Word: interaction
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...faculty residences outward from Cambridge since 1905. It calls on the Faculty “to reconsider the way that we do business on a day-to-day basis, and to recognize that practices that evolved when Harvard faculty were available on a round-the-clock basis to interact with colleagues and students are having a discriminatory and counterproductive effect today.”Martin said in the interview that her main priorities for the year are to restructure searches for new faculty in a way that maximizes the applicant pool and to improve the mentoring of junior professors...
...speak at all.Some argue that the Harvard administration simply doesn’t care enough about our student opinion, and it is for this reason that many students are apathetic. But by failing to vocalize opinions, students create a self-fulfilling prophecy. Furthermore, having had the opportunity to regularly interact with members of the search committee, we candidly attest to the fact that student opinions are indeed valued in this process. They are even eager to receive nominations of specific candidates from students. If you have been frustrated in the past and felt that your opinion was not sufficiently valued...
...even greater doses. The one problematic element came during the moments of dialogue between Barron and the prerecorded character of Nikita Ivanitch (the voice of producer Sniderman). The recording was stiff and unnatural. Johnson would have been better off employing a live voiceover instead, giving Barron the opportunity to interact in real-time with another actor. Set designer Britt Caputo ’08, who is also a Crimson editor, created her best scenery for “Swan Song.” The scattered flowers, a wispy candle and a fallen curtain provided a haunting backdrop and added symbolic...
...diversity that colleges throughout the country have begun to sell so adeptly. As much as we might like to believe otherwise, the pretty pictures in the application viewbooks do not represent all facets of reality. To be sure, there are many instances when students of different backgrounds and ideologies interact more than happily, but when this is not the case, the solution is not to ignore...
...most of us, though, it's the grand question about what it is that makes us human that renders comparative genome studies so compelling. As scientists keep reminding us, evolution is a random process in which haphazard genetic changes interact with random environmental conditions to produce an organism somehow fitter than its fellows. After 3.5 billion years of such randomness, a creature emerged that could ponder its own origins--and revel in a Mozart adagio. Within a few short years, we may finally understand precisely when and how that happened...