11-15-2013 dunwoody reporter
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NOV. 29 — DEC. 12, 2013 • VOL. 4 — NO. 24
Not necessaryDebate if county CEO
position should continue
COMMUNITY 4
Tough roadIndependent school system
harder than cityhood
COMMENTARY 5
Joyful noiseChurches putting on
holiday concerts
OUT & ABOUT 18, 22
Better off?Public asked ‘state of city’ after fi ve years
COMMENTARY 6-7
Tons of toysLocal police, fi refi ghters
brighten childrens’ holiday
PUBLIC SAFETY 30
The gift of giving backDancers Julia Hall, left, and Beatrice Russell, wait to perform “We Need a Little Christmas” at Light Up Dunwoody on Nov. 24. The two are part of the Atlanta Jazz Theatre group, out of Dan and Company Studios. Light Up Dunwoody, held on Chamblee Dunwoody Road in front of the Cheek-Spruill Farmhouse, is an annual community event.
PHIL MOSIER
BY MELISSA WEINMAN AND JOE EARLESome north DeKalb parents and offi cials believe the DeKalb
County Board of Education’s recent vote to deny a “charter clus-ter” application for Druid Hills sent a message that the embattled school board isn’t open to new ideas.
Proponents of independent school systems in north DeKalb say the school board’s decision will bolster eff orts to start new school systems.
“Th e school board has a one-size-fi ts-all [philosophy],” said Dunwoody City Councilman Terry Nall, who has advocated for a separate Dunwoody school system. “Th ey’re not willing to rec-
BY JOE [email protected]
Dunwoody residents reviewing the latest concept for a new city park questioned whether it would fl ood nearby streams, create traf-fi c problems for nearby residents and whether it should include an amphitheater.
More than 50 residents attended a public meeting at St. Pat-rick’s Episcopal Church on Nov. 19 to look over the latest plans for the 5-acre park at the corner of North Shallowford Road and Per-noshal Court.
Construction of the proposed park is scheduled to begin next SEE LOCAL SCHOOL, PAGE 26 SEE RESIDENTS, PAGE 3
DeKalb school board ‘isn’t open to new ideas’
Questions arise over Georgetown-area park
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Residents question design for 5-acre city park
Dunwoody Government
CalendarThe Dunwoody City Council usually meets the second and fourth Monday of each month at 7 p.m. at Dunwoody City Hall located at 41 Perimeter Center East Suite No. 103.
For a complete and up to date schedule of Dunwoody City meetings, visit http://www.dunwoodyga.gov/Residents/Calendar.aspx
year as part of the city redevelopment ef-fort known as Project Renaissance. Th e redevelopment project is intended to build parks, housing and shops on 35 acres in the Georgetown area of the city that had been the former site of Emo-ry Dunwoody Hospital and an aban-doned housing development that had been nicknamed the “PVC pipe farm.”
Residents seemed on the whole to welcome the idea of the park. “I’m just glad to see the property where the hos-pital was is going to be utilized,” George Houston said as he reviewed the large drawings showing the kinds of recre-ation facilities the city might include in the park.
But several residents raised questions about the design.
“I think they’re trying to do too much with this 5-acre space,” David Whitten-ton said. “I think it could be a little bet-ter planned.”
City offi cials said they would take the comments to park designers. Dun-woody City Council is to take another look at the plan on Dec. 9. “Th is plan isn’t written in concrete,” City Coun-cilman Denny Shortal told the crowd. “Th ese are the latest ideas.”
Th e latest plan for the 5-acre park, one of four parks being developed in Project Renaissance, calls for two play-grounds; a multi-use court set up for basketball and other games; an open, multi-use fi eld for sports; a picnic area; a multi-use trail; restrooms; and the am-phitheater.
Several people attending the meeting argued the amphitheater would be too close to a busy street, so noise would in-terrupt performances. Th ey argued the amphitheater should be put in Brook Run Park, which is much larger.
Lynne Nault, who lives nearby on
Pernoshal Court, worried about the noise from performances and crowds at the amphitheater. And, she said, “we don’t need all these trails.”
Iris Reily said she felt that, over all, the park “looks pretty good.” But, she said, “I’m a little worried about the noise
from the amphitheater. I’d rather see a nice Zen garden.”
Kristin and Justin Moore, who live near the proposed park, worried about traffi c the park might attract to their street.
“I think it’s great for the city of Dun-woody, but maybe not so great for the [neighbors],” Kristin Moore said.
JOE EARLE
Iris Reilly examines a map showing the location of the city’s new
parks in Project Renaissance at a meeting at St. Patrick’s Episcopal
Church on Nov. 19. To view a larger version of the above map, go to ReporterNewspapers.net.
“I think they’re trying to do too much with this 5-acre space. I think it could be a little better planned.”
– DAVID WHITTENTON
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
DUN
4 | NOV. 29 – DEC. 12, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
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BY JOE [email protected]
DeKalb County’s interim CEO gathered a group of north DeKalb res-idents and public officials recently to debate whether the county should get rid of his job.
Interim CEO Lee May said the Nov. 21 discussion was the first of several he planned to hold in locations across DeKalb to debate whether the county should re-think its CEO form of government.
“Whether it’s to change or not to change, we have to open this dialogue,” said May, who has said publicly he thinks the county should change its form of gov-ernment to eliminate the CEO post. But he said discussions like the one in Dun-woody were “not about Lee May’s posi-tion. It’s about a public dialogue about what’s best for our county.”
May held a seat on the DeKalb Coun-ty Commission before his appoint-ment in July to replace suspended CEO Burrell Ellis, who faces trial on corrup-tion charges. Ellis has denied doing any-thing wrong. Ellis’ predecessor, former CEO Vernon Jones, angered many res-idents in the northern end of the county through his actions in office.
On Nov. 21, more than 80 peo-ple, including state lawmakers and city
council members from both Brookhav-en and Dunwoody, took part in discus-sions at Dunwoody High School about whether the county’s form of govern-ment should change and, if so, what it should be.
Brookhaven City Councilman Jim Eyre welcomed the discussion. “I think [May] has a conviction that something needs to happen,” Eyre said. “He’s clear-ly not just jumping into it. He’s trying to find the best route and involving as many as he can.”
May told the group that the county was “working to do some very substan-tive things to fix some things that have been broken.”
May said he had researched the back-ground of the CEO form of government and planned to post online the coun-ty documents related to the change to the CEO form in the 1970s. When the DeKalb County Commission changed from a chairman-commission form of government to the CEO form, he said, the decision was not made light-ly. “There was a robust dialogue then,” he said.
Several people attending the Dun-woody meeting questioned whether
Residents, officials debate eliminating DeKalb CEO post
the role of the county needs to change again as cities such as Dunwoody and Brookhaven are created to deliver ser-vices once provided by the county gov-ernment. Movements to create more new cities have begun in several DeKalb communities.
“There’s no perfect system,” Sen. Fran Millar (R-Dunwoody) said during a break from the discussions. “Most peo-ple think of the Cobb or Gwinnett mod-el, but they’ve had their problems, too.”
State lawmakers said DeKalb’s form of government could be debated by the
county’s legislative delegation next year. “I don’t look for anything in the near fu-ture because we’re not sure what we real-ly want,” Millar said.
But May said his plan was to get the discussion going so DeKalb residents can look over options.
“What people really want is better outcomes,” May told the group. “You want a better government. You want a government that is responsive to your needs. Whether you are on the side of change or the side of staying the same, people want better outcomes.”
JOE EARLE
Left, DeKalb Interim CEO Lee May introduces a public discussion at Dunwoody High School Nov. 21 on whether the county should eliminate the CEO job. Right, Rep. Mike Jacobs (R-Brookhaven), standing, chats
with Dunwoody City Councilman Denny Shortal, seated at left.
DUN
C O M M E N T A R Y
www.ReporterNewspapers.net | NOV. 29 – DEC. 12, 2013 | 5
As we head into the New Year, the issue that is at the forefront of many Dunwoody residents’ minds is the action that SACS took putting the entire DeKalb County School System on probation, just one step above loss of accreditation.
Loss of accreditation would be harmful, not just to our children, but also to proper-ty values. Th at, coupled with the governor removing six school board members has se-verely impacted confi dence in the DeKalb School system. So, what do we do?
One bold approach would be to form an independent school system for Dun-woody. Th is has been made as an offi cial request (unanimously passed by the City Council) as a high priority issue for the next legislative session. With that said, this would require amending the state Consti-tution to allow another school system to form, a process designed to be diffi cult.
Let me cover a little history on this. In 1945, the Georgia Constitution was amended to cap the number of school sys-tems in Georgia at 180. Th is was a move by the then county-controlled General As-sembly to eliminate competing systems statewide. Currently there are 159 coun-ty systems and 21 city school systems, like Atlanta and Decatur, which were grandfa-thered in.
Th e process that we will have to go through to get there is analogous to the process that we went through to form the city, but unlike cityhood, it is a constitu-tional issue and has to pass with superma-jorities in both the House of Represen-tatives (120 votes of 180 members) and Senate (37 votes of 56 members), and then must be voted on statewide as a refer-endum in a general election.
I have been asked by many residents how long this could take and I want to re-fl ect realistic expectations to the commu-nity. Th e earliest that this could be on a statewide ballot for a vote, if everything goes perfectly, is November 2014.
How do we get started? Th e fi rst thing that your legislative team needs is a com-pleted feasibility study showing all of the fi -nancials. Dunwoody has funded the now complete study.
At the end of the last session, I dropped a bill (HR-486), and have had one hearing
on indepen-dent school systems.
As with all Constitution-al issues, we had hearings on it in year one (2013) of the bienni-al session and could possi-bly vote on it in 2014. If it passed everything in the General Assem-bly, we would need to mobilize a state-wide marketing eff ort, because again, it would be on every ballot in the state and we would need to convince voters on the other end of the state why Dunwoody needs our own school system and why they should vote for it.
Th e major pushback I heard in the Leg-islature was why not form a “charter clus-ter”? Th e DeKalb BOE recently denied a charter to what was a meticulously pre-pared eff ort. Comments made by the su-perintendent at that hearing made it very clear that under this administration, there will be not charter clusters. I am now go-ing to push forward with the eff ort to form our own municipal school system in the Legislature -- that being the only alterna-tive left to us.
I was at the “point of the spear” in the legislative eff orts that successfully got the incorporation of Dunwoody done and lat-er on the transfer of the parks for $100 per acre. We were fi ghting just DeKalb Coun-ty at that time. I expect a lot of other coun-ties to join them in opposing this legisla-tion fi ercely.
