Word: pizzas
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...pizza king who owns the Detroit Tigers plans a museum...
Although there's no Famous Rays in Harvard Square, there are enough varieties of pizza to keep even the most addicted happy. Ranging from the inexpensive snack fare to a hearty meal, the choices are almost all above average and reasonably priced...
...Canto (928 Mass, Ave.): Deep-dish pizza, a variety of other entrees, salad and desserts, complete with civilized atmosphere, Cafe Avventura (The Garage): The newest of the bunch, Avventura is probably also the best, Thin-crust, with a perfect tomato-cheese balance, it's widely considered the best deal in the Square. Pizzeria Regina (4-10 Holyoke ST.): Before there was Avventura, Regina's thin-crust had no competition. The downstairs dining room sports friendly booths, pitchers of beer, and a lively atmosphere. Pizzeria Uno (22 JFK St.): If you've never had deep-dish (Chicago-style)pizza...
...Plympton St, one can find four bookstores. The Star Book Shop is one, and across the street, in the former site of the late Harvard Pizza, is McIntyre and Moore Booksellers (30 Plympton St.), with used and rare books. Another place, for those who tire of prose, is the famous Grolier Book Shop (6 Plymton St.), alive since 1927. "Minimum of prose" reads the sign in the window, and they speak the truth. Tall bookcases house poetry collections, little magazines, books about poets and their works, and casettes of readings. Special orders and mail orders can be done here...
Other changes seniors remember have not stemmed directly from the construction projects, but fit in with the drive for increasing respectability. Brigham's trimmed its daily hours from 24 to 12. Harvard Pizza--the only pizza place open past 1 a.m.--was replaced by a used bookstore...