Kell HS marching band triumphs at 2024 Conquest of Champions

Kell HS marching band triumphs at 2024 Conquest of Champions

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At the recent Conquest of Champions hosted by Allatoona High School, the Kell Longhorn Marching Band walked away with a whole host of awards, including Conquest Grand Champion, first in AAAAA Division, overall Gold Division winner, Best General Effect, and Best Music Performance!

Their current show, “Pop,” explores all things pop—music, pop art, things that go “pop,” even pops of color. The production features instantly recognizable classical music from well-known movies and musicals and iconic music by pop legends Michael Jackson, Madonna, Beyonce, and more!

“The beauty of marching band is that it is very subjective,” said Kell Band Director David Roth. “We can only control what we do, not what other bands do or what a judge focuses on. Our barometer for a successful performance at any competition is how good we feel when we walk off the field.”

After their performance at Conquest, every Longhorn band member knew exactly how they had done.

“The students walked off the field literally in tears because they knew they just had their best performance of the season to date. The energy was unmistakable, and the emotion was palpable,” Director Roth said.

The 2024 Kell Marching Band is the largest in school history, with 170 members. The students have been working on this show since band camp in July. All that practice paid off with a superb performance on Buccaneer Field to claim the title of Conquest Grand Champions!

“We are very passionate about using competition as a means to better OURSELVES, not just to win awards,” Director Roth continued. “We constantly remind the students that they will remember the feeling of performing with their best friends in an activity they love far more than any amount of trophies they win.”

That said, Director Roth was still thrilled with the judge’s confirmation of an exceptional performance.

“We are so incredibly happy for them,” he concluded proudly about his Conquest Grand Champions. “Not only for the placements but for their performance and the memories they will carry with them forever.” 

East Cobb residential real estate sales, Oct. 15-18, 2024

East Hampton, East Cobb real estate sales
East Hampton

The following East Cobb residential real estate sales were compiled from agency reports and Cobb County property records.

They include the street address, subdivision name and sales price listed under their respective high school attendance zones:

Kell

5061 Ravenwood Drive, 30066 (Ravenwood): $415,000

4900 Willow Cove Way, 30066 (Willow Creek): $499,500

Lassiter

2707 Limerick Court, 30066 (Bluffs at Jamerson): $1.135 million

Pope

3270 Normandy Circle, 30062 (Normandy): $640,000

3037 Windrose Glenn, 30062 (Windrush): $725,000

2400 Prince Howard Trail, 30062 (Corinth): $640,000

Sprayberry

2645 Lee Ann Drive, 30066 (Piedmont Hills): $385,000

3987 Devonshire Drive, 30066 (Canterbury Park): $429,900

2907 Rockbridge Court, 30066 (Piedmont Hills): $465,000

1514 Pleasant Street, 30066 (Oak Creek Estates): $476,500

3579 Autumn Leaves Way, 30066 (Autumn Ridge): $385,000

1779 Chasewood Park Lane, 30066 (Chasewood Park): $465,000

1411 Windburn Drive, 30066 (Shaw Woods): $423,000

3345 Bryant Lane, 30066 (North Forty): $368,700

2021 Grove Park Court, 30062 (Grove Park): $490,000

2683 Arbor Glen Place, 30066 (Arbor Glen): $290,000

524 Chapman Lane, 30066 (Wyndcliff): $550,000

Walton

2602 Holly Lane, 30062 (Holly Hills Estates): $499,900

4137 Avid Park, 30062 (St. Clair): $810,000

836 Barn Owl Road, 30068 (High Gates at Robinson Farm): $2.5 million

977 Muirfield Drive, 30068 (Pinecrest): $640,000

1836 Pemberton Place, 30062 (East Hampton): $1.2 million

291 Kings Court, 30067 (Kings Cove): $750,000

635 Serramonte Drive, 30068 (Villas at Parkaire): $390,000

550 Ridgewater Drive, 30068 (Indian Hills): $700,000

Wheeler

703 Wynnes Ridge Circle, 30067 (Wynnes Ridge): $212,000

2780 Sagamore Hill Drive, 30067 (Hyde Park): $459,900

2200 Powers Ferry Drive, 30067 (Sunvalley Estates): $400,000

2978 Grey Squirrel Court, 30067 (The Village): $350,000

577 Lullingstone Drive, 30067 (Glens at Powers Ferry): $450,000

3016 Greenfield Drive, 30068 (Indian Hills): $735,000

3091 Milledge Gate Court, 30067 (Belmont Point 1): $655,000

2880 Grove Park Lane, 30067 (Grovemeade): $550,000

2341 Monterey Drive, 30068 (Spring Creek): $830,000

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Editor’s Note: On elections, early voting and endorsements

 

Who’s ready for Tuesday to be over?

