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Word: reactor (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

...controversial, $5.2 billion reactor is completed but has been unable to surmount evacuation-planning obstacles to a commercial operating license...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Seabrook Plant Files for Bankruptcy | 1/29/1988 | See Source »

...utility continued borrowing heavily to finish the reactor and maintain interest payments. But as the reactor's licensing woes mounted, investors last summer refused to lend the company any more money, triggering financial crisis...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Seabrook Plant Files for Bankruptcy | 1/29/1988 | See Source »

...eternal life. An immense liturgy of transformation grew from this myth, and Kiefer uses it to connect primal fertility rites to the no less awful mysteries of nuclear technology. The painting is filled by a gigantic step-pyramid, the site of Osiris' burial but also, by implication, a nuclear reactor. Osiris' body parts are ceramic fragments scattered at the base, each wired by bright copper cable to his ka, or soul, at the summit of the mastaba, represented by a circuit board. Death and integration: fission and fusion. Through such metaphors, Kiefer sets forth images charged with warning and suffused...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Germany's Master in The Making | 12/21/1987 | See Source »

Robertson has returned at a time when, as he says, "there's a feeling of a little more substance in the air." The two U2 collaborations on the record (Testimony and the reactor-hot Sweet Fire of Love) were launched on little more than a wing, a prayer, a guitar riff, a tom-tom beat and a horn chart written by Gil Evans (Miles Davis' collaborator on Sketches of Spain). It is not only talent that makes these songs work, it's a finding of common ground between Robertson and the Dublin boys so sudden and intense that the discovery...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: The Half-Breed Rides Again | 11/30/1987 | See Source »

Like a giant vessel left ashore by the tide, the Seabrook nuclear power plant sits forlornly on the marshy New Hampshire coastline. The reactor has produced not a single kilowatt of electricity -- nor a penny of income -- since ground was broken for the project in 1976. Result: Seabrook is generating a financial disaster for its principal owner, Public Service of New Hampshire, an otherwise healthy electric utility that has poured $2.1 billion into the plant. Strapped for cash, Public Service last week did something that utilities virtually never do: it defaulted. The company deliberately missed a $37.5 million semiannual interest...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: We Are in a Heap of Trouble | 10/26/1987 | See Source »

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