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Realty Heading for a shakeup - istock.com× Real estate developers will have to stay in watch-and-wait mode as they figure out customer behaviour in a post-Covid world It’s too early to forecast how the world’s going to unfold when the pandemic ends, as end it must, although the timing’s uncertain. Will we toss aside our masks and stride forth, as we once did, to movies, malls and restaurants and partake of all the pre-pandemic pleasures that cities had to offer? Will we go back to offices? Or, will we permanently abandon the sprawling, crowded megalopolises and work from hill stations or smaller towns where rents are lower, the air’s cleaner and life moves at a slower pace? Also, now that we’ve all learnt to order online, will that lead to the demise of bricks-and-mortar retailers and with them the high street and malls? ....
Cô gái người Dao: Một đời quá dài, hãy dám ngược chiều - Học hành vietgiaitri.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from vietgiaitri.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A transformational gift in progress The development of a new academic quadrangle is in progress. Called the West Quad for its location on the west side of Middle Path, the space will be anchored by Chalmers Library, a hub for undergraduate research, experiential learning and academic and career advising. Joining the library will be an interdisciplinary academic building for the social sciences and a new home for admissions and financial aid. These developments enable Kenyon to make major strides toward becoming a more accessible campus. The library is expected to open in spring of 2021, with construction of the other facilities wrapping up a year later. ....
Same Hill, New World View scenes from life at Kenyon at the start of an unprecedented fall semester. In August, Kenyon welcomed back to campus a cohort of first-years, sophomores and transfer students (while juniors and seniors participated in classes remotely). Before the students’ arrival in Gambier, faculty and staff redesigned classroom set-ups, posted social distancing markers around campus, and re-envisioned all aspects of student life and learning in the midst of a pandemic. “I have felt really proud and fortunate to be part of an institution that has done its best to take care of students and look out for its people,” said Associate Professor of English Sarah Heidt 97, who taught a mix of in-person and remote courses this year. “I do my best, every class session, to help my students feel that they have a place where they belong, and where they have a community, in a time that often feels frightening, lonely and overwhelming. And being with my students ....
Love in the time of COVID-19 January 24, 2021 The world, according to reports, learnt of Coronavirus disease rather late by few months when people began to die of the scourge not knowing how to treat such patients. China was considered the culprit and those who travelled to that country became the carries of the virus. And China with its booming economy, there is hardly any country that did not have contact with it. By March 2020, it had already spread all over the world and the period of lockdown began with the world desperately looking for a cure. It decided “Prevention is better than cure” and banned international flights and travel. The effective preventive measure was recommended and even enforced wear mask covering your nose and mouth, keep social distance and keep washing your hands with sanitisers. And the elders stay in isolation at home for ultimate safety. ....