Word: plaines
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Congress has eliminated most of their depletion allowance, and their profits have dropped. Exxon, for example, reported a 34.3% decline in net from the second quarter, compared with 1974. But another reason is the discouragingly low rate of discovery. Says Petroleum Industry Research Foundation Executive Director John Lichtblau: "The plain truth is, we just haven't seen any results from the recent rapid pace of drilling...
...problem was the only real mishap in a nearly perfect double exercise. Leaving behind the orbiting Apollo after their 44-hour handclasp in the sky, Soyuz earlier in the week came to a near bull's-eye touchdown on a dusty Kazakhstan plain, ending what Soyuz Commander Aleksei Leonov in his colloquial English said was a flight that seemed to go "as smooth as a peeled egg." The Kremlin promptly hailed the joint mission with yet another barrage of pronouncements. Exulted Izvestia: SUCCESS IN OUTER SPACE FOR PEACE. The Russians had more reason to crow. At week...
...What's your idea?" Again and again the Atlantic Richfield oil company asked that question in a six-month, $5.5 million advertising campaign that nagged Americans to send in suggestions for improving mass transportation. The company's own idea was plain enough. Top executives of Arco, the seventh largest U.S. oil company, were upset by public resentment of the big profits rolled up by the industry in the wake of the 1973-74 price increases. So they decided to do some image polishing by sponsoring a nationwide debate on alternatives to the family car. The response: an astonishing...
...then in Philadelphia. In Philadelphia, he occupied a cramped three-story house built as a private residence. There was no place for public offices except on the third floor, and callers climbing the stairs passed through the Washingtons' living quarters. Since the kitchen was in the visitors' plain view, Washington left his New York cook and her daughter behind: their "dirty fingers" would not be a "pleasant sight." Most of the official furniture was brought from New York where it had been inherited by the Federal Government from the congressional president. Much of it wore out so completely...
...Kremlin's enduring obsession with secrecy may at least partly reflect a residual sense of inferiority about Soviet technical skills. Until Stafford and ins men made it plain that they would not fly the ASTP mission if they could not inspect their partners' hardware, the Russians refused even to show them Soyuz and its launcher. When the Americans finally saw the spacecraft, they realized why. The Soviet equipment seemed even less sopinsticated than it had been reputed...