2025-11-112025-11-111961-09-18https://hdl.handle.net/10323/18954Pontiac Press newspaper scanned from microfilmFisher Body settles with Pontiac still out ; Dag Hammarskjold dies pursuing peace for world ; Secretary general’s death puts U.N. in deepest crisis to date ; Send-off should be warm: school child needs love ; Motor Division last strike bound plant: GM, local 596 agree ; Adenauer’s party loses 27 seats but will hang on ; Officer beaten on melee here ; 37 die as Electra falters on take-off: ‘no control’ call clue in crash ; Details include new fenders, roof: Olds reveals ’62 profile ; The day in Birmingham: Flint minister to address Missions Institute Oct. 6 ; U.N. troops OK, Ireland learns ; Interiors glamorized: silhouette low on longer larks ; Cuba deports bishop and 135 priests ; East Germany readies new law for defense ; U.S. dollars keep Commies warm? U. of M. to filter transferees ; Unit to oppose ‘forced’ unions ; Peru’s president arrives in U.S. for visit today ; Sukarno says happy with U.S. responsePDFen-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.United Auto Workers UnionHammarskjöld, Dag, 1905-1961Plane crashesGeneral MotorsGermanyOldsmobileMichigan--FlintCubaPeruIndonesiaCold WarUniversity of MichiganThe Pontiac Press: 1961-09-18TextOakland University