Sadly, it was a typo in the email (apologies for that), but not in the
query:

 SELECT Applicants.AppID, Applicants.Name, Applicants.Email,
  Reviews.Quant, Reviews.Qual
  FROM ApplicantStatus
  INNER JOIN Applicants ON Applicants.AppID = ApplicantStatus.AppID
  LEFT JOIN Reviews ON Reviews.AppID = Applicants.AppID
  WHERE ApplicantStatus.Active = 1

AND Reviews.ReviewerID = 2  

  AND ApplicantStatus.SCode = '####'; 

produces the result I described.  --Chris


> If "C.Reviewer.ID" is a typo for "Reviews.ReviewerID", the solution is
simple:

>> There's something I'm not getting about how to put a SELECT
restriction on a query with an outer join.  The following query:
>> SELECT Applicants.AppID, Applicants.Name, Applicants.Email, 
>> Reviews.Quant, Reviews.Qual FROM ApplicantStatus INNER JOIN
Applicants 
>> ON Applicants.AppID = ApplicantStatus.AppID LEFT JOIN Reviews ON 
>> Reviews.AppID = Applicants.AppID WHERE ApplicantStatus.Active = 1 AND

>> ApplicantStatus.SCode = '####'

>> AND Reviews.ReviewerID = 2;
 
>> returns only Applicants who have reviews from Reviewer # 2.  What I
want is *all* applicants who meet the other two criteria (Active, and
SCode =...), and *any* reviews by Reviewer 2 for any of those applicants
(if Reviewer 2 hasn't written for Applicant a, then a should still be in
the result set, but with the Reviews.* columns as NULL).  
 
>> When I remove the final "ReviewerID = 2" restriction, all of the
right applicants are in the dataset--but with a lot of extra rows due to
reviews by other reviewers.  How do I get rid of Reviewers {1, 3...n},
without losing all the applicants who've never met Reviewer #2?  


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