Th is will be harder than cityhood to ac-complish, so I want to manage the expecta-tions for the community of the amount of time, money and eff ort this will entail. Th e Georgia General Assembly convenes on Jan. 13. I invite you to access the Gener-al Assembly website during session to read about current events and view live hearings and to come down to observe and partici-pate in the legislative process in person.
Tom Taylor (R-Dunwoody) represents District 79, GA House of Representatives.
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Independent school system more challenging than cityhood
‘Experts’ bolster one’s opinion
To the editor:
Recent comments [Dunwoody Re-porter, Nov. 15-28] regarding Dun-woody Mayor Mike Davis’ statement about not trusting experts are disingen-uous at best. It is reasonably obvious that the mayor is stating a well known fact: one can always hire an expert to bolster one’s opinion.
To make the case that the mayor would never trust the advice of an ex-pert defi es any sort of logic. Even Ray Charles could see this.
Mr. Davis is simply stating that those on the side wishing to block the dog run relocation have hired an expert who agreed with those paying his fee.
Jim Kelley
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
E-mail letters to [email protected]
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“I’m disappointed the government isn’t listening to the citizens. It feels like they’ve got their own agenda.”
Jim Bedell
“Yes, because we can deal with our problems locally. We are able to handle
local issues more directly. You can have direct communications and effect
whatever the issues are locally. It’s always harder when it’s further away.”
Ashley Doolittle
“I think yes. There’re more activities. There’re more businesses in the
Dunwoody community. We’ve seen a lot of growth. There seems to be
more pulling together as a community. I think we still have some bugs that
need to be ironed out, but yes.”
Susan Levy
“I feel that the county government was unresponsive. Even though there have been some missteps along the way, I feel that the present [City] Council
has our best interests at heart.”
Bob Barnwell
“I think the community is better with services like police. We see a lot more presence of police in our
neighborhood, which is good. All the services are more noticeable.”
Ken Morrison
“We’ve only been here two years. I don’t have any complaints.
We absolutely love it. We plan to be here quite a while.”
Jana Pedersen
STREET TALK
Q&ATh e city of Dunwoody opened for business on Dec. 1, 2008. In the fi ve years since, city government has paved roads, added miles of sidewalks,
started a police department, taken control of local land-use planning and begun de-veloping new city parks. At the same time, the city’s actions have stirred opposition from some residents who claim city offi cials have stopped listening to their constit-uents.
Over the past few weeks, the Dunwoody Reporter asked residents, in person at var-ious public gatherings or by email, whether they thought their community was better off now than it was fi ve years ago. Here’s what they had to say.
Q: Is the community better off now than it was fi ve years ago?
Asked around Dunwoody
DUN
www.ReporterNewspapers.net | NOV. 29 – DEC. 12, 2013 | 7
C O M M E N T A R Y
“Yeah, I do. ... I just prefer cities over counties. I think you have
better policing. I don’t want to wait for DeKalb County [police] when Dunwoody police can get to my house in two or three minutes.”
Enrico Dixon
“I think the community is making some great improvements, and has a long-
term vision for a wonderful and active and progressive society. I think we’ve had some bumps. I think we’re kind of over them and I think things are on target to move into the future.”
Bobbe Gillis
“I think so. As a city, I see more services, more being a part of the community, a little bit of pride, too, that I live in Dunwoody.”
Rupinder Hargun
“From a police standpoint, yes. I’m really impressed with the police
department. On the streets, I’ve seen improvement. I was really irritated about potholes before the city. I’ve stopped complaining. The city took care of us. On Brook Run Park, I like the children’s area. I like the skate park and the Veterans Memorial.
But the rest of it is pretty bad. I’m really disappointed there’s not more
development for seniors in Dunwoody ... Overall, some things are good and some things haven’t measured up.”
George Houston
“On balance, no. While police protection has improved, the overall
Dunwoody City Council is incompetent, and repeatedly ignores input from very capable citizens, reminiscent of the old TV sitcom F Troop and a
flock of ostriches with heads buried in the sand. This weak outfit allows the city manager to implement an
impractical urban planning agenda that completely changes the character of
the community motivated by his desire to win superficial awards and move on to another higher paying job.”
Jim Dickson
“I came here three years back. I think it could be better if the city gets more
funds [to do something about] this traffic in the evening. ... If they can
get [traffic] sorted out, it’ll be nice.”
Naveen Kumar
“Better, unquestionably. Better police services. Better financial system. A surplus. Job growth
and infrastructure improvements. They’ve delivered everything they said they were going to deliver.”
Bob Lundsten
“I believe we are a much more viable community as a city. Like anything new there is a learning curve which we are negotiating. I believe our future is very bright.”
Jim Redovian
“The community is most definitely better off, as compared to five years ago. Without raising taxes, the city of Dunwoody has provided 19 lane miles of newly paved roads, fixed more than 1,100 potholes, laid more than five miles of new sidewalks, created the best, most-talented police force in the Southeast, and revived more than 102 acres of park space that was previously being neglected. All this has been accomplished in a relatively short timeframe with no tax increases and no need to borrow money. So yes, in five years we’ve helped make Dunwoody a safer, healthier and more enjoyable community for all.”Mayor Mike Davis
DUN
C O M M E N T A R Y
8 | NOV. 29 – DEC. 12, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net DUN
Th e constant rain of quarters ended Nov. 22.
Th e falling coins really did sound a bit like rain down in the tunnel beneath the Ga. 400 Toll Plaza. Coins drivers dropped into the toll-collection baskets on the road above rolled down met-al tubes and then thumped into locked metal boxes placed at various spots along the 600-foot-long, concrete-walled tun-nel.
“During rush hour, it gets quite in-tense,” said Bert Brantley, deputy execu-tive director of the State Road and Toll-way Authority, who wore a refl ective orange vest reading “Tolls end Nov. 22” as he led a media tour of the facility on Nov. 19.
Th e rain of quarters, dimes and nick-els yielded tens of millions of dollars over the 20 years the tolls were collected on Ga. 400. In recent years, the toll booths have collected about $60,000 a day, half of that in coins, Brantley said.
Landmarks come and go in Atlanta. We’re a burn-it-down-and-build-it-again kind of place. We save little. Take Turner Field, the ballpark the Olympics gave to Atlanta baseball. Now there’s a very pub-lic plan to move the Atlanta Braves to a new suburban home and tear down Th e Ted in a couple of years.
Th ere will be an outcry, no doubt, and discussions about how to save a brick-and-steel ball fi eld and keep the Braves downtown. But if the Braves do move, we metro Atlantans will get used to that. We always do.
We’re not the kind of people who need our ballplayers to work the same hallowed ground where sports giants of past made their marks. We leave that to Boston or Chicago or New York. Here, once Turner Field opened, I couldn’t wait until the old Atlanta-Fulton County Sta-dium was blown up. It blocked the view of downtown skyscrapers from seats in Turner Field.
As a landmark, the Ga. 400 Toll Pla-za isn’t on the same level as Turner Field, of course. Still, it’s a place we’ve all got-ten used to and have grown to know. For 20 years, north metro drivers have tossed quarters into those collection baskets as they fought traffi c to and from Buckhead. Now we expect to stop and smile at the cashier as we fumble for change. It’s part of our routine.
Soon, it won’t even be a wide spot in the road.A few will even miss it. Michael Bent will. He’s worked at
the plaza for 17 years. “It’s very sad,” he said, a memory of his native Jamaica accenting his words. “It’s been here all these years. It’s like home here.”
He started as a cashier. And don’t call them “toll collec-tors,” SRTA folks are quick to say. Toll roads in other towns may have toll collectors, but metro Atlanta doesn’t. Th ey don’t collect tolls. Instead, they make change. You give them a dol-
lar, and they give you back 50 cents and throw the other 50 cents into the basket. After a stint as a cashier, Bent moved up to the building overlooking the plaza, where workers monitor the computer screens that show a count of every single coin going into the collection baskets.
Soon, metro toll roads won’t have any cashiers at all. Th e system will be fully automated. Th en, there will be few, if any, people left to tell the stories of the tollways. It’s the stories that make places come alive and keep them alive long after they’re gone. It’s the tales that matter.
Th e Ga. 400 Tollway Plaza leaves behind its share of tales. Th e cashiers tell them. Th e people who sat for hours in the booths, making change, remember the drivers, the ones who
Ga. 400 tolls: The rain of falling quarters comes to an end
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Phil Mosier
PHOTOS BY JOE EARLE
The State Road and Tollway Authority stopped collecting Ga. 400 tolls on Nov. 22, after 20 years of dimes, nickles and quarters dropping
into baskets. Above, the deposited coins traveled via metal tubes into locked boxes in a 600-foot-long tunnel beneath the toll plaza. Below, Michael Bent worked at the plaza for 17 years and is sad to see it go.
AROUND TOWNJOE EARLE
AROUND TOWN
www.ReporterNewspapers.net | NOV. 29 – DEC. 12, 2013 | 9
C O M M E N T A R Ypassed by, and the regulars they grew to recognize and sort of got to know. Some of the drivers knew them, too. Some even brought snacks for their favorite cashiers or asked about them when they were sick or changed shifts.
� e toll plaza workers remember when � st� ghts broke out among drivers who turned road rage into toll plaza rage. Some remember when drivers died at the plaza in terrible wrecks. Bent recalls that a baby was born at the plaza in an ambulance summoned after the parents stopped at the toll lane and said they’d never make it to the hos-pital in time.
Cashier Kaz Jones of Sandy Springs remembers the women in cars who wanted his number. He even went out with a couple of them, he admits, grinning sheep-ishly.
And then there are the scandal-ous tales. Some may had involved alcohol. Some may have required it. Cashier Roslyn McDonald re-members when, late one night, a man jumped from a car stopped in the toll lane and ran down Ga. 400, removing his clothes as he went. � e driver paid the toll, drove o� and collected the naked streaker a few hundred yards down the road.
Jones recalls a night when a female driver grinned mischievously at him, then gestured to-ward the back seat of her car. � ere, he saw two
women wearing nothing but their smiles. “You never know what you’re going to see down here,” Jones said.
Soon enough, there’ll be next to nothing left to see. � e plaza will be gone. � e tunnel will remain, a way to route utility lines beneath the road. But the sound of falling quarters has ended.
Toll plaza cashiers can share plenty of stories about what they’ve seen over the years. Above,
and right, Kaz Jones says “you never know what you’re going to see down here.”
Perimeter BusinessA monthly section focusing on business in the Reporter Newspapers communities
By Dan Whisenhunt
People who put off holiday shopping until the last possible moment might want to check their calen-dars.
Retailers are checking theirs. The holiday shopping season, beginning on the
day after Thanksgiving, which has come to be known as Black Friday, will be six days shorter this year. 2013 offers the shortest holiday shopping season in recent memory.
