Word: exists
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...feeling behind participation in the project. The package containing the tiles was covered in comic panels (themselves pixels of a larger work), and the artist had included a copy of one of his self-published comic books. The title of the book was “Proof That I Exist.” “That sums it up, for me,” says Smuts. “It’s the creative instinct, to be part of a community, to be part of an idea.”Erin A. Straw...
...divested in a rapid manner, taking into account...our fiduciary responsibility,” said Kottage. Trustees credited the measure’s success and speedy passage to the nature of the Darfur issue. “It’s just a situation that can’t exist,” CERF Chair Jerry Sagnella said. “There’s no argument...for it on the other side of the coin.” Sagnella emphasized that it was important for divestment not to become a political tool in split issues. “You?...
...HARD IS IT TO PRODUCE AND MARKET AN ENTIRELY NON-LEATHER LINE OF ACCESSORIES? It's surprising to me that people cannot get their heads around a non-leather bag or shoe. They already exist out there, but unfortunately designers feel they have to slap a leather trim or sole on them. People need to start looking at the product, and if they like it, that's all that matters. If it has an ethical or ecological edge, that's a huge bonus. We address these questions in every other part of our lives except fashion. Mind-sets are changing...
...underlying piece of all of this is that the affordability needs to be preserved, and the neighborhood needs to stay intact,” Jacques says. “The question is how do you come up with a plan that allows for the two entities to exist without there being a need for competing agendas.”Gerald Autler, the project manager at the Boston Redevelopment Authority who coordinates Harvard’s plans with the city, called the possibilities of economic development a “double-edged sword,” saying that while better amenities...
...Viswanathan is hardly the first to point out that such children exist. After David Brooks coined the term, former Dean of the College Harry R. Lewis ’68 wrote his “Slow Down” letter as an attack on the same kind of thing. The popular press caught on almost as quickly, overworking the “College Admissions Game Getting Harder to Win” angle until phrases like “extracurricular activities” and “unweighted grade point average” became household terms...