Word: feedbacks
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...course," Polonsky said, adding that students "go into it seriously or not at all." He said "informal workshops for people who just like to write but don't intend to publish for The New Yorker" are needed because at present those people do not have "much opportunity to get feedback" on their creative work...
John A. Spritz, an English major who said last week he was "scared off" by Option III because he had heard it was "rather confining," agrees with Polonsky that very little feedback or encouragement comes to writers at Harvard. "Most of the writing here is going on quietly in the middle of the night. People put stuff in drawers and you never hear about it," Spritz said...
Since CHUL only possesses the power to make recommendations which Rosovsky must then approve, many members of the committee said last spring that Rosovsky's presence would help expedite business by providing immediate feedback on the acceptability and feasibility of CHUL proposals...
...nomination, and he prepared for it with a deft combination of openness and secrecy: he was demonstrably open to advice, but extremely secretive about his thinking as it evolved. As a Ford aide put it, in splendidly technocratic jargon: "His decision-making process was one of maximum input, zero feedback...
...little response. After a painful silence, Reagan went on talking. He told them he was less vulnerable than Ford to Democrats. When he finished, there was no applause, only more silence. Asked if he thought he had won over many of the delegates, Reagan shrugged: "They give so little feedback, it's impossible to tell." For Reagan, the winning orator, the man with the sure sense of the mood of his audiences, the uncommitted are maddeningly tough to read...