Word: travelled
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...found.But in spite of the esoteric subject matter, the gallery has seen a steady flow of visitors, and Lambert-Beatty is pleased with how it has been received.When Aranda and Vidokle first created the video rental scheme, they had no idea that it would last as long or travel as widely as it has—since the exhibit debuted on Ludlow Street in New York, it has traveled all over the world, everywhere from Seoul to the Canary Islands.As Lambert-Beatty prepared to bring the show to Harvard, she sought interns from Harvard and from Boston-area art schools...
...great job,” Snyder said. “She had to block a lot of plain range saves, the goals they had were just complete breakdowns defensively.” Harvard seems to be picking up momentum heading into the critical part of its season. It will travel to top seeded Hartwick College this weekend. This match will be a good measure of the Crimson’s progress. When the two squads met back on February 24 the Hawks got the best of the Harvard, winning 13-3. Most importantly however, the Crimson is focused on preparing...
...energy efficient either, using triple the amount of power of a bullet train while running at less than double the speed. In fact, the bullet train may be the best reason to leave the maglev on its test track. Terai counters that the maglev aims to compete with air travel, and that reducing travel time between Tokyo and Osaka to around one hour actually makes it faster than going by plane. But air travel makes up only a fraction of the short-haul market precisely because bullet trains are more convenient and almost as fast. (And they're getting faster...
Japan is a trainspotter's paradise. From the 12 separate metro lines that twist beneath Tokyo like a bowl of noodles to the suburban commuter trains packed to bursting every morning and evening, the country runs on rails. In 2005, Japanese traveled 243 billion miles by railroad - nearly 1,900 miles per person. And 49 billion of those miles were covered by the shinkansen, the super-fast bullet trains that make intercity travel as simple as a subway hop. If all you've ever known is the slow torture of Amtrak, you won't believe trains that reach...
...difficult to imagine where your correspondent Michael Elliott has been these past 50 years. The E.U. is a 1950s solution to 1930s problems. It is a cumbersome, profoundly undemocratic, unitary system of government by unelected bureaucrats. Endemic corruption is beyond repair. Is that the price of easier travel and cleaner beaches? Free trade and freely negotiated agreements among sovereign nations - that's what we need. Not this lumbering, inefficient dinosaur that has too much in common with the former Soviet Union. The Europeans are neighbors of us Brits. They should be our friends. They cannot be our masters. Many Europeans...