Temporary Archive Opened Following Department of Justice Release of Epstein Documents
Introduction
A nonprofit organization based in Washington has opened a temporary exhibition in New York City featuring printed records related to Jeffrey Epstein.
Main Body
The exhibition, called 'The Donald J. Trump and Jeffrey Epstein Memorial Reading Room,' contains 3,437 books with about 3.5 million pages. These documents were released by the US Department of Justice under the Epstein Files Transparency Act. However, because the Department of Justice did not remove the names of the victims, access is limited to lawyers and journalists, although people can register online. Additionally, the exhibition explores the past relationship between President Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein. Although they were friends for many years, reports suggest they stopped speaking in 2004 after a disagreement over real estate. Since then, President Trump has denied any wrongdoings, even though his name appears frequently in the released documents. From an organizational point of view, the Institute of Primary Facts describes the project as an educational tool to show systemic corruption and threats to democracy. David Garrett, one of the project's architects, emphasized that the exhibition is meant to encourage public demand for accountability, especially regarding claims that the administration tried to hide the President's links to Epstein.
Conclusion
The exhibition will be open in Tribeca until May 21.
Learning
⚡ The 'Contrast' Leap: Moving Beyond 'But'
To move from A2 to B2, you must stop relying on the word but to connect opposing ideas. B2 speakers use Concessive Clauses to make their speech sound more professional and nuanced.
🔍 The Pattern Shift
Look at these two sentences from the text:
- "...access is limited to lawyers and journalists, although people can register online."
- "Although they were friends for many years, reports suggest they stopped speaking..."
The A2 way: "They were friends, but they stopped speaking." The B2 way: "Although they were friends, they stopped speaking."
🛠️ How to apply this
Although works like a bridge. It introduces a fact that makes the second part of the sentence surprising.
- Position A (The Start):
Although+ [Fact A], [Surprising Fact B].- Example: Although it was raining, we went to the exhibition.
- Position B (The Middle): [Surprising Fact B],
although+ [Fact A].- Example: We went to the exhibition, although it was raining.
🚀 Level-Up Challenge
Notice how the text uses even though in the second paragraph: "...denied any wrongdoings, even though his name appears frequently..."
The Pro Tip: Use even though when you want to emphasize that the contrast is very strong or shocking. It is the "stronger sibling" of although.
Quick Contrast Map:
ButBasic/InformalAlthoughBalanced/AcademicEven thoughEmphatic/Strong