Pope HS salutatorian among National Merit Scholarship winners

Eight recent high school graduates from the East Cobb area were named recipients of National Merit Scholarships this week.

More East Cobb students awarded National Merit Scholarships
Jay Natu, Pope High School

The National Merit Scholarship Corporation announced a nationwide list of scholarships provided by the colleges and universities where the recipients will be attending in the fall.

The scholarship amounts range from $500 and $2,000 annually for up to four years of undergraduate study.

The recent recipients include Jay Natu, the salutatorian at Pope High School, who intends to study biochemistry at the University of Georgia.

Two of his Pope classmates also will be receiving National Merit Scholarships, and also are bound for UGA. They are Simon O’Connor (mathematics) and Michael Soule (business).

Two Wheeler recipients also will be headed to UGA in the fall: Diya A. Garrepally (pharmaceutical science) and Katherine Carter (health care).

Receiving a National Merit Auburn University Scholarship is Sarah Clark of Walton, who is interested in studying environmental engineering.

Zara Khan of East Cobb, who recently graduated from Campbell High School, has received a National Merit Scholarship to attend the University of Southern California, with a probable career field of linguistics.

Claire Petersen of East Cobb, who graduated from Blessed Trinity Catholic High School in Roswell, will be attending Vanderbilt University, where she plans to study applied mathematics.

Applicants had to reach the National Merit Scholarship finalist stage, were required to submit essays and detail extracurricular activities, awards and leadership positions.

Their academic records included threshold scores on the SAT or SAT and students had to be recommended by a high school official.

The NMSC awarded scholarships to more than 6,870 high school seniors in 2024 totaling nearly $26 million.

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East Cobb Traffic Update: Temporary East Piedmont Road closure

Temporary East Piedmont Road closure

From a Cobb County government release Tuesday afternoon:

A contractor replacing a sewer line along East Piedmont Road will close some travel lanes during this week  The project will take place between Mainsail Drive and Piedmont Forest Court, which is just east of Sandy Plains Road.

The project has started and is expected to run through Tuesday, June 12. Weather could impact the length of the project as well as the times when lanes are closed off.

No detours are necessary, but some delays are expected.  

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Cobb commission candidate qualifies for runoff in surprise

Cobb commission candidate qualifies for runoff in surprise
Taniesha Whorton said she’s focusing her campaign efforts on the East Cobb area of District 2 in the June 18 runoff.

There were only a few upsets in Cobb results in the May 21 primary elections, and Taniesha Whorton’s finish in a five-way race for an open seat on the Cobb Board of Commissioners was among them.

A former administrative assistant in the Cobb County Police Department, the Smyrna-area resident finished second in the Democratic race for District 2 in her first-ever political campaign.

She outpolled former State Rep. Erick Allen and will face former Cobb school board member Jaha Howard in the runoff, which culminates on June 18.

The District 2 boundaries that are being observed by the Cobb Board of Elections include some of East Cobb, and are those adopted by Cobb’s Democratic commissioners in a home-rule dispute that continues in the courts.

Here’s Whorton’s campaign website; East Cobb News also has arranged an interview with Howard through his campaign and will be publishing that next week.

Advance runoff voting begins next week, and Whorton was out campaigning on Sunday at East Cobb Park, handing out fliers and meeting with potential voters during a concert.

In the primary, she won several East Cobb precincts, including Roswell 1, Hightower 1, Sewell Mill 1, Sewell Mill 3, Sope Creek 1, Sope Creek 2, Fullers Park 1, Mt. Bethel 4, Powers Ferry 1, Terrell Mill 1 and Chattahoochee 1.

You can view the full results by clicking here.

Cobb commission candidate qualifies for runoff in surprise
A precinct map shows polling stations won by Howard in Green, Whorton in brown, Allen in blue and Kevin Redmon in turquoise. Click here to see precinct details. 

Whorton said she worked on political campaigns in her native Michigan. An ordained minister, she moved to Georgia in 2016 to work with the Faith Christian Center Church in Austell, and also got involved in the Cobb Police Athletic League.

Now a senior executive with Bader Scott Injury Lawyers, Whorton—who holds an economics degree as well as an MBA and a master’s in government affairs—said she decided to get out from a behind-the-scenes role in a campaign and offer up herself as a candidate.

