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Daily Citizen from Beaver Dam, Wisconsin • 3

Publication:
Daily Citizeni
Location:
Beaver Dam, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

AMEN da. Mrs. Hintz March ATLANTA arthday: MAYVILLE Winners in the Parkview Elementary School and Mayville Middle School Invention Convention showed off their first place creations. Above, from left are Parkview students third-grader Kevin Sella (with odd ball I holder), second-grader Tyler Erdmann Citizen Staff Photos (desk top holder) and first-grader Korin Figel (switcher). Below, from left, are fourth-grader Jessica Heller indicator), fifth-grader Ryan Erdmann (key kollecter) and sixth-grader Michael Storck (pillow hat, for sleeping while traveling).

BEFORE AFTER THAWED FOOD SHOULD NOT DE we REFROZEN AND SOLD DNR finds gas additives in S.E. Wisconsin air MADISON, Wis. (AP) Additives in reformulated gasoline are entering southeastern Wisconsin's air, but not in higher levels than the toxins found in conventional gasoline, a state agency reported Friday. The Department of Natural Resources measured the chemicals MTBE, ETBE and ethanol in the air of Milwaukee, and found that they are present at higher levels a at busy intersections and around gas stations. Northfield, Minn.

and Patrick Anderson (Barb Blanch), Iron Ridge; three daughters, Kathleen (Calvin) Wilcox, Rubicon, Rebecca (Scott) Brodell, Iron Ridge and Valarie Rogers (Scott Neuman) Beaver Dam; 22 grandchildren; five greatgrandchildren; brother Lloyd (LaVonne), La Crosse, nieces, nephews, other relatives, friends and special friend, Hogan. She is preceded in death by her parents. Friends may call on Saturday, April 1, from 3 p.m. until the time of the service at the Berndt Funeral Home, Hartford. Memorial may be directed toward the Dodge County Friends of Animals.

Eager for jobs, Upper Peninsula embraces prisons NEWBERRY, Mich. (AP) Lots of folks consider this pleasant little Upper Peninsula town a refuge from big-city crime and violence. So why are many delighted that the state is about to plant 800 murderers, rapists and other bad guys in their midst? Let longtime resident John Derusha tell you. Better yet, let him show you. "That was a carpet shop," says Derusha, director of the Luce County Economic Development gesturing toward an empty storefront.

"And that over there was a Stroh's brewery distributorship." On he goes, as if reading names on sagging tombstones in the family cemetery. "That was a Chevrolet dealership. That was a clothing store. Now, this on the corner was a Standard gas FIFTEEN BUSINESSES in or just outside the town of 1,900 people have folded since Newberry Regional Psychiatric Hospital closed three years ago. They made up about 25 percent of the area's businesses.

Among them was the market that Derusha ran for 28 years, doing well enough to put five children through college. "I had good, loyal customers, but when we lost the hospital there weren't enough of them any more." A local economy pillar for nearly a century, the hospital employed 300 when the state abandoned it under a policy encouraging community-based treatment. Now comes a belated consolation prize: The state plans to convert the 30-acre campus, with neatly landscaped grounds and 14 buildings, to a medium-security prison. Expected to open in October, it will provide roughly the number of jobs lost when the hospital closed. Others will be created as businesses spring up to sell goods and services to the prison and its workers.

"Taking the hospital away was like taking the auto industry out of Detroit absolutely Derusha said. "But the prison will help make up for it." It also will continue an Upper Peninsula prison boom dating to the late 1970s, when the former Kincheloe Air Force Base barracks were encircled with walls and barbed wire. Before then, the region had only Marquette Branch Prison and three work Jean A. Anderson Jean A. Anderson, 68, of 90 Meadowbrook Park, Iron Ridge, died Thursday, March 30 at Hartford Memorial Hospital.

Funeral services will be held on Saturday, April 1 at 6 p.m. at the Berndt Funeral Home in Hartford. Rev. Bervie Scott will officiate. Mrs.

Anderson was born Dec. 12, 1926 in La Crosse, the daughter of Fredrick and Hilda (Carr) Reynolds. She married David Anderson on Nov. 19, 1970 in West Bend, Wis. She was a member of the Dodge County Friends of Animals and the North Shore Animal League.

