09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

40
BY ELLEN ELDRIDGE [email protected] Brookhaven is part of the North Metro SWAT Team. Sandy Springs owns a Hummer. Dunwoody’s police de- partment has its own armored vehicle. Although images of violence and riot-gear-clad police in Ferguson, Mo., reverberated across the country, raising questions about the “militarization” of community police departments, local officers say that while that kind of gear is seldom, if ever, used here, they believe it is necessary to keep up with the criminals they confront. Sandy Springs Police Chief Ken DeSimone points to a case of weapons in a conference room at police headquar- ters that was pulled off criminals. DeSimone says he has a ompson submachine gun in his office. “We’re not outgunning the bad guys,” DeSimone said. “We’re just staying even with them.” Dunwoody Chief Billy Grogan says distinctions should be made between police gear and military gear. SEPT. 19 — OCT. 2, 2014 • VOL. 6 — NO. 19 Brookhaven Reporter www.ReporterNewspapers.net Inside SEE LOCAL, PAGE 36 Fall Education Guide Curtain closing? Theater company seeking funds COMMUNITY 2 Big changes History Center getting major makeover COMMUNITY 8-9 SEE CITY, PAGE 7 City adopts new parks, transportation plans BY ANN MARIE QUILL [email protected] Plans intended to guide Brookhaven to become a more walkable, urban place have been adopted by the city. e Brookhaven City Council on Sept. 9 gave final approval to two of the plans, the Transportation Plan and Parks & Recreation Master Plan. A third, the city’s comprehen- sive plan, will be reconsidered after state re- view. e council delayed a decision on a fourth plan, intended to guide development along Buford Highway, until Oct.14. e council voted to transmit the com- prehensive plan to Georgia’s Department of Community Affairs and the Atlanta Re- gional Commission for review, as required by state law. Council members stressed that the plans are not set in stone, and projects suggested in the plans would have to be budgeted and approved by council. Following public input, some changes to the parks plan included adding a master plan for each park as part of the overall plan, and removing both a suggested parking deck for Murphey Candler Park and 250 parking Police say military experience, gear a benefit PHOTOS BY PHIL MOSIER Left, Ashleigh Raley, a “shopper” from Jewell, Georgia, checks out a jewelry hanger, as neighborhood resident Tasha Moody, right, arranges her items for sale during Brookhaven Fields’ 20th annual yard sale on Sept. 6. Trash or treasure? AUDIOLOGICAL CONSULTANTS of ATLANTA “Since 1983” A C A You Could Be Hearing From Us. Serving e Community For 30 Years! Improve Your Quality of Life! CAN. See our ad on page 9 to learn more and to schedule your FREE Lyric consultation today. Where do Brookhaven’s plans stand? Comprehensive Plan 2034: The council could vote as early as Nov. 18. Comprehensive Transportation Plan: Approved by city council on Sept. 9. Parks & Recreation Master Plan: Approved by city council on Sept. 9. Buford Highway Improvement Plan: Deferred by city council until Oct. 14. PAGES 13-28

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Transcript of 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

Page 1: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

BY ELLEN [email protected]

Brookhaven is part of the North Metro SWAT Team. Sandy Springs owns a Hummer. Dunwoody’s police de-partment has its own armored vehicle.

Although images of violence and riot-gear-clad police in Ferguson, Mo., reverberated across the country, raising questions about the “militarization” of community police departments, local officers say that while that kind of gear is seldom, if ever, used here, they believe it is necessary to keep up with the criminals they confront.

Sandy Springs Police Chief Ken DeSimone points to a case of weapons in a conference room at police headquar-ters that was pulled off criminals. DeSimone says he has a Thompson submachine gun in his office.

“We’re not outgunning the bad guys,” DeSimone said. “We’re just staying even with them.”

Dunwoody Chief Billy Grogan says distinctions should be made between police gear and military gear.

SEPT. 19 — OCT. 2, 2014 • VOL. 6 — NO. 19

BrookhavenReporter

www.ReporterNewspapers.net

Inside

SEE LOCAL, PAGE 36

Fall Education Guide

Curtain closing?Theater company seeking funds

COMMUNITY 2

Big changesHistory Center getting major makeover

COMMUNITY 8-9

SEE CITY, PAGE 7

City adopts new parks,

transportation plans

BY ANN MARIE [email protected]

Plans intended to guide Brookhaven to become a more walkable, urban place have been adopted by the city.

The Brookhaven City Council on Sept. 9 gave final approval to two of the plans, the Transportation Plan and Parks & Recreation Master Plan. A third, the city’s comprehen-sive plan, will be reconsidered after state re-view.

The council delayed a decision on a fourth plan, intended to guide development along Buford Highway, until Oct.14.

The council voted to transmit the com-prehensive plan to Georgia’s Department of Community Affairs and the Atlanta Re-gional Commission for review, as required by state law.

Council members stressed that the plans are not set in stone, and projects suggested in the plans would have to be budgeted and approved by council.

Following public input, some changes to the parks plan included adding a master plan for each park as part of the overall plan, and removing both a suggested parking deck for Murphey Candler Park and 250 parking

Police say military experience, gear a benefit

PHOTOS BY PHIL MOSIER

Left, Ashleigh Raley, a “shopper” from Jewell, Georgia, checks out a jewelry hanger, as neighborhood resident Tasha Moody, right, arranges her items for

sale during Brookhaven Fields’ 20th annual yard sale on Sept. 6.

Trash or treasure?

AUDIOLOGICALCONSULTANTS of

ATLANTA“Since 1983”

ACAYou Could Be Hearing From Us.

Serving � e Community For 30 Years!

Improve Your Quality of Life!CAN.

See our ad on page 9 to learn more and to

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consultation today.

Where do Brookhaven’s plans stand?

Comprehensive Plan 2034: The council could vote as early as Nov. 18.

Comprehensive Transportation Plan: Approved by city council on Sept. 9.

Parks & Recreation Master Plan: Approved by city council on Sept. 9.

Buford Highway Improvement Plan: Deferred by city council until Oct. 14.

PAGES 13-28

Page 2: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

2 | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

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Georgia Shakespeare cancels ‘Henry V’ production, re-evaluates its long-term direction

BY ANN MARIE [email protected]

Georgia Shakespeare plans to hold a $100-a-ticket fundraiser next week as part of a new program to raise the cash it needs to stay open.

The Brookhaven-based theater com-pany recently cited “insufficient finan-cial resources” as the reason it had to cancel its production of “Henry V,” which was scheduled to open Oct. 1 at the Conant Performing Arts Center on Oglethorpe University’s campus.

“We obviously regret that we will be unable to go forward with the show, but given our current financial status and our inability to secure strategic funding for operating capital, we felt it simply not possible to do so,” board chair Dan-iel Norris said in a press release. “We re-gret the inconvenience to our patrons, supporters, and to the artists committed to working on the show.”

The theater company’s board and staff plan to evaluate the theater compa-ny’s long-term direction and decide by early October what they should do.

“During the next few weeks, we will continue our ongoing conversations with all the stakeholders in the com-

munity in an attempt to identify a so-lution to our fundraising needs and de-termine our ongoing viability,” Norris said.

This year, Georgia Shakespeare ini-tiated a fundraising campaign to raise $750,000 in operating capital from stra-tegic funders to eliminate debt and cre-ate a working capital reserve.

“Unfortunately, ... we have been un-able to secure any significant strategic gifts for operating capital to improve the balance sheet and create the working capital reserves necessary for healthy op-erations,” said Managing Director Jen-nifer Bauer-Lyons.

She said that the company current-ly has $343,000 in debt. “We have used operating money to pay that debt,” she said, leaving the Georgia Shakespeare with no cash to put on its production of “Henry V.”

She said that the $750,000 fundrais-ing campaign would not only eliminate the debt, but would give the company a cash reserve fund to help with periods of low income.

In 2011, the company conducted a

“Save Georgia Shakespeare” campaign, raising more than $550,000 from more than 2,000 donors. That enabled the theater to continue operating, but it did not eliminate its debt.

The new fundraiser, called “For a Muse of Fire, A Benefit for Georgia Shakespeare,” is scheduled for Sept. 22, starting at 7:30 p.m., with the theater’s picnic grounds opening at 6. The benefit

will feature performances from popular Atlanta artists, as well as highlights from the company’s 29 years of productions.

Those wishing to help Georgia Shake-speare can make donations to help meet existing obligations at www.gashake-speare.org. Patrons who have purchased tickets to “Henry V” will be notified of the cancellation by phone or email, the company said.

GEORGIA SHAKESPEARE

Georgia Shakespeare is holding another fundraising campaign to help get them out of debt.

BK

Page 3: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | 3

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Page 4: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

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Chili Cook Off to feature 60 teams Some 60 local restaurants and amateur teams are set to face off in the third an-

nual Brookhaven Chili Cook Off on Oct. 11.Rick Dionne, whose company, Armus Media Group, organizes the event, said

he expects 3,500 to 5,000 guests this year, up from 2,500 last year. “It’s a fun family event,” he said. “With local restaurants participating, it’s a

chance to see some of the stuff they do.”The event takes place from noon to 6 p.m., and festival goers can start sam-

pling the chili and Brunswick Stew at noon. Other activities include live music, arts and crafts, and a kids’ zone. The event takes place at 2740 Apple Valley Road, with free parking and shuttles at the Brookhaven MARTA station.

Tickets are $10 in advance or $15 at the door for unlimited chili tastings. For more information and to purchase tickets, visit www.BrookhavenChiliCookOff.com.

‘Hot Pursuit’ 5K Run & Tot Trot Oct. 4The Brookhaven Police Department will host its first “Hot Pursuit” 5K on

Oct. 4 in Ashford Park. All proceeds from this event will be used to fund the “Shop with a Badge” Christmas program.

All funds raised through race registration fees, donations and corporate spon-sorships will be divided up equally among Brookhaven’s underprivileged chil-dren. The children will be escorted by participating police officers, sheriff’s dep-uties, troopers and various other first responders to pick out much needed items, and maybe a toy or two.

For more information or to become a sponsor, visit www.brookhavenga.gov/city-departments/police/pride.

BK

Attendees at the 2013 Chili Cook Off

Page 5: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

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Group opposes redevelopment referendum

A group of residents who say their mission is to keep taxes low and government out of development have formed a group called the Brookhaven Redevelopment Referendum Committee (BRRC).

The committee is in response to a referendum that will appear on the Nov. 4 ballot asking Brookhaven residents to vote for or against giv-ing redevelopment powers to the Brookhaven City Council.

After studying the Redevelopment Powers Law (RPL), BRRC members state that a vote “no” is in the best inter-est of Brookhaven.

“The Redevelopment Powers Law is a huge, complex piece of legislation designed for ‘socially and economically

depressed areas - not vibrant, growing communities like Brookhaven,” said Cath-erine Bernard, a local attorney and BRRC member, in a press release from the group.

“This referendum would mean more debt, more taxes, more bureaucracy, and more inefficient government control and cronyism at the expense of residents and taxpayers.”

The committee was scheduled to hold public meetings on Sept. 28, from 5 to 7 p.m. at 1321 Oaklawn Avenue, and Oct. 6, from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at 3616 Sun-derland Circle.

For more: www.brookhavenreferendum.org.

MARTA moves forward on Brookhaven station development plan

MARTA is moving forward with plans of turning its Brookhav-en station into a mixed-use, transit-oriented development. The tran-sit agency has issued a formal request for qualifications for potential developers.

MARTA says it seeks firms able to develop the Brookhaven property in ways that will increase ridership and generate a return on the agen-cy’s investment. Plans for the site include a mix of residen-tial, office and retail space.

According to the city’s news website, www.brookhaven-citylimits.com, Brookhav-en will provide technical as-sistance with the process. The development will be built by a private developer selected by MARTA.

“The future development of the Brookhaven MARTA sta-tion will serve as a gateway into our city,” City Manager Marie Garrett said on the web-site.

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Page 6: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

C O M M U N I T Y

6 | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

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Five seek District 1 County Commission seat

BY JOE [email protected]

Five candidates filed to run for the District 1 seat on the DeKalb County Commission, according to the DeKalb Election and Voter Registration office.

Lawyer and MARTA board member Wendy Butler and retired engineer Lar-ry Danese, both of Brookhaven; former DeKalb School Board member Nancy Jester of Dunwoody; retiree and veter-an Tom Owens of Doraville; and retir-ee Holmes E. Pyle of Stone Mountain filed to run for the post vacated by for-mer Commissioner Elaine Boyer.

Boyer resigned the day before fed-eral prosecutors accused her of misus-ing county money. She pleaded guilty on Sept. 3 to mail fraud and conspiracy to commit wire fraud, and is scheduled to be sentenced on Dec. 3, according to news reports.

Meanwhile, the DeKalb County Ethics Board on Sept. 15 decided to continue con-sidering a case against Boyer and her chief of staff Bob Lundsten, according to ajc.com.

