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FORECAST: Mostly cloudy to
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Highest Yesterday 40
A feature story concerning
instruction for mentally retarded
children appears on Pace 11 of
today's Issue of The Mail Trib
une. s
o
o a
Lowest Yesterday 32
Prec.
..Trace
United Press Full Leased Wire
United Press Full Leased Wire
To 10:30 Yesterday
50th Year
30 PAGES
MEDFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY, NOVE
Price 5c
No. 2$)
Big Four To Turn
Disarmament Over
Geneva. Switzerland (U.P.)
s The Big Four Foreign Ministers
Saturday abandoned all attempts
to reach agreement on disarma
ment at their present meeting.
They decided to instruct their
'experts to work out, before the
conference ends Wednesday, an
agreement to turn the whole dis
armament issue back to the
United Nations in New York
At a meeting yesterday, the
four Foreign Ministers even
failed to reach agreement on a
communique which would an
nounce their' deadlock or suggest
Five Medford Boys
Injured In Crash
South Of Roseburg
Five Medford boys were in
jured, none of them critically, in
an automobile accident eight
miles south of Roseburg early
Saturday, according to United
Press.
The new 1956 automobile in
which they were riding was de
molished when the car spun
around on the Winston bridge
and plunged down a 50-foot em
bankment.
Revs Identified
Police identified the boys as
Larry Tolle, 16, son of Mrs.
Jewel Tolle, 2823 Table Rock rd.,
driver of the car; Kenneth
Potucek, 16, son of Mr. and Mrs.
George Potucek, 337 O'Gara st.;
Donald S. Wolfe, 16, and Arnold
Wolfe, 14, sons of Mrs. Hazel
Wolfe, 322 Benson st., and Ralph
D. Stinson, 16, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Stinson, 1219 West
10th st. i
The five were taken to Com
munity hospital in Roseburg.
Relatives here said some of the
boys were to return to Medford
last night, while others were ex
pected to remain hospitalized
until today.
The Wolfe boys sister, Mrs.
Irene White, Mrs. Tolle, and
ti.tt onH Mrs Potucek were in
Roseburg to be with the injured
youths.
The car involved in the acci
dent was owned by Mrs. Tolle.
Plane-Ship Crash
Kills Five Sailors
San Diego, Calif. U.R)
Naval authorities Saturday id
entified two sailors who were
among five men killed when a
Navy attack bomber crashed
into the Destroyer USS Hope
well Friday during maneuvers
80 miles west of here.
The dead seamen were Rob
ert Dale Hobel, 22, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Leonard Hobel, Le
high Neb., and Roger Merril
Edwards, 21, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Antone Edwards, Bell,
Calif.
The crash also took the lives
of thea three men aboard the
plane, including Lt. Cmdr. M.
S. Essary, 40, San Diego; and
enlisted men R. E. Stewart,
Punxsutawney, Pa., and B. M.
Phillips, Jamaica, N.Y.
Five sailors aboard the Hope
well suffered burns and were
removed to San Diego Naval
hospital by helicopter. One was
reported in' serious condition,
while the other four were in
good condition.
Cmdr. Mark M. Grandor,
skipper of the ship, said it ap
peared the plane was making a
simulated attack on the ship
when the tragedy occurred. It
resembled the "Kamikaze" at
tacks in which Japanese pilots
deliberately plunged their
planes into enemy ships.
Box-Car Situation In
Oregon Said Improved
Salem (U.R) The freight car
shortage situation in western
Oregon improved last week with
72 per cent of the cars ordered
by shippers provided by the rail
roads, Public Utilities Commis
sioner Charles H. Heltzel said
Saturday.
That was the highest percent
ase in two months and com
pared with 67 per cent the pre
vious week.
Lumber shippers ordered 5,162
cars from Southern Pacific last
week, 352 fewer than the week
before. Shippers received 3,709
cars or 40 more than in the pre
vious week.
a means to resume talks on dis
armament in future.
But after days of hot words,
the delegates softened their tone
in Saturday's debate and agreed
that negotiations should continue
in the U.N.
Arranges Conference
Soviet Foreign Minister Vyach-
slav M. Molotov, in a new move,
arranged to confer privately
with Secretary of State John
Foster Dulles at American head
quarters at 10 a.m. today.
