Word: cantabrigians
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...says Erin Nettifee, Supervisor of Residential Computing. “It can be done but it takes time, so it’s not easy.” University Technology Security Officer Scott O. Bradner says that the PIN server is almost uncrackable. Even if an ingenious Cantabrigian were to break into the server, Harvard PINs are stored in a cryptographic hash and cannot be decrypted even by the system manager. And as for credit card numbers, one card issuer, Harvard University Employees Credit Union, guarantees that it stops all abnormal transactions for one card. There?...
...Nixon administration, stopped in Cambridge last night to answer questions about his book, “State of Denial,” the third in his investigative series on the Bush administration. The Harvard Book Store sponsored the sold-out event, held at First Parish Church, and the Cantabrigian crowd applauded Woodward’s critiques of the White House’s management of the Iraq war. Using previously undisclosed memoranda and an unprecedented access to Bush and high-ranking members of his administration, Woodward’s book describes how White House officials turned a deaf ear toward...
...fine officers of HUPD don’t do the trick, go to the mattresses and call the Cambridge police. Clearly, you’re dealing with more than the Harvard disciplinary infrastructure is equipped to handle. You’ll have some fun pretending to be a crotchety Cantabrigian, and even more fun hearing about your neighbors’ underage drinking citations through your paper-thin walls. Hey, they asked...
...scene not so uncommon these days. Just as the mutilated bodies of Toscanini’s employees send their own signals, preppy fashion at Harvard so frequently collides with the wearers’ bad behavior that I’ve taken seersucker and salmon, among other aspects of Cantabrigian wear, to be ostentatious declarations of “I am not yet mature!” or “Check back in two hours and I’ll be, like, totally smashed!” bellowed across our cobblestone streets.Perhaps there are no hard and fast rules about...
...Brown University; Edith M. Stokey, a former lecturer at the Kennedy School; Richard J. Zeckhauser, Plumpton professor of political economy at the Kennedy School; and David T. Ellwood, dean of the Kennedy School. Schelling, who graduated from Harvard with a PhD in economics in 1951, proved an enthusiastic former Cantabrigian. “I am incredibly happy to be back among such good people and good friends,” he said. “Since I received this award in October of last year, things haven’t slowed down at all. If not for that...