acquaintance argued over money. the argument turned physical in the parking lot. the victim left her purse in the ve-hicle with the suspect, returned and noticed $5 was missing from her purse. the victim and the suspect exited the vehicle, and when the victim threatened to call police, the suspect threw a bottle filled with liquid in the vic-tim’s face, causing a laceration on the lower lip. The suspect then fled on foot.

� 2000 block of Peachtree Road, NE – An aggravated assault was reported on Aug. 29. A woman and her boyfriend were arguing over the remote when her boy-friend began to choke her. She struck her boyfriend in the head; he went and got a gun, waved it in her face and threatened to hurt her. She ran out of the apartment. She did not have any visible bruises. the suspect was not on the scene.

� 3700 block of Roswell Road, NE – An ag-gravated assault was reported on Sept. 2. A woman was talking to a known man when his ex-girlfriend, who had been looking for him all night, punched the woman on the left side of her face, causing a concussion.

� 2100 block of Cheshire Bridge Road, NE – An aggravated assault was report-ed on Sept. 4. A woman came into the pre-cinct to report having two incidents with the suspect, one of which involved the suspect holding a cake knife in her hands while at-tempting to attack her.

RoBBeRy � 1900 block of Peachtree Road, NE – A pe-

destrian robbery was reported on Aug. 27. A man said he was attacked by two men and struck in the head with baseball bats before the suspects stole $20. he had visible injuries to his forehead and nose.

� 2200 block of Peachtree Road, NE – A rob-bery at a bank was reported on Aug. 29. A man approached the teller counter and hand-ed the teller a note advising it was a rob-

bery. the note said he had bombs and guns, and to give him all the mon-

ey. the suspect appeared to have a grenade in his left hand and a dark brown drawstring bag in his right hand. the teller put $1,509 from the drawer on the counter, and the suspect scooped it up. He fled on foot toward Biscayne

drive, and the teller pushed the alarm button.

� 3600 block of Peachtree Road, NE – A commercial robbery was report-

ed on Aug. 29. the suspect entered the business, selected seven ra-zors totaling $175, and concealed them in a book bag. the suspect pulled a knife on an employ-ee when confronted. the sus-pect left without paying for the items, and was later caught and

arrested.

� 1900 block of Piedmont Circle, NE – A pedestrian robbery was reported on Aug. 31. two unknown men ran out from a dumpster area of a hotel and approached a man walking onto the property. One man pre-sented a black revolver, pointed it at the vic-tim and said, “Give it up.” the victim gave the suspect $47, and ran across the street to a gas station to call for help. the suspects ran toward piedmont Road. the victim said an old friend whom he let shower and change in his room may have been connected to the robbery.

� 600 block of Garson Drive, NE – A residen-tial robbery was reported on Sept. 1. the ar-

coNtiNUed oN PaGe 36

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Page 36: 09-20-2013 Buckhead Reporter

P u b l i c S a f e t y

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restees entered the victim’s residence armed with handguns and shotguns, demanded all of their valuables, struck one of the victims in the back of his head with a shotgun, then left the location. two of the suspects were later stopped and placed under arrest.

� 1900 block of Bolton Road, NW – A pedes-trian robbery was reported on Sept. 7. A man was grabbed by two unknown men who demanded he give up his money. the victim fought back, and suspect #1, who was armed with a knife, cut him on his chest and neck, while suspect #2, armed with a gun, reached in his pocket and took $305 cash. the victim said he would not be able to identify the suspects.

BURGLaRy � 2300 block of Glenwood

Drive, NE – A residential burglary was reported on Aug. 26. A woman said she returned home and found her tv, Blu-ray player, camera, printer, laptop and flute all taken.

� 700 block of Andover Drive, NW – A res-idential burglary was reported on Aug. 30. A window was found open and the screen was found in the bushes. A pillow case was taken from the master bedroom, and the drawers where jewelry was kept were ransacked. mis-cellaneous jewelry was taken.

� 2200 block of Collins Road, NW – A res-idential burglary was reported on Sept. 5. A woman, who babysits for parents, thought she heard a parent at her door, opened it, and went out with a flashlight to check. When she returned, she saw the suspect in-side the house picking up her items. the sus-pect refused to leave, and said he was just getting some water. the victim’s husband and son heard the commotion and chased the suspect out of the house. the suspect attempted to take their son’s bicycle, was unsuccessful, and was chased to a nearby church.

�2900 block of Lookout Place, NE – A residential burglary was report-

ed on Sept.6. A man was home watching tv when he heard someone enter his residence through the kitchen door. he grabbed a baseball bat, con-fronted the suspect, and told him to get out. the suspect complied and exited through the kitchen door. the suspect walked out the back of the

house and met the victim in the driveway. the victim said he was

calling the police, and the suspect fled in a vehicle. The victim said his

door lock was defective and the door sticks.

