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clear...l’ve been pushed about as far
as I want to be pushed by Mr.
Carter,” said Gingrich.
Carter said in the article that “It
doesn’t matter how much good I do
the rest of my life, I can’t ever
outweigh the evil that I’ve caused by
helping him be elected to Congress.
“There’s one paragraph which is, I
think, very revealing in that arti
cle,” said Gingrich, “in which Mr.
Carter says that the worst thing he
ever did in his life is help elect me.
Now a man who hates the con
gressman, who says publicly the
worst thing he ever did was help
elect him, and whom I fired, who is
the only person that Osborne quotes
about all of that personal stuff ought
to at least make you
wonder...whether that’s in any sense
a truthful or accurate article.”
As of Monday night, Carter could
not be reached for comment.
Although Gingrich said that
Osborne set out to do a hatchet job on
him, Osborne said that he considered
Studen ts Pro test New
Drinking Policies
NORMAL, IL. (CPS) In one of
the most violent episodes yet this fall
of nationwide student resistance to
strict new drinking policies, as many
as 1000 Illinois State University
students took to the streets in a
seven-hour riot last week. i
The young people, mostly ISU
students, flocked from campus to ci
ty hall on October 4th, pelting police
with rocks and breaking store and of
fice windows, officials report.
Other protestors staged a sit-in at
a downtown theater and threw rocks
at police attempting to remove
them.
To playthegame,know the rules
Granted, the West Georgia Traffic
Code is a lengthy document.
Granted, also, that many of you
throw it away as soon as it touches
your hand. BUT, you are expected to
know the rules. Amen. In an attempt
to assist student drivers on campus,
the following information is offered.
THE TEN COMMANDMENTS TO
AVOIDING TRAFFIC FINES
1. Get your vehicle registered as
soon as possible.
2. The parking situation is com
plex, we know. Refer to “Zoned
Parking” for further details. All
vehicles must park so the rear
bumper faces the adjacent traffic
lane. Don’t park against the flow.
3. Never park on a yellow or red
curb. Green curbs are for faculty
staff only. White curbs are
designated for student parking.
4. Don’t park in a space designated
for handicapped persons if you’re
not handicapped. Penalty: Your car
will be towed to No Man’s Land. NO
QUESTIONS ASKED.
5. The speed limit campus wide is
25m.p.h.
6. Visitors must obtain a tem
porary parking permit. If you
operate a second vehicle and it is
non-registered, you must also obtain
a permit for that car. Temporary
permits are issued 24 hours a day.
The decal issued to one vehicle can
not be transferred to another vehi
cle.
7. Parking-meters hours of opera
tion are from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Monday-Thursday and from 7 a.m.
to 3 p.m. on Fridays.
8. The registrant of any motor
vehicle is held responsible for the
proper parking of his/her vehicle
regardless of who may be the
operator.
9. When an individual must
operate an unregistered vehicle on
campus, e.g., borrowed car, rental,
etc., a seven-day permit can be ob
tained 24 hours at no charge. (Limit
of 2 per quarter).
10. Pay all traffic fines on time. If
you pay them within five days, most
violations can be reduced by 60 per
cent.
READ YOUR TRAFFIC CODE
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Mother Jones
his piece a fair and accurate profile
of the politician. He said that he was
actually disappointed when he found
“bitterness” in Carrollton, because
that meant that he had more work to
do on the story in order to confirm
that bitterness.
“I had to prove to myself that it
was true,” Osborne said.
Gingrich was asked why Osborne
would want to do a smear attack on
him.
“David Osborne doesn’t like me,”
said Gingrich, “and if he can destroy
me by slurring me I’m a lot less
dangerous.”
One of Gingrich’s aides has sug
gested that the article was inspired
by House Speaker Tip O’Neill, who
tangled with the Georgia con
gressman in the C-Span controversy
of last May in which Gingrich was
criticized by congressional
Democrats for attacking his liberal
opponents on camera before a vir
tually empty house. O’Neill ordered
the camera to sweep the floor to
Traffic on a nearby highway was
disrupted by partying protestors
equipped with a keg of beer,
observers say.
