T E M1tI-A-A N 0-ITTL V WEDNESDAY, DEC. 2, Madrid Residents Flee To Subways DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN -i i WEDNESDAY, DEC. 2,61936 VOL. XLVII No. 56 Notices President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to students this afternoon from 4 to 6 p.m. Dedication of the Baird Carillon: Members of the faculty and their families, students, and the public generally are cordially invited to at- tend the exercises to be held in Hill Auditorium at 4:30 p.m., Friday, Dec. 4, at which the Charles Baird Caril- lon will be dedicated. While a limit- ed number of official invitations are being issued, the University takes this method of inviting the Uni- versity community and citizens of Ann Arbor to attend the exercises. With the exception of the section reserved for official guests, all seats in the auditorium will be available for occupancy, and after 4:20 p.m. ne reserved seats will be held. Faculty, School of Education: The regular December meeting of the Faculty of the School of Education has been postponed from Monday, (Continued on Page 4) Debaters Will Meet Purdue And Olio With two victories already to their credit in practice debates with Wayne University, the Michigan debating teams encounter Purdue and Ohio State on Dec. 10 at Ann Arbor and Columbus respectively. The affirmative team composed of Robert V. Rosa, '39, Ronald Freed- man, '39 and Harry Shneiderman, '38, speaking in that order, will de- bate Purdue on the subject "Re- solved: That All Electric Utilities Should Be Governmentally Owned And Operated." The negative team composed of Marvin W. Reider, '39, Nathaniel Holtzman, '39 and Wil- liam A. Sentner, '38, will debate the same question with Ohio State. The teams were chosen after a series of elimination debates which began in early October with an or- iginal squad of 35 candidates. C.I.O. Expulsion Action Most Significant, Elliott Concludes Protest Of Support Given Unlikely From Members Professor Believes The most significant action of the recently-concluded American Feder- ation of Labor convention in Tampa, Fla., is the support given the execu- tive council in its expulsion of the Committee for Industrial Organiza- tion affiliates, in the opinion of Prof. Margaret Elliott of the economics de- partment. The possibility of A.F. of L. mem- bers throughout the United .States protesting the support given William Green is slight, Professor Elliott said, "because representatives were prob- ably sent to Tampa with instructions from their constituents, who knew that the split in unionized labor would be the predominant issue of the convention." Despite this apparently strong sup- port, Professor Elliott held it not atl all unlikely that the rift in labor would be healed becausQ this sup- port was in many cases given with the quaification that consistent peace overtures be oade. Professor Elliott believes that the executive council will continue efforts toward concilia- tion. The bulk of sentiment in favor of pacifying the C.I.O. unions even at the expense of appreciable conces-' sions is coming from union members throughout the country who feel that the strength of labor will be consid- erably weakened if labor is to remain divided, Professor Elliott said. "One important question in the final result of this present struggle is whether the C.I.O. is united on the basis of common conviction for in- dustrial unionization," Professor El- liott said. "If conceivably one after the other of the C.I.O. unions would Jewelry and Watch Repairing HALLER'S Jewelry State at Liberty drop away, Lewis would be forced to conciliate. Another important consideration is the financial backing of Lewis. His program is one that requires strong financial backing, and it is ,a ques- tion of how long this can last with- out the full numerical and- financial strength of the American Federation of Labor behind it." Professor Elliott said that "a split in United States labor for some time to come would appreciably weaken the influence of labor because or- ganized labor is not numerically strong enough. A labor movement is naturally stronger if it can present a united front." The question offered by this labor split seems to Professor Elliott to be one of "the relative importance of personal differences of opinion as to whether unions should be organized along craft or industrial lines, as against the importance of the ad- vancement of the cause of all work- ers." Also significant in the A.F. of L. convention was Federation's reitera- tion that it would be a non-partisan- organization politically, Professor El- liott believes. "This means that the American Federation of Labor is not for the present at least, going in for the formation of a labor party." REVELLI RETURNS Prof. William D. Revelli, director of the Varsity Band, returned Monday night from a trip which took him to the state band clinics of South Da- kota and Indiana. At Rapid City, SD., Professor Revelli conducted the all-state high school band of South Dakota and at Elkhart, Ind. he con- ducted a clinic for high school in- structors. - Associated Press Photo Stations of the Madrid subway system offered a safe haven during the r cent Fascist aerial bombardment of the Spanish capital. Shown are the terrified residents of the s platform below the surface of the More Positions1 io Students war-torn city as they huddled on a ground. 4re Avalable Than Last Year reau during the recent registration period had shown an increase of ap- proximately one-third over last year. According to the latest report of the Bureau, enrollments in the busi- ness placement division totalled 1,077 for the year ending Nov. 1, an in- crease of 30 over the preceding year. Placements in the same period in- creased from 743 to 927. In 1936 the Bureau received 1,558 calls from educational institutions, as; compared with 1355 in the previous year, and 897 seniors and graduates were placed in teachers positions1 during the year, an increase of 101. 1 a I ...and after the show or before- DANCE (Free) 'i : f I U ~~Richard A. Rowland's Production irexctead by Edwh~inU I