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Orlando Evening Star du lieu suivant : Orlando, Florida • 1

Lieu:
Orlando, Florida
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1
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Jfl.Gfl?bDDG ITwaGfincg gEfflfQDQ0ODQ(ojQ JU By FRANK MURPHY Staff-Writer ed and is such as to allow maximum progression under all traffic conditions. This system is being expanded north on Magnolia to N. Orange Ave. and south on Orange Ave. from Colonial Barry said.

Only 20 Pet. Use For the pedestrian cross-walks, the engineer said his surveys discovered that only 20 pet. of all pedestrians took advantage of the diagonal crosswalk. "It was likewise discovered, in analyzing the signal timing at these intersections, that the pedestrian was immobile Recommended, P. 2, Cols.

4-5 vanced signals are Concord, Amelia, Livingston, Robinson, Washington, Central, Pineand Church. In the 50-page report, Barry said Rosalind Ave. has a single dial non-expansible system interconnected to provide a degree of progression. "The signal spacing on this street is irregular and not conducive to good circulation," the engineer said. "Main St.

has a PR electronic signals system of co-ordinated traffic control. This system is so flexible as to offer close to 300 different possible combinations, depending on local intersection conditions. The system is interconnect "aid Barry has recommended that the four pedestrian crosswalks on Washington Central Pine and Church be eliminated to facilitate traffic. The engineer has also asked that parking be removed from the east side of Orange Ave. between Jefferson and South Sts.

These recommendations were made by Barry after making traffic surveys in the city for one year. The seven intersections on Rosalind Ave. that Barry recommended for electronic signals are Livingston, Robinson, Washington, Central, Pine, Church and South St. The eight intersections on Garland suggested for the ad To speed the flow of traffic in Orlando, the city traffic engineer has recommended to city council that electronic signal devices be installed at 15 intersections on Rosalind Ave. and Garland St It has already been recommended and approved by council to install the electronic "brain" lights on Orange Ave.

at 10 intersections. Would DropjCrosswalks For another change on Orange Traffic Engr. Don- EVENIN MAN DO The Weather Partly cloudy through Saturday with scattered afternoon and evening thundershowers. HUh yesterday 91 Low this a.m. 72 Hourly Temperatures 1 1 34 5(7 (9 10 11)2 1 1J 75 74 73 73 74 74 75 7g 79 82 S3 (CcmpItU Forwut Oa Page I FINAL EDITION THIRTY-TWO PAGES ORLANDO, FLORIDA, FRIDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 7, 1957 Tele.

3-4411 -Classified Only 3-8511 Price: 5 Cts. VOL 84 NO. 249 DUO The Winners'. Flier Rescued At Sea, 2d Missing Orlando-Alaska Wedding By Phone Maneuvers mm Llorjiig astatine FjQrjQ! For Ike Cut HYMAN N. ROTH JOSEPH L.

BRECHNER WLOF Granted Channel 9 WASHINGTON The Federal Communications Commission today awarded TV Channel 9 at Orlando to Mid-Florida Television Corp. WLOF. It denied an application by WORZ Inc. for the channel. The action reversed the rec ommendation of a hearing ex aminer who in August, 1955, proposed a grant to WORZ which operates radio stations WKIS AM and WORZ IFM, Orlando, and WNTM, Vero Beach.

Two Orlandoans 5,000 miles apart, are going to tie the knot over a telephone wire tonight. There shouldn't be any hitches either in the plans of Miss Betty Louise Holland, 19, Orlando, and A2-c Richard James Justice, 21, who's stationed at Ladd Air Force Base just outside Fairbanks, Alaska. There's been a lot of planning: The circuits between Orlando and the air force base ft i 'A i By Search ABOARD USS SARATOGA (iF The pilot of one of the two jet planes which plunged into the Atlantic last night has been rescued, it was announced aboard this supercarrier today. The rescue was made by heli 4 VASIL POLYZOIS JOHN W. KLUGE copter from the aircraft ear To Avert New Session ner Valley orge.

