Word: ariz
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...looked safe. It was presented as safe. And it was going to the benefit of everyone." That's how Paul Gelsinger, a father of four from Tucson, Ariz., explained in an emotional appearance before a Senate subcommittee last week why he supported the decision made by his 18-year-old son Jesse to undergo gene therapy for a rare metabolic disorder Jesse had suffered from since birth...
...Gore Vidal know how transparent and boring they are in launching their bruised-ego slurs against others in their field? There is plenty of room on this planet for all great writers to reap their monetary and psychological rewards without resorting to such laughable tactics. DALE N. WICKLIFFE Phoenix, Ariz...
...write about Gore because I am concerned that he not lose support by evading difficulties with legalese ("no controlling legal authority") or semantic gymnastics. One of the reasons so many New Hampshire voters chose Sen. John S. McCain (R-Ariz.) last week was that they like his "straight talk," that he answers questions in direct, often earthily vivid words linked in declarative sentences. Whether he means what he says and will do what he promises is a separate issue from the simple point of sounding as though he means what he says and will do what he promises...
...although the two weren't knocked off their horses completely, the results of the New Hampshire primary were more than enough to rattle their hold on the reins. Sen. John S. McCain (R-Ariz.) finished ahead of Bush with a solid 19 percentage point victory. Although New Hampshire has a particular affinity for insurgent candidates, McCain drew broad-based support from Independent and Republican voters alike. For Bush, who waltzed into New Hampshire expecting to win, the defeat signifies that he will need more than deep pockets and a famous name to secure the Republican nomination...
Even more troubling, however, is that the killing of this magnitude has become business as usual, especially on the campaign trail. While Texas Gov. George W. Bush and Sen. John S. McCain (R-Ariz.) trumpet this bipartisan massacre--claiming that this places foreign policy "above politics"--their complacency abdicates the opposition party's duty to provide the nation with a choice. Consequently, most important foreign policy issues will be removed from the debate in the upcoming general election...