Boyer’s lawyer had asked the board to dismiss the case since she is no longer in office, the website said, while Lundsten’s lawyer said he didn’t violate any ethical standards.

Owens, one of the candidates seek-ing the District 1 seat, said he filed the ethics charges against Boyer and Lund-sten. Another candidate, Danese, had run against Boyer in the past.

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BK

Page 7: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | 7

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City adopts parks, transportation plans

spaces for Brookhaven Park from the plan.

The transportation plan looks at cor-ridor and intersection improvements; bike, pedestrian, trail and public tran-sit projects; the feasibility of a neighbor-hood transit system that would bring people to MARTA stations; and improv-ing traffic flow.

The public will have 60 days to con-tinue providing input on the Compre-hensive Plan while it’s under review by the state, and the council is set to tenta-tively take a final vote following a Nov. 18 public hearing.

That plan outlines the “overarch-ing long-term vision for the city of Brookhaven, with a special focus on the future growth and development of

the city,” said Amanda Hutton, proj-ect manager for Jacobs Engineer-ing, the company that designed the plan.

Hutton said the plan is primarily fo-cused on land use, and that its goal is that “Brookhaven will be a national model for an urban, walkable commu-nity,” while preserving the uniqueness of its neighborhoods, parks and natural as-sets.

Part of the plan is a character area map that focuses on 13 areas of the city and their long-term development. The plan, which Sutton said includes ideas gained during public input, calls for maintaining the character of eight res-idential areas and looking at five com-munity activity areas that could benefit from mixed-use developments.

“The comprehensive plan is an over-all guide, it’s not a legal document that the city has to follow everything in it,” Sutton said.

However, the Atlanta Regional Com-mission does like to see what has hap-pened in the plan every five years, she added.

“Wouldn’t this fall under our zoning procedures?” Councilman Bates Matti-son asked Sutton.

She replied that while it would be used as a guide, “ultimately your zoning and development regulations are the le-gal aspect to that.”

Resident Catherine Bernard said she was concerned that the plan was being pushed through too quickly and with-out adequate public input. “I think we are rushing into this, and after looking

into what other communities have done with these comprehensive plans, my concerns continue. While I understand there are elements of these plans that we like and can be pleased by, I think we are rushing to adopt it.”

But City Manager Marie Garrett re-plied that the city had been providing more public input than required and had been doing so since March.

That plan calls for the corridor to transform into a walkable area with re-tail, dining options and a mix of high-end and affordable housing.

Key parts of plan include looking at potential uses of specific parcels of land in the corridor, including underdevel-oped tracts.

The plans can be found on the city’s website at www.brookhavenga.gov.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

BK

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8 | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

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History Center renovates to make the past ‘not boring’

BY JOE [email protected]

They want more company. To show it, they’re getting a new front door.

And a lot more.The Atlanta History Center has begun

a dramatic renovation of its West Paces Ferry Road facilities that will create a new entrance for its museum building, a new display of Atlanta history, add an historic log cabin to its collection, and, if the city of Atlanta signs off, could provide a new home for the historic Cyclorama painting.

The center plans to bring more than $50 million worth of construction proj-ects and new programs to its Buckhead campus over the next few years.

“It’s definitely an exciting time,” His-tory Center Vice President Hillary Hard-wick said. “It’s a great time for Atlanta and it’s a great time for the Atlanta History Center. We used to say we were one of At-lanta’s best kept secrets -- and we didn’t say that proudly. We want to open up.”

The $21 million construction project now under way will provide a new entry drive off West Paces Ferry, move the front of the building closer to the street, create a new entry façade for the museum, dou-ble the size of the building’s atrium, add a central hallway connecting the exhibits, and add a coffee shop/gift shop/bookstore.

History Center officials hope that the work will make the facility seem more in-viting and will help change the way Atlan-tans view history. “One of our big goals is changing the perception of history and the Atlanta History Center,” Hardwick said.

What do they hope to convince peo-ple about history? “It’s not boring,” His-tory Center President and CEO Sheffield Hale said. “It’s fun. It impacts their lives.”

In the past, he said, history “was taught so badly that people thought it was names and dates and dead folks and had no rela-tion to them.” To change that, Hale and Hardwick say the center is opening up both physically and philosophically.

“The first thing I did when I got here was take down the fences,” Hale said. “The reaction I got was far beyond anything I thought I’d see. ... Who wants a chain-link fence in their front yard? Those kind of symbolic things matter. The architecture matters. The way this old building looked to people, they didn’t know what it was and they didn’t come in.”

Hale says the new bookstore/gift shop/coffee shop planned as part of the reno-vation will provide one way the center can become more welcoming to the pub-lic. He hopes it becomes a place where the

ATLANTA HISTORY CENTER

The Atlanta History Center has raised over $32 million to restore and build a new home for “The Battle of Atlanta” painting.

BK

Page 9: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | 9

C O M M U N I T Y

center’s neighbors will come for coffee or a spot to relax. The shop will offer places to sit and Wi-Fi connections, he said.

“It’s not going to be like any other mu-seum bookstore,” Hale said. “It’s going to be a community living room. What I want it to be is the coolest bookstore/café/living room you’re ever been to.”

The center used focus groups to deter-mine what people wanted to see. Audi-ence feedback said one thing museum go-ers wanted, Hale said, was coffee. “Coffee and a chair,” Hardwick said.

As the building gets a new entrance and façade, the center’s main exhibit showing the history of Atlanta is being re-tooled, too. The exhibit, which hadn’t changed since it was installed in 1993, has been re-moved and center historians are reworking it. They intend for the new exhibit, sched-uled to open in 2016, to be more interac-tive and to do a better job of bringing At-lanta history to life.

“We’re going to talk about your neigh-borhood,” Hale said. “One week it could be Morningside, the next week it could be Old Fourth Ward. Everybody loves to talk about their neighborhood. ... We think that construct of ‘neighborhoods’ might be a disciplined way for us to get out into the community.”

And Hale wants the history center to get out more. He thinks the nonprofit center should have a greater impact on the community.

“When we started this project, one of our goals was to really change the way peo-ple feel as they walk onto this 33-acre cam-pus,” Hardwick said. “We’re changing. ... All of this helps reinforce that. It mirrors the organization we‘re becoming.”

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Changes under way at the Atlanta History CenterThe Atlanta History Center has begun a

major renovation of its facilities. Over the next few years, more than $53 million is to be spent on projects at the museum and on its grounds. The work, History Center officials say, is in-tended to make the facility more visible from the street and more inviting to visitors.

1. New entrance from West Paces Ferry and new atrium. Construction is under way to build a new entrance to the History Center and enlarge the building’s atrium to 5,300 square feet. The $21 million project will change the look of the building and add a new gift shop/coffee shop/bookstore that center officials hope will be used by neighbors as well as museum visitors. The plan includes moving the front of the building closer to West Paces, landscap-ing the drive to reflect the center’s gardens, and adding a hallway through the building that will connect all the center’s exhibits.

Opens 2015.

2. New history of Atlanta display. History Center historians are working on a new display of center artifacts and documents, and plan to tell the story of the city of Atlanta in a new way. It’s the first reworking of the center’s main ex-hibit since the building opened in 1993. The new exhibit, the center says, will allow visi-tors to see, hear, touch and explore the exhibits through new media.

Opens 2016.

3. Cyclorama. The History Center has raised more than $32 million to restore and build a new home for the 128-year-old paint-ing “The Battle of Atlanta,” which now is on display at the Cyclorama in Grant Park. If city of Atlanta officials approve the deal, the His-tory Center plans to build a new home for the painting as one of its displays. The money raised includes $10 million for maintenance of the painting. History Center conservators plan to restore the painting to its original size, adding 3,268 square feet that was removed in 1921, and hang the painting the way it was originally displayed.

4. Elias Wood family cabin. The center is moving to its campus a log cabin that originally was located in the Hollywood Road area. The cabin, home to Elias and Jane Wood, was built on land ceded to Georgia by the Creek Indians in 1821, and dates to Atlanta’s earliest days, the center says.

Opening fall 2014.

5. Goizueta Gardens. A $3 million gift from the Goizueta Foundation will be used to rehabilitate and tie together the History Cen-ter’s 22 acres of gardens, which include six pub-lic gardens that illustrate the horticultural his-tory of the area.

Ongoing.

Source: Atlanta History Center

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C O M M E N T A R Y

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Contributors

Phil Mosier, Matha Nodar,

“The senate race in particular, yes. I like Michelle Nunn. ... I’m interest-

ed in the environment and landscaping of property. I think she’s better about

that, about preservation of trees. I liked her dad, too.”

Joan Ama-Leo

“I have been paying attention to the Senate race -- because of the

advertising. It’s unavoidable.”

Matthew Barker

“Yes. I would like to see more progressive election [results].”

Bob Chalfant

“Not as much as I should. Probably 30 percent, which is what I hear through

the media.”

James Stempel

“No. Because we’re relocating. We’ve got to go where the job goes.”

Naoko Tsunoda

“No. I am a new resident here, so I just haven’t paid attention.”

Richard Washington

“I am. I think it is an important race with a lot at stake. We need a strong candidate for Georgia’s

representation.”

Jodi Daniels

“A little bit, yeah. I think it affects our future. But on the other hand, I don’t like either of the politicians running

for office. I don’t have anything to vote for.”

John Goree

“No. It’s just not something I’ve been paying attention to. I haven’t followed

politics lately.”

Michael Kuniansky

“Somewhat. There’s a chance it could be a Democrat this year. Yea!”

Heidi Natkin

“Yes, I am. There’s a pretty good chance a Democrat wins the Senate. That hasn’t happened in a while.”

Carlos Leon

“I’m actually thinking about going to vote. The makeup of the Senate hangs

in the balance.”

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STREET TALK

Q&AQ: Are you paying attention to the statewide campaigns for governor and U.S. Senate?

Page 11: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

C O M M E N T A R Y

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | 11

After living for 38 years in Sandy Springs, Julia Woodman was talking one recent afternoon about moving.

“This was country when I moved out here,” Woodman said as she sat in her sprawling, art-filled home on Powers Ferry Road. “Cars on Powers Ferry were an event. Now they’re a menace.”

She feels it’s time to move. Her hus-band died two years ago. She wants to be closer to her family in Cobb Coun-ty. “It’s lonely here,” she said. “It’s isolat-ed because everybody has 2 acres. I don’t know my neighbors.”

But, unlike many aging Sandy Springs residents who contemplate set-tling into smaller, more manageable homes, Woodman had some special,

well, considerations as she planned her move.

After all, not everyone who’s down-sizing takes an anvil with them. Or a hammer to use on the anvil. Or a met-al press.

“This is my 50-ton press,” she said, sitting in her basement studio crowd-ed with metal-working tools. “It only weighs 1,400 pounds, but it has 50 tons of pressure.” She uses it to make bowls. “I want to make bowls into my 80s.”

So, how old is she? “81. And I’m still making bowls. Can you imagine?”

Well, yes you can. After an hour talk-ing with Woodman, you can imagine her tackling all sorts of things. She ra-diates enthusiasm and energy. And she’s still eager to try new things.

“If you stop learning, you get ripe and fall off the vine and rot,” she said.

She’s a metalsmith. Not just a silver-smith, she says, but a metalsmith. She works various kinds of metal into works of art. “Metal requires an enormous amount of discipline,” she said.

She earned her B.F.A. degree de-signing and making a silver teapot and creamer. She moved on to other things – processional crosses used on special oc-

casions at the Cathedral of St. Philip in Buckhead, a medal-lion worn at Georgia State University’s formal cere-monies, more tea services. She’s stud-ied abroad, teaches, and has devel-oped a fol-lowing. Her work has been displayed at the Victoria and Albert Museum in Lon-

don, among others.

That’s a long way from where she started. She grew up on a farm in North Caro-lina. Her dad ran a dairy just outside Asheville. She “always had been arty,” she said, so she went to col-lege in New York to study industrial de-sign. There, she met her husband-to-be. He was a

military man who taught ROTC at the time. After she married, they travelled all over, from Fort Knox to Iran. “We moved 19 times in 20 years,” she said.

Once he retired, he found work near Atlanta and they settled in Sandy Springs, out in the country. She decided to go back to school and, at age 49, en-rolled at Georgia State University with plans to study sculpture. She found she liked working with metal. “I discovered I had a little talent,” she said. “I start-ed winning competitions and commis-sions.”

In 1986, she started spending por-tions of her summers doing metal work at an international craft school near Asheville. Eventually, she won a schol-arship to study metalworking in Finland “from second and third generation Fa-bergé masters.”

She intends to keep working with metal as long as she can. “All so I can continue working with metal, so I can sling a hammer.”

After all, it’s still fun. And fun is im-portant.

“You don’t stop playing when you get old,” she said. “You get old when you stop playing.”

She’s got a hammer and knows how to use it

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Metalsmith Julia Woodman in her art studio.