“People have told me that I have a lot to offer the county,” Whorton said. “I wanted to step out of the shadows.”

Whorton ran a bare-bones campaign in the primary, raising less than $3,000 (with nearly half of that sum a loan from herself).

Fewer than 12,00 votes were cast in District 2. Howard got 33 percent of the vote, and Whorton edged Allen with 25 percent, to his 23 percent.

She didn’t have the name recognition of Howard and Allen (who drew the disputed District 2 maps that are being used).

But low turnout may have helped some of the other candidates who upset incumbents, including Cobb legislative delegation chairwoman Teri Anulewicz, who was defeated in a Smyrna State House race.

Whorton said that based on some interactions with voters, “I think people related to me. I get up and got to work every day, and I know how to stretch my resources.”

What she said she’s hearing from voters are frustrations over stormwater issues (a proposed fee was delayed by commissioners until August after citizen opposition) and transit issues.

As for the former, Whorton said she favors “a sustainable plan where residents are not bearing all the burden.”

Whorton has lived in Detroit, Dallas and Chicago, and said she appreciates that mobility concerns are important in some parts of Cobb.

She didn’t offer an opinion on the proposed Cobb Mobility Transit Tax referendum that could be on the November ballot.

Cobb Commission Chairwoman Lisa Cupid favors a 30-year, one-percent sales tax that would generate an estimated $11 billion.

Whorton said she “hasn’t dug into the issue to see if it could be shorter” and admitted that a 30-year tax might be regarded as being too long.

She said she’s focusing on reaching out to voters in East Cobb, mindful that the boundaries could still be in limbo.

Current District 2 commissioner Jerica Richardson was drawn out during reapportionment and decided to run for Congress (losing to U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath in the 6th District Democratic primary).

The only Republican candidate to qualify is Pam Reardon, but she resides in the District 3 that was redistricted by the legislature. Another GOP hopeful, Alicia Adams, is challenging her disqualification by the Cobb Elections Board, also based on the disputed maps.

Whorton—who like Howard resides in District 2 either way—said she hopes the matter will be resolved by November.

“It will be good for the voters” to have some clarity when they go to the polls, she said.

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Fundraiser set for Republican Cobb school board candidates

Fundraiser set for Republican Cobb school board candidates
John Cristadoro

U.S. Rep. Barry Loudermilk and local legislators are the hosts of a fundraiser next week for three Republicans running for the Cobb Board of Education.

According to a “Cobb County School Board Town Hall Newsletter” sent out Monday by GOP school board member David Chastain, the event, dubbed “Keeping Cobb Schools Strong,” will take place Monday, June 10, at the 1885 Grill (4975 North Main Street, Acworth) from 6:30-8 p.m.

The host committee includes State Sens. Kay Kirkpatrick and John Albers (who have East Cobb constituencies) and Ed Setzler, as well as State Reps. Ginny Ehrhart and Devan Seabaugh.

Chastain is not up for re-election, but the other three school board seats held by Republicans are. The GOP has held a 4-3 majority since 2019 as partisan antagonisms have grown on a number of issues.

That includes Post 5 in East Cobb, where four-term incumbent David Banks is retiring from office. The lone Republican to qualify for the Nov. 8 election is Walton cluster parent John Cristadoro.

Cristadoro will face Democrat Laura Judge, also a Walton parent. Both are first-time candidates and declared their intent to run last spring.

In the May 21 primary, in which they were both unopposed, Cristadoro received 6,369 votes to 5,262 for Judge.

Until the 2018 elections, Republicans held a firm grip on local control in Cobb County government and the school board (6-1 majority) as well as the Cobb legislative delegation.

But the school board is all the GOP controls today.

Monday’s e-mail message from Chastain (from a Google e-mail address outside of the Cobb school district and referencing his Post 4 in Northeast Cobb) alluded to what’s at stake.

Cristadoro appeared in a short video thanking supporters for campaign contributions and noting the legislators who will be in attendance, especially Loudermilk, whose 11th District includes East Cobb.

