american river
current
Vol. 66, Ed. 2 • September 17, 2014
Dunning wins by one vote RILEY: ELECTION WAS STOLEN By John Ferrannini jferr1995@gmail.com Tamara Dunning was elected as ASB Student Senate president by a margin of one vote, according to the unofficial results of last week’s special election announced by the Center for Leadership and Development Friday. Dunning received 77 votes to Jorge Riley’s 76 votes. “I’m extremely grateful and just humbled,” Dunning said. “77 to 76 is a real indication of the diversity on this campus.” Dunning served as Student Senate vice president last semester. Riley had served as Student Senate director of finance. Riley, who was elected ASB Student Senate president in last spring’s election over Dunning by a margin of 62 votes, but whose election was invalidated for reasons the administration and the ASB have not disclosed, says the election was stolen. “I think they rigged the election,” Riley said. “The only way they could beat me was to rig it so the numbers would be low.” “I see the commonality with last year when I was kept from running because of one signature,” he added.
SEE ELECTION, PAGE 2
Courtesy of Josh Perkins
Film major Josh Perkins posted a photo on Facebook of the injuries he received during the assault and battery spree that began during a class Aug. 26.
‘PUNCHING RAMPAGE’ VIOLENT OUTBURST BEGAN IN CLASSROOM AND ESCALATED INTO HALLWAYS By Barbara Harvey and Kameron Schmid
RELATED STORY
barbarapharvey@gmail.com kameronschmid@gmail.com A woman accused of going on a “punching rampage” was arrested Tuesday, Aug. 26 following an alleged assault spree that began in a classroom and escalated into the hallways, and involved the battery of more than seven students and faculty. The suspect, Jonetta Hall, 38, was taken into custody by campus police at 3:55 p.m. According to Sergeant Mike Olson, Hall is also a suspect in an earlier call to campus police placed from the library at 10:30 a.m. on Aug. 26. The incident is alleged to have started in the Fine Arts building, room 512, during an instrumental voice class taught by professor Catherine Fagiolo. Josh Perkins, a film major who was present in the class, claims that Hall accused her classmates of laughing at her pri-
How prepared are professors to respond to violent situations that erupt in their classrooms?
SEE STORY, PAGE 3
or to the attacks. “Me and my girlfriend were talking a little during the class,” Perkins explained. “The woman who was sitting in front of us, who later went on a punching hurricane, decided to turn around and say, ‘You guys need to shut up, or I’ll punch you.’” Perkins, who described the alleged attack on his Facebook page as a “punching rampage,” claims that Hall continued to display aggressive behavior. “There’s honestly just something wrong with her, because she kept mumbling about it long after the event had transpired,” said Perkins. “She was mumbling a lot. It was like,
‘Don’t laugh at me.’” Perkins’ girlfriend Lauren Otis was also in the class. “It looked like she was about to start crying and left the room,” Otis said. “I thought it was a little weird, so I paid attention to that, and when she came back in, she did a little circle like she was about to just leave, and then she just decided not to, and pushed two guys in front of her. She then said something like, ‘Are you guys done laughing at me yet?’ and she was yelling at this point.” According to Perkins and Otis, Hall then turned her attention on Perkins. “She looked over at Josh, and made a beeline,” Otis said. Perkins claims that Hall then pushed him from behind, scratching his shoulder and drawing blood in the process. “(Professor) Fagiolo then walked over, and was like ‘You need to leave, so just leave, go.’ So she went out for a little longer,” Otis said. “It was a little longer than the first time she left,
SEE PUNCH, PAGE 3
Models pose nude for ‘Figure Friday’ ARC WORKSHOP IS OPEN TO COMMUNITY By Jose Garcia jig.garcia1995@gmail.com
Breana Herndon / bherndon96@gmail.com
Tami Dunning won the Sept. 9 special election by a margin of one vote.
Artists from American River College and the community join together once a week in room 510 of the Fine and Applied Arts building to participate in Figure Friday, an open life workshop that aims to help artists refine their creative abilities and technique by sketching a nude model. Figure Friday has been a weekly event at American River College for about eight years and has benefited from increased attendance since its creation. Diane Baxter, one of Figure
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INDEX
Friday’s regular models, has been modeling since the 70s, and has seen numerous changes in the world of modeling since then. “I started modeling when I was 18. When I first began, nudity wasn’t accepted,” said Baxter. Baxter has modeled in the past in cities such as Monterey, San Francisco, and even at Sacramento’s Crocker Art Museum. Her fame as a model has brought artists and fans from all around the world to see her. Most people recognize her from “The Diane Show,” a since gone recurring live show centered
SEE FIGURE, PAGE 7
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News pages 2 & 3 Sports pages 4 & 5
Feature page 6 A&C pages 7 & 8
Kameron Schmid / kameronschmid@gmail.com
Drawings by unnamed artists are hung in a display case outside of room 510 of the Fine and Applied Arts Building, where Figure Friday is held.
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Scene pages 9 & 10 Opinion page 11
IMPROVIVOR PAGE 8
@ARCurrent ARC students and alumni compete in local improv competition based on cutthroat reality show “Survivor”