Word: digestibility
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...worn off. News anchors feel compelled to constantly avail themselves of this new resource, which distracts them from a broader analysis of the conflict and its implications. When they do try to analyze the war, they tend to turn to their retired American military experts to digest and then regurgitate reports from the field. These generals have close personal and professional ties to the current war planners, and inevitably they too find it difficult to take a dispassionate view. As noted in The New York Times, these generals, unless pressed, rarely question the conduct of the war, instead reminding viewers...
Charles Hulse, an Arkansas native and a Galle real estate agent, for years split his time between Paris and the Greek isle of Hydra before settling in a tastefully restored Galle house with interiors fit for Architectural Digest. Hulse notes that the cost of restoring a fort house usually runs more than half the purchase price...
...should sign up for their House open lists, but they should not be fooled into believing that the lists will fulfill their desire for debate on weighty matters. Instead, these lists will provide most students with mild entertainment when they have the time to peruse the posts (possibly in digest form). For a select few first-years, House lists will become a forum for their own witty remarks and ruminations. But to debate serious issues, and to create true House community, students will have to venture out of their dorm rooms and search for one another in the real world...
...predominance of marble, Apley is widely considered to be the cream of the first-year housing—especially by those poor souls residing in the skim milk of first-year housing. Apley’s shell sconces over the water fountains, oaken moldings straight out of Architectural Digest and fireplaces worthy of an English country inn place it more than a few notches above Canaday. Jackson’s also quick to sing the praises of the “really, really tall doorways” and her room’s extraordinary pedigree—T.S. Eliot...
...Charles Hulse, a septuagenarian American from Arkansas and a veteran Galle Fort realtor, lived for years between Paris and the Greek Isle of Hydra before settling in a tastefully restored Galle Fort house with interiors fit for Architectural Digest. Hulse warns that the cost of restoring a fort house usually runs to 50% of the purchase price. "It is all very well to get a wonderful house near the ramparts for a song but unless you have someone on the spot to advise you and hold your hand, there are all sorts of problems that can cause major headaches...