“We’re bringing out the big guns,” Cristadoro said. “Why? They truly believe, as do I, of the importance of our schools, and what the future holds for our youngsters. That needs to be protected.

“There are lots of outside influences, national groups, that are going to come in and push their political agenda. It’s already being seen.”

He didn’t specify the groups or what those issues might be (East Cobb News has left a message seeking comment), but similar charges were made in 2022 when Chastain defeated Democrat Catherine Pozniak in a bitter campaign.

Two GOP incumbents are seeking re-election. Chairman Randy Scamihorn of Post 1 in North Cobb is being opposed by Vickie Benson in a rematch from the 2020 election, and he received only 96 more votes in their unopposed primary.

Brad Wheeler of Post 7 in West Cobb had a close re-election in 2020. His foe is Democrat Andrew Cole, and in their unopposed primary, Cole 6,637 votes to 5,602 for Wheeler.

Cole is a member of the Cobb Community Care Coalition that is highly critical of the Republican majority and Cobb County School District Superintendent Chris Ragsdale.

Scamihorn, a former Cobb educator who is completing his third term, is pledging his commitment to “keeping our students safe” as well as “keeping inappropriate books out of schools.”

That’s a reference to several books that were removed from Cobb school libraries during the 2023-24 school year due to sexually explicit content.

Wheeler, also a former Cobb teacher, is touting the same priorities.

The only Democrat on the November ballot is Post 3 incumbent Tre’ Hutchins, who is unopposed and had no primary opposition.

In his e-mail Monday, Chastain said that “I urge you to support leaders who embody common sense and a steadfast commitment to our community’s well-being.”

For information and to RSVP contact KeepStrongSchools4Cobb@gmail.com.

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Cobb adopts new traffic-calming policy for neighborhoods

Cobb adopts new traffic-calming policy for neighborhoods

Submitted information:

Cobb residents upset about speeding traffic through their neighborhoods will have more options to get help, thanks to a recent revision of the county’s traffic calming plan.

The Board of Commissioners approved the revisions at its May 28, 2024 meeting. The plan consolidates the Department of Transportation’s prior policies on speed humps and traffic dynamic speed display devices. It lowers the speed thresholds on residential streets and allows residents to ask the county for help if 65% of residents sign a petition.

The policy dramatically increases the options available to the county to slow speed on roadways where most traffic significantly exceeds the posted speed limit.

Cobb DOT Director Drew Raessler told the board that his staff would receive the request, study the data, formulate a proposed solution, and then return it to the residents. “We would coordinate with the community and say this is what the department recommends,” Raessler said. “We would ask if this would match what they think would work in their community, understanding they know their neighborhood better than we do.”

Once the department and the community formulate a solution, the proposal would be brought back to the Board of Commissioners for ultimate approval.

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Cobb Library System releases Pride Month booklist, resources

Submitted information:Cobb Library System releases 2024 Pride Month booklist

June is Pride Month! These books celebrate diversity, community, inclusivity, and understanding!

Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer (LGBTQ) Pride Month is celebrated each June. President Bill Clinton declared June as Gay and Lesbian Pride Month in 2000.  In 2011, President Barack Obama expanded the observance to Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Pride Month. According to the Library of Congress, “The purpose of the commemorative month is to recognize the impact that lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender individuals have had on history locally, nationally, and internationally.” The month-long celebration has its origins in the Stonewall Uprising in NYC’s Greenwich Village in Manhattan, which turned into a tipping point for the Gay Liberation Movement. Stonewall involved several days of conflict between police and patrons of a gay bar and onlookers in violent clashes beginning June 28, 1969. Visit loc.gov/lgbt-pride-month/about to learn more.

Click on a title to find it in our catalog; and find many more titles at cobbcat.org.

