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...Britannica Ultimate Reference Suite 2004 DVD With more than 100,000 articles on everything from alpaca to Zionism, this encyclopedia ($70) is by far the most comprehensive. I especially enjoyed original articles (commissioned for print editions eons ago) by the likes of Sigmund Freud and Harry Houdini. To my surprise, however, I preferred the online version, at britannica.com It is easier to search and has many of the videos and photos featured on the DVD. It also deftly integrates thousands of external links (reviewed by Britannica editors). A one-year subscription costs...
...items were displayed last year, in hopes that retailers would place big orders and the public would go out and buy them. In the packed and cacophonous LitAg - short for Literary Agents and Scouts Center - business deals worth €31 million concerning an amazing 18,000 hitherto unpublished print and electronic books in 53 languages were closed last year, as young, would-be authors, their manuscripts clutched in sweaty hands, prowled the corridors in search of a publisher. For leisure-time visitors who haven't come to bargain but simply to enjoy themselves, there are thousands of events to choose...
...budding entrepeneurs have set up an online auction site to help students searching for elusive items like the 2002 freshman facebook or that out-of-print biography of serial socialite Pamela Digby Churchill Hayward Harrimann...
...school implemented an online course registration program in January 2002, a change welcomed by most undergraduates. Another program allowed students to see what time their courses met—students could literally add courses to an online “shopping cart,” then print them out at the end of shopping period to be signed by their advisors...
...both touched and disturbed by the concern. "They don't care about thousands of Iraqi children, but they care if I survive." In The Bookseller of Kabul, Seierstad's account of staying with a family in Afghanistan in the months after the Taliban's fall, she accomplishes vividly in print what comes so easily on screen. Her portrait of Sultan Khan, the title subject, and the dozen or so family members who live in his home, is a compassionate and illuminating portrait of one family that makes readers care deeply about their fate. Though hardly typical - as the most successful...