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Word: overloadings (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Coordinators say they are also worried about information overload...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: First-Year Orientation: The Administrators' Domain? | 9/14/1998 | See Source »

...There's no information overload here, no crank calls, no Jehovah's Witnesses bugging you and no one trying to rip you off," says Barnett, a former X-ray technician who moved here nine years ago with a bad back and a disability check...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: So Who's Crazy, Them Or Us? | 8/17/1998 | See Source »

Riding the critical success of Everest, IMAX Corp., of Mississauga, Ontario, plans to expand by taking this sensory overload to a megaplex near you. "The company is going through a huge shift from institutional sites into more commercial sites like multiplexes," says Kevin Skislock, a senior analyst at investment bank L.H. Friend, Weinress, Frankson & Presson...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Imax Gets Bigger (By Getting Smaller) | 6/29/1998 | See Source »

...information overload resulting from a visit to the center is enough to intimidate the most optimistic high school student or delight the most over-achieving parent. There's nothing like a display of how intimately Harvard has been connected to the most minute and unimportant events in American history to make a hopeful parent beam and a stressed-out kid cringe. The info center has a timeline displayed on computer that goes into the details of all of Harvard's history, more than even the Crimson Key Society could handle. There is such a thing as too much Harvard trivia...

Author: By L. MARIKA Landau-wells, | Title: Getting the Down-Low at the Info Office | 4/16/1998 | See Source »

...them well known at the time. He has never done a commissioned portrait.) He began his big faces in the late 1960s, working directly from black-and-white photographs he took himself. The results were very strange. The images weren't "expressive." Their obsession is with fact, an overload of fact--not in the least with character. Their eyes don't contact the viewer: they look right through you. They were as anticosmetic as mug shots (some disconcertingly so: young Richard Serra looks like a dockland thug; his wife, artist Nancy Graves, like a snaggle-toothed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Close Encounters | 4/13/1998 | See Source »

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