ig 414t AbL-..mmmdMMN6- A p juatt 9 WEATHER Cloudy and Cooler Possible Showers VOL. LV, No. 121 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN SATURDAY, APRIL 14, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS Truman Takes Helm, Meets with Cabinet G Daily I Find City 'Somber, Waiting' Note 'Reverence, - - Uncertainty' By MONROE FINK and ALLAN ANDERSON Special to The Daily W4SHINGTON, D. C., 7:30 p. m. Friday, April 13-Arriving in Wash- ington, D. C., at 7 p. m. we found quiet, somber Washington awaiting tonight the funeral services of Frank- lin D. Roosevelt, Thirty-Second Pres- ident of the United States, to be held at four p. m. today in the East Room of the White House. In the last twenty-three hours, by means of the thumb, we have travel- led from Packard and Washtenaw to Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, D. C. to witness the final honors that the nation's capital will pay to what a truck driver from Canton, a foot- ball coach from Belleview, Ohio, and a doctor from Wheeling, West Vir- ginia all described as "the greatest President since Abraham Lincoln." In all the 21 people who were re- sponsible for our transportation from Ann Arbor to Washington, we found the same basic fears and emotions; a deep expression of reverence for the departed President and a distinct feeling of uncertainty as to the fu- ture. What was this reverence based on? A Steubenville, Ohio, business man told us. "I never voted for Roosevelt in all the four times he ran for of- fice but now that his firm guidance of the reigns of government is gone, I am frankly worried if there is any man at present capable of stepping into his shoes." . "The best friend that the Ameri- can workingman ever had," was how a coal miner who picked us up at 5:30 a. m. yesterday morning on his way to work at the collery at Waynes- burg, Ohio, put it and these senti- ments were strongly re-echoed by an organizer for the United Steel Workers Union of the C.I.O. who gave us a lift just outside of Wash- ington, Pa. "The President was sure working hard to see that we wouldn't ever again have to get involved in the mess we're mixed up in at present. What's going to become of those plans for a lasting peace is what I'm worried about," said a G.. sergeant on the way to his camp just outside of Wheeling, West Virginia. Washington is at present enjoying the momentary lull before the storm. As yet the great crowds which are expected to form along Pennsylvania Ave., the route which the funeral procession will take on its way to the White House from Union station, have not yet arrived. The city has apparently recovered from its first shock on hearing the news. As the cab driver, whom we hailed upon reaching the outskirts of the city expressed it. "By four o'clock this afternoon, (Friday) I felt it would be alright if I took out my cab again and started to do a little business." Sociology 54, 165 Will Not Meet for Class Today Students in Sociology 54, section three, and Sociology 165 will not meet for class today, W. S. Land- ecker announced last night. CAMPUS EVENTS Today Pan-American Ball defi- nitely postponed. Today Baseball-2 p. m. EWT at Ferry Field against West- ern Michigan. Today Preliminaries in River Rouge Track Meet held at 1 p. m. April 15 Special memorial services commemorating the death of President Franklin De- lano Roosevelt will be held at 4 p. m. EWT (3 p. m. CWT) in Hill Audi- torium. April 16 Dr. Franklin H. Littell, Director of the Student leporters Arrive in x:4 Capital * / * * * * * * (AP Wirephoto) TRUMAN IS SWORN IN AS PRESIDENT OF UNITED STATES-Harry S. Truman (left) is sworn in by Chief Justice Harlan Stone as President of the United States in the cabinet room of the executive offices of the White House April 12 following the death of President Roose pelt. Mrs. Truman is in center. Be- hind Mrs. Truman is Secretary of State Edward R. S tettinius Jr. Beind Mr. Truman is Attorney General Francis Biddle. CAMPUS MOURNS; .University To Hold Memorial Service To Honor Roosevelt The University will hold memorial services in honor of President Roose- velt at 4 p. m. EWT (3 p. m. CWT) tomorrow at Hill Auditorium, Dr. Frank E. Robbins, Assistant to Pres- ident Ruthven, announced today. A special delegation of about 600 Army and Navy personnel will oc- cupy a section of the floor of Hill Auditorium, while the rest of the Auditorium will be open to other ser- vicemen, students, faculty members and the general, public. Program Planned The result of a conference held by President Alexander G. Ruthven with various deans and Army and Navy representatives yesterday