It was believed likely that
Molotov might have some new
proposal to make. But there was
no indication that the dour So
viet ' Foreign Minister would
change the attitude which had
blocked' all attempts to reach
agreement on German unifica
tion, European Security and Dis
armament.
At their meeting Monday, the
Foreign Ministers will turn to
the question of intensifying
friendly contacts between East
and West. But so many disagree
ments have been disclosed in ad
vance on this item that little
progress is foreseen.
Other Issues
Dulles, British Foreign Sec
retary Harold MacMillan and
French Acting Chief Delegate
Roland De Margerie met Satur
day afternoon to discus non-con
ference issues.
These included the Palestine
crisis, the rar .Last and admis
sion of new members to the U.N.
The relaxed tone of the For
eign Ministers was shown when
Dulles said:
I feel confident that even if
we did not reach a large measure
of formalized agreement on dis
armament, certainly the ex
change of viewpoints5, which oc
curred here has been instructive
and will help our Representa
tives in the U.N."
Major Shake-Up In
Argentina Likely
Buenos Aires, Argentina (U.P.)
A wide open split between
President Eduardo Lonardi and
his second in command, Vice
President Isaac Rojas, threaten
ed today to cause a major shake
up in the government. '
Rojas called an urgent meet
ing of the National Consultative
Assembly after his disagreement
with Lonardi over the Presi
dent's naming of right-wing
cabinet ministers.
The vice-president, a rear ad
miral whose naval forces played
a vital role in the overthrow ot
Juan D. Peron, was cheered in
the streets as he made his way
to the Assembly meeting early
Saturday.
Lonardi remained at the
rjresidential suburban residence
Buenos Aires was calm. There
were no soldiers in the streets.
Some persons gathered in front
of the Congress building where
the Assembly began its current
session at 12:20 a.m.
Eureka, Calif. (U.R) Six-
year-old Grace Anna Holt of
Bridgeville, Calif., died at Scotia
hospital here arly today from
burns she suffered at her home
Friday night. The child's cloth
ing caught fire from a backyard
weiner roast.
First 101 Members of New
German Army
Bonn, Germany (U.R) W est
Germany's new army was born
Saturday in a shabby garage be
hind the Defense Ministry.
Defense M i n i st e r Theodor
Blank administered an oath of
loyalty to the first 101 men of
what is to become a 500.000-man
Streitkraefte fighting force.
Officers Listed .
Two lieutenant generals, 93
lieutenant colonels, majors and
lieutenants, one sergeant major
and five master sergeants gave
the pledge.
Only a few had time to get
themselves fitted with the
mouse-gray uniform of the new
army. They were put promin
ently in front of the somewhat
disorderly ranks of the 101-man
nucleus for the Streitkraefte.
Bunting and a huge iron cross,
symbol of old-fashioned German
militarism, constituted the only
decorations for the ceremony in
the bare building which is used
as a training shed.
A red carpet was laid on the
grease-stained floor of the
Henrique T. Lott
Claims Victory In
Brazil Revolution
Ramos Installed As
President; Luz Out
Rio De Janeiro U.R) War
Minister Henrique T. Lott, Bra
zil's new strong man, claimed
total victory Saturday for his
"preventive revolution."
Under Lott's leadership the
Army Friday ousted acting Pres
ident Carlos Luz and installed
Nereu Ramos as this country's
fourth President in 15 months.
Concede Victory
Army announcements said that
both Luz and former Air Minis
ter Eduardo Gomes, his principal
supporter, have conceded victory
to the Revolutionists who took
over the country almost without
firing a shot.
Luz, who fled south to Santos
yesterday in the U.S.-built light
cruiser Almirante Tamandare,
was on his way back to Rio
yesterday after reporting by ra
dio that he is willing to accept
the new regime.
Gomes, who had attempted to
set up a counter-revolutionary-
headquarters at the Cumbica
Airbase outside Santos, flew
back to Rio with three plane
loads of Air Force officers who
had supported him.
They surrendered to Brig.
Vasco Alves Secca, Brazil's new
Air Minister, and were allowed
to go home.
The censorship imposed on
Rio by the Army was lifted Sat
urday, and reports from all parts
of the country indicated that the
bloodless revolution was a com
plete success.
Only Shots
The only shots known to have
been fired in the Revolution
were two shells from a Harbor
Defense battery at Rio's Ft.
