$ubli h r$u (0f ? rab Vol. 1 MAY 8, 1936 No. 7 STUDENTS RENOVATE INDICATORS Approximately 300 to 400 dial indi- cators are repaired each month by the boya in the precision tool department. Accuracy is required throughout the Ford Motor Company. That is why such an enormous number of dial Indicators is used in the various departments. The dial indicator department in the school repairs all the indicators used by the Ford Motor Company including branches and assembly plants throughout the United States. Services of fifteen boys are required to keep all of the in- dicators repaired. These boys dismantle each dial, examine all parte for de- fects, and replace them with new ones if they cannot be repaired. Then they are rebuilt and tested for accuracy. Each student is able to repair from 8 to 18 per day. The A-Class graduation party will be held Saturday, June 27, in the Aztec Tower. The tickets are now in the hands of the class presi- dents. The price is $2.50 a couple. Indicators that are personally own- ed by Ford Motor Company employees and instructors and students of the Trade School are also repaired here. FIRST STUDENT RETURNS One of the first six students to enroll in the Henry Ford Trade School, Stanley F. Lasky, recently paid a brief visit to his Alma Mater. In order to commemorate this brief visit, Mr. Lasky appears in the above picture with Mr. F. E. Searle and Mr. E. Y. Peterson standing near a shaper twenty years old, which may have been operated by Stanley when he was a student. Stanley was enrolled in the school October 25, 1916, when the Valley Farm, a home for young boys maintained by Mr. Henry Ford, was closed and the boys, six of them, were transferred to the Trade School, Just opening. At that time the six students were required to attend classes for one-half the day and shop for the other half. During his visit he was noted care- fully scrutinizing the old shaper. When asked what he was seeking, he replied, It was our custom, when the school first started, to take a scriber and carve our initials on each machine we operated. We did our own bookkeeping, he Jokingly added. Above everything else, he stated, my school experience trained me how to work. At the present time Mr. Lasky is a chef in a Detroit hotel.
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SUPPLEMENT TO THE CRAFTSMAN FRIDAY, MAY 8, 1936 Under the auspices of the Detroit Public Library, the first Trade School Library was organized in 1918. The school was at that time located in Highland Park. This library was open to students of the Trade School and to all employees of the Ford Motor Company. Branch association with the Detroit Public Library was discontinued in 1919 and a few months later the Highland Park Public Library established a branch in the school. This was open to the public as well as to students of the school and Ford Motor Company employees. It was gradually increased and maintained until the Trade School was transferred to the Ford Motor Company in Dearborn in 1930. At this time, the school undertook to operate its own library, which it has been doing ever since. The present library is under the direction of John Onderko, a graduate of the school. The library is open from 7 a. m. to 4:15 p. m. and is used to capacity nearly every hour of the day. Employees of the Ford Motor Company also have access to the library. Following is a list of the magazines received regularly at our library. Aero Digest American Boy (3 coploa) American Builder and Building Age American Magailne (2 coploa) American Machinist (3 coplea) American Mathematica: Monthly Atlantic Monthly Auttaaotive Induetri ea Boys' Life (3 copies) Chemical Metallurgical Engineering Country Gentleman Econami c Geography Education Electronics Etude Factory Management Maintenance Ford Deal or News Forum Fcundry Geographical Review Industrial Arts Vocational Education Industrial Education Iron Age Journal of Chemical Education Literary Digest Machinery Mechanical Engineering Metal Industry Metal8 Alloys National Geographic (2 copies) Nations Schools Nature News Week (3 copies) Occupations Popular Mechanics Popular Science Monthly Q S T Amateur Radio Radio News and Short Wave Radio World Readers Digest Saturday Evening Poet School and Society Science Leaflet Science News Letter Scientific American (2 copies) Steel Timo Today
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