I ask that strictly as a rhetorical question, one that really shouldn’t be asked at all.

Election Day has been a hallowed event on the civic calendar of democratic nations for decades.

But especially for the last decade or so, and in particular the last few months, the voting public in the United States, Georgia and even in Cobb County has weathered what has seemed to be a constant rhetorical war.

Overheated and apocalyptic rhetoric has become the hallmark of both major political parties, advocacy groups of all kinds and the media, as they gleefully hurl and repeat these ludicrous contentions about those seeking your vote:

Fascists, Nazis, Hitler, Commie Libtards, Garbage, Stupid, Lazy, etc.

There are plenty more epithets being bandied about, and surely more to follow in Tuesday’s voting finale, and the ballot-counting mayhem that’s certain to ensue.

With three weeks of early voting here in Georgia, admonitions to get out and vote! have been relentless.

Many of you have done so, in record numbers, here in Cobb and Georgia, as we buckle up to be a presidential battleground state yet again.

We’re told to be proud of this high turnout, and it is encouraging that so many citizens are paying attention to those who are seeking elected office.

But as I dawdled over whether to join you, I recalled what baseball Hall of Fame catcher Yogi Berra, master of the malapropism, is said to have quipped in response to a question about frequenting a popular restaurant:

“Nobody goes there any more, it’s too crowded.”

That’s sort of how I feel about early voting.

I’m not undecided about anything that’s on my ballot, but after several years of voting early, it’s lost its appeal for me. Lines have been long at times, other times not so much.

Yet that’s not why I am reluctant now to vote early. I voted absentee in 2020, like many people. It was easy, and convenient and I felt my vote was secure.

I waited for a while to choose when to vote this year, until, as Berra also said, “when you come to a fork in the road . . . take it.”

I enjoy the excitement of going to the polls on Election Day and casting a ballot that will be counted that day, and not having to wait long to find out the result.

I found the exhortations from those holding up their “I Voted” stickers two weeks ahead of time a bit off-putting, along with constant text messages from shadowy groups who know whether or not you’ve voted.

I know there’s no going back to Election Day-only voting, but other nations seem to handle it just fine—witness the recent elections in Great Britain and France, with all the results known within hours.

Like those countries, I would be in favor making Election Day a national holiday. Schools are already out here on Tuesday, so why not work too?

Or hold elections on a weekend. In recent regional German elections, the polls closed around sundown on a Sunday, and by mid-evening the returns were in.

Here, we may be facing days and even weeks before all the votes are counted in some states, and already lawsuits have been threatened or filed to manipulate the process.

So on Tuesday I will resume an old tradition that I’ve missed the last couple of election cycles.

I’ll go to my precinct late morning, cast my vote, affix my sticker to my shirt, and grab a late breakfast at Waffle House: Two eggs scrambled, whole-wheat toast, sausage and hash browns, smothered.

I want to reconnect with that, and a mid-afternoon siesta—”I usually take a two-hour nap from 1 to 4,” another Yogi classic—before a long night of reporting on local election results for you.


The august practice of newspaper political endorsements has been dwindling for a couple of decades, mirroring industry decline. Not long after I left The Atlanta Journal-Constitution in 2008, it discontinued that practice.

One of the factors was the shuttering of suburban offices—I worked at the Cobb bureau off the Marietta Square in the early 1990s—that provided editorial writers with crucial information about candidates and issues in down-ballot races.

Other newspapers have also dropped endorsements for similar reasons, without much fuss from their readers.

But when The Washington Post announced it wouldn’t endorse in this presidential race—after an intervention from publisher Jeff Bezos—several editorial staffers resigned. The same happened at the Los Angeles Times, which also went neutral at the last minute.

