THE MICHIGAN DAILY :. .r.., klLY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 98TH CONGESS PASSESi QUIE~T INTO HISTORYI me I SATURDAY, MARCH f, 1921. Number 104. ARMY AND NAVY BILLS FAIL PASS IN FINAL HOURS TO phomore Engineers: The next Assembly will be held Tuesday, March 8, in Room 348 of New gineering building, at 9 o'clock. W. C. HOAD, Class Mentor. [ucation: The ninth departmental conference of graduate students and others spe- lizing in Education will be held Monday, March-7, 4-6 (not 7-9), Tappan 11. PROGRAM Report of Atlantic City meetings: Professor Harvey, Ypsilanti: Army Alpha Tests in the Normal High ;hool. Miss Davis, Jackson: The Burgess Reading Test in Grades IIP to VI. GUY M. WHIPPLE', ospective Teachers Enrolled with Appointment Committee: All prospective teachers enrolled with the Appointment Committee are quested to call at the office, Room 102 Tappan hall, and fill out location anks for the second semester. This includes all students who have en- lled this year whether they desire positions for next year or merely wish leave their records on file. Office hours for this purpose for one week ginning Monday will be held from 10:30 to 12 a. m. and 3 to 5 p. m. MARGARET CAMERON, Secretary. WHAT'S GOING ON SATURDAY .30-Union orchestra rehearsal in the assembly hall, Union. :15-All men playing in the Union orchestra both first and second se- mesters,, meet for picture, Rent- schler's studio. :00-Meeting of Upper Room Bible class, Lane hall. :30-Meeting of Craftsmen's club In the Masonic temple. SUNDAY :30--University Men's .Bible class meets in upper room, Lane hall. :80-Meeting of all senior and jun- ior men in the assembly hall, Un- ion. :00-Friends of the University meet at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. I Kelsey, 915 Greenwood avenuq. :00-Japanese students meet, Lane hall. :30-Delegates to Student Volunteer conference at Lansing meet, Lane hall. :30-Student Volunteer pre-confer- ence rally, Lane hall. :45-Rayls-Michigan hockey game at Weinberg's colisuem. :00-Get together supper, Harris hall. Professor Reeves speaks. :00-Wesleyan guild meets, Methodist church. There will be no social half hour because of the University ser- vice. :00-Univiersity serv ice, 1ill audi- torium.. :30-Meeting of the Kentucky club in room 302, Union. U-NOTICES 'he next assembly for sophomore eng- ineers will be held at 9 o'clock on Tuesday, March 8, in room 348, Engineering building. [emorial services will be held for Joe Baker at the meeting of the Crafts- men's club at 7:30 o'clock this eve- ning in the Masonic temple. he informal Varsity soccer team will have their picture taken for the Michigeanensian at Spedding's, Sat- urday afternoon at 2 o'clock. The men must get their uniforms from Coach Mitchell for the picture. he University Boxing club meets at 4 o'clock every Tuesday and Thurs- day in Waterman gymnasium. he Ferris Institute club banquet tickets are now on sale at the Un- ion and at Sugden's drug store. REASE DANCE WILL BE MORE PROFUSELY LEGAL THAN EVER WORK, PROGRESSES ONON N PR SC EY Scenery for the first act of "Top o' th' Mornin'" is almost complete, the Michigan Union construction company under the direction of Carl Bromel, having spent the past three weeks on the work. It is an interior scene of the Blue Goose inn, County Limerick, Ireland sometime before the great war. "It is by far the most elaborate first act setting ever given in a Union opera," said E. Mortimer Shater, opera direct- or, yesterday. Noted for Lighting Effects Mr. Bromel, who designed the set- ting, has completed the model for the second act setting which takes place in the garden on the O'Dare estate in the same locale as the first act. Both settings are said to lend themselves wonderfully to lighting effects for which he is famous. After receiving ideas from Mr. Shu- ter, the designs are made by Mr. Bromel. The scenery is constructed by three carpenters under his direc- tion. The work has been going on for three weeks and will continue un- til the opening night of the perform- ance. Retouched Follies Scenery Musical comedy organizations when in Detroit employ Mr. Bromel to work on their scenery, because in him they say they have one of the best scenery artists in the West. He gave his en- tire time to retouching settings for the Ziegfeld Follies during the recent run in Detroit. HANDBALL MATCHES ON TODAY; TEAMS ENTER NATIONAL MEET Today's schedule in the handball tournament follows: 10 o'clock, San- chez vs. Ogden; 2 o'clock, Gehring and Watson vs. Bruker and Sanchez; 3:30 o'clock, Potts and Liu