Survivors include her husband; four sons, Michael (Jeanne) Reynolds, Hartford, James (Judy) Reynolds, Hartford, Frances (Judy) Reynolds, SALES REPAIRS PARTS ALL MAKES "We sell the best and fix the rest" A-1 SEWING TRI-COUNTY CENTER VACUUM 312 S. Spring Beaver Dam 885-9702 IT I FREE TRAVEL SHOWS Attend Cole Tours Free Travel Shows for more information on our upcoming tours for Refreshments Door Prizes! ALASKA CRUISE TOUR EUROPE NEW YORK THEATER I SIGHTSEEING MACKINAC ISLAND BRANSON CHICAGO THEATER NASHVILLE MAJESTIC PARKS CRUISES CANADIAN ROCKIES NEW ENGLAND FALL FOLIAGE MYRTLE BEACH MANY MORE! April 4th, 2 pm or 7 pm Beaver Dam Campus Inn 815 Park Ave. April 6th, 2 pm or 7 pm Fond du Lac Traveler's Inn 1325 S. Main Please R.S.V.P. to Cole Tours at 11 922-4494 or 1-800-690-4494 COLE TRAVEL AGENCY WISCONSIN'S OLDEST TRAVEL AGENCY 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 Saturday, April 1, 1995 -Daily Citizen- Page 3 Administrator will participate in hotline By ERIC J.

PLEDL Staff Reporter MAYVILLE Parkview Primary School will be represented at an April meeting of elementary school principals in San Diego, and that may benefit parents and elementary school students nationwide. That's because John Larkin, principal at Parkview School, will participate in an education hotline as part of the National Association of Elementary School Principals (NAESP) meeting April 9-11. The hotline gives parents, grandparents and stepparents the opportunity to get answers from professionals about specific education issues. "I have a feeling that there's going to be a lot of questions about difficult situations and the strange things that come up," Larkin said. LARKIN, a certified school psychologist and School District of Mayville special education director, found out about the hotline when he attended a NAESP meeting two years ago.

He is one of 150 primary principals selected to take calls this year. Larkin said he thinks phone calls will be directed to certain principals depending on their expertise. "I'm planning on getting a lot of special ed calls, but it could be anything," Larkin said. This is the sixth year that the NAESP is offering the hotline service. The hotline number is 1-800-944-1601 for English speaking callers and 1-800-266-1780 for those who speak Spanish.

John Larkin Callers in the Central time zone may call between 2 p.m. and 10 p.m. on Sunday, April between 10 a.m. and 10 p.m. on Monday, April 10 and from 10 a.m.

to 2 p.m. on Tuesday, April 11. Every caller will receive a copy of the booklet "Now We're Talking" in English or Spanish, which helps parents get more involved in children's education issues. Some questions and answers from the hotline will be featured in a back-to-school issue of Family Circle magazine in August. Over 1,000 callers took advantage of the service last year.

camps. Now there are 13 installations, from the sprawling Kinross complex to maximum-security lockups in Baraga and Munising to a half-dozen camps near villages such as Painesdale and Marenisco. Although home to only 3 percent of Michigan's population, the Upper Peninsula has nearly one-fifth of the state's inmates more than 7,400. Some people call the string of prisons "'Gulag U.P." It might seem out of place in Michigan's far north country, revered as a bucolic paradise with colorful forests, pristine trout streams and small, peaceful towns. But with fewer people able to make a traditional living as loggers, miners or fishers, the region increasingly depends on employers also found in the biggest cities: hospitals, colleges, gambling houses.

And prisons. AROUND 2,600 PEOPLE work for Upper Peninsula prisons, says Warren Williams, spokesman for the Michigan Department of Corrections. That puts the prisons among the region's top employers. Others include iron-ore and copper mines, which employ about Indian gambling enterprises, with a combined payroll of roughly and the three Upper Peninsula universities, which combined employ about 2,500. Prison work is particularly attractive in the Upper Peninsula for two reasons.

First, it's steady and recession-proof no small consideration in an area with chronic unemployment, and where many jobs are seasonal. The Upper Peninsula's February jobless rate was 10.9 percent, compared to 6.2 percent statewide. "It's not likely, until we see the Second Coming or whatever, that we'll see the end of the need for prisons," said Charles Van Eaton, a Hillsdale College economist who has studied how jails and prisons affect their host communities. Secondly, there's the money. Corrections officers' hourly pay ranges from $10.72 to $16.07, depending on experience.

