Letter: Campus Y response to Delaney Robinson case
Campus Y response to Delaney Robinson
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Campus Y response to Delaney Robinson
Many may wonder, “What exactly is the problem with stereotypes?”
At the Faculty Athletics Committee meeting on Thursday, members discussed the Atlantic Coast Conference’s recent decision to move championships out of North Carolina due to House Bill 2. Games on college campuses will still be held.
CORRECTION: A previous version of this story misstated Damien Washington's class year. Washington graduated in 2016 and is no longer on the football team. The story has been updated to reflect that change. The Daily Tar Heel apologizes for the error.
Siren gathers students on September 14 in Carroll Hall to discuss potential ideas to address the university in response to lack of protection against sexual assault victims.
TO THE EDITOR:
The Siren opened up its weekly meeting to all students Wednesday night to discuss a response to the UNC administration in light of Delaney Robinson’s sexual assault case.
I am disappointed and angry. My anger and disappointment hit me for many reasons and in different ways. The most shocking reason being that the sexual assault claim issued by Delaney Robinson was grossly mishandled. I live on campus. I love everything about UNC – from my professors and classes to Sup Dogs and all-nighters in the Undergraduate Library. What’s terrifying is that my roommates, my friends and I could easily find ourselves in Delaney’s shoes.
One day after sophomore Delaney Robinson and her lawyer announced their intent to pursue self-sworn misdemeanor charges against UNC football player Allen Artis, he turned himself in.
When I was about 5 years old, I got stung on the hand by a bee. After that, I would run away crying from anything with black and yellow stripes, whether it was an actual insect or a zebra I colored incorrectly during kindergarten.
On Valentine’s Day 2016, current sophomore Delaney Robinson said she survived a sexual assault in Ram Village.
UPDATE Sept. 14 12:14 p.m.: According to a press release by the Orange County Sheriff's Office, Allen Artis turned himself in today. He was released by the magistrate on a $5000 unsecured bond. He will appear in Orange County District Court on Sept. 15 at 9:00 a.m.
Update (Monday 9:37 p.m.): Kami Mueller, a spokesperson for the North Carolina Republican Party, responded to the NCAA's decision on behalf of her party.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention awarded UNC’s Injury Prevention Center a four-year, $1.79 million grant to evaluate the effectiveness of a rape education prevention program called Wise Guys: the Next Level.
Over the last five days, I've been at the forefront of a "Harambe" renaissance in The Daily Tar Heel office. My work computer's background is a "Wheel of Fortune" board that partially spells out a Harambe meme. I petitioned to have the front-page quote on Tuesday be Nicki Minaj's freestyle name-checking everyone's favorite slain gorilla.
Plans to provide free Uber rides for UNC students have officially stalled.
Nearly four years after UNC came under fire for mishandling sexual assault cases and two years after the University responded with a new reporting policy, UNC officials say conversations about sexual assault are more open — and the numbers appear to support that.
Common public health measures include promoting hand washing, delivering vaccines and distributing condoms to prevent the spread of STDs.
Ninety-six percent of the crimes 16- and 17-year-olds commit in North Carolina are non-violent. Eighty percent of those crimes are misdemeanors. Yet 100 percent of these teenagers are tried as adults.
Ninety percent of children who are sexually abused know their abuser personally.