Dane Seibert, a retail consultant who lives in San-dy Springs, said many stores began their holiday pro-motions earlier this year. The continued growth of In-ternet sales has put added pressure on retail stores,
particularly local ones. “They’re going to have to get really creative.
They’re also going to fight Internet sales, which are growing substantially,” Siebert said. “If they haven’t already got their plans started, they’re already be-hind.”
In the Perimeter and throughout the country, re-tailers are looking for ways to attract more custom-ers during the shortened shopping window. Some of the nation’s largest retailers, including Walmart and JCPenney, planned to open on Thanksgiving Day.
Online retailers will be competitive this year, too. According to a study by the Adobe Digital Index, the shorter shopping window will cost retailers $1.5 bil-lion in online sales.
George Lawes, owner of Kudzu Antiques in San-dy Springs, said his business will hold special events throughout the season to bring people through the doors. There will be music and refreshments.
Lawes hopes Kudzu can attract civic-minded cus-tomers who support local businesses.
“As bricks-and-mortar retailers, we’re continu-ing to fight for the consumer’s choice because of the Internet,” Lawes said. “So many people now buy through the Internet. One thing that we feel is impor-tant is for people to support local brick and mortar retailers that are locally owned. We hope more con-sumers will value that choice, because if everybody shops at Amazon, you’re not going to have any stores
Southern-inspired -12Emmie How-
ard took her love of ‘preppy aesthetic’ and turned it into a clothing line for the ‘Southern gentleman.’
Q&A: Season to give -11It may seem ‘old-
fashioned’ to some, collecting mone-tary donations in red buckets, but it has been working for The Salvation Army for many, many years.
Ribbon cuttings -13Companies
serving up ham-burgers and deli sandwiches as well as provid-ing financial ser-vices are making their mark in the
Perimeter business community.
George Lawes, behind the desk, owner of Kudzu Antiques, and manager Peggy Horne, chat at the Sandy Springs store while employee Tommy Orr hangs Christmas lights. The store is readying its interior in anticipation of the holiday shopping season. Lawes said his store will try and enhance a customer’s shopping experience by holding special events, and offering music and refreshments. He hopes people will shop at “brick and mortar” retailers like his and support the local community.
CONTINUED ON PAGE 14
Retailers face shorter shopping season
P E R I M E T E R B U S I N E S S
www.ReporterNewspapers.net | NOV. 29 – DEC. 12, 2013 | 11
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The Salvation Army raises funds with red buckets, bells
They’re a true sign of the holiday season. The Salvation Army’s dona-tion collectors, with their recogniz-able red buckets and ringing bells, are taking to the streets again.
In this time of Internet fundrais-ers and gifts-by-Twitter, why do they keep showing up in front of groceries and malls to greet pass-ersby and collect coins? Here’s what a volunteer bell ringer who stands outside businesses in the Perime-ter and Buckhead and a Salvation Army lieutenant who oversees col-lections in those areas had to say.
Bell ringer Wal-ter Long, a tall, talk-ative 53-year-old, first volunteered to col-lect for The Salva-tion Army last year. This year, he’ll be back, manning his red bucket and ringing his bell about three days a week at vari-ous locations around Buckhead and Brookhaven. His enthusiasm for the job shows. “I really enjoy it,” he said one recent afternoon as he collect-ed donations outside a Brookhaven grocery. “It’s a great way to volun-teer.”
Q Why do you do this?
A It can really be fun. You can
brighten up people’s days. People donate and they know they’re helping. Peo-ple see this kettle and it’s nostalgic. I can’t tell you how many come by this bucket and say, ‘This is my Number One charity.”
Q How do people react when they see you standing here
with the bell and bucket?
A Ninety-nine percent of the people love us. The other 1
percent love us, too, they just don’t know it yet. Half the people who put money in this bucket they say, “Thank you. Thank you for ringing the bell.’ For some people, who are lonely during the holidays, this real-ly brightens their day... The smiles you get. It can be rewarding. After you do this for a day, you feel re-
warded. It’s really refreshing.”
Q What’s the oddest thing you’ve seen while collecting?
A Last week, there was a guy. He looked homeless. He was car-
rying his backpack and he comes and puts a whole jar of coins in my basket. It’s just amazing, the gener-osity. Beneath it all, we are soldiers of Christ. You see it come out in peo-ple at this time of the year. It pulls us together as a community. It picks me up. Life’s different for everybody, but when you give to
others, it’s a pick-me-up.
Lieutenant Stephen Correira works as an assistant corps officer for the Atlanta Tem-ple Corps of The Sal-vation Army. The 38-year-old watches over red bucket col-lections at 38 loca-tions in the Perim-eter, Buckhead and
parts of DeKalb County. Last year, the bell ringers collected $194,000 in his area, he said. His goal for 2013 is $200,000.
Q How important is the bell-ringer program to The Salva-
tion Army?
A This is our sin-gle, largest an-
nual fundraiser of the year. The funds generated at these lo-cations give us 80 percent of our total revenue.
Q With so many other ways to
collect contribu-tions, why continue to do it this way?
A This is nostalgic for people. They look for-ward to seeing the red buckets. Peo-ple are donating online as well, but the vast majority of our donations is happening at these kettles. The need is great. The need for our services keeps going up. In met-ro Atlanta alone, we served 104,000 nights [for homeless people]. We helped 54,000 people with rental, food, Christian assistance.
Q Don’t the buckets and bells seem a little old-fashioned?
A If it was old-fashioned and out of date, we wouldn’t be stand-
ing here.
Lt. Stephen Correira
Walter Long
P E R I M E T E R B U S I N E S S
12 | NOV. 29 – DEC. 12, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
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Clothing line aims to dress ‘Southern gentlemen’By Melissa Weinman
Emmie Howard loves a well-dressed man.
There’s just something special about a man in a bow tie and a seersucker suit, she said.
Howard has taken her love of the preppy aesthetic and made a living creating patterned ties and collegiate–style clothing to outfit Southern gen-tlemen through her company, South-ern Proper.
“Women, especially in the South, influence what a guy wears,” Howard said. “We wanted to influence what a guy looked like and make sure we’re with a guy who looks his best.”
Howard, the “chief executive belle” at Chamblee-based Southern Proper, launched the com-pany in 2006. She felt there was a need for a preppy brand that catered to South-ern men.
Howard said she liked the bright colors and preppy patterns of Vine-yard Vines, but felt guys going to SEC football games just couldn’t relate to
the brand’s New England vibe. “We didn’t summer in Nantucket,”
she said. “We knew there was a niche in the market for something Southern-
inspired.”Howard said the compa-
ny started with printed ties and bow ties featuring pastel colors with prints like hunt-ing dogs, lanterns and state
flags. Each year, the company has add-ed new articles of clothing into their repertoire.
A tie with a cotton boll motif is Southern Proper’s No. 1 seller, she said.
Cotton is particularly meaningful for Howard, who grew up on a cotton farm in rural Tennessee. “It’s been my family’s livelihood,” Howard said.
After graduating from Brenau Uni-versity in 2001, Howard went to work for Newell Rubbermaid. She used her experience in product develop-ment from the corporate world to start her own company. She now lives in Brookhaven with her husband, who wears a Southern Proper tie to work every day, she said.
Howard said her family couldn’t understand why she would leave a good job for the uncertainty of starting a business. But she hasn’t looked back since.
“It’s been very fulfilling in so many ways,” Howard said. “This has been a great way for me to express truly what I’m interested and passionate about – fun, preppy clothes.”
Southern Proper is sold online and in about 300 men’s specialty stores throughout the Southeast.
Madeline Brumby, store manag-er for Southern Traditions in Buck-head, said the Southern Proper bow ties are among the store’s top-selling items. Brumby attributes much of the recent popularity of bow ties to South-ern Proper. “Any kind of college thing - formals, semi formals - they’re all looking for bow ties and cumberbund sets,” Brumby said. “[Southern Proper] really set the stage for that trend.”
Perimeter Profile
Melissa WeinmanEmmie Howard loves a “well-dressed man.”
P E R I M E T E R B U S I N E S S
www.ReporterNewspapers.net | NOV. 29 – DEC. 12, 2013 | 13
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offers fi nanical services, is located at 7840 Roswell Road, Suite 450, in Sandy Springs.
Cheeseburger Bobby’s, serving up burgers, fries
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Openings
Chambers, local officials welcome new businesses
Businesses offering every-thing from hamburgers, deli sandwiches and financial advice are starting up in the Perimeter, one of the largest commercial centers in met-ro Atlanta. Here are recent ribbon cut-
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Dunwoody Chamber of Commerce.
Jason’s Deli celebrated their remodeled store at 4705 Ashford Dunwoody
Road, Suite 2, with company executives, Sandy Springs/Perimeter and Dunwoody
Chamber members, and Dunwoody Mayor
Mike Davis, left center, who cut the ribbon.
P E R I M E T E R B U S I N E S S
14 | NOV. 29 – DEC. 12, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
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left in people’s hometowns. If Sandy Springs wants to maintain a vibrant retail community, a consumer has to support that.”
Kelly Wolff, owner of the Hunt-er Collective jewelry store in Buck-head on East Andrews, opened her business two months ago. She’ll con-tend with having fewer hol-iday shopping days and be-ing the new store on the block. “I’m figuring it out as I go along,” Wolff said. “The West Village here in Buckhead is getting together to do the Small Shop Saturday on Nov. 30. There’ll be carolers and hot cider sta-tions throughout the West Village. From an event planning standpoint, we’re going to offer 10 percent off for that weekend.”
In Dunwoody, Michael Beattie
counts on holiday sales at his pho-to-finishing business, Dunwoody Photo. Most photographers have switched to digital cameras, he said, and the film processing business has just about vanished. “When I started [in the business] in 1997, we did 300-350 rolls of film a day. Now I do 300 rolls of film a month,” he said. “I’ve
been waiting for the last two months of the year to see where we’re at. We’re kind of break-even the oth-er months.”
He’s hopeful that the seasonal push that comes when peo-ple turn their family photos into hol-iday albums, greeting cards and cal-endars will make the difference in Dunwoody Photo’s first year.
Cori DeFrancis, owner of Fantastic Finds for Him in Sandy Springs, said people already are shopping for pres-
Retailers prepare for a short holiday shopping seasonCONTINUED FROM PAGE 10
Michael Beattie, general manager of Dunwoody Photo, is waiting for the last two months of the year to “see where we’re at.”
Photos by Dan Whisenhunt
CoverStory
P E R I M E T E R B U S I N E S S
www.ReporterNewspapers.net | NOV. 29 – DEC. 12, 2013 | 15
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ents at her store. “I think we are hav-ing a busier time right now,” she said. “This time in November usually has been a little bit quieter.”
