Natter 69: Practically names itself.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I just don't know if I'm working tomorrow, and if so, from where. Food this week is up to: untold Gatorade, an apple, and a piece of bread. Of course I've got postural hypotension. But I can't get this headache broken today. It's too soon.
Wave at the sleeping fam for me.
ita, pretty or not, I hope the sleep psych and the GP call produce some results. That all sounds unbelievably miserable.
Suzi, I hope something gives KCD a wakeup kick to the ass.
Downtown last night ended up being an actual riot -- people throwing rocks, tearing down streetlights, and tipping over a news van. At least one fire started, but it was put out before it got out of hand.
It's actually not that big a percentage of the students here, but on a campus of 44,000 students, even 5% is a whole ton of people.
Suzi, I'm so sorry. You are definitely a good mom.
ita, I'm sorry, too. I wish you could get some sleep, and eat, and everything.
Hil, I'm amazed at the mob mentality of the students. I like to think that wouldn't happen here under similar circumstances, but I can't say that it wouldn't.
This incident is making me think about how it is really drummed into us at my university to NOT call 911, but to call campus security. I always assumed that it was to reduce extraneous calls to 911, but now...
What I can't fathom is how he could have continued to work with those people.
I agree with this. The GA probably felt he followed proper procedures, but the Department of Education may wonder why the police weren't called.
If you see someone murdered, are you just supposed to use one of the on-campus phones to report it? You gotta wonder if someone using an illegal hot plate in the dorms would have gotten a more serious response from the campus police than child abuse.
If the campus police are sworn officers, they are real police, just working for a university rather than a city. I'd guess that a 911 call from campus would be routed to the campus police, and the process would slow response time. In the case of Penn State, at this point it appears that only the earlier complaint, which didn't include an actual sex act, was actually reported to the campus police, and it was fairly extensively investigated and referred to a state agency. This is not to say that campus police departments, like all police departments, aren't subject to cronyism and corruption.
eta: A university or small town force normally turns over a crime like murder to county or state investigators.
I did not know that it was referred to a state agency. So why wasn't it followed through at the state agency level?
Is this where the DA's disappearance comes in?
Here's an article on the '98 investigation: [link]
Hil, a college friend of mine is giving a seminar at PSU today - Michelle Lacey, who teaches at Tulane. Say hi if you go!
(Edit: In Math, natch. She's in Statistics.)