Vol. 69, Ed. 6

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Racing Robots

Professor challenges his students to create self-driving robotic race cars.

Page 6

Wednesday 03.14.18

CURRENT The

American River College Sacramento, Calif.

REPORTED GUNMAN ON CAMPUS INITIATES SCHOOL-WIDE LOCKDOWN

ARC Artist

Student and artist Aliyah Sidqe makes an impression on local art scene.

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Vol. 69

Ed. 6

Anti-abortion protesters visit ARC By Luis Gael Jimenez luisgaeljimenez@gmail.com

Photo illustration by Ashley Hayes-Stone | Co-Managing Editor and Multimedia Editor

After the shooting in Parkland, Florida that left 17 people dead, American River College officials are re-examining many of their secuirty protocols.

Gun scare exposes lack of standardized procedures at ARC during emergencies By Brienna Edwards & Luis Gael Jimenez briennaedwards@gmail.com luisgaeljimenez@gmail.com Parkland, Florida became home to one of the world’s deadliest school massacres when Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School was victim to a mass shooting on Feb. 14 Thirty four bullets punctured flesh, tearing apart families and stealing innocence. Seventeen of those bullets killed their targets, taking innocent lives. An entire community and an entire country were shattered. That same day, apprehension spread from Florida to here at American River College, where reports of a man armed with a gun prompted a campus-wide lockdown. The primary Rave Alert sent out to students and faculty at 6:58 p.m. warned them to stay clear of “area xxx.” That alert stood until 7:13 p.m., when a second alert was sent out declaring the Science Department as the area to avoid. Gursiman Singh was in the midst of taking a test in his statistics class in the Computer Math Complex next to the Science De-

partment when the alerts went out. “Everyone’s phone just started buzzing at the same time,” Singh said. “We could hear the helicopter outside but we didn’t think anything of it.” It wasn’t until 30 minutes later when Singh had finished his test and left the class that he checked his phone. “I saw that I had two missed calls from my girlfriend and then I saw the alerts but I had no idea what was going on,” Singh said. “I didn’t see any police or anything but I decided to go back into the room and tell them.” It was only after Singh returned and told his professor that they were in the middle of an active lockdown that the rest of the class was made aware of the situation and the door was locked. According to Singh, the doors were unlocked for most of the lockdown. “We just kept taking the test. Everyone was pretty calm,” Singh said. No arrests were made in relation to the incident, but the incident has caused various departments to re-examine their safety protocols. After a student was recently removed, and subsequently banned for the semester from the

Learning Resource Center, Marsha Reske, Dean of the LRC, recognized that the facility needs to upgrade their security measure. “He was disruptive and scaring students. We have students that are trying to study but they’re fearful,” Reske said. “We’re looking at potentially installing cameras near the entryway and potentially other places around the LRC, to improve safety.” According to Reske, she communicated with Reading Across the Curriculum and Writing Across the Curriculum, which share a building with the LRC, to make sure that they knew the student was no longer allowed access to any department within the complex. But not every department on campus has the same level of communication as the LRC. While some departments are well prepared for an emergency and have had recent and effective training, others are scattered and disjointed, with each faculty member having a different idea as to what is necessary in case of an emergency on campus. For example Jayne Overgard, a mathematics professor, must rely on her own knowledge, if faced with an active shooter on campus. Her department has had no

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training, leaving her actions if ever faced with an active shooter on campus purely instinct. “I don’t recall if we have talked about [a lockdown situation] here but we have talked about it at other schools I have been at,” Overgard said. Departments like the athletics department poses a significant disadvantage when it comes to safety. Classes are spread out with many being held outdoors in open fields, where there is little to no protection in case of attack. Kathy Sullivan-Torrez, a professor in the athletics department, say she has considered the possibility of what she would do if there were to be a lockdown. “You look at our fields here, and you look at all the classes that we teach, whether it’s the pool, whether it’s the gym and then you have the parking garage, where someone could be on top and see the whole area,” SullivanTorrez said. Many students in these classes do not have cellphones on them, leaving the responsibility on the shoulders of the professor to both obtain any information needed in the case of an emergency, and to pass it along to their students.

Campus Safety | Page 2 /ARCurrent.com

ARC TO UFC UFC Fighter Josh Emmett

PAGE 5 began his MMA career here in Sacramento.

Project Truth, an anti-abortion group that travels across the West Coast sharings its beliefs, stopped at American River College on March 5 and 6. John Edgar, a leader within the organization, said the goal of the group is to spread awareness about abortion. “[The objective is] to make abortion unthinkable and educate students on the humanity of the unborn and the inhumanity of abortion,” Edgar said. The group uses images of dead fetuses on posters as part of its campaign. Edgar said that the reason for using such graphic imagery was to show people the “truth.” As a response to the graphic pictures, ARC President Thomas Greene sent out a campus-wide email on March 2 in advance of the group’s protest, warning students that an “outside group” would be displaying images that could possibly be offensive. “They might be displaying images that are offensive to some or engaging in speech that is offensive to some. You may wish to avoid these areas,” Greene’s email said. School administration also posted notices around the area where the group would be demonstrating, warning students of the graphic nature of the images. But Project Truth argues that their message is meant to cause disturbance with the people receiving it. “It should be disturbing; it’s the truth,” Edgar said. “I always ask people what disturbs you most? That I’m showing you the picture or that this is happening to a little human being over 3,000 times a day.” A member of Project Truth who declined to offer her name, said the group used Google to locate the images and that others could find the images and other similar pictures if they used the search engine. Elena Denecochea, Feminists United Club president, said that the group’s message might have a heavy emotional impact on young women. “I think that a woman would be deterred by the images because it’s a sensitive subject and is a personal choice,” DeNecochea said. “But for women like me who don’t view abortion as murder, it won’t change our minds or our abilities to do what we choose with our bodies.”

Abortion Protests | Page 2


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