LaRceNy � 3200 block of Peachtree Road, NE – A lar-

ceny was reported on Aug. 28. A man said he was playing basketball in the gym. prior to playing he placed his cellphone on the bench, and when he came back for it between games, he noticed it was gone. he said he has a possible suspect that was captured on sur-veillance footage. in addition, his phone was pinged through his email, with a last known location of the Brookhaven area.

� 1800 block of Peachtree Road, NW – A larceny was reported on Aug. 29. A wom-an left her bag in the mail room which con-tained her laptop and $10,000 in cash. When she returned it was gone, but the bag had been turned in to the front desk. however, the computer and cash were gone. there is video of the lobby area, and the laptop has Lojack software.

� 400 block of Bishop Street, NW – A larce-ny was reported on Aug. 30. during a wed-ding ceremony/reception, a man was taking pictures. he placed a camera, camera lens and memory card on a table, and began us-ing another camera to continue taking pho-tos. When he returned to get the camera and equipment, the items were missing.

� 3300 block of Peachtree Road, NW – A lar-ceny was reported on Aug. 30. A woman said she was deceived into purchasing a laptop. She said when the suspect showed up he pre-sented an Apple mac box that was sealed. She said after the suspect left the location, she opened the box and realized that inside was a brick that resembled a laptop.

� 100 block of Habersham Valley Road, NW – A residential larceny was reported on Aug. 31. A man met two women at a bar and in-vited them back to his house. he removed his gold Rolex presidential watch and placed it on a table in his bedroom. After the wom-en left, he noticed his watch was missing. he said one of the women was alone in his room for a few minutes. he was unable to provide names or a description of the women other than they were attractive.

� 2100 block of Defoors Ferry Road, NW – A larceny was reported on Sept. 7.

Police BlottercoNtiNUed FRom PaGe 35

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Page 37: 09-20-2013 Buckhead Reporter

P u b l i c S a f e t y

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | 37

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A man listed his ipad for sale on craigslist.com, and agreed to meet another man at the location. the victim was met by two men in the parking lot; one had a wad of cash in his hand and one looked at the ipad. While they were discussing the sales price, the man looking at the ipad ran off behind some apartments. When the second man attempted to leave, the victim grabbed him by his shirt and the suspect threw the wad of cash at him. the victim let go of the suspect’s shirt. they were not located. the cash recovered was $250 of the victim’s $600 asking price.

LaRceNy FRom aUto �West Paces Ferry Road, NE – A larceny

from an auto was reported on Aug. 27. A man noticed his driver’s side door was damaged and proceeded to drive home. he then saw that his gun was missing, so he returned to the location. While he waited in the park-ing lot, he noticed two men looking into cars. the men got into a dark-colored min-ivan, possibly a dodge Caravan, which was parked adjacent to a Chevrolet Suburban. they broke two rear driver’s side windows, took several bags, and placed them in their vehicle. the victim followed them as they left the scene, but was unable to keep up with the vehicle’s speed.

� 3400 block of Northside Parkway, NW – A larceny from an auto was reported on Aug. 28. An unknown suspect entered the victim’s unlocked vehicle and stole $4,500 cash and other items.

� 500 block of Pharr Road, NE – A larceny from an auto was reported on Sept. 5. An un-known suspect entered the victim’s vehicle

and stole three Fedex boxes from the trunk that contained $32,000 worth of jewelry.

aUto tHeFt � 900 block of Bowen Street, NW – An auto

theft was reported on Aug. 25. A silver 2007 Saturn was taken from the parking lot at the location. the victim also said a Fedex package was taken from the same location. the vehicle was recovered two days later in Zone 4, inside a parking lot, totally burned out.

� 400 block of Armour Drive, NW – An auto theft was reported on Aug. 27. A suspect took the car from the fourth level and made it to the first level of the parking garage, where the vehicle broke down. The suspect fled the scene.

� 3300 block of Peachtree Road, NW – An auto theft was reported on Aug. 30. A woman said her vehicle was stolen from the parking garage while parked overnight. Security ad-vised that the gates leading to the garage en-trance was forcibly damaged overnight.

� 300 block of Deering Road, NW – An auto theft was reported on Sept. 3. A man said that he left his car running while he went up-stairs to get a change of clothes, and when he came back, his car was gone.

Read more of the police Blotter online at

www.reporternewspapers.net

BH

Page 38: 09-20-2013 Buckhead Reporter

38 | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

C o m m u n i t y

Buzzing aboutthe Blue Heron Nature Preserve and

whole Foods-Buckhead hosted a “Kid’s day of Service,” featuring honeybees

on Sept. 14. Parents and children learned about beekeeping, gardening

and good environmental practices. Left, master beekeepers Julia mahood, left, and son Noah macey, explain the art of beekeeping at two hives on the preserve’s property. Below left, Hyatt

Brandenburg, 1, works in the community garden. center, Kevin mccauley, far

left, with the preserve, goes over the day’s activities. Below, right, honeybees were the star attraction. Right, Naomi Brandenburg, 3, spreads some mulch.

phOtOS By phiL mOSieR

BH

Reporter Classifieds To place a Classified or Service Directory ad call deborah at 404-917-2200 x 110.

