23rd January
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Photo Diary app wins York prize

Friday, 20th January 2012

A group of York students has won the opportunity to have their very own I-phone application developed after winning The App Challenge final, held at the Ron Cooke Hub on Wednesday, January 18.

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Students warned about loans scam

Thursday, 19th January 2012

YUSU Welfare officer Bob Hughes has warned students to be vigilant after a student loans phishing scam has been revealed.

Her Most Gracious Majesty

Queen Comes to York

Wednesday, 18th January 2012

Her Majesty the Queen will be visiting York on Maundy Thursday, 5th April, as part of the 800th anniversary of York’s Charter for the traditional “Royal Maundy” ceremony.

Berrick Saul

Flooding Triggers Network Outage On Eve Of Exams

Saturday, 14th January 2012

A flood caused by a heating system “failure” forced the university IT services to shut down many essential systems on Sunday night, causing problems for many students on the eve of their exams and assignment due-dates.

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Growing concerns over campus security

Central Hall
Unwanted people lurking on campus
Wednesday, 17th March 2010
University of York students should be more aware of theft on campus than ever before. With an apparent rise in thefts, particularly of laptops, students are warned to safeguard their belongings at all times.

A theft from Vanbrugh College accommodation last Friday was the most recent in the trend, with a student having his window forced and his wallet and laptop stolen. Derwent College has also fallen victim to a series of incidents, involving the attempted burglary of a first-floor room in one block where the window was smashed, and the actual theft of a laptop from another.

These incidents have shaken students’ confidence in the security of their rooms on campus, and their belief in campus as a safe place. An apparent increase in bike thefts in and around Derwent College has also raised concerns.

Laptop theft from unattended desks in the library has also been reported. A second-year Law student recently left his work on a desk while he went to the ground floor to check out some books, returning to find his laptop gone. While the University has emphasised this was a fairly isolated incident, it has raised issues over students’ working environments.

A theft from a room in the Department of Music has also been reported. Through examination of CCTV footage, a man has been arrested and charged with the offence, although the Press Office did not specify whether the thief was a student or an outside person. An idea to assess the most vulnerable areas on campus has also been suggested, involving a close examination of the individual colleges.

Potentially in light of these well-publicised events, Jon-Mark Buchanan, the new Police Chief Constable for the University of York, is keen to assure students of their safety and address any issues they might have. He wants to set up a drop-in service for students to ask questions on an informal one-to-one basis about security.

Yet, despite reports to the contrary, laptop theft on campus hasn’t seemed to rise dramatically over the last few months. According to the University Press Officer, David Garner, “since 1st January, there have been five laptops stolen from ground floor student accommodation” – a figure that isn’t unusually high, especially given rumours of twenty laptops stolen over the last two months. Garner told the yorker that, "in three cases entry was gained by forcing the windows, though in one instance the student had previously removed window restrictors thus allowing full access to the room. In the remaining two cases, students had left their windows open”.

It cannot be said that the portering cuts have affected the status of theft on campus, except that one Derwent student had to walk all the way to Vanbrugh to find a porter to report his broken window.

Garner offered his advice to students: "We would urge students to make sure their rooms are secure when they are unoccupied” and emphasised that “leaving valuable personal items unattended in public areas" should be avoided at all costs.

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#1 Greg Ebdon
Wed, 17th Mar 2010 2:18am

You know what might help this lot? Double glazing. Some fancy new colleges (naming no names) have it, but down here in Halifax we're still on single glazed windows with flimsy aluminium frames. Apart from making the rooms colder than a witch's tit, they're far easier to smash or force than fitted, double-glazed windows with sealed plastic surrounds and keyed latches would be.

#2 Anonymous
Wed, 17th Mar 2010 10:00am

There was also a theft from Langwith I think on Saturday night, around the time of the elections (8ish) where a guy had his laptop stolen, and a whole other host of stuff.

#3 Anonymous
Thu, 18th Mar 2010 5:28pm

The phrase "colder than a witch's tit" is pure gold.

#4 Cieran Douglass
Thu, 18th Mar 2010 6:19pm

Frankly you could break these windows by leaning on them. Not to mention the energy costs of having windows which are essentially glorified cellophane. Eugh, I hate the ground floor...

#5 Anonymous
Fri, 19th Mar 2010 12:17pm

Is there any info needed about the Langwith incident? On elections night I saw some dodgy people loitering... I don't think they were students. One tried to sneak into the courtyard but a Door Safe guy made him leave and then messaged his people. Might be relevant?

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