A first-year graduate student died in an apparent suicide early yesterday afternoon after falling four stories from the Gordon Mckay Library in Pierce Hall on Oxford Street.
Hailei Ge, a Computer Science student from Beijing in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, died at 7:45 p.m. last night at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, said Patty Jacobs, director of media relations.
Ge was unconscious with critical head trauma when transported to the hospital by ambulance, said Harvard University Police Department spokesperson Peggy McNamara.
There were no witnesses to the fall itself, which occurred shortly after 2 p.m.
Joshua Cohen '98 said he was near Pierce Hall on his way to class with two other friends when they heard a crash.
Ge was lying on his side on the paved walkway in front of Pierce Hall, said Cohen, who said he went with this friends over to Ge.
"It didn't look like he was breathing. I elevated his head, and he coughed up a lot blood," Cohen said.
Cohen said he stayed and talked to Ge until ambulances arrived about 10 minutes later but that he did not respond and his eyes were closed.
"[He had] severe head trauma [and] had lost an awful lot of blood," Cohen said, adding that medics on the scene had difficulty intubating Ge because his jaw was broken and locked.
According to Albert Gold, associate dean of the Division of Engineering and Applied Sciences, a student from anoth- Officials who work in administrative offices within the building said that they called 911 when one of their employees--a Harvard student on the scene at the same time as Cohen--reported seeing a badly injured student on the ground in front of the building. The case will be investigated by both HUPD and Massachusetts state investigators, said Alex Huppe, University spokesperson. Those who had contact with Ge said they had no indication that he was having serious problems. "He talked with his advisor about a programming task that he thought was a good idea to do, and he was going off to do it, as far as people knew," said Paul C. Martin '51, dean of the division of applied sciences. "There is a group of students who knew him, but no one knew him very well because he had only been here two months. People working with him this morning had no suspicion that anything was in the offing," Martin added. H. T. Kung, McKay professor of electrical engineering and computer science, was Ge's adviser. Read more in News