PAGE TWO TBE MCBIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, APRIL 16, 1957 IA TITEMCIGNDIYTEDYARL1,1S k M AW , mRmm Dial NEW IRON SOURCE: Taconite Increases Supply of Ore INEID "The action is savage and honest !" -William K. Zinsser, Herald Tribune "REAL . .. OVERWHELMING . . . THE ENDLESS THREAT BUILDS A WRACKING SUSPENSE 1" --Alton Cook, World Telegram "Stirring . . . the action is filled with suspense !" --Kate Cameron, News ROBERI RYAN*ALO AY n'" end .top *xw 1i\N /"" .... i . ._.._,_>. : By HUGH A. MILLIGAN Associated Press Newsfeatures Writer Almost from the time English settlers with the Virginia Company established America's first iron- works at Falling Creek; Va., in 1619, this ever expanding country has been eating into its iron ore deposits with a banquet-sized ap- petite. But only in the past decade, when annual steel production passed the billion-ton mark for the first time, was the ghost of deple- tion observed hovering about the economic table-auguring poverty in the midst of plenty, sending a horrifying shudder up the steel backbone of our economy, threat- ening to exhaust the might Mesabi range of northeastern Minnesota, which supplies our purest grade of iron ore, before the century was out. Was the iron age, which began with the Assyrians 5,000 years ago and saw the sword turned into a ploughshare, an iron ship, a sky- scraper, an automobile and an armored tank, to come one day to a close? What, if anything, would replace it? Before the haunting spectre of depletion could answer these ques- tions, a new source of iron ore with the misleading Greek name of ta- conite had quietly laid the ghost to rest. Twice as tough as granite and one of the world's hardest rocks, taconite put up a long and expen- sive laboratory struggle before it yielded the secret of extracting its much needed iron ore content. In Greek, taconite means to melt, but this was one time when the Greeks did not have the word for it. To get one useable ton of iron ore, three tons of this rugged gray rock must be drilled, blasted, crushed to the consistency of sand, then ground fine as flour and baked into pellets in a 2,400-degree oven. But despite the difficult and ex- pensive milling operations, tacon- ite plants, as the accompanying map shows, are booming in the Great Lakes region on both sides of the border Already plants are in operation at Silver Bay and Moun- tain Iron in Minnesota and an- other is going up at Aurora. Reesed thmn UMILO MI ® r TACONITE PLANTS BOOMING IN GREAT LAKES REGION f/Vr0A)'/NM "'.. a - . PAilcide/phia 1::1 ~ do : :: City News Roundup MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .75 1.87 2.78 3 .90 2.25 3.33 4 1.04 2.60 3.85 Figure 5 average words to a line. Classified deadline, 3 P.M. daily. 1 1:00 A.M. Saturday Phone NO 2-3241 HELP WANTED COUNSELORS for brother-sister Camp in Southwest Michigan. Few openings for married couples. Good salary. In- teresting work. Write, Camp Cones- toga, 621 County Line Rd., Highland Park, Ill. )H113 PERMANENT POSITION open in our office. Requires typing, filing, and general office procedures. Full time. Could be adjusted to 30 hours per week if necessary. Apply at: Fol- lett's Michigan Book Store, 322 South State Street. )H112 STORE MANAGER Retail - Men's Wear College Campus Location Fast growing chain of