THE MICHIGAN DAILY Franco's Drive Reaches Catalonia r"" F R A NMCE S n astian Pam plona A NDOR A !faro Huesca Flguera SA A L ONIA Vikh Saragoss Lida Cervera (Zar gos * - raga arcetona Rees - aroca AIcaniz Ga e a "Toto a Singra Morella Med ierranean Sea C h=- Viver llao gunto Plm Vafencia50 Spanish Insurgents eliminated a major barrier to their sweep toward Barcelona when they took the key city of Lerida, in Catalonia. Lerida, long considered a. center of government military operations, is only 80 miles from Barcelona. DAILY OFFICIAL BULETIN WEDNESDAY, MARCH 30, 1938 VOL. XLVIII. No. 130 Social Chairmen-are reminded tnat unless party requests with all neces- sayy accompanying documents are filed with the Office of the Dean of' Students, or in the case of sororities, in the Office of Dean of Women, on! the Monday before the event is tol take place, permission for the event cannot be granted. Students, College of Engineering: The. final da for removal of in- NLRB Hearing In Press Case Is Tomorrow Examination Will Cover Charges Of Unfairness, Union Bargain Right (Continued from Page 1) Child Labor Action Racked By Senate (Continued from Page 1) tion quartet, of Horace Gilmore, '39,1 Samuel Krugliak, '38, Lovell andI Quarles, (proxy) contended that the Vinson Bill only authorized Congress to appropri te any amount up to 800 million dollars. The Bill, they said, did not specifically name the amount to be spent.4 Noted Scientist TO Talk Here Will Speak On Distances In The Universe Dr. Knut Lundmark, director of the observatory of the University of Lund, Sweden, will discuss aspects of distance and the universe in a Univer- .sity lecture to be held at 8 p.m. to- morrow in the Natural Science Audi- torium. The lecture is being spun- sored by the department of astron- omy. Dr. Lundmark is well-known in the field of statistical astronomy and has participated in the United States in studies at the Lick Observatory and at the M. Wilson, Cal., Observatory Te Resolution for help to uinese ganized otherwise than in the Asso- students was defeated by a 14 to 7 Sciation or joined Local 154 of tihecount, the majority holding that International Typographical Union money was best spent at home first,i tU na, Inthat food was a more important item than education and that Japan was 3. Discharge of 12 employees be,- not included in the proposed aid. i . i t t: Broadcasting Library Records 1 Radio Pro ram Development New Venture Will Include casters -advertising specialists, andI 0 students of Broadcasting. Information And Copie Networks Cooperate Of Scripts Of All Types The three leading networks, Na- tional, Columbia ,and Mutual are By RICHARD KELLOGG cooperating in contributing anything The historian of the future willn that may be of documentary value. probably look to Ann Arbor as the Institutions throughout the world haven of mformation on broadcast- American Academy of Political and ing in its infant stages as a result of j Social Science, down to the humblest1 the establishment of the first Library radio station in the midwestern farm of Broadcasting in the nation here, belt are sending in valuable source unde Breadirtigonte ntPro.Waldmaterial, according to Professor Ab- under the direction of Prof. Waldo bot. M. Abbot, director of brcadcasting. Te purpose of the new Morris Hall All available information on every Library is intended to be the same in phase of broadcasting industry is be- broadcasting as that of the Clements ing collected and many documents Library in history and the Transpor-' which will be of unique value in the tation Library in transportation. future are being preserved which S otherwise might be thrown away, ac-i "i "'uYWftluuV1i- tween April 16, 1937 and F eb. 18, 19388 completes will be Saturday, April 9. and refusal to reinstate these menI Petitions for extension of this time because they had joined Local 154 of must be on file in the Secretary's Of- the ITU and had engaged in con- fice on or before Wednesday, March certed activities for coieletive bar- 10. A. H. Lovell, Secretary, gaining 4. Refusal on four occasions be- Freshnen in the College of Litera- tween Feb. 16 and March 12 to bar- i ture, Science and the Arts who have gain collectively with Local 154, al- Dave not received their five-week leged to represent a majority of the prcgress reports may obtain them in employees in the composing room Room 107, Mason Hall, from 8 to and therefore entitled to be exclusive 11:30 aim. and 2 to 4:30 p.m. ac- bargaining agent for these employees, cording to the following schedule: who are said to constitute the ap- Surnames beginning A through F, lpropriate bargaining unit. Thursday, March 31. [ The Ann Arbor Press answer denied Surnames begiing G through Q, that the composing room was the Friday, April 1. proper bargaining unit and claimed Surnames beginning R through Z' that the whole plant was, because of Saturday, April 2. its relatively small size (125 em- School of Education, College of 'ployees) and because labor problems i u, ch fi' r are common to all employees of the Acter,