Word: inputted
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...both members of the UC’s committee. The two declined to comment. Sundquist said at the meeting that the committee’s chair, Organismic and Evolutionary Biology professor Donald H. Pfister, had told him he was not willing to consider the Council’s input on the issue. Sundquist also promised the UC he would raise the issue again. In a subsequent e-mail that Sundquist forwarded to the UC’s open list, Pfister wrote, “We could have chosen, but did not do so, to appoint another student from...
...second time around, it was a wholly locally-run process...they were constitutional drafters, and they didn’t need my input,” he said...
...Experience is a red herring. Does anyone believe that a modern President makes complex decisions without input from a team of experienced experts? The real question that should be asked is how willing a potential President is to tamp down his or her ego in order to get to the right answer using the best available knowledge. Measured that way, my vote is for Obama. He doesn't think he knows it all, and he talks and listens to people who don't agree with him. That's presidential. Brian Weiss, Pasadena, California...
...sets aside a one-month period for "fundraising." Florida State Democratic Party Press Secretary Alejandro Mayar said the plan includes all aspects of the mail-in scenario. Says Mayar, "It's a very detailed plan." The proposal had already been circulated among top state Democratic players for their input. "We're being 'shopped,' would be more accurate," said Florida Senate Democratic Leader Steve Geller. Under DNC rules, any proposal would have to sit for 30 days to allow time for comment...
...decision to institute women’s only hours at the Quadrangle Recreational Athletic Center (QRAC). I find fault not with the decision—it was a good one—but with the fact that a small clique of administrators made the decision, once again, with little input from anyone else. In doing so, they deprived the Harvard community of an opportunity to improve itself through the discussion of an issue that will follow us long after we leave Cambridge...