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Show Here's Your New Car Stalled hy Strike . m v. -owjo. rrcoW V-WSV'? , rS- 'Mnr?; s J Itj wiu N J U; : .wH' A r Mil, LrVlV r .J'tl VZ If!'. V-( ar-n.t - -: . " - fVT .-.-. !'s. - rrrri I BODIES BY FISHER stand idle! JRVGGri) CM T 00r - luntil the CM strike is settled, j "prf' .MM TS. m"St a,t' ' Your 1946 automobile may be stranded on the assembly lines. A nationwide strike has para-I para-I lyzed General Motors, the world's largest producer ot passenger cars, trucks and buses, forcing consumers to wait indefinitely for essential transportation. The strike was called by the i linited Automobile Workers ; (CIO) to enforce demands for a I ?o rf-r -- - i-.-"fT. The How Long Musi You Wait? Union flatly rejected a 10 per cent increase offered by General Motors as a living cost adjustment. The strike involves 175,000 hourlv-rated employes. They are losing nearly $2,000,000 in wages dailv, and these losses affect indirectly in-directly every phase of the nation's na-tion's economy. Coincidentally, striking Union members have' V barred 50,000 office workers from their jobs in GM plants. ...... .:tv .vvftWxwooiv...,.v 'W . ! V: -,.:: &!:f S i 3i - ' , , , ,; - : v . ; -k -. f -' ru- 3;: -, vv . i.r.. ..... .: : , . ,i . . . . . - : - . ' .. -M - ' " -t -v. ' -. - ,, ... . .." ..::.""-' . . " ... - &)J- 'ST'- --ijK |