STUDENT IS POTENTIAL SUSPECT
A Dartmouth junior says that the police consider him a "prime suspect" but that he is completely innocent of all allegations and was not in any way involved in the Saturday afternoon murders of Susanne and Half Zantop.
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A Dartmouth junior says that the police consider him a "prime suspect" but that he is completely innocent of all allegations and was not in any way involved in the Saturday afternoon murders of Susanne and Half Zantop.
Bob McCollum took time out yesterday from his jam-packed interview schedule, which started at 5 a.m. with a camera crew knocking on his door, to pay a tribute to his slain friends.
The state police still refuse to release many details in the murders of Susanne and Half Zantop, and they appear no closer to finding a perpetrator.
The police remained tight-lipped yesterday as they continued their investigation into the murders of professors Susanne and Half Zantop -- still combing the crime scene while also examining a dormitory basement on the Dartmouth campus.
News of the murders of two Dartmouth professors sent shock waves through the College and the local community as law enforcement officials continued their investigation, releasing few details about the tragedy.
Autopsies performed today by the state's chief medical examiner on the bodies of Dartmouth professors Susanne and Half Zantop confirmed homicide as the cause of death, New Hampshire Attorney General Philip McLaughlin announced this afternoon.
Two professors are confirmed dead, and police are investigating the possible double murder late this afternoon at 115 Trescott Road in Etna, just miles from the campus, according to Dean of the Faculty Ed Berger.
Except for a few missing W's, President George W. Bush's inauguration and move into 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue went smoothly.
(Editor's note: This is the first in a five-part series this week that examines President-elect George W. Bush's policy proposals.)
With Linda Chavez pulling her own nomination for Labor Secretary after less than a week of protests from Democrats and civil rights groups, Democrats now turn their attention to another of Bush's Cabinet picks -- Attorney General nominee John Ashcroft.
With President-elect George W. Bush coming into office under a wave of calls for bipartisanship, one Dartmouth alumnus will likely play a key role in how Congress handles the next year's agenda, according to a major Capitol Hill newspaper.
Vocal New York Republican Gov. George Pataki last week unleashed what may be an unnerving harbinger for President-Elect George W. Bush and his mantra of a bipartisanship for the new millennium in America.
William H. King, Jr. '63 said he was "scared to death" as he came up over the hill from White River Junction, Vt. to view Baker Tower rising in the distance for the first time in the fall of 1959. So, if you're a little nervous don't worry -- you might just end up the Chairman of the Board of Trustees of Dartmouth College.
Before the Whitewater investigation thrust the role of the Independent Counsel into the spotlight of American politics, another, perhaps more sordid, scandal that began in the fall of 1986 scarred the administration of a president some compared in charisma to John F. Kennedy.
Despite -- or perhaps because of -- Eminem's recent encounters with the law, "The Marshall Mathers LP" stayed on top of the Billboard Top 200 charts for the fifth straight week, edging out Britney Spears "Oops! I Did It Again."
Melanie Schechter '02 never pictured herself leading the governing body of the College's Greek system.
Texas A&M University President Ray Bowen announced last week that the school's annual bonfire will go on a two-year hiatus to allow experts, admininstrators and students to reevaluate the structure's safety.
She has chaired the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission. She was the first African-American woman to receive a doctorate from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She was inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame. She is the president of a major research institution.
Many actors wait tables, before they get their big break, to supplement the often meager earnings of the theater. But how many movie stars can say they waited tables at the Hanover Inn?
Forget about the changes to the Greek system and all-freshman housing for the weekend because, if you think about it, what are you going to remember in five years? ten years? fifty years?