Word: leonards
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...foreigners shared the cool scorn of the Parisian who growled: "The Americans are crazy, and the Russians are crazy, too." Nor did anyone west of the Iron Curtain echo Radio Prague, which called Shepard's flight "scientifically primitive." In Europe and the U.S. most space spectators agreed with Leonard J. Carter, secretary of the British Interplanetary Society: "The Americans had the right way of doing it. Unlike the Russians, they allowed us all to take part in the fantastic adventure. I was pretty well right up there in the capsule with...
...brighter; there are indications that the young men called to the ministry today are keener of mind and firmer of purpose than their predecessors. Many seminaries are raising their entrance requirements-among them, the Missouri Synod Lutherans' Concordia Theological Seminary in St. Louis, whose dean, the Reverend Leonard C. Wuerffel, feels that the current crop of seminarians are being better trained than they have been in at least 20 years...
Died. Air Marshal Sir Leonard Horatio Slatter, 66, South African-born British air group commander in the Battle of the Atlantic during critical 1943, whose Wellington and Halifax bombers helped keep Allied sea lanes open by teaming with Royal Navy sub-killers to sink 61 German U-boats in April and May alone; after a long illness; in Uxbridge, England...
...LEONARD M. LANSKY, PH.D. Lexington, Mass...
...along, and hired a Cadillac ("a sickly marlin blue") to speed off to Providence. Sedov by then was about to emplane for New York. Cray persuaded him to ride instead in the Cadillac "in utter peace and quiet." Sedov produced a couple of nuggets for Science Editor Jonathan Norton Leonard's cover story. In turn, the Soviet scientist and his companions seemed fascinated by the ride, particularly with the automated Thruway toll booths which respond to dropped quarters with flashing "Thank You" signs...