IFAlFqb)as THURSDAY °717 wCut saxmlpOs - • , •->z-` drY - • t 'hicolik.4s4hom yire4bl! Rusk.. k Ho rp otit a el qpd More 1 , • ti 11' t ,:) 4unimmu", ' , 7 1,,,1 ...tulip hie I ligdo k y' l *os I Ads sell QUICK in the Daily Collegian Psst... Did you know that Penn State Students spend $1,24,351 on fast food every month? Flosiseheaedoosed !No 1 r11;11. •'' 5h0u1d.._:.,,,, he stay .: or hould Alleged Swarthmore harasser given option to return to campus By LEE UNDER Associated Press Writer SWARTHMORE Swarthmore College said yesterday it will readmit a student suspended last semester after he was accused by a woman student of harassing and intimidating her when she refused to date him. Now it's up to Ewart Yearwood to decide whether he wants to return to the Swarthmore campus in Delaware County. His lawyer said he'd make that decision by Monday. "He has a large number of schools he can go to," said attor ney Harvey Silverglate of Boston. He did not identify any of them. The charges against Yearwood, who was at Swarthmore on full scholarship, were brought last fall by Alexis Clinansmith, 19. They resulted in a disciplinary commit tee suspending him for the spring semester. He also agreed to undergo counseling. The college paid his tuition to attend Boston University. Clinansmith has filed a federal lawsuit seeking to block Year wood's return to Swarthmore, and seeks more than $lOO,OOO for emotional distress, according to her lawyer, Carolyn Short. She had brought criminal charges against Yearwood, but dropped them in March. Swarthmore Vice President Harry Gotwals said the school, a Quaker-run institution, "wanted to very fair and considerate of both students" in reaching the decision to readmit Yearwood for the fall semester. "We have a long tradition that emphasizes individual responsibil ity and rights, and we protect the emotional and physical security of both male and female students," he said. "When there is a dispute The staff of The Daily Collegian will be leaving for Labor Day weekend at 4:30 p.m., Friday, Sept. 2. Regular office hours will resume at 8 a.m., Tuesday, Sept. 6. The early ad deadline for the between two students we look at the case carefully and are com mitted to a solution that is fair and just to both." He said that Swarthmore "is committed to making life for Preliminary hearings A 37-year-old Pleasant Gap man was bound over for trial yesterday by District Justice Robert Shoff on charges of luwasstnenthMffichig and simple assault. James Decker allegedly struck Ruth Ann Decker in the face and shut a door on her hand, causing bleeding and swelling, according to court files. He also allegedly struck her son. e're Leav" on a Jet Plane. Sept. 6 issue is 4 p.m., Thursday, Sept. 1. dat,Coliegian Irs ail you need e go? Alexis secure on a campus we consider very secure." "He said he is prepared to maintain decorum, that he respects Alexis' rights, and will meet the college's expectations." Also appearing before Shoff yesterday, 39-year-old Bernard Love Jr., of Akron, Ohio, was ordered to stand trial on charges- of possession of con- trolled substances. Love and hieson arrived at in Boggs Township on Aug. 23. An narcotics agent then found 178 packets of marijuana in a suitcase, according to court files. THURSDAY; MGD Pitcher Night Continues 8-12 120 Wings DJ Lucky Rock a by Joan Confer
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