The Post editorial page staff—which is separate from newsroom reporters and editors—had prepared an endorsement for Kamala Harris, the Democratic nominee, when Bezos stepped in.

Many readers cancelled their subscriptions, and legendary Post names like Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward of Watergate fame weighed in with the gravitas that’s all the rage these days.

As a former legacy newspaper reporter turned independent local news operator, I found that amusing. In my days in the print world, I knew that political endorsements rarely swayed readers.

I also knew that no matter what the editorial page staff decided, that was the voice of the paper. I was a reporter, not an opinionator.

But as a publisher myself, I see this matter through different eyes. Bezos offered a common-sense reply as he battles to right the ship of a newspaper that lost nearly $80 million last year.

He’s been at the helm for more than a decade, so his reign surely can be questioned about all the red ink that’s been spilled.

But his larger concern—about a loss of credibility in legacy (traditional) media—is a valid one.

The trust of our readers, our audience, and our communities is all we have. Journalists are keen to tell the public what they think about many things, including whom to vote for.

But the public that isn’t amped up 24/7 on politics isn’t buying that these days.

East Cobb News doesn’t endorse candidates or ballot issues and never will.

The reason this site exists is to address the dearth of local news here.

Our mission is to provide you with information about what’s happening around you so you can make up your mind, and to take action if you wish.

You don’t need us to tell us you what you think or how to vote. Every post on this site and our social media channels is available for reader comments, and we get plenty.

We always want to hear from you about your concerns—political or otherwise—that may shape our everyday coverage.

As we prepare to close another eventful election year, that offer remains standing, and always will.

Despite the shrieks about “saving democracy!”–presumably by voting for candidates preferred by those doing the shouting—we’ll stick with a cliched, but true adage that has served us well, about doing the reporting, and letting you do the deciding.

That’s a tradition worth saving, and it’s no Yogism at all.

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As Cobb Election Day 2024 awaits: Early voting sets records

Nearly 60 percent of registered voters in Cobb County have voted as the final phase of the 2024 general elections awaits.cobb advance voting, Cobb voter registration deadline, Walton and Dickerson PTSA candidates forum

On Tuesday, Election Day, those voters who haven’t voted must go to their assigned precincts to cast their ballots, or submit absentee ballots.

After Friday’s finale for three weeks of early voting, Cobb Elections reports that 311,389 early votes have been cast, almost all of them in-person.

Nearly 18,000 absentee ballots have been accepted, and following a court order on Friday, those voters who got their ballots late and mailed them after Wednesday will have some extra time for them to be received in order to be counted.

The two early voting locations in East Cobb had some of the highest turnout, and here are the final individual breakdowns (full details here):

  • Tim D. Lee Senior Center: 40,508
  • Smyrna Community Center: 37,380
  • Cobb Elections Office: 34,036
  • East Cobb Government Service Center: 33,898
  • Ben Robertson Community Center: 26,900
  • Boots Ward Recreation Center: 24,197
  • South Cobb Community Center: 22,735
  • North Cobb Senior Center: 20,516
  • Ron Anderson Recreation Center: 18,383
  • West Cobb Regional Library: 16,304
  • Collar Park Community Center: 9,961
  • Fair Oaks Recreation Center: 8,805

Across Georgia, more than 3.7 million early votes have been cast, and total turnout is around 4 million, according to the Georgia Secretary of State’s Election Data Hub.

That’s also more than 55 percent of the eligible state electorate, as Georgia is once again a battleground state in the presidential race.

Nearly all of Georgia’s 159 counties have reported turnout of 40 percent or more, and with a few reporting near or surpassing 70 percent.

The polls on Tuesday will be open from 7-7, and voters must bring an photo identification with them.

To check your voter registration status and polling station, and to get a customized sample ballot, visit the Georgia Secretary of State’s My Voter Page.

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Cobb judge extends deadline for returning 3K absentee ballots

Cobb absentee ballots

An estimated 3,200 voters who were mailed absentee ballots late this week will get extra time to return them.

Cobb Superior Court Judge Robert Flournoy ruled Friday that they will have until 5 p.m. Friday to either mail or return their absentee ballots by hand to the Cobb Elections Office.

