EAST FAREWELL
NEWS
Thursday, March
8, 1956 Vol. C558
LOCAL
NEWS
SNOW CLOSES RAILWAY AND TOWNS
East Farewell- An early March blizzard completely closed down
the Mighty Keystone Railroad between Central City and Springfield for two days last week. This segment of the line runs through East
Farewell, Slate Mountain ,
Riverview and Mountain View
and the communities were effectively cut off for almost two days. It wasn’t until massive locomotives with
plows attached to the front that the rails were opened for travel. The snow storm was an unexpected blizzard
that caught the entire eastern half of the state off guard. A storm that was traveling east from the Chicago area combined with a northern, artic front that
swept in from Canada
and dropped a massive 62 inches of snow on the area within an eight hour time
frame. The storm also closed the almost
complete Interstate Highway .
Since the interchanges that were hit by the snow were not officially opened
yet, the number of vehicles that were stranded was minimal. Approximately thirty people had to be rescued
from snowed in vehicles on the highway.
For two days
the East Farewell was unreachable but that did not mean the town was closed
down. A festive atmosphere swept over
the town when the radio announced the train shutdown. People bundled up and flooded the traffic
free streets before the snow had stopped.
A massive snowball fight and snow follies commenced and no one was left
out. The storm was in full swing through
the first night and Lake Shore Drive
was packed with people that looked like snowmen throwing snow at each other, others
were running around like children, laughing and shouting at each other. Many of the restaurants stayed open even as
the snow piled up on the sidewalks and the streets became impassible. This had
all the signs of a major disaster but it turned into a giant snow party. For two days the town celebrated its
isolation and townspeople came together with a sense of community and shared
excitement. When the trains rolled through
on Thursday many people were standing at the station to greet the huge
locomotives and pelt them with snowballs, all in fun of course. The engineers were quite amused at the antics
and let out several long steam whistles that brought cheers and more snowballs
from the crowd.
The storm mover
through fairly quickly and was gone within 36 hours. It left the town under over 5 feet of snow
and numerous power and heating outages.
Even with these complications, spirits were high and enthusiasm was
unflagging. Schools were closed for most
of the week and all events had been postponed or cancelled. This storm will be remembered for a long time
and often be referred to as, “The Great Snow of 1956.”
The Great Snowball fight of ‘56
SPORTS
COUGARS LOSE 1 BUT STAY HOT AS SEASON COMES
TO A CLOSE
East Farewell- The Cougars lost a revenge match to the Riverview
Wildcats, 48-52, after beating them, 50-48 only two weeks earlier. The loss turned out to be only a blip on the
record of an overachieving, scrappy team that has surprised everyone this
season. Along with the Wildcat games the Cougars faced
the Slate Mountain Canaries, the Fort Lee Captains and the Southport Hawks
during the final part of the season. The
final game of the season is with the Slate Mountain Miners. This game was postponed due to the huge snow
storm and will be played next week.
The team has
continued to improve with every game.
Coach Wilson has pointed toward the surprisingly even and controlled
back court play of senior Timmy Green and sophomore Fergal Conner. “Greeny and Conner have just been
phenomenal. They run the game like pros
or at least really good college guards,” laughed Coach Wilson during a recent
interview.
The two
together have been responsible for more back court points than any in school
history with one game still to play. The
front court also has been solid. The all
Junior front court has also been solid and powerful. Center Wilson Watson has become a powerful
force under the basket while Tom O’Hare and Billy Reilly have stood strong as
forwards grabbing offensive rebounds and feeding Wilson for put back scores that have won more
than one game.
If the Cougars
win their last game they stand a chance to end up in a try for first place in
the league. In order to have this happen
the Riverview Wildcats would have to lose to the Fort Lee Captains and the
Canaries would have to beat the Corning Devils.
While this may be a long shot, it would be a fitting climax to the
Cougars season. The Cougars game has
been rescheduled to Tuesday, Mach 13th at 4:30 in the Regional High
School Gym.
NATIONAL NEWS
TROUBLE IN TUNIS – RADIO GROWING – RCA MERGES
An anti-American mob of Algerian
nationalists storm the U.S. consulate in Tunis, ransacking offices and
destroying files and then wreck the headquarters of the U.s. Information
Service. Algerian nationalists carry
their revolt against French rule to the streets of Tunis battling helmeted police who halted
their march on the National Assembly.
Radio news - Radio growing - almost 15
million new radio sets were sold in 1955 and there are 140 million radio sets
in this country. Several years ago, there was a belief the industry would
diminish in interest
RCA-Victor here and Decca Record
Company of London
enter into a reciprocal agreement effective May 1957. Under terms, Decca in England will receive master recordings from the
RCA Victor catalogue and Victor will have access to Decca recordings for release
in America
under the RCA Victor label. The new alliance terminates the oldest
international pact in the record world – that between Victor and His Master’s
Voice (HMV) in London .
Decca London is not related to Decca
here. The originator of the FFRR (Full frequency range recording) record, Decca
not only has plants throughout Europe, but also owns Telefunken in Germany . H.M.V. is a subsidiary of EMI.
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