Copacabana, which were dis
charged as a warning to warships
lying: off the port. No casualties
were reported.
Reports that Maj. Gen. Alcides
EchegQyen was shot and lulled
while resisting arrest were de
nied officially. Government
sources said Echegoyen suffered
a "heart disturbance" after being
arrested, and that he was being
treated at a Military hospital.
The War Ministry announced
that Maj. Gen. Alvaro Fuiza De
Castro, Luz's "War Minister for
a day" following Lott's resigna
tion Thursday, has been released
by the Revolutionists who ar
rested him Friday.
It was not immediately certain
whether others of a group of
about 100 officers arrested still
were in custody.
Lott rose against Luz to fore
stall a possible coup by Army
officers who wanted to prevent
the inauguration Jan. 31 of President-elect
Juscelino Kubitschek
and Vice-President-elect Joao
(Jango) Gaulart, who are gen
erally regarded as the "political
heirs" of the late President Getu
lio Vargas.
Slash Blaze Near Here
Results In Phone Calls
A fire on the hills east of
Medford caused a minor furor in
Medford last night.
The blaze, which . could be
seen from all parts of the Med
ford area, resulted in an estima
ted 50 telephone calls to city
police, and many more to the
fire department, radio stations,
and The Mail Tribune.
City police said, however.
that the blaze was a slash fire,
being burned by an operator
with a state permit, ' near the
Switzerland of America road.
Receive Oath
blotchy yellow-brick building.
Inspector General
Lt. Generals Adolf Heusinger
and Hans Speidel were the sen
ior officers. Heusinger is to be
come inspector general of the
army. It is expected that Speidel
will become the army's liaison
man with the North Atlantic
Treaty organization of which
West Germany is now a mem
ber. Defense Minister Blank, in a
brief speech, expressed the em
phasis which the government is
putting on making the army a
democratic one.
"You are the first of thous
ands," he said. "You are citizens
in uniform, and no more or less
than other citizens.
"The Streitkraefte will be un
dec the authority of the state."
There were no monocles,
medals or other ornaments
among the 106 to remind the few
officials and newspaper corres
pondents who -witnessed the in
duction ceremony of the tradi
tional Prussian armies.
itnfAW"" ""Kit!.'"-' v-
TO TELL PLANS Adlai E.
Stevenson is expected to reveal
his plans for seeking the Demo
cratic nomination for the presi
dency Tuesday at a meeting , in
Chicago. The belief that Steven
son will be an active candidate
for the nomination was strength
ened Saturday with reports that
James A. Finegan of Pennsyl
vania is in line for appointment
as a manager to handle Steven
son's roundup of delegates to
the Democratic national conven
tion. Edgar Faure Wins
Fifth Confidence
Vote In Five Weeks
Paris (U.R) Premier Edgar
Faure won his fifth confidence
vote in five weeksiSaturday to
save his shaky government from
collapse.
Following a debate subdued
by the death of France's first
lady, the national assembly
backed up Faure on his decision
to call December elections.
The vote was 285 to 247.
Ninety of the 94 Communists
supported Faure and the re
mainder were absent. Of the
103 Socialists, 94 voted against
him and the others did not vote.
Socialists Split
The Radical Socialists, the
party of both Faure and former
Premier Pierre Mendes-France,
split with 25 voting for the gov
ernment, 38 against, and 12 not
voting.
But the Premier faced possible
fresh trouble with his slim ma
jority because this was the
second time in a week that he
owed victory to Communist sup
port. The grudging confidence vote
for Faure came over the bitter
opposition . of former ' Premier
Pierre Mendes-France.
The vote was a key test be
tween Faure and Mendes-France,
who opposes early voting and
who wants an English-type elec
toral system based on voting by
districts for individual candi
dates. Official Mourning
The vote was held in an at
mosphere of official mourning
for Mme. Rene Coty, the French
President's wife who died early
Saturday.
Assembly officials wanted to
postpone the vote because of
Mme. Coty's death. But Presi
dent Coty insisted the vote go
on. He announced he would as
sume "all the responsibilities of
my office" should the vote over
throw the government.
Those responsibilities are
heavy. When a government falls
the president must consult with
political leaders and after long
negotiations, name a premier
designate who will try to win as
sembly approval.
