
---
This will be one of the Big Summer Movie Hits.
I give it FIVE STARS.

Franklin, St. Avondale Estates, GA 30002 (Get directions) e: info@artbque.com
Food Vendors: Avondale Pizza Cafe | Fox Brothers Bar-B-Q| Farmstead 303 | Farm Burger | Local Boys a Cookin' | Mitch Miller | Smoker and the Bandit
This sounds Awesome
Mary Moore visits The White House
For “Chefs Move to Schools”
ATLANTA,
The aim of Let’s Move! is to end childhood obesity within a generation. The Chefs Move to Schools program is an outreach opportunity for chefs around the country to adopt a local school to help solve the childhood obesity epidemic.
· Virginia Willis, renowned chef and author of “Bon Appétit, Y’all”
· Cathy Conway, owner of Avalon Catering
· Barbara Petit, director of the local food initiative of Georgia Organics
· Gina Hopkins and Linton Hopkins, owners of Restaurant Eugene and Holeman & Finch Public House, and
· Former Atlantan Nathalie Dupree, now living in
Les Dames is a worldwide philanthropic society of professional woman leaders in the fields of food, fine beverage and hospitality.
The Cook’s Warehouse has a long history of supporting the farm-to-school movement through community gardens and cooking classes. In November of 2009 it expanded its commitment with a daylong seminar for Decatur City Schools’ cafeteria staff, demonstrating fresh-food cooking skills and talking about farm-to-school opportunities. The second class in this series is later this month.
Mrs. Obama addressed the assembled chefs and thanked them for coming to
“We are going to need everyone’s time and talent to solve the childhood obesity epidemic and our nation’s chefs have tremendous power as leaders on this issue because of their deep knowledge of food and nutrition and their standing in the community. I want to thank them for joining the Let’s Move! campaign.
“Chefs Move to Schools will pair chefs with schools in their communities to bring fun to fruits and vegetables, and teach kids about food, nutrition and cooking in an engaging way. And by working with school food-service employees, administrators and teachers, chefs can help deliver these messages from the cafeteria to the classroom. After hearing fifth graders cheer for broccoli, I know firsthand that chefs can have a huge impact on kids’ health and well being.
“You know the joy of cooking for others, that passion that you get, the sense of camaraderie, the understanding and fulfillment that comes with seeing folks gathering around a dinner table, not just enjoying a meal, but enjoying fellowship. That is power.
“You know the central role that food plays in the moments that make us happiest. Food is always there, whether it’s at a birthday party, or Thanksgiving dinner, or quiet moments with friends. Food is at the core of what makes life wonderful.”
The Chefs Move to Schools is led by Sam Kass, White House sous chef and the food initiative coordinator. He oversaw the groundbreaking of the White House Kitchen Garden more than a year ago where local students have spent time on the South Lawn planting seeds, harvesting vegetables and learning about health and nutrition along the way.
“Through the garden, the First Lady started a discussion on the role food plays in living a healthy life. The discussion grew into the Let’s Move! campaign and like the garden, we just keep on growing.
“Today, I’m excited to announce the Chefs Move to Schools program – an opportunity for chefs around the country to adopt a local school to help solve the childhood obesity epidemic,” said Kass.
Chefs and schools that are interested in participating can sign up through www.LetsMove.gov.
The Cook’s Warehouse ( www.cookswarehouse.com ) is greater
Owned and operated by founder Mary S. Moore, The Cook’s Warehouse also retails high-end appliances; conducts private cooking classes for unique celebrations and corporate events, and is a pro bono partner with virtually every major cooking event and gourmet association in
By April Hunt
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
A storytelling series about pioneer life, including children’s chores and entertainment, will return to the DeKalb History Center this month and next.
Fran Frantz will weave the stories and offer frontier crafts every Wednesday between June 16 and July 28. The events run from 10 – 11:30 a.m. at the historic Biffle Cabin, 720 W. Trinity Place.
The programs, for children ages 6 and 12, are $6 per session. For more information or reservations, call 404-373-1088, ext. 20 or send an e-mail dhs@dekalbhistory.org.







The Decatur High School class of 1955 invites DHS alumni, family members, and friends to an evening of live entertainment by the Roswell New Horizons Band.
Plan to join us at the Decatur High School Performing Arts Center on
Friday, June 11, 2010, 8-10pm,
for an evening of swing and big band tunes by the Jazz Band and vocalist.
If you love music you will want to make this event!
Tickets are just $3.00 (payable at the door).
You can learn more about the Roswell New Horizons Band at www.roswellnewhorizonsband.net


Participating shops will decorate their windows with a Beach Party theme, and shoppers can vote for their favorite windows using a text to vote service during the next two weeks leading up to the Beach Party.
more here


The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Wells Fargo & Co., which acquired Wachovia Corp. little more than a year ago, has added 300 jobs statewide in recent months -- 200 of them in metro Atlanta -- as part of strategy to grow and improve service.
The San Francisco-based bank, which plans to continue hiring, has focused on beefing up its teller ranks, but it also is increasing the number of branch managers and specialists such as loan officers, Jerome Byers II, Wells Fargo's Atlanta regional president, told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
ajc story
Look for a name change on Decatur's Wachovia buildings to Wells Fargo in Oct.
along with nearly 280 Wachovia banks in Georgia.