in Dr. Rob- bins' office, the program will include the reading of the Opening Sentences of the Burial Service, the reading of passages from the Scriptures and prayers by the Reverend Henry Lewis of the Ann Arbor Episcopal Church. The conference decided, according' to Dr. Robbins, that "this is not the, right time for an elaborate program with eulogies," but that a simple, dignified service would be more ap- propriate. Organ Introduction An Organ Prelude rendered by Prof. Palmer Christian, University organist, will open the program, fol- lowing which the audience will rise to sing the National Anthem. Selections from the writings of President Roosevelt will be delivered by Prof., John Henry Muyskens of the Department of Speech. "Oh God, Our Help in Ages Past" and "Onward, Christian Soldiers" are the two hymns which will be sung. The offering of benediction and taps will conclude the ceremony. The color guard will carry the col- TruianWill1Have Support of Labor WASHINGTON. April l3-.(/P) - Many labor unions swung quickly be- hind President Harry S. Truman to- day with official and unofficial state- ments pledging support to Franklin D. Roosevelt's successor. AFL president William Green said Mr. Roosevelt was a president of all the people, and that Mr. Truman would be, also. The CIO, which supported Henry A. Wallace as its first choice for vie nrpesident at the Democratic na- ors down the center aisle of Hill Auditorium and stack them along the sides. Special Army Ceremony All army units on campus, Dr. Robbins reported, will pay their trib- ute to President Roosevelt at 3 p. m. EWT (2 p. m. CWT) by a ceremony including the reading of a proclama- tion of the death of President Roose- velt, a fire volley and taps. The Naval units on campus, in ac- cordance with a statement issued by Secretary of Navy James Forrestal, will recognize the death of President Roosevelt by carrying on with their regular tasks in true Navy tradition, Capt. W. V. Michaux, commandant of all Naval units here, said. Slosson Lauds Roosevelt; Says Faith Needed Roosevelt's work is not shipwreck- ed; his creed was democracy and he believed that the people will always' produce capable leaders, Prof. Pres- ton Slosson, speaking at memorial services for the late President, told the audience who assembled yester- day at the Congregational church to pay tribute to the memory of their leader. At the informal services arrang- ed by the Post-War Council, Prof. Slosson said, "We would be false to his memory were we to assume that his work would not be carried out. Just as no general would want to believe that his death meant re- treat, neither would any statesman See ROOSEVELT, Page 6 $1,300000 I Denied TU' for New Building The State Finance Committee to- day eliminated $1,300,000 from the University budget, which was to be used to construct an Administrative and Service Building proposed as a replacement to University Hall and as a centralization of the University's administrative, business and public service offices, the Associated Press reported. Permanent rejection of the ap- propriation is doubted by Senator Don Vanderwerp, chairman of the committee, who said the appropria- tion will probabv be restored next week when the committee hears Dr. Ruthven. The proposed Administration and Service Building was to be construct- ed after the war on a site stretching along State street, from the Union to Newberry Hall. Officially known as a General Service Building the structure was also contemplated to house the Broadcasting Service, over which the University would conduct educational radio broadcasts on a frequency modulation (FM) outlet. * The University has already applied to the Federal Communications Com- mission for an FM outlet. Russian Army Takes Vtennra LONDON, Saturday, April 14-(0P) -The Red Army captured Vienna yesterday after a week's siege, clear- ing the way for Russian drives to Prague and the Nazis' "mountain redoubt" in Southern Germany after taking more than 130,000 Nazi pris- oners in the battle for the second city of Adolf Hitler's greater Reich. Third Army Dash Almost Splits Reich Patton's Men Cut Off All Direct Roads By The Associated Press PARIS, Saturday, April 14-The U. S. Third Army severed all direct roads and railways between Berlin and southern Germany yesterday with a dazzling 32-mile eastward drive that all but split the Reich in half. Lt. Gen. George S. Patton Jr., struck with all his wonted fury, cut- ting the Munich-Berin superhighway and two railways and driving a wedge of steel within 90 miles of the Rus- sian lines and 38 miles of the Saxonf capital of Dresden. The