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In briefCollege president dies during graduationBy Compiled from Times wires© St. Petersburg Times published May 12, 2003 MACHIAS, Maine - The president of a small university died of an apparent heart attack Saturday in the midst of the school's commencement activities, a university official said. John H. Joseph, president of the University of Maine at Machias, collapsed shortly before the graduation ceremony, said John Diamond of the University of Maine system. Joseph, 60, had been scheduled to preside over the graduation of 135 students. Wickham Skinner, a University of Maine system trustee, took his place and told the audience that Joseph had collapsed, Diamond said. Officials at the school of about 1,000 students learned after the ceremony that Joseph had died. Joseph had been president of the Machias campus since July 2000. Climber amputee releasedGRAND JUNCTION, Colo. - The climber who amputated his arm after being pinned by a boulder was released from the hospital Saturday. Aron Ralston, 27, was in good spirits as he left St. Mary's Hospital with his parents, said Paul Poister, a spokesman for the family. Shooting suspect called a graduate with a grudgeCLEVELAND - The man accused of a shooting rampage at a Cleveland university had military training with the Indian army and a grudge against an employee, authorities said Saturday. Biswanath Halder, 62, armed with two handguns, is accused of killing one person and wounding two others while he held police at bay for seven hours Friday. Halder wore a bulletproof vest and a wig glued on "a kind of World War II Army helmet" as he walked the halls of Case Western Reserve University's Peter B. Lewis Building and fired hundreds of rounds, police Chief Edward Lohn said. Norman Wallace, a 30-year-old graduate student, was killed. The two injured people - a 32-year-old man shot in the buttocks and a 46-year-old woman shot in her collar bone - were released from the hospital Saturday, authorities said. Halder, who suffered a gunshot wound to the shoulder, was released into police custody Saturday, a hospital spokeswoman said. Halder, who graduated from Case Western in 1999 with a master's degree in business administration, had sued a university computer lab employee who was in the building but escaped during the standoff, university president Edward Hundert said. Mental health agency seeks Klingon interpreterPORTLAND, Ore. - Position Available: Interpreter, must be fluent in Klingon. The language created for the Star Trek TV series and movies is one of about 55 needed by the office that treats mental health patients in Multnomah County. "We have to provide information in all the languages our clients speak," said Jerry Jelusich, a procurement specialist for the county Department of Human Services, which serves about 60,000 mental health clients. Although created for works of fiction, Klingon has a consistent grammar, syntax and vocabulary. And now Multnomah County research has found that many people - and not just fans - consider it a complete language. Mother charged with murder in deaths of sonsNEW CHAPEL HILL, Texas - A woman was charged with capital murder in the deaths of two of her sons Saturday after calling 911 and telling a dispatcher, "I've just killed my boys." When deputies arrived at the home of Deanna Laney shortly before 1 a.m., the boys, ages 6 and 8, were in their underwear in the front yard with large rocks on top of them. Her 14-month-old son was found alive but bleeding in his crib with a pillow over his face and massive head injuries. Laney, 38, was jailed on charges of capital murder and aggravated assault. Bail was set at $3-million. © 2006 • All Rights Reserved • St. Petersburg Times
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