Newspaper Page Text
6-A
■fr The Summerville News, Thurs., Mar. 16, 1972
University
of Miami
Delegation
Visits
A delegation from the University of Miami, Coral
Gables, Fla., and Berry College visited the Chattooga
County Parent-Child Center Friday to study the center’s
early child development programs.
The visitation was part of an in-service and pre-service
student-teacher exchange in the area of early childhood
development conducted by the two educational institu
tions.
In the first phase of the program, a group from Berry
College visited the University of Miami for a first-hand
examination of that institution’s early childhood develop
ment programs.
Ihe Berry group which made the visit to Coral Gables
was composed of Dr. Inez I dge, associate professor of
education .it Berry and Georgia coordinator of the Early
Childhood Iri-State Teacher Training Project, of which the
teacher exchange is an outgrowth. Mrs. Catherine Mc-
Donald. associate professor and acting chairman of Berry’s
home economics department and director of the Berry
nursery school
Ihe group also included three Berry students who are
concentrating on early childhood education: Connie Bail,
Florence, SC Martha Mitchell, Atlanta. Ramona Sweat,
Raiford. Fla and Berry graduate Mrs. Frances Davis
Accompanying this group on its return to Berry College
was the delegation froiji the University of Miami, who
studied Berry’s early childhood education programs by
visiting college classes. Head Start in Rome, a special
education center, the Berry nursery school, and the visit to
the parent-child center here
Ihe visitors from Florida included Dr. Mark Murfin, Dr.
Tricia Goshall, students Gay Sullivan, Eugene Kissel,
Barbara Kellman, Leslie Silverstein, Terri Berwick, and
1 ricia Mellow
lop, left Barbara Kellman, University of Miami student;
Connie Ball, Berry College student, and Tricia Mellow,also
a UM student, are shown with babies from the Chattooga
County Parent-Child Center Top, right: Geni Kissel, Uni
versity of Miami Ruth Moore, Berry College. Peggy Wood,
Ct PCC instructor Muri Raines, also a CCPCC instructor;
and Gay Sullivan, UM student
Bottom, left Dr Mark Murfin, head of the department
of elementary education at the University of Miami; Mrs.
Catherine McDonald, director of the nursery school and
professor of home economics at Berry College, and Jim
Mros, a Berry student, attend one of the classes at the
Chattooga County Parent Child Center. Bottom, right Dr
Mark Murfin. Mrs Winifred Stephens, CCPCC director, and
Mrs. Neill Golf, laliatoona Head Start director with an
office at Berry College, observe one of the classes in session
at the local center
Revival Announced
Perennial Springs Baptist
Church will be in revival March
20-25, with the Rev Lloyd
Guffey as evangelist Ihe serv-
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DEATHS
MRS EMMA GAYLOR
Mrs Emma Cooper Gaylor,
78, Route 1, Lyerly, died at
5:50 p in. Monday, March 13.
She was born in Chattooga
County on July 21, 1893,
daughter of the late Jack
Cooper and Susie Strickland
Cooper.
Surviving are her husband.
Cecil V. Gaylor, Route 1,
Lyerly; one daughter, Mrs.
Louise Powell Jacoby , Pontiac,
Mich.; one stepson, Hearschel
Powell, Ft. Oglethorpe; several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
(today) Thursday, March 16, at
4 p.m. from the chapel of J. D
Hill Funeral Home, with the
Rev. A A. Tanner officiating.
Interment will be in Trinity
Ce metery.
J. I). Hill Funeral Home,
Inc., has charge of arrange
ments.
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