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...individual was sitting at a computer terminal in Austin Hall. They located the individual and conducted a field interview. Mark Mohr, 49, of Springfield, was placed under arrest and was charged with trespassing.May 21: 11:28 p.m.: HUPD responded to a report of a suspicious individual in Adams House B. A field interview was conducted and James Ruma, 37, of Medford, was placed under arrest and charged with trespassing.May 22: 1:07 a.m.: Officers were dispatched to a report from an individual who had witnessed a robbery. Upon arrival, another individual approached the officer stating they were resting in their...
...Staff writer Christian B. Flow can be reached at cflow@fas.harvard.edu...
Last Wednesday, President George W. Bush announced that he would nominate Robert B. Zoellick, a Harvard Law School (HLS) and Kennedy School of Government (KSG) graduate, to be the World Bank’s 11th president, succeeding Paul Wolfowitz in the position. His nomination is subject to approval by the Bank’s Board of Governors, who are appointed to five-year terms by the Bank’s member countries. “Bob Zoellick has had a long and distinguished career in diplomacy and development economics,” said the President in a press conference last...
...abate so that lenders are kept in check and students are not swindled.In addition to the socio-economic barriers to going to college, international students are forced to navigate the jungle of student and work visas. Of particular concern to graduating international students has been the dearth of H1-B visas, which allow highly skilled workers to work in the U.S. The number of H1-Bs is capped at a dismally low 65,000, closing the door to thousands of capable and skillful immigrants—including American-educated students—who wish to contribute to the American economy...
...never occurred to the generals that Chaudhry would say no," says Ahsan. "So when he did, they had no plan B." What transpired instead was an increasingly ham-fisted attempt to contain the subsequent public outrage by cracking down on media coverage of the ongoing crisis. On Thursday, the Pakistan Media Regulatory Authority banned live talk shows. On Friday it banned any live coverage of the Chief Justice's rally the next day in Abbottabad. On Saturday authorities sent letters to cable companies telling them not to air programs that encourage an "anti-state attitude" or that contain "aspersions against...