Newspaper Page Text
The Summerville News
. .
Jail Chief
°
Logo Wins
The administrator of
Chattooga County's Jail
has submitted the winning
logo for the symbol of the
newly formed Georgia Jail
Assn.
Lewis Wilson, who is
one of the founders of the
statewide organization,
said his design was one of
four submitted to the
association for judging
last week. It came out the
winner and will be used by
a professional artist to
design the official logo for
the jail administrators.
~ The approval came dur
ing a meeting at the
Fulton County Jail in
Atlanta.
Wilson, who serves as
coordinator for Region 1 of
the new organization, said
its first convention will be
see JAIL, page 6-B
Mrs. Lowery Recognized
For Hiring Handicapped
Riegel Textile Division,
Trion, and Mrs. Naomi Lowery
of Riegel have been honored for
their contributions in hirin
the handicapped. The awarg
was presente(f) to Mrs. Lowery
last Friday in advance of Na
tional Employ the Handicap
ped Week this week. :
In the last six months,
Riegel has employed five per
sons who are deaf, one with
cerebral palsy and two with
other disabilities, according to
officials with the Division of
Rehabilitative Services (DRS),
Georgia Department of
Human Resources. One deaf
employee has been working for
Riegel for 30 years, they said
in pointing out that Riegel's
commitment has not been a re
cent development.
PRESENTED
The award was given to
Mrs. Lowery by the DHR's Joe
Flow, Weyland Billingsley and
Three Hurt
In Fire At
Broomtown
Sixteen members of the
Menlo Volunteer Fire Depart
ment resgonded toacall at a
house in Broomtown, Ala., ear
ly last Sunday. Three children
were burned in the blaze, which
destroyed an historic two-story
house.
Sid Swords of the Menlo
Department said the 16
volunteers answered a call
about 2:45 a.m. Sunday. The
Gaylesville, Ala., and Rinehart,
Ala., volunteer departments
also answered the call.
The home of Franklin Ward
was totally destroyed by the
flames, Swords said. Ward and
his wife barely escaped without
injury and three of their grand
children received burns in the
fire and were taken to a
hospital in Birmingham, Ala.,
Swords added.
The residence was located
about three-fourths of a mile
south of Mt. Bethel Baptist
Church.
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TRION NOW HAS A FULLTIME PSYCHOMETRIST
Lisa Chreitzberg Serves Grades K-12
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JAIL ADMINISTRATOR LEWIS WILSON
With Winning Association Logo
Ronnie Hudson, all with the
DRS.
Mrs. Lowery will be
honored again on Nov. 12 when
she will be recognized by the
Rome-Floyd County Commit
tee to Hire the Handicapped,
they said. The program wifi be
held at the Rome Civic Center.
‘“‘Riegel has been very open
and very helpful about working
with the deaf, said Billingsley,
whose specialty is counseling
the hearing impaired. The firm
has been ‘‘very patient and ac
commodating. They've really
tried,” he said. ‘“You don’t
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Steve Weaver Optimist Of Year
Steve Weaver, left, was recognized as
“Optimist of the Year’ last Thursday
evening at the annual installation ban
quet of the Summerville-Trion Optimist
often have an employer to go
out of the way to g'elp han
dicapped persons.”
KEY
The key to working with
handicapped individuals it to
?lace them in jobs they can per
orm well, said Hudson, such
as moving a hearing impaired
person from the spinning to the
creeling department where
there is less noise.
Billingsley and Hudson
Eointed out that ‘‘Making
'mployment A Reality" is the
see LOWERY, page 5-B
Club. The award was presented by Bill
Gilbert, outgoing club president. The pro
gram was held at The Tavern, Trion. Look
inside for additional photos. (Staff Photo).
