Word: colorados
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...result of inflationary forces already let loose. It seems most unfair to relate higher living costs to steel prices when the average steel price has remained steady for several years." Block thereupon announced that Inland too was raising its price on structural steel by $5 a ton; little Colorado Fuel & Iron followed by posting a $3-per-ton increase on structurals...
Maybe nobody has heard of Pacific Lutheran, but it beat Seattle Pacific, which beat Seattle, which beat Colorado, which beat Arizona, which beat San Jose State, which beat Stanford, which beat San Francisco, which beat Houston, which beat Providence, which beat New York University, which beat South Carolina, which beat Duke -which, as everybody knows, was the No. 1-ranked team in the nation last week. The Blue Devils weren't taking any chances with their ranking, either: while the rest of the Top Ten were getting knocked off right and left in holiday tournaments, Duke took ten days...
...than in Connecticut. Even so, astonishing inequities also exist within the laws of a single state. In California, a boy who breaks into a car and rifles the glove compartment can get up to 15 years; for stealing the whole car, he gets no more than ten years. In Colorado, dog stealing is punishable by ten years; dog killing, by six months and a $500 fine. In Minnesota, the maximum sentence for "carnal knowledge" of a girl aged 14 to 18 is seven years-compared with 20 years for the same crime with "any animal or bird...
...trains from Chicago to the West Coast still maintain a tradition of comfort and good service that continues to attract passengers. The Burlington, whose California and Denver Zephyrs used to carry peak loads only in summer, will spend $350,000 this winter jointly with Hertz Corp. to promote Colorado skiing. It has already been so successful that ski-season reservations on its trains must often be made months in advance...
Died. Dr. William Randolph Lovelace II, 57, pioneering space doctor and NASA's director of medicine; of exposure after the crash of his twin-engine Beechcraft in sub-zero weather near Aspen in the Colorado Rockies which also cost the lives of his wife and the pilot. A onetime Mayo Clinic surgeon, Lovelace turned to aerospace as wartime head of Army Air Forces medical research at Wright Field; he developed the first satisfactory oxygen mask for high-altitude flight, and played a role in virtually every major high-altitude development since, thus becoming NASA's inevitable choice...