Alison Norris, owner of Alison’s Restaurant, is optimistic about this holiday season, too. She depends on the holiday season for party book-ings, she said, and this year she’s al-ready pre-booked more parties than last year. “I’m looking good,” she said. “I can take more, but I’m look-ing good.”
Ed Grenvicz, owner of Pour Bis-tro in Brookhaven, said restaurants won’t be as susceptible to the shorter calendar as the retail stores. He said the restaurant is promoting the space it has available for rent on Sunday for people looking for a venue for a hol-iday party.
“We’re still going to have the same number of actual holiday days,” he said. “Our job is to try to squeeze as many Christmas events and other
folks coming through our doors as possible.”
Mike Cosentino, owner of Big Peach Running Co. in Brookhaven, said he planned for the shortened cal-endar a year ago. Also, his business does a substantial amount of sales just after the new year, attracting custom-ers who are buying running shoes to help them keep their New Year’s res-olutions.
“The biggest surprise to me is how much it seems to be a surprise to everyone else, given how much of us in this business were looking at this a year ago,” Cosentino said. “What I’ve heard is that the ten-dency to mark things down ridicu-lously low is more likely, because of the fact that there are some retailers who feel like they over-bought. Be-cause of the shortened season, they aren’t going to get the velocity they need to get through the inventory they have.”
Alison Norris, owner of Alison’s Restaurant, is optimistic about this holiday season.
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Holiday HoopsFriday, Dec. 6, 5:30 p.m. – Boys and girls in grades 6-8 can test their bas-ketball skills during the Hol-iday Hoops 2 on 2 Tour-nament. 2-on-2 round robin, free throw and 3-point shooting contests. Competi-tion begins at 6 p.m. Awards given in each catego-ry. Includes tournament t-shirt. Free. Sandy Springs Middle School, 8750 Pride Place, Sandy Springs, 30350. To learn more and to register, go to: www.sandyspringsga.org or email: [email protected].
Queen GlitterTuesday, Dec. 10, 4-4:45 p.m. – Get ready to be swept up in the magic of Queen Glitter’s en-chanting tales. For ages 4-12. Free and open to the public. Northside Branch Library, 3295 Northside Parkway, NW, Atlanta, 30327. Email: [email protected] or call 404-814-3508 for addition-al details.
Turtle ToursSaturday, Dec. 14, 11 a.m.-12 p.m. – Her-itage Sandy Springs’ “Turtle Tours,” an education-al series appropriate for children ages 2-5, contin-ues. In this program, museum mascots “Sandy” the Chipmunk and “Spring” the Turtle “Celebrate the Season.” Free; donations encouraged. 6075 Sandy Springs Circle, Sandy Springs, 30328. For more in-formation, email: [email protected], call 404-851-9111 or visit: www.heritagesan-dysprings.org.
Winter CraftSaturday, Dec. 14, 12-4 p.m. – Children ages 4-12 can drop in with parents and caregivers to make a winter holiday craft. Free and open to all. Buckhead Branch Library, 269 Buckhead Ave., NE, Atlanta, 30305. Email: [email protected] or call 404-814-3500 for further information.
L E T ’ S L E A R N !
Cathedral TourSaturday, Dec. 7, 9:50 a.m. – Come tour the architecture and stained glass windows of the Cathe-dral of St. Philip. Free, and open to everyone. Tour begins in the atrium outside the bookstore entrance, and includes the organs, rose window and � ve of the six chapels. Binoculars encouraged. 2744 Peachtree Rd., NW, Atlanta, 30305. Contact Ken Brownlee at 404-365-1000 with questions.
Feel BetterMonday, Dec. 9, 10 a.m.-12 p.m. – � e “Look Good, Feel Better” program teaches beauty techniques to people with cancer, helping them man-age the appearance-related side e� ects of cancer treat-ment. Free. Call 1-800-395-5665 to register. Saint Joseph’s Hospital, Carroll Conference and Educa-tion Center, 5665 Peachtree Dunwoody Rd., Atlan-ta, 30342. Free parking in the East parking garage. Go to: http://lookgoodfeelbetter.org to learn more.
Waning Autumn Hike Saturday, Dec. 14, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. – Join National Park Service Ranger Jerry Hightower for a hike through a forest that was once home to Amer-ican Indians. Visit the largest natural rock shelter in the park, and hear about the Indians’ use of available resources to survive and prosper. $3 daily park pass; $25 annual park pass required. Call 678-538-1200 to make a reservation. Chattahoochee River Na-tional Recreation Area, Palisades unit, Whitewater Creek Rd., NW, Sandy Springs, 30327. Visit: www.nps.gov for details.
Urban WildlifeSaturday, Dec. 14, 11 a.m.-12 p.m. – � e Atlanta Wild Animal Rescue E� ort returns to the Blue Heron Nature Preserve to discuss how urban wildlife has adapted to living next door to humans. Event includes “meet-and-greet” with a � ying squir-rel, box turtle, screech owl, corn snake and an opos-sum! $10 per person. RSVP by calling 412-398-1101. 4055 Roswell Rd., Atlanta, 30342. To � nd out more, go to: www.bhnp.org.
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www.ReporterNewspapers.net | NOV. 29 – DEC. 12, 2013 | 17
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Hanukkah HootenannyMonday, Dec. 2, 5:15 p.m. – � e community is invit-ed to a Hanukkah cel-ebration at the Mar-cus Jewish Community Center - Atlanta. Fes-tivities include a Meno-rah lighting, songs, jelly doughnuts and a special
performance of “Milton the Menorah” by � e Bi-ble Players. Hanukkah dinner available for purchase following the show. Free. 5342 Tilly Mill Rd., Dun-woody, 30338. To learn more, call 678-812-4161, email: [email protected] or visit: www.atlantajcc.org.
Hanukkah Goblins� ursday, Dec. 5, 10:30 a.m. – A feisty band of goblins has stolen Hanukkah, and it’s up to Her-shel of Ostropol to get it back! Camped out in the haunted synagogue on the hill, Hershel outwits the goblins one by one, but can he prevail through the eighth night when the ferocious King of the Goblins appears? Play suited for ages 3 and up. Additional shows: Dec. 5, 7 p.m.; Sunday, Dec. 8, 10:30 a.m., 1 and 4 p.m. Tickets: MJCCA members, adult $12; child $10. Non-members, adult $15, child $12; � ursday matinee, all tickets $10. Marcus Jewish Community Center - Atlanta, Morris & Rae Frank � eatre, 5342 Tilly Mill Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. For information, visit: www.atlantajcc.org/boxo� ce or call 678-812-4002.
Tree Lighting� ursday, Dec. 5, 4 p.m. – Join others at Holy Spirit Catholic Church for holiday traditions: Ad-vent Vespers and Mass, followed by a live nativi-ty and tree lighting on the Holy Spirit Preparatory School campus. Free and open to the public. Re-freshments served. 4465 Northside Dr., NW, Atlan-ta, 30327. Call 678-904-2811 with questions.
Artists MarketSaturday, Dec. 7, 12-3 p.m. – It’s Family Day at the Spruill Art Gallery! Bring everyone for an af-ternoon � lled with activities and tastings, and check out the market’s locally-crafted gifts and décor. Free and open to the community. Late night shopping, 6-8 p.m., � ursdays in Dec. Jewelry trunk show Dec. 14, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Market hours: Tuesday-Saturday, 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; Sunday, 12-5 p.m. Mar-ket opened Nov. 14 and continues through Dec. 23. 4681 Ashford Dunwoody Rd., Atlanta, 30346. Call 770-394-4019 or visit: spruillgallery.blogspot.com for details.
German MarketSaturday, Dec. 7, 12-6 p.m. – Atlanta Inter-national School holds its annual international expe-rience! Market features holiday refreshments, craft activities for kids, photo opportunity with St. Nich-olas, gift items from more than 40 vendors, live en-tertainment. Free admission and open to all. 2890 North Fulton Dr., Atlanta, 30305. Call 404-841-3840 or go to: www.aischool.org to learn more.
Elf EvieSaturday, Dec. 7, 1-4 p.m. – Santa Claus and Elf Evie � y in from the North Pole to visit children and give out treats. Free ad-mission to the Ogletho-rpe University Museum for children under 12. Photog-
raphy permitted and encouraged. Program also on Dec. 14 and Dec. 21. $5 general admission; free for OUMA members and those with a Petrel Pass. In conjunction with “Haddon Sundblom: Santa Paint-ings” exhibit. 4484 Peachtree Rd., NE, Brookhav-en, 30319. For additional details, visit: museum.oglethorpe.edu or call 404-364-8555.
H O L I D A Y H A P P E N I N G S
Live NativitySaturday, Dec. 7, 6-8 p.m. – Enjoy the live na-tivity scene, Bethlehem town, the shepherds’ � elds and the heavenly host above the lawn of St. John Church Methodist Church. Refreshments provided. Free, and all are welcome. Also on Sunday, Dec. 8, 6-8 p.m. 550 Mt. Paran Rd., NW, Atlanta, 30327. Call 404-255-1384 or go to: http://stjohnatlanta.org with questions.
Global Gift MarketSunday, Dec. 8, 12-5:30 p.m. – Covenant Presbyterian Church hosts its annual Glob-al Gift Market in the Fellowship Hall. Browse hand-crafted gifts, gift cards and fair trade food
products and baskets. Proceeds support Ten � ou-sand Villages and the LaGonave Haiti Partnership. Free admission, and the public is invited. Enjoy free, hot apple cider and cookies. $6 chili supper follows, with Lessons and Carols at 6:30 p.m. Free parking at Peachtree Battle Shopping Center. 2461 Peachtree Rd., NE, Atlanta, 30305. Go to: www.covenantpres-byterian.us or call 404-237-0363 for information.
Candy MakingTuesday, Dec. 10, 6-7:30 p.m. – Sari teach-es you how to make candy in time for the holidays! Adults only due to hot ingredients. Free. Open to the � rst 15 participants. Call 404-848-7140 or visit the Brookhaven Branch Library to register. 1242 N. Druid Hills Rd., NE, Brookhaven, 30319.
Holiday Greenery Wednesday, Dec. 11, 3-3:45 p.m. – Learn how to create holiday decorations by using materials from your yard and home. Presented by Sarah Brodd of the UGA Cooperative Extension. Free. Open to � rst 25 participants. For adults, 18 years and over. Brookhaven Branch Library, 1242 N. Druid Hills Rd., NE, Brookhaven, 30319. Call 404-848-7140 or visit the branch to register.
The Holiday SpiritSaturday, Dec. 14, 10:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. – � e Atlanta History Center’s annual holiday pro-gram lets you explore holidays past with living his-tory characters at Smith Family Farm and Swan House. Free for AHC members; included in the cost of general admission for non-members. 130 West Paces Ferry Rd., NW. Atlanta, 30305. For more in-formation or to purchase tickets, call 404-814-4000 or go to: www.atlantahistorycenter.com.
