Volume 68 Edition 8

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CURRENT The

Wednesday 03.08.17 American River College Sacramento, Calif. Vol. 68, Ed. 8

STUDENT HIT BY CAR FIRST WEEK AT ARC IN 1978

W.E.A.V.E HELPS DOMESTIC ABUSE VICTIMS SPEAK OUT By Solange Echeverria solangerecheverria@gmail.com

Photo by Luis Gael Jimenez/ Managing editor Tom Roberts holds up a ceramic boat he made at American River College. Roberts survived a traumatic brain injury in 1978. He has been enrolled at ARC since 1989.

Head trauma survivor makes positive impact By Cheyenne Drury cheyennemdrury@gmail.com A red Volkswagen van. That’s the color and model that he will never be able to get out of his head, during his weekly meeting at the Traumatic and Acquired Brain Injury Support group every Wednesday at American River College. Tom Roberts enrolled in ARC in the fall of 1978. Fresh out of the Navy and cultured from all of his travels, he planned on getting his Associate of Arts degree in business. This all changed when the driver of a red Volkswagen van was traveling on the same road just as the sun was setting. Roberts was riding his dirt bike home from college when he was hit by the man with the sun in his

Luis Gael Jimenez/ Managing editor

Traumatic and Acquired Brain Injury Support (TABIS) membes, left to right, Pearl Calhoun, Tod Winebarger and Tom Roberts laugh together in their weekly TABIS meeting. Roberts attends the group every week.

eyes. Most head trauma victims remember their accident and Roberts is no exception. For 14 days Roberts remained in a coma and for six months, he

said, “I just existed.” When he finally woke up Roberts didn’t know what had happened but he remembers that he was unable to speak.

For more ARC coverage, go to www.arcurrent.com

INDEX

2 News 4 3 Scene 5

Sports Feature

@ARCurrent

6 7

A&C Opinion

The fact that Roberts survived the accident is a miracle in itself, but what it possibly even more impressive is that he has been attending ARC since he re-enrolled in 1989. Roberts, “is a fixture here,” said Barb Westre, counselor for the Disabled Students Programs and Services program. The contrast between his life before and his life now is a stark one. Roberts grew up in Bogota, Columbia and lived there until he was about 10; he then moved to Miami, Florida where he attended a military academy. He followed school by enlisting in the Navy when he was 19 and served from 1974-1978. While he was in the Navy, Roberts worked on two aircraft carriers, the USSD Franklin Roosevelt and the USS Oriskany as a

Head trauma | Page 3

@ARCurrent

SPORTS PAGE 4

The Los Rios Community College District and Women Escaping Assault and Violent Environments have partnered together to bring a WEAVE Confidential Advocate to each of its campuses one day per week. WEAVE is Sacramento’s primary provider of violence and crisis prevention services, offering resources and support to victims of gender-based violence, which encompasses domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault and sex trafficking. On campus, American River College’s Student Health Center is the place for students to come and get support, information and referral from the WEAVE Confidential Advocate regarding the spectrum of gender violence. “Health starts with us having our basic needs met and goes on to include; feeling safe and secure, having a sense of belonging, feeling respected by others, and having the ability to respect ourselves,” said Michelle Arnott, ARC’s Health Center Director. Arnott added that access to resources, along with crisis response, education, and expertise is critical in providing support to those who report sexual assault or intimate partner violence.” The initial groundwork in providing this support was laid under Title IX, landmark federal legislation enacted in 1972 that prohibits sexual discrimination in schools. Over the years sexual discrimination has been expanded to include sexual violence and other forms of gender-based violence under Title IX and schools are also required to have policies and procedures in place to help students who are victims.According to information from the non-profit organization Know Your Title IX, 19 percent of college women will be sexually assaulted during their time in college and 84 percent of those assaults will occur within a student’s the first four semesters of enrollment. According to the website CampusSafety.com members of the LGBTQ community are also at risk with nearly half of all bisexual men and nearly four in ten gay men have experiences some type of sexual violence other than rape in their lifetimes; 46 percent of bisexual women and one in eight lesbian women experience

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From Africa to American, men’s basketball player Baidi Kamagate established himself at ARC.

W.E.A.V.E. | Page 2


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