DISCORD STRIKES ASB
american river
current
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AS B
Vol. 65, Ed. 2 • October 2, 2013
T
he Government of the United States of America is built on the ideal of unite or die. The Associated Student Body Student Senate is modeled after the same tenets that the U.S. Senate is. As the voice of the students and as a legal body, ASB has a big job to fill on campus. In the short time the senators have been in office, they have had to face unique challenges with the changes in leadership, and the people involved are making things more divisive than united. In the fifth week of the session, ASB Senate has gone over bylaws that should have been approved by previous boards. But due to many differing voices, the ASB has been as much at a standstill as has the US Senate. All the differing ideas,
SEE ASB, PAGE 3
A new day a new president
The Gadsden Flag is a yellow historical flag showing a ready-to-strike snake coiled up on a patch of grass. Under the snake read the words “Don’t Tread On Me.” Christopher Gadsden, after whom the flag is named, designed the flag in 1775 during the American Revolution. Rattlesnakes had been a big part of the American Revolution because snakes heavily populated the areas of the original 13 colonies. According to “Flag: An American Biography” by Marc Leepson, it was common policy for Britain to send convicted criminals to America. In response Benjamin Franklin suggested that we thank the British by sending them rattlesnakes. The image of the snake has been used in political cartoons during times of division and to show the necessity to unite.
- Carlos Guerrero
POOR COMMUNICATION AND CONTENTIOUS BYLAW DISCUSSION HAS CAUSED MEMBERS OF ASB AND CAEB TO DIFFER By Jeff Gonzales & Zach Tierney |
AN INSIDE LOOK AT THE ANATOMY OF A MOSH PIT By Alisha Kirby & Brooke Purves
ztierney.zt@gmail.com
alishakirby1@gmail.com brookempurves@gmail.com
Bill Karns was ushered in as interim president Monday as faculty said goodbye to Marie Smith in a small ceremony at Guthrie Grove at 3:30 p.m. Attendees celebrated the time Marie Smith spent as president this semester and Karns’ impending 53 days as leader. In an interview with The Current, Tony Barcellos of American River College’s math department spoke about the good fortune of having Smith and Karns serve. “(Smith) has an ability to build a consensus and get people to cooperate,” Barcellos said. “You have that instinctive feeling of trust when you meet her and then you get to know her and you find out it’s not a fluke.” Barcellos also recognized Karn’s dedication. “Karns invests himself in things so entirely,” Barcellos said. “No one can match him in taking things seriously.” Smith gave her own parting words, saying that her time here this semester was “a very fast but wonderful time.”
For the full story, visit us at ARCurrent.com
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jeff.a.gonzales@gmail.com ztierney.zt@gmail.com
Moshers just want to have fun
By Zach Tierney
A LOOK INSIDE
History of the Gadsden Flag
Working Athletes Student athletes discuss competing commitments
Alisha Kirby / alishakirby1@gmail.com
Mosh pits are a good place for people to release their aggression in a semi-controlled environment.
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Kohler Creek ARC students work to protect the Holyoke Nature Area located on campus
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You’re beaming as you exit the venue after watching your favorite band play. You’re drenched in sweat, your shirt is ripped, and you’ve got a little bit of someone else’s blood on your forearm. To some this sounds almost barbaric, but to many concertgoers who spend their time in the mosh pit, these are all signs of a good time. “At certain shows I go [into the pit], no questions asked,” said ARC sociology major, Morgan Leschke. “There’s this energy that can only be experienced in the pit and the band feeds off of the energy the crowd emotes and vice versa.” The pit forms a vortex of energy from flailing, airpunching, shoulder-ramming and dancing. “I’m an English professor, not a sociologist,” said ARC’s Christian Kiefer, “but to me, with punk rock, when it became so aggressive and so fast, you could
SEE MOSH, PAGE 8
Smokers on campus The Current’s Jessica Maynard talks secondhand smoke for expecting mothers