Flournoy issued an injunction extending the time from Tuesday’s 7 p.m. deadline following a lawsuit from several individual voters and the Democratic National Committee and Democratic Party of Georgia, who accused the Cobb Elections office of failing to mail out the ballots in a timely fashion.

Cobb Elections began expediting the absentee ballots that were requested near the Oct. 25 deadline, saying they were overwhelmed with such requests and there was an “equipment failure.”

But more than 1,000 of those requested ballots are out of state, ruling out in-person return and making timely mail return difficult.

Those ballots covered under the order were mailed after Oct. 30 and must be postmarked by 7 p.m. Tuesday.

The injunction (you can read it here) also:

  • Orders the Board of Elections to mail absentee ballots with prepaid express return envelopes by the end of the day on Nov. 1, 2024.
  • Directs the Elections Department to segregate absentee ballots returned after 7 p.m. on Election Day and on or before 5 p.m. on Nov. 8 and keep them in a secure container.
  • Requires the Elections Department to notify affected voters of the situation and this order via phone or email if contact information is available.
  • Requires the Elections Department to provide a list of affected voters to all parties in the case.

Voter who did not get absentee ballots may still vote in person on Tuesday at their assigned.

“The agreement gives us a solution that helps ensure the voting rights of those affected and gives the public the assurance that all those who want to cast a ballot legally can do so,” Cobb Elections board chairwoman Tori Silas said in a statement issued by Cobb government Friday.

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Parents sue Cobb school district over public comment scuffle

Cobb school board public conduct policy
Jenny Peterson of East Cobb is a frequent commenter at Cobb school board meetings.

More than a year after they were denied public comment slots in a chaotic incident before a Cobb Board of Education meeting, two parents are suing the Cobb County School District and several employees from its communications department.

Attorneys for Melissa Marten and Jenny Peterson filed the suit in the U.S. District Court for Northern Georgia on Thursday, alleging the district and staff members violated their constitutional free speech rights.

(You can read the lawsuit by clicking here.)

The matter at hand took place before the September 2023 board meeting, at which the public comment sign-up table was moved from inside the lobby of the Cobb school district headquarters, to a location outside of the entrance.

They claimed in their lawsuit that the changes were made to prevent district critics from speaking out against the firing of a Due West Elementary School teacher for reading a book to her students about a child with gender identity issues.

The teacher, Katie Rinderle, is suing the district for her 2023 termination. Her attorney, Craig Goodmark, also is representing Marten and Peterson in the lawsuit filed Thursday.

They allege that Cobb school district officials purposely changed the public comment sign-up process to prevent critical remarks about the Rinderle situation, referring to some of those critics as the “bad guys.”

Members of a group called the Cobb Community Care Coalition, which is generally critical of  Superintendent Chris Ragsdale and the school board’s Republican majority, held a rally before the meeting.

Marten and Peterson, an East Cobb resident, lost their slots, and some people claimed they were shoved and injured in the ensuing chaos.

Critics said the change in sign-up policy occurred without any warning, and the result, according to the lawsuit, is that the “plaintiffs were blocked from speaking publicly in opposition to Defendants actions and policies.”

Marten and Peterson are seeking court action to prevent the district from “manipulation of the signup procedures limiting the opportunity of disfavored viewpoints from speaking during the public comment portion of the CCBOE public meeting.”

The backdrop of that Sept. 14, 2023 meeting also included a series of book removals by Ragsdale for sexually explicit content, of which the Cobb Community Care Coalition also expressed opposition.

The individual defendants named in the suit are Ragsdale and his Chief Strategy and Accountability Officer, John Floresta.

That’s the office that directs the district’s communications office, and whose staffers, including Julian Coca, Nan Kiel, Daniel Vehar, Zach Alderson and Amanda Chambers are also named as defendants.

The lawsuit claims that they used the district’s Microsoft Teams messaging system to plan a method to prevent critical speakers. Marten and Peterson, who are frequent speakers during public comment sessions, were wearing “Replace Ragsdale” shirts at the Sept. 14, 2023 meeting.

The lawsuit said that according to the Microsoft Teams messages, obtained through a public records request, the district communications staffers communicated about changing the sign-up process although some people had been waiting in line for lengthy periods.

“Citizens that had been participating in the anti-Ragsdale protest in front of the CCBOE building were physically moved away from the signup iPad. A video of the altercation shows a transgender student crying as the student was violently pushed to the ground and suffered injuries,” the lawsuit states.