Faure entered the vote with
the powerful Socialists and most
of his Radical Socialist party
lined up against him. Ironically
the Communists pledged to sup
port him with their 94-member
assembly bloc.
Tears to Pineapples'
Tour To Arrive Today
The "pears to pineapple" air
tour to Hawaii, which took more
than 30 Jackson county residents
to the islands last week, is sched
uled to return to the Medford air
port at about noon today.
The tour, sponsored by the
Jackson County Chamber of
Commerce, left here Nov. 5 for
a week of sight-seeing in Hono
lulu and other portions of the
territory. .
The four-engined Transocean
Air lines plane flew to Hawaii
direct from Medford, which
christened its airport the "Med
ford International and Trans
ocean Airport" for the one day
only. The return flight is also
direct, and takes approximately
12 hours.
Eisenhc
Golf Club; To Open
Gettysburg Office
May Attend Meetings
Starting Next Monday
Washington (U.R) A bu
oyant, happy President Eisen
hower took a couple of swings
with a golf club Saturday in
a carefree demonstration that
he is feeling fit as a fiddle
despite his recent heart attack.
Not only that. He announced
he is going to open an office in
down town Gettysburg, Pa.,
three miles from his farm, at
tend a welcome when he goes
there Monday, and probably
preside at Cabinet and National
Security council meetings a
week from now.
Practice Shots
Mr. Eisenhower, decked out
in casual gray slacks and jacket,
Washington (U.R) Sen.
James H. Duff (R-Pa.), one of
President Eisenhower's orig
inal backers, said Saturday
that if Mr. Eisenhower runs
again he will be re-elected and
the Democrats know it.
But Duff declined io specu
late whether the President,
who is recuperating from a
heart attack, . will seek a
second term.
strolled out onto the south lawn
of the White House shortly after
lunch. All he wanted to do was
cast a critical eye on his son,
Maj. John S. Eisenhower, who
was taking a few practice shots
on the White House putting
green.
The President sat for a while
on a bench nearby. But it was
a beautiful balmy fall day, the
temperatures in the mid-60's.
He couldn't help thinking how
long he'd been away from his
favorite sport. Finally he gave
in.
He got up slowly, took a club
in his own hands, and took a
few swings of his own to show
John how it should be done.
The look on his face was some
thing to see. The famous Ike
grin was broader than ever. He
was having more fun than in a
long time.
In an earlier indication of
Mr. Eisenhower's buoyant spir
its the White House announced
that he may report to his office
in downtown Gettysburg as ear
ly as Tuesday.
He will commute to the office
in the Gettysburg post office
from his farm three miles away.
Press Secretary James C. Hag
erty said this "certainly" is
another sign of the President's
rapid recovery from the heart
attack he suffered seven weeks
ago.
Shows No Fatigue
The Chief Eexcutive arose re
freshed and cheerful after his
first night in the White House
in 13 weeks. He showed no fa
tigue in a morning examination
despite the exictement of his
long trip from Denver and tu
multous welcome home here
late Friday.
Shortly after Jie awoke, Mr.
Eisenhower ' conferred f o i an
hour with Hagerty and Presi
dential Assistant Sherman Ad
ams. And then he turned to his
favorite pastime playing with
his grandchildren in his private
quarters on the second floor of
the Pennsylvania avenue man
sion. The President's physician's
could not be reached immedi
ately for comment on their pa
tient's golfing on his second day
out of the hospital. But it was
presumed he wouldn't . have ta
ken the swings without their
approval since he has been fol
lowing orders pretty strictly.
Three Killed, 15 Injured as Landslide
Sends School, Homes Into Quebec River
Nicolet, Que. (U.R) A
rumbling landslide apparently
caused by seeping water under
mined at least five buildings,
including a school and the
bishop's palace, Saturady and
sent them crashing into the Nic
olet river.
Three persons, including a
two-month-old child, were kil
led. At least 15 persons were
injured, none critically.
The disaster occurred shortly
before noon near the confluence
of the Nicolet and St. Lawrence
rivers, 90 miles northeast of
Montreal. Three of the Dionne
quintuplets went to school here.