Children’s Picture Books

Grandad’s Camper by Harry Woodgate

Heather Has Two Mommies by Lesléa Newman

Home at Last by Vera B. Williams

It’s Pride, Baby! By Allen R. Wells

Mama and Mommy and Me in the Middle by Nina LaCour

Miss Rita, Mystery Reader by Sam Donovan

Pride Puppy by Robin Stevenson

Rainbow: A First Book of Pride by Michael Genhart

The Rainbow Parade by Emily Neilson

This Day in June by Gayle Pitman

‘Twas the Night Before Pride by Joanna McClintick

Children’s Nonfiction Books

 The Gender Wheel by Maya Gonzalez

I Am Jazz by Jessica Herthel

It Feels Good to Be Yourself by Theresa Thorn

My Two Dads by Julie Murray

Pride: Celebrating Diversity and Community by Robin Stevenson

Pride: The Story of Harvey Milk and the Rainbow Flag by Rob Sanders

Rainbow Revolutionaries: 50 LGBTQ+ People Who Made History by Sarah Prager

Stonewall: A Building, an Uprising, a Revolution by Rob Sanders

Two Grooms on a Cake: The Story of America’s First Gay Wedding by Rob Sanders

Children’s and Preteen Chapter Books

 Alan Cole is Not a Coward by Eric Bell

The Best Liars in Riverview by Lin Thompson

Emma and the Love Spell by Meredith Ireland

Flight of the Puffin by Ann Braden

The Greatest Superpower by Alex Sanchez

The Insiders by Mark Oshiro

The List of Things That Will Not Change by Rebecca Stead

Lunar Boy by Jes and Cin Wibowo

Paige Not Found by Jen Wilde

Sir Callie and the Dragon’s Roost by Esme Symes-Smith

Thanks A Lot, Universe by Chad Lucas

Too Bright to See by Kyle Lukoff

The Visitors by Greg Howard

Winnie Nash is Not Your Sunshine by Nicole Melleby

You Only Live Once, David Bravo by Mark Oshiro

Teen and Young Adult Fiction

Afterglow by Phil Stamper

As You Walk On By by Julian Winters

Beautiful Music for Ugly Children by Kirstin Cronn-Mills

Being Ace: An Anthology of Queer, Trans, Femme, and Disabled Stories of Asexual Love and Connection edited by Madeline Dyer

Bianca Torre is Afraid of Everything by Justine Pucella Winans

I’ll Take Everything You Have by James Klise

The Long Run by James Acker

Night of the Living Queers: 13 Tales of Terror and Delight edited by Shelly Page

No Boy Summer by Amy Spalding

Only Mostly Devastated by Sophie Gonzales

Out of Character by Jenna Miller

Ready When You Are by Gary Lonesborough

The Severed Thread by Leslie Vedder

They Hate Each Other by Amanda Woody

This Delicious Death by Kayla Cottingham

Teen and Young Adult Nonfiction

Allies: Real Talk About Showing Up, Screwing Up, and Trying Again edited by Shakirah Bourne

Beyond Magenta: Transgender Teens Speak Out edited by Susan Kuklin

Hear Us Out!: Lesbian and Gay Stories of Struggle, Progress, and Hope,1950 to the Present by Nancy Garden

The Pride Guide: The Guide to Sexual and Social Health for LGBTQ Youth by Jo Langford

A Queer History of the United States for Young People by Michael Bronski

A Quick and Easy Guide to Asexuality by Molly Muldoon

A Quick and Easy Guide to Queer and Trans Identities by Mady G.

Stonewall: Breaking Out in the Fight for Gay Rights by Ann Bausum

The Stonewall Riots: Coming Out in the Streets by Gayle E. Pitman

Adult Fiction

After Sappho by Selby Wynn Schwartz

And Then He Sang a Lullaby by Ani Kayode Somtochkwu

Best Men by Sidney Karger

Biography of X by Catherine Lacey

Blackouts by Justin Torres

The Celebrants by Steven Rowley

City of Laughter by Temim Fruchter

Confidence by Rafael Frumkin

The Great Believers by Rebecca Makkai

Just As You Are by Camille Kellogg

The Late Americans by Brandon Taylor

The Mars House by Natasha Pulley

The Sun and the Void by Gabriela Romero Lacruz

The World and All That It Holds by Aleksander Hermon

Your Driver is Waiting by Priya Guns

Adult Nonfiction

The Book of Pride: LGBTQ Heroes Who Changed the World by Mason Funk

The Deviant’s War: The Homosexual vs. the United States of America by Eric Cervini

