Word: lamont
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Dining halls slept. Lamont was locked. Traffic slowed, sometimes stood still. It was Thanksgiving. In quiet corners across campus, students cultured lab cells and honed hockey shots. A handful of students tried to save the cost of pricey airfares and catch up on neglected work, and got a glimpse of Harvard, moving at a snail’s pace. “Even just walking down Mass. Ave., there were hardly any cars,” said Katharine M. Chute ’11. “It was pretty quiet, and it was kind of nice...
...Hour Lamont Party, Part II: With extra funds, maybe the UC can get enough burritos this time...
...that, Larry. You have fierce competition. 5) President Ryan A. Petersen ’08. Running alongside Faust. They do kind of have matching hair. 6) Matthew L. Sundquist ’09. You may be running uncontested, but let’s see you run naked. 7) A Lamont Security Guard. Now let’s see what they’re hiding. 8) N. Gregory Mankiw...although on second thought, that seems like way more cost than benefit. Clothes on! 9) The True Love Revolution team, because we can only assume that you guys are getting...
...guard and walk in. In the Cabot Science Library, I like to use my library card from home. It’s blue. The Quad Library sometimes props the door open to get a nice breeze going. Admittedly, the non-ghetto libraries at Harvard have somewhat tighter security. At Lamont and Widener, you have to use a real and valid Harvard ID (presumably your own) to gain access. Fear not—if you don’t have your own ID, you can always just get swiped in as a visitor. No identification required, no questions asked...
...lack even a cursory knowledge of what is contained in the prodigious collections of Widener Library, and few could navigate the stacks without a map. In this generation of HOLLIS-dependent undergrads, the only romance associated with the library can be found in the smutty open dialogue of Bored@Lamont or late-night hookups in Widener. Thanks to the boom in digitized literature, students are increasingly able to forego the simple pleasures of the musty, dimly lit, and seemingly innumerable corridors of Widener: now the books are going online.With new developments in the digital revolution—an opaque term...