Fires Break Out
Fires broke out in some of
the wrecked and damaged build
ings and telephone lines snap
ped when poles were toppled
by the sudden collapse of the
earth. A bridge across the Nic
For red
MISS BOHNERT HONORED Miss Doreen' Bohnert, Central
Point, is one of the eight highest-ranking 4-H members in the na
tion, it was learned here Saturday. As a result she will go to the
National 4-H congress this month, where final results of the na
tional achievement awards program will be announced. She is
shown above receiving two statuettes as the state achievement
contest winner from Jennings Pierce, representing the Ford Motor
company, which presented the award.
SATURDAY
SCORES
WEST
Oregon State 16, California 14
Stanford 44, Oregon 7
UCLA 19, Washington 17
Washington State 13, San
Jose State 13
Pacific U. 7, Lewis and Clark
6
Denver 39, Utah Stale 6
Utah 27, Colorado A&M 6
SOUTHWEST
Texas Christian 47, Texas 20
Texas A&M 20, Rice 12
Arkansas 6, Southern Meth
odist 0
Oklahoma 52, Iowa State 0
Texas Tech 34, Tulsa 7
Wyoming 20, New Mexico 0
MIDWEST
Ohio State 20, Iowa 10
Michigan 30, Indiana 0
Michigan State 42, Minnesota
14
Illinois 17, Wisconsin 14
Purdue 46, Northwestern 8
Marquette 18, Holy Cross 6
Kansas 12, Oklahoma A&M 7
Nebraska 37, Colorado 20
Kansas State 21, Missouri 0
SOUTH
Maryland 25, Clemson 12
Duke 41. South Carolina 7
Tennessee 20, Florida 0
Virginia Tech 34, North
Carolina State 26
Wake Forest 13, Virginia 7
Notre Dame 27, North
Carolina 7
, Auburn 16, Georgia 13
Georgia Tech 26, Alabama 2
Kentucky 41, Memphis St. 7
Vanderbilt 20, Tulane 7
Louisiana State 34, Mississip
pi State 7
Mississippi 27, Houston 11
EAST
Dartmouth 7, Cornell 0
Princeton 13, Yale 0
Navy 47, Columbia 0
Army 40 Pennsylvania 0
Syracuse 26, Colgate 19
Brown 14, Harvard 6
Pittsburgh' 26, West Virginia 7
Penn State 34, Rutgers 13
Boston College 40, Boston U.
12
olet was damaged and closed to
auto traffic.
The Nicolet cathedral was
damaged and left tilted when
thousands of tons of earth caved
in, creating a .gaping hole 700
feet long, 200 feet wide and 40
feet deep.
It was in this area that the
residence of Bishop Albertus
Martin had stood. The Acad
emie Commercial, a boy's school
run by the Christian Brothers,
also was dashed into the river,
along with a doctor's, home, an
apartment building and a ser
vice station.
' Among the dead was a child
of Dr. Jean Lessard, whose
home was demolished. Mrs. Al
phonse Boisvert, 60, a cook at
the school, and Brother Her
menegilde, a teacher, were in
the school when it collapsed and
were killed.
Had the disaster occurred on
torn
on
Centra! Point Girl
Named One Of Top
4-H Members In US
Miss Doreen Bohnert, 19,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John
Bohnert, Central Point, has been
named one of the top eight 4-H
members in the United States, it
was learned here Saturday
Glenn Klein, county agent for
4-H work, was informed that she
has been chosen regional winner
in the National 4-H achievement
awards program, which, he ex
plained, means she is among the
eight highest-ranking 4-H'ers in
the nation. As a result she will
receive a trip to the annual na
tional 4-H Congress in Chieaeo
Noy 2e 27 and 28.
Achievement Winner
Miss Bohnert was named win
ner of the statewide achieve
ment awards program recently,
and went on to enter the na
tional contest. Klein explained
that her ranking among the top
eight will not be announced
until the Chicago meeting, and
that actually she could rank
even closer to the top.
Miss Bohnert, now a student
at Oregon State college, Cor
vallis, has been an outstanding
and active 4-H worker for the
past 11 years. Her work has been
in many phases of 4-H activity,
but she has concentrated on
home economics and livestock
work.
MOVE EQUIPMENT
Boise (U.R) Twelve heavily-laden
railroad flatcars, load
ed With Morrison - Knudsen
construction equipment, will
leave here by Monday for Cam
bridge, Idaho, and the site of
Idaho Power company's projects
in Hells Canyon.
