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As noted on the Web site: "We wish to foster not only insight, ingenuity and creativity, but also the virtue of perseverance, which is equally essential in scientific endeavors".
One to two minutes is all that is needed, they say, to know whether a therapist is clicking with a client.More and more clinical tests are proving that a massage if done well can produce all sorts of positive biochemical effects that foster not only a deep sense of relaxation, but also produce lower anxiety levels and higher immune efficiency.
A civics or "character education" class eager to acknowledge every divergent point of view may end up with none of its own, and vouchers -- leaving aside the wider controversy over them -- may foster not only community-mindedness but also ugly extremism.
Genetic engineering in sport will foster not only a greater potential health risk for athletes than does conventional doping, but also a greater potential for performance enhancement, said Dr. Jacques Rogge, a Belgian surgeon who is an I.O.C. delegate and vice chairman of its medical commission.
Education must foster not only problem solving skills but also problem seeking skills all while maintaining the interest of the students.
The Japanese nation is in a position to foster not only an awareness of the East but also a global awareness on the part of every nation.
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This freshly educational approach was fostered not only by Bernstein but also by Carlos Moseley, arguably the Philharmonic's greatest administrator, who became managing director in 1961 and who died last year.
The Bush administration's shredding of the constitution at home and overt support for human rights abuses abroad has fostered not only a change in image, but perhaps the standards by which "the judge" will henceforth be judged.
"Play Works" designed by Roto Studio, a firm in Dublin, Ohio, is devoted to fostering not only literacy, but also mathematical understanding and what Dr. Hirsh-Pasek calls "cultural literacy": hence the "Mona Lisa".
A number of English writers have been fond of that harmonious, and rhetorical prose, the taste for which may well have been fostered not only by the familiarity with Cicero but also by the profound influence of the authorized version of the Bible (1611).
Perhaps one of the additional lessons that might be culled from "At Princeton, a Parody Raises Questions of Bias" (news article, Jan . 23, about a broken-English parody in the student daily of an Asian-American student who had filed a civil rights complaint against Princeton, is the importance of fostering not only academic intelligence, but social intelligence as well.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com