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Word: overburdened (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...determined not to hurry the process with pumps or other heavy-duty machinery. All in all, the technicians at Three Mile Island are cautiously optimistic. But even after cooldown, their job will not be done. They must still purge the stricken and perhaps permanently wrecked plant of its overburden of frighteningly dangerous radioactivity, a process that could easily go on for months. Then they must figure out a way to dispose of tons of unprecedented high-level nuclear waste left by the nightmare. Even Yankee ingenuity has not come up with a solution to that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Now for Operation Teakettle | 4/30/1979 | See Source »

...author's obvious personal intelligence, coupled with that which he bestows on his characters, including the women, counteracts the nose in the air excesses. The theatrical, artistic and literary allusions (not to mention numerous Harvard Law School alumni) that Auchincloss generously strews throughout the novel usually liven, rather than overburden his dialogue...

Author: By Joanne L. Kenen, | Title: Poor Little Rich Folks | 7/8/1977 | See Source »

...Chang's Liang Ch'i-ch'ao and Intellectual Transition in China is an outgrowth of his Ph.D. thesis. Nevertheless, it reads smoothly and does not attempt to overburden the reader with the useless facts or to overawe him with the writer's analytical skills. The author has attempted to show how currents of Western and traditional Chinese thought clashed in Liang's mind. Liang did not merely substitute Western ideas for those already present in the Chinese tradition. Liang would accept a particular Western idea, but he was perfectly willing to discard that idea if he found an element...

Author: By Jim Blum, | Title: Liang Ch'i-ch'ao | 4/12/1972 | See Source »

Dumped over deep cuts high in the mountains, the "overburden" piles up -until the rains come. Then the mud and boulders roar downhill, snapping big trees like toothpicks and tumbling onto farms, gardens and homes in the hollows below. "I just dread the day," says Alice Slone, principal of a school in Cordia, Ky., "when I'll pick up the phone and find one of the children has been buried in a strip mine slide...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Environment: The Price of Strip Mining | 3/22/1971 | See Source »

Some top airmen contend that they could trim fares if Browne's CAB did not overburden them with enforced competition. As Browne conceded, "there has been criticism from some that the CAB is still grinding out route awards every Friday afternoon." But most of those are made on the basis of cases started long ago, when the economy-and traffic-was riding high. Others have been made because of congressional or White House intervention over the objections of the CAB. A classic case was the 1956 award of a New York-Miami route to Northeast Airlines, pushed through first...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: The High Cost of Competition | 10/12/1970 | See Source »

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