Vol 65 Edition 3

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american river

current

ARCurrent.com @ARCurrent Facebook.com/ARCurrentcom Vol. 65, Ed. 3 • October 16, 2013

REDEMPTION

POSSIBILITIES GROW FOR THE UNDEFEATED BEAVERS TEAM By Jessica Maynard jessica.r.maynard87@gmail.com

It’s something every athlete hopes for: a chance to prove that he or she is the best on the biggest stage. The past two seasons have accounted for tremendous change in the American River College football program. The team left the Mid Empire Conference for the Valley Conference, which made it eligible to compete for the state and national championships. The Beavers have propelled themselves onto the nation’s football radar and have proven they have what it takes to compete with the best teams. On Oct. 5, the Beavers faced No. 1 team in the state City College of San Francisco and dominated in a 34-13 victory in San

Photo Courtesy of Bryce Fraser

I heard a couple of terms thrown around, ‘redemption,’ and I heard ‘payback.’ I think for the 2013 ARC football Beavers it means ‘success’ and that’s what I told them. So let’s handle success well, celebrate, and come back because we have five more games.” JERRYHAFLICH HEAD COACH

SEE FOOTBALL, PAGE 4

Student not held back by Asperger’s ADVOCATE FOR DISABLED STUDENTS ENSURES VOICES ARE HEARD By Melissa Hurtado hurtadom73@gmail.com “Nothing about us, without us,” is a motto that Shayana Mendes, an advocate for disabled students and American River College student with Asperger’s syndrome, strongly believes in. “People need to stop saying, ‘Oh, yeah, we know what you’re about,’ and not make any kind of decision for people with disabilities without Alisha Kirby / alishakirby1@gmail.com

Shayana Mendes lives with Asperger’s syndrome, a form of autism. She often speaks for the needs of fellow students with disabilities during ASB meetings.

A LOOK INSIDE

2

ASB Bylaws

ASB and CAEB approve bylaws, special election to come next

asking for their feelings. Their voice is important, too.” The 29-year-old Glendale native has been a student at ARC for about 10 years, pursuing degrees in Spanish, sign language, theatre arts, nutrition and law, with a focus on disability rights. “It’s my persistence. That’s why I’m still at it here,” said Mendes. “We don’t need to be fixed or cured,” says Mendes about disabled students. “We’re not ashamed of who we are.” She wasn’t always such an advocate. She found out about

SEE ASPERGER’S, PAGE 10

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Extra classes at steep price By Jessica Maynard jessica.r.maynard87@gmail.com Governor Brown signed into law Thursday a bill that will allow select community colleges to charge non-resident fees for additional highdemand classes to be offered during winter and summer intersessions. Assembly Bill 955 creates a pilot program that will be offered to six California community colleges that suffer from high levels of overcrowding, and to as many as 11 community colleges by July 2014. Participation in the program is optional and it is unknown which of the six colleges offered the program will implement it. The bill, written by Assemblyman Das Williams, will see the price for these courses go from $46 to $200 per unit, with one-third of

SEE FEES, PAGE 3

World Music Festival ARC faculty talk about Sacramento’s multicultural event


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