Word: lamont
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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Other works of art with less potential to irritate do exist on a permanent basis at Harvard. The best-known example is the Henry Moore sculpture, “Four Piece Reclining Figure,” which lounges permanently across from the entrance to Lamont Library. The work, not created to fit this specific site but intended by the artist to be displayed outdoors, was donated to the University in 1981. A less prominent but equally permanent work of public art is displayed on the façade of the main office of the OFA itself on Mt. Auburn...
...doors to Lamont is labeled “Emergency Exit” on the inside. This door, which does not trigger an alarm, is not reserved for any special daytime emergencies, but rather for use in the event that a student hidden in a fifth-floor reading room does not make it out before Lamont shuts down at 12:45 a.m. “When we close the library, all of the doors except that one lock from the inside also,” explains Joe Rindfleisch, access services assistant and evening supervisor at Lamont. “It?...
...anyone really ever been locked inside? Before the library closes, staff members ring piercing bells warning students of their imminent expulsion for the evening. “Those horrific bells could wake up anyone,” says Lamont employee Natalie S. Ignacio ’03. “I would think that we would come across anyone who managed to sleep through them and wake them up while we close down the library...
...rational need for a good night’s sleep, fear not. Even the soundest sleeper, undisturbed by the closing bells and friendly nudges, can sneak out of an unlocked door remaining anonymous—provided you can get away before the cops responding to the alarms get to Lamont...
According to Hanson, the Lamont Professor of Divinity, the dog “lost his head” in the midst of the May Day celebration in the MAC quad yesterday morning...