The announcement spelled at least partial success for a mercy operation that had sharp and the voices from Alaska will come plainly out of a loudspeaker. Donald Justice, 19, 1103 26th will stand in during the ceremony for his brother and will place the ring on Miss Holland's finger. The romance, which started at a Boone High School bonfire rally in 1953, got a big boost from Orkyido Atty. Richard M. Harris and Jim Pitts, Southern Bell public office manager.

Miss Holland, who met her husband-to-be when she was a 10th grade student at Boone, went to Harris and inquired about marriage by proxy. The attorney had heard of the telephone technique and asked Pitts. Pitts arranged the circuits. The ceremony probably will cost about $35. Rates are $7.50 for the first three minutes and $2.50 for each additional minute.

Rites Will Last About 13 Minutes The rites, which will not include the usual bride's walk down the aisle, organ music and solo, will last probably about 13 minutes, according to the Rev. Clarke. After the ceremony, the bride will go back to her home, Rt. 1, Box 625, Orlando, where she lives with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.

J. C. Holland. Honeymoon plans are "undecided," Miss Holland said. She won't have a vacation from her secretarial post at Mc-Dowall Transport 114 W.

Grant for six months. Justice, who enlisted in the air force in February, is checking into the possibility of leave. His Alaskan tour as a member of an air police squadron will last until December 1958. If her new husband, a Boone graduate, can't get leave, Miss Holland said she would go to Alaska when her vacation comes around. ly curtailed navy maneuvers at which Pres.

Eisenhower, a guest aboard the Saratoga, was a Solons Race Time On New Tax Plan spectator. SEARCH AT DAWN RICHARD JAMES JUSTICE BETTY LOUISE HOLLAND William O. Murrcll WORZ Inc. secretary-treasurer, said today the FCC decision would be appealed. NO TARGET DATE Donn R.

Colee, vice president and director of Mid-Florida Television, said there is no target date for getting the television station on the air. Ha said there are equipment delivery "and other Negotiations will begin immediately with National Broadcasting for a network affiliation, Colee said. The television station's transmitter will be erected on the 45 acre radio operations site on the Old Winter Garden west of Orlando. Sixteen of the 18 warships escorting the "Big Sara" had been sent to take part in the hunt, and four of the 60,000 ton carrier's own planes were put into the search at dawn. By Star Services TALLAHASSEE Florida legislators began a race against time today to shove through a $125 million tax program by Saturday midnight under a threat by Gov.

LeRoy Collins have been reserved for the marriage time of 8 p.m., 3 p.m. in Alaska. Two ministers are ready to officiate in the double ring ceremony the Rev. W. R.

Clarke of the First Baptist Church of Orlando, and an air force chaplain at Ladd. Notary Public Retained A notary public has been retained to take down the proceedings. A speakerphone has been set up in the office of John Cooper, district manager of the Southern Bell Telephone Telegraph Co. The Orlando ceremony will take place there. to call them back into immediate special sesson if they don't.

The key to solution of the tax problem which has plagued the legislature throughout the session lay with a six man conference committee which worked last night shaping a compromise tax package. The committee worked be Announcement of the rescue came shortly after word had been received aboard the Saratoga that a man on a life raft had been sighted about 120 miles northeast of Jacksonville. That was the area in which the jet fighters went down last night. James C. Hagerty, presiden hind closed doors at its task 7, OQ State Arlvcntists afSier For BULLETINS TALLAHASSEE.

(IP) The house sustained Gov. LeRoy Collins' veto of the "last resort" bill today. The bill, with powerful backing of the attorney general, provided for closing public schools to avoid racial integration. The vote was 4842, short the necessary two-thirds to override. and gave no advance hint of its progress.

Members said they hoped to have a program shaped for presentation some time during the day. FINAL EFFORT Members of the conference group were Sens. Davis of Madison, Pearce of East Palatka and Clark of Monticello, and Reps. Surles of Polk, Sweeny of Volusia and C. A.

