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The Red and Black » Tuesday, October 9, 1990 • B
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1
Twenty-one candidates prepare to
run in upcoming general election
By DANA WHITE
Staff Writer
Twenty-one candidates have
qualified to run in the Nov. 6 Gen
eral Election for six offices that af
fect many University voters.
Qualifying may be over for these
candidates, but the campaign
trails still present another obstacle
in their pursuit of a seat on the
unified Athens-Clarke County
Commission.
Cardee Kilpatrick, 2nd Ward
City Council member and candi
date for the 7th District, said she
has been campaigning door-to-
door.
“Actually, I’ve been to 980
homes,” she said.
Kilpatrick said she was at the
Tate Student Center Plaza during
the Voter Registration Drive last
week where she distributed hun
dreds of brochures with her phone
number.
She’s hoping students will con
tact her with their concerns.
Gwen O’Looney, 5th Ward City
Council member and Chief Elected
Officer candidate, said she spoke
■ JUDICIAL REPORT
File
Dot Barrett: Board of
elections chair.
every day at Tate Plaza during the
Voter Registration Drive.
O’Looney said she plans to con
tact the campus groups involved
with politics and offer herself to
concerns and questions from stu
dents.
Five other candidates are in the
race for CEO. George Bulluck,
Clarke County Commissioner; E.
H. Culpepper, local financial insti
tution executive; James Holland,
County Commission chair; Jim
McGown, computer aid at Barrow
Elementary School; and Nathan
Williams, an independent insur
ance agent.
Danny Daniel, owner of Cat-
eraid Food Services, and Howard
Guest, co-owner of Guest Printing
Company are the other two candi
dates in the 7th District.
Linney Bailey, 3rd Ward City
Council member, is running unop
posed in the 3rd District which in
cludes fraternity and sorority
houses on Milledge Avenue north
of Baxter Street.
Four candidates are running in
the 4th District, which encom
passes most of the University com
munity. John Barrow, local
attorney; Scott Davis, local restau
rant owner; Michael Dioguardi, as- f
sistant manager of the Red and
Black package stores and a junior
economics major; and Thomas
Stubbs, senior political science
major.
Four candidates are running for
the 9th District, the superdistrict
covering the first through the
fourth districts.
Dishonesty will be problem
The Office of Judicial Programs has been in a lull this
week and last week, said Roger Lee, Student Affairs coun
selor at the office.
Nine hearings are scheduled for next week, and Lee
said he expects to receive more complaints for academic
dishonesty in the near future.
Nine complaints of students violating University regula
tions were filed for the week of Oct.l.
• Four complaints are for disorderly conduct due to stu
dents who were caught throwing objects Sept. 29 in San
ford Stadium at the East Carolina game.
• A fifth, unrelated complaint of disorderly conduct is
also alcohol related.
• Two other students have been charged with damage
to property.
• A complaint was filed for physical assault.
• Another complaint was filed for disorderly conduct
and harrassment.
Federal privacy laws governing information released by
the University allow only three sets of facts to be disclosed
about an individual involved in disciplinary proceedings:
charges filed, the verdict and sentence. The University
can't release any circumstances that would identify the
person(s) involved.
Five pieces of information regarding organization cases
can be released by the University: the organization's name,
charges filed, the verdict, sentence and a brief synopsis of
the case.
— Patrick Flanigan
Qualifying may be over
for these candidates,
but the campaign trails
still present another
obstacle in their
pursuit of a seat on the
unified Athens-Clarke
County Commission.
Tom Chasteen, a general inde
pendent insurance agent; Regero
Sampson, AT&T computer systems
territory sales manager; Harry
Sims, 1st Ward City Council
member; and Richard Stone, Pur
chasing and Production Services
Department for the Clarke County
School District, are all candidates
for the superdistrict seat.
Three candidates are running
for the 10th District seat, the su
perdistrict covering the fifth
through the eighth districts.
Tal Duvall, retired state director
of the University of Georgia Exten
sion Service; Will Jackson, third
shift supervisor at Kinko’s Copies;
and John Jeffreys, Clarke County
Commissioner.
It’s a beautiful day in the neighborhood...
Trip Freeman, freshman biology major, takes a break in the shade. The trees on the
north campus lawn provide welcome relief from the scorching October sun.
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