Dave Matthews fan, LeVeen '68 knew how to have fun
(Editor's note: This is the seventh in a series of articles profiling the Dartmouth victims of the Sept. 11 tragedy)
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(Editor's note: This is the seventh in a series of articles profiling the Dartmouth victims of the Sept. 11 tragedy)
Name any random theme off the top of your head and you can most likely find it in the twisted semi-surreal romantic comedy "Town and Country."
123 lbs. (typical), boyfriends (um, not so much), calories undecided (are we subtracting the ones lost while on the treadmill?), alcohol units 2 (less than the average Dartmouth student on a Saturday night), no. of times checked blitz today 9,000, no. of good blitzes received 12 (v.g.), no. of movies that I've seen recently that deserve rave reviews 1 (read on for detail).
George W. Bush's idea of giving federal subsidies to faith-based organizations probably would not affect Dartmouth, but that doesn't mean that campus religious leaders aren't analyzing the plan and forming their initial impressions.
Two men were several hundred feet above the ground, scaling a vertical peak in Yosemite National Park.
Prosecutors still haven't said, and may not even know, what linked the Half and Suzanne Zantop to their accused killers.
Yesterday's report that a local fitness club could be a link between the Zantops and the two accused teenagers may seem to be an interesting theory, but it might not be such a viable connection, according to a lawyer for the club.
Chelsea Constable Carol Olsen was in Connecticut when she heard that two teenagers from her town, Robert Tulloch and James Parker, were wanted for the Zantop murders.
Although a detailed illustration of his older best friend has begun to emerge, insight into what James "Jimmy" Parker was like before news spread of the teenagers' murder charges has been far more difficult to discern.
For Chelsea, Vt., resident Robert Childs, news that teenagers Robert Tulloch and James Parker were wanted for murder brought back memories of another murder that hit even closer to home.
A picture of a motivated but stubborn young man is emerging from Chelsea, Vt. as the local and national communities grapple with many yet unresolved questions about the alleged teenage murderers.
Robert Tulloch, 17, will return to New Hampshire this afternoon for his arraignment on first-degree murder charges, but James Parker, 16, will not be in back in the state for at least another week, the state Attorney General's Office said yesterday.
James Parker and his attorney opted to push back his return to New Hampshire during his extradition hearing, which was held today at the courthouse at 3:30 p.m., according to Henry County Detective Edward Manning.
When Diane Tulloch answered her telephone yesterday afternoon, she would not say how she felt since learning that her son, Robert, 17, had finally been found, but the past few days left her noticeably shaken.
Robert Tulloch, 17, will return to New Hampshire tomorrow afternoon for his arraignment on murder charges, but James Parker, 16, will not be in back in the state for at least another week, the state Attorney General's Office said today.
Since authorities announced that they had issued an arrest warrant for Robert Tulloch, 17, and James Parker, 16, most reports have depicted them as good students with senses of humor. No one in early reports pegged Tulloch as violent -- and certainly not capable of murder.
3:23 p.m.: When Diane Tulloch answered her telephone this afternoon, she would not say how she has felt since learning that her son, Robert, 17, had finally been found, but the past few days have left her noticeably shaken.
Since authorities announced that they had issued an arrest warrant for Robert Tulloch, 17, and James Parker, 16, most reports have depicted them as good students with senses of humor. No one in early reports pegged Tulloch as violent -- and certainly not capable of murder.
Within a month, New Hampshire's House of Representatives will vote for the second time in two years on a bill that would repeal the state's capital punishment law.
Friday afternoon's plea for new clues about the Zantop murder case does not mean the investigation is over, according to Jack Levin, director of the Brudnick Center on Violence at Northeastern University.