Newspaper Page Text
10-A
The Summerville News, Thursday, September 22, 1988
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NEWLY BUILT BARBECUE GRILL DESTROYED BY VANDALS
Located Behind Berryton Community Center
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Staff Photos
LIGHT FOR HORSESHOE AREA BENT
Vandals Have Smashed Bulb After Bulb
2448 Shorter Avenue
Rome
(In New Kroger Plaza)
Brass, Oriental, Figurines, Etc.
GRAND OPENING
Beginning
Mon., Sept. 26-Sat., Oct. 1
Everything in Store 25% Off
Hours: Monday-Saturday 10 am. - 6 p.m.
DRAWING FOR FREE PRIZES
COME BY AND REGISTER
OWNERS:
Ray and Laßrenda McGill Henson
| QUALITY BEDDING
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Vandals
from front page
thieves who cut the rope cable
on the pole. The U. S. Hag was
recovered and Cothran said
recreation association
members decided to replace the
flafipole rope with a metal
cable.
The new cable was install
ed on a Saturday but before
new clamps coul! be obtained
on Sunday afternoon, someone
stole the metal cable.
LIGHT SMASHED
The association then install
ed two sets of horseshoe boxes,
one for adults and the other for
youngsters. It then installed a
light on a pole with a conve
nient switcfi so the area could
be used at night. ‘“That didn’t
last,” Cothran said. ‘“They
(vandals) shot the light all to
pieces. We've replaced them
and replaced them.”
The outgoing mailbox
under the postal box shelter at
Berryton was finally removed
by the post office because van
dals kept dumping sand from
the recreation center’s sandbox
into the postal box.
Playground equipment
behind the center has been torn
apart and vandals have pound
ed on an SBOO metal chifldoren's
slide with blocks, bricks ‘‘and
everything else,”” Cothran said.
MAY QUIT?
The association just wanted
to {)rovide a nice area for the
children and adults of Ber
ryton, he continued, but after
seeing its work destroyed time
and time again, the group’s
members are about at the end
of their collective rope.
They were hoping this week
that publicity agout the van
dalism might cause it to end, or
encourage people who live near
the center to report any
suspicious activity at the facili
-87 in time for the Chattooga
ounty Sheriff's Office to
make arrests or to identify the
vandals.
from front page
panel.
MRS. CARTER
Mrs. Jimmy Carter also
made a brief, unexflected ap
;‘){earance at the luncheon, Mrs.
ush said.
Judges of the competition
were Ann Crammond, ex
ecutive director of the Atlanta
Botanical Garden; W. L. Cor
ley, horticulture specialist with
the University of (gveeorgia; Mrs.
Walter Davis and Mrs. William
B. Hargraves, Garden Club
landscalpe critics; Eric Horne,
horticulturist with the City of
Atlanta; and Mrs. Robert
Jinright, co-chairman of road
side development for the
Garden Club.
Trion Scores In State’s
Top 10 Percent On CRT
County Students Exceed Sta
Students in the Trion public
school system who took a stan
dardized writing test this
spring accumulated a com
posite score for the system that
was better than 90 gercent of
all other Georgia public school
systems. e
The Georgia Criterion-
Referenced writing test was
given this spring to sixth and
eighth graders across the state.
Trion's sixth grade scored in
the top six percent and the
eighth grade scored in the top
nine percent.
’l‘Eee sixth grade scored a
224.10 on the test, or 10.85
points above the average score
across the state of 213.25.
Although the sixth grade rank
ed in the top six percent of all
other sixth grades taking the
writing test, Trion's group
rankeg 10th out of the 186
gubliq school districts in
JOorEam. o o i §
Trion's eighth grade scored
a 224.29, or 10.06 more than
the state average of 214.23.
The eighth f‘rade ranked 16th
among all state school
districts, even though
statewide it scored in the top
nine percent.
CHATTOOGA
Last week it was reported
by Don Hayes, superintendent
of Chattooga County Schools
that the county's sixth graders
scored 213.33 on the writing
test while the eighth graders
scored 218.26. Sixth graders in
the county scored a few hun
dredths of a point more than
the state average and the
eighth graders score more than
four points above the state
average. ¢ i
On another scale which
depends on a socio-economic
grouEing. both sixth and
eight %;raders in both systems
scored better when compared
to schools in the same
category. In this measurement,
school systems are grouped by
two characteristics: size, and
the percentage of students
receiving free lunch.
Large systems have 8,500
or more students, mid-size
systems have fewer than 8,500
students but more than 2,000,
and small systems have fewer
than 2,000 students. By this
standard, Chattooga’'s county
system is mid-size§ and Trion
is a small system.
FREE LUNCH
There are four divisions for
mid-sized schools, those with
22 percent or less eligible for
free lunch services, those with
23-32 percent eligible, 33-43
percent eligible, and 44 percent
or more eligible for free lunch.
Chattooga County also has
between 33 and 43 percent of
its public school students
receiving free lunch. Small
systems are only broken into
two categories, those with less
than 45 percent receiving free
lunch and those with more
than 45 percent receiving free
lunch; Trion is in the first
group.
Accordingly, Chattooga
sixth graders scored 3.04
points (213.33) or higher than
the state average in their
demographic group which
averaged only 210.29 on the
writing test. ghattooga eighth
graders scored 8.39 points
(218.26), or higher than the
demographic average of
209.87.