quality col- lege stores seeks the services of an ambitious, aggressive young man for new Ann Arbor store, opening about April 20. Located: 1208 So. University (New Campus Theatre Bldg.) Retail clothing experience preferred, but not absolutely necessary. WRITE TO BEAUTY SHOPS ROSE O'GRADY BEAUTY SHOP 1102 Packard . . . NO 2-4738 )Y8 VOGUE BEAUTY SALON Complete Beauty Service 300 S. Thayer . . . NO 8-8384 )Y7 PITTSFIELD BEAUTY SALON 2232 Pittsfield Blvd. . . . NO 3-4052 )Y6 PHILLIPS BEAUTY SALON Phillips for Hair Styles 1315 S. University . . . NO 8-7156 )Y5 FLORENCE'S BEAUTY STUDIO Complete Beauty Service Hutzel Bldg., 106 E. Liberty-NO 2-0897 )Y3 CAMEO BEAUTY SHOP Specializing in Permanents 116 E. Huron . . . NO 8-7018 )Y2 ANN ARBOR BEAUTY SHOP Open Evenings by Appointment 2075 S. Main . . . NO 2-1478 MUSICAL MERCHANDISE, RADIOS, REPAIRS SPRING SALE Record players ..........24.95 up Portable radios ..........$14.95 up Television ..............$195.95 up MUSIC CENTER 300 S. Thayer )X17 BALDWIN PIANOS Acrosonic Spinets Used spinets and uprights ---------------------- --also I BUGS BUNNY UNIVERSITYI I "To Hare Is O XI Hum n'sOF MEXICO 1 II Human" I ----------------------- Next: "DESIGNING WOMAN" Maddy Music 508 E. William NO 3-3223 ',{ :} : 5.<..z. :;'.;:. t,'.",,: }"°F.{-: ^"."^;?.?:J:": :?ii"i'.iuv .'j,+^.^.i .}i. qT';?:?< . :TT; t{K { "..:"";:, i }R?" : i: :.::if::: .. Jr. SSS:{lY :"::tC^j':l iii i'+: 'iii:C+r?:: i:i4i>i> i:;,i;ii.}vjt.tiy.:...::i?. .y, G W:iA£:Jwiie'i:": ii utiCivS::e:)4. a6[ +"v:?+nw.v.._..i::.v .8d>:is.ti::t+viw'u :fi vYi[ i Yli? :": e )XI Redwood & Ross, OEIUM DIAL NO 2-3136 Kalamazoo, Michigan P.O. Box 511 Kalamazoo, Mich. Inc. nH )Hill LAST SHOWINGS TODAY REAL ESTATE THE BUTTS & SWISHER CO. REALTORS FOR ANN ARBOR WOODS (Washtenaw at Stadium) Models Open Daily 10-8 )R1 LOST AND FOUND LOST-Monday, two seta of ROTC of- ficer's shoulder boards on E. Univer'- sity. Call Richard Nagle, NO 2-7817. )A128 REWARD for information leading to whereabouts of gold ring. Lost 3/18 in library. Call 3-0521, ext. 672. If no an, leave message. )A120 ALTERATIONS DRESSMAKER Alterations, Restyling 334 S. State St. NO 3-6613 )P4 Dressmaking Tailoring, restyling. Will do fitting in your home or mine. Experienced. minimum charges. NO 5-6370. Pick-up and Delivery DRESSMAKER Mending -- Alterations. Ph. NO 2-9541, )PI CONVERT your double-breasted suit to a new single-breasted model. $15. Double-breasted, $18, or new ell& shawl collar, $25. Write to Michaels Tailoring Co., 1425 Broadway, Detroit, Michigan, for free details or phone WOodward 3-5776. )P2 FOR RENT ONE-HALF double room $7.50 per week, 1315 Cambridge Rd. NO 2-8718 )C109 FOR SUMMER ONLY: 4 room newly furnished and decorated apt; private bath; 1 block from shopping area and campus. Call Jane 3-5974 be tween 5:30-7 or write Michigan Daily, Box 40-A. )C17 ON CAMPUS A NICE 2 room, private bath, a1utili- ties. $75. Additional services. Arthu Witting. Telephone NO 8-7234. )0110 3 ROOM furnished apt. close to cam% pus and downtown. Private bath and shower; sunporch, fireplace, TV an- tenna, two entrances. All utilities furnished except electricity. $11 month. Phone NO 3-5532 after 6:30 P.M. )0111 ROOMMATE WANTED for male Botany grad., in private, congenial home. Everything furnished. On-campus lo- cation. NO 8-7391. )C104 4 ROOMS and bath, unfurnished, avail- able for 3 or 4 students. Must pay for all utilities except heat. $90 per month. NO 8-9874 )C101 FOR FALL and summer-modern apart. ments 1 block from campus. NO 2- 1443. )C99 USED CARS 1955 VW Sunroof, radio & heater, r- dining seat, instrument panel excel- lent condition. Call NO 5-537. )N125 SELECT USED CARS 1948 Dodge tudor sedan; runs good .