Page 12: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

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Monday, Sept. 22, 4:30-5:30 p.m. – Come join Out of the Box Art Studio and go “Dali-style” in clay! Create and glaze a “timeless” clay melting clock inspired by the Salvador Dali piece called “Per-sistence of Memory.” Free. Open to the public. For preschool, elementary and middle school audienc-es. Registration required and started Sept. 3. Space is limited. Come by the Sandy Spring Branch Library, call 404-303-6130 or email: [email protected] to sign up. 395 Mount Vernon High-way, Sandy Springs, 30328.

Tasty ParfaitsTuesday, Sept. 23, 4:30-5:30 p.m. – Help celebrate the first day of autumn with the Young Chefs Academy. Get a hands-on cooking lesson, and make some tasty fall harvest parfaits. Free. For ages 6 and up. All are welcome. Registration required and started Sept. 3. Space is limited. Come by the Sandy Spring Branch Library, call 404-303-6130 or email: [email protected] to sign up. 395 Mount Vernon Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328.

Moonlight MoviesFriday, Sept. 26, 6-10 p.m. – Sandy Springs “Movies by Moonlight,” now in its 10th year, shows “How to Train Your Dragon 2,” an animated, ac-tion comedy set in a world of burly Vikings and wild

dragons. Free. Outdoors. The community is wel-come to attend. Food for sale. Kids’ activities. Sandy Springs United Methodist Church, 86 Mount Ver-non Highway, Sandy Springs, 30328. Call 404-256-9091 in case of inclement weather. For further de-tails, visit: www.leadershipsandysprings.org.

Superhero PropsSaturday, Oct. 4, 1:30-2:30 p.m. – Kids, cre-ate your own superhero props, like masks and oth-er accessories! Free. Geared for those ages 7 and up. Open to the first 25 participants. Registration began Sept. 2. Call 770-512-4640 or visit the Dunwoody Branch Library to sign up. 5339 Chamblee Dun-woody Rd., Dunwoody, 30338.

F U N D R A I S E R S

Book Sales Monday, Sept. 22, 6-9 p.m. – The 55th annu-al American Association of University Women book fair includes more than 75,000 gently-used books at bargain prices. Find Southern authors, mysteries, science fiction, reference, business, history, politics, biography, romance, foreign language, cookbooks, arts, travel, military and children’s books. Au-dio tapes, cassettes, CDs and DVDs also available. Opening night admission, $10; all other times, free. All are welcome. Sale continues through Sept. 28, mall hours. Cash and checks only. Perimeter Mall, in the Dillard’s Wing, 4400 Ashford Dunwoody Rd., Atlanta, 30346. For more: 404-261-7646 or bookfairaauw.org.

Thursday, Sept. 25, 1-4 p.m. – The Friends of the Dunwoody Library hold their book sale. Browse titles and take home books, magazines, CDs, DVDs and much more. Members only from 1-4 p.m. All are welcome 4-8 p.m. No admission fee. Sale con-tinues Friday and Saturday, Sept. 26-27, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday, Sept. 29, from 10 a.m.-8 p.m., is “Bag Day.” Buy a bag for $6 and fill it up! Proceeds benefit the Dunwoody library. 5339 Chamblee Dunwoody Rd., Dunwoody, 30338. Email: [email protected]

CONTINUED ON PAGE 29

Page 13: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

FALL 2014

Education Guide

www.ReporterNewspapers.net

Are standardized tests relevant?

HALL TALK 15-17

Up, downTest results fluctuate statewide

PAGE 19

Be flexibleSchools must remain open to options

PAGE 14

Inside

BY ANN MARIE [email protected]

The Georgia Department of Education is rolling out new statewide tests this year in an effort to add more “rigor” in the evaluation of schools and stu-dents.

“We need to know that students are being pre-pared, not at a minimum-competency level but with rigorous, relevant education, to enter college, the workforce or the military at a level that makes them competitive with students from other states,” Geor-gia School Superintendent Dr. John Barge said earlier

this year when the announcement was made.One parent with children in the Atlanta Public

Schools system said that while she didn’t know much specifically about the new tests, that teachers in Buck-head public schools have been preparing the students for them.

“I know they’re supposed to be higher rigor,” said Sara Catherine Kibler, who has a ninth-grader at North Atlanta High School, a sixth-grader at Sutton Middle School and a child who recently graduated

from North Atlanta. “I expect to see drops in scores; I don’t necessarily expect them to be super at first. But I know the teachers have been changing their curric-ulums for several years to prepare.”

The new tests, called Milestones, this year will re-place the End of Course Tests, or EOCT, and the Cri-terian Referenced Competency Tests, or CRCTs, now used in Georgia public schools. The new tests will be aligned to Common Core standards, state officials said. The state claims that a benefit of the new test-ing system is that it provides one consistent measure across grades 3-12, whereas previously, students took

SEE SCHOOL, PAGE 18

SEE SCHOOL MERGER, PAGE 28

A meeting of the minds

DEVI KNAPP, ATLANTA JEWISH ACADEMY

Atlanta Jewish Academy students, from left, Dan Jutan, Eliott Dosetareh and Mia Azani, study in their classroom. The academy is a merger of Greenfield Hebrew

Academy in Sandy Springs and Yeshiva Atlanta High School in DeKalb.

School merger will ‘strengthen community’

New tests, growth models on the agenda for area schools

BY ANN MARIE [email protected]

There’s a new cat in town. The jaguar is the mascot representing

the new Atlanta Jewish Academy, a merg-er of two longtime private Jewish schools in the Atlanta area – Greenfield Hebrew Academy lower and middle school in Sandy Springs and Yeshiva Atlanta High School in DeKalb.

Backers say the merger creates the only Jewish day school in metro Atlanta serving pre-K through 12th grade students.

“A family can come here knowing this is a full-service place,” said new Head of School Rabbi Pinchos Hecht, who moved from Florida to take the position.

Meanwhile, a very different kind of new school is emerging in Buckhead. The Atlanta Classical Academy opened this year with 450 students selected from 1,341 who entered a lottery to attend the new public charter school.

The school follows the classical educa-tion model, which follows Western tradi-tions and has been popular with Christian schools, though organizers have said no re-ligious material will be in the curriculum. Matthew Kirby, chairman of the school’s board of directors, said the school took “a very traditional, liberal-arts approach.”

The classical academy opened offering classes from kindergarten through eighth grade. Its organizers plan to add a grade

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | 13

Page 14: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

EDUCATION GUIDE

14 | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

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Infants – Private Pre-K & After School

School systems pursue options for more flexibility

BY ANN MARIE [email protected]

DeKalb schools may soon pass Ful-ton County schools to become the state’s largest charter system if they succeed in its plan to convert its operations to a more flexible model.

In April, Superintendent Michael Thurmond informed the DeKalb Board of Education that the district would pursue charter system status. A public hearing on the decision will follow an Oct. 6 school board work session, where the proposal will be discussed.

Georgia’s school systems are explor-ing options for more autonomy fol-lowing a Georgia Department of Edu-cation mandate from several years back that they choose an operating model by June 2015.

Schools must choose a charter sys-tem model or an “Investing in Educa-tional Excellence System” model, called “IE2,” or retain the status quo. The char-ter system and IE2 models allow school systems to sidestep many state rules and regulations while also requiring more ac-countability.

“In exchange for increased autono-my, including waivers from state law, . . . districts receive the flexibility to be innovative and thereby [must] show greater accountability and higher stu-dent performance,” said Trenton Ar-nold, a regional superintendent for DeKalb schools, at a public hearing on Aug. 28.

According to Atlanta Public Schools’ website, the types of flexibility schools may pursue under the charter and IE2 options include customizing course of-ferings; waiving class-size requirements to allow for college-like settings; waiv-ing class-time requirements to allow stu-dents to explore internships or dual en-rollments; or hiring subject experts for

teachers and non-traditional gifted pro-grams.

The Atlanta Public School System hasn’t chosen what model it will pursue.

“These are things that will dramat-ically change the way we do business,” said Superintendent Meria Carstarphen during her Sept. 9 “State of the Schools” address. “We haven’t chosen a model. APS could be very similar to what it is today; it could be very different.”

APS currently has a survey on its website seeking community feedback on the direction it should take, and says if it decides to pursue the charter or IE2 op-tion it will submit its application to the state by Nov. 5 following a presentation at its Oct. 6 board meeting.

In Fulton, officials seem pleased that they converted in phases to charter sta-tus in 2012, with a final group of schools set to switch by this time next year.

“Our charter system is really begin-ning to gain a lot of traction,” said Su-perintendent Robert Avossa, at Fulton schools’ back-to-school news briefing in August.

He cited examples of what some Ful-ton schools have been able to do as a re-sult of the conversion.

At Centennial High School in Ro-swell, a physical education credit was waived, meaning that students in an athletic club or marching band can take a high-level credit course such as math or science instead.

Meanwhile, Northview High School in Johns Creek applied for a class-size waiver, allowing the school to create larger classes to simulate a college expe-rience.

“We’re excited to see if we can repli-cate some of those strategies across the district,” Avossa said.

JOE EARLE

Dr. Meria Carstarphen delivered her first “State of the Schools” address on Sept. 9.

Page 15: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

EDUCATION GUIDE

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | 15

Which Test: SAT or ACT? As founder of Applerouth Tutoring, I often help parents navigate the complicated world of college admissions testing. Parents know the ACT is an alternative to the SAT, but they often do not know how to help their student choose between the two tests. Recently announced changes to the tests have contributed to the uncertainty.

Students tend to feel more comfortable with one test format over the other. Over the past thirteen 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 equivalents, the PLAN/ASPIRE. Parents often ask me how they can use just a PSAT score to make this important decision.

The easiest way to make this decision is to have your student take a mock ACT so that they can compare their PSAT/SAT score equivalents to the ACT scores in order to make the best choice. If it’s been a year or more since they last took the SAT, they may additionally want to sit for a mock SAT test. Compare your student’s percentile rankings on the two tests, and then put your energy into the test your student more naturally excels at.

There is zero risk and a lot of benefit to using meaningful data to make the right decision early on because 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 these tests, including the “new” SAT, at one of our upcoming FREE EVERYTHING COLLEGE ADMISSIONS SEMINARS:

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Educating students with language learning disabilities and differences 5 years old through 12th grade

“It’s good to see what level you’re at compared to other students in the state. They could be shorter, though.”

Thomas Beson The Marist School

“I think they provide a good baseline for national rankings. Other than that I don’t see a purpose. I think a more personalized curriculum is more important.”

Liam Collins Riverwood International Charter School

HALL TALK

Q&AQ: Do you think

standardized tests are important?

“I think they are an important way to gauge students’ knowledge.”

Jordan Gold The Weber School

“Standardized test are not important because they do not determine a student’s true abilities. People are smarter in certain areas that are not covered in a standardized

test. These tests are not designed to improve intelligence, nor are they fair. They are only a measure of what students have learned and retained prior to taking the tests. Standardized tests test students on memory, as opposed to skills. Everyone has different learning styles, and with standardized tests, students are forced to comply with solely one style of learning, which makes standardized test absolutely biased.”

Skylar Gardner Riverwood International Charter School

“I think standardized tests are important because it’s a way to judge everyone’s intelligence by the same scale. Although it leads to questions of upper class

privilege, it’s still important to have a way to grade everyone’s intelligence, and I can’t think of another alternative that would complete that task.”

Olivia Hagen, The Galloway School

Page 16: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

EDUCATION GUIDE

16 | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

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“I think it’s a necessary evil. While it doesn’t necessarily correlate to intelligence, I think it’s important to have in the college process because the quality of

schools varies.”

Catherine Benedict, The Westminster School

“Standardized test are important for the state to know how well students are performing, but these scores not only reflect on you but the teachers as well. Some

students aren’t the best test takers. This shouldn’t affect the student’s or teacher’s capabilities. The student could be a genius, but according to the test he’s not meeting requirements. And the same for the teacher.”

Aiya Kadi, Riverwood International Charter School

“Standardized test are important, because of the fact that they give people insight as to how students perform in school, because there are so many school systems and they are all different. The only problem with that is that not a lot of people are good test takers and in some cases this can make or break your future.”

Courtney Jeffers , Riverwood International Charter School

“I find standardized tests useless because they don’t really prove how someone could solve a problem in the real world. The testing environment is

too controlled and relates to nothing in real life. Standardized tests just show how well a person can bubble in an answer.”

Sarah Waindle, Riverwood International Charter School

“SATs are good because they test your knowledge. But, SLOs are annoying because we obviously don’t know the content.”

Alycia Cooper Riverwood International Charter School

“I think they serve a purpose to make sure you comprehend the subject matter.”

Elizabeth Lamar

Riverwood Inter-national Charter School

“Standardized tests are important because it is critical for students to practice time management and the ability to work for what they want. Also, colleges need

to know the students that they are admitting.”

Lily Maslia, The Galloway School

Page 17: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

EDUCATION GUIDE

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | 17

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“I don’t think standardized tests are fair because they don’t really measure your knowledge of school materials, just your test-taking skills. Additionally, studies have shown that teenagers from richer backgrounds do better on standardized tests because they can afford to hire tutors to teach them how to game the system.”

