Word: guayana
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...warning against placing too much importance on the material side of liberation, to the neglect of its spiritual aspects. Still, the Pope declared repeatedly that the struggle for social justice is an essential part of the church's work. At a complex of giant metalworks and mines in Ciudad Guayana, 300,000 people, many of them workers, greeted John Paul warmly when he said, "How long will the men of the Third World have to support unjustly the primacy of economic processes over inviolable human rights?" In Quito, Ecuador, he called for the "gradual disappearance of the intolerable abyss" between...
...much of its oil income to build a huge steel industry that will exploit its iron ore and great sources of hydroelectric power. Deep in the backlands on the Orinoco River, more than 200,000 people have already clustered in the government run, iron-and-steel community of Ciudad Guayana, where international businessmen come to swing deals, dine on fine French food and gaze upon spectacular waterfalls. Pérez aims to raise steel output from last year's 784,000 metric tons to 5 million tons by 1978, and to 15 million by 1985. If those hugely ambitious...
...most extravagant economic project is a $5 billion plan for quadrupling the capacity of the state-owned steel plant at Ciudad Guayana, thereby doubling employment from 8,000 to 15,000 over the next four years. As part of the project, Perez has announced that the iron-mining operations of U.S. Steel and Bethlehem Steel will be nationalized by 1975 rather than in 2000 as originally agreed. It is presumed that the American companies will be fairly compensated with money from oil revenues. Oil leases and equipment held by foreign investors-principally Exxon, Shell and Gulf-will also be nationalized...
...from the Center have been working under the auspices of the MIT-Harvard Joint Center for Urban Studies with the schools in the zone around Santo Tome de Guayana, Venezuela; and it is likely that at least one of the new projects will be conducted in that area. It is rumored that Davis, now in Venezuela, will negotiate some agreement concerning the study with the country's government before returning here...
...urban design have evolved over a period of centuries, and before the advent of the elevator. Harvard Professor Willo von Moltke demonstrates, however, that Sekler's chief criteria--proportion, symbolic placement of essential buildings, "visual continuity," and reasonable traffic flow--can be employed in designing a new city (Ciudad Guayana, Venezuela). Both articles are effectively illustrated...