From thedecaturminute.com
Local shops, retailers and restaurants host Decatur's largest, single-night art experience with city-wide art show openings and receptions that are free and open to the public.
ArtWalk Participants
Agnes Scott CollegeThe Atlanta Journal-Constitution
The former Sears, Roebuck and Co. complex on Ponce de Leon Avenue, more recently known as City Hall East, cleared a hurdle Tuesday night that would allow it to again hum with commerceAtlanta’s Zoning Review Board voted to approve new conditions for the site that would allow a major anchor tenant -- such as a Target or REI -- to occupy a portion of the mammoth building.
The vote allows an anchor tenant to occupy up to 150,000 square feet and changes green-space requirements. Two neighborhood groups attended the meeting to support the proposal, which was introduced by Councilman Kwanza Hall.
ajc full story
``````````````````````
CAN YOU SAY WAL-MART


NOTE: THIS EVENT HAS BEEN CHANGED AND NO LONGER REQUIRES TICKETS.
COME BY LITTLE SHOP OF STORIES DURING ARTWALK ON FRIDAY, MAY 28 BETWEEN 5-10PM FOR A GLASS OF WINE, YUMMY SNACKS FROM SUN IN MY BELLY AND CAKES & ALE AND BID ON GREAT ARTWORK AND SIGNED BOOKS BY YOUR FAVORITE CHILDREN'S AUTHORS AND ILLUSTRATORS. YOUR CHANCE TO BID ON AN ORIGINAL PETE THE CAT PAINTING BY DECATUR'S OWN JAMES DEAN! HOPE TO SEE YOU THERE AND REMEMBER - NO TICKET PURCHASE REQUIRED!!! ALL DONATIONS AND PROCEEDS RAISED FROM THE AUCTION SUPPORT THE DEF BOOK FUND WHICH ENSURES THAT ALL CHILDREN IN OUR COMMUNITY HAVE ACCESS TO QUALITY BOOKS AT HOME. VISIT WWW.DECATUREDUCATIONFOUNDATION.ORG FOR MORE INFO.





Decatur's most unusual gift shop and gallery!
427 Church Street
next to Javamonkey
just south of Ponce de Leon
one block off the square
By Bo Emerson
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
When Davison’s, that “Cathedral of Commerce” on Peachtree Street, opened in 1927, it was reportedly the first department store south of Philadelphia to have air conditioning. Many tourists came from around the region just to ride the escalators.
By 2003, most shoppers had fled to suburban malls. The Davison’s building (rechristened Macy’s in the 1980s), went dark.
Today, workmen are busy completing a $16 million renovation at the massive downtown landmark. Of the 26 or so investors in the project, 25 are native Atlantans.
Many of them were around when Davison’s represented the acme of Atlanta’s glamour and glitz. That nostalgia didn’t lure them into an emotional investment. But it didn’t hurt.
“We’re not in the preservation business,” said Robert Patterson, the Chastain Park-raised, Ivy-educated president of 200 Peachtree. “This is a business investment. We’re not trying to say this is a philanthropy. This a group of people that remember Davison’s and what that building meant to downtown. There is a desire to see that come back.”
ajc story
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
A copper bell that has been with a local church since its founding in 1868 has gone missing.
The large copper bell, weighing anywhere between 600 and 1,000 lbs, belongs to Antioch African Methodist Episcopal Church. It was discovered missing sometime around April 19 or 20, James Simon, church administrator, told the AJC.“Some actually cried when we discovered it was gone,” Simon said. “It feels like a part of the church’s personality is gone.”
The bell had been sitting on a pallet in the back of the church since they moved to their current location on S. Hairston Road in 1995. Plans had been to have it remounted at the new location.
“When we moved here from Decatur we had to pay someone to move it,” Simon said. “That’s just how heavy it is.”
ajc story

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Over the last 100 years, even as Atlanta’s borders swelled and its population exploded, the old Lakewood Fairgrounds escaped a sea of cement and a wave of condos and shopping centers.
Always, there were other ideas: a weekend getaway for the city’s elite, an agricultural fairground, a race track for horses, a race track for cars, a monthly antique market, a concert venue, a movie set, even housing for 1996 Olympics security personnel.
On the list of could-have-but-weren’ts: a Ford Mustang museum, a zoo, a city cemetery, a mixed-use development complete with its own charter school.
Indeed, a film studio planned for the old fairgrounds is the latest in a long line of ideas, schemes and plans laid out for the 110-acre parcel of land on Atlanta’s Southside.
On Monday, the city council welcomed the newest plan, approving a multi-million dollar, 50-year lease for the Lakewood Fairgrounds to be used as film studios and sound stages. EUE/Screen Gems will pay $250,000 per year in rent until it jumps to $600,000 per year in 10 years.
City leaders hope it will create more than 1,000 jobs.
ajc full story