Tara Subramaniam, The Westminster School

“I think that standardized tests [referring to the SAT] are good in theory and that they give universities a chance to easily compare students from all around the country.

However, I think they have become something that no longer does that. They seem much more focused on how well you can learn to take a test, rather than how well you understand the material it is covering.”

Alicia Martinez, Atlanta International School

“Standardized tests are not important because not everyone learns the same and not everyone can recall the same information.”

Ereka Fitts, Riverwood International Charter School “I think

standardized tests are essential because they allow colleges to fairly compare students from different schools. If you go to an easy school and have

high grades, but a poor SAT score, colleges will then be able to view your grades in context.”

Berhan Getachew, The Westminster School

“Standardized testing has very little to do with really learning and internalizing the nature of the information you learn. Much of it is repeating facts and showing how

well you are able to recall information, rather than apply it to real-life situations and thinking critically. While it may have provided a good baseline for testing knowledge, there is much left to be desired as a means of gauging academic understanding.”

Sara Wren, Atlanta International School

“I think when they say ‘standardized,’ that doesn’t apply. Students in advanced classes will find the tests easy. They really need to be ‘standardized’ a lot better.”

Collins Vise, Riverwood International Char-ter School

“I like the tests that you can’t really study for. They compare students by intelligence rather than how hard they work.”

Chase Luther

Holy Innocents’ Episcopal School

Page 18: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

EDUCATION GUIDE

18 | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

3110-A Ashford Dunwoody Rd. Atlanta, GA 30319

Open HouseNovember 8, 2014 9:30 am–12 noonQuestions? Contact the Admissions Office at 404.228.0709 or visit stmartinschool.org.

discover the possibilities at St. Martin’s Episcopal School

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Extended-day program available

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Scan the code to learn more about St. Martin’s academic program.

4055 Roswell RoadAtlanta, GA 30342

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LITTLE DA VINCIINTERNATIONAL SCHOOLwhere learning inspires the mind

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

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a series of individual tests.Barge warned that parents should

expect lower scores this year due to the increased expectations embod-ied in the new tests. However, this year the tests will have no bearing on whether or not students are held back, the state board recently announced.

Robert Avossa, Fulton Schools su-perintendent, said he welcomes the higher challenges the new test will bring.

“We’re anticipating a dip in aca-demic outcomes, but y’all have heard me say this before, it’s the right thing to do,” Avossa said during a back-to-school news briefing in August. “We need to raise the bar.”

With Georgia having one of the lowest scores in the nation, he said, “we’ve got to make sure we tell parents how their kids are truly doing.”

Kibler said that standardized tests should hold students and teachers ac-countable. “We keep complaining that Georgia has low national stan-dards for education, then we start complaining when we want to hold children accountable,” she said.

Avossa did express concern that schools may not be able to adequate-ly prepare students for the new tests, and that the changes the state has made in the past have often left dis-tricts scrambling.

To help parents prepare their chil-dren, the DeKalb school system was planning to hold an interactive work-shop to gain a better understanding of the tests.

The new testing system will in-clude open-ended questions -- to bet-ter gauge students’ content mastery,

the school system says. The plans are for the tests to be administered entire-ly online in five years.

The state of Georgia awarded a bid on May 28 for a $107.8-million, five-year contract to CTB/McGraw-Hill to develop the new testing system.

The state education depart-ment also said it would provide in-depth information on student prog-ress through an online tool called the Georgia Student Growth Model, found at www.gastudentgrowth.ga-doe.org.

“Historically, Georgia’s assessment system has only enabled us to ask cer-tain questions: ‘What percentage of students met the state standard?’ for example, or, ‘Did more students meet the state standard this year compared to last year?’ the DOE said.

“The [new model] will allow all stakeholders to take a deeper look at student growth by school and school district, asking questions such as, ‘Did students in this school grow more or less than academically simi-lar students across the state? or, ‘Are students growing as much in math as in reading?’”

Users can search student-growth data by district, grade, assessment and subject area. Parents and teachers will be able to view reports for their spe-cific students.

Results from the growth model will be used in the College and Career Ready Performance Index.

“They’re pretty complicated to un-derstand,” Avossa said, “but we want to make sure . . . all kids are grow-ing at least one year in one year’s time [and] we can begin to close the gap that exists in some of our schools.”

School systems brace for new tests, growth models

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12

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The Georgia De-partment of Education has released the re-sults of its second Col-lege & Career Ready Performance Index (CCRPI), a measure of public schools that takes into account CRCT and EOCT scores. Those tests will be replaced this year by Milestones.

Statewide, both el-ementary and middle schools saw increas-es overall, while high school scores saw a dip.

Overall, Atlan-ta Public Schools and Fulton Coun-ty schools increased scores at all three lev-els, while DeKalb County schools fell in all three.

Here are the results, based on a 110-point scale, from 2013 and 2012 for schools in Buckhead, Sandy Springs, Dunwoody and Brookhaven.

APS, Fulton schools improve CCRPI scores, DeKalb sees dipBuckhead schools 2013 2012E. Rivers Elementary 76.8 72.7Garden Hills Elementary 76 68.6Morris Brandon Elementary 94.2 90.7Sarah Smith Elementary 86.6 89.8Warren T. Jackson Elementary 93.2 94Sutton Middle 84.3 77.4North Atlanta High 70.6 64.8APS Elementary Schools (all) 67.1 59.6APS Middle Schools (all) 65.4 60.4APS High Schools (all) 59.2 58.9

Brookhaven schools 2013 2012Ashford Park Elementary 87.6 77.9Montgomery Elementary 89 88.6Woodward Elementary 48 64.2DeKalb PATH Elementary 83.2 83DeKalb PATH Middle 90.9 85.4Chamblee Middle School 87.9 82.7Chamblee Charter High 78.6 80.3Cross Keys High 72.8 63.6Dunwoody schools 2013 2012Austin Elementary 96.5 95.1Chesnut Elementary 84.1 70.2

Dunwoody Elementary 93.7 85.4Kingsley Elementary 68.9 68.7Vanderlyn Elementary 95.2 94.2Peachtree Middle 72.8 81Dunwoody High 79.1 80.9DeKalb Elementary Schools (all) 62.9 64.1DeKalb Middle Schools (all) 59.9 66.2DeKalb High Schools (all) 62 65.1

Sandy Springs schools 2013 2012Dunwoody Springs Elementary 65.9 82Heards Ferry Elementary 91.2 90.9High Point Elementary 73.9 77.8Ison Springs Elementary 86.9 72.2Lake Forest Elementary 64.2 66.9Spalding Drive Elementary 78.6 71Woodland Elementary 85.8 72.9Ridgeview Middle 71.7 67.3Sandy Springs Middle 75.8 69.2North Springs High 75.6 71.3Riverwood High 73.5 69.5Fulton Elementary Schools (all) 77.8 76.6Fulton Middle Schools (all) 74.6 73.5Fulton High Schools (all) 77.6 69 So

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How can ( i ) explore new ideas and build on the ideas of others?

Curiosity and passion drive learning. 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.

Open House Nov 13, 6:00 p.m.–7:30 p.m.

Group Tours Preschool–Grade 4: Oct 29, 8:30 a.m.

Grades 5–6: Oct 15, 9:30 a.m.Grades 7–12: Oct 8, 8:30 a.m.

LearNiNG aNd LeadiNG by exaMPLe

Preschool–12. Family. Community.mountvernonschool.org404.252.3448

Page 20: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

EDUCATION GUIDE

20 | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

OPEN HOUSE Sunday, December 7, from 1-4 p.m.

Where will your child go and how will they get there? The Society of Mary founded Marist School

more than 100 years ago to provide an education unlike any other. Our faculty and curriculum

encourage excellence in all of our students. Beyond the classroom, we offer a comprehensive array

of extracurricular activities to inspire exploration and uncover students’ 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 child prepare his or her future—no matter where it leads.

PHOTOS BY ANN MARIE QUILL

Lending a helping handDozens of students from Mount Vernon Presbyterian School honored the Sept. 11 National Day of Service by volunteering at the Sandy

Springs Library. Students planted flowers, pulled weeds, and hauled and laid down mulch. Their efforts were organized by Sandy Springs resident Sylvia McAdams, who is working to improve the library’s grounds following cuts in services. Top left, Emily Hollis,

left, and Arden Tahtinen empty mulch from a wheelbarrow. Bottom left, Epi Yonas, left, and Jacob Munoz do a little raking. Center, third-graders help plant flowers in front of the library sign. Top right, left to right, Curran Jolly, Zack Betz

and Brooks Scarborough lay down mulch. Bottom right, Eric Soelberg helps pull out a stubborn weed.

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EDUCATION GUIDE

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Mazel Tov to the Epstein Class of 2010We are proud of your achievements in high school and wish you continued success in your freshman year in college.COLLEGE ATTENDANCEBoston UniversityBrown UniversityChristopher Newport UniversityDuke UniversityElon UniversityEmory UniversityGeorgia College and State UniversityGeorgia Institute of TechnologyGeorgia State UniversityHaverford CollegeIndiana UniversityNew York UniversityNorth Georgia College and

State University

Ohio UniversityTufts University Tulane UniversityUnited States Air Force AcademyUniversity of AlabamaUniversity of Central FloridaUniversity of FloridaUniversity of GeorgiaUniversity of GlasgowUniversity of MichiganUniversity of South CarolinaUniversity of VermontWashington University in St. Louis

WE ARE ACADEMICS. n 3 Valedictoriansn 2 Salutatoriansn 4 National Merit

Finalistsn 83% National

Merit Scholars or National Honor Society

WE ARE CHARACTER .n 75% played sportsn 42% team captains

of a sportn 65% officers in

Student Council or a club

WE ARE COMMUNITY. n 19 graduates

served in international, regional or national positions of leadership for Jewish youth groups

We are The Epstein School. We invite you to get to know us and our newly-renovated campus: www.EpsteinAtlanta.org/Tour

THE EPSTEIN SCHOOLSolomon Schechter School of Atlanta

THE EPSTEIN SCHOOLSolomon Schechter School of Atlanta

THE EPSTEIN SCHOOLSolomon Schechter School of Atlanta

THE EPSTEIN SCHOOLSolomon Schechter School of Atlanta

THE EPSTEIN SCHOOLSolomon Schechter School of Atlanta

THE EPSTEIN SCHOOLSolomon Schechter School of Atlanta

THE EPSTEIN SCHOOLSolomon Schechter School of Atlanta

experience EPSTEIN.We’re way more than you imagined.

335 COLEWOOD WAY NW | SANDY SPRINGS, GA 30328-2956EPSTEINATLANTA.ORG

4819 epst gradad14_prf1.indd 1 9/8/14 5:34 PM

Holy Innocents’ installs new head of schools

Paul Barton was recently installed as the new head of school at Holy Innocents’ Episcopal in Sandy Springs. Special guest the Rt. Rev. Rob Wright, bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Atlanta and a Holy Innocents’ parent, led the service. The entire student body participated in the ceremony, called the Celebration of New Ministry.

SPECIAL

Left, the Rt. Rev. Rob Wright, bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Atlanta, with Paul Barton, the new head of school at Holy Innocents’, and his wife Leanne, at the Celebration of New Ministry service.

SSEF hosting first Footprints for the Future 5K

The Sandy Springs Education Force (SSEF) will host its inaugural Footprints for the Future 5K and Family Fun Run on Saturday, Nov. 8.

The event, part of the RUN & See Geor-gia Grand Prix Race Series, will provide fami-lies from throughout metro Atlanta and Sandy Springs the opportunity to come together for a day of fitness and fun. Money raised from the event goes toward SSEF’s mission of inspiring and supporting Sandy Springs public school students to graduate and pursue productive lives beyond high school by providing educational and enrichment programs.

Footprints will start at Lake Forest Elementary School, 5920 Sandy Springs Cir-cle, NE.

For more information, visit www.sandyspringseducationforce.org.

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EDUCATION GUIDE

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Connecting learning to life at every level.

We THINK BIG.

Pace Academy's Isdell Center

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Riverwood runners earn state and national recognition

The Riverwood Lady Raiders Cross Country team is currently ranked 5th in State Class 5A. Junior Anna Hayden is ranked No. 1 in the state. Sophomore teammate Elizabeth Graves is No. 2. Both Hayden and Graves have been recognized this year by Ga. MileSplit with “Runners of the Week” honors. With Hayden meeting the Mile-Split U.S. First Team standard and Graves meeting the Milesplit U.S. Second Team standard, this is the first time that the Raiders have ever had two athletes qualify for first and second team national elite status in one season.

SPECIAL

Riverwood Cross Country runners Elizabeth Graves, left, and Anna Hayden.