The Trion Board of Educa
tion did not release similar
comparisons, but the board did
say that within Trion's
demographic group which in
cludegr 34 school systems the
sixth grade was fourth and the
eighth grade was fifth.
There were 27 school
systems in Chattooga Coun
ty's demographic group.
BREAK DOWN
Chattooga released addi
tional information about its
students scores this week. For
grade six, Lyerly students
scored 205.74, and for grade
eight they scored 222.75. In the
same grades, Menlo scored
210.58, and 228.95; Pennville,
207.19 and 200.25; Summer
}zlilléeévlliddle School, 217.15 and
The mean scale score for the
system was 213.33 for the
sixth grade and 218.26 for the
eighth. The statewide mean
scale score was 213.25 for the
See me for a State Farm
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22 S. Commerce St.
Downtown Summaerville
Phone 857-1759
State Farm Insurance STATE FARM
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sixth grade and 214,23 for the
eighth.
“The writing assessment
consisted of asking each stu
dent to write a composition of
no more than two pages on an
assigned topic. Each student's
paper was scored by two train
ed readers, who ind‘épendently
rated the composition on five
domains of ef?ect.ive writing.
These domains were content
and or¥anization, style,
sentence formation, usage and
mechanics. Scoring falls into
four categories, inadequate,
minimal, good and very good.
Approximately four percent of
the papers in each grade were
rated inadequate; 37 percent of
all sixth graders and 33 percent
of all ei%fi{h graders received a
mir:iima rating,”’ the release
said.,
GOOD AND VERY GOOD
According to the release,
students scoring in the “‘good
or very ;food range" on the test
were as follows: In content and
Chain Saw Clinic
Slated Next Week
A three-night chain saw clinic will be held at Chattooga
County High School next Monday through Wednesday.
It will be taught in the vocational department by David
Matteson, vocational agriculture teacger. Bobby Joslin,
area adult vocational agriculture teacher, will assist.
The clinic will begin at 7 p.m. daily. It will be free to
the public. :
Those attending the clinic should bring their chain saw
and tools to the first meeting next Monday.
It will include instruction in selecting and mixing fuels
and lubricants, cleaning and storage, repairing starters, ser
vicing the carburetion and ignition systems, selecting and
maintaining chain saws, bars and sprockets. Participants
will have an opportunity to service their own saws. *
For additional information, contact Matteson at the
school.
— ELECT — G .
MARTHA
HULGAN
STATE SENATOR
ELECTION NOV. 8,;?316“ {{ ‘
Y oA Shop and Save at . . . e Loo
Summerville’s Number One Drug Value Center
‘ “ minutes to 1 hour
Visine | DULCOLAX ‘e
: Eye Drops TABLETS 5 MG. EXRINLIEE
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CREAM 1/2 OZ. $2.93 | aemt... )
e Average
organizaiton, 64.6 percent of
Chattooga County's sixth
graders scored in the good or
very %ood range, and 61 per
cent of the eighth graders also
scored in that range, '
In style, 54.4 percent of the
sixth graders scored well, as
did 61 percent of the eighth
graders. In sentence formation,
59.7 percent of the sixth
graders did well but 64.6 ger
cent of the eiglhth graders had
high scores. In usage, sixth
graders scored 57.3 percent
and eighth graders 64.6 per
cent. In Mechanics, 53.9 per
cent of the sixth graders had at
least good scores but 66.7 per
cent of eighth Faders did well
on that part of the evaluation.
““The Comprehensive
Evaluation Process mandated
by the Qualitg' Basic Educa
tion Act has determined that
the statistically best
demograghic predictor of stu
dent achievement was the
?ercentage of students eligible
or the school lunch program.”
Every Bth Roll of Color Print
; Film Processed and Printed
(Accompanied by a Photo Club Card)
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M- PHOTO
=£l’ WORLD
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=y »'\\,%:7"‘, Where our lab operators
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31 N. Commerce - Summerville 857-3221
MONDAY-FRIDAY 9-6 SATURDAY 10-2
In 1895, we
helped a deaf
man hear
TODAY...we
can help the
whole family.
P g o
[x ; ; !
In 1895, Dr. D.D. Paimer took an
interest in the partially deaf
janitor who was cleaning his
office. The janitor explained that
he had been deaf since bending
over some seventeen years ago.
He had heard a popping noise in
his neck, and suddenly, he could
no longer hear. Examining his
neck, the doctor discovered a
lump. By manually re-aligning a
vertebrae in Harvey's cervical
spine (neck), he relieved the
stress on the nerve system and
subsequently, the man could
hear again more normally.
Palmer's idea was translated
into physical reality and the birth
of a profession was soon to
follow.
‘Since then, the chiropractic
‘profession has grown into the
largest drugless health care
K. W. HARWOOD, D.C.
300 SOUTH COMMERCE ST
SUMMERVILLE, GA.
profession in the world: The
science of chiropractic holds
that the cause of many health
problems is improper nerve
supply to the body organs or
tissues. The main procedure in
chiropractic health care is
examining the spine for deviated
positioning or malfunctioning of
spinal vertebrae that may alter
the normal nerve supply
necessary for the body to
function normally.
Today, chiropractic health care is
directed at helping the whole
family feel its best. Regular
chiropractic check-ups can help
the body remain healthy by
locating spinal deviations early,
before they cause interference
with the nerve system and
produce symptoms.
Make an appointment today!