IT’S NOT EASY BEING BLUE
american river
current
Vol. 66, Ed. 5 • November 12, 2014
Los Rios Police short on officers By John Ferrannini jferr1995@gmail.com One-fifth of the sworn officer positions with the Los Rios Police Department are vacant as American River College President Thomas Greene spearheads an initiative to improve campus safety. Seven of the 34 positions are unoccupied, according to Mitchel Benson, the associate vice chancellor for communications and media relations for the Los Rios district. While Sgt. Mike Olson of the Los Rios Police Department wouldn’t say that the vacancies impact his ability to help keep the campus safe, he commented on the strain it causes the department. “There isn’t even a minimum (number of sworn officers that must be on campus). We have a finite number of police officers and a vast area to cover,” said Olson. “Ultimately, it’s not up to me how many officers we have. I distribute what we do have.” While witnessing a physical fight on the ARC campus on Oct. 27, student Kyle Joyce called the Los Rios police. “I couldn’t get a hold of them,” said Joyce. “There was an automated message. It was such a long voicemail that I hung up to try and break up the fight.” “I would feel more safe knowing we have a full staff,” he added. Benson said that the vacancies do not impact the police department’s ability to maintain safe campuses. “We believe that the current
SEE POLICE, PAGE 2
CAMPUS CLOWNS PAGE 7
READ, WRITE
Courtesy of Blue Man Productions
Jason Sinclair Long, center, was a member of the Blue Man Group for four years before becoming an English professor at American River College.
ENGLISH PROFESSOR RECOUNTS HIS PAST WITH BLUE MAN GROUP By Joseph Daniels joseph64daniels@gmail.com Halfway through a performance in Chicago one night, Blue Man Group member Jason Long hit his drum so hard that his mallet, which was roughly the size of a human head, bounced back up, splitting the top of his nose wide open. Long scooped up more of the group’s trademark blue makeup with his hand, pressed it into the wound to stop the bleeding, and kept going. “It’s gnarly,” Long said of his past with the group, who are known for their drum performances and blue makeup. “It’s not a very glamorous thing to be a part of.” Long, now an author and English professor at ARC, was a part of the Blue Man Group from 2001-2004. He performed with the
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It’s not a very glamorous thing to be a part of.
JASONSINCLAIRLONG BMG, as they’re known, in major cities like New York City, Chicago and Boston. “The first show you ever do is so crazy, you’re in the pitch black before the show starts, you’re in this tiny space up on stage,” Long said. “That first moment of the show of your very first show is terrifying as the audience swells and gets larger.” Long recalls a night when the BMG per-
formed at a venue during a power outage. “It was a super weird, quiet show that was done with emergency lights and no amplification. There was a lot of quiet restraint in the music, but it had such energy in it because we were trying to pull back so hard on it.” Long said the reality of being a performer for the Blue Man Group tends to be different than what people may expect. “We had people s--- themselves because they have to do the show when they’re sick,” Long said. “People running off the stage vomiting in trash cans and coming back to finish.” The Blue Man Group have their own share of groupies, according to Long, but they differ from the typical rock-and-roll variety. “The groupie thing is a weird word to put
SEE BLUE, PAGE 7
ARC football falls to Butte in first loss
BEAVERS ARE NO LONGER UNDEFEATED AFTER A MISTAKE-FILLED GAME SATURDAY By Kameron Schmid kameronschmid@gmail.com Despite outgaining their opponent by nearly 300 yards and a solid defensive performance, the American River College football team lost their first game of the season Saturday, falling to the visiting Butte College 31-28. ARC committed six turnovers in the game, four of which Butte was able to turn into 24 points. In fact, Butte’s only score that didn’t come off of an ARC turnover was a 95-yard kickoff return by Marvel Harris. ARC head coach Jon Osterhout was frank after the game, blaming the loss solely on the team’s mental mistakes.
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For gallery of photos from Saturday’s game, go to arcurrent.com “It was our lack of taking care of the football,” said Osterhout, who also indicated penalties as a reason for the loss. As well as turnovers, ARC committed 12 penalties for 115 yards lost. ARC’s last penalty of the game made sure they didn’t get a shot at a game winning drive. ARC defensive back Robert Sanders was flagged for
SEE FOOTBALL, PAGE 4
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News pages 2 & 3 Sports pages 4 & 5
Feature page 6 A&C pages 7 & 8
Emily K. Rabasto / rabastoe@gmail.com
After a tough win over Sierra College Nov. 1, head coach Jon Osterhout and the football team lost their first game to Butte, 31-28 on Saturday.
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Scene pages 9 & 10 Opinion page 11
HOOP DREAMS PAGE 9
@ARCurrent ARC student Alicia Szutowicz is training for the paralympics after losing her left leg to cancer.