The Guardian, February 8, 1979
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Wright State University CORE Scholar The Guardian Student Newspaper Student Activities 2-8-1979 The Guardian, February 8, 1979 Wright State University Student Body Follow this and additional works at: https://corescholar.libraries.wright.edu/guardian Part of the Mass Communication Commons Repository Citation Wright State University Student Body (1979). The Guardian, February 8, 1979. : Wright State University. This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Activities at CORE Scholar. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Guardian Student Newspaper by an authorized administrator of CORE Scholar. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Daily Guardian February 8, 197° Issue 63 Volume XV Wright State University Dayton. Ohio Covered walkway Trustees discuss proposed WSU apartments By CAROL A. HOWELL 40 feet from a C lot, and the to be a big help to 'lim. The posts mendations, he said, could be chief fiscal officer for WSU. told Guardian Associate Writer others about 100 yards from the include advisors to the president very important in the decision to the trustees that the default rate The new University apart- University. for University communications, accredit the new Ph.D programs of National Direct Student Loans ments, presidential advisors, doc- THE APARTMENTS will cost legal affairs and research affairs in biomedical sciences and psy- has decreased since a counselor torate accreditation, the com- from $320 to $375 a quarter, and Kegerreis added that the posi- chology. was hired to advise those with mencement speaker and loan will probably have a semi-struc- tion of vice-president for ad- After consulting with a selec- loans. Ragan stated that the defaults were all topics of discus- tured atmosphere with resident ministration will need to be filled tion committee, Kegerreis has default rate has dropped from 29 sion at yesterday's Board of directors. Apartment resident- later this yea/ when Dr. Andrew chosen Dr. Clifton Orton. chancel- percent last March to 26.3 per- Trustees meeting. will be able to buy food tickets Speigel leaves that post. lor of New York State Univcrsiiy. cent in December 1978. There will be lighted and iust as Hamilton Hall residents A NORTH CENTRAL Associa- as commencement speaker for the covered walkways from the new do, Koch said. tion accreditation team which has 1979 exercises. Horton is one of IN OTHER ousiness. the trus- apartments to the campus, ac- President Robert Kegerreis in- reviewed the University has given the top three people in higher tees approved a $100,000 dona- cording to Elenore Koch, vice- formed the trustees that the favorable indications of its impres education in the U.S.. Kegerreis tion of scientific equipment made president for Student Affairs. The positions of presidential advisors sions of Wright State. Kegerreis noted. to WSU by the Mobil Oil Com- first building will be located about have been filled and are proving told the trustees. Their recom- Arlo Ragan. controller and pany. Residence Life Committee fails to come up with plan By BOB MYERS response to this matter is ex- getting to class is no different period of waiting before finally ap?.~;.ients next fall. Mr. Holmes deciding the issue is helping to, Guardian Special Writer pected by Feb. 20, before the next from getting to work. He also said said that the conti actor had committee meeting on Feb. 24. that the petition route is still open defuse the situation. promised to deliver them on time. A meeting yesterday of the to any student who feels that Howevir, he did not have a Resident's Life Advisory Commit- HOLMES ALSO SAID that the Hamilton Hall is the best place for In response to a question blueprint of the studio models on tee failed to make any definite rescheduling of the campus shut- him to be. concerning the availability of the hand. commitment on the question of tle buses is being considered. the current Hamilton Hall resi- Hopefully, they can be routed to Holmes said that the informa- dents ouster. include the new apartments. tion the students had at this time was sketchy. He said that as the Roger Holmes, assistant direc- In response (o a question students have become more Connolly to speak tor of Student Development, said concerning handicapped stu- aware of the situation thev have that the committee is waiting to dents' transportation. Holmes grown more tolerant. Holmes said hear the preference of the new said thai the experience of college he is giving students information Joseph Connolly, press secretary for Con^-cssman Christopher J. freshmen applicants before de- life is aimed at preparing the to explain the situation to the Dodd. v ill speak <-n "The Occupation