rAGE SIX THE MIC11IGAN DAIY Truman Pledges To Carry On, Fight for Roosevelt Principles ASSOCIATED PRESS PUG TURE NEWS Dedicate Estate as Ngtional Shrine By The Associated Press HYDE PARK, N. Y., April 12 - President Truman today pledged to "carry on in the way of Franklin D. Roosevelt" as he dedicated the late President's Hudson river estate as a national monument. The former President died a year ago today. Standing bareheaded on the stone veranda of the Roosevelt stone and stucco mansion, Mr. Truman said "we shall continue to fight" for his predecessor's "progressive and hu- mane principles of the New Deal" and "principles of international coopera- tion." Isolation Impossible The President said Mr. Roosevelt "saw clearly that we cannot con- tinue to live isolated from other na- tions" and "recognized, above all that our hope for the future of civili- zation, for the future of life itself, lay in the success of the United Nations." He added that the former chief executive's foreign policy "called for fair, sympathetic and firm dealing with the other members of the family of nations." The President spoke before an au- dience of several thousand, including many government leaders as well as the ambassadors or ministers of 18 foreign countries. Millions more heard him via a world-girdling radio hookup. Mrs. Roosevelt Present Behind the President on the white- pillared front porch were Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, Interior Secretary J, A. Krug, and many others who had been friends and associates of the late president. Mrs. Roosevelt was dressed in black. She stepped forward to a post Professor First Thought Of Academy "The Michigan Academy of Sci- ence owes its inception to Prof. Jacob E. Reighard, former head of the De- partment of Animal Morphology at the University, who felt the need of bringing together the teachers and other persons in the state who were interested in research," states a pamphlet in the Michigan Academy of Science, Arts and Letters exhibit in the General Library. The exhibit is commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of the Academy's founding which has held annual meetings since 1894, except in 1896 and 1914, all but four of the meetings were held in Ann Arbor. On display are accounts of various Academies of Science, including sev- eral printed in the seventeenth cen- tury, in the United States and many European and Asiatic countries. Because it was impossible during the war to secure' foreign periodicals and society publications micro-film was used and distributed to the li- braries by several scientific organi- zations. The exhibit displays two rolls of films from France and Rus- sia. PRESIDENT TRUMAN-is shown spt aking at the dedication of Hyde Park as a national shrine. -------- - ~ - --------- ~ ----- ~ ~~- behind a battery of microphones, and in formally presenting the house, her husband's rose garden grave and its New Business Course Offered For Veterans A short course in business manage- ment for veterans, similar to the one offered on campus, will be given in Detroit beginning April 29 by the University Extension Service and the School of Business Administration, it has been announced. The course will meet mornings and afternoons daily except Saturday and Sunday at the RaO;ham Educational Memorial. The program covers a per- iod of four months, and includes four complete units, in merchandising and accounting, banking and finance, business law, and a unit devoted to business lectures and conferences with business men who have had specialized experience in the various fields. Adaptation of this program for the Detroit center has been super- vised by Prof. Charles L. Jamison of the School of Business Administra- tion, and the faculty will include men selected and approved by that school. Approximately 20 hours each week will be spent in the classroom. -. - - - surrounding green acres, she said: "My husband's spirit lives in this house, in the library, and in the quiet garden where he wished his body to lie." Recognition for Roosevelt Speaking of his predecessor, Mr. T umnan said: "All over the globe plain people join with leaders and statesmen in recognition that it was largely be- cause of him that civilization has survived. Only history can do him full justice. "The progressive and humane principles of the New Deal embodied the great hope which in an hour of extreme crisis President Roosevelt gave to the American