Word: in-depth
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...area's natural beauty has been neglected over the past few decades, the Seoul City Government is now making up for lost time. A visit to the new Seoul Museum of History, located downtown near the recently rebuilt Gyeonghuigung Palace, illustrates Seoul's new attitude. An in-depth (and bilingual) exhibition, "Seoul, 2002: A Vision of the City," details the new policies being implemented to both preserve and expand Seoul's natural gifts while protecting its historical heritage. What it adds up to is an ecological and cultural capital positioning itself to be more than just a place...
...first-years, freshman seminars are Harvard’s most valuable academic treasures. They create an intimate setting of about 12 students, close interaction with a faculty member and in-depth investigation into a topic of choice. Freshman seminar offerings considerably increased this year, which should be celebrated as a concrete improvement for the undergraduate academic curriculum...
Hopefully the success and heightened interest in freshman seminars will encourage individual departments to increase the number of upperclass seminars. The type of in-depth learning that takes place in a small, intimate setting is of the utmost benefit to undergraduates, and an increase in these offerings will augment the academic career of any Harvard student...
...airports are coping with those challenges, a team of TIME reporters and photographers decided to take an in-depth look at one airport, Denver International. It's an airport that to a large extent has adapted nicely to the post-Sept. 11 world. The huge, snaking security lines that attracted so much attention in the weeks after last year's terrorist attacks have largely disappeared even as traffic has edged back to pre-9/11 levels. Last Wednesday, on the busy day before the July 4 holiday, 115,000 travelers passed through Denver International Airport, compared with...
...airports are coping with those challenges, a team of TIME reporters and photographers decided to take an in-depth look at one airport, Denver International. It's an airport that to a large extent has adapted nicely to the post-Sept. 11 world. The huge, snaking security lines that attracted so much attention in the weeks after last year's terrorist attacks have largely disappeared even as traffic has edged back to pre-9/11 levels. Last Wednesday, on the busy day before the July 4 holiday, 115,000 travelers passed through Denver International Airport, compared with...