$95 1953 Nash Ambassador fordor; radio and heater, overdrive......$495 1952 Pontiac fordor sedan; good trans. portation ...................$291 KLINGLER PONTIAC, Inc. 2500 Jackson at Stadium Blvd. Stripped of all Fiction, Legend, Lies! dG CINEMASC:OP . LR by DELUXE WANTED-Cab drivers, full or part- time. Apply 113 S. Ashley. Ann Arbor Yellow and Checker Cab Company, Phone NO 8-9382. )H20 PERSONAL HAVE YOU forgotten second payment on Airflight to Europe is due today? )F197 HI FI Speakers AR-Y, Bozak, Electro-Voice, Lansing Amplifiers & Tuners Dyna-Kit, Fisher, McIntosh, Sherwood, REL Turntables Connoisseur, Rek-O-Kut, Garrard Recorders Viking, Bell, Berlant, Magnecord, Crown Pre-Recorded Tapes Stereophonic, Monaural Arms Gray, Electro-Sonic, Fairchild Audio Supply Laboratories 334 Nickels Arcade * STARTS WEDNESDAY A Peak of Excitement That No Man... No Camera... Has Ever Captured Before ! VICTORs{_ MATURE Ew CINEM 'SCoPa TECHNICOLOR9 4 WEK'S Diaper Service National s exclusive "no-fold" diapers fit your baby. Beautiful polyplastic container. "Rock-bottom" prices. Fresh plastic bag every delivery NOrmandy 2-4603 NATIONAL DIAPER SERVICE TARANTULAS Kinkajou, alligator lizards, desert lizards, rare turtles, ant colony, monkeys, sea horses, tropical fish, new plants, aquariums and supplies. UNIVERSITY AQUARIUM 328 East Liberty NO 3-0224 (open daily except Thursday) Bus Service Resumes Buses started rolling again Sat- urday on Ann Arbor streets. After more than a week without bus service, a period which saw some doubt as to whether the buses' were going to start again or not, The Ann Arbor Transit Company started limited service early Sat- urday morning. With nine buses in operation, patronage was reported as "fair," although some complaints were re- ceived. Free rides were given by the ,company Saturday afternoon. j The Bus Company spent the first day of service checking routes and time schedules. During the period between serv- ice, local taxi companys sponsored share-the-ride plans in the city. * * * Parking Fines Increased Prohibited zone parking will now cost University students $5.00. Municipal Court Judge Francis L. O'Brien announced that, effec- tive° immediately, all prohibited zone parking fines will be boosted from $1.00 to $5.00. Any tickets received must now be paid within 72 hours, a change from the previous ten-day period. 4 # # Castrop Pleads Guilty CharlestCastrop,s24 years old, pleaded guilty in circuit court on April 4 to a charge of felonious assault. Castrop was accused of beating a student nurse with a toy pistol as she slept in her room on January 6. He was released on a $2,500 bond to await sentencing on April 30. Bike Licenses on Sale New bicycle licenses for Ann Ar- bor's 11,698 registered bicycles may go on sale tomorrow, according to City Clerk Fred J. Looker. The bicycle licenses were due to go on sale yesterday, but the Allen Park supplier could not have them ready then. 