Word: producting
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...world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful.” “Any researcher or student, whether they’re in New York or New Delhi, can now research and learn from these books,” Google Vice President for Product Management Susan Wojcicki told The Crimson through a spokesman. Wojcicki told The Wall Street Journal that some copyrighted works might be made available by mistake. But she added that her company would be focusing, in the short term, on works that are out of print. Eventually, she said, Google would scan...
...minutes,” Maramaldi said. Dean of the College Benedict H. Gross ’71 approved the database initiative this past spring, and Edwards hired Maramaldi to coordinate the effort with a team from the Faculty of Arts and Sciences’ Computer Services. The final product was unveiled at the Study Abroad Fair outside the Science Center on Oct. 6, which drew a crowd of 1,500, according to Edwards. The site is the first step in a larger project, known as the “Mapping the International Landscape Initiative,” which aims...
...some worried the major product of the meeting, the $700 grant, might put limits on the free discourse that came before it. “If we are to discuss the issue of tolerance on this campus, then we must discuss our tolerance of Mr. Pappin and every other student who might profess an unpopular opinion,” wrote UC representative P. K. Agarwalla ’04 in an e-mail to the Council warning that the “Tolerance Bill” might chill free speech...
...because this is a lot to ask of people, I had to feed them and provide entertainment.” The reassemblers worked unassisted. Though all are enthusiastic about the experience, Frey points out that some of them were “ashamed of their final product,” a strange sentiment in light of the compositions’ beauty and uniqueness. Frey, who is a Cal Poly graduate with an illustration background, turned to landscapes when he saw what he refers to as a “cheesy family painting” that made him want to render...
...strength of Wright’s underlying research—proves to be entirely superfluous.Unavoidably, these minor transgressions will force readers to approach “Harvard’s Secret Court” with skepticism—to question which details are fact and which are the product of Wright’s prodigious imagination. Are we any the worse off for reading that Roberts’ “highly polished English shoes…glistened in the dim light”—when, in fact, they might not have been highly polished (nor English...