Word: offerred
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...haven’t had an open house yet, but we’re having one soon,” says Christina Dias, an administrative coordinator for the Harvard Foundation. “At that point, we really hope to welcome everyone, to offer all of our facilities, computers and copiers, student assistants. We would like to see our office as a workspace for the student organizations, for programs and initiatives and projects. We primarily see it as a place where intellectual conversations are taking place, things are getting done...
...team members who thought of the Facebook group have apologized and now claim that it was a misunderstood joke. While I don’t think these guys understand the meaning of “joke” (I’m sure my future significant other could offer legitimate forms of jokes from “Seinfeld”), their one moment lapse of judgment has now been memorialized by the global spatiality of Facebook. In short, it’s a rather tragic depiction of what happens when Facebook gets out of control...
...five years ago when comix and graphic novels were just barely beginning to get serious attention from the mainstream press. My goal was to introduce the more general readership of Time's website to the unique, mostly unheralded possibilities of storytelling that I knew the comix form had to offer. My philosophy for the column has always been to offer supportive reviews of books that I found interesting. There seemed little point in telling a comix-averse audience not to read comix. The perfect TIME.comix review would be a brief guide to how to appreciate art works whose context...
...President has failed to address these issues head-on. Where Americans have demanded change, President Bush has offered the status quo. He has sided with automakers in Detroit over environmental reformers. He has refused to offer a change of course in Iraq, even spurning the advice of the nation’s military leadership...
...residents and members of the Harvard-Allston Development Group met at the Honan Library in Allston last night to discuss plans for a road that could significantly alter the area’s traffic circulation. According to the proposed plan, the new street, to be named Stadium Way, would offer two traffic lanes, two shuttle lanes, and a possible bike lane. The road would help ease the rise in vehicle and pedestrian traffic expected from Harvard’s expansion into Allston. John Cusack, a member of the Harvard-Allston Task Force, chaired last night’s meeting...