Word: reflects
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...alternative to energy-consuming air conditioning. Vittori's vision of hospital design also extends to the mental well-being of the patients and staff. The Dell Center's low-rise buildings, linked by courtyards and quiet spaces, are designed to be child-friendly and unintimidating. The gardens will reflect the plant life of the surrounding area, giving the children the comfort of familiar sights. And as everybody knows, there's no color more comforting than green...
...Jones had been highly regarded in her field and widely praised for MIT's efforts to reduce the stress of college admissions. She redesigned the school's application to reflect her desire for applicants who make strong contributions to a few extracurricular activities rather than amass long lists of them. A book she co-wrote last year, "Less Stress, More Success," emphasized that theme...
...fits-all policy now in place for funding HoCos, the UC should hold hearings at the beginning of the year, to assess just how miserable each House’s inhabitants really are, or, more accurately, how miserable they ought to be. Forget that the House system should probably reflect its own randomized nature and keep funding as equal as possible across the board...
...part of this push forward, we challenge students to not only put pressure on the administration but to challenge themselves to bridge the gap that exists between us and Harvard employees. This campaign should remind us of the immense privilege we have as students at Harvard, and to reflect on that privilege and its accompanying influence. Right now students have the opportunity to tell Harvard that every person deserves dignity and respect at work, that secure employment should not just be the luxury of the wealthy, and that no person should be working full-time and still struggling to support...
...twenty-first century audio guide geared towards the student body. The project, funded by a grant from the Office of the Arts, is intended to encourage student visitorship at the Sackler.Students who volunteered to contribute to the podcast were asked to choose an object in the museum and reflect on what makes it most interesting to them. They were then to summarize their interaction with and thoughts on the object in a two- to four-minute segment. “The podcast is not meant to be an authoritative art historical review of the Sackler,” says Hays...