Word: broadening
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...design at an Indian college and is now keen to study design in the U.S. "The point is exposure," says Diwan, who was at the exhibition last week to compare European colleges to her U.S. choices. "Friends who have come back have different thought processes now. I want to broaden my vision and the best way to do that is spend time away." But if foreign universities can open up better education to tens of thousands more Indians at home, that has got to help broaden India's vision...
...single ticket because both sets of candidates have strong commitments to the BGLTQ community,” their statement read.COMMUNITY FIRSTTrailing the two frontrunners are the campaigns of Amadi P. Anene ’08 and Ali A. Zaidi ’08, both UC insiders campaigning to broaden the council’s vision and impact. Anene, who is running with Kyle A. De Beausset ’08-’09, has been the only candidate to consistently emphasize racial and gender diversity as a major concern. The Black Men’s Forum endorsed Anene, citing...
...legislation creating a systematic process for evaluating department courses for potential Core credit was approved by a Faculty vote.Prior to 1997, Lewis says, there was no systematic petition and approval system in Core areas outside of the sciences. The decision to implement the evaluation process to broaden the scope of the Core was a result of a two-year review of the core in 1995-1997, according to Lewis.After the legislation was approved in 1997, it took a few years for the approval process to become fully operational.“People had to be contacted. It took a while...
...term—and to student groups, while campus-wide social events have been placed in more capable hands.This new, streamlined UC now needs to find a way to do more. We challenge this year’s candidates to find a ways to broaden the UC’s vision for student advocacy in order to address the big picture issues that most tangibly effect students’ daily lives, including ensuring that the College does not rest on its laurels with respect to social life improvements and making the realities of a Harvard undergraduate education worthy...
...Royal will have to come up with more policy answers of her own to match Sarkozy, a crafty pragmatist happy to jettison ideological ballast when it restrains his progress. But at the same time she'll be seeking to broaden her success so far by keeping the spotlight on values rather than policies. Her main theme: bottom-up democracy. "S?gol?ne wants to get the citizens pulling along in solving the enormous problems we have," says one of her key spokesmen, National Assembly deputy Arnaud Montebourg. "We need a democratic revolution." Easy enough to say. But the French love irony enough...