Live AnimalsSaturday, Dec. 14, 6-8 p.m. – Bring the en-tire family, and check out the live nativity perfor-mances every 30 minutes on Sardis United Method-ist Church’s front lawn. Sing Christmas carols in the sanctuary, and enjoy refreshments in the Fellowship Hall. � e public is welcome. Free; donations glad-ly accepted. 3725 Powers Ferry Rd., NW, Atlanta, 30342. Call 404-237-6060 or visit: www.sardisch-urch.com with questions.
out & about
18 | NOV. 29 – DEC. 12, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
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Church, school concerts to brighten the holiday season� e season of song has arrived for
festive gatherings, indulging in decadent nibbles and libations and wearing that “colorful” sweater grandma bought you last year. It is also the time that choirs lift their voices to celebrate the season. Here are some upcoming musical events scheduled for Reporter Newspapers communities that are sure to brighten your holidays.
Brookhaven
Brookhaven United Methodist Church
Mark your calendar for a community concert featuring holiday favorites, both sacred and secular. Don Jones, the new music director at Brookhaven United Methodist Church and former Broad-way musician, presents seasonal favor-ites, and those in attendance will have an opportunity to sing carols together.
When: Sunday, Dec. 8, 3 p.m. Where: 1366 N. Druid Hills Rd.,
Brookhaven, 30319How much: Suggested donation, $5,
or � ve canned food items For more information: Call 404-
237-7506 or visit: www.brookhave-
numc.org
Buckhead
� e Cathedral of St. Philip� e Atlanta Gay Men’s Chorus cel-
ebrates all family members in “Seasons of Family,” featuring special arrange-ments of familiar holiday tunes, from “Home for the Holidays” to the Peanuts’ “Christmas Time is Here,” “I Saw � ree Ships,” Benjamin Britten’s “� is Lit-tle Babe” and “� row the Yule Log On, Uncle John.” � e 33rd annual event welcomes a cameo appearance by the new Atlanta Women’s Chorus, as it pre-pares to launch its own concert season.
When: Friday, Dec. 6, 8 p.m., Satur-day, Dec. 7, 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. Free ice cream social follows the Saturday mat-inee
Where: 2744 Peachtree Rd., NW, Atlanta, 30305
How much: General admission, $30; premium seating, $40
For more information: Call 404-320-1030 or visit: www.agmchorus.org
� e Westminster Schools� e Westminster Schools presents
a holiday concert featuring Lee Harp-er & Dancers, joined by Lee Harper & Dancers II (youth company), and West-minster Middle School’s dance class and chorus. � e concert includes num-bers such as “Sleigh Ride,” “Farandole,” “Christmas a La Waltz,” “Carol of the Bells” and “March of the Toys.” Chris-topher Rex, principal cellist of the At-lanta Symphony Orchestra, performs as guest musician.
When: Saturday, Dec. 14, 1 p.m. Where: Kellett � eatre, Broyles Arts
Center, (on the school’s campus) 1424 W. Paces Ferry Rd., Atlanta, 30327
How much: Free admission and open to all
For more information: Call Lee Harper & Dancers at 404-364-9555 or visit: www.leeharperanddancers.com
Northside Drive Baptist Church� e Choral Guild of Atlanta invites
the public to a “Carol Sing,” with the Lovinggood Middle School Chorus. Music selections include “I Saw � ree Ships,” “Carol of Bells,” “African Car-ol,” “A Musicological Journey through Twelve Days of Christmas” and sing-a-longs of several seasonal favorites. Come
learn about the history and background of the songs you have sung for years that are a traditional part of the season.
When: Tuesday, Dec. 17, 7:30-9 p.m.
Where: 3100 Northside Dr., NW, Atlanta, 30305
How much: Adults, $15; seniors, $12; students, $5
For more information: Call 404-223-6362, email: [email protected] or go to: www.cgatl.org
Peachtree Road United Methodist Church
Peachtree Road United Methodist Church welcomes the � ve levels of the Georgia Boy Choir, along with a full orchestra, in performing favorite car-ols and classic songs to keep your hol-iday season merry. � e evening in-cludes Atlanta’s largest performance of the “Twelve Days of Christmas,” with audience participation highly encour-aged. During the concert, children un-der 6 years old are invited to attend an onsite Christmas party, so parents can enjoy the performance worry-free.
When: Friday, Dec. 20, 7-9 p.m. CONTINUED ON PAGE 22
Holiday Shopping
www.ReporterNewspapers.net | NOV. 29 – DEC. 12, 2013 | 19
seasonal shopportunities
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COMMUNITIES OF FAITH
20 | NOV. 29 – DEC. 12, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
N o r t h s i d e d r i v e B a p t i s t C h u r C h
Christmas Eve4 pm • Family Vespers
Carols and Communion with all children participating in the telling of the Christmas story
10:30 pm • Lessons and Carols with CommunionA candlelight service based on the King’s College tradition
3100 Northside Drive NW • www.northsidedrive.org
10 am | Young Families Service | Sanctuary
12 Noon | Communion Service | Kellett Chapel
12 Noon | A Summit Christmas | The Lodge
2 pm | Family Service | Sanctuary
4 pm | Family Candlelight Service | Sanctuary
6, 8 and 10 pm | Candlelight Services | Sanctuary
3434 Roswell Road, NW | Atlanta Ga 30305 | 404.842.5800 | peachtreepres.org
A T P e A C h T r e e
Christmas EveChristmas EveChristmas EveChristmas EveChristmas EveChristmas EveChristmas EveA T P e A C h T r e e
Christmas EveServices
Christmas Night Gratitude Service
7:30 p.m. – 8:30 p.m.Second Church of Christ, Scientist
347 Carpenter Dr., Sandy Springs GA 30328(near � e Comfort Inn at I-285 & Roswell Rd)
All Are Welcome!More details at
www.SecondChurchAtlanta.orgor call 404-364-9642
3110 Ashford Dunwoody Rd • Atlanta, 30319 • 404-261-4292 • www.stmartins.org
Christmas Eve: Tuesday, Dec. 243:00 p.m. Holy Eucharist and Christmas Pageant* 5:30 p.m. Christmas Concert*6:00 p.m. Festive Christmas Mass With Orchestra* 8:00 p.m. Holy Eucharist and Lessons and Carols10:30 p.m. Christmas Concert11:00 p.m. The Solemn Mass of Christ at Midnight*Nursery is available for these services and programs.
Christmas Day: Wednesday, Dec. 25, 10:00 a.m.
SAINT MARTIN IN THE FIELDS EPISCOPAL CHURCH
3264 Northside Parkway, NW Atlanta, GA 30327 www.StLukeAtlanta.org
Christmas Eve at St. Luke Lutheran Church
Tuesday, December 24, 7:30 pmJoin us for a traditional Lutheran
Candlelight Service with choir and carols.For more information call
404.237.4413.
3264 Northside Parkway, NW Atlanta, GA 30327 www.StLukeAtlanta.org
Christmas Eve at St. Luke Lutheran Church
Tuesday, December 24, 7:30 pmJoin us for a traditional Lutheran
Candlelight Service with choir and carols.For more information call
404.237.4413.
3264 Northside Parkway, NW Atlanta, GA 30327 www.StLukeAtlanta.org
Christmas Eve at St. Luke Lutheran Church
Tuesday, December 24, 7:30 pmJoin us for a traditional Lutheran
Candlelight Service with choir and carols.For more information call
404.237.4413.
F A I T H
www.ReporterNewspapers.net | NOV. 29 – DEC. 12, 2013 | 21
COMMUNITIES OF FAITH
See the world’s greatest story come to life!
The Story of Bethlehem
Saturday & Sunday, December 7 - 8 6:00 – 8:00 PM
Celebrate the world’s greatest story
featuring a LIVE NATIVITY!
Walk into The Story of Bethlehem re-creation of the 1st century town with a live nativity, angels on high, magi following the star, shepherds with their sheep and goats, a donkey,
marketplace vendors, Roman centurions, a synagogue, and “Rufus” the camel! The newly remodeled sanctuary is open for quiet meditation with beautiful music, while the fellowship hall is
candlelit with the aroma of complimentary hot cider, cocoa, and fresh baked cookies.
St. John United Methodist Church
550 Mt. Paran Rd NW Atlanta, GA 30327
www.stjohnatlanta.org
FREE ADMISSION AND O PEN TO ALL
The Story of BethlehemSee the world’s greatest story come to life!
Saturday & Sunday, December 7–86:00 – 8:00 PM
Walk into The Story of Bethlehem re-creation of the 1st century town with a live nativity, angels on high, magi following the star,
shepherds with their sheep and goats, a donkey, marketplace vendors, Roman centurions, a synagogue, and “Rufus” the camel! The newly remodeled sanctuary is open for quiet meditation with
beautiful music, while the fellowship hall is candlelit with the aroma of complimentary hot cider, cocoa, and fresh baked cookies.
Free Admission and Open to All
St. John United Methodist Church550 Mt. Paran Rd NW, Atlanta, GA 30327
www.stjohnatlanta.org
December 1st: Worship 11am Annual Christmas Tree Lighting and Family Event 5pmDecember 8th: Worship 11am: A Thrill of Hope December 15th: Worship 11am: White Gifts ServiceDecember 22nd: Worship 11am: A Gift of Love, A Prayer for Peace with orchestraDecember 24th: Family Christmas Eve Service 5pmDecember 29th: Worship 11am: A Gift of Joy, with orchestra
Sandy Springs United Methodist Church
86 Mount Vernon Hwy, Sandy Springs, GA 30328
404.255.1181 | www.ssumc.org
Come experience peace, joy,
hope, and love with us this
Advent season.
PHOTOS BY PHIL MOSIER
Hanukkah shoppingLeft, Congregation Or VeShalom gave
holiday shoppers a jump on the season by offering their “OVS Sisterhood Hanukkah Bazaar” on Nov. 17, featuring food and holiday festivities. Right, Elaine Levine, left, shops in the bakery section of the
bazaar as Amy Maslia helps with her order. The Jewish holiday of Hanukkah
began at sundown on Nov. 27.
out & about
22 | NOV. 29 – DEC. 12, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
Classical . Catholic. Inspired. Comp lete.
