Word: stealingly
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...potato-left-behind effort. 9) Shut off your computer when you go to sleep. For real, the screen saver doesn’t save shit. 10) Use the green-handle toilets for water conservation. If you don’t see green, you have permission not to flush. 11) Steal bulbs from Lamont’s fifth floor lamps and leave a note: “No Studying after Daylight hours.” 12) Wash everything on cold cycle. Just do it. 13) Start a group in each house devoted to environmental issues...oh wait, never mind. 14) Shame...
...This dark class is discriminated against because it represents the poor part of America. The poor isn’t a group that we are too fond of in our society. The poor steal. They kill. They do drugs. They drop out of school. They end up in prison...
...made a difference in heroin production? U.S. taxpayers will now have to spend millions to prosecute and detain him. The U.S. could wipe out the drug trade tomorrow by legalization and taxation, which would take away the enormous profits earned in illicit trade and reduce theft by addicts who steal to support their habit. The huge sums reserved for incarceration and policing could be spent on health care and education. William A. Ring San Diego...
...around 2 a.m. on Feb. 20, she thought the noise she heard emanating from her common room was a disoriented person walking into the wrong suite.Instead, she found police officers in her Kirkland House bathroom wrestling with a late-night intruder who had allegedly entered the room to steal from her.The man, identified by the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) as Craig King, a 37-year-old Cantabrigian, had allegedly “piggybacked” into Kirkland—following a resident into the house—before finding the door to the junior’s room propped...
...Harvard bubble,” and they spark discussions and debates over meals. Having even a few papers available would greatly benefit all students; information spreads by diffusion as roommates point out interesting or humorous articles to friends over breakfast. To top it off, the price point was a steal. The Times would have footed the bill for delivery, and Harvard would have received eighty newspapers for ten weeks for just over $1,700 dollars, amounting to just 40 cents a copy (the Times sells for a dollar on newsstands). The UC chose not to fund copies of The Times...