Third Army was outflanking both Berlin and the Czechoslovakian munitions city of Pilsen, and driving hard against the last lines of retreat over which the Germans were report- ed streaming southward for Bavaria and the final big battle of the war. Patton's columns, their exact posi- tions masked in secrecy, were believ- ed already 30 miles east of the west- ern tip of Czechoslovakia and racing unopposed across the waist of Ger- many about 32 miles north of that Balkan democracy's northern fron- tier. Division Outflanks Berlin Farther north, his Sixth Armored Division was outflanking Berlin itself, reaching the Mulde River southeast of embattled Leipzig and about 85 miles due south of Berlin. German positions in the west were disintegrating fast. T'he U. S. Ninth Army rolled up to the Elbe River on a 100-mile front -thrust within 45 miles of Berlin- and fought a roaring battle on the east bank. The U. S. First Army opened the battle of Leipzig, now by-passed by the Third Army, and charged eight miles through its stiff defenses to within seven miles of the city, where an estimated 1,000,000 persons, many of them bombed out refugees from Berlin, cowered in air raid shelters' and basements. The U. S. Ninth Army was about 95 miles from the Russians, and the First Army was 115 miles away. Ninitz Reports Over 256 Jap Planes Downed GUAM, April 14, Saturday-(P)- More than 256 Japanese planes- many of them piloted by the enemy's vaunted Kami-Kaze (suicide) corps -were destroyed April 11-13 by Al- lied forces in the Ryukyus, Fleet- Adm. Chester W. Nimitz announced today. Simultaneously Nimitz reported a strong Japanese counterattack- in battalion strength-on the southern Okinawa front was defeated early Friday mornng by the 24th Army Corps commanded by Maj. - Gen. John R. Hodge. Naval rifles joined heavy Marine and Army artillery in hurling back the fanatical Japanese. Summarizing the brilliant work of Vice-Adm. Marc A. Mitscher's fast carrier task force, Nimitz said that from March 18 to April 12, inclusive, 1,277 Japanese planes were destroy- ed. Of these, 841 were shot down by U.S. planes in combat; 73 by naval gunfire, and 366 were destroyed on the ground. Congress To Be Addressed Monday New President Pleas 'Pray For Me!'; Proclaims A National Day of Mourning By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, April 13-With a tearful plea-"Pray for me!" Harry S. Truman gathered up the presidential reins of a nation at war today as millions the world over mourned the passing of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. The new president went quickly to work, conferring with the heads of the State and Military Departments of government. He arranged to outline his foreign policies to a joint session of Congress at 1 p. m., EWT, Monday and address the armed forces by radio Tuesday night. But the emotional weight of hii, new responsibilities came down upon him at noon as he returned to his old haunts at the Capitol to confer with Congressional leaders. Tears welled in his eyes when he saw the familiar faces of Capitol newsmen. He reverted to the langu- age of his Missouri farm youth to de- scribe the crushing weight of his new job. Feels Responsibility "I don't know if any of you fel- lows ever had a load of hay or a bull fall on him," he said. the whole weight of stars fell on me. I dous responsibility. "Please pray for that!" Mr. Truman's first "But last night the moon and feel a tremen- me! I mean executive proc- lamation was a paper setting aside tomorrow as a day of national mourn- ing for Mr. Roosevelt, stricken yes- terday at "The Little White House" in Warm Springs, Ga. Day of Mourning. The proclamation called upon the nation: "To pay out of full hearts their homage of love and reverence to the The text of President Roosevelt's Jefferson Day address, released yesterday by Stephen Early, may be found on Page two, column one. memory of the great and good man whose death they mourn." Grief and mourning were world- wide. Messages of condolences streamer in from every quarter of the globe. The battle flags flew at half-mast over Okinawa. In Washington, Congressional lead- ers, stunned and distraught, aban- doned routine business and conferrer instead. on arranging a memorial ser- vice to the dead president. It prob- ably will be next week., All major Congressional committe( meetings were chalked off. The Houst stood in recess. The Senate, previ- ously committed to a session, tran- sacted no business. * * * TU' Graduate May Replace Harry Hopkins WASHINGTON, April 13.