Free digital textbooks available through the Georgia

Department of EducationTeachers, school leaders, parents and students can now access free, interactive dig-

ital textbooks through the Georgia Department of Education’s website.“As we implement the new standards, we know teachers and parents need high-

quality resources,” State School Superintendent Dr. John Barge said. “We developed these textbooks and other resources for middle and high school virtual school cours-es, and the students who have used them have been very successful. Much of their success can be attributed to these exceptional resources in the hands of our teachers.”

The textbooks, which can be accessed by visiting www.gavirtuallearning.org/Re-sources, are currently available for middle and high school courses. They cover an ar-ray of content areas in language arts, math, science and social studies.

Many of the textbooks feature supplemental or interactive content, including study guides, discussion questions, games, audio recordings and quizzes. These re-sources are aligned to the Common Core Georgia Performance Standards and are free for use by schools, districts or individuals.

Mount Vernon named an Ashoka Changemaker School

Mount Vernon Presbyterian School has been selected into Ashoka’s Changemak-er Schools Network, joining 59 innovative schools across the country. The school, the only one in Georgia to date, was chosen for equipping students with the vital skills necessary to address the needs of the community through empathy, teamwork, prob-lem-solving and leadership.

Bo Adams, chief learning and innovation officer at Mount Vernon, said, “If school is supposed to prepare kids for real life, then why doesn’t school look more like real life? For more than a decade, this central question has guided my research and profes-sional practice as an educational leader.

“Through design thinking and real-world context and problem solving, we are striving to nurture engaged citizen leaders and people that give, rather than get or take, for their education.”

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EDUCATION GUIDE

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | 23

OPEN HOUSE Sunday, November 9, 2014

EVENING TO INFORM Thursday, December 4, 2014

PRESCHOOL PREVIEW Thursday, December 11, 2014

IB World School | Preschool – Eighth Grade | Roswell, GA | 770.993.2940U.S. Department of Education Green Ribbon School www.highmeadows.org

what school should be.Come take a closer look.

what school should be.Come take a closer look.

Atlanta families are invited to the 2014 Elementary School FairOctober 29, 10AM – 12PM at The Temple

This event is hosted by

Come meet representatives from these schools: • Atlanta International School • Atlanta Jewish Academy • Cliff Valley School

• The Children’s School • The Davis Academy • The Epstein School • The Friends School of Atlanta • The Galloway School • The Lovett School • The Paideia School • Pace Academy • Trinity School • Woodward Academy

• St. Martin’s Episcopal School • The Westminster Schools • Springmont, Atlanta’s First Montessori School

This event is FREE and parking is FREE

and convenient in our covered deck

1589 Peachtree St, NE Atlanta, GA 30309

[email protected]

Rabbi Pinchos Hecht, Head of School

Dr. Paul S. Oberman, Associate Head of School, Upper School

Leah Summers, Associate Head of School, Greenfield Pre-School - 8th Grade

For more information, please call (404) 843-9900 or (770) 451-5299

Combining the best of Greenfield Hebrew Academy & Yeshiva Atlanta

Introducing the Southeast’s first Pre-School-12th grade

Jewish Day School

PHOTOS BY PHIL MOSIER

It’s a match!The Dunwoody High School girls’ varsity volleyball team

faced the Holy Innocents’ Lady Bears in the North

Springs Charter High School gym on Sept. 11. Above, Holy Innocents’ player Kat Glover,

right, with Dunwoody’s Caroline Madden, left, and Bridget Boyle

defending. Center, Golden Bears players Helania Theos, left center, and clockwise, Sarah Joe, Kat O’Connor,

Kat Glover, Kate Chesser and Haley Collins celebrate after winning the first game. Left,

Lady Bears’ Haley Collins bumps, or passes, the ball. The Dunwoody Lady Wildcats won the match, two games to one.

Page 24: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

EDUCATION GUIDE

24 | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

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

For Ages 6 weeks - Pre-K

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• Handwriting Without Tears

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THE SUNSHINE SCHOOL at Temple Kol Emeth1415 Old Canton Road, Marietta • 678.812.3720

THE WEINSTEIN SCHOOL5342 Tilly Mill Road, Dunwoody • 678.812.3834

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atlantajcc.org/preschool

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.

Lovett

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

Join us for an Open House:Saturday, November 15 Kindergarten, 1:00 pm

Sunday, November 16Grades 1–5, 1:00 pm Grades 6–12, 3:30 pm

DeKalb School District boosts budget surplus to $30.9 million

The DeKalb County School District has announced a 35 percent increase in its surplus for Fiscal Year 2014, reporting an additional $10.9 million in reserves over the $20-million surplus previously estimated.

Superintendent Michael Thurmond cited an increase in revenue collections as well as lower expenditures to produce a FY14 fund balance of $30.9 million.

“The additional $10.9 million in reserves demonstrates that we are making signifi-cant progress in stabilizing the finances of the DeKalb County School District,” Thur-mond said in a press release. “Our goal is a fund balance of $66 million. We’re just halfway there, but we are confident that we will reach that milestone.”

When Thurmond was appointed interim superintendent in February 2013, the school district faced a budget deficit of $21.4 million. The $30.9 million fund balance represents an improvement of $52.3 million since the end of FY2012.

Earlier this year, the district announced an anticipated surplus of $20 million in a budget that made new investments in instruction, technology and school safety. The FY14 budget also eliminated furlough days, and provided the first pay raises to teach-ers and staff in six years.

Epstein School celebrates first phase of renovations

The Epstein School in Sandy Springs recently celebrated the completion of the first phase of renovations resulting from its Building Our Future Capital Campaign.

The changes include a new, restaurant-quality kosher kitchen and cafeteria, ma-jor overhauls of the Orkin Education Building and Halpern Family Building, com-bined with a state-of-the-art renovation of the Goldstein Media Center and the Cav-alier Bet Tefilah.

SPECIAL

Celebrating Epstein’s renovations, front row from left, Ted Blum, Sandy Springs Mayor Rusty Paul, President of Board Mark Stern, Jack Halpern,

Lynne Halpern, Carolyn Oppenheimer and City Councilman Graham McDonald. Back row, from left, Amy Fox, Tamar Stern, Head of School

Stan Beiner, Greg Lewis, Bryan Lewis, Ramie Tritt and Joyce Tritt.

Cross Keys teacher earns State Farm grant

Glenda Bonds, a Business Computer Science teacher at Cross Keys High School in Brookhaven, received a State Farm Student Achievement Grant to lead her stu-dents in a semester-long service and learning project to address the issue of senior cit-izens’ hunger.

Bonds’ project begins on Oct. 5, and continues through Global Youth Service Day in April 2015. Throughout the school year, students will partner with the Senior Con-nections’ Meals on Wheels program to assist in preparing and distributing meals to the elderly. “Service learning enhances academic achievement and serves as an avenue for civic involvement for students,” Bonds said.

Bonds is one of 130 State Farm Student Achievement Grant recipients for the 2014-2015 academic year.

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www.ReporterNewspapers.net | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | 25

Inspiring students from 18 months to 8th grade

what I’ll learntoday?

wonder

An extraordinary, curious, open mind. A sense of wonder nurtured and inspired. Lessons experienced, not just taught. Collective engagement and personal success. Gifts of knowledge and wisdom extending far beyond the classroom. Welcome to Springmont.

ATLANTA’S FIRST MONTESSORI SCHOOL

springmont.com • (404) 252-3910

Join us for an Open House!Upcoming Dates:November 7thJanuary 11thJanuary 29th

Open HouseSaturday, Nov. 1, 2014

10:00 a.m.Presentation at 10:30 followed by school tours

• Cultivatingthedyslexicbrain-type• Buildingonthestudents’strengthsandtalents• Aschoolwheredyslexicsexcel

300GrimesBridgeRoad|Roswell,GA30075|678.205.4988|www.swiftschool.com

RollingAdmissionsGrades1-8

St. Martin’s students learn to be ‘digital citizens’

St. Martin’s Episcopal School recently delivered iPads to all its 4th and 5th grad-ers, and HP Chromebooks to all 6th, 7th and 8th grade students. The school did a test program with two grade levels last year. They will use the devices throughout the school day and at home for homework assignments.

In addition, 1st, 2nd and 3rd grade classrooms each have five iPads that students can use in small groups or centers for different learning activities. Those iPads are housed on campus at all times. In the Early Childhood preschool, a mobile cart hous-ing 20 iPads is available for teachers to “check out” and bring to their classrooms for learning activities.

In addition to teaching students how to use these devices for their academic work, St. Martin’s is intentionally teaching students how to be good “digital citizens” -- be responsible with their equipment and be accountable for how they use them.

SPECIAL

From left, 7th-graders Lily Steck, Kyra Graap (in back) and Jordan Wissman use their Chromebooks.

Marist’s Styf is a national ‘Teacher of the Future’

Marist School 7th grade science teacher Sarah Styf has been selected by the Na-tional Association of Independent Schools to participate in its Teachers of the Fu-ture program.

As one of only 35 teachers nationwide chosen for the pro-gram, Styf will par-ticipate in a vari-ety of initiatives that aims to strengthen learning and teaching at independent schools, as well as grow the instructors’ personal and professional leadership capacities.

The 2014-15 NAIS Teachers of the Future were selected from a pool of nomi-nees who “exemplify creativity and innovation in the classroom, inspire academ-ic excellence in students, and who serve as opinion leaders among their colleagues and peers,” according to a National Association of Independent Schools press re-lease.

“You don’t want to make smartphones or any other new technology the en-emy,” Styf said. “There are a lot of really cool apps out there that can be used to make the classroom fun and the lessons informative.” Styf ’s frequent tweets give parents who follow her an open door to class activities and lessons.

“When I saw the criteria for the Teachers of the Future program, Sarah im-mediately came to mind,” said Styf ’s nominator, Tricia Glidewell, Marist School dean of faculty. “From introducing her colleagues to the Kagan Method of teach-ing to inspiring a group to attend a Critical Thinking Conference to sharing how she uses TED talks in her classroom, she has not only been an innovator herself, but she has inspired creativity and innovation in others.”

Styf earned a BA in biology from Kalamazoo College and an MA in physics ed-ucation from the University of Virginia. She began teaching seventh and eighth grade science through Marist School’s middle-school-tailored Foundations pro-gram in 2010.

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EDUCATION GUIDE

26 | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

Proud Affiliate of:

Where the Journey Begins

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

Integrated Technology • Guiding Values & Community Service

Come see for yourself! Call 678-527-3300 to schedule a private tour or visit www.davisacademy.org

for 2014-2015 Parent Information Session dates.

The Davis Academy Inspires Inquiring Minds, Caring

Hearts, and Confident Leaders

An independent elementary school serving students age three through sixth grade345 Tenth Street NE, Atlanta, GA 30309

RSVP at www.thechildrensschool.comor call 404-835-4603

Experience hands-onlearning for yourself atThe Children’s School’s

fall open houseNov. 2, 2014 2pm to 4pm

At The Children’s School, Hands-on learning is child’s play

Purpose.PLAY. Passion.

St. Martin’s students earn high marks in French contest

Middle School French students at St. Martin’s Episcopal School recently took the National French Contest exam, also known as “Le Grand Concours,” administered by the American Association of Teachers of French. Several students received high ac-colades on the exam.

Eighth graders Charlotte Hermann and Knox Pittman both ranked No. 7 in the nation. Seventh-graders Gracie Ackaway, Caswell King and Lauren Young, and eighth-grader Katie Crofton, ranked in the top 10 in the state.

SPECIAL

From left, Caswell King, Gracie Ackaway, Lauren Young, Charlotte Hermann, Katie Crofton and Knox Pittman.

Sandy Springs Education Force, Mount Vernon named STEM award finalists

The Technology Association of Georgia has announced that the Sandy Springs Ed-ucation Force and Mount Vernon Presbyterian School have been named finalists for the 2014 STEM Education Awards.

The awards recognize schools, programs and companies for outstanding efforts and achievements in supporting and promoting STEM (Science, Technology, Engineer-ing and Math) education in Georgia.

Selected among 220 nominees, SSEF has been named a finalist for its work in part-nership with the Georgia Tech Research Institute in presenting a comprehensive and community-wide STEM event. “Our partnership with GTRI has inspired countless students in Sandy Springs to consider a future career in STEM, and we are honored to share this recognition with them,” said SSEF Executive Director Irene Schweiger in a press release.

Mount Vernon was chosen as a finalist for its design thinking approach to learn-ing. The school instituted the first, comprehensive K-12 design thinking program in Atlanta.

DeKalb schools’ online tool allows parents to view progress

The DeKalb County School District has a new and updated Campus Portal, a con-fidential and secure website that allows parents and guardians to log in and view their children’s progress in school.

“The Campus Portal strengthens the partnership between our schools, and our par-ents and guardians,” said Michael Thurmond, superintendent of the DeKalb County School District. “With Campus Portal, academic information is shared confidential-ly and quickly, allowing parents to know right away if their students are on the right track or need academic help. Campus Portal helps keep our students on track, and re-establishes the bond between schools and homes.”

