Word: rodriguez
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...Lealani Rodriguez '96 chose to leave Winthrop House last year for the newly-christened Pforzheimer House. "I didn't get to know a lot of people in Winthrop...I just didn't feel like part of the house. Pforzheimer has a lot of house activities and speakers that interest me. It has more of a house life than Winthrop ever did." Rodriguez and her rooming group had originally wanted to live in the Quad, and the move allowed them to rejoin once-distant friends...
...sure he was in the right place. Again he fatally shot the receptionist -- Leanne Nichols, 38 -- and again he kept on shooting. It was only when a security guard returned fire that the rifleman dropped his bag and fled. Yet even in retreat, he kept his composure. Says Angel Rodriguez, who witnessed the shooter's escape: "He was completely calm and took his time. He kept the gun low on his hip and ran backwards, firing at least five shots. He was trying to scare people, and it worked...
...have friends at other colleges and universities, and [compared to them] the Christian groups at Harvard are really strong and growing," says Ivy A. Ku '98, a member of the Asian-American Bible Study.CrimsonRebecca L. BennettNATE S. BECKER '98, GREGORY Y. FUNG '95 and JENNIFER RODRIGUEZ '96 at a Christian Fellowship Bible study yesterday...
...nearly a year, the Rodriguez brothers have been trying to cut a deal with the Colombian government in exchange for slap-on-the-wrist punishment. For just as long, impatient drug fighters in Washington have been pressing Bogota to make the narcobosses pay a stiff penalty for their crimes. When Ernesto Samper Pizano was elected President nearly five months ago, the Clinton Administration thought it had assurances that the Rodriguez brothers would not get the deal they wanted...
Such generalized responses immediately raised questions of exactly how onerous such a surrender might be. The drug lords were optimistic. Samper's statement, said a spokesman for Rodriguez, "is the answer we've been waiting for." U.S. officials, however, preferred to think otherwise. Assistant Secretary of State Robert Gelbard said that Bogota had previously "told us their strong preference is to capture them rather than to go for the kind of surrender program the previous government was so enthusiastic about." If a deal was struck, he said, U.S. ambassador to Colombia Myles Frechette "doesn't believe they will be lenient...