In one of his first actions as interim president, Frank L. Sims sent a letter to parents telling them that the administrative shake-up would not affect education at the school. Sims repeatedly emphasized that point Tuesday in an exclusive interview with The Tennessean.
Sims, 64, a retired business leader from Atlanta and Fisk board member with close family ties to the university, said that he would spend the next year making small changes that would enable the next permanent president to tackle the “tremendous challenges” that lie ahead, particularly when it comes to the school's finances.
“We’re going to have to be competitive on the education side and on the financial side," Sims said. "We’re doing very well on one of those. We’re not doing too well in the other, and that’s where we have to focus."
Sims said he will spend most of his brief tenure focused on strengthening Fisk’s financial footing and streamlining administrative practices, leaving the academic programs, which he considers to be sturdy, in the hands of the provost and faculty. He plans to meet with key donors and community leaders in the coming weeks while continuing to collaborate with students during regular town hall meetings.
<span>There are a lot of lonely people on earth. <span>they have no friends or they are orphans. </span><span>such people often go deep into themselves and not even many psychologists can get them out of this state. </span><span>also there are people who are heartbroken, with little grief. </span><span>this is self-love, but more on that later. </span></span>
<span><span> so to withdraw from the state of trance, grief, books help most often. </span><span>they are with us everywhere, has been with us since childhood. </span><span>but people do not think about it because </span><span>they do not understand its full value. </span><span>the value of literature. </span><span>literature of different genres helps to relax, make the right decision, and find a way out of the situation. Read books! Hope this helps! =)</span></span>
<span>Depending on the occasion I would stop before I would try to find a shortcut.</span>
Answer:
Explanation:
Plato's theory of ideas is directly linked to his theory of the soul. In part IV of his book “Republic”, Plato conceives man as body and soul. As the body changes and ages, the soul is immutable, eternal and divine.
For Aristotle, men are not the only beings who have souls (or psyches); all living beings have it, from daisies and mollusks to more complex beings. Like a form, a soul is an act of a particular type