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Word: cantabrigian (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...been following his career since he was treasurer of the United States,” Cantabrigian Silas Howland ’08 said, “and I even used to collect his dollar bills. He has magical eyes...

Author: By Lauren A.E. Schuker, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Summers Welcomes First-Years to Harvard | 9/13/2004 | See Source »

...claws still waving—from an open tank and bag it for you to go. “This is the place to come for the [East] Asian ingredients you can’t get anywhere else,” says Akemi Yanada, a Cantabrigian who has shopped here since moving from Japan five years ago. She personally recommends their extensive noodle collection, which takes up more than one long supermarket aisle. If you’re too timid to undertake a full meal, the frozen food section has a large selection of hors...

Author: By Diana E. Garvin, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: To Market, To Market | 4/29/2004 | See Source »

...claws still waving—from an open tank and bag it for you to go. “This is the place to come for the [East] Asian ingredients you can’t get anywhere else,” says Akemi Yanada, a Cantabrigian who has shopped here since moving from Japan five years ago. She personally recommends their extensive noodle collection, which takes up more than one long supermarket aisle. If you’re too timid to undertake a full meal, the frozen food section has a large selection of hors...

Author: By Diana E. Garvin, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: To Market, To Market | 4/28/2004 | See Source »

...start using GPS systems to track stolen bicycles. Apparently, the biggest problem is the proliferation of gangs of professional bicycle thieves, who roam the city at night with trucks and load up dozens of pilfered bikes at a time. Except for the whole free love/drug use thing, our Cantabrigian community might be Amsterdam’s kid sibling: Cambridge is the bike theft capital of Massachusetts, and the greater Boston area ranks sixth nationally among the worst cities for bicycle larceny. So I guess I had it coming...

Author: By Christopher W. Snyder, WRIT SMALL | Title: The Bicycle Thief | 4/9/2004 | See Source »

...winter draws to a close, one more of Harvard Square’s beloved blossoms has been killed by frost, never to unfurl its tender petals again. But this frost is not the same frost that snaps at the ears of red-cheeked students; it is rather an icy Cantabrigian apathy that has gnawed upon many of the Square’s most august institutions. The dead flower is the Grolier Poetry Book Shop...

Author: By The Crimson Staff, | Title: The Demise of Poetry | 3/18/2004 | See Source »

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