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Word: programed (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
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Usage:

...their American counterparts'. One day, while visiting friends, Hamm stumbled on a shelf of anthropology textbooks--and was hooked. At first he nourished his voracious interest with books alone. Later he began taking anthropology courses at the University of New Hampshire. Four years ago, he enrolled in a Ph.D. program at the University of Massachusetts. He has an advantage over his younger classmates. "Graduate students often have a problem figuring out what they want to do," says Hamm. "I had never lost my interest in the maquiladora industry, and I knew from the beginning what I wanted to study...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Careers: Catching Their Second Wind | 1/31/2000 | See Source »

...Academy emphasizes collaborative learning through team-teaching and heterogeneous class groupings. Forty percent of The Academy's student are enrolled in the Bilingual Program...

Author: By Anna M. Schneider-mayerson, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Thr New Plan & The Current 'Houses' | 1/26/2000 | See Source »

...Each school will contain a representative mix of the student population, from bilingual students who have typically been concentrated in the Academy's bilingual program to special education students...

Author: By Anna M. Schneider-mayerson, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Thr New Plan & The Current 'Houses' | 1/26/2000 | See Source »

...those of you who haven't yet downloaded a licensed copy of Photoshop from the Harvard network, I encourage you to do so. The image editing program will give you far more power to manipulate graphics than you thought possible. After a few hours of dabbling, even the novice can put a roommate's head on Michelangelo's David and circulate posters of the result. (Not that I would ever do such a thing, of course.) It's only after you've played with Photoshop for a while that you realize how easy it is--and how scary...

Author: By Stephen E. Sachs, | Title: What You See is What You Get | 1/26/2000 | See Source »

...been no stranger to image editing: Baseball stadiums sometimes replace local ads with national ones in the television coverage. But CBS' decision raises new questions of whether television can be trusted when what network executives think is "entertainment" might be what the average viewer takes as "news." When a program presents itself as fact, as the millennium coverage did--were there really that many partiers, or did CBS add some to make the footage more dramatic?--it seems that the images it presents should be fact as well. The TV watcher should see exactly the same thing as someone standing...

Author: By Stephen E. Sachs, | Title: What You See is What You Get | 1/26/2000 | See Source »

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