The Gay Agenda: A Modern Queer History and Handbook by Ashley Molesso

Gay Like Me: A Father Writes to His Son by Richie Jackson

The Gay Revolution: The Story of the Struggle by Lillian Faderman

It was Vugar & It was Beautiful: How AIDS Activists Used Art to Fight a Pandemic by Jack Lowery

The Lexington Six: Lesbian and Gay Resistance in 1970s America by Josephine Donovan

Love Wins: The Lovers and Lawyers Who Fought the Landmark Case for Marriage Equality by Debbie Cenziper

Love’s Next Meeting: The Forgotten History of Homosexuality and the Left in American Culture by Aaron Lecklider

The Pink Line: Journey’s Across the World’s Queer Frontiers by Mark Gevisser

The Queens’ English: The LGBTQIA+ Dictionary of Lingo and Colloquial Phrases by Chloe O. Davis

Tinderbox: The Untold Story of the Up Stairs Lounge Fire and the Rise of Gay Liberation by Robert Fieseler

Tomorrow Will Be Different: Love, Love, and the Fight for Trans Equality by Sarah McBride

The Women’s House of Detention: A Queer History of a Forgotten Prison by Hugh Ryan

 

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East Cobb Biz Scene: Brass Tap opens; June biz events; more

 

Brass Tap opens East Cobb

After some delays, the first Brass Tap Craft Beer Bar in the East Cobb area has opened at MarketPlace Terrell Milll.

The location at 1420 Terrell Mill Road, Suite 100, is located near the Los Abuelos Grill.

Monday was the first day of business for the location operated by Raj and Meghl Patel, brothers in their 20s from a family of entrepreneurs, who have operated gas stations and businesses in the hospitality industry.

They’ve signed on to open several more locations in metro Atlanta for Tampa-based franchise chain, which has Atlanta-area locations at Perimeter Center, Milton and Hapeville for the time being.

Brass Tap is one of the finishing touches on the mixed-use development that includes a Kroger superstore that opened last summer and market-rate apartments at the intersection of Powers Ferry and Terrell Mill roads.

More than 150 craft beer choices on draught and in bottles are featured at Brass Tap, ranging from the (512) Bock deep amber from Austin, Texas to five varieties of Pennslyvania’s famed Yuengling Brewer, including a Hershey’s Chocolate Porter.

Georgia beers include Terrapin, Sweetwater, and Marietta’s own Red Hare.

The main food menu includes a wide selection of starters, nachos, chicken wings, burgers, pizzas, salads, subs and desserts.

The restaurant includes a loyalty program called the Brew Crew, and online delivery and pickup ordering is also available.

Hours are from 11 a.m. to midnight daily. Phone: 813-226-2333.

June Biz Association events

The East Cobb Business Association will hold its monthly women’s luncheon, Professional Women of East Cobb, on June 14 at J. Christopher’s at Woodlawn Square (1205 Johnson Ferry Road, Suite 114).

The event is from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. and the cost is $20-$25.

The organization’s main luncheon is June 18 and the featured speaker is leadership coach and branding consultant Stacey Ruth, whose topic is: “Brand You: Breakthrough thinking to fast-track growth.”

The event includes networking and lasts from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Rich Hart Global Studios )2030 Powers Ferry Road, Suites 270-280).  The cost is $20-$30.

ECBA also has weekly open networking meetings Friday at IHOP (3130 Johnson Ferry Road) and monthly Toastmasters sessions, also at Rich Hart.

For information and to register, visit the ECBA website.

The Northeast Cobb Business Association is on hiatus until August.

State of the County address

Cobb Commission Chairwoman Lisa Cupid will deliver the State of the County address June 10 at the Cobb Chamber of Commerce’s Monday Marquee.

It’s from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. at the Coca-Cola Roxy Theatre at The Battery Atlanta (800 Battery Avenue, Suite 500).

Cupid, a Democrat, is in the final year of her term and is seeking re-election in November.