All About School Psychometry
Chattooga, Trion System Specialists Describe Activities
By KAY ABBOTT
Staff Writer
On any fiiven day, the work of local
school psychometrists Peggy Morehead
and Lisa Chreitzberg may range from
administering an intelligence quotient
(IQ) test to intervening in a crisis with
a troubled student. It is their duty to
assure that children in the entire spec
trum of learning are placed within the
pro&)‘er school environment.
he process involves administering
a comfi)licated battery of tests in a man
ner that is not overwhelming or in
timidating for the student.
ENJOYS TESTING
“Generally, the child enjoKs the
testini so much that smaller children
will ask if I can come get them the next
Thursday, October 8, 1987
Magazine Cites
Rose And Crown
Pub-Restaurant Owned By
Former Chattooga Resident
A former Chattooga County resident and her husband
have continued to improve the quality of the meals they
serve at their English restaurant, according to a holiday
magazine published in that country.
The Rose and Crown, own
ed by Nancy Marion-Crawford,
formerly 0{ Summerville, and
her English husband, Charles,
has been cited in the *‘Somerset
and Dorset”” magazine.
The former Nancy Marks
and her son, Peter, recently
visited her family in Summer
ville. However, Charles, her
husband, was unable to accom-
Eany them because ‘‘business
as been tremendous at the
Rose and Crown and Chaz
stayed behind in England as a
necessity for business
reasons.’”’
HIGH STANDARDS
‘*“...Since Charles and
Nancy Marion-Crawford took
over two years ago, they have
maintained a very high stan
dard, and added, through Nan
cy's American connection,
some intriguing culinary
touches,” said S&D.
Chaz and Nancy have also
recently hired a new chef. He is
Ray Pike, an Englishman.
‘‘Pike developed his
culinary talents in various
large hotels on the southern
coast of England,” according
to S&D. Further, “Pike sees
tremendous scope for his im
agination and the ability to be
' - Features/News |
By KAREN COOK
The entire article follows:
“Most people’s criteria for
the (Ferfect ;;llllg must surely in
clude an idyllic country setting
~within sight and sound of the
historic village church, perhaps
‘a gently waving cornfield visi
ble through the windows, a cool
interior-on hot summer days
that becomes snug and log-fire
warm in the winter, good beers
and wines are essential, a fine
host and hostess who will
laugh at your jokes and, pray
fervently, a bill of fare that is
imaginative and reasonably
priced.
“Stay with me, dear reader,
because I have just described
the Rose and Crown, at Trent,
near Sherborne. And to add
lustre to the above list of at
tributes, the pub has just
engaged the services of a pro
fessional chef. From what I've
seen and eaten, it will soon be
standing room only at Trent's
favorite hostelry.
“Trent village is only two or
three miles from Yeovil and
Sherborne, just off the A3O,
and the Rose and Crown has
long had a reputation for ex
cellent food.
‘The previous owners serv
ed a meticulous menu, and
since Charles and Nancy
Marion-Crawford took over
two years ago, they have main
tained a very high standard,
and added, through Nancy’s
American connection, some in
triguing culinary touches.
“You may remember that
we wrote about Charles and
Nancy a few months ago, but
things are moving fast in that
otherwise quiet J)art of the
countryside, and there's a
see MAGAZINE, page 6-B
day,”” said Mrs. Morehead,
psychometrist for the Chattooga Coun
ty school system.
Her most successful cases have in
volved helping a gifted child who was
bored in regular classes, a suicidal child
who was overly burdened with home
responsibilities by parents and a 5-year
old who had never talked.
“I test when there is any kind of
special need for the child and then make
referrals,” she added. ‘lt might be that
the child's teachers or parents believe
him to be gifted and in need of enrich
ment courses, or that the child is hav
ing difficulty with reading or getting
along emotionally in school.
“When teachers see a possibility of
a serious behavioral problem, they
usually call here for a psychological
evaluation. I will often observe the child
in the classroom with the teacher and
then call the parents in for a conference.