Parents and guardians designated with legal rights to student records may receive a Campus Portal account. In order to create a Campus Portal account, parents and guardians will need to retrieve an activation code and create a username and pass-word.

For more information, visit www.dekalb.k12.ga.us.

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www.ReporterNewspapers.net | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | 27

BEYOND EXPECTATIONS

VISIT GALLOWAYSCHOOL.ORGfor more info and to sign up for an admissions tour.

At Galloway, students (ages 3-18) are inspired to push beyond

intellectual boundaries, to embrace challenges, and

to discover more about themselves and the world

around them. A community of 1,360 students, ages 3-years-old through 12th Grade.

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Holy Innocents’ Episcopal School develops in students a love of learning,

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community.- Mission Statement

Fall_2014_HIES_Reporter.indd 1 8/25/14 4:18 PM

Raiders attend Governor’s programFour Riverwood International Charter School

students, after an audition and interview process, were selected to participate in a four-week 2014 Governor’s Honors Program at Valdosta State University. Students Garon Berenson in technol-ogy, Max Kantor in theater, Callaway Powlus in music and Pascal Acree in biology were selected. GHP is a residential summer program for approx-imately 700 intellectually gifted and artistical-

ly talented high school juniors and seniors from across the state. Students spend their mornings in their major area of nomination exploring topics not usually found in the regular high school class-room. During the afternoons, students choose one of the other 20 areas in which to study. Eve-nings are filled with seminars, activities, concerts and performances. Now in its 51st year, GHP is fully funded by the Georgia General Assembly.

Pace’s Knights get a new homeOn Aug. 29, Pace Academy’s varsity football team took on the Our Lady of Mer-

cy Bobcats in the first athletic competition at Walsh Field, a new facility within Pace Academy’s existing Athletics Complex.

The game marked the end of a two-year, $32-million capital campaign for the Ar-thur M. Blank Family Upper School, a 75,000-square-foot building that recently opened on the school’s W. Paces Ferry Road campus in Buckhead. More than 1,300 donors contributed to the campaign, which exceeded its goal by more than $3 mil-lion, allowing for the completion of the school’s satellite Athletics Complex, located at 5700 Riverview Road in Cobb County.

Pace Academy parents, volunteers, and alumni Leigh and Tim Walsh (Pace Class of 1981) contributed to the campaign, the largest alumni capital gift in Pace Acade-my history, and Walsh Field is named in their honor. “Participation in Pace Athletics has had a tremendous impact on me, on Leigh and on our three children,” said Walsh, who served as chairman of Pace Academy’s Board of Trustees from 2011 to 2014. “It was time for the quality of our facilities to match the quality of our student-athletes, and our family is fortunate to be part of making that happen.”

The Walsh Family cut the ribbon on Walsh Field during a back-to-school event for faculty and staff on Aug. 28, and they participated in the inaugural coin toss pri-or to the Aug. 29 game. In addition to the opening festivities, the Knights’ 2014 state champions in track and girls’ soccer received state-championship rings during half-time, and the Knights went on to defeat the Bobcats 14-12.

Walsh Field includes a state-of-the-art stadium with bleacher seating, a FIFA-regu-

lation grass field and a Beynon track. The facility fulfills the school’s original vision for the Riverview Road property, which it acquired in 2005. In addition to Walsh Field, Pace Academy Athletics Complex includes Charlie Owens Baseball Field, a multipur-pose field for football, soccer and lacrosse, locker rooms, an athletic training facility and a snack bar.

SPECIAL

Pace Academy’s new Walsh Field. The school’s Athletics Complex also includes a baseball field, multipurpose field for football, soccer and lacrosse, locker rooms, an athletic training facility and a snack bar.

Grant to improve school superintendents’ skillsThe Wallace Foundation is investing $3 million in a five-year

effort to help the DeKalb County School District improve the in-structional leadership skills of its principal supervisors or regional superintendents. The initiative is to improve the quality of teach-ing and learning in schools by providing more effective instruc-tional support to school level leaders.

Page 28: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

EDUCATION GUIDE

28 | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

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School merger aims to strengthen Jewish community

each year until it reaches 12. Dr. Ter-rence O. Moore was hired as its first prin-cipal. He was the founding principal of Ridgeview Classical Schools in Colorado, which Atlanta Classical Academy is mod-eled after.

The new school is located at the Northside Drive campus of the Heiskell School, a private Christian school that closed this summer. It’s open to all stu-dents in the Atlanta Public Schools Sys-tem, but it’s located in the North Atlanta High attendance zone.

Ian Ratner, chairman of the Atlanta Jewish Academy board, said talks of cre-ating a new Jewish K-12 program have been going on for years. About two years ago, “a working group was formed to re-ally get more involved in the analysis,” he said. The boards of both schools voted this summer to merge the schools.

Both Ratner and Hecht say there are numerous benefits to merging into one school.

Hecht said aside from operations be-coming more efficient, a merger pro-vides growth opportunities for faculty. “There’s more professional opportunity for steps up they can take in a larger sys-tem with a full school,” he said.

A full school also strengthens the com-munity, he said. “Where I was a principal earlier, many of my students became my parents, and that speaks to a certain kind of continuity, and you build a communi-ty,” Hecht said.

Ratner explained that the K-12 model also helps students retain their Judaism.

“The less breaks in the system, the less opportunity to leave the Jewish system,” he said. “There’s a much smaller num-ber of Jewish children in Atlanta in high school than are in elementary school. What that says is that all of us aren’t do-ing a good enough job because we’re at-tracting kids into the elementary school but for some reason we can’t keep them engaged in high school.”

Ratner said the school’s enrollment picked up some this year, and that hav-ing a school from early childhood to 12th grade helps with recruitment efforts as parents won’t have to worry about where

to send their children when it’s time to enter high school.

He said a study conducted by the Jew-ish Federation of Greater Atlanta a num-ber of years ago called for lower and high schools in the community to align.

“That’s been buzzing around Atlanta for a long time, he said. “We’re just the first people to say we’re doing it.”

Ratner pointed to other successful pri-

vate schools in the community with low-er and high schools.

“One of the things about the K-through-12 model that struck me is that most of the leading independent schools – not necessarily Jewish schools – wheth-er its Woodward, Pace or Paideia or West-minster, all have adopted this uniform K-through-12 model.”

Erica Gal, a parent with children in

preschool and kindergarten at the school, said that continuity is what attracted her to Atlanta Jewish Academy. While it’s her second year involved with the school, she said that she was aware in the beginning of a possible merger.

“It’s important to us because we do see our involvement in the school and where we put our kids in terms of a long-term commitment,” she said. “As parents we’re thrilled and excited about the possibility of our kids growing up in this system that takes them from children to adults.”

Ratner said a full school also helps from a fundraising perspective.

“It gives you a much longer life of a family,” he said, “instead of the fami-ly starting in kindergarten and by the time they get to grade 6 or 7 they are al-ready looking at different options. . . . You want families to develop that long-term fundraising relationship that says, ‘Hey, we’re going to get you on a program where you’re going to make a donation every year for the next 10 years.’ You get them bought into the programs. So from a fundraising and investment perspective it is absolutely the winning model.”

The school’s name, too, leaves space at the front, in case a major donor comes through during the school’s fundraising. Names were solicited from board and steering committee members, and then a survey was sent to the board, with sur-vey results later analyzed. Possible names were categorized, but “academy” was a name that popped up frequently.

“‘Academy’ gives a sense of education-al quality,” Ratner said. “‘Jewish’ identi-fies who we are.”

Right now the schools remain on their respective campuses. But the plan is for the high school to eventually move to the Sandy Springs campus adjacent to the theater arts building. The Yeshiva campus will then be turned into a sports com-plex, retaining its state-of-the-art gym, and adding a soccer field, baseball dia-mond and tennis court.

“I would not be shocked, when oth-er schools see the energy that this kind of combined institute can create, if there were other similar mergers going up very quickly,” Hecht said.

PHOTOS BY ANN MARIE QUILL AND DEVI KNAPP, ATLANTA JEWISH ACADEMY

Top, Atlanta Jewish Academy student Sophia Harris. Above, left, Ian Ratner, chairman of the Atlanta Jewish Academy

board, with Head of School Rabbi Pinchos Hecht. Left, from left, students Ariela Bland, Shimon

Horwitz and Rayut Shmuel.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12

Page 29: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

out & about

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | 29

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Sandy Springs Sprint Saturday, Sept. 27, 8 a.m. – Woodland Elemen-tary School holds its second Sandy Springs Sprint, a 5K Family Run/Walk fundraiser. Adults, $20; child, $10. No charge or registration 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 information and to register, go to: www.sandyspringssprint.com.

Open Arms Festival

Saturday, Sept. 27, 10:30 a.m.-2 p.m. – The festival, an annual fundraiser, benefits Open Arms Lutheran Child Development Center, a not-

for-profit ministry of The Lutheran Church of the Ascension. $5 bracelet provides unlimited access to games, bounce houses, pony rides, a petting zoo, face painting and more. Sand art cart for additional fee. For toddlers and young children ages 6 and un-der. 4000 Roswell Rd., NE, Atlanta, 30342. Visit: www.openarmsbuckhead.org or call 404-256-1330 with questions.

Howl-O-Weenie Saturday, Oct. 4, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. – The an-nual Howl-O-Weenie festival benefits DREAM Dachshund Rescue. Free admission. All are wel-come to enjoy. Festivities include howling con-test, costume contests and doxie races. Also features a silent auction, microchipping, face kissing con-test, hot dog lunches and beer for sale. Brook Run Park, 4770 N. Peachtree Road, Dunwoody, 30338. For additional details and the schedule, visit: www.dreamrescue.org.

P E R F O R M I N G & V I S U A L A R T S

Swing Night

Thursday, Sept. 25, 7 p.m. – Peachtree Road United Methodist Church kicks off its music sea-son by welcoming Joe Gransden and his Big Band for a night of swing music, dancing and fun. Tick-ets, $25. Enjoy light appetizers and dessert through-out the evening. In the church’s Fellowship Hall. Childcare available with reservation. Buy tickets and find out more at: www.prumc.org. For addition-al information, call the church’s music department at 404-240-8212. 3180 Peachtree Rd., Atlanta, 30305.

Pottery on the PorchSaturday, Sept. 27, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. – Chas-tain Arts Center presents the 2nd annual Pottery on the Porch, Artists show, where onsite artists sell both thrown and hand-built works. Food trucks, Raku demonstration, hourly door prizes from art-ists. Free. Open to the community. 135 West Wieu-ca Rd., NW, Atlanta, 30342. Call 404-252-2927 for details.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12

Page 30: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

out & about

30 | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

Local photographers bringcolor to area libraries

BY MATHA NODARExhibitions at two Buckhead libraries

showcase works by local photographers this month.

Ruth Gogel of Buckhead and Ale-ta Aaron of Sandy Springs join fellow members of the Buckhead-based Atlan-ta Artists Center in displaying images at the Buckhead branch and at the North-side branch of the Atlanta-Fulton Coun-ty Public Library System.

Buckhead BranchThe “Tenth AAC Photography Ex-

hibit at the Buckhead Public Library” runs from Sept. 30 to Oct. 27, and in-

cludes 70 pieces by Aaron, Gay Allen, Cheryl and Paul D’Amato, Nathan Dean, Judith Dunne, David Foster, Louise Georges, Joe Hoyle, Al John-son, Nafisa Shariff, Russell Streur, Cole Thomas and Saul Torres.

This exhibit is part of the Atlanta Celebrates Photography Festival, an an-nual event promoting the art of photog-raphy in Atlanta for the last 16 years.

Aaron’s “Autumn Joy” is one of the images included in the exhibit.

While walking outside her home, Aaron noticed a multicolor array of fall-en leaves had gathered together in a path almost floating in a slate of water.

“It had rained the night before,” she said. “The rain had made the leaves fall

ALETA AARON

Aleta Aaron’s “Autumn Joy,” on display at the Buckhead Branch Library, was snapped outside her home.

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C O M M U N I T Y

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EventsWhat: “AAC Exhibit at the Northside Public Library”Where: Northside Public Library, 3295 Northside Pkwy., Atlanta, 30327, 404-814-3508When: Oct 2 through Oct. 30Admission: FreeLibrary Hours: Mon, Wed: 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Tues 12-8 p.m. Thurs 2-6 p.m. Sat 1-5 p.m.

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down from my Japanese Maple tree.”Aaron turned around and got her

camera. Fellow AAC members Valerie Gruner

and Robert Kelly offered their views on Aaron’s image.

“We don’t often get to see the tree leaves preserved in such a lovely, deli-cate pattern,” Kelly said. “The colors are wonderful!”

“I feel like the joy in Aleta’s image is the near celebratory scatter of the color, like confetti,” Gruner said. “The love-ly wet aspect of it makes one practically feel the crispness in the air.”

Gruner is exhibiting her work at the Northside Branch along with Gogel, Jim Freeman, Grace Hawthorne and Streur.

