american river
current Vol. 66, Ed. 8 • February 25, 2015
Photos by Kameron Schmid and Cheyenne Drury / kameronschmid@gmail.com, cheyennemdrury@gmail.com
Alex Honnold, left, has been a professional climber since he turned 19. His mother, ARC French professor Dierdre Wolownick, right, picked up the hobby on her own while Honnold was away.
Climbing toward success
PROFESSIONAL FREE-CLIMBER ALEX HONNOLD INTRODUCED HIS MOTHER, AN ARC PROFESSOR, TO CLIMBING By Cheyenne Drury cheyyenemdrury@gmail.com Children who start walking before they are 14-months-old are considered advanced. Dierdre Wolownick, a French professor at American River College, knew her son Alex Honnold was developing quickly when he began walking at 11 months. Honnold was featured in a 2011 episode of the CBS newsmagazine 60 Minutes that featured his free solo climbs in Yosemite National Park. “From an early age Alex was climbing on
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Only the climber can evaluate risk, weather conditions, the amount of sleep they are getting and I know that Alex knows what he is doing.”
DIERDREWOLOWNICK anything that he could,” said Wolonick. The CBS crew utilized 14 cameras to shoot the climb for television. Free solo rock climbing is done com-
pletely alone and without any ropes or aides. “Only the climber can evaluate risk, weather conditions, the amount of sleep
they are getting and I know that Alex knows what he is doing,” said Wolonick. Aside from walking at an early age, Honnold has another feature that helps out his climbing abilities. “What big hands he has,” was always the response people had when meeting her son, said Wolonick. Honnold, who has been climbing since he was 11, graduated from Mira Loma High School with a 4.7 GPA, and studied engineering at the University of California at Berkeley. By the time he was 19, he had decided to dedicate his life to climbing.
SEE CLIMBING, PAGE 9
Walking the trail with the Guardian Angels CITIZEN GROUP PATROLS IN RESPONSE TO AREA CRIMES By John Ferrannini jferr1995@gmail.com
Flashlights pierced the dim illumination of Sunday’s dusk over the still, cold creek. The sound of boots ruffling leaves could Cheyenne Drury / cheyennemdrury@gmail.com soon be heard, and if the many trees had Members of the Sacramento, Stockton and Modesto chapters of the Guardian Angels are eyes they could see a brigade of red berets trying to ramp up their patrol of the Arcade Creek nature trail near ARC’s main campus. marching two by two.
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News pages 2 & 3 Sports pages 4 & 5
Feature page 6 A&C page 8 and 9
The six men and one woman underneath those berets are members of the Sacramento, Modesto and Stockton chapters of the Guardian Angels, a group of concerned citizens who patrol crime-ridden areas. The creek is the Arcade Creek adjacent to the American River College campus, where several violent crimes have taken place over
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SEE ANGELS, PAGE 3
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Scene pages 9 & 10 NOBEL LAUREATE Carol Greider, a molecular biologist and professor at Johns PAGE 3 Hopkins University, is coming to ARC on March 16. Opinion page 11