Harvard grad. student arraigned for murder
A 25-year-old Harvard University graduate student was arraigned yesterday morning in the stabbing death of an 18-year-old Cambridge man. Alexander Pring-Wilson pleaded innocent to the murder charge.
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A 25-year-old Harvard University graduate student was arraigned yesterday morning in the stabbing death of an 18-year-old Cambridge man. Alexander Pring-Wilson pleaded innocent to the murder charge.
Balmy weather and snow has kept skaters off Occom Pond for all but three days this season, but there may be relief in site for winter sports enthusiasts.
Contingent upon a review of final changes to Chi Heorot fraternity's constitution and new member program that will be turned in to the Office of Residential Life today, the fraternity will be removed from probation ahead of schedule next week.
(Editor's note: After a decade in which high school students across the country have increasingly turned to early decision when applying to college, national controversy has erupted over the benefits of binding November applications. This is the first article in a three part series examining the complicated issues surrounding early decision policies.)
When the bonfire is reduced to embers, many students are likely to hit the Greek scene this weekend. On campus, many students look forward to Homecoming for the abundance of lively parties as much as they anticipate the traditional rally-round-the-bonfire festivities.
Professor Thomas Spencer's first teaching job at Dartmouth College was instructing sophomores in Chemistry 51. He describes one of his students as an "obviously very bright, extremely energetic and enthusiastic" young man.
The Organizational Adjudication Committee, born out of the Student Life Initiative, meets today for the first time.
The Sept. 11 hijackings forced officials at train stations, bus stations and airports nationwide to implement stricter security procedures and to assure the traveling public that trains, buses and airplanes are safe.
A resolve to continue to discuss and debate the direction of policy decisions amidst a new atmosphere of unity and bipartisanship in Washington emerged from the annual gathering of the Upper Valley Democrats and Hanover Democratic Committee in the Campion Barn in Etna Friday night. Candidates spoke of the difficulty of campaigning during a time when many of their constituencies are still grappling with the emotional residue of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
Before the ground freezes next winter, Dean of Residential Life Martin Redman hopes "visible signs [of progress] such as a hole in the ground" will be made on the construction of the new Tuck Mall dormitory.
Ali Ahmad Sai'd, a critically acclaimed poet and political activist whose work has been at the forefront of the Arab artistic world since the 1960s, will be coming to the College this spring as a Montgomery Fellow. The poet, who is known creatively as Adonis, will visit the college from May 1 to May 18th.
At a fireside chat attended by less than a dozen students at the Top of the Hop last night, Dean of the College James Larimore and College President James Wright discussed important issue pertaining to the community.
The faces are changing, and changing rapidly, in the galleries showcasing portraits of Ivy League presidents. The 1990s saw the institution of the college presidency begin to evolve and change.