Vol. 69, Ed. 7

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Pride Center

ARC becomes one of three community colleges to have LGBTQ+ Center

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Wednesday 04.11.18

CURRENT The

American River College Sacramento, Calif.

ADRIAN LAMO, HACKER WHO TURNED IN CHELSEA MANNING, DIES AT 37

Photographer

The Kaneko Gallery hosts a photography exhibit on the work of Luther Gerlach.

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Vol. 69

Ed. 7

Drone club prepares for lift-off By Brienna Edwards briennaedwards@gmail.com

by praised Lamo’s abilities as a journalist, but said that Lamo struggled with deadlines. “You could give Adrian an assignment and guarantee it wouldn’t come in on deadline. He would turn it in late and turn in a totally different assignment,” Stangby said. “He found a way to put himself in every story he wrote. You don’t really see that at the community college level — he had a gift.” Terracina-Hartman echoed that sentiment and said that Lamo often overindulged himself with his writing. “Me and Andy came up with a word for it: verbal masturbation, we called it. We’d have to sit him down sometimes and remind him that the rules applied to him too,” Hartman said. “But that’s the way he was. He was always five steps ahead of everyone else.” Matthew Keys, fellow journalist, said Lamo’s genius was undeniable; it was what he did with his talent that bothered Keys. “He was so bright. He was so smart. His biggest obstacle was himself. It was an obstacle he couldn’t overcome,” Keys said. “He had a brilliant mind but rather than try [to] better society,

A typical afternoon on any given Tuesday or Wednesday will find Shane Lipscomb, an Administrative Assistant, trudging across American River College’s soccer field, where he will soon be met by a small collection of students. Inevitably they all assemble, standing together by the team bench, dropping their backpacks down onto its metal surface, it is here that they laugh and joke, and catch up on each others’ week. However, it is not Lipscomb’s great love for ‘the beautiful game’ that sends them to the far reaches of the campus, because in his hand he carries a small black case. The case contains an unmanned aerial vehicle or more specifically, a drone, and this small group has gathered to fly it. The Drone Club, for lack of a better term, originated a couple of years ago, said Lipscomb. “There was a design student, who wanted to, as part of a project he was working on in class, design and print a drone, so he did,” Lipscomb said. From there he and his fellow students began flying it as part of demonstrations on campus. “People started showing an interest, and so more people wanted to fly,” Lipscomb said. Not long after, “the technology met an ease to use and a price point where the school could justify purchasing a couple as design platforms,” he said. Soon the club’s goal came to fruition. “We had the drones, people were interested and Cheryl [Sears] lets us have the fields Monday and Wednesday at noon,” he said. Sears works in Administrative Services at ARC, she is also the operations Department; all flights must be scheduled and approved through her. “Students can fly without a license if they are just flying for fun, or if they are flying in pursuit of some educational purpose,” Lipscomb said. If it is for a class, or simply for enjoyment a student can fly a drone campus. The club also takes extra precautions to remain safe. “We have adopted the rule for specific authorization so while hobbyist could fly up to 400 feet here, we ask people to stay at the light level and below, at around 60 feet,” Lipscomb said. In addition, if an aircraft is flying in the vicinity of the school

Adrian Lamo | Page 2

Drone Club | Page 4

File Photo

Adrian Lamo, poses in front of the Rose Marks Quad at American River College in 2006. Lamo gained infamy after turning in Chelsea Manning to federal authorities for exposing classified government information to WikiLeaks. Lamo died on March 14 from undisclosed causes in his Wichita, Kansas home.

Adrian Lamo, ‘Homeless Hacker’ and former Current staff member, dies By Luis Gael Jimenez

luisgaeljimenez@gmail.com Adrian Lamo, the controversial “grey hat” hacker best known for reporting Chelsea Manning to the FBI and hacking into the websites of the New York Times, Yahoo, Microsoft and other companies, was found dead in his Wichita, Kansas home on March 16 at 37. Lamo attended American River College in the mid-2000s following a court order from a judge after hacking the New York Times website in 2002. Mario Lamo, Adrian Lamo’s father, said that his son simply added his name to the list of contributing writers on the Times’ website. “The New York Times wanted to prosecute Adrian to make an example out of him. They went after him with their lawyers to prove a point,” Mario Lamo said. “But Adrian learned his lesson; he never hacked another company again.” It was while at ARC that Lamo joined the Current during his second semester and applied his skills towards helping the newspaper. Mario Lamo, who still keeps his son’s old newspaper clippings, remembers Adrian Lamo’s days on

the Current as some of the better ones of his life. “He felt at home there. Adrian loved writing so much,” Mario Lamo said. Andy Stangby, who served as editor-in-chief of the paper at the time, said Lamo initially joined the Current because it gave him internet access — something the judge had restricted Lamo from having as part of his probation sentence. “This odd little man we’d never seen before walked in and said: ‘Hi, I’m Adrian Lamo.’ Then he just sort of started hanging out,” Stangby said. “He wasn’t on the paper right away but he was always in there on the computers. I think that’s when he decided he wanted to be a journalist.” Once on the school paper, Lamo used his “grey hat” hacking abilities (or in other words, his willingness to violate laws without malicious intent) to help the Current on multiple occasions. Carol Terracina-Hartman, who served as the faculty adviser to the paper while Lamo attended ARC, said she once saw Lamo hack into the cameras of the Sacramento County Courthouse in order to track down the subject of an article. “Adrian sat there on the com-

“After Manning was pardoned, Adrian told me he was relieved ... He was always very sorry about Manning.” Mario Lamo

Adrian Lamo’s Father puter and somehow tapped into the cameras outside of the courthouse. I don’t know how he did it, but that’s the kind of student he was; he was brilliant,” TerracinaHartman said. “You can’t teach that sort of innate curiosity. Adrian had that long before he was on the paper.” Terracina-Hartman also told a story about the time Lamo hacked into the computers of the California State Capitol to find out where a teleconference between the California Community College Chancellor and dozens of reporters was taking place. Terracina-Hartman said Lamo was able to pinpoint the chancellor’s location within the Capitol, allowing Current reporters to find him for an interview when he finished the conference call. Terracina-Hartman and Stang-

@ARCurrent

INDEX

2 News 3&4 Scene 5 A&C 6 Sports 7 Opinion

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/ARCurrent.com ‘JULIUS CAESAR’ ARC’s production of the

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Shakespearean play starts April 20.


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