'U' pedalers will have until April 30 to pick up their 1957 plates which are required for all bicycles. Licenses are priced at 50 cents each. I I FOR SALE )F195 NO 2-7767 NO 2-9425 WELCOME BACK! )X13 Was coming back quite a feat? Do you yearn for cookies to eat? Remember us for a midnight treat! CAMPBELL & SON BAKERY 219 N. Main NO 8-9880 )B285 DIAMOND RINGS. Complete selection. Best price anywhere. Direct from fac- tory at 55% off list. No risk-money- back guarantee. NO 2-2684. )B237 ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords - $7.25; socks, 39c; shorts, 69c: military sup- plies. Hi Fi Studio Largest inventory of I FT components in the area. Authorized Dyna-Kit Electro-Voice AR-1 Rek-O-Kit Colloro Pickering Jim Lansing Wharfdale dealer for: David Bogen University Janzen Garrard Fairchild Fisher McIntosh and others SAM'S STORE Phone NO 3-0800 122 East Washington )B205 PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES For the Finest in Movies it's BOLEX THE QUARRY, INC. 320 S. State St. NO 3-1991 more than just a camera shop )D71 Ia I Ask about our payment plans and package specials. 1217 & 1317 So. University NO 2-9595 )X3 BUSINESS SERVICES RE-WEAVING-Burns, tears, moth holes rewoven. Let us save your clothes. Weave-Bac Shop. 224 Nickles Arcade. )J2 TYPEWRITER REPAIR and service. Pick-up and delivery. Moseley Type- writer Service. 204 N. 4th Avenue, NO 3-5888. )J60 PASTEL MINK--NEW SKINS Direct from an EMBA Ranch. MARGARET SHOP - 516 E. LIBERTY ) J59 WASHINGS-Also ironing separately. Specialize in cotton blouses and washed skirts'. Free pick up and deli- very. Phone NO 2-9020. )J23 CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES EXPERT Foreign and Sports Car Serv- ice. Nye Motor Sales, Inc., 514 E. Washington. NO 3-4858. )S60 For the Best in Tires, Batteries, and Service Open 8:30 A.M. to 8:30: Week Day Shows at 7 and 9 P.M. Phone NO 2-3221 P.M. )N124 dg= DIAL NO 8-6416 UNION THEATER TRIP There's always a sale at BOB MARSHALL'S "DAMN YANKEES" Tuesday, April 23 48 NASH under 50,000 miles. Clean for its age, overhauled motor, good trans- portation at $125. 2008 Day St. or call NO 2-8576. )N106' PETS & SUPPLIES Parakeets - Tropical Fish Your Garden Center, 215 S. Fifth Ave. )T4. MONKEYS Kinkajou, alligator lizards, desert lizards, rare turtles, ant colony, tarantulas, sea horses, tropical fish, new plants, aquariums and supplies. UNIVERSITY AQUARIUM 328 East Liberty NO 3-0224 (open daily except Thursday) )T9 ALL COLORS - baby parakeets and breeders. Canaries. Baby cockatiel cages. 305 W. Hoover. NO 2-2403. )T3 L r a $375 I see "HOB" GAINSLEY SERVICE So. University & Forest MAY FESTIVAL Six Concerts-May 2-3-4-5 THURSDAY, MAY 2, 8:30 THE PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA EUGENE ORMANDY, Conductor ALEXANDER BRAILOWSKY, Pianist Including transportation to Detroit )S49 Tickets on sale Union Student Offices 2-5 P.M. LIMITED NUMBER STILL AVAILABLE TIRE SALE Prices slashed Big trade-in for used tires Fully Guaranteed GOLDEN'S SERVICE featuring STANDARD Products 601 Packard - NO 8-9429 1552 I I I le 15 I All-Beethoven Program Overture to "Leonore," No. 3, Op. 72 Symphony No. 8 in F major, Op. 93 Concerto No. 3 in C minor, for Piano and Orchestra, Op. 37 DANCE CONCERT' a-4olern' Classifieds Read I a'--------------------- ~ U ii i I i 1I II