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Word: monitorable (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Some consulting companies seem to have absorbed the importance of food. The next round of schmoozing for both McKinsey and for Monitor will be fullscale dinners. No cheese and crackers here...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CONTACT CONSULTING | 11/5/1994 | See Source »

Patients would be able to leave the hospital wearing their incubators, just as if they were wearing a bandage or cast. The patient would only need to return to the hospital to monitor healing of the wound...

Author: By Anne C. Krendl, | Title: The Greatest Thing Since The Band-Aid | 11/1/1994 | See Source »

...most realistic doctor show TV has ever done. That realism goes beyond the graphic operating-room scenes and rapid-fire medical jargon ("O.K., we gotta go with it -- 5,000 units heparin, tPA 10 milligrams, push. Sixty over one hour. Let's get another EKG. Keep him on the monitor ..."). The show's hopped-up pace and jumbled texture -- stories start, stop and overlap seemingly at random -- set it apart from almost anything else on the air. "There's a rhythmic instinct to slow down in television," says Crichton. "But our show had to go as fast as the real...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TELEVISION: Angels with Dirty Faces | 10/31/1994 | See Source »

...Indian artists, it is irreverent, sometimes heavy-handed and very of-the-moment. It ends with a meditation on the fate of the earth titled Worldview, dominated by a traditional burial scaffolding embedded with a parking meter permanently stuck on time expired and set up next to a video monitor screening images of war. Previous Indian museums, says director Richard West, "felt they were doing civilization and humanity a favor by saving material of people who everybody assumed were headed for extinction. I wanted to make sure that ours did not lapse into interpreting Indians as a historical phenomenon." Himself...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CULTURE: Of Spirit and Blood | 10/31/1994 | See Source »

...other for the first time. In return for the halt, the Clinton Administration and its allies will provide North Korea with two light-water reactors, worth an estimated $4 billion, as well as up to 500,000 tons of heavy oil a year. International inspectors will be allowed to monitor North Korea's declared nuclear sites to make sure the freeze is carried out, but it will be at least five years before they can inspect sites Washington suspects contain clues to the North's nuclear-weapons program...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Week October 16-22 | 10/31/1994 | See Source »

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