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Word: hazardous (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Rail explosion leads to massive chemical hazard...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dashboard: Jul. 30, 2007 | 7/19/2007 | See Source »

...pages of documents we've reviewed expose an official policy of premeditated ignorance." He also criticized the testing standards that FEMA and the Environmental Protection Agency used before they eventually came to the incorrect conclusion, as Paulison stated in May 2007, that "the formaldehyde does not present a health hazard." Trailers were left with windows ajar, air conditioning on and all vents open for days before interior air levels were tested for the gas - conditions that did not nearly approximate actual living conditions. It was only almost a year and a half after the first complaint - and with the looming...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Grilling FEMA Over Its Toxic Trailers | 7/19/2007 | See Source »

When people hazard a guess at my ethnicity (sometimes after asking something like, “So, where are you really from?”), they usually guess Korean, Chinese, or Japanese, with a few choosing Malaysian, Singaporean, or Filipino. But no one ever says part Mongolian. Statistically, that would make sense. With a population of almost three million, there aren’t many Mongolians even in Mongolia—the least densely populated country in the world...

Author: By Joyce Y. Zhang | Title: Reconciliation in the Land of the Khans | 7/5/2007 | See Source »

...Chambers Bay Golf Course in Pierce County, Wash., is obvious and abundant, a gorgeous canvas of mountain, sea and sky. As you begin to walk the course, a second natural element makes its presence known: the wind. It swirls and dips and then slaps you sideways, an "invisible hazard," as the course's architect, Robert Trent Jones Jr., likes to call it, mimicking the roughness of the stubbly Van Gogh--like landscape...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Teeing Up a New Game | 6/7/2007 | See Source »

Once upon a time, cars were hailed as the solution to an acute environmental hazard. A century ago in a city like Milwaukee, a quarter of a million lbs. of horse emissions fouled the streets each day. In Chicago, 10,000 dead horses had to be towed away in a single year. The flies and the pathogens in the manure dust aside, magazine writers compared the overall "horse cost of living" unfavorably with the cost of switching to cars. At the time, a gallon of gasoline cost 18, which today would be close to $4--exactly where some experts think...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Pain in the Gas | 5/24/2007 | See Source »

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