SUNDAY, MARCH 10, 1946 THE MICHIGAN DAILY FAC~E, U' Will Give Motor Vehicle Fleet Course Supervisor Training Will Be Provided A training course for motor vehicle fleet supervisors will be held at the University May 13 to May 17, Prof. Roger L. Morrison of the Division of Highway Engineering and Highway Transport announced yesterday. This course, which is being pre- sented by the College of Engineering, is part of a nation-wide training program developed and sponsored by the National Committee for Mo- tor Vehicle Fleet Supervisor Train- ing Offered by Colleges Offered through cooperating col- leges and universities, the course pre- sents a practical program for acci- dent prevention, conservation of manpower and equipment, and effi- cient, economical operation. It gives specific attention to methods of sel- ecting, training and supervising driv- ers. This is a regular course with a charge for enrollment, Prof. Morrison, course director, said. Fleet super- visors are sent by various companies to take part in the course, he pointed out, and they pass information on to their drivers. ield Exercises According to the plan of the course set forth by the National Committee for Motor Vehicle Fleet Supervisor Training, "practical laboratory and field exercises include the use of driver testing equipment by each member of the class. This training program, developed during the last seven years, has resulted in the reduction of the fre- quency and severity of accidents, in lowering maintenance costs and in improving employe and public re- lations, the committee's program says. Lutheran Rally Will Be Held To Raise Funds The Rev. Henry O. Yoder, pastor of the University Lutheran Chapel and Student Center, will serve as chairman of the rally to raise funds in Europe which will be held at 8 p.m. tonight in Zion Lutheran Church. Six Ann Arbor area churches will be represented at thet rally, which will include evening services. The rally is one of 450 being held throughout the country for the Luth- eran World Action Appeal. Part of the $10,000,000 which the churches hope to raise will be used to extend the ministry to veterans in large University areas such as Wil- low Run. The rest will be used to hell) war sufferers in Scandanavia, Pol- and, Slovak nations and Germany and to continue the Service Centers for men and women in uniform at home and abroad. 'Modern Man' To Be Subject of Lecture Under the sponsorship of the Stu- dent Religious Association, Dr. D. Elton Trueblood, professor of philoso- phy at Earlham College, Indiana, will speak on "The Predicament of Mod- ern Man" at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Rackham Amphitheatre. Dr. Trueblod, an author and an active participant in Quaker work, will leave this month for Europe to help with rehabilitation and to un- earth information about the Chris- tian underground in Germany. After the lecture there will be a reception for Dr. Trueblood in the Lane Hall Library for interested stu- dents and faculty members. Keep A-head of Your Hair We have plenty of qualified barbers to give workmanship and service you desire. THE DASCOLA BARBERS Betweon Statpe & Michigan Theatres Navy Students Use Library In Northl Hal PRODUCTION LOST: Strike Costs Billion Dollars i By the Associated Press Detroit. March 9-The bitter and proonged General Motors strike has lpa financial loss to labori and e industry approximating $1.000,- 000,000. The General Library is not the only place where reference books will be part of the los was estimated, in authoritative sources, as follows: To the industry in unfilled orders, $600.000,000. To labor in unearned wages, $150.- 000.000. To car merchandisers in new car sales commissions $150,000.000. Cost of idle plant maintenance, salaries to engineers whose work has been limited by the strike, lost com- missions on used car sales, $100,000,- i found for student Use. As the fight between one of the Naval students in the University world's largest corporations and the can find a variety of texts in a small big CIO United Auto Workers Union library in North Hall, which is d- gut well into its 16th week of idle- voted principally to Naval and re- ness for 175,000 production workers lated subjects. The collection con- and scores of assembly plants tains many references ranging from aou;hout the nation, the major maritime tradition beoks to combat ;- - - -~ - narratives of World War I1. These works have been obtained from various sources and are pri- GOU M JST \ NOTNH marily for the use of the Naval Sci- ' A LL RADIO %1 ence Department. Capt. Wood,(on UOMFORrA LE Michaux, commandant of the Nvy T unit here, explained, but Univ rsity faculty and students are welcome to use the library facilities. Besides the volumes of Navy texts and current periodicals, there are many volumes dealing with political science, history and international law. which according to Capt. Michaux, are of value in emphasizing the im- portant role the Navy plays in execut- ing foreign policy. A file of confidential publications, available to all Naval Reservists who have proper identification is also found in the library. Non-confiden- tial books may be drawn out for two- weeks periods by any interested indi- vidual and