SACS and SAIS accredited
Preschool starting age 2 through 12th grade
you are INVITED to our
Sunday, December 8, 2013 | 1:30 pm-4:00 pm4449 Northside Drive, Atlanta, GA 30327
PRESCHOOL Age 2-4 * Presentation 2:00 pmChildcare is provided for those attending Preschool Presentation
UPPER SCHOOL Grades 7-12 * Presentation 3:00 pm
www.holyspiritprep.org 678.761.7992
Sunday, December 8, 2013 | Sunday, December 8, 2013 | 1:30 pm-4:00 pmSunday, December 8, 2013 |
HSP reporter ad 7.47x 6.185 11-21 HR.pdf 3 11/21/13 1:32 PM
and Saturday, Dec. 21, 7-9 p.m. Where: 3180 Peachtree Rd., NE,
Atlanta, 30305How much: General admission, $20;
preferred seating, $40; students, $12 For more information: Call 404-
402-4083 or visit: georgiaboychoir.org
Dunwoody
Dunwoody United Methodist ChurchDunwoody United Methodist
Church presents its annual family con-cert, “All for a Baby,” in the sanctuary. � e Wandering Shepherds, DUMC’s bluegrass band, as well as children, youth, handbell, women and Chancel choirs join together to celebrate Christ-mas!
When: Sunday, Dec. 8, 3:45 p.m. Where: 1548 Mount Vernon Rd.,
Dunwoody, 30338 How much: Free. � e public is wel-
comeFor more information: Call the
church at 770-394-0675
St. Luke’s Presbyterian ChurchSt. Luke’s Presbyterian Church holds
its annual Toys for Tots concert in its sanctuary. Hear the Chancel choir, Fes-tival Ringers and brass usher in the hol-
iday season. When: Sunday, Dec. 8, 4 p.m. Where: 1978 Mount Vernon Rd.,
Dunwoody, 30338 How much: One unwrapped toy for
donation to Toys for Tots; a free-will of-fering will be collected for service per-sonnel families
For more information: Contact David Wallace at 770-329-5659 or via email: [email protected]. Also
visit: www.slpres.org
Sandy Springs
Heritage Sandy SpringsHeritage Sandy Springs continues its
Heritage Winter Classics concert series by welcoming “� e Atlanta Vocal Proj-ect,” an a cappella chorus specializing in the barbershop style, as they perform a Christmas show.
When: Sunday, Dec. 15, 4:30-6:30 p.m. Doors open at 4 p.m.
Where: Heritage Hall, 6110 Blue-stone Rd., Sandy Springs, 30328
How much: $5 per person For more information: Call 404-
851-9111, ext. 4, email: [email protected] or go to: www.her-itagesandysprings.org. To learn more about the group, visit: www.atlantavo-calproject.com
Apostles Church of Sandy SpringsInvite your family, friends and neigh-
bors to celebrate the season at the Apos-tles Night of Music and Community Feast! � e Apostles Praise and Worship Band, adult chorus and student perfor-mance group perform a variety of mu-sic, including holiday favorites. Come together after the concert for a potluck community feast. For last name A-M, bring a salad; N-Z, soup. � e church will provide bread, dessert and beverag-es.
When: Sunday, Dec. 15, 5-7 p.m. Where: 6025 Glenridge Dr., NE,
Sandy Springs, 30328 How much: All are welcome regard-
less of ability to bring a potluck item.For more information: Call 404-
255-8668 or email: [email protected]
Church, school concerts to brighten the holiday seasonCONTINUED FROM PAGE 18
&
Read all of our editions online
ReporterNewspapers.net
AtlantaINtownPaper.com
SPECIAL
The Atlanta Vocal Project will perform on Dec. 15 at Heritage Sandy Springs.
www.ReporterNewspapers.net | NOV. 29 – DEC. 12, 2013 | 23
Here’s Looking at You!
To view more photos visit ReporterNewspapers.net. Submit photos @ [email protected]
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SPECIAL
Green is goodFrom left, Sam Woodrow, Mia Arrigali, Neal Yates, Ethan Archibald, Grace
Myers and Azeezat Bello, students at Dunwoody
Elementary School, harvested a variety of
vegetables from the school’s garden, and were able
to sample “home-grown” lettuce, broccoli and radishes.
SPECIAL
Cool cashGarden Hills Elementary School teacher Kelly Petrello, holding
check, received an Atlanta Families’ Award for Excellence
in Education, and a $7,500 check to continue her personal
project, the Digital Citizen’s Online Classroom. Helping her celebrate were Garden
Hills Elementary Principal Mr. Tommy Usher, second from right, APS North Region Interim Executive Director Dr. Sidney Baker, at Usher’s left, Board of Education member Nancy Meister, next to check, and other special guests.
SPECIAL
Soccer starsThe Our Lady of the Assumption Church’s U14 boys soccer team
won the Dunwoody Metro Soccer League fall season,
defeating Saint Brigid Catholic Church 2-1 in overtime. Front row, from left, Luc Franklin, Max Haslach, Quint Gfroerer, Conor Sheehan, Colt Franklin,
Nic Howard, Santiago Martinez, Luke Franklin, Michael Tobia.
Back row, from left, Head Coach Rob Aldrich, Connor
Brown, Mac McComb, Nolan Aldrich, Patrick Kremer, Erik Kolvereid, Richy Wagner, Joseph Waller and Coach Mike McComb.
DEAN CHELLIAH
Aprons on!Sarah Smith Elementary School
in Buckhead recently held their fall festival. Peter Wurm,
left, assists daughters Sadie and Sofi e, right, in building
tool boxes. The annual festival attracted over 1,200 attendees.
E D U C A T I O N
24 | NOV. 29 – DEC. 12, 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.
up
It takes courage to
upcourage 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
Standout StudentsStudent Profi le:
Sarah Sukin Pace Academy, senior
Sarah Sukin is keeping her options open for the future.
Sarah participates in a broad range of activities. � e variety highlights her wide in-terests.
She leads art classes for stu-dents at her school, does vol-unteer work with homeless women and children, teaches Hebrew school, and juggles participation in clubs ranging from the model United Na-tions to the National Honor Society.
� ough Sarah is a very busy girl, carrying a tiring schedule, her passion for ev-erything she does provides the energy to keep her going, she said.
She started volunteer work at My Sis-ter’s House, a shelter for homeless wom-en and children, during her sophomore year in high school.
“It’s so inspiring to listen to the kids and help them, it makes you keep want-ing to go back,” she said, “and I go back to that every � ursday.”
Sarah’s enthusiasm shows not only through her community service activi-ties, but also through her academics. She enjoys both math and art, and is con-siders a career that would combine the two, such as working with 3-D printing or with product design.
Sarah’s teachers recognize her passion and ability to excel at whatever she puts her mind to.
“With her calm, quiet intellect, cou-pled with a very mature, consistent work ethic, Sarah is able to tackle any task with apparent ease,” said Jenni Coale, Sarah’s history teacher.
Sarah says she thinks what’s impor-tant is to try out a variety of areas.
“� e most important thing is that whatever you do you want to do the best that you can,” she said. “But also enjoy what you are doing. I don’t do anything that I don’t feel very inspired about.”
What’s Next:
Sarah plans to pick a college where she can continue her interest in math and art. And she wants to stay active do-ing service work in her community. “I de� nitely am going to � nd a place near wherever I go to college where I can help and continue my service,” she said.
� is article was prepared by Mau-ra Binkley, a student at Dunwoody High School.
Do you know a standout high school student?
Send nominees to [email protected].
E D U C A T I O N
www.ReporterNewspapers.net | NOV. 29 – DEC. 12, 2013 | 25DUN
Student Profi le: Mollie Simon Chamblee Charter High
School, senior
Th ere’s quite a bit to say about Mol-lie Simon. She’s president of Chamblee’s Technology Student Association, co-ed-itor of her school’s newspaper and prac-ticed in Aikido, a Japanese defensive martial art.
Mollie has been broadening her ho-rizons and learning new skills for years. In eighth grade, she started taking class-es in Aikido.
Aikido, translated roughly as “the way of the harmonious spirit,” is a de-fensive martial art that originated in Ja-pan in the early 1900s. Th e form focus-es on grappling and on softness: In other words, it is a style that emphasizes dis-patching an attacker rather than attack-ing someone else.
“It’s all about responding to attacks,” Mollie said.
Th ough Mollie has not been focusing as intently on Aikido in recent years, she most certainly has not slacked off . She has been working on Chamblee Char-ter High School’s Technology Student Association, an organization that meets weekly. She is currently its president.
She’s worked with the association since her freshman year. Th e organiza-tion challenges students to compete in various events, from engineering and
writing to debate, public speaking and even fashion design.
Mollie has attended the Tech Day and State Conference in Athens, Ga., and a couple of international conferenc-es – one in Orlando, Fla., and the oth-er in Dallas, Texas. At one conference, Mollie and a friend won a fi rst-place prize by developing a customizable trav-el bag.
“I had actually wanted to go into journalism instead,” Mollie noted, “but as a freshman, [under school rules] I
couldn’t do that. I ended up picking the association, and I’ve stuck with it ever since.”
Th at in no way means that Mollie has given up on pursuing a career in jour-nalism. She works as an intern with Re-porter Newspapers. And she is co-editor of Chamblee’s school newspaper, “Th e Blue & Gold.”
Mollie recently attended the Al Neu-harth Free Spirit Journalism Conference in Washington D.C., as a representative of the state of Georgia. Th e conference, named for the founder of USA Today, is designed to encourage and inspire future journalists. Mollie was one of 51 rising
seniors to attend.
What’s Next:
Mollie hasn’t settled on a college yet, but believes she’d like to pursue a career in journalism. She is also looking into marketing the customizable bag that won her and her partner fi rst place at one of the Technology Student Associa-tion’s International Conferences.
� is article was prepared by Blake Flournoy, a student at Riverwood Interna-tional Charter School.
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DUN
DeKalb school board ‘doesn’t recognize local needs’
ognize the unique needs of local com-munities. It highlights our need for con-trol.”
On Nov. 11, the DeKalb school board voted 5-4 against the Druid Hills petition.
A “charter cluster” is a concept that takes a cluster of schools – a high school and all of the elementary and middle schools that feed into it – and puts it un-der the control of a governing board sep-arate from the school system.
Th e idea is that the charter cluster would have more autonomy and fl exi-bility in exchange for more accountabil-ity and improvements in academic per-formance.
Marshall Orson, a board of educa-tion representative whose district in-cludes Brookhaven, was one of the four members who voted in favor of the Dru-id Hills petition. Orson said the Dru-id Hills Charter Cluster petition was the fi rst of its kind to come before the DeKalb school board and had it been approved, it would have been the fi rst charter cluster in the state.
“I think we’re going to have to wrestle with this issue. I don’t think this is the last petition. I think it’s only the fi rst.”
But Brookhaven City Councilman Bates Mattison said the school board’s decision also may discourage parents from submitting charter cluster appli-cations in the future. Mattison said he looked into creating a charter cluster for Chamblee High School and a lot of time, eff ort and money goes into prepar-ing the charter petitions.