Australia Children
Make Own 'Davy' Hats
Sydney, Australia (U.R)
The suburban village of
Banksia was shocked Satur
day by allegations that chil
dren in the area have been
cutting the tails off cats to
make "coonskin" Davy Crock
ett hats.
a weekday, it would have
caught the school's students in
their classes and the casualty
toll certainly would have been
larger.
Many persons were evacuated
from the area. Among them
were patients from the Hotel
Dieu hospital and nuns from a
convent nearby.
Red Cross and Army person
nel and provincial police were
rushed to this textile manufac
turing town Of about 60,000
population to cope with the
emergency. Policemen joined
firemen in battling the fires
that broke out in damaged
buildings, and by nightfall most
of the blazes had been brought
under control.
The disaster struck as Nicolet
still was rebuilding after a fire
in March, 1954, which destroyed
almost the entire business dis
trict,
Two Deaths Blamed
On Area's First
Major Cold Wayg
Police Advise Using
Chains On Most Passes
By UNITED PRESS
The weather bureau predicted -Saturday
that a new storm mov
ing down toward Oregon from
the Gulf of Alaska would bring
about six inches of snow to
Northwestern sections of the
state today.
The forecast followed one of
the coldest November nights on
record in the s'tate. Portland had
a minimum temperature of 21
degrees early Saturday and
Baker was the coldest spot in the
state with 7 above.
Temperature Warning
Oregonians were warned to
prepare for below freezing tem
peratures before the new storm
arrives and a low of zero at
Baker and 15 to 20 at Portland
was predicted last night.
State P.olice were advising
chains through all Cascade passes
where plowing and sanding was
in progress.
At least two "deaths in Oregon
were attributed, in part, to the
storm, and 13 persons were res
cued from drowning when moun
tainous waves pounded a 128-
foot tuna vessel into a singing
condition some 30 miles off Cape
Lookout on the Oregon coast.
Erode Bruce, a 56-year-old
Junction City barber, was killed
in a headon collision during a
heavy snowsorm one mile south
of Junction City.' Lane County
Coroner Fred Buell said Bruce
apparently was blinded by the
storm and .attempted to make a
left turn when he was struck by
a pickup operated by Anthony J.
Howser, 42, of West Linn.
A Portland motorist, Rollo
Forrest Axley, 61, collapsed and
died while putting chgins on his
car near Government Camp on
the slopes of Mt. Hood. The
mountain area was the scene of
a blizzard all through Friday.
High Winds
Winds up to 60 miles an hour
and 15-foot ocean swells were
reported off the Oregon coast. A
heavy gust of wind toppled the
tip of a power pole at Pacific
Power & Light's Youngs bay
plant at Astoria, cutting off
power to that port city and Sea
side and Cannon Beach. Power
was restored to downtown As
toria by 5 p.m.
Chains were advised at Pros
pect with three inches of new
snow; at Siskiyou , with one
inch; and Meacham, where
plows were operating.
Sanding operations were re
ported at The Dalles, with
packed snow. Packed snow was
reported at Pendleton, with
with plows in operation. Klam
ath Falls had a trace of new
snow.
First Cold Wave
The arctic blast was the first
major cold wave of the season. It
gripped a vast area from the
Pacific Coast to the Dakotas
and as far south as Nebraska.
Across the Rockies, 10 inches
of snow piled up at Fraser, Colo.,
and temperatures dipped to 11
below zero at Cutbank, Mont.,
and to 8 below at Great Falls,
Mont.
Early Storm Covers
Region Vifh Snow
The Medford weather bureau
last night reported only a trace
of snow at the airport yesterday,
but nearly an inch was reported
at Jacksonville and in other
parts of the valley.
Heaviest snowfall in the Med
ford area in November was in
1911, the first year weather
records were' kept here, when
two inches fell on Nov. 10. The
only other time November snow
fall totaled as much as an inch
was in 1918, when an inch fell
on Nov. 25.
Eleven inches of new snow
fell at Crater Lake National park
in the 24 hours ending at 8 a.m.
Saturday.
Highway 62 through the park
is slippery and motorists were
advised to carry chains or use
snow tire's. The road from Annie
Springs to the lake rim was
closed temporarily but was ex
pected to be open in time for
skiers today. o
The warming hut will be open.