Roberts of Union. Meanwhile, two house members planned a last gasp at 'GRATIFIED' "The stockholders of Mid-Florida Television are extremely proud of the decision of the Federal Communications Commission today regarding the assignment of Channel 9," Colee declared. "We are very gratified that the issue has been settled and that Orlando will benefit with a wider range of program selection that another channel will afford." Mid Florida officers are: Joseph L. Brechner, Bethesda, president and director; Hyman N. Roth, Orlando, sec- Opening Trading Is Higher NEW YORK UR Oils continued to advance as the stock market went higher in fairly active trading at the opening today.

Leading issues rose from fractions to around a point. Rails were lower. Opening blocks included: 205 Men Cross Lines At Canaveral COCOA Two hundred and five men crossed Teamsters Union picket lines around the Cape Canaveral guided missile test center this morning. Col. E.

E. Kirkpatrick, in charge of the corps of engineers' Jacksonville office, said he understood members of the operating engineers, plumbers and electricians unions plus laborers and "one or two" carpenters were in the group. Fifteen hundred men have been honoring the Teamsters picket lines, established May 21. The union is seeking The campus of a 400-stu-dent boarding high school 12 miles north of Orlando has been converted into a convention site for 7,000. Opening at 7:30 p.m.

today on the campus of Forest Lake Academy is the annual Seventh-day Adventist camp meeting, a statewide meeting scheduled to run 15 hours a day for the next nine days. Thousands of Adventists tial press secretary, said the report came from the heavy cruiser Boston. WATCH LAUNCHING The rescue announcement came a few minutes after 7:30 a.m. Orlando time, just as Eisenhower had come to the Saratoga's flag bridge to watch a launching of the navy's Reg-ulus guided missile. Hagerty said there was no information regarding the fate of the pilot of the second plane.

Both were flying F-3H Jet Demons. The planes were not attached to the Saratoga unit. They were operating out of the navy's Cecil Field at consecration to religious beliefs." Opening for business today is the convention's large cafeteria, geared to serve several thousand meals daily; a supply store, refreshment stand and a book and Bible house. Tonight ministers working in shifts will double as night-watchmen as permanent campers sleep. Tomorrow, the first full day of the convention, Adventists will hold their regular Sabbath service.

As many as a dozen services will be going on at the tempt to revive constitutional revision in the legislature and TALLAHASSEE (IP) The Senate refused today to bypass a death-dealing double committee reference and place on its calendar for an immediate vote the controversial bill to validate a harness track permit in Seminole County. from throughout the state have been arriving since yesterday ward off an extra session. Reps. Tom Beasley of Walton County and John Mathews of Duval sought to have the house either adopt a reapportionment formula identical to the one in the present constitution or else remove the whole question of apportionment from the revised constitution. With the legislature inflexibly divided into two camps the small county lawmakers on one side and the large-coun Case Supports Ike In Rollins Address afternoon to occupy hundreds of tents, trailer sites and dormitory rooms.

Others have registered at nearby hotels and motels. EARLY ARRIVALS Early arrivals will be joined by congregations within easy driving distance of Orlando for the opening address by Pastor Harold H. Schmidt, Orlando, same time in the morning. Francis D. Nichol, Washington, D.

editor of the Adventists' official weekly Review and Herald, will address the main congregation at 11 a.m. An early devotional service at 6:30 a.m. will feature Pastor Taylor G. Bunch, minister of By SUMNER RAND Staff Writer I Sligo Church, largest Protest president of the Florida Confer I steps. Thurs the news reports indicate our representatives are exploring such possibilities as Getty Oil up -i at 37U on 1,000 shares; Standard Oil New Jersey up Vi at 655s on Socony-Mobil up 3b at 61 on and Kansas City Southern off at on shares.

American Telephone was up at 177V4 on 1,200 shares; Anaconda up Vt at 66 on and Standard Oil of Indiana up at 57'8 on 3,000. Shell Transport Trading rose at 28 on 3,600 shares; Bethlehem Steel was up at 471 on and U. S. Steel rose at 67 on 1,500. Boeing, United Aircraft, New York Central and Pennsylvania Railroad were among the losers.

