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The petition, which Say it Loud hopes to present to the Department for Education, comes after several recent scandals involving male students at UK universities.
Oxford Brookes Union Rugby Football Club was investigated in December over claims that players had collected pictures of female students posing nude, which were then rated by their team-mates.
One post, seen by MailOnline, purported to tell one of the women you ranked third .
Oxford Brookes University last year said it was investigating the claims as a matter of urgency while the rugby club said it was also looking into the allegations.
News of the alleged scandal emerged when a rugby club member posted a direct message on an Instagram page called @brookesconfessions, a gossip account for students to confess about what they have been getting up to.
From top left: activist, academic, and author Dr. Angela Davis; minister and human rights activist Malcolm X; composer, pianist, and band leader Duke Ellington; from bottom left: playwright and author Lorraine Hansberry; and literary critic, professor, historian, and filmmaker Dr. Henry Louis Gates, Jr.
Credit Wikimedia Commons, Lorraine Hansberry Literary Trust
Join KIOS in February for a celebration of America s Black History. All this month, on each Friday from 1pm to 3pm, KIOS brings you the stories and struggles of Black women and men who helped shape and breathe life into American culture and civil rights.
On Friday, February 5th at 1pm, we begin with
Part 2: Wednesday, February 10 at 10pm
Part 3: Wednesday, February 17 at 10pm
Part 4: Wednesday, February 24 at 10pm
Join journalist and athlete Ade Adepitan as he travels across Africa to discover how the continent is changing. With his very personal take on the continent, this four-part series asks the question: Just as the last 30 years transformed Asia, does the future belong to Africa?
Africa With Ade Adepitan, Copyright: BBC
Friday, February 5 at 11pm
Explore the complicated history of the American South and its music through the life of country star Charley Pride. Raised in segregated Mississippi, his journey shows the ways that artistic expression can triumph over prejudice and injustice.