people. As car- ried out in practice the New Deal be- came the realization of that hope." Good Neighbor Policy "In the foreign field, President Roc,,evelt's guiding thought was that this nation as a good neighbor must play an active, intelligent and con- structive part in world affairs. He saw clearly that we cannot continue to live isolated from other nations. He knew that what happens on other continents must affect the welfare of our country." In pledging continuance of the foreign and domestic principles and policies of Mr. Roosevelt, Mr. Tru- man said changes might be re- quired to meet changing conditions and he concluded: "May Almighty God, who watches over this republic as it grew from weakness to strength, give us the wis- dom to carry on in the way of Franklin D. Roosevelt." Slosson Will Talk On World Government Prof. Preston Slosson of the his- tory department will present the case for a Federated World Government as a prelude to a rally later'this term at 8 p.m. Monday in the Union. Sponsored by the Committee for Liberal Action, the open meeting is being held in conjunction with re- cent appeal by a veterans' organiza- tion at Northwestern University. This group is sending out two teams of four students each to speak on a World Government at campuses throughout the country. A system of international inspec- tion and control and a strong inter- national government were proposed as the only defense against the bomb at a conference on interna- tional control of the atomic bomb which Prof. Slosson recently attend- ed at Rollins College. G O B S 0 N C 0 R R E G.I D 0 R T 0 U R -- Five 1. S. sailors on a liberty tour of Corregidor inspect a 12-inch disappearing gun, part of the defenses of the stronghold. Left to right are SI/C N. D. Coon, Clearfield, Pa., SI/C T. D. iiughston, Dallas, Tex.j Y3/C W. D. Burkhardt, McKeesport, Pa., SI/C I. A. Freeman, Santa Cruz, Calif., and MM12/C O. N. Watson, Asliand, Kas./ State Orchards Damaged by Frost DETROIT, April 12 -(A')- Michi- gan's fruit orchards faced freezing temperatures tonight for the fourth time this week, according to the De- troit Weather Bureau. Continuing rising temperatures for the weekend were in prospect, how- ever, and the Bureau held out some R I T A G I V E S-Actress Rita Corday contributes her check as the nationwide cancer. c'ontrol campaign opens. the loss of half the sour cherry buds and two-thirds of the sweet in the Grand Rapids area, according to Walter Toenjes, superintendent of the State Horticultural Experiment Station. Plums, pears and peaches have been damaged severely in parts of Van Buren, Berrien and Shiawassee counties, it was reported. ICE AFTER F I R E - Streams of water poured by fire fighters on a blaze at Fitchburg, Mass.. in five-above-zero weather left this wintry scene. hope that the cold its mid. This week's frosts snal) was near have resuttted in DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from page 4) 10:00 a.m., ADAMS to KATZ, B, Haven Hall; KAY to ZEEB, 1025 Angell Hall. Room Room The University of Michigan Sym- phony Orchestra, William D. Revelli, Conductor, will present a program at, 8:30 Thursday evening, April 18, in Hill Auditorium. Jeannette Haien, a graduate student in the School of Music, will appear with the orches- tra in Beethoven's Concerto No. 5 in E-flat Major, "The Emperor," for piano and orchestra. The public is invited. Exhibit jons College of Architecture and De- sign: Water colors and oils by Mr.; Karl Kasten, Instructor in Drawingt and Painting in this College. Ground, floor corridor. Open daily except Sun- day, 9 to 5, through April 20,. The public is invited. Michigan Historical Collections: "Early Ann Arbor." 160 Rackham. , Open daily 8-12, 1:30-4:30, Saturdays 8-12. Events Today Saturday Seminar at 7:30 in the Guild 110i1s e 3apt ist cltreh >. Rep- resentat ives of hillel Foundation will lead a discussion on Zionism. Unitarian Student Groue hay-bide tonight. Make reservations by call- ing 3085. Group meets at 110 N. State Street at 7:00 p.m. tUniversity of Michigan Band meet in Hill Auditorium Monday at 4:15. Asseciation of University of Michi- gan Scientists will meet Monday, April 15, at 7:30 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. There will be a busi- ness meeting followed by a discussion of the Atcheson Report on interna- tional control of atomic energy at 8 p.m., to which the public is invited. Prof. W. Kaplan will initiate the dis- cussion