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Word: inspector (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...appeared in the room and asked for the appropriate rolls of microfiche. The logs backed up what Reynolds had said: Millstone had moved fuel as soon as 65 hrs. after shutdown--a quarter of the required time. The logs noted the sounding of alarms. Galatis wondered where the resident inspector had been...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: NUCLEAR WARRIORS | 3/4/1996 | See Source »

...plans for the restaurant were approved by the City of Cambridge Zoning Commission despite protests by the Harvard Square Defense Fund, Rangit Finzanaygam, a city zoning inspector, said...

Author: By Adam M. Kleinbaum, | Title: HSA Plans To Oust Jerry's | 2/16/1996 | See Source »

...largest chemical stockpile, the facility was built by EG&G Defense Materials Inc., under contract to the Army. But Utah residents are wary of the military after the atomic-testing scandal of the 1950s. "The firebricks blew up in the kiln at Johnston," says Steve Jones, a safety inspector who was fired by EG&G in 1994, after just three months on the job. "Then they built the kiln in Tooele using the same bricks." The Army contends that Jones was fired for mismanagement; Jones says he was sacked after refusing to sign a document stating that the Tooele incinerator...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CHEMICAL TIME BOMBS | 2/12/1996 | See Source »

...dumb blond (Kristen Rolf), the girl with a cold (Ona Hahs) and the vulgar staff member who proudly wields her cigarette (Anna Lewis)--all under the direction of the constantly angry boss, Emily Stone's Marge (often called--surprise, surprise--Sarge). The action picks up when a health inspector, played by Mark Bagley, has to review the kitchen, which for years has passed the test. This time, things are different. Bagley portrays a slimy 70s type, who will only give the kitchen a passing rating if he receives his share of lettuce. Will he be murdered? After he offends each...

Author: By Ian Z. Pervil, | Title: Don't Eat the 'Slaw'; Order Out | 12/14/1995 | See Source »

...Slaw and Order" serves up its best jokes when it tries to be a cartoon Laughter can abound at some of the recreations of the health inspector's death. Early on, he brings several moments of entertainment with his unctuous gestures. Later, a sub-plot, involving the unreaction of samplers brought out a few chuckles from the audience. But, these moments do not quite add up to a great play. Even Velma knows that it takes more than the discovery of a magnifying glass and phosphorescent paint to solve the crime...

Author: By Ian Z. Pervil, | Title: Don't Eat the 'Slaw'; Order Out | 12/14/1995 | See Source »

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