of Congressional Press ciding on a definite plan. A student for "real life" and that current residents, and feels the Secretary" Friday. Feb. 9, at 2 p.m. in room 125 of Millett Hall. Mr. Connolly has worked as both a newsman and a press secretary. He worked for CBS as a radio newsman before his appointment as press secretary in 1976. Carter plan may cost N ursing school The lecture is offered by the College of Liberal Arts Lecture Series. Attendance is free and open to the public. By CAROL A. HOWELL to prevent an oversupply of health graduate and doctorate degrees. "It is hard to find a qualified Guardian Associate WrMer professionals in the near future. There is a possibility of an nurses to teach our bachelor thursday degree students. Most nursing The Wright State University oversupply of health profession- School of Nursing could lose over als in 10 or 15 years, according to schools offering two year degrees weather $193,000 next year, dui to Presi- Torres. Right now. though, there have few instructors with master dent Carter's budget cuts in the is a critical shortage in the degrees." she added. area of the education of health number of registered nurses with Cloudv today with snow flurries ending late this afternoon. The professionals, according to nurs- masters and doctorate degrees, TORRES SAID she and other high today should be near 20 with the temperature failng to near ing dean, Dr. Gertrude Torres. she said. Ohio nursing deans are going to zero tonight. Tommorow it will be partly cloudy, with temperatures The school may not be in meet with Ohio senators Glenn failing throughout the day. immediate financial danger, stat- THERE ARE ONLY 1300 to and Mctzenbaum in Washington ed Dave Darr, WSU financial aid 1400 nurses with a master's later this month to fight the director, who explained that nurs- degree in Ohio and only 30 or 40 budget cuts. correction ing school loans and scholarships Ohio nurses with doctorates. Among the items proposed for are forward-funded, so next "President Carter is wrong," cuts is the operating money Yesterday's headline concerning WSU's police force being uninsured for the better part of a year should have said 1978 instead year's money is already allocated. Torres contends. "There may be $73,232 for the nursing school's plenty of all kinds of nurses in the mobile health unit, which pro- of 1979. THE GRADUATE school of future, but there is a shortage of vides free health screening thought nursing is in its first year and nursing leaders (now)." around the Miami Valley. The doesn't require much money. Torres said the president is unit is almost entirely supported Darr said. "Eventually, unless cutting an area that is already in by federal funds. Torres said the A thought for the day: Illustrating how times and nations change congress makes changes (in the short supply, stating that nurses University will try to keep the is this quotation from first US President George Washington. budget), we may have prob- with advanced degrees arc need mobile unit, which serves from "'Tis our true policy to steer clear of permanent alliances, with any lems." ed badly in the areas of research 2000 to 3000 Miami Valley resi- portion of the foreign world." Carter cited his move as a step and educational programs for dents a year. 2 DAILY GUARDIAN Feb. S, 1979 Group seeks to iimit state taxing power NORTH CANTON, Ohio UPI Chairman Rick Roman, of Can- taxes of $100 for every SI,000 in 40 counties across the state. new taxes must be approved in a A citizens group has launched a ton. "We propose to restore personal income. At the other end He said his group will need to similar manner prior to becoming statewide drive to place an initia- taxpayer control over taxation." of the scale. Alaskans paid $234 collect 284.000 valid signatures effective. tive petition on the November and New Yorkers $177. from registered voters in Ohio. "It also limits state income ballot that would severely limit ROMAN SAID the proposal "Just because taxes in Ohio are But due to ensure themselves a taxes to 1 percent for an individ- the taxation powers of state and would limit the state income tax low, compared to other states, safe margin after the Secretary of ual and 3 percent for a corpora- local governments in Ohio, al- to I percent for individuals and 3 doesn't mean we don't need tax State's Office reviews the peti- tion. though Ohio already has the percent for corporations. reform." Roman contended. tions for invalid signatures, OR- "Finally, the state will be lowest taxes in the nation. "And it would prohibit the "This country was founded on the TAG intends to collect 500,000 prohibited from requiring politi- The newly formed Ohioans for state from mandating programs rule of the individual having the signatures.