General Electric, Kennecott Copper and Loew's were up. Yesterday the Associated Press average of 60 stocks rose 90 cts. to $183.70 in its first WOLF, Tg. 3, Cols. 2-4 West Palm Beach Will Be Closed WASHINGTON The air force plans to close down its West Palm Beach base June 30, 1959.

An air force spokesman said today a study has shown that the base will not be needed after that date. The base is used as a training center for Military Air Transport Service MATS -A-lots and crews and also photo mapping and charui. squadrons. George, It Is DALLAS Catzumi Ot-suka went through the routine of having his name changed in district court. The new moniker? It's George Catzumi Ot-suka.

"Everybody calls mo George," he explained to Judge D. B. Wood. ant congregation in the nation capital. Sen.

Clifford Philip ence. Three permant auditoriums and several circus-size tents cMduiiMiiiii'iii ui iuuiuai aunai inspection zones and some masure of ground i nspection, some limitation on the testing Comic Dictionary ty legislators on the other the efforts of Beasley and Mathews appeared doomed before they started. Collins said that if the legislature fails to provide revenue to balance the budget, the budget commission may withhold funds from state departments and institutions. The problem is to provide The Rollins Decoration of Honor bestowed for distinguished service to the college was made to Joseph Justice, Rollins dean of men in absentee and Mrs. Alice McBride Hansen, librarian of Mills Memorial Library.

Algernon Sydney Sullivan Medallions, one of the highest student awards, were made to Marion Poison. Ithaca. N. and to Kenneth Pahel, State Pa will be utilized for various groups from five to 90, as well as exhibits and displays. Purpose of the convention, according to church officials, is to provide a "vacation with spiritual emphasis which will afford opportunities for Christian fellowship and renewal of PEDESTRIAN A person who can dodge some of the drivers all the time, and all the drivers some of the time, but who can't dodge all the drivers all the time.

R-NJ today called for support of the administration "in what I believe it is trying to do in the direction of a limit, first-step agreement" on disarmament. Making the commencement address at graduation exercises for 116 Rollins College seniors, Sen. Case said "the very fact that serious negotiations are taking place provides some ground for hope that the unhappy impasse in which we have been living for some years now may finally be abut $90 million in state funds and $36 million for the coun The Libra Honor Award ities lo tch. tef.cher Pa crease ana scnooinouses uuuu- maHo in 1he nti1tanHino unman praHnatp wpnt tn Rnmp Rnsp. funds The house instructed its con-i n- marv NnnnHnrf Tnrnntn General Reeve awards for ference group to make certain SEN.

CASE scholarship excellence were "1U "'Tr1, advance of the week. On the American Stock Ex-1 chtnge prices advanced also. Gainers included New Jersey Zinc, Pacific Petroleum, Creole I Petroleum, Imperial Oil and Hazeltine. I Corporate bonds were mixed. Oft THE PRAYER OT THE DAT DIAL 4-2(11 1 MUSIC STORES CLOSE SATURDAY Commencing Saturday, June 8 thru mid-August, Cooper, Gregory, Kraemer's, McKinney's, Music Mart, Robinson's, Streep's and York's will close all-day Saturday.

Stores will be open Friday evenings until 9 p.m. lnr tV niirlr'irat, ViiMnon Klein anH SO ine 10C31 UOVIS W1U UtJ ICf Inside The Star Tase! Page Comics 22 Personalities 9 Editorials 8 Radio-TV 23 a 'first-step' that would serve devices as well as of nuclear Richard Trismen of Winter jtam t0 Eet tne 6 impose some degree of con-'stock piles through the diver-: Park. Ronald Fishbaugh and: Movies 21 Society 15-19 trnl over armaments anrl that 1 cinn nf rntnrp nutniit nf fission-1 Danipl PowpII of Orlando and I PIANO i organ prk-INVENTORY vwv tu.uvUiuii v.v v. SALE OPEN TONIGHT 'TIL 9 could provide a base for later able material to peaceful uses." to Shirley Leech, Canton, Ohio. coofer maonoua Obituaries lDjSports 10-1.

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Pages disponibles:
490 675
Années disponibles:
1884-1973