Word: wider
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...community with enriching events that take advantage of the wide array of graduate schools in the University. Too often undergraduates are unable to capitalize on the resources afforded by the graduate schools. The Office of the Provost is providing a new avenue for undergraduates to share in the wider Harvard community. This new fund will not only encourage collaboration between the different schools, but it will also reward those groups which already reach across campus lines...
...unite already existing student groups in the different schools, giving the collaborative organization a stronger voice across campus. This particular aspect of the grant could be useful for political groups in the upcoming elections, or social activist groups who would like to organize a conference to generate a wider base of support. A wide array of groups has access to the fund, provided their use of the money falls under the broad category of "academic purposes...
...begin as a faculty member," explains Judith Block McLaughlin, a professor of the Graduate School of Education and a scholar of the college presidency. "Typically the route is through department chair to a dean or a provost and into the presidency. With each appointment comes a wider range of leadership experiences...
...even setting aside concerns over Lee's civil rights for a moment, it's worth questioning how Director Freeh's testimony will actually help the FBI. After all, if the senators and the wider public actually do buy into a portrait of Wen Ho Lee as a devious consort of a foreign power hungry for U.S. nuclear secrets, they're as likely to believe that by getting away only with time served on a single felony count he made the feds look silly...
There are large areas of agreement between the two sides--much wider than anyone would guess from hearing the candidates slam each other. Agreement begins with the most basic calculation: How much money will be available to fund tax cuts and new spending and to pay off federal debt? Both sides accept a Congressional Budget Office estimate that with no changes in policy, the government will rake in a staggering $4.6 trillion more than it pays out over the next 10 years...