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East Cobb residential real estate sales, May 13-17, 2024

Bishops Green, East Cobb real estate sales
Bishops Green

The following East Cobb residential real estate sales were compiled from agency reports and county property records. They include the street address, subdivision name, high school attendance zone and sales price:

May 13

3415 North Hembree Road, 30062 (Pope): $930,000

4101 Riverlook Parkway Unit 102, 30067 (Willows by the River, Walton): $285,000

3140 Indian Hills Drive, 30068 (Indian Hills, Wheeler): $750,000

545 Barnes Mill Drive, 30062 (Marietta): $267,500

1430 Helena Drive, 30066 (Trojan Hills, Sprayberry): $250,000

2244 Carlyle Drive, 30062 (Cedar Hills Estates, Pope): $580,000

2830 Timberline Road, 30062 (Holly Springs, Sprayberry): $360,000

4444 Freeman Road, 30062 (Breckenridge, Pope): $852,o0o

4840 Olde Mill Drive, 30066 (Olde Mill Ford, Kell): $480,000

5543 Woodberry Circle, 30068 (Willow Point, Walton): $699,000

May 14

3886 Lower Roswell Road, 30067 (Walton): $1.392 million

1270 Promontory Lane, 30062 (Walton’s Reserve, Walton): $850,000

890 Edgewater Circle, 30062 (Barnes Mill Lake, Wheeler): $338,000

2185 Northfield Court, 30066 (North Field, Sprayberry): $510,000

3137 Sycamore Lane, 30066 (Oak Creek Estates, Sprayberry): $465,000

4450 Windsor Oaks Circle, 30066 (Windsor Oaks, Lassiter): $750,000

2994 Forest Chase Terrace, 30066 (Forest Chase, Lassiter): $482,500

May 15

2600 Middle Coray Circle, 30066 (The Oaks at Mill Pond, Lassiter): $1.399 million

2814 Prado Lane, 30066 (Enclave at Laura Creek, Sprayberry): $549,000

197 Parkstone Way, 30066 (Park at Barrett Creek, Sprayberry): $523,000

1815 Bishops Green Drive, 30062 (Bishops Green, Pope): $742,000

3011 Wendwood Court, 30062 (Wendwood, Pope): $500,000

4230 Arbor Club Drive, 30066 (Arbor Bridge, Lassiter): $590,000

5062 Gardenia Circle, 30068 (The Gardens at Parkaire, Walton): $352,000

May 16

1508 Keener Lane, 30066 (Roman’s Ridge, Sprayberry): $765,000

290 Lamplighter Lane, 30067 (Fox Hills, Wheeler): $625,000

614 Fairway Court, 30068 (Millstone, Walton): $763,000

1106 Tom Lane, 30066 (Powell Station, Sprayberry): $405,000

902 Roanoke Drive, 30066 (Owensby, Sprayberry): $345,000

2190 Wilmington Circle, 30062 (Rutherford, Sprayberry): $515,000

3909 Twin Leaf Place, 30062 (Lost Forest Place, Pope): $901,000

3724 Running Fox Drive, 30062 (Raintree Forest, Lassiter): $575,000

3298 Hutton Walk, 30066 (Hampton Ridge, Lassiter): $720,000

2693 Raven Trail, 30066 (Falcon Crest, Lassiter): $310,400

5109 Nicolet Court, 30062 (North Forest, Walton): $654,000

May 17

1547 Cambridge Place, 30062 (Cambridge Walk, Marietta): $480,000

3685 Tarn Court, 30062 (Cochran Lake Estates, Lassiter): $1.7 million

202 Parkstone Way, 30066 (Park at Barrett Creek, Sprayberry): $495,000

3291 Belmont Glen Drive, 30067 (Belmont, Wheeler): $975,000

3069 Greyfield Trace, 30067 (Greyfield, Wheeler): $650,000

3793 Fox Hills Drive, 30068 (Fox Hills, Wheeler): $550,000

740 Anderson Walk, 30062 (Barnes Mill Townhomes, Wheeler): $295,000

3765 Creek Stone Way, 30068 (Indian Hills, Walton): $2.463 million

3760 Hickory Ridge Court, 30066 (North Ridge, Sprayberry): $525,000

4196 Liberty Trace, 30066 (Windsor Oaks, Lassiter): $830,000

4332 Highborne Drive, 30066 (Highland Pointe, Lassiter): $700,000

903 Willeo Place, 30068 (River Forest, Walton): $1.15 million

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