Northside BranchThe “AAC Exhibit at the Northside

Public Library” consists of 10 pieces and runs from Oct. 2 to Oct. 30. This ex-hibit is not formally associated with the ACP annual event.

Gogel’s “Ready to Go” is one of the photos included in this exhibit, which shows a pile of boats in the sand at a ma-rina in Florida ready to be launched into the water.

She said this is a repeated theme in her compositions. “I love the water and the marine motif,” Gogel said.

Recalling her youth, Gogel said her family frequently spent their vacations at Michigan’s upper peninsula, where she and her father would go fishing.

For more information about the festival visit acpinfo.org.

Page 32: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

F A I T H

32 | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

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Blasts from ram’s horn announce Jewish New Year

ISADORA PENNINGTON

Bruce Duner blows the shofar at Congregation Or Hadash in Sandy Springs.

BY ELLEN [email protected]

The Jewish New Year starts with the emotion-stirring call from a ram’s horn, an instrument known as the shofar.

Signaling a call to action, shofar blow-ers resonate with the words from the To-rah, asking congregations to commemo-rate the sacred occasion of Rosh Hashanah with loud blasts.

The high holy holidays start the Jewish calendar over, and faithful members look inward to reflect on the year in terms of deeds and their relationship with God.

At the Congregation Or Hadash, in Sandy Springs, generations are represent-ed by the alternating roles of two shofar blowers. Bruce Duner, a man in his 50s, and Adam Rosenfeld, a man in his 20s, have been blowing the shofar for about six years.

Rabbi Analia Bortz said these two do a mag-nificent job blowing the shofar.

“Tears come out of your eyes when they blow the shofar,” she said. “[It’s] a most pristine and beautiful sound.”

Duner, who had played trombone from middle school through college, thought he would use that experience when he volun-teered to blow the shofar for services at Or Hadash. But it turned out his years with the trombone only helped a little -- shofars have no mouthpiece attachment or pitch control, and the sound is created only by the shape of the horn itself and the posi-tioning of the player’s lips.

Duner found his shofar in 2008, when he visited Israel for his son’s bar mitzvah.

“I’d always wanted to buy one,” Dun-er said, adding that a “shofar has to choose you—like Harry Potter’s wand.”

Visiting various shops in Israel, Duner said some stores displayed decorated sho-fars and made a big deal out of their ar-rangements, but the place where Duner found his shofar simply had several horns

stuffed in a box. “I started pulling a bunch out and the

second or third one I tried, I said ‘That’s it!’” Duner said. “I just looked at my wife and she smiled.”

Now, Duner said he displays his shofar above the fireplace in his liv-ing room and takes it down to blow it during the month leading up to Rosh Hashanah.

Or Hadash’s younger shofar blow-er, Rosenfeld, who attends Kennesaw State University, said he starts practicing a month and a half before the holidays to build up his lung capacity.

He believes he had a bit of natural tal-ent, but his practicing since he was “just a kid” helped him develop the lung strength needed to produce the sounds. The first year he blew the in-strument, he said, “I was

exhausted.”“Another gentleman, who was sup-

posed to blow that year, couldn’t come to synagogue because his kid was sick,” Rosenfeld said. “So I stepped up.”

He said he felt he performed “OK,” but does a much better job now. His role as one of two shofar blowers makes him feel like he is helping out his community and the rabbis, he said.

“It’s nice to be up there; it’s my favorite part of the service,” Rosenfeld said. “For me, it’s a breathing exercise because I’m not very musically accomplished—except for this.”

Duner said the first year he and Rosen-feld worked together, they practiced be-forehand. Now, they alternate blowing the 100 notes necessary during the day-long service.

“It’s an honor to be able to blow it for the community, a huge honor,” Duner said. “And it’s nice we can volunteer, but if other people want to do it, we find a way.”

BK

To hear the shofar, read this article on our website at ReporterNewspapers.net

Page 33: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

F A I T H

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | 33

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BY ELLEN [email protected]

During the 10 days between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, Jews awaken spiritually to examine their deeds and atone with their creator.

Rabbis in the communities of Dunwoody, Buckhead, Brookhaven and Sandy Springs say they seek to provide inspiration as well as healing in sermon topics.

Rosh Hashanah, which begins Sept. 24, signals the start of the Jew-ish New Year.

In Dunwoody, Rabbi Mark Zim-merman, of the Congregation Beth Shalom on Winters Chapel Road,

compares the importance of Rosh Hasha-nah to the Su-per Bowl.

“It’s the Su-per Bowl of Jewish spiritu-ality,” Zimmer-man said. “It’s an opportunity to take stock of life, pause and see where we are

as individuals and as a community.”It’s a time when Rabbi Analia

Bortz, of Congregation Or Hadash in Sandy Springs, leads her congre-gation in “an unapologetic way of re-living” the year.

She describes the holiday as a time “to show with pride who we are by the contributions we’ve done for the world.”

Bortz said she plans to preach about the history of contributions made from the 1900s through to to-day, noting her hope to inspire the congregation with a call to action against the anti-Semitism in Europe, particularly in France and Belguim, where she said non-Jews are reacting harshly toward Jews.

Bortz said her sermon will speak

out against the vandalism in syna-gogues and the murder of Jewish re-porters in Europe, calling her con-gregation to action not through vengeance but by increasing their contributions to the world.

“The idea is about taking action by producing more contributions to the world,” she said.

Zimmerman said that during the 10-day period, certain themes ap-pear. One, he said, is connection to community and getting spiritually reconnected to our world, which is often driven by business and secular concerns.

“We don’t have as much time to pause and ask why we’re here and what is this life all about,” Zimmer-man said, noting that he plans to dis-cuss the goings on in Gaza and the rise of the group known as the Islam-ic State in Iraq and Syria.

Part of taking stock is what is going on in the larger com-munity, Zim-merman said,

Rosh Hashanah marks period of reflection, atonement

SPECIAL

Rabbi Mark Zimmerman

CONTINUED ON PAGE 34

SPECIAL

Rabbi Neil Sandler

ISADORA PENNINGTON

Rabbi Mario Karpuj and wife Rabbi Analia Bortz.

BK

Page 34: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

F A I T H

34 | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

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Sermon topics among rabbis to focus on healing, hope

noting the “frightening growth of anti-Semitism around the world.”

He described a sanctuary, which is required to have windows, and how those windows remind those inside of the outside world.

“People are disconnecting spiritu-ally – our job is to reconnect them spiritually to the Jewish communi-ty,” Zimmerman said. “Anti-Zion-ism is the new anti-Semitism.”

Rabbi Neil Sandler, of Ahavath Achim Synagogue in Buckhead, also plans to discuss Israel during Rosh Hashanah.

“I’ve been a rabbi more than 30 years and I realize everybody has dif-ferent desires and needs, so I think what I try to do over the years is try to bring a message of current import, like this sermon, and then I always want to make certain I bring a more personally introspective and person-al message also,” Sandler said.

He said his ap-proach will connect the dots between why Jews in Buck-head need to con-tinue to care about Jews in Israel.

“I’m concerned with what stud-ies show—a drift away from Israel,” he said. “We have to continue to care, connect and work on its behalf.”

The theme in the Torah that Sandler said he plans to discuss in-volves the moment, called “Heen-aynee” in Hebrew, meaning “I am here; I am present,” Sandler said. “I am here to say I have a place in the concern of Israel and I must act on its behalf.”

Rabbi Hayyim Kassorla, of Con-gregation Or Veshalom in Brookhav-

en, said he will talk about healing af-ter the difficult summer.

“It’s been a difficult year for the Jewish people given what transpired in Israel over the summer, but of course it hasn’t ceased yet giv-en the contin-uation of the beheadings in Iraq,” Kassorla said.

He said his Rosh Hasha-nah sermon will note that at the moment there is relative calm in Isra-el, but he said the question is, “How long will that continue?”

One of the central prayers of Rosh Hashanah asks to let the year end with all its curses and all its negativ-

ity, and let the new year begin with all its blessings, Kas-sorla said, noting plans to kill mem-bers of the Jew-ish community on Rosh Hashanah came out in the news during the summer.

“We need to fo-cus on the posi-tive, the miracles of the land of Israel, the miracles of the Jewish people and

the miracle of Jewish existence, and the hope of a serene and joyous new year,” he said.

The Jewish communities focusing on healing and looking to God for hope and inspiration continue Sept. 24 through Oct. 4.

“When things look the bleakest, that is when the sun comes out,” Kassorla said.

SPECIAL

Rabbi Hayyim Kassorla

“I’m concerned with what studies show—a drift away

from Israel. We have to continue to care, connect and work on its behalf.”

– NEIL SANDLER

RABBI

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 33

Page 35: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

P U B L I C S A F E T Y

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | 35

The BearCat armored personnel carri-er Dunwoody owns, he said, is a not as strongly armored or “weaponized” as the military version of the vehicle.

“It’s not as offensive as the military would have,” Grogan said, noting that military gear and police force gear is often similar, but while the military has a grenade launcher that launch-es actual grenades, some police units have grenade launchers that launch tear gas.

Dunwoody’s BearCat has been used only a half-dozen or so times since the city bought it, Grogan said. It’s most-ly deployed “to transport the [North Metro] SWAT Team in safety” dur-ing confrontations with hostage-tak-ers or other dangerous situations, Gro-gan said. “We think it’s a good tool to keep officers and citizens safe,” he said.

And Sandy Springs’ Hummer is used only for parades and communi-ty events, including the recent Nation-al Night Out, SSPD Sgt. Ronald Mo-mon said.

Still, there are many similarities be-tween police and the military when it comes to training, preparedness and discipline, local police officials say.

DeSimone, who retired from the United States Marine Corps Reserve at the rank of colonel after 32 years of service, said he believes a military background is good for local police of-ficers because the training acts as an equalizing experience.

“People from all races, all walks of life and all economic classes,” work to-gether in the military, DeSimone said. “You have the rich people coming in and the poor people coming in. It’s the great equalizer.”

Momon, who has 15 years’ mili-tary experience, says law enforcement agencies act as para-military organiza-tions and model themselves after the military in rank structure, grooming and uniform appearance, physical fit-ness and discipline.

“The main aspect of the military

training as it relates to law enforce-ment is mainly the discipline aspect,” Momon said. “Military members are trained very heavily in discipline. In my opinion, this prepares you better to handle the dangers and stress of law enforcement.”

Grogan agrees. “The military is a structured environment, and structure transfers well into a police environ-ment,” Grogan said.

But applying a military mindset to policing local communities some-times can get police officers into trou-ble, Grogan said. While he doesn’t have military experience himself, he believes it’s good to hire officers who have been honorably discharged from the military.

Regarding the question of local po-lice officers being “too military,” Gro-gan said the difference lies in whether a group is policing a group of people or an individual. Grogan said police have to make sure their response to any given situation is appropriate.

“Common sense is the number one trait of a good police officer,” DeSim-one said, noting good judgment fol-lows closely.

Grogan says police must stay en-gaged with the communities they serve. “In general, it’s important for the police department to have a good relationship with the community,” Grogan said, adding that when a re-lationship is developed between police and the community as in Dunwoody, then a crisis, if one were to occur, would be better worked out.

“You can work through that cri-sis in a well-thought-out, collabora-tive way, where police can respond ap-propriately,” Grogan said, adding that trust is a key component in building a relationship between police and the Dunwoody community.

Training makes a great difference when it comes to police use of military gear, said Sandy Springs police Capt. Rob Stevens, commander of the North

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Police say they benefit from military backgrounds, gear

CONTINUED ON PAGE 36

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

BK

Page 36: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

P U B L I C S A F E T Y

36 | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

Metro SWAT Team. The SWAT Team’s main functions include drug raids and executing high-risk warrants, Stevens said. He said Sandy Springs has had three hostage rescue situations since 2006.

“We [SSPD] have a specialty unit for riots,” Ste-vens said. “When you mix units to do the same job, you create issues. Long guns and SWAT teams don’t need to be in a riot.”

Patrol officers have riot-con-trol training and the “mobile field force,” a 30-man force of officers trained by larger agencies to quell riots and maintain crowd control who would act as the

frontline, Stevens said. They’ve been taught by larger agencies in forma-tions and in civil unrest, Stevens said.

Stevens, who began his career with the Fulton County Police Department more than 20 years ago, joined the Sandy Springs department in 2006.

In 2009, he helped create the North Met-ro Multi-juris-dictional SWAT Team, which in-cludes officers from Brookhav-en, Sandy Springs, Dunwoody and other commu-nities, and he now commands its more than 50 members.

“They are cross-trained in active shooter sit-

uations,” he said, adding that the SWAT Team is “not there for offen-

sive, but defensive; to rescue.”Stevens said the SWAT Team doesn’t

want to be portrayed as a bunch of tat-

tooed tough guys scaring the commu-nity. “We want people to know we’re there to help,” he said.

