Word: bombs
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Returning Russians. Meanwhile, Middle East peace will depend on restraint by both sides. Even if there is no resumption of major fighting, Israel seems in for more violence. Last Tuesday a terrorist's grenade exploded in the Old City section of Jerusalem, injuring 20; the following day a bomb exploded in an Israeli bus wounding 14 and killing one. Both incidents indicate the growing restlessness of the Palestinians living within the Israeli-occupied Arab territories. In the past month at least 60 suspected terrorists have been arrested in Israel for a series of attacks...
Quarterback: (13) DAVID JAYNES, Kansas, 6 ft. 2 in., 212 Ibs. In what is most certainly not the year of the college quarterback, Jaynes is the best of a mediocre group. Respected for his passing-he throws the short square-out as well as the long bomb with equal skill -Jaynes is most admired for the way he drops back and stays in the pocket. A former ball boy at the Kansas City Chiefs' summer training camp, he has patterned his style after the Chiefs' veteran quarterback, Len Dawson. At Kansas, Jaynes has hit for 35 touchdown passes...
...world prestige. From an economic or historical perspective, then, it is not surprising that the victors of the Chinese revolution have been so intent on returning lost territories to their homeland. And if nothing else, Sinkiang province has served China well as a suitably unpopulated area for nuclear-bomb testing...
...AUGUST 1970, a group of people planted a bomb in the University of Wisconsin's Army Mathematics Research Center. When the bomb went off, early in the morning, a researcher working late was killed, and people across the United States were shocked and horrified. Most people who shared the bombers's opposition to American policy in Indochina said that they should still have worked in a non-violent way. When The Crimson ran an article called "In Defense of Terrorism," most readers disapproved, and David S. Landes, professor of History, called the article atrocious in a letter to the editors...
...executive aircraft by Cessna, Beech and Gates Learjet. They make six out of every ten light planes sold in the U.S. President Nixon, however, has now ordered a whopping 42% cut in fuel for business aircraft, a move that has hit Wichita with all the impact of an antipersonnel bomb...