“It took what was a group of active parents and educators who want to im-prove the school system and told them, ‘We’re not interested in having you par-ticipate,’” he said. “In the bigger pic-ture, it says to people like me or in Dun-woody, maybe it’s not worth the eff ort.”
Meanwhile, a study of the feasibility of creating a separate Dunwoody school system found the system would raise twice as much at current tax levels as it would need to operate. Th e study, com-missioned by Dunwoody Parents Con-cerned about Quality Education and paid for by the Dunwoody City Coun-cil, projected revenues for Dunwoody school system at $78.7 million, based on 2012 levels, and projected operating costs of about $37.8 million.
“Such organization reform may be not only fi nancially prudent, but would facilitate the classroom-centered and child-centered operations without the organization encumbrances of a district organized to serve 98,000 children,” said the study, which was conducted by Georgia Tech professor Christine P. Ris and Georgia Public Policy Foundation president Kelly McCutchen.
Th e study also found that DeKalb County schools stood to lose about $27 million of consolidated revenues if an independent Dunwoody school system
should be created.Orson, who was a strong support-
er of the Druid Hills eff ort, said he sees charter clusters as a good model for im-proving education. “Th ey strike a good balance for autonomy for areas with the capacity and interest while maintaining the overall school system,” Orson said.
Orson said he doesn’t think it’s fair to label the school board as infl exible or unwilling to consider new ideas. “I hate to draw a conclusion from any single vote,” Orson said. “Th is is a new board.”
Earlier this year, Gov. Nathan Deal removed six of the nine school board members after the DeKalb school sys-tem was placed on accreditation pro-bation. Orson and two other members had recently been elected and were al-lowed to retain their seats. On Nov. 25, the Georgia Supreme Court upheld the law allowing Deal to remove the board members.
Orson said he thinks it’s likely the state may try to narrow the board’s dis-cretion when it comes to charter peti-tions. For that reason, Orson would like to see the board consider more alterna-tive ideas.
“Are we better off embracing it so we’re still party to it or having the state make a decision for us?” Orson said. “To maintain our relevance, we’re ultimate-ly going to have to be part of the pro-cess … or someone else is going to do it for us.”
Rep. Tom Taylor, R-Dunwoody, be-lieves denial of the Druid Hills petition will fuel support for his bill allowing the creation of independent school systems. His bill would allow cities created since 2005 to start new school systems.
Taylor said the school board’s actions show there is a need to create diff erent ways to improve public schools. “Th is is our only alternative,” Taylor said.
He believes the denial will help his cause in the Legislature. “A lot of the pushback I was getting last year, in the one hearing we had, was, ‘Why don’t you do a charter cluster?’ Now I can tell you why,” Taylor said.
Sen. Fran Millar, R-Dunwoody, said he has asked legislative counsel to ex-plore adding an appeals process to the current state law on charter clusters for applications that are denied by local school boards.
Millar said his interest in changing the law was infl uenced by the DeKalb school board’s vote to turn down the Druid Hills application.
“I was disappointed. I think it was a chance to really be innovative instead of the same ole same ole,” Millar said.
Mattison said improving public ed-ucation is too important for parents to give up. “People like me are not going to stop just because the DeKalb Board of Education said ‘no’ to one group,” he said. “Th e question is, which option is going to be the most achievable and do-able?”
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
C O M M U N I T Y
www.ReporterNewspapers.net | NOV. 29 – DEC. 12, 2013 | 27
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DUN
Report fi nds city of Lakeside viable
BY MELISSA [email protected]
Advocates of a proposed city to be called Lakeside have released a Univer-sity of Georgia study that fi nds their plan to create the city in central DeKalb County is fi nancially sound.
Th e Lakeside City Alliance is the fi rst of sever-al groups hoping to incorporate a city in the north-cen-tral corridor of the county to publish a completed feasibili-ty study.
“We are thrilled that our communi-ty generates the rev-enue necessary to govern itself,” said Mary Kay Wood-worth, chair of the Lakeside City Alli-ance in a news re-lease. “After more than 70 community meetings discussing potential incorpora-tion, it’s now time to move forward and re-quest that the Gener-al Assembly allow us a vote to become Georgia’s newest city.”
Th e analysis was completed by the Carl Vinson Institute of Government at the University of Georgia.
Th e institute estimated that if creat-ed, the city of Lakeside would have an-nual expenses of $29,909,347 and total annual revenues of $35,245,527. Rev-enue estimates were based on property taxes collected in the same area of unin-corporated DeKalb in 2012, as well as projections for franchise fees, sales tax-es and grant funding. Th e expenditure estimates were made using the budgets for the cities of Smyrna and Dunwoody, which were selected as comparison cities for the proposed city of Lakeside.
Th e proposed city would be approx-imately 20 square miles. Th e report de-scribes the study area as bounded to the north by I-85, Gwinnett County to the east and North Druid Hills Road to the south. Most of the area is bounded on the east by I-285 north of U.S. 78.
Sen. Fran Millar, R-Dunwoody, sponsored the bill to create the city of Lakeside last year. Millar said the fi nal borders for the proposed city have not yet been fi nalized.
Th ere are areas in confl ict with pro-posals for a city of Tucker as well, he said, particularly the Midvale Road, Midvale Elementary and Livsey Ele-mentary precincts. “Unfortunately try-ing to get these borders done, I’ve been trying to get these groups together and haven’t been successful,” Millar said.
Millar said he thinks the best way
to solve the confl ict would be to hold a straw poll for those in the areas in ques-tion to gauge interest in joining the city. Th at would leave the door open for them to annex into the city in the fu-
ture, if Lakeside is approved.
“We may have a non-binding vote in some of the areas at the same time as we have a vote for the city,” Millar said.
At the same time as Millar fi led the bill for Lakeside, several other legisla-tors sponsored city-hood bills around the same area.
Th e City of Bri-arcliff Initiative es-timates its own fea-sibility study will be complete in Decem-ber.
“Th e residents of each area that ac-tively raised thou-sands of dollars for these studies deserve a chance to vote on
whether they want to incorporate as new cities— not just Lakeside, but Bri-arcliff , Tucker, and Stonecrest,” said Al-len Venet, president of the organization.
Despite the challenges of compet-ing cityhood eff orts and a short legisla-tive session in 2014, Millar said he is op-timistic. “I’m hopeful the Lakeside bill will go forward, whatever the boundar-ies are,” he said.
With a population of approximate-ly 63,000, Lakeside would become the largest city in DeKalb County. Th e pop-ulation within the study area is 66 per-cent white, 19 percent black, 9 percent Asian, and about 16 percent Hispanic. Th e median income is $50,812 and ap-proximately 10 percent of the population lives in poverty.
Th e area has six existing parks and a total of 190 acres of parkland. Th e es-timated cost of operating the parks is $2,169,943.
“Neither of the comparison cities maintains a robust recreation program, relying instead on nonprofi ts to serve this function,” according to the study. “It was assumed a city comprised of the study area would operate similarly.”
Th e Vinson Institute estimated the city of Lakeside would need 81 police offi cers. Th is compares with 46 offi cers in Dun-woody, with a population of 46,267, and 91 offi cers in Smyrna, with a population of 51,265.
Th e study estimates a Lakeside police department would have an annual operat-ing budget of $7.8 million.
FILE
The area on this map outlined by dots highlights the proposed city of Briarcliff. The area with a solid outline represents the
proposed city of Lakeside.For a larger version visit ReporterNewspapers.net
P U B L I C S A F E T Y
28 | NOV. 29 – DEC. 12, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
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Police BlotterFrom police reports
dated through Nov. 20.
The following information was pulled from Dunwoody’s Police-to-Citizen Portal Event Search website
and is presumed to be accurate.
BURGLARY 5100 block of Tilly Mill Road – A burglary
to a residence, without using forced entry, resulted in the theft of jewelry, and was re-ported on Nov. 12.
2200 block of Dunwoody Crossing – A burglary to a residence, using forced entry, resulted in the theft of shoes, video games and a Kindle, and was reported on Nov. 14.
6400 block of Abercorn Avenue – A bur-glary to a residence, without using forced en-try, resulted in the theft of a laptop, and was reported on Nov. 15.
5000 block of Happy Hollow Road – A burglary to a residence, using forced entry, resulted in the theft of a laptop, TV and a motorcycle helmet, and was reported on Nov. 19.
1st block of Peachford Circle – A burglary to a residence, without using forced entry, resulted in the theft of a laptop and a micro-phone, and was reported on Nov. 20.
AUTO THEFT 4700 block of Ashford Dun-
woody Road – Theft of an auto was reported on Nov. 17.
1100 block of Hammond Drive – Theft of an auto was re-ported on Nov. 18.
2400 block of Chestnut Lodge – Theft of an auto was reported on Nov. 18.
4600 block of Winters Chapel Road – Theft of an auto was reported on Nov. 20.
THEFT/LARCENY 1100 block of Hammond Drive – A larce-
ny of a purse from a vehicle was reported on Nov. 9; shoplifting of purse was reported on Nov. 15.
4700 block of Ashford Dunwoody Road – Shoplifting of razors and body wash was re-ported on Nov. 11; shoplifting of electronics was reported on Nov. 12; shoplifting was re-ported on Nov. 12; a larceny of a laptop and a camera from a vehicle was reported on Nov. 13; shoplifting of beer was reported on Nov. 14; shoplifting was reported on Nov. 14; shop-lifting was reported on Nov. 17; shoplifting of bathroom items was reported on Nov. 18; en-tering an auto was reported on Nov. 19; shop-lifting of ink cartridges was reported on Nov. 20.
700 block of Ashwood Parkway – A larce-ny of a laptop from a vehicle was reported on Nov. 11.
1300 block of Dunwoody Village Parkway – Entering an auto was reported on Nov. 12.
1500 block of Dunwoody Village Parkway – A larceny of a purse from a vehicle was re-ported on Nov. 12.
5600 block of Chamblee Dunwoody Road – A larceny of a purse from a vehicle was re-ported on Nov. 12.
5300 block of Roberts Drive – A larceny of a purse from a vehicle was reported on Nov. 12.
100 block of Perimeter Center Place – Shoplifting was reported on Nov. 12; shoplift-ing of a cellphone was reported on Nov. 20.
5500 block of Chamblee Dunwoody Road – A larceny was reported on Nov. 12.
4400 block of Ashford Dunwoody Road – Shoplifting of earbuds was reported on Nov. 13; shoplifting of clothing was reported on Nov. 14; a larceny from a building was re-ported on Nov. 14; shoplifting was reported on Nov. 16; sudden snatching was reported on Nov. 16; shoplifting of a laptop was reported on Nov. 18; shoplifting of earbuds was report-ed on Nov. 19.
