Word: ores
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...story is wrong-and it infuriates Reed College all the more because Reed, a place that goes for beards, guitars and sandals, is just unconventional enough that the yarn sounds as though it might be true. The story is often cited in two cities: in Portland, Ore., Reed's home town, and Moscow. In the Russian capital, not long ago, a Kremlin guide halted some U.S. professors at the tomb...
...mind are his country's Andean-sized needs. Lying along South America's mountainous Pacific flank, Chile has one of the world's richest copper deposits, but, apart from minerals, few other natural resources. Copper production is at a record, but prices have dropped and the ore does not bring in as much as it used to. There is drought in the southern farm lands, and Chileans are still repairing the $400 million damage from catastrophic earthquakes 2½ years ago. Chile also shares some of the woes common to most of her neighboring republics-inflation, government...
Named were Paul G. Bamberg, Jr. '63 of Eliot House and Middletown, R.I., (physics); James A. Quitslund '63 of Eliot House and Bainbridge Island, Wash., (English); John H. Raaf '63 of Lowell House and Portland, Ore. (bio-chemical sciences); and Michael S. Rice '63 of Winthrop Hause and Sioux Falls, S.D., (government...
...still known as Reichswerke Hermann Goring. He ran its mining operations in Germany and in Nazi-occupied lands. In 1950 he was picked by Bonn to revitalize what the war had left to Salzgitter: a ragged collection of steelmaking plants, largely dismantled, built around some low-grade ore mines in northern Germany. Despite the many problems, Ende opened new mines, modernized the ore processing, put up steel mills, branched into oil drilling. Since Ende took over, Salzgitter's annual sales have increased by an astonishing 475%. though they are leveling off this year. ''You have to compliment...
...than the New York Exchange. In Switzerland and West Germany, indexes dropped 40% below their alltime highs, v. Dow Jones, which dropped 23%. Having dropped farther, most European exchanges are showing even less recuperative power than Wall Street. ''Pessimism reigns supreme," lamented the Milanese financial daily 24 Ore last week...