Word: in-depth
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Bunch is right, of course. But increasingly what visitors really need may be the same as what they want: less in-depth education and more seduction. After all, if people really wanted to dig into Washington's life, they could check out one of the fine new Washington biographies. Or they could just Google the guy. When it comes to history, Americans don't lack information; they lack the attention span to wade through the dusty collections of the old history museums. And that's where the new museums, using technology to make themselves savvier storytellers, can do their part...
...does worry that the evening crowd is getting thick and that London Lite could damage its corporate brethren. Two evening giveaways means the Standard is "obviously going to be losing some circulation," he says. But that's not guaranteed bad news. The Standard "gives you far more lengthy and in-depth comment than you will get from most free newspapers," says Auckland. "And it caters to a slightly older audience because of that." The migration of younger readers toward free sheets could help concentrate the Standard's mature readership, Goodman agrees, and two distinctly divided readerships could be an attractive...
...many more in-depth and helpful tips on classes, concentrations, and cores, watch for The Harvard Crimson’s Confidential Guide to Courses, due out at the end of your “Camp Harvard” orientation week...
...thing she learned was that she was right. On the love scale, boys scored equally with girls. They were at least as emotionally invested in their romantic relationships as their partners. About 100 of the boys and girls were randomly chosen for additional, in-depth, face-to-face interviews that were taped. The responses were revelatory in their passionate forthrightness. "You think of it as this way: [Would] you give up your whole life, you know ... to save Jenny's life?" one boy said, trying to explain his feelings about his girlfriend. "I'm like a little girl...
First, renowned press observer Michael Massing ’74 wrote an extensive essay in The New York Review of Books on the subject. After thumping Walt and Mearsheimer for not examining AIPAC in detail, he launched into a 5,000-word, in-depth examination of the committee’s structure and power...