InstallatIon Offering all types of windows, All types of siding – Factory-trained installation. Family-owned, family-priced. Angie’s List (A rated), BBB (A+ rating). 33 Years in Business. Quinn Windows & Siding. 770-939-5634.

CleanIng servICesHouse Cleaning Services Available – Home or Office. Detailed oriented. Free estimates. Call Ellie Wingers or Walter at 404-903-2913.

I love to clean houses Spic and Span! – Call for the best prices in town!! 678-333-3898.

offICe spaCe for leaseMidtown West Class A office space – Available for sub-lease – 1,000 – 8,000 square feet. Please call Bob McNeil 404-892-2931

BusIness opportunItyHair Salon Station Available in Buckhead – Share space or rent station $460 monthly. Call 404-237-2814.

Housemate WantedSandy Springs – Homeowner is looking for a Professional Female Housemate. Call 404-275-9378.

Care gIverCNA / Care Giver – CPR seeking live out, 6 days/week, 15 years experience. Dependable, trustworthy, loving/caring person. Call Delores 770-369-0832.

Care Giver with 15 years of experience – providing comfort, care and companionship for the elderly. Medical needs, errands, cooking or whatever you need to be done. References available upon request. Call Bridget 404-456-4972.

for saleLinton Furniture Shop – Buy, Sell, Trade. Cell/Text 770-882-5132.

Driveways & Walkways – Replaced or repaired. Masonry, grading, foundations repaired, waterproofing and retaining walls. Call Joe Sullivan 770-616-0576.

Furniture Care – Onsite repairs & touchups. Cell/Text 770-882-5132. Linton’s Furniture Shop

Matthew’s Handy Services – Small jobs and chores is my specialty, flexible scheduling, carpentry, drywall, painting, plumbing and cleaning. Call 404-547-2079

North Georgia Lawn Care – Honest, affordable and dependable. Free Estimates. Tony 404-402-5435.

servICes avaIlaBle

garage saleSaturday, October 5: 8 AM – 2 PM – Pine Hills Neighborhood Association holds its 5th annual Yard Sale. Stroll the neighborhood and shop for treasures. Multiple homes participating – look for neighborhood signage (balloons on mailboxes). North of Buford Hwy – located between East Roxboro Rd and Lenox Rd. Free and open to all!!

Reporter Classifieds will work for you.

Child Care $400/wk/child Homeowner in Sandy Springs

Master in Education/25 yrs expCare for a max of 2 children/exc references

Contact Ellen: 404-291-3410 [email protected]

Unified Technology ConceptsComputer/Phone Repair & SEOWebpages • Mobile appsPerform onsite repairsSolutions tailored to your needs678-439-7829

Design, develop & test databases for varied business applications and customer specifications in multiple indus-tries; Create Business Intelligence road maps to complete BI project life cycles; Utilize SQL skills, renew object and data models and metadata reporting to organize for better management and quicker access; Identify business requirements, perform data cleansing, utilize data quality, data reporting, modeling and architectural concepts; De-fine functional and process designs & build dimensional databases; Evaluate and analyze reusability of current data for additional analysis. Drug screening, criminal and educational background checks required. Bachelor’s degree in Information Science or related IT field, plus five years experience in business intelligence, & data management, or a Master’s degree in Information Science or related IT field, plus three years’ experience in business intelligence, & data management. 75% travel within Atlanta metropolitan area required based on company/client need. Resumes to: Denise Pacelli, Daugherty Systems, Inc., 3438 Peachtree Road, Ste. 950, Atlanta GA 30326.

Information Architect

Help WantedP/T Office Assistant – Must have very strong computer skills, with proficiency in MS Excel/Word; experience with sales support software (such as Act or Salesforce) a plus. 10-15 hrs per week. Call 404-917-2200, ext. 111.

Legal/Administrative Assistant – Sandy Springs law firm looking for administrative assistant. Firm specializes in litigation and transactional work. Job duties include general administrative functions. College degree or paralegal certificate required. At least two years experience in an administrative role required; work in a law firm preferred. No smokers. Hourly: 40 hrs per week; $14-$18 per hr depending on experience. Group Health Plan available. Fax resume to 678-999-3242.

Page 39: 09-20-2013 Buckhead Reporter

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | 39BH

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Home Services directory To place a Classified or Service Directory ad call deborah at 404-917-2200 x 110.

Get help around the house by calling one of our Home Services and Services Available advertisers. Tell them you saw their ad in Reporter Newspapers!

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40 | Sept. 20 – Oct. 3, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

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