Word: ores
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...third worry is freight carloadings. Last week they were down again, 15.3% below the same week in 1956, for the sharpest drop of the year and the greatest fall since August 1954. Much of the drop was caused by the winter stop in Great Lakes ore shipments ten days earlier than forecast. The key "miscellaneous" category, which includes all manufactured goods and is generally considered a good barometer, slipped only 12.4% below last year, and only 2.8% below the week before, considerably less, say railroaders, than the normal seasonal decline. Total for the year will probably wind up about...
...donation of $1.5 million by Mr. and Mrs. Alfred St. Vrain Carpenter of Medford, Ore., made the building possible. Their son, Harlow Carpenter '50 received his master's degree from the Graduate School of Design...
...nations which had been fighting among themselves for centuries -Germany, France, Italy, Belgium, The Netherlands and Luxembourg-formed the European Coal and Steel Community, surrendered to its control 188 iron ore mines, 355 steel companies operating 455 iron and steel plants, 145 coal mining companies operating 459 active pits. Last week the Common Assembly met in Rome to review five years' experience of the first practical experiment in European community, and found it good...
...Union Committee has chosen its officers and Student Council representatives. Eugene Langevin of Stoughton Hall and Ferndale, Mich., has been chosen chairman, J. Thomas Rosche of Massachusetts Hall and Omaha, Neb., vice-chairman and treasurer, and Robert W. Wilkinson, Jr. of Grays Hall and Portland, Ore., secretary. Lewis B. Oliver, Jr., Robert E. Weil, and Hastings Wyman, Jr. are the new Council representatives...
With their production of concentrate limited, even the big integrated producers were planning to cut back the costly ore search. Anaconda Copper Mining Co., which operates the richest U.S. mine near New Mexico's Ambrosia Lake region (TIME, Sept. 30), set a course that probably will be followed by other industry leaders. Said President Clyde Weed: "We will keep on exploring, but at a slower rate. We will spend less money on development. If we find good deposits, we will sit on them until the demand picks...