Local and state police broke up the
seven-hour disturbance with tear
gas about 2:30 a.m. following three
arrests and a plea to students from
ISU President Lloyd Wallace to stop
demonstrating. Officials report no
serious injuries.
Officials note new city laws gover
ning the use of alcohol and making
students get permits for parties are
being enforced for the first time this
fall.
raw
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show viewers the empty seats.
Osborne laughed at the suggestion
that O’Neill was responsble for his
writing the article and called the
idea “one of the most amusing things
I’ve ever heard.”
Gingrich maintained that the arti
cle was “a deliberate effort to crip
ple” him.
“This is so much not who I am,”
said Gingrich. “I felt almost sick
when I read the article because it’s
as though they took who I really am
and they turned it upside down. ”
Gingrich did say that he feels that
most people won’t believe the arti
cle, and his Democratic opponent
Gerald Johnson has refused to com
ment on the matter.
“I’ve read the article and I’ve
decided that I don’t want to use it in
thecampaign,” said Johnson, “and I
don’t want to comment on it.”
Gingrich and Johnson are schedul
ed to debate in the Social Science
Lecture Hall on Tuesday night.
“There have been reports of a
number of spontaneous parties with
2000 or 3000 people who take over
whole neighborhoods,” explains
Steve Mahrt, the city lawyer. “And
there are thousands of students out
at night, roaming neighborhoods,
drinking beer. Occasionally, a few
get drunk and vandalize property.”
But all the violations stemmed
from the city’s public possession of
alcohol ordinance, not the new mass
gathering law which requires per
mits for public gatherings of 300 or
more, Mahrt reports.
“We haven’t had a single party
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JERRY MOCK, Director of Learning Resources, supervises a student disc jockey at WWGC-FM.
(Photo by Paige Bullard)
Continued from page 1
The staff at the station is headed
by Haley Hamf, station manager,
Danny Bruton, music director, and
Stephanie Kennedy, production
manger.
“It takes a lot of dedication to run
a radio station of this sort,” said
Jerry Mock, pointing out that most
of the staff are volunteers.
“We are not operating 24-hours a
day now because we are looking for
quality not quantity in our disc
jockeys,” Mock said.
When the new antenna goes up,
quality will be more imporant than
ever.
disturbance this fall,” agrees
Richard Godfrey, ISU director of in
stitutional advancement and Normal
mayor. “And the frats have had no
problem with the ordinance. It’s
very easy to comply with.
Some students questioned the or
dinance’s summer passage, claim-
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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 17,1984, THE WEST GEORGIAN-
-Radio Station
The WWGC staff assumes that the
majority of students want to hear top
40 music. Yet, as Mock said, "we
want to be a little bit different.” So
they play new albums when they
receive them from the record com
panies. This puts WWGC about two
months ahead of other stations
because most stations wait until the
reigning hits have faded before try
ing the new numbers.
Melanie Burnette, a junior at West
Georgia, says she listens to WWGC
“because they play a wide variety of
music. They play a little new wave,
B-52s and even some older songs that
will always be popular. ’'
ing few students were on campus
then, but Godfrey recalls ISU stu
dent leaders joined discussions of the
measure last spring.
Most protestors had no idea why
they were there, he maintains.
“I went into the crowd to talk to
the protestors,” he says. “An ex-
coupon
The station also provides a public
affairs program for West Georgia
students on Monday nights at 7:30
p.m. The program is called “Feed
back“ and features a guest who is
brought to the station for a question
and answer and telephone call-in
half-an-hour session. The guests are
picked because of their interest to
students. For example, Chief
William A. Tuttle, head of campus
security, recently appeared on Feed
back to discuss DUI arrests. Last
year Dr. Jonathan Goldstein told of
his experience of being trapped
behind the iron curtain at the time of
the Korean airline tragedy.
tremely small percentage of people
were there to be destructive. Lots
were around because it was
something to do on a warm October
night.”
Officials are prepared for more
demonstrations, but “we don’t an
ticipate any,” Godfrey says. “Some
students have even suggested taking
un a collection to pay for damages. ”
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