Word: lock
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...foot was killing him--and started talking about going back to Canada, leaving Cambridge forever. This particular damn fool came to him with an offer to buy the shop. As Gordon told it, and I hope it wasn't true, this guy offered to buy out the shop, lock and stock--I don't think Gordon owned a barrel--for $600. Then, with the benefit of the Grolier's location, and Gordon's good will, he proposed to open Harvard Square's first porno book store. Gordon threw the damn fool out, God bless him, and went on running...
Harvard has spent well over $150.000 this year just adding lighting to many areas considered "target" places for crime and in replacing or adding locks to many doors. All Mather House entry ways are now locked, as are all of the doors to the Yard dorms. Mather residents must use a key to operate the elevator in the high rise section. However, Masters and students have resisted any moves to lock entries in many of the other Houses. Hall says that he hopes that all of the Houses will eventually follow suit, but that...
...that it constantly reminds residents that they should be "on the lookout" for crime. More and more students admit to feeling "jittery" about the thefts and assaults which have been taking place around them and as a result are far more willing to question strangers and take care to lock doors, cars and bikes. White's assailants were captured even before police knew that White had been robbed because Randy Nixon '74 had called the police earlier when the youths tried to force their way into his room, also looking for "John Simmons...
...exact figures can possibly be obtained. At least 56 cars were reported stolen last year and the number of bicycle thefts probably has hit a large chunk of the student body. Many students have had two and three bikes stolen from them, no matter what type of chain, lock or storage place they have used...
...France, he went on painting the rabbinical figures, village steeples, brides, bouquets, clocks and animals of Vitebsk. Back in the U.S.S.R. for the first time since 1922, the 85-year-old artist was visibly moved by an exhibition of his work, some of which has been kept under lock and key as too "formalist" for the Soviet censors. Did he remember the paintings? Tentatively touching his 1917 oil, The Wedding, Chagall replied with tears in his eyes: "More than you can imagine...