Judge rules against city officials in suit over hiring ordinance
Superior Court Judge Stephen Fortunato ruled in favor of local advocacy groups Friday when he ordered the city to comply with the First Source ordinance within 14 days.
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Superior Court Judge Stephen Fortunato ruled in favor of local advocacy groups Friday when he ordered the city to comply with the First Source ordinance within 14 days.
In a Herald poll conducted at the beginning of the semester, almost 75 percent of students claimed to like or love the city of Providence, compared to just 2.3 percent who said they hate it.
The University of Chicago's Board of Trustees will act in a special meeting today regarding the election of Provost Robert Zimmer as the 13th president of the university, according to a campus-wide e-mail ...
Having presented its recommendations to Vice President for Campus Life and Student Services David Greene on Tuesday, the Ad Hoc Committee to Review Social Events Policy and Procedure will have a final ...
Steps taken by the city of Providence to enact First Source, an ordinance meant to find jobs for unemployed residents, have been insufficient, according to local advocacy groups now suing the city for ...
Over 50 members of the College Hill community were present Wednesday night at Brown Hillel for a presentation on the University's Institutional Master Plan, which will be submitted to the City Council ...
In addition to being one of the most popular concentrations offered at the University, the International Relations Program is also arguably the broadest. Its four concentration tracks include courses ...
About 35 percent of undergraduate students chose "Don't Know/No Answer" when asked in a recent Herald poll if they approved of the Undergraduate Council of Students. This percentage of null responses ...
Middletown
Final candidates to replace Andries van Dam, the University's first-ever vice president for research and a professor of computer science, should be determined by the end of the month or early March. A ...
Brown alums are known for their undying dedication to the University, serving as members of the Corporation, fundraisers for the Annual Fund and Campaign for Academic Enrichment, recruiters for potential ...
Jennifer Lawless took out two loans totaling $25,100 in the last quarter of 2005, according to a report filed with the Federal Election Commission Jan. 31.
Officer Jay Ducharme, who began serving in September 2004 as a security officer in the Department of Public Safety, died suddenly Wednesday morning.
The Department of Public Safety's move to arm its 33-member police force last month appears to have gone smoothly, with little concern - or reaction whatsoever - from the College Hill community. This ...
Four architects presented their initial plans for the University's biggest upcoming capital projects and answered questions from College Hill residents at a meeting Thursday evening in the Vartan Gregorian ...
Commercial property owners on College Hill will officially present their petition to establish a Thayer Street Management District and a district management authority at a public hearing held by the City ...
Bearing signs such as "Nerds on strike" and "Honk if you support labor," New York University graduate assistants and their supporters have spent the last week striking against the university's refusal ...
About 20 members of the Brown College Republicans and Brown Democrats gathered on the steps of Faunce House Tuesday night at 9:45 p.m. to take part in a candlelight vigil honoring "all people who have ...
Though neither has committed to voting for or against Supreme Court nominee Judge Samuel Alito, senators Lincoln Chafee '75, R-R.I., and Jack Reed, D-R.I., have both expressed concerns about his 15-year ...
South Asians in the United States have to transcend their identities as members of two vastly different and often clashing cultures, former Wall Street Journal correspondent Asra Nomani said during a ...