___ ___ ___ __Tff t Y ji GAN DAILY G.M. Production Cut in Half; $75,000,000 Lost in Wages By The Associated Press tion volume they scheduled for De- DETROIT, Jan. 19-The General cember and January. Motors strike, now in its ninth week, Ford, which started assemblies in and work stoppages in related indus- .July and scheduled 85,000 passenger tries have cost hourly-rated workers 1cars by December 31, has only this in the automobile plants upward of weekpssdhe5,0makGn- $75,000,000 in lost wages and have cut eek passed the 50,000 mark; Gen- back production by at least $400,- eral Motors which scheduled 291,000 000,000 worth of motor vehicles, passenger units up to Jan. 31, has The loss to the retailing division of turned out only 25,000; Chrysler has the industry probably amounts to an not disclosed its output volume but additional $80,000,000 in the unit it has been estimated at around 15,- sales commissions. 000. Nash has assembled no cars To date the assembly plants have since Dec. 21. turned out slightly more than 100,000 Glass Shortage passenger vehicles. But for the Gen- Hudson has been making about 200 eral Motors strike and stoppages in cars a day but may soon feel the plants of supplier concerns total out- pinch of glass shortages. Studebaker put now would aggregate around has just started its assembly line 500,000 units and a 400,000-cars-a- and Packard has reopened after a month production level would be close parts shortage shutdown of several at hand. kweeks. 175,000 Workers Idle Now definitely abandoned in the The General Motors strike idled industry is any hope that 6,000,000 175,000 workers and halted approxi- cars may be made this year. That mately 50 per cent of the car indus- was the figure projected for 1946 try's manufacturing capacity. It was when plant reconversion got under not in itself wholly responsible, how- way last year. ever, for the cutback in assemblies A total of 4,000,000 units this year of 1946 model passenger cars. Strikes now is regarded as an optimistic ex- in glass, transmission, gear, ignition pectation. To achieve it the assem- assembly and other parts and mate- bly plants would have to get into high rials factories had curtailed output level output in March, continue cur- by other car manufacturers even be- rent model output through July and fore the General Motors strike began cut down sharply the time normally last November. required to switch over to next year's At that time, too, C. E. Wilson, model. General Motors president, asserted a The 1947 models already have been shortage of glass threatened to cur- designed by most of the car builders. tail production by many of his com- The industry will put them in produc- pany's car divisions.,ti esbe n- On the basis of developments since te then it is a fair assumption that even had the GM strike been averted Dr. Margaret Bell, chairman of the Chevrolet, Buick, Pontiac, Oldsmo- Physical Education Program for bile and Cadillac assembly plants Women, is away on a three-month would have had to curtail the produc- leave of absence. . Highlights On Campus Austrian Actors Star . . The Art Cinema League in cooper- ation with the German department will present "The Merry Wives of Vienna," an Austrian film with Ger- man dialogue and English subtitles, at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 29, in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Starring Willie Forst and Paul Hoerbiger, Austrian cinema actors, the operetta featuring many Strauss waltzes, takes place in Vienna in 1875. Two Films To Be Shown Two documentary films, a Baboona travelogue of Central Africa and the British film, "Night Mail," will be shown by the Art Cinema League next Sunday, Jan. 27, in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Filmed by Mr. and Mrs. Martin Johnson, the African movie shows their experiences and travels there. The British film is based on the nightly journey of the postal special from London to Glasgow, and in- eludes a commentary in verse by W. H. Auden. Chamberlain To Speak..' "Russia and the West: Conflict or Cooperation" will be the subject of a lecture by William Henry Chamber- lain, well known foreign correspond- ,nt and author, at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Kellogg Auditorium. Chamberlain, whose lecture is be- ing