Terrance Harris, 40YOA, was arrested yesterday by members of the Patrol and Detective Divisions and charged with Sexual Battery and Burglary. Details of incident are as follows: The suspect unlawfully entered a residence and committed a sexual battery upon the victim. Luckily, the sexual battery was interrupted by several other…
Black faculty and staff at Oregon State University ask the question “It’s 2022. Do Black Lives Really Matter?” in a Zoom panel discussion to close out Black History Month (tonight, February 28th, at 6:30). The texts between Ahmaud Arbery's killers may be an indication.
Nearly two years after the murder of George Floyd and promises made across the nation to combat racism, Black faculty and staff at Oregon State University are holding a panel to discuss what has happened in the intervening time and what that means for the country. "It's 2022. Do Black Lives Really Matter?" will be held on Zoom and with a limited in-person audience from 6:30-8:30 p.m. on Monday, Feb. 28. "I think Black folks have always been under a microscope, always had to deal with this issue of racism," said event organizer Dwaine Plaza, one of the panelists and a sociology professor at OSU. "We understand that; we're carrying that burden. What we'd like to know now is that white folks can take more responsibility for the structural and institutional changes that need to happen because they actually control those." The event is co-presented by the Lonnie B. Harris Black Cultural Center, the President's Commission on the Status of Bla