I will either make a referral for the
parents or make an appointment for
totally flexable in his use of
fresh vegetables and
herbs . . . as chef of the Rose
and Crown ... "
MENU
Now being served at the
Rose and Crown are such menu
items as deep fried clams and
chicken, sweet corn soup,
escalope of veal with ared cur
rant sauce, and fresh scallops
with a wine, bacon and cream
sauce, There are still ‘tradi
tional English menu items
available such as Dorset mix
ed seafood pie, steak and
kidney pie made with Guinness
ale, ané, ploughman'’s lunches
with Brie, home cooked ham,
and sirloin or beef. For dessert
there is Alabama fudge cake or
Tennessee Erasshopper ie.
“ ... What other pug can
boast of having served 50
French wedding guests a lunch
of cold salmon and aioli,” S&D
said. ‘lt seems a long way to
come — they flew to England
for the reception — but then
the French have always known
where to find good food, and
distance is no object.”
ARTICLE
MOVE FAST
COST
The evaluation she routinely per
forms on students would cost S3OO or
more by a private psychologist, Mrs.
Morehead said. :
“It always feels good to work with
a student and identify what problems he
is experiencing,’’ said Ms. (Fhreitzberg,
Trion school psychometrist. ‘“Then we
can determine what is casuing him not
to learn at the appropriate rate.”
Ms. Chreitzberg is the first fulltime
psychometrist to %e employed by the
Trion Schools. She had previously serv
ed Trion on a parttime basis through
Northwest Georgia Regional Educa
tional Services Agministration (RESA).
“Parental support is very important
to our success in Eelping students,’’ she
see PSYCHOMETRY, page 6-B
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FORMER SUMMERVILLE RESIDENT NANCY MARION-CRAWFORD (R)
With Husband (C) And New Chef And Wife At Pub
School Lunch Week Set
By KAY ABBOTT
Staff Writer
- Chattooga County students
will learn more about good
nutrition during National
School Lunch Week next Mon
day through Friday, Oct. 16.
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FOODS FROM OTHER LANDS WILL BE FEATURED
During National School Nutrition Week
them, depending on what they need. If
the child requires outside counseling, I
can sometimes arrange for funding to
cover the costs."”
Special Menus Planned In Chattooga
“National School Lunch
Week encourages students to
eat lunch at school by pro
viding a chance to sample
menus related to other
cultures,” said Toni Tutton,
county nutritionist.
“We also want to inform
parents and the community of
the nutritional and economic
value of meals at school,” she
said.
.
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EACH CHILD'S TEST IS DOUBLE CHECKED
Psychometrist Peggy Morehead, Joyce Montgomery
NUTRITION
““School lunch provides
students with one-third of their
daily nutritional need; it pro
vides an example of a well
balanced meal and it helgs
students acquire healthy
‘eating -habits. A nutritious
lunch at school is available to
every student regardless of
ability to pay.”
The theme for the 25th an
nual observance of National
School Lunch Week is ‘“‘School
Lunch: It Makes a World of
Difference.”
During National School
Lunch Week, Chattooga
schools will serve foods of
other cultures from menus
glanned by the American
chool Food Service Assn.
which sponsors the event. The
Scandinavian menu will feature
fish and Julekage (a Swedish
word meaning Christmas cake).
The West African menu will of
fer chicken with a peanut
sauce. Gyro sandwiches will be
on the Middle Eastern menu
and double cheeseburgers with
the works will be on the All-
American menu.
GOV. HARRIS
Schools also may serve a
favorite menu, or Gov. Joe
Frank Harris' favorite menu,
fried chicken, sliced tomato
salad, green beans, creamed
potatoes, peaches, rolls and
milk.
Various local officials will
be invited to lunch at schools
throughout the county during
the special observance.
Parents who wish to join
their children for lunch during
the week may purchase an
adult portion t{)r $2. Children
in the Chattooga County
school system pay 75 cents in
elementary sciools and 80
see SCHOOL., page 5-B