Based on a 40-hour work week, that's $22,300 to $33,400. "I used to get $5 an hour at Kmart," said Walt Patrick, who worked for the retail giant and sold firewood before landing a job at Kinross Correctional Facility. "Now I do a lot better. I especially like the health But except for one gas on a warm day. station, the chemicals didn't The DNR analyzed the register at levels higher than mileage of eight vehicles, benzene or toluene, the two ranging from a 1979 most toxic chemical Oldsmobile to a 1994 ingredients of conventional Pontiac Sunbird, and gasoline.

collected more than 130 air samples in February and ANOTHER DR study March from typical urban released Friday found the locations, busy intersections average reduction in gas and freeway interchanges mileage in a range of and gas pumps. vehicles that burned The agency didn't draw reformulated gas was 2.8 any health conclusions from percent. The same car its data. The levels of burning the same gasoline chemicals detected were all got 10 percent lower below federal health mileage on a cold day than standards. Openings exist in these and other courses for Term 4 at Moraine Park Technical College Beaver Dam Campus 527-456-002 Centrifugal Pump Maintenance Workshop 7 Hr.

8:30 a.m. 4:00 p.m. 1 Wk. 13.25 510-335-004 Nursing Assistant Skilled 5 Cr. TWR 8:00 a.m.

4:00 p.m. 8 Wk. $286.50 311-400-066 Responsible Beverage Service 4 Hr. 5:00 p.m. 9:00 p.m.

1 Wk. 8.15 Fond du Lac Campus 527-411-002 Biological Phosphorus 7 Hr. 8:30 a.m. 4:30 p.m. 1 Wk.

13.25 527-456-001 Centrifugal Pump Maintenance Workshop 7 Hr. 8:30 a.m. 4:30 p.m. 1 Wk. 13.25 508-332-004 Dental Assisting 2 (Indep.

Study) 3 Cr. Call for Date Call for Time 18 Wk. $206.70 303-428-002 School Food Service Workshop 3 Hr. 4:30 p.m. 7:45 p.m.

1 Wk. 11.90 303-365-011 Food Sanitation Safety .5 Cr. 5:00 p.m. 8:00 p.m. 3 Wk.

26.55 311-400-070 Responsible Beverage Service 4 Hr. 9:00 a.m. 1:00 p.m. 1 Wk. 8.15 West Bend Campus 527-456-003 Centrifugal Pump Maintenance Workshop 7 Hr.

8:30 a.m. 4:00 p.m. 1 Wk. 13.25 311-400-065 Responsible Beverage Service 4 Hr. -4 6:00 p.m.

10:00 p.m. 1 Wk. 8.15 311-400-067 Responsible Beverage Service 4 Hr. 6:00 p.m. 10:00 p.m.

Wk. 8.15 Alternative Learning Codes: Prerequisite Register Now Call (414) 929-2100 (414) 887-4400 (414) 335-5700 An Equal Opportunity Functioning Under An Affirmative Action Plan. MORAINE PARK TECHNICAL OLLEGE We Help You Lean a In addition to participation in the hotline, Larkin said he hopes to bring information back to Mayville from the many workshops and speakers available to him at the NAESP meeting. The meeting is geared toward innovative teaching techniques and other topics specifically for the needs of children between the ages of five and eight. "What I like to do when I get back, is sit down with the staff and share what I've learned," Larkin said.

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May 20 Deena Affeldt John 20 Rachelle Dykstra Daniel Murphy. May 27 Dana Diels David 27 June Wendy Huizenga Joseph June 3 Teresa Tennessen Leander Schuett. June 3 Lisa Reiter Tim June 3 Angelette King Kenneth Thieleke. June 3 Kelly Riege Steven June 3 Jodie Semrau John June 10 Dana Juaise Pete June 10 Denise Woodward A June 10 Caustad Robin Groehler Travis Kreitzman. June 10 Heidi Rieman Jay June 10 Lisa Metzdorf Kelly June 10 Vickie Biel Darren 17 Kerry Mertens Steve June 17 Karin States Kirk June 17 Diane Howe Corey June 17 Lynn Marsolek Jon June 17 Rachel Seiltz Michael June 18 Jodi Tamminga Thomas June 24 Janice Voigt Jeff Falbe.

June 24 Chris Zirbel David Schumacher June 24 Heather Katsma Kevin June 24 Karla Westra Darin June 24 Kim Van Grinsven Todd Spittel, June 30 Beaver Dam Mall Use your Rose card. with the power of Vital We honor Visa, Mastercard, American Express and Discover: Shop Daily 10:00 a.m. p.m.; Saturday 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.; Sunday p.m..

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Pages Available:
422,180
Years Available:
1971-2024