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Word: keycard (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...beautiful long hair that might have been our connection to the outside world became annoying, so with short hair and apparently empty conscience we have boarded the windows and plan to spend our days eating grapes, playing squash, writing Core papers and waging the good fight for universal keycard access...

Author: By Abigail R. Branch, | Title: Stuck in the Tower | 2/25/1998 | See Source »

While students are literally left out in the cold, Mather co-Master Leigh G. Hafrey '73 says the issue of keycard access has not been addressed recently by the Committee on House Life (COHL...

Author: By Scott A. Resnick, CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS | Title: Keycard Access Concerns Masters | 2/9/1998 | See Source »

...council's three standing committees, SAC advocates on behalf of the student body to the administration. Recent SAC initiatives have included universal keycard access, core reform and revitalizing Loker Commons. SAC also elects delegates to student-faculty standing committees...

Author: By Neeraj K. Gupta, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: U.C. Elects New Student Affairs Committee Chair | 2/4/1998 | See Source »

...Universal keycard access. We have been unsuccessful in the past on this issue, I believe, because we have too strongly emphasized the safety factor. We have done this partially because we have had to; opponents claim that keycard access will be less safe because it will increase the traffic in any given dorm. We have had no choice but to respond with the assertion that increased keycard access will in fact increase safety because students will be more leery of piggy-backers...

Author: By Beth A. Stewart, | Title: Less Politics, More Progress for the U.C. | 2/3/1998 | See Source »

...truth, I do think this latter claim is more accurate. But even assuming the safety effects cancel out, there are still great reasons for keycard access. It would increase a sense of campus-wide community. Which upperclass student does not recall with great fondness the days of being a first-year, popping in to visit friends and vice versa? The result of restricted access is the relegation of socialization to electronically pre-arranged encounters. Moreover, it is simply more convenient. We are afraid to say this because we think it makes us seem selfish or reckless, but we shouldn...

Author: By Beth A. Stewart, | Title: Less Politics, More Progress for the U.C. | 2/3/1998 | See Source »

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