american river
current Vol. 66, Ed. 11 • April 22, 2015
Campus smoking faces changes ADMINS SAY DECISION COULD BE MADE BEFORE SUMMER By John Ferrannini jferr1995@gmail.com If a new student at American River College does not notice the curly, thin streams of tobacco smoke drifting into the open air in front of Davies Hall or in the Rose Marks quad, they probably notice the crushed cigarette butts that pockmark the hallways. But after a nine-day online survey of students, faculty and staff ended last week, all that might change. “This has been an issue for years,” said Laurie Jones, who sits on the Building, Grounds and Safety Committee that asked for the survey. “I’m a health oriented person, but it’s also a civil rights issue because there are people who can’t work here because smoke gets in their workplaces.” After receiving complaints about the prevalence of tobacco use on campus, particularly cigarette smoking, the Buildings, Grounds and Safety Committee provided three possible courses of action for the school: maintaining the current policy, creating designated smoking areas or establishing a tobacco free campus. A survey, put together by the ARC Research Office, was sent to students, faculty and staff on their Los Rios email accounts on April 6 and remained open through April 14.
SEE SMOKING, PAGE 3
SHOT AT ON I-80 Page 2
Left, courtesy of Tamara Dunning. Right, Bryce Fraser / brycefraser180@gmail.com
Left, Tamara Dunning, 18 years old, sits with her grandfather. Right, Dunning holds the picture, with her military records spread in front of her.
DOCUMENTED SURVIVAL SEXUALLY ASSAULTED IN THE ARMY, DUNNING IS STILL HAUNTED BY THE MEMORIES By Joseph Daniels joseph64daniels@gmail.com She had been 18 years old for just three months when she says she was attacked and sexually assaulted by a male soldier. Her attacker was never convicted of any crime relating to that night, and because of the statute of limitations, he never will be. Nearly thirty years later, American River College student Tamara Dunning is still haunted by what she remembers. “This isn’t just something that happened,” Dunning said of her assault. “This is my life. This affects every corner of my life.” Dunning’s recovery has been challenged by the long, ongoing process of trying to
still does not prove the rape in the eyes of the VA. Dunning said in her statement during the investigation that after being driven to her barracks by the man she accuses, he asked if she wanted to go on a walk. She was then tackled from behind, tried to fight him off, hit him with her fist and yelled at him to leave her alone. Both Dunning and the man took polygraph tests to answer questions to see whether they were lying or not about the assault. “Keep in mind, I’m in the service at the time,” Tamara said. “Someone tells you to do something, you’re not questioning, you just go do it.”
SEE DUNNING, PAGE 3
Mace attacker awaits court date A FORMER ARC STUDENT, LANNING IS NOW IN JAIL AFTER NEARLY KILLING A WOMAN WITH A MEDIEVAL WEAPON By Kameron Schmid kameronschmid@gmail. com A former American River College student who brutally attacked a woman and her dog with a medieval morningstar-styled mace in the early hours of March 23 is now being charged with attempted murder, but has yet to appear in court due to “psychotic episodes.” Travis Lanning has missed all four of his scheduled court dates, as court officials said he is unsafe to transfer in his current medical condition. Lanning is being charged with attempted murder, but was first arrested on charges of assault with a deadly weapon. He is ineligible for
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prove to the Department of Veterans Affairs that she was raped and needs treatment and disability payments, in spite of the fact that the man she accuses was never convicted. While Dunning is being treated by the VA for post-traumatic stress disorder, which she has been diagnosed with relating to the incident, she is not receiving benefits from the military for a service related disability. According to the VA, she needs new evidence to support that she has been sexually assaulted. For three years, when requesting her service files, all files related to her assault were omitted. Dunning recently received all of those documents through the Freedom of Information Act. They show that her PTSD diagnosis goes back to when she was still in the military, but
bail. According to reports, Lanning attacked a woman walking her dog in the very early morning on March 23, sending her to the hospital in critical condition and the dog to a veterinarian hospital as well. And as the media upswell began to rise, things were abruptly halted as Lanning’s mental state was brought to attention. Lanning’s public defender declined to comment after appearing in the courtroom on his second scheduled appearance date. The story of the attack was a topic of both national and international conversation as articles about the abnormal weapon choice and gruesome
SEE MACE, PAGE 2
Courtesy of the Sacramento Sherriff’s Department
Travis Lanning, 34, attacked a woman and her dog with a medieval-style mace on March 23. Lanning, a former American River College student, now sits in jail.
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News pages 2 & 3 Sports pages 4 & 5
Feature page 6 A&C pages 7 & 8
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Scene pages 9 & 10 Opinion page 11
ASB ELECTIONS PAGE 6
@ARCurrent Results from last weeks ASB and CAEB elections, and data on voter turnout in recent years.