2024-09-042024-09-041953-09-01https://hdl.handle.net/10323/18050Pontiac Press newspaper scanned from microfilmCold front may break heat wave Thursday ; Germany uncovers "Red terror plan' ; Tribunal orders damages paid, jobs restored: U. N. High Court Rules in Favor of 1 1 employes after pro-Red quiz ; Latest Soviet atom bomb blast equivalent to US bombs ; 100 GIs released today include West Point officer ; Lucy Cartrette arraigned here ; Union-Red probe planned in fall ; Employment at record high ; Broker shortage is now $150,000 ; General Wainwright suffers 2nd stroke ; Pontiac schools will open for fall terms next week ; Kyes reveals plans for European trip ; County farmers face $1 million drought damage ; Birmingham commission asks tor new proposal on use of Porritt property ; Detroiters stage traffic protest ; Israel Beattie dies at age 82 ; Ferguson talks on Senate vote ; Birmingham man to receive training ; Detroit sergeant in free PW list ; FCC to review Flint TV report ; 5 suspects released in Perkins slaying ; Disease perils southern Texas ; Harvard keeps suspected Red ; 2 Flint women amputees plan for useful lives ; CIO members urged to boycott Cudahy ; Ace pilot sets altitude record ; AFL-CIO argument slows beer output ; Six-day vacation in Rockies ends for EisenhowerPDFen-USUsers assume all responsibility for questions of copyright, invasion of privacy, and rights of publicity that may arise in using reproductions from the library's collections.CommunismNuclear weaponsLabor unionsDroughtsPrisoners of warKorean WarThe Pontiac Press: 1953-09-01TextOakland University