Local police say they benefit from military backgrounds, gearCONTINUED FROM PAGE 35

SPECIAL

The North Metro SWAT team’s main functions include drug raids and executing high-risk warrants, says

Sandy Springs police Capt. Rob Stevens.

Brookhaven Blotter From police reports dated through

Sept. 12.

The following information was pulled from DeKalb County Police Department’s Crimetrac system (www.crimemapping.com/map/ga/dekalbcounty) for the zip

code 30319 and the lower Buford Highway corridor. The information on the website is

presumed accurate.

ROBBERY � 2900 block of Buford Highway—On

Sept. 1, robbery with use of a gun was reported.

� 1600 block of North Druid Hills Road—On Sept. 2, robbery with use of a gun was reported.

� 2000 block of North Druid Hills Road—On Sept. 5, a robbery with a weapon was reported.

� 3700 block Buford Highway—On Sept. 8, robbery of a residence with a gun was reported.

� 1800 block of Corporate Boulevard—On Sept. 10, a strong arm robbery was reported.

BURGLARY � 3000 block of Caldwell Road—On

Sept. 4, a forced entry burglary was re-ported at a residence.

� 100 block of Lincoln Court Avenue—On Sept. 4, a burglary without forced en-

try was reported at a non-residence.

� 2900 block of Clairmont Road—On Sept. 5, a burglary without forced entry was reported.

� 2400 block of Wawona Drive—On Sept. 6, a forced entry burglary was re-ported.

� 1500 block of North Druid Hills Road—On Sept. 8, forced entry bur-glary of a residence was report-ed.

� 2900 block of Clairmont Road—On Sept. 9, a forced entry burglary was reported.

� 1800 block of Winchester Trail—On Sept. 9, a forced entry burglary was reported.

� 7300 block of Druid Hills Re-serve Drive—On Sept. 9, a forced entry burglary was reported.

AUTO THEFT � 2900 block of Clairmont Road—On

Sept. 2, theft of an auto was reported.

� 1800 block of Corporate Boulevard—On Sept. 7 theft of an auto was reported.

� 3100 block of Telford Drive—On Sept. 8, theft of an auto was reported.

� 1300 block of Roxboro Drive—On Sept. 8, theft of an auto was reported.

� 3400 block of Buford Highway—On Sept. 9, theft of an auto was reported.

THEFT/LARCENY � 2700 block of Buford High-

way—On Sept. 1, theft was re-ported.

� 1700 block of Dresden Way—On Sept. 1, theft was re-ported.

� 5200 block of Reserve Drive—On Sept. 1, theft was reported.

� 2400 block of Skyland Drive—On Sept. 2, theft of articles from a vehicle was re-ported.

� 700 block of Brookhaven Way—On Sept.

3, theft of a bicycle was re-ported.

� 4000 block of Peachtree Road—On Sept. 3, theft of articles from a vehicle was reported.

� 3800 block of Peachtree Road—On Sept. 3, theft of articles from a vehicle was reported.

� 3300 block of Buford Highway—On Sept. 4, theft of gas was reported when a car drove off without paying.

� 3000 block of Clairmont Road—On Sept. 5, theft of a bicycle was reported.

� 2300 block of Poplar Springs Drive-On Sept. 5, theft was reported.

� 2600 block Buford Highway—On Sept. 5, theft was reported.

� 3700 block of Ashford Dunwoody Road—On Sept. 5, theft of articles from a vehi-

cle was reported.

�2900 block of Clairmont Road—On Sept. 5, theft of articles

from a vehicle was reported.

� 700 block of Brookhaven Avenue—On Sept. 7, theft of a bicycle was reported.

� 2700 block of Buford High-way—On Sept. 7, theft was reported.

� 3600 block of Ashford Dunwoody Road—On Sept. 8, theft was reported.

� 3800 block of Buford Highway—On Sept. 8, theft of parts from an auto was reported.

� 3400 block of Buford Highway—On Sept. 9, theft of articles from a vehicle was reported.

� 1800 block of Dresden Drive—On Sept. 9, theft of articles from a vehicle was reported.

� 1100 block of Thornwell Drive—On Sept. 9, theft of articles from a vehicle was reported.

CONTINUED ON PAGE 38

“We want people to know we’re there to help.”

– ROB STEVENS

NORTH METRO SWAT TEAM

BK

Page 37: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | 37

THE BROOKHAVEN CITY COUNCIL STOPS SETTLEMENT

NEGOTIATIONS!

THE BROOKHAVEN CITY COUNCIL WANTS A MILLION DOLLARS PER YEAR OR WAIT FOR THE SUPREME COURT TO RULE!

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THE MAYOR & CITY COUNCIL ARE NOT LISTENING TO THE VOTERS!CALL THEM!

PP_Negotiation_Ad.indd 1 9/16/14 9:40 PMBK

Page 38: 09-19-2014 Brookhaven Reporter

P U B L I C S A F E T Y

38 | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

� 2300 block of Logan Circle—On Sept. 10, theft was reported.

ASSAULT � 2100 block of Coosawattee Drive—

On Sept. 1, battery was reported.

� 3600 block of Buford Highway—On Sept. 1, sexual assault was reported.

� 3100 block of Buford Highway—On Sept. 3, battery was reported.

� 3100 block of Buford Highway—On Sept. 2, simple battery was reported and an arrest was made.

� 3200 block of Buford Highway—On Sept. 5, simple assault was reported.

� 2800 block of Buford Highway—On Sept. 10, aggravated assault with a gun was reported.

FRAUD � 2000 block of Johnson Ferry Road—

On Sept. 5, an arrest was made for fraud with a financial card and possession of a fraudulent driver’s license or ID.

ARRESTS � 2500 block of Skyland Drive—On

Sept. 1, an arrest was made for driving without a license.

� 2100 block of Coosawattee Drive—On Sept. 2, an arrest for obstruction was made.

� 3700 block of Ashford Dunwoody Road—On Sept. 2, a wanted person was locat-ed and arrested.

� 3900 block of Peachtree Road—On Sept. 3, a wanted person was lo-cated and arrested.

� 2600 block of Skyland Drive—On Sept. 3, an arrest for possession of mar-ijuana was made.

� 1900 block of Buford Highway—On

Sept. 4, an arrest for driving while license suspended or revoked was made during a traffic stop.

� 100 block of Peachtree Road—On Sept. 4, a wanted person was located and arrested.

� 3000 block of Buford High-way—On Sept. 6, an arrest was made for public intoxication and public consumption.

� 2900 block of Clair-mont Road—On Sept. 6, an arrest was made for posses-sion of cocaine.

� 1100 block of Pine Grove Avenue—On Sept. 6, a

wanted person was located and arrest-ed.

� 4400 block of Peachtree Road—On Sept. 6, two arrests for possession of mar-ijuana were made/

� 3600 block of Buford Highway—On

Sept. 6, an arrest was made for marijua-na possession.

� 3800 block of Ashford Dunwoody Road—On Sept. 7, two people were ar-rested for possession of marijuana.

� 3500 block of Buford Highway—On Sept. 7, an arrest was made for disorder-ly conduct.

� 1400 block of Cliff Valley Way—On Sept. 7, two people were arrested for dis-orderly conduct; later, an arrest for hit and run was made.

� 2700 block of Buford Highway—On Sept. 7, an arrest for possession of mar-ijuana was made.

� 3200 block of Buford Highway—On Sept. 8, an arrest for DUI was made.

� 3000 block of Buford Highway—On Sept. 9, an arrest was made for possession of marijuana.

� 2000 block of North Druid Hills

Brookhaven Police BlotterCONTINUED FROM PAGE 36

BK

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Sandy Springs Police Department – is seeking owners for Lost and Found Property. These property items are not for sale. To view the property items list, visit the Sandy Springs Police Department website at www.sandyspringspolice.org To claim property, you must have valid identification and proof of ownership.

Vernon Woods Animal Hospital is looking for Full/Part-time Kennel Assistants – We have three locations in Sandy Springs and Brookhaven, some weekends included, please contact Cindy Martin at 404-252-1641, fax 404-252-7401 or email: [email protected]

Advertising Sales - Reporter Newspapers & Atlanta Intown – Join our team! You should have a record of success selling products or services to small and mid-sized businesses, know the local market and enjoy working in a fast-paced, deadline oriented, entrepreneurial company. Unlimited earning potential with base salary + commission + company paid health insurance. Contact Publisher: Steve Levene at 404-917-2200 ext. 111. or email [email protected].

HELP WANTED

Friday (10/3) and Saturday (10/4) – 9 AM – 5 PM – 2885 Coles Way, Sandy Springs 30350. Household items, furniture, women’s apparel and misc. items. Call – 770-395-1418.

Saturday (9/27) – 8 AM – 3 PM – Buckhead Baptist Church Ladies Ministry Yard Sale, 4100 Roswell Rd NE, 30342. Children’s clothing, books, toys, household items and more.

GARAGE / YARD SALESLooking for a caregiver to take care of your sick loved one? – Look no more!! I have 13 years experience: CNA, CPR and 1st aid. Call 678-665-2803.

An affordable Caregiver/CNA – Will care for you or your loved ones in their homes. Please contact 573-301-4243 for more information

CNA – Years of experience, dependable, great references, own transportation, live-in, day or night care. Call 404-441-9134.

CNA specializing in elderly care – Caring hands & loving heart in the comfort of your own home. Full/Part-time, day/night. References available. Call 678-427-4135.

Elderly Care – Experienced CNA available for compassionate, care. Call Kathleen 678-491-0532 or Hellen 404-494-6016.

10 years experience – Trained and competent in working to support healthcare clients with various needs. References available. Call Pamela, CNA at 404-358-0724.

CAREGIVER

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

Matthew’s Handy Services – small jobs and chores are my specialty. Member of the Better Business Bureau. Shelving/organizers, towel bars, carpentry, drywall, painting, plumbing & minor yard work. Call 404-547-2079 or email [email protected].

SERVICES AVAILABLE

CLEANING SERVICESI Love to clean houses! – Call 678-221-7716. Great prices.

Houses, Apartments, Offices & more –Affordable prices, excellent references. Call 770-837-5711

ANTIQUES WANTEDBronze, Marble Sculpture, Sterling, Paintings, Art Glass – Honest & Reliable. Lucien 404-719-3559

REAL ESTATEWant to sell your home? – I pay cash – quick close – any condition. Call today – 678-250-9675 (no text).

I sell Investment Homes 50-70% of MKT Value – Call Craig: 770-756-6026. Licensed Agent.

ROOM FOR RENTProfessional lady desires – female roommate to share townhouse in gated community on Chattahoochee. Large bedroom, walk-in closet & full bath. $650 – call 770-951-1168.

P E TS E R V I C E S

D I R E C T O R Y

SEEKING RENTALRetired Atlanta Symphony Orchestra cellist Bruce Klingbeil – Interested in renting a house in Brookhaven. If you or anyone you know has a house for rent in Brookhaven or vicinity, please contact Mr. Klingbeil at PO Box 191121, Atlanta GA 31119-1121

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P U B L I C S A F E T Y

www.ReporterNewspapers.net | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | 39

Road—On Sept. 9, an arrest was made for possession of marihuana.

� 2500 block of Caldwell Road—On Sept. 9, an arrest for obstructing a police officer was made.

� 3900 block of Peachtree Road—On Sept. 9, an arrest for disorderly conduct was made.

� 2800 block of Buford Highway—On Sept. 9, a wanted person was located and arrested.

� 3200 block of Buford Highway—On Sept. 10, an arrest for DUI was made.

� 2600 block of Buford Highway—On Sept. 10, a wanted person was

located during a traffic stop and arrested.

� 3300 block of Buford Highway—On Sept. 10, an arrest was made for public intoxication and public consumption.

� 2900 block of Buford Highway—On Sept. 11, an arrest was made for DUI, during a traffic stop for speeding.

� 3700 block of Buford Highway—On Sept. 11, an arrest was made for driving on suspended or cancelled registration.

� 3100 block of Buford Highway—On Sept. 12, an arrest was made for posses-sion of marijuana.

OTHER � 2000 block of North Druid Hills

Road—On Sept. 1, firing a weapon was reported.

� 3800 block of Buford Highway—On Sept. 1, damage to private property was reported.

� 3600 block of Buford Highway—On Sept. 1, a hit and run was reported; On Sept. 2, damage to property was report-ed.

� 4300 block of Chamblee Dunwoody Road—On Sept. 4, a hit and run was re-ported.

� 2100 block of Lake Boulevard—On

Sept. 5, a hit and run was reported.

� 1300 block of Gables Drive—On Sept. 5, damage to private property was report-ed.

� 4000 block of Peachtree Road—On Sept. 5, firing of a weapon was reported.

� 3200 block of Gables Drive—On Sept. 5, a hit and run was reported.

� 3200 block of Buford Highway—On Sept. 6, a report of terroristic threats was made.

� 2600 block of Buford Highway—On Sept. 9, a report of harassing communi-cation was made.

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40 | SEPT. 19 – OCT. 2, 2014 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net BK