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GET SOME SPICE IN YOUR LIFE

The monotonous routine of the school year is beginning to take its toll, and weary Harvard students are looking for a change of pace. But, unbeknownst to many in the Harvard community, you don't have to leave the campus to find new, interesting

Arcane places to relax, study, shop and eat abound right on the sprawling Harvard campus--and they provide an ideal way for students to break the mid-term rut.

Take, for example, the Business School chapel.

Inside a glass pyramid, yellow, black and orange fish mingle with greenery in a bubbling pool.

An adjacent turquoise building boasts tall ceilings with prisms and skylights.

This two-part chapel, a haven for relaxation, reflection and inspiration, is a refreshing piece of modern art located amid the Business School's otherwise straight-laced architecture.

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Built from 1991-92, the chapel was donated by the Business School Class of 1959 "[t]o make our community complete and remind us of our higher purpose and ideals," according to an inscription on the building.

Visitors enter through the glass pyramid, which has five rows of exotic greenery.

The turquoise cylinder encloses the worship and gathering area, which seats about 100 people.

The chapel is located in the courtyard behind Morgan Hall and is accessible from North Harvard Street. It is open weekdays from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.

The Law School's library, Langdell, offers a luxurious alternative to the harsh lighting and hard chairs of Lamont.

The huge reading room--with its majestic portraits, columns and easy chairs--is plush and inspiring. But even more attractive than the reading room is the selection of edibles and potables that can be found in the building's tunnels.

A gourmet hot-drinks machine doles out everything from capuccino and Suisse mocha to tea and chicken soup. And the adjacent food machine serves such delicacies as hot dogs, pizza and microwave dinners.

To boot, an old-fashioned elevator transports students from Langdell's reading room to the building's basement.

The library is open from 8:30 a.m. to midnight Monday through Thursday, from 8:30 to 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday and from noon to midnight on Sunday.

Another alternative to Lamont is the Loeb Music Library--a find that few non-musicians seem to know about. One of the best features of the library, which is located just outside the Yard in the Music Building, is the Spalding Room.

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