Word: parcelled
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Because the University has decided to abandon its traditional belligerent stance toward city leaders and neighborhood residents, there may be a happy ending for a parcel of property located across from the Mt. Auburn St. post office...
...spokesmen noted that Harvard is working under a February 1982 deadline for completion of the project design, because of a provision in the agreement between the University and the property's previous owner, Louis DiGiovanni, a Cambridge developer. Unless the advisory committee approves the design before that time, the parcel will revert to DiGiovanni...
Most of the 4,000 men and women from 23 countries boarding planes bound for Israel carried an oddly shaped parcel. As airport security guards soon discovered, the packages contained rocks, some as small as a fist, some the size of a tombstone, all inscribed with the names of victims of Hitler's massacre of European Jewry. The passengers were Holocaust survivors and their children, headed for an unprecedented four-day meeting in Jerusalem, where their stones will be used to build a memorial for the 6 million Jews who died at the hands of the Nazis. Explained Auschwitz...
...unmistakable signs that the nature of the relationship is changing, and the parking lot story is one. A little more than a year ago, the University purchased a parking lot from local developer Louis DiGiovanni. An acre of scruffy weeds, the parking lot represented one of the few remaining parcels of open space in the Square. What's more, its location next to the proposed "Parcel 1B" hotel-office-retail development made it both high-priced and sensitive. The University paid more than ever before for an undeveloped piece of land--almost $4 million--and from the beginning let everyone...
...evict tenants from a Sumner Rd. apartment building and received widespread criticism for failing to increase its voluntary payments to the city to help compensate for 2 1/2. The only applause Harvard has won from Cambridge is for its work with neighbors in planning the development of a parcel of land on Mt. Auburn St., cooperation that may become increasingly commonplace with the passage of a tough new law that will allow Cambridge to regulate University expansion...