Animals on Campus
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Cooper, a registered therapy dog, is swagged out at the Harvard Medical School’s Countway Library on Tuesday and Thursday afternoons.
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A lone squirrel climbs a tree near the Charles riverbank. Female squirrel typically have two to eight babies in each birth cycle.. Baby squirrels are blind and totally reliant on their mothers for two or three months.
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A gaggle of geese roams around the Charles River. Canadian Geese are protected under the Federal Migratory Bird Act of 1918, meaning it is illegal to harm or injure a goose, its eggs, or its nest without a federal permit.
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Neko enjoys a stress-free exam period by rolling himself up in some holiday wrapping paper provided by Richard Johnston, Cabot’s Sophomore Advising Coordinator.
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During Cambridge’s cold winter months, Sly enjoys curling up with issues of “The Economist” in front of his common room fireplace.
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Sly enjoys a beautiful view of the Charles River from his room in Dunster House where he currently resides with James Esdaile, Resident Tutor in History and Public Service.
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Perched safely behind a small Christmas tree decorated by Dunster House Resident Tutors Erica Brown Soto ‘07 and Odeviz Soto ‘07, Clara surveys her home for stray ornaments.
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Locating and protecting ornaments is not a problem for Clara, who watches over them with care until her human roommates can return them to their tree.
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Whiskey, age 8, and his roommate Zachary Sifuentes ‘97, the Adams House resident tutor in poetry, rehearse their arrangement of “Happy Birthday” in the Bow & Arrow Press.
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