Word: lorain
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Also Sally S. Seaver, of Moors Hall and Fayetteville, N.Y. (Chemistry); Ethel M. Silverman, of Comstock Hall and Clifton, N.J. (Biology); Elizabeth K. Smith, of Coggeshall House and Lorain, Ohio (Economics); Anita E. Spertus, of Jordan W and Glencoe, III. (Near Eastern Languages); Eleanor B. Swift, of Whitman Hall and Chicago (History); and Nancy L. Uhlar, of Wolbach Hall and Valley Stream, N.Y. (History and Literature...
...years, France has spent $600 million on the new test facility. Some 15,000 Frenchmen, supported by 40% of France's navy, have been busy building bunkers, laying airstrips, deepening Tahiti's harbor and extending its piers. Last week, the job completed on schedule, French Admiral Jean Lorain gave the order from aboard his flagship, the cruiser De Grasse, and an irregular black mushroom rose above Mururoa lagoon...
...simple (and cheap) concrete-block structures. Last month the Rev. Lyle Schaller, director of the Regional Church Planning Office in northeastern Ohio (which represents twelve Protestant denominations), reported in The Lutheran magazine on a survey of new church construction near Cleveland. In the suburban triangle formed by Cleveland, Lorain and Elyria, no fewer than eleven of the 15 new congregations that have been organized since 1955 are Bible-preaching fundamentalist groups...
...string of nonsectarian "retirement centers" in downtown areas of cities, in villages-and near resort communities. The projects, for which the church hopes to get longterm, low-interest federal loans, will be designed for oldsters over 62 whose incomes are as low as $1,800 a year. In Lorain County. Ohio, for example, the church will set up a $4,500,000 settlement for 500 people. The plans call for cottages and high-rise apartments that will rent from $60 to $90 a month. A "core unit" near the center of the housing clusters will provide inexpensive health services, community...
...been no more risky than bridge building. Last week at Site No. 2-one of the twelve Atlas missile launching pads being dug near Roswell, N.Mex.-ironworkers began removing the steel outriggers, which stabilized an unmanned Lorain crane poised near the edge of the 172-ft. hole. The huge crane rolled through a wooden railing, toppled over backwards. Then, while crews watched helplessly, the boom toppled and the crane slid over the silo's lip. It hurtled downward, brushed workmen and scaffolding off the sides of the hole, crashed in flames at the bottom, killing a total...