Word: inputs
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...search committee will seek official input from student and faculty advisory committees, according to a statement from the University. That marks the first time—at least in recent memory—that students and professors have had any formal involvement in the presidential search process...
...screen - not just the LCD panel but the graphics that appeared on it. Sony appears to have paid a higher degree of attention to the graphical user interface than any of its competitors. Given a few minutes to acclimate myself with the device, I soon learned how to input destinations or find points of interest. I especially liked the fact that I could search by zip code as well - you don?t have to know a zip code, but if you do, you can identify your destination very quickly. There?s nothing raggedy about the visuals. Not only is text...
...Patrick’s Day revelers downed green beer and kicked little Irish jigs last Friday, Derek C. Bok was huddled in his office sending an e-mail to the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) community. He reached out a hand, not to dance, but rather to solicit input on the search for a dean of the Faculty to replace William C. Kirby. At this juncture, we have two primary suggestions for Bok to consider in the dean search. First, the next dean of the Faculty should have only an interim appointment and second, Harvard undergraduates must be involved...
...other online stores, pop it into the card slot and the music player inside will find it all and blast it through your FM stations. People who use FM transmitters for their iPods will be sad to hear that there is no iPod jack, or even a simple auxiliary input jack, on the Blackbird. Fortunately, Alpine's Steve Witt tells me that the company is "studying that implementation right now," and that a version with a iPod-compatible jack could be out within a year...
...college experience. In 1995, the administration—in its infinite wisdom—figured that, rather than allowing students to decide on their own what sort of community they’d like to live in, flinging blocking groups aimlessly across campus without any sort of input from them at all would somehow produce a happier, more integrated student body. Now, just about ten years later, it seems that—surprise, surprise—it hasn’t. The grand experiment that was randomization seems largely intended to promote (read: force) interaction between students of different backgrounds...