California, Florida, South Carolina, North Carolina, Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, and Iowa
Iowa, by a huge margin.
Iowa is north of Missouri.
Iowa is north of Mississippi.
no
Alaska, Arizona, California, Hawaii, Iowa, Montana, North Dakota, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Washington and Wisconsin.
At this point he's no longer on the team, but quarterback Kurt Warner is from Iowa and played for the Arizona Cardinals.
The answer will be different depending on which state you lived in and on whether you moved from one state to another. The general principle is that income is taxable in BOTH the state where you earned it and the state where you were a resident at the time. If, for example, you were a resident of Arizona and occasionally traveled to Iowa to do work, then you would claim all of the income earned in Iowa on an Iowa non-resident income tax return. On you Arizona full-year resident return, you would claim all of the income you earned all year in BOTH states. Then you would attach Arizona Form 309 to claim a credit for taxes paid to Iowa. On the other hand, if you moved from Arizona to Iowa, then you would file an Arizona Part Year Resident income tax return and pay taxes to Arizona on the income you earned while living in Arizona. You would also file an Iowa Part Year Resident income tax return and pay taxes to Iowa on the income you earned while living in Iowa.
That depends. Arizona does not observe Daylight Saving Time. Iowa is in Central Time, and Arizona is Mountain Time, so if Daylight Saving Time is not in effect (November through March, approximate - they keep changing it), then Arizona is 8am when Iowa is 9am (1 hour difference).If Daylight Saving Time is in effect, then there is a 2 hour difference, so 9 am Iowa is 7 am Arizona.
Iowa
Iowa
Iowa is 310 miles long from north to south.