Word: demanding
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...Harvard has not, in many years, thought comprehensively about its relationship to the arts or defined its aspirations or opportunities in a systematic way. Our extraordinary strengths in the arts remain fragmented, less well-understood, less well-supported, and less integrated than their importance warrants. Demand exceeds supply in many areas — class slots in film and creative writing; professional direction and support in theater; practice facilities for music; rehearsal space for drama; studios for the plastic arts. Cross-School and cross-unit collaborations are underdeveloped, and resources have not kept pace with changing needs. Many...
...Expos and the College can also dramatically expand the trained peer support currently offered to students as they work on their analytical writing. Far from being “under-utilized,” the Writing Center cannot keep up with demand from concentrators and senior thesis writers. To address the need, Expos has committed more funds to the Center to add more tutorial hours; furthermore, the program has recruited and funded advanced graduate students as Departmental Writing Fellows to help students with discipline-specific writing in the concentrations. For this pilot year, the Fellows are currently in History...
...extraordinary strengths in the arts remain fragmented, less well-understood, less well-supported, and less integrated than their importance warrants. Demand exceeds supply in many areas,” Faust wrote in a charge to the professors, administrators, and students on the panel...
...suggestion of those who currently have numbers in their e-mail addresses. But this proposal was quickly sidelined when the Faculty of Arts and Sciences Computer Services informed us that its priorities for the year–expanding e-mail inboxes for Faculty members—would demand all of its resources. Changes to the University could be enacted if student-faculty committees existing as advisory bodies existed instead as an extension of the dean’s office and had decision-making power...
...willingness of Quinn and Norris to admit that there were mistakes made in the coverage of some financial issues, but added that he was less pleased about how they suggested that articles often cater to popular opinions. “It sort of proved that stories are based on demand,” he said...