At the school board meeting later, Ragsdale lit into his critics over the book removals and his decision to fire Rinderle, saying that the “ ‘radical new idea’ is not that schools have an obligation to protect students, but the radical new idea is that all children should somehow be forced to encounter sexually explicit language and instruction while at school.”

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East Cobb artist to present holiday show of abstract works

East Cobb artist to present holiday show of abstract works

Submitted information and photos:

Lynne McDonald, an abstract artist and entrepreneur, presents a Holiday Art Show, Smoke & Mirrors, at Serendipity Labs (3225 Cumberland Blvd., Suite 100, Atlanta), November 13, 2024 from 6:00-8:00 pm. Lynne has been the featured artist at Serendipity for nearly three years. This Holiday Show will be the unveiling of Lynne’s beautiful new pieces. Guests are invited to enjoy lite bites and drinks. For more information and to RSVP, call 770.765.0590, or visit www.lynnemcdonald.com.

“If you had told me in my twenties that I would be making a living as an artist and stirring souls with my artwork, I never would’ve believed you,” says Lynne. “I never allowed myself to dream that far outside the box. Now I tell people to follow their dreams as wild as you think they are because that is what makes their life unique and special. That is their gift to the world. Just keep saying yes!”

Lynne continues, “I’m fascinated by the organic beauty in nature. Most often my inspiration comes from water. It has a spiritual element that tugs at my soul. I am grateful for the time I’ve spent in beautiful, inspiring places around the world.“

Lynne mixes her own paints and adds different additives or mediums to create different viscosity and pours it onto the canvas. Her vibrant, organic artworks are crafted with acrylic paints, brushes, and unconventional tools such as a blow torch, forks, straws, paintbrushes, fingers…whatever is handy.

Participating in juried events like Summerfest and collaborating with interior designers, Lynne has sold over 400 paintings. Since transitioning into her full-time career, Lynne has curated 13 solo exhibitions, including three Live Instagram shows held during the challenges of the Pandemic, each meticulously produced in various locations, alongside four collaborative showcases.

“Art is subjective. When someone connects with my work and it stirs their soul, I consider that a success,” Lynne explains. “In the studio, I am authentic and vulnerable, because each piece of work is a piece of me. I pour large pieces; I prefer the impact of a large statement piece.”

ABOUT THE ARTIST

Lynne McDonald started painting in her kitchen in 2015 and made it her full-time profession by 2020. Lynne carefully creates artworks with organic elements and intricate details, gradually revealing themselves over time to evoke immediate emotional responses. Having reshaped her career and life, she radiates hope, inspiring others to break free and embrace life’s possibilities.

Lynne has developed a following and has sold pieces all over the world; from Georgia to Greece to Dubai. As a juried artist, she’s been able to have over fifteen shows in her short career; thirteen of which have been solo. She’s had her work published in a coffee table book, 101 Art Book Floral Edition 2024; in Simply Buckhead and Best Self Atlanta magazines; won numerous awards; and has been on countless podcasts and radio shows to encourage everyone to live life on their terms.

“It’s amazing! I have to pinch myself! I have hundreds of collectors all over the world,” says Lynne. “I have large commercial buildings with my artwork and am currently the featured artist at Serendipity. I have representation in Florida and Alabama. And I have cleared paintings for film and tv work. I am so proud to say that I am an artist!”

Lynne continues, “We are all worthy of our dreams. I took a leap and created the life I wanted. I stepped into my authenticity and started saying yes to possibilities I had never considered. I hope my work inspires others to embrace life. You are the designer of your life!”

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Deadline nears for Cobb PARKS Fun in the Park photo contest

Mabry Park Opening
Mabry Park

Submitted information:

As you have enjoyed your Cobb parks and activities, take a few minutes to go through your favorite photos and submit your best to the Fun in the Park photo contest. You can enter photos of sports, nature, wildlife and anything else that shows why you enjoy spending time in Cobb’s parks, facilities and at events. Enter up to 10 of your best shots in the 20th annual contest. The competition is open to all photographers, amateur and pro. The entry deadline is Nov. 4. See the rules and download the entry form on the photo contest web page.

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