Word: spaciousness
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There is enough to keep the museum developers busy. In particular, some of the exhibits were unfinished at the time of the inauguration, the museum's spacious location leaves room for expansion, and the fast-moving computer industry will make some of the current exhibits obsolete a year from now. In addition to the museum's permanent collection. Stelling plans to establish a traveling exhibit about computer issues and history. The museum also has plans to develop jointly with the Boston Computer Society a "computer discovery center" to help the general public understand computers in a relaxed atmosphere...
...gallery on the third and top level is also reserved for items from the permanent collection; the four spacious rooms have skylights that will cast natural shadows on the artwork. These rooms will house Greek, Roman, Egyptian and Mesopotamian...
...concept of the sleeping module came from Japan, where 100 budget-price "capsule hotels" have become popular among thrifty business travelers and other customers since they were first introduced in 1979. The MAC1 is spacious enough for Western frames and comes with extras not available on the more spartan Japanese models. The basic module, made of plastic lined with fire-resistant foam, costs $2,500 and comes with a twin-size foam mattress, overhead light and climate-control unit. More lavishly equipped versions, costing up to $3,900 each, feature color TV, radio, telephone, tape deck and hot-drink dispenser...
...through the seventh circle of hell. An actor can both inhabit his character and stand outside it, flashing signals to the audience that say, "I'm not really this lowlife, but it's fun to pretend." Perhaps that is why the audience at off-Broadway's spacious new Minetta Lane Theater, where Balm moved last week after a successful run at the Circle Rep, looks to be enjoying the play a bit too much for its own good. They are sharing not a drink of human dregs but a celebration of show biz in all its volcanic...
...story of Dobanday is typical. Just six years ago, 20,000 people lived in spacious adobe houses scattered across the floor of a green, spring-fed canyon some 45 miles south of Kabul. "Life was good," recalls Haji Jumah Gul. "We had wheat, corn, rice, melons, apples, cherries, pears and mulberries. Almost everyone had cattle and sheep." Many of the villagers were prosperous enough to be able to afford a pilgrimage each year to Mecca...