sponsored by Polonia Society, will be introduced by Prof. Harold M. Dorr of the Department of Political Science. Gillette Will Lecture . . Commander N. C. Gillette, execu- tive officer of the NROTC unit on campus, will be the speaker at the regular meeting of the Institute of Aeronautical Sciences at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Union. Former commander of the famed "Black Cat Squadron" in the South Pacific, he will discuss his wartime experiences with particlar emphasis on the problem of maintenance, up- keep, and transportation of combat squadrons. Plans for a banquet will also be dis- cussed at the meeting. Dr. Colby To Lecture ..- Dr. Martha Colby, associate profes- sor of psychology, will speak on the subject "Folk Music of the World" at 7:30 p.m. today at the Interna- tional Center. She will illustrate her talk with a collection of recordings she made during a world tour for the study of folk music. A community sing and refresh- ments will follow the lecture. Outing Club Plans Hike A hike in Saline Valley has been planned by the Graduate Outing Club for today. Hikers will leave at 1:30 p.m. from the clubrooms in the Rackham Build- ing and go to Saline by car. After the hike, supper will be served followed by square dancing. MOMS To Hear Dorr,... Prof. Harold M. Dorr of the polit- ical science department will address the MOMS club on "Our Obligations as Citizens" at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the League. Tojo's Trial Set TOKYO, Jan. 19-(M)-The long- awaited trials for Ex-Premier Hideki Tojo. and other high Japanese war leaders for "crimes against peace and crimes against humanity" were or- dered by General MacArthur today in chartering an international tribu- nal tentatively scheduled to begin op- erations March 1. Service Group To Hold Student Activities Poll To help determine students' social preferences, Alpha Phi Omega, na- tional service fraternity, will conduct a campus-wide poll on student ac- tivities Jan. 29 and 30. Information revealed by the poll which is intended to aid campus or- ganizations in preparing for campus functions will be published in The Dail. Morris Rochlin, president of the fraternity, pointed out as an example that students' answers to the question of whether they prefer strictly formal dances to the informal and semi-formal type now held should be helpful to dance committees. Sug- gestions for the questionnaire would be welcomed, Rochlin said, and should be sent to Gammi Pi chapter, Alpha Phi Omega, North Hall. Ballots will be distributed on the Diagonal and in dormitories, fra- ternities and sororities and will be collected in a box on the Diagonal. 'U' Delegation To Enter Debate St. Lawrence Waterway Project Will Be Topic A delegation from the University chapter of Sigma Rho Tau, stump speakers society, will go to Detroit next Saturday, for a debate and dis- cussion with other colleges on the topic "Should We Now Complete the St. Lawrence Waterway?" These discussions and debates on the waterway question are in prep- aration for an intercollegiate debate to be held early this spring. The St. Lawrence Waterway, the completion of which President Roosevelt urged but Congress failed to approve dur- ing the war, is again becoming a leading question in Congress. Americano To Visit 'U' Dr. Jorge Americano, rector of the University of Sao Paulo and out- standing Brazilian educator, will visit Ann Arbor Feb. 7 through Feb. 11 to obtain information for use in connec- tion with the construction of a new university center:in Brazil. A specialist in the field. of interna- tional law, Dr. Americano is travel- ing under . the sponsorship of the American State Department. Dr. F. E. Godoy Morura, professor of orthopedic surgery and Brazilian member of the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons, will visit Ann Arbor on Feb. 11. Members of the central commit- tee for Junior Girls Play will meet at 4:45 p.m. Tuesday in the Under- graduate Office of the League. The 'Ensian picture will be taken at this time. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) student officer in the Judge Advocate General's School and just recently come to America from the Philip- pines will speak to us about the Uni- versity of the Philippines and con- ditions in the country as a whole. This will follow a cost supper which begins at 5:00. Memorial Christian Church (Dis- ciples of Christ) Morning worship, 10:50 a.m. Reverend Mr. F. E. Zendt will deliver the morning message. The Congregational-Disciples Guild will meet Sunday evening at 5:00 at the Memorial Christian Church (Dis- iples of Christ), Hill and Tappan. Following a cost supper we will hear a talk from Major Revero who is a student officer in theJudge Advocate General's School. He will tell us about the general conditions in the Philippines and at the University there in conjunction with the World Student Service Fund drive on Cam- pus at present. University Lutheran Chapel, 1511 Washtenaw: Service Sunday at 11:00 a.m., with sermon by the Rev. Alfred Scheips, "The Question of Alcohol and You." Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student Club, will have its regular supper meeting at the Student Center Sun- day at 5:00 p.m. Unity: "Faith" will be the subject Mrs. Eve Edeen, of Detroit, will dis- cuss at the 11 a.m. Unity service in the Michigan League Chapel. "Prayer" will be the subject for dis- cussion at the student meeting at 5 p.m. at the Unity Reading Rooms, Room 31-35, 310 S. State Street. First Unitarian Church, Edward H. Redman, Minister. 10:00 a.m., Uni- tarian-Friends' Church School. 10:00 a.m.,Adult study group, "Buddhism". 10:50 a.m., Service of Worship broad- cast, over WPAG. Rev. Edward H. Redman preaching on: "Is Modern Man Obsolete?" 7:30 p.m., Unitarian Student Group, Lane Hall, Mr. Jack Sessions leading discussion. First Church of Christ, Scientist: 109 S Division St., Wednesday eve- ning service at 8 p.m. Sunday morn- ing service at 10:30 a.m. Subject: "Life." Sunday school at 11:45 a.m. A special reading room is main- tained by this church at 706 Wolver- ine Bldg., Washington at Fourth, where the Bible, also the Christian Science Textbook, "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures" and other writings by Mary Baker Eddy may be read, borrowed or pur- chased. Open daily except Sundays and holidays from 11:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Help Win the Peace Buy ictory Bonds! Vets To Discuss Insurance Veterans enrolled in the School of Business Administration will partici- pate in a broadcast intended to clari- fy points in GI insurance that have proved puzzling to veterans at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday over station WKAR. The broadcast has been carefully planned to cover material in GI in- surance which is poorly understood and which has previously received little attention. Ward D. Peterson, General Agent for Indianapolis Life Insurance Com- pany will act as moderator of the dis- cussion. Questions will be presented Classes Planned for Wives of Veterans Mrs. Agnes Stahly and Miss Pa- tricia Walsh, members of the Univer- sity of Michigan School of Public Health, will meet at 3:30 p.m. tomor- row in the West Court Community House to discuss possible plans for child care and home nursing classes for the wives of student veterans, with children now living in Willow Run. by Robert D. Beach and Richard W. Miller, veterans enrolled in the veter- an's short course in business manage- ment in the School of Business Ada- ministration, and by two veterans who are taking the regular business course. Rabbi Cohen Will Lecture A lecture dealing with Jewish life in the middle ages will be given at 7:45 p.m. tomorrow at 3'nal B'rith Hillel Foundation by Rabbi Jehudah M. Cohen. The lecture is the second in the series Rabbi Cohen is giving on the topic "Judiasm in Transit." In this second lecture, Rabbi Cohen will discuss the character of Jewish life during the middle ages, Jewish culture, and the problems of the Jews as manifested in the Inquisition and the Crusades. A "Supper Nar" will be held at 5:30 p.m. today at the Foundation. 4'94 DE LJSO DEBS do Black Calf up in the grand manner - for all those important occasions in your life. You'll say that "Beautmib" .is the word for these shoe sophisticates. IIROOKINS' s VhoeiY 108 East Washington Phone 2,2685 HOLD THOSE WAR BONDS! -1 LI>'. a ro A.S FEATURED IN CHARM )~ - -mop MW NOW, Mww- w er . { :. , hn h Z , :J k d(' S". vi 45, ," . ,; 1}'+ : s s Other stewS! Prints in crepes and cottons. 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