-( )-A shift in presidential advisers seemed in the making today as President Truman completed his first busy day at the White House and Capitol. Gone permanently from the scene is Harry Hopkins, who began with President Roosevelt in 1932. and climbed the ladder from WPA ad- ministrator to the point where he became the late President's closest adviser. Friends said the ailing Hopkins, flying here tomorrow for his chief's funeral services in the White House has no inclination to continue under President Truman the role he filled under his predecessor. In his stead, a 36-year-old New York and Washington attorney, Hugh Fulton, appeared at this point most likely to be in the in- nermost circle of presidential ad- visers. Fulton was an honor student at the University of Michigan where he received a bachelor of arts de- gree in 1930 and a doctor of juris- prudence in 1931. He belonged to Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi, and Coif Honor Societies and was a member of the editorial board of the Michigan Law Review. Harry Truman May Not Attend Peace Parley Many New Duties Given as Reason By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, April 13.-Presi- dent Truman decided today that he probably cannot attend the San Francisco Conference, but he empha- sized anew that he Will follow the Roosevelt foreign policies. The late' President Roosevelt had planned to address the Golden Gate Conference, called to draft a plan 'for a world organization., It became known that Mr. Truman does not expect to attend. This decision was attributed to the tremendous new duties so sud- denly thrust upon him, rather than to any lack of enthusiasm for the work of the conference. Stettinius Issues Statement A statement reflecting the Presi- dent's foreign policy views was issued by Secretary of State Stettinius upon authority of Mr. Truman. It empha- sized the Chief Executive's support for the plan to organize a world sys- tem aimed at keeping the peace as well as his determination to maintain in force the other basic foreign poli- cies of his predecessor. "There will be no change of pur- pose or break of continuity in the foreign policy of the United States Government," the statement said. It evidently was intended to end uncer- tainty among foreign diplomats and leaders who knew little about Mr. Truman. Victory Is Goal Stettinius said there would be no faltering in the accomplishment of victory and peace ends "for which Franklin D. Roosevelt gave his life." "We shall press forward with the other United Nations toward a vic- tory whose terms will deprive Ger- many and Japan of the means with which to commit aggression ever again, and toward the establishment of a world organization endowed with strength to keep the peace for generations and to give security and wider opportunity to all men." State Arranges Tributes Today Governor Kelly Asks For Minute of Silence MP-Michigan prepared today to pay tribute to President Roosevelt with a minute of silence asked by Governor Harry F. Kelly for 4 p. m. (EWT) Saturday, when funeral ser- vices will start in Washington, and other observances throughout the state. Asking that all traffic stop and all business suspend for a minute, the state's Chief Executive also suggested that all those who could, spend the hour between 4 and 5 in reflection, and requested that the occasion be marked in church services of all .aiths Sunday. A three-minute period of silence at 4 p. m. Saturday in Michigan war plants was suggested as "a very ap- propriate tribute" by Carston Tiede- man, Regional War Production -Board Director, who stated that he did not think the late president would wish suspension of war production activi- ties for several hours. At Adrian, however, the Bohn Aluminum Plant BRITISH REPRESENTATIVE: Eden To Attend Roosevelt's Funeral LONDON, Saturday, April 14-(P)- Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden was en route to the United States by plane this morning to attend Presi- dent Roosevelt's funeral as Prime Minister Churchill reluctantly stayed on the job in anticipation of a pos- sible end of organized German resist- a-n n House of Commons, was reported to have decided against flying to Wash- ington only after becoming convinced that the military situation required his hour by hour presence here. There was speculation that it would be necessary for Churchill and Pre- mier Stalin of Russia to meet soon "The House will have learned with deepest sorrow the grievous news which has come to us from across the Atlantic and which conveys to us the loss of a famous President of the United States, whose friendship for the cause of freedom and for the causes of the weak and poor have