2024-08-152024-08-151957-02-04https://hdl.handle.net/10323/16946Pontiac Press newspaper scanned from microfilm9 men dead, 27 others missing following coal mine explosion: Smoke, fumes believed to be biggest menace ; Auto show crowns queen in closing hours of '57 run ; May bury two more in tomb of honored dead ; Soviet officials refuse to name mystery patient ; Mine shaft is scene of disaster ; Bank held up in Grand Rapids ; Reveal state road plans ; Pontiac man to run for state board post ; Area woman killed as train hits car ; Many victims of nervous disturbances find way to health ; Ban on parking sought at school ; The day in Birmingham: Tonight's agenda runs from beetle to rezoning ; Crews abandon 2 French ships ; Sisters top pie baking contest ; Township seeks building order ; AFL-CIO heads to attempt ousting 3 member unions ; Suffers skull injury in 2-car collision ; Executive finishes long Pontiac career ; Your income tax ; Birmingham woman seeks U of M post ; Examiner OKs 'genuine' label ; Ample budget assures city of snow removal ; Leukemia takes Michigan boy, 8 ; Brownell requests civil rights action ; 2 appointees named to United Fund panel ; Winter vacationers arouse distrust ; B52s to take place of outdated B36s ; Danes to get pensions ; Woman, 82, faces judge over 69-cent meat theftPDFen-USUsers assume all responsibility for questions of copyright, invasion of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.ExplosionsMine safetyDisastersAuto showsBeauty contestsTomb of the Unknowns (Va.)Road constructionLabor unionsMental healthCivil rightsUnited FundThe Pontiac Press: 1957-02-04TextOakland University