even confidential material- _ can be supplied at the discretion of the commandant. -I, S , 000. "TUNED iNTro On the air 7:00 A.M. to 6:45 A.M. in March. Dial 1050 TASK FORCE COMMANDERS - Brig. Gen. Roger M. Ramey of Denton, Tex. (seated), commanding Task Force 15, which will carry out atom bomb tests at Bikini Atoll in the Pacific, talks with his staff members (L. to R.), Col. Alfred F. Kalderer, Lafayette, Ind., intelligence officer; Col. William H. Blanchard, Chelsea, Mass., commanding officer of the 509th Bombardment Group; Col. Paul W. Tibbets, Orlando, Fla., technical director of the atom bomb tests. (AP Wirephoto) LOOK, BUT NO LEAP: Paratroopers Lose Insignia After Refusing Training Jump By ,the Associated Press Washington, March 9-Prized wing insignia and boots were summarily stripped from 168 parachute troopers who refused to jump from planes in a training exercise at Fort Bragg, N. C., last month, it was dicslosed to- day. The men were transferred to other, army units. Approximately 1300 of them were said to have had almost enough points to assure early release from service. Reports to the War Department said the jump was staged as schedul- ed, however, on Feb. 16 with the Mexican secretary of war a specta- tor. Some 700 paracitutists took part. Reason Not Stated Why the men refusec to jump was not specifically stated, but officials assumed that with the war months past the men did not care to face the hazards involved in stepping out of a speeding plane and drifting to the ground. Mrines To Get Point Reduction Washington, March 9 - - The Marine Corps will drop the criti- cal score for all men from 42 to 40 points tomorrow. Another two-point reduction will become effective April 1 and at the same time the score for women Ma- rines will be cut from 16 to *13 points. Announcing details of its future plans for progressive reduction in point scores, the Corps said present estimates indicate that virtually all personnel with combat service who are not regulars will be mustered out by mid-summer. Future reductions in point scores will be as follows: May 1,. men 33 points, women, eight; June 1, men 28 points, women four; July 1, men 25 points, women zero. Thirty months' service will make a man eligible for separation after July 1. Stabilization Board Granis Wage Raises Detroit, March 9-(AP)-The Regional Wage Stabilization Board approved for pricing purposes today wage increases for 18,500 employes of seven Michigan industrial firms. The board pointed out that its action clears the way for applications by the companies to the Office of Price Administration for modifica- tion of ceilings on their products. Army officials who told about the incident in response to inquiries said no further disciplinary action is planned, although in wartime refusal to jump called for court martial. Gen. Gavin Gives Orders The stripping of wings and loss of extra pay was ordered by Maj. Gen. James M. Gavin, who led members of his 82nd Airborne Division in a Fifth Avenue parade in New York upon their return from fighting in Europe. The men involved were veterans ofI numerous jumps, though not in com- bat. All were members of the 115th Parachute Regiment, a part of the 13th Airborne Division. Twins' Convention Will Meet in Grand Rapids Grand Rapids, March 9-(AP)- Three days of confusion-but fun- are scheduled for Grand Rapids next summer when 400 sets of twins arrive for the first postwar convention of the International Twins Association, Inc. Hearings On Seaway End St. Lawrence Project Gets Final Testimony By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, March 9-Senate hearings on legislation to authorize the St. Lawrence Seaway and Power Project ended today after three weeks of conflicting testimony. R. C. Allen, president of a large mining company, said in a statement submitted to a Senate foreign rela- tions submitted to a Senate foreign relations subcommittee than con- struction of the seaway would delay development of an industry producing iron from low-grade ore. The "time is not far away" when such production will begin to supple- ment the supply of natural ore now nearing exhaustion, Allen said. Ton J. McGrath, director of the National St. Lawrence Project Con- ference, which opposes the develop- ment, urged that "the whole and ex- clusive rights" to develop the power phase of the seaway be vested in the federal government. Under present arrangements, the seaway's power facilities would be turned over to New York State for disposal of the energy. National Memorial Hall Proposed Washington, March 9-(AP)-Plans for a national auditorium, proposed to be built here as a memorial to members of the armed forces in both World Wars, will be discussed at a meeting of national and local organi- zation representatives April 2. Legislation providing such a mem- orial to be located in the District of Columbia has been introduced in Congress by Senator Pepper (Dem., Fla.,) and Rep. Randolph Dem. It would contain an auditorium seating a minimum of 6,000 persons, with smaller halls for lesser audiences. I 01 Hop off the merry-go-round yon live on there days and relax! A trim or a new permanent will revive your hair. 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