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Dunwoody Crier - March 30, 2023

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Wellstar opens $12 million Cancer center in Roswell ► PAGE 9 March 30, 2023 | AppenMedia.com | An Appen Media Group Publication | Ser ving the community since 1976

Local students garner awards at film festival

CITY COUNCIL RETREAT

By DELANEY TARR delaney@appenmedia.com

ALEX POPP/APPEN MEDIA

Dunwoody City Manager Eric Linton speaks to officials during the Dunwoody City Council retreat March 22. Dunwoody leaders visited the City of Canton to kick off their retreat.

Dunwoody leaders visit Canton to kick off City Council retreat By ALEXANDER POPP alex@appenmedia.com CANTON, Ga. — At first glance, the cities of Dunwoody and Canton might not seem like they have any similarities or common ground. Canton, founded in 1834, is the mostly rural seat of Cherokee County with just over 32,000 residents, while Dunwoody, incorporated in 2008, is a northern suburb of Atlanta with a population of nearly 52,000. But Dunwoody leaders said their community has a lot to learn from Canton, which has started earning statewide recognition in recent years for its vision, planning and approach to engaging diverse communities. To kick off their annual retreat, members

of the Dunwoody City Council toured Canton’s Etowah River Park and met with leaders at Canton City Hall, to ask questions, share successes and learn from each other. Mayor Bill Grant, who calls Canton the “Coolest small town in America,” said much of his city’s recent success comes from the development of a “Roadmap for Success,” which guides almost every decision that city leaders make. Launched in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic, Canton’s Roadmap for Success is a set of seven different guiding principles (Creating Great Neighborhoods, Celebrating the Diversity of Our Community, Advancing Regional Economic Success, Enhancing Historic Downtown Canton,

See RETREAT, Page 8

ATLANTA, Ga. — Dunwoody High School took home two audience choice awards for their student-made short films at the fifth annual DeKalb County Student Film Festival at the Plaza Theatre in Atlanta March 21. Students, parents and teachers walked the red carpet at the theater before sitting down for the night’s program. The film festival was put on by the DeKalb County School District, the DeKalb Entertainment Commission and re:imagine, an organization that assists young people with their filmmaking goals. A total of 19 student films premiered. Each film required students to include a picture frame as a prop, a character named “Azari Binx” and the line “We’re running out of time.” The films spanned genres from comedy to horror.

See FILM, Page 6

DELANEY TARR / APPEN MEDIA

The DeKalb County School District hosts its fifth annual student film festival at the Plaza Theatre in Atlanta March 21. The festival showcases students premiere their films and compete for the night’s awards.


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