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ISSUE NO. 22 VOL. 52

WWW.THEGUARDIANONLINE.COM

MARCH 16, 2016

Wright State student attempts to jump stage at Trump rally Olivia Rutherford News Editor Rutherford.24@wright.edu

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protester attempted to breech the security of GOP candidate Donald Trump’s stage before Secret Service was able to tackle him and escort him from the rally. The protester, Thomas DiMassimo, is a Wright State senior and local activist who protested at Wright State’s campus by standing on the American flag at 2015’s April Craze. DiMassimo was a child actor in a select few television programs and is now enrolled in the university’s theatre program. “I was thinking that I could get up on stage and take his podium away from him and take his mic away from him and send a message to all people out in the country who wouldn’t consider themselves racist,” DiMassimo told

CNN in an interview. According to initial reports, DiMassimo was able to get over the waist-high security railings and broke through two security personnel before nearly getting on the stage. The incident happened near the end of Trump’s rally and got him around 10 feet away from the candidate. “I didn’t see the protester, but I was watching Trump right when it happened. I saw Trump’s reaction to it, followed by shrieks,” Wright State graduate David McNeely said. “Next thing I knew, my mom and I were squeezing hands because we were afraid. We had no idea what was going on. Was somebody going to shoot Trump?” DiMassimo was arrested for disorderly conduct and inducing panic and was released on bail from the Montgomery County Jail later that

afternoon on Saturday, Mar. 12. On Tuesday, Mar. 15 DiMassimo was charged, in federal court, with entering

Beer and other alcohol products started to see a decline at WSU in 1982 when the legal drinking age was changed in Ohio; with that beer with an alcohol content of 3.2 was no longer made available for purchase. “Most traditional-aged students could not purchase beer or alcohol, so the climate in The Rathskeller started to change,” Morris said. “They stopped serving beer on tap and only served beer by the bottle and then they stopped serving it altogether.” The change in legal drinking age also affected major outdoor student-sponsored events: May Daze and October Daze, which eventually evolved to what is now April Craze and Fall Fest. The university in the late 90s determined that it was not appropriate to include alcohol at these events. Morris has stated that there is a possible chance of alcohol being reinstated on campus if demand is high enough. “I wish there was a place on

campus to buy and consume alcohol,” student Matt Grunwald said. “I mean more of a bar where you drink on site

restricted grounds without lawful authority to do so. His first federal court appearance is currently scheduled for Wednesday, Mar. 23.

Photo from www.donaldjtrump.com

Wright State may consider selling alcohol on campus Hasan Abdul-Karim Staff Writer Abdul-Karim.2@wright.edu

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right State may consider reintroducing the sale of alcohol on campus if demand grows, according to campus officials. This comes in light of other state and national universities allowing alcohol to be sold on their property. “Many universities in Ohio and across the country have sports-bar type operations that serve beer or other alcohol,” vice president of student affairs Katherine Morris said. “They are typically standalone operations that aren’t part of a ‘dining hall’.” Wright State used to sell beer and other alcoholic beverages on campus through operations such as The Rathskeller, a space that still exists in the Student Union and serves as meeting space and The Club, a small lounge that was also located in the building and was shut down due to dwindling profits.

Photo by Emily Nurrenbrock

as opposed to a convenience store where you can buy alcohol with the intent of drinking it somewhere else.”


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