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...Commencement day, for example, Officer Robert Cooper took a nine millimeter semiautomatic Glock pistol and two fully loaded magazines from a man outside the Au Bon Pain restaurant in Harvard Square. And last month, Detective Richard Mederos was involved in a high-speed chase and shootout with a New York man wanted for murder near the Medical School...

Author: By Andrew L. Wright, | Title: What's Going on at 29G? | 10/29/1993 | See Source »

...frivolity. He cleverly attacks a group's validity based on false claims about what makes that group a group. If one were to look only at Mansfield's remarks, the notion of civil rights for homosexuals would indeed sound laughable after all, why should a collection of irresponsible thespians, bon-mot formulators and civilization-haters demand legal protection because of an identity based on these very traits? They function usefully, Mansfield generously concedes, as society's sideshow freaks, but that's simply not a good enough reason to assure their civil rights...

Author: By David S. Kurnick, | Title: Civil Rights, Not Civilization | 10/25/1993 | See Source »

Establishment Au Bon Pain Bruegger's. C'est Bon David's The Greenhouse Cafe Physical Appearance The Ugly Duckling of cookies. Dark, dry, crusty, cracked, and hard. A baker's beauty. A very a attractive cookie--large, thick, and soft--with lots of healthy-sized chips. Nothing special. Thin, hard, few chips visible. "Wild topography." Chunky, muddy, soft like butter. The classic look. Dark chocolate chips in a small, round, firm cookie. Smell The cookie's scent is something of a turn-off. When in the Pain, go for eau de Sweet Cheese croissant instead. Nonexistent, really. Perfect...

Author: By Stephanie P. Wexler, | Title: Smart Cookies | 10/21/1993 | See Source »

...Bon soir," one student behind me told her friend as we waited for our thumbprints. "Thank you," the other responded. Then there was a pause...

Author: By Joanna M. Weiss, | Title: My Life As a Number | 10/15/1993 | See Source »

...know it. You've seen it. Lurking between Cambridge Trust and Au Bon Pain, all swathes of solid colors and square block fonts, the kiosk is a beacon to Harvard Square's newest arena of consumption, "The Shops at Harvard Yard." And while to most it may seem faintly amusing, worthy only of only a regretful shake of the head on the way to the Yard, this behemoth begs our attention...

Author: By Christopher Capozzola, | Title: Down with The Shops: A Manifesto | 10/8/1993 | See Source »

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