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Word: pilote (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
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...mail addresses and interface much sooner than this spring. Within the next few weeks, the e-mail specifies, up to 1,600 students—or about a quarter of the College’s undergraduates—will be tapped to take part in a pilot program that will last for a “few months,” until the entire student body is assigned new addresses. For the duration of the pilot, students’ old @fas.harvard.edu addresses will remain active, but will forward to their new @college.harvard.edu addresses. “We?...

Author: By Charles J. Wells, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Students To Test New Webmail | 10/21/2008 | See Source »

...paid for by a separate student fee, and Dartmouth, where it is funded by the student government, according to Erin Maghran, USA Today’s manager for higher education programs. Past attempts at bringing newspapers to campus have fizzled due to lack of permanent funding. A fall 2007 pilot program that offered the New York Times in dining halls with support form the UC, House Committees, and Harvard University Dining Services, ended due to a dearth of funding. An earlier trial period failed to muster enough UC support for permanent financing when legislation was introduced in March...

Author: By Alex M. Mcleese, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Campus May See Times, Boston Globe | 10/20/2008 | See Source »

...country's Institute for the Study of Totalitarian Regimes, a state-funded historical archive and research body. The magazine and the historical institute published a contemporary police document that names Kundera as the man who had informed police about the whereabouts of Miroslav Dvoracek, a former military pilot who had fled to what was then West Germany in 1949. Dvoracek signed up with a Western intelligence agency and returned undercover in 1950. Kundera, who had not spoken to the press for decades, broke that silence this week to deny the allegation, insisting he never even knew the spy, and that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Was Milan Kundera a Communist Snitch? | 10/18/2008 | See Source »

...same anxiety powers CBS's new science-driven cop show Eleventh Hour, in which a government biophysicist (Rufus Sewell) investigates cases of bioscience run amok. In the pilot, a wealthy man coerces a needy woman to risk her life by bearing a clone of his dead son. On FX, buddy comedy Testees, about down-and-out dudes who sell their bodies for experiments, plays the same discomfort for gross-out laughs. (One gets a treatment that apparently leaves him pregnant--and lactating...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bodies of Evidence | 10/16/2008 | See Source »

...every institution in this country—and you can begin here.” The discussion also addressed Yale’s Sustainable Food Project and the steps Harvard is taking in a similar direction. Joshua L. Viertel ’01 was instrumental in creating the pilot program in one of Yale’s dining halls in 2003, and it has grown into a campus-wide initiative in which 40 percent of food options in each dining hall at Yale are sustainable. Martin Breslin, the director for culinary operations at Harvard University Dining Services, wrapped...

Author: By Wendy H. Chang, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Defending Sustainable Eats | 10/15/2008 | See Source »

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