100 block of Perimeter Center West – A larceny of a laptop, iPad
and passport from a vehicle was reported on Nov. 13; a larceny of a laptop from a vehicle was re-ported on Nov. 14; a larceny was reported on Nov. 19.
1000 block of Crown Pointe Parkway – A larceny of a
laptop, iPod and passport from a vehicle was reported on Nov. 13.
4600 block of Ridgeview Road – A larceny of a laptop and camera from a vehi-
cle was reported on Nov. 13.
4300 block of Ashford Dunwoody Road – Shoplifting was reported on Nov. 14; shoplift-ing was reported on Nov. 17; a larceny from a building was reported on Nov. 20.
1600 block of Potomac Road – Entering an auto was reported on Nov. 14.
4500 block of Ashford Dunwoody Road – A larceny of a laptop from a vehicle was re-ported on Nov. 17; shoplifting was reported on Nov. 17.
4500 block of Olde Perimeter Way – A lar-ceny of a laptop and books from a vehicle was reported on Nov. 17.
1900 block of Peachford Road – A larce-ny of parts from a vehicle was reported on Nov. 17.
1200 block of Ashford Crossing – A larce-ny was reported on Nov. 18.
2900 block of Winterhaven Court – Four incidents of larceny from a vehicle were re-ported on Nov. 20.
2800 block of Winterhaven Court – Five incidents of larceny from a vehicle were re-ported on Nov. 20.
4700 block of Ashford Dun-– Theft of an auto
2400 block of Chestnut Lodge – Theft of an auto was reported on
100 block of Perimeter Center West
and passport from a vehicle was
laptop, iPod and passport from a vehicle was reported on Nov. 13.
4600 block of Ridgeview Road
DUN
P U B L I C S A F E T Y
www.ReporterNewspapers.net | NOV. 29 – DEC. 12, 2013 | 29
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2900 block of Winter Rose Court – A lar-ceny from a vehicle was reported on Nov. 20.
200 block of Perimeter Center Parkway – A larceny of headphones from a vehicle was reported on Nov. 20.
ASSAULT 2200 block of Dunwoody Crossing – Sim-
ple assault/battery was reported on Nov. 10.
2900 block of Wintercrest Trace – Family battery/simple battery was reported on Nov. 12.
4300 block of Charleston Place – Simple assault/battery was re-ported on Nov. 14.
6100 block of Dunwoody Gables Drive – Simple assault/battery was re-ported on Nov. 14.
4600 block of Peachtree Place Parkway – Aggravated assault with a knife was reported on Nov. 17.
4800 block of Twin Lakes Trail – Family battery/simple battery was reported on Nov. 19; two incidents of simple assault/battery were reported on Nov. 19.
4400 block of Ashford Dunwoody Road – Two incidents of assault through intimida-tion were reported on Nov. 19.
285 WB Expressway/Ashford Dunwoody Road – Simple assault/battery was report-
ed on Nov. 19.
FRAUD 1st block of Perimeter Center Place –
Fraud was reported on Nov. 10.
2400 block of Brookhurst Drive – A worthless check was reported on Nov. 12.
4700 block of Ashford Dunwoody Road – A worthless check was reported on Nov. 12.
2200 block of Dartford Drive – Fraud through imperson-ation was reported on Nov. 13.
4400 block of Ashford Dunwoody Road – Credit card
fraud was reported on Nov. 14; fraud through impersonation was
reported on Nov. 20.
1200 block of Ham-mond Drive – Forgery was report-ed on Nov. 18.
2300 block of Dun-woody Crossing – Two incidents of fraud through impersonation
were reported on Nov. 19.
OTHER 1300 block of Manget Way – Harassing
communications were reported on Nov. 9.
4700 block of Kings Down Road – A civil dispute was reported on Nov. 9.
6700 block of Peachtree Industrial Bou-
levard – Firing a weapon was reported on Nov. 10.
6600 block of Peachtree Industrial Bou-levard – Disorderly conduct was reported on Nov. 12.
Tilly Mill Road/N. Peachtree Road – Child molestation was reported on Nov. 12.
1st block of Perimeter Center East – A loi-tering violation was reported on Nov. 14.
6200 block of Charleston Place – Harass-ing communications were reported on Nov. 14; a noise violation was reported on Nov. 19.
6800 block of Peachtree Industrial Bou-levard – Child neglect was reported on Nov. 15.
1800 block of Cotillion Drive – Altering the identifi cation on a weapon was report-ed on Nov. 15.
4600 block of Peachtree Place Parkway – Harassing communications were reported on Nov. 16.
4400 block of Ashford Dunwoody Road – Disorderly conduct was reported on Nov. 16.
4600 block of Ashford Dunwoody Road – A civil dispute was reported on Nov. 16.
4900 block of Winters Chapel Road – An-imal complaints were reported on Nov. 19.
1100 block of Hammond Drive – Public indecency/indecent exposure was reported on Nov. 19.
6100 block of Dunwoody Gables – Simple assault/battery was re-
DUN
New councilman sets ‘listening
session’Newly-elected Dunwoody City
Councilman Jim Riticher has sched-uled a “listening session” to hear from his constituents on Dec. 3.
Riticher ran as one of three “clean sweep” candidates in the Nov. 5 elec-tion. He was the sole member of the group to win a council seat. Incumbent Councilmen Denny Shortal and Doug Th ompson reclaimed their seats.
Riticher said the listening session will be open to the public and will be held in the Social Hall of All Saints Catholic Church, 2443 Mt. Vernon Road.
DeKalb police seek help identifying car
DeKalb County police are asking for public help in identifying a 2000-2003 Mercedes-Benz C Class involved in a fatal hit-and-run in November.
Saquena Williams, 29, was struck near I-85 and the Northcrest Road exit ramp. Anyone with information should call 770-724-7610.
BRIEFS
30 | NOV. 29 – DEC. 12, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net
C O M M U N I T Y
DUN
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thing like this – these warm and fuzzies – it’s good for our police spirit.
“We call Chrismas For Kids our jewel. Doing things like this is a positive.”
Elizabeth Stell, executive assistant to Dunwoody Police Chief Billy Grogan, said the program focuses on gifts for children and their families, but it also gives something back to the offi cers.
“It’s a big morale boost,” she said. “Our offi cers get something out of it, just like the community. It’s fun for them.”
Sandy Springs fi refi ghters took over a toy-collection program that was in place when the city’s department start-ed. Th e collections were begun by fi refi ghters with the Ful-ton County department that preceded the city.
Fire Chief Jack McElfi sh said the department usually takes in 250 to 300 toys each year. Firefi ghters themselves distribute any toys that come in after the deadline for the Optimist Club’s party. And the offi cers enjoy showing up in their emergency vehicles, lights fl ashing, and handing out toys, he said.
“Whenever they do it, they call me and say, ‘You won’t believe this!’” he said. “It makes them appreciate what they have, and they just appreciate seeing the kids and seeing the parents when they receive the items.”
In Dunwoody, Espinoza said police keep their annual holiday party quiet to avoid any embarrassment the fam-ilies might feel. “Th is is a private and intimate aff air,” he said.
But the annual gift-wrapping party, planned this year for Dec. 14, has itself turned into a holiday event for volun-teers from local churches and businesses, Dunwoody po-lice said.
Espinoza’s not surprised Christmas For Kids has caught on in Dunwoody.
“One side of town had not so much and the other side of town with plenty and willing to give,” he said. “It seemed to make sense.”
For police and fi refi ghters, holidays become a time to giveBY JOE EARLE
Back in 2009, during the Dunwoody police depart-ment’s fi rst year of operation, Sgt. Fidel Espinoza saw a need in the young city.
“When we fi rst started, we realized there’s a big diff er-ence between our affl uent side of town and our less fortu-nate side of town,” Espinoza said.
He had an idea. As the holidays approached, the police department would pull together local businesses, church groups and other volunteers, and throw a party for kids from the less affl uent side of town. Th ey would play Santa and distribute presents to families in need.
“What better way to tie the two parts of the communi-ty together?” he asked.
Th e department started a program called Christmas For Kids. It collected toys and threw a party for children from the city’s poorer apartment complexes.
“It just seemed the right thing to do. It made sense,” Es-pinoza said. “Th e need was apparent.”
And, it worked. Th e program caught on and is still go-ing.
Each year since that fi rst one, the department has col-lected toys for distribution in December to children in the less affl uent areas of the city. Th e police throw a holiday party, complete with Santa, for about 60 people. Th is year, Dunwoody police plan to host their fi fth Christmas For Kids party.
“One thing that really stands out about the Dunwoody Police Department is the fi rst line in our mission statement – we will engage the community,” Espinoza said.
But the Dunwoody department isn’t the only group of fi rst responders organizing holiday gift giveaways.
In Sandy Springs, the city’s fi refi ghters gather toys for the North Perimeter Optimist Club’s annual holiday toy drive. In Atlanta, the Police Athletic League sets up Toys for Tots collection boxes in each of the city’s precincts. And in Brookhaven, the spokesman for the city’s new police de-partment said police there don’t have anything going this year, but could organize a gift-collection program by next Christmas.
“It’s in our nature,” Espinoza said. “Police departments, fi re departments – it’s something innate. Th roughout the year, we deal with the ugly side of people. Doing some-
Collection points for donated toys In Atlanta, the Police Athletic League collects unwrapped toys for children aged 8 to 18 for Toys for Tots. In
Buckhead, toys may be dropped off at the Zone 2 Precinct, 3120 Maple Drive. In Dunwoody, the city police department’s Christmas For Kids program collects new and unwrapped gifts
for children newborn to age 15. Police will collect gifts in the lobby of police headquarters, 41 Perimeter Center East, through Dec. 23.
Other Dunwoody drop-off locations: Another Broken Egg Café; Crossroads Church of Dunwoody; Cutie Pies Children’s Boutique; CVS Pharmacy; Dentistry with a Diff erence; Dunwoody Elementary School; Dunwoody Nature Center; Fidelity Bank; Kingsley Charter Elementary School; Mellow Mushroom Pizza; Nancy’s Hallmark; North Atlanta Memorial Park; Peachtree Charter Middle School; Picayune Toys; Starbucks (at Ravinia); Tilted Kilt; Vanderlyn Elementary School.
In Sandy Springs, fi refi ghters collect unwrapped toys for children aged 3 to 12 for the North Perimeter Opti-mist Club’s Children’s Holiday Party. Donations are accepted through Dec. 12 at the city’s four fi re stations. Sta-tions are located at 1425 Spalding Drive, 139 Johnson Ferry Road, 6025 Raiders Drive and 4697 Wieuca Road.
PHIL MOSIER
Chris and Lisa Albright put children’s gifts in a box set up by the Dunwoody Police Department
at the Light Up Dunwoody event on Nov. 24.
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