A group of freshmen in Pennypacker Hall began raising money this week to help cover the fine the Exeter, N.H. District Court will probably impose on Thomas Arnold '80, one of many Harvard undergraduates arrested for criminal trespassing at the site of the Seabrook, N.H. nuclear power plant on May 1.
Turner Graybill, a proctor in Pennypacker said yesterday the "typical sentence" for being convicted of criminal trespass in this case has been a fine of $100 and 15 days in jail, and he did not expect Arnold's sentence to be any different.
"There are 100 people in Pennypacker, and if we all chip in a dollar or so, it might lighten his burden," Graybill said.
Arnold chose not to post bail, so the ten days he has already spent in prison will probably be credited to his final sentence, Graybill said.
Arnold and two other Harvard students, Jeffrey Ferris '77 and Geoffrey Wisner '80 are the only undergraduates who have refused to post the $100 bail.
Of the 1414 demonstrators New Hampshire state police arrested at the Seabrook site, nearly half were released after posting bail.
Read more in News
Three Groups Hold Elections of OfficersRecommended Articles
-
Three Undergrads Remain in Prison, Awaiting Decision on Clamshell PetitionMANCHESTER, N.H.--Three Harvard undergraduates remained in custody in the Manchester, N.H. armory yesterday for their participation in the two-day occupation
-
18 Arrested at Seabrook Site As Construction Begins AgainEighteen anti-nuclear protesters, including two Sisters of Mercy and one demonstrator in a wheel chair, were arrested yesterday at the
-
Homeless Enter Church Near HousesThe University Lutheran Church opened its doors to the homeless of Harvard Square. Last night with the approval of Cambridge
-
H-Y-P Debate Deadlocks on Treaty TopicThree rounds of argumentation produced a three-way tie last night in the annual Harvard-Yale-Princeton Debates, as the decisions went to
-
Peter D. SagalSagal, now the host of NPR’s popular news game show, “Wait Wait...Don’t Tell Me,” never intended to be a radio host. But, after spending a decade writing plays, scripts, and screenplays, and taking odd jobs, Sagal landed at the helm of the show.
-
Noah J. Harrison