vs. Greene brothers. These contests will have a direct bearing on the teams that will rep- resent Michigan at the national hand- ball tournament to be held the latter part of this month in Detroit. At pres- ent the strongest doubles team seems to be the Glasgow-Ogden combina- tion. Results which have not yet been reported are as follows: Potts-Liu defeated G. Dower-Searnechin, 3-0; Hauser-Swarz overcame Rosenman- Slock, 3-1; Ogden-Glasgow beat Hau- ser-Swarz, 3-1. Singles: Swarz beat J. Greene, 2-0; Glasgow defeated Pall, 2:0; C. Greene defeated Wolcott, 2- fault; Glasgow defeated C. Greene, 2- 0; J. Bowers defeated Morse, 2-0; Og- den bested Ross, default, and San- chez defeated Winagrand, default. (By Associated Press) Washington, March 4. - The 66th congress passed into history today with little of the flurry usually attend- ant to the hurly burly of an inaugur- ation. Final gavels fell in the house at 11.50 o'clock and in the senate about 12:30 the latter clock having been moved backwards and the former for- wards both to meet the exigencies of the inaugural program. Immediate- ly the new senate was called to order by Vice-president Coolidge for the session requested by President Hard- ing. The final sessions were virtually de- void of legistlation. The principal bills which failed were the army and navy appropriation budget and the immigration exclusion bill. The army and immigration measures met a "podket" veto by President Wilson who failed to sign them and the naval bill failed to get through the senate. President Wilson, in conformance with custom, waited upon congress in its final hour in his room off the sen ate chamber signing a few lst min- ute measures. Among these were the sundry civil appropriation bill and the Langley bill appropriating $18,- 600,000 for hospitalization of former service men. Republican leaders plan to draft substitutes for the army and navy bills as soon as the extra session is con- vened by President Harding prob- ably early in April and rush them through. The immigration restriction measure also will be one of the first measures considered at the extra ses- sion. CREW OF WRECKED TRAIN TO BE TRIED Valpariso, March 4.-William Long, engineer, and George Block, fireman, of the Michigan Central train struck by a New York Central train'at Port- er, Indiana, Monday night, today were ordered held for trial on a charge of involuntary manslaughter by a cor- oner's jury which investigated the dis- aster. Long and Block were released on bonds of $5,000 each. Grand jury ac- tion will be necessary, it was said, in view of the action taken by the coron- er's jury. The action was taken aft- er witnesses had testified that all signals had been set against the Mich- igan Central train. In a statement made before the in- quest, an attorney for Long and Block said they would plead not guilty, and maintained that the New York Cen- tral and Michigan Central roads them- selves were guilty in that they had permitted use of a crossing at which signals were obscured by a sharp curve and where safety devices were not properly installed. COMPETITION WILL DECIDE ORATORICAL REPRESENTATIVE Competition to decide the Univer- sity's representative in the Northern Oratorical league contest well begin Monday night in room 302, Mason hall. At that time six juniors will speak, from which number two will be se- lected. The following day at the same time and place one man will be chosen from the sophomore class in direct competition, while Wednesday of next week the senior member will be decided upon. During the latter part of March, competition will be held which will award to the winner a prize of $100 and the Chicago alumni medal, besides giving him the honor to represent Michigan in the Northern Oratorical league contest to be held during the first week of May at the University of Iowa. MEDICAL DEANS LEAVE FOR CHICAGO EDUCATION MEETING Dean Victor C. Vaughan, of the Medical school, and Dr. C. W. Ed- munds, assistant dean of the Medical school, leave tomorrow for the con- ference of medical education in Chi- cago. Dr. Vaughan will give a paper on "Graduate Instruction in Public Health and Preventive Medicine," and Dr. Edmunds will give on on "Grad- uate Instruction ink Pharmacollogyp' The general subject to be presented at the conference is graduate instruc- tions in medical schools. This conference is the annual meet- ing of graduate instruction depart- ment of the American Medical asso- ciation. City News W. S. Gilbreath, manager of the' Detroit Automobile club, will address the members of the Washtenaw Auto! club at their annual banquet and elec- tion of officers Monday evening at the Armory. Mr. Gilbreath was formerly a mem- ber of the Hoosier Automobile -club of Indiana and was one of the or- ganizers of the Dixie Highway asso- ciation. The Irwin Prieskorn post of the American Legion will present "Oh, Oh, Cindy," a musical revue, at the Whitney theater March 22 and 23, ac- cording to an announceemnt made to- day by James J. O'Kane, commander of the post. Dr. J. A. Wessinger, health officer, emphasized the necessity of vaccina- tion against smallpox yesterday. While it is true that the disease had made its appearance in "Ann Arbor, Dr. Wessinger states that no one can tell when it will appear in virulent form. Since the holidays there have been seven cases of smallpox. We serve dinners to parties. Teet's Dining Rooms, 805 E. Huron St.-Adv. HARDING AND COOLIDGE TAKE OFFICE MINUS GREAT CEREMONY (Continued from Page One) forming to Mr. Harding's wishs, were kept free from almost every show of the pomp and circumstances that us- ually surround the incoming of a chief executive. Not Usual Crowds Thousands witnessed the oath and cheered the old and new President along Pennsylvania avenue, but the crowd was only a fraction of the cus- tomary inauguration crowd. On the Bible used by George Washington at his first induction into office and the verse of Scripture extolling the vir- tue of an humble faith in God Mr. Harding plighted his best ability to the presidency. In his inaugural ad- dressreaffirming his reverence for the traditions of his fathers he reiterated his belief that the supreme task ahead was to bring the country once more to normalcy. Sunday night specials. Both Amer- ican and Chinese, for your entertain- ment. Chinese Gardens.-Adv. SPECIAL 90c Chicken Dinner, Sun- day, 12 to 2 p. m., Chinese Gardens.- Adv. Paronize Daily Advertiers.-Adv. HARDING OUTLINES NATIO POLICY FOR NEXT FOUR (Continued from Page One) full well we cannot sell where we do not buy and we cannot sell success- fully where we do not-carry. Wants Homes "There never can be equality of re- wards or possessions so -long as the human plan contains varied talents and differing degrees on industry and thrift but ours ought to be a country free from great blotches of distressed poverty. We ought to find a way to guard against the perils and penal- ties of unemployment. We want an America of homes, illuminated with hope and happiness, where mothers, freed from the necessity for long hours of toil beyond their own doors, may preside as befits the hearthstone of American citizenship. We want the cradle of American. childhood rocked under conditions so wholesome and so hopeful that no blight may-touch it in its development and we want to provide that no selfish interest, no material necessity, no lack of oppor- tunity shall prevent the gaining of that education so essential to best cit- izenship." Teet's Dining Rooms for dinner parties. 805 E. Huron St.-Adv. ABS 4 Engineers Have you seen it? The "Rust" Lettering Scale--A great time saver. Price $1.25 Log Log Rules - -- A good supyly at W A H S Unversty Bookstores Young Men's Clothes Our ready-to-wears are chosen from t h e finest lines in th e country. All hand cut and tailoredueand they are designed for Young men. WAGNER AND COMPANY STATE STREET AT LIBERTY Established 1848 I....1 Various innovations have been plan- d for the "Crease," the All-law dance hich will be held April 29 in the Un- n, according to R. Levin, '21L, chair- an of the senior class social com- ittee. Supeonas, which will summon e partners of the laws to appear on e aforementioned date, will be is- ed before spring vacation, and can served any time thereafter. B. Loring, '21L, editor-in-chief of e "Crease Paper" promnises a legal ition that will surpass the works any of the earlier jurists. The aperones have not been indicted as t. Cabinet Club Elects Officers New officers for the ensuing term were elected Thursday night by the Cabinet club as follows: President, M. M. Shoemaker, '21; vice-president, C. H. Dearborn, '21E; secretary, E. M. Hampton, '21E; treasurer, B. J. Gurevich, '23. Burton to Give Oberlin Address President Marion L. Burton has ac- cepted an invitation to deliver the commencement address at Oberlin col- lege, Oberlin, Ohio, on June 22. I. 0. T. C. NOTICE 2 Students required to complete the en- ment in the infantry unit of R. O. T. C. Enroll now in n 241, Engineering building. Are you going to have a party? Let I Teet's Dining Rooms serve the dinner. -Adv. Increase your business by advertis- ing in The Michigan Daily.-Adv. '