Word: arizona
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Gasoline fever appears to be worst in the Northeast, Florida and Arizona. But a few places-Texas, the Beep South and the Great Plains states-are virtually awash with gasoline. Some reasons for the disparity...
...advice, he would say, "Resign in the near future." He added: "We would be better off with Jerry Ford as President." Mills offered an intriguing inducement: he said he would support legislation to assure Nixon's immunity from federal prosecution if he leaves office. Even the House Republican leader, Arizona's John Rhodes, predicted that the Judiciary Committee will vote to impeach. Illinois Republican Congressman John Anderson, a good political weather vane, declared, "This is the penultimate link in the chain of evidence that has steadily been forged to show that there has been a conscious, deliberate effort to obstruct...
House Republican leader John J. Rhodes of Arizona has urged that any subpoenas be approved by the committee's senior Republicans as well as Rodino. Rodino said no decision has been made on that proposal...
Sticky Glue. Some NASA astronomers speculated that the sun's heat might have baked the comet's exterior into a kind of "sticky glue" that prevented some of the cometary dust and gas from boiling off. University of Arizona Astronomer Elizabeth Roemer, for one, found this theory improbable. Comets, she explained, are too gaseous and fragile to develop such a crust. Other astronomers suggested that Kohoutek, a "virgin" comet making its first approach to the inner part of the solar system and never before exposed to the warmth of the sun, had flared up briefly when its more...
...Arizona research was a so-called "double blind" study on over 600 school children. The doctors gave half the students daily doses of one to two grams of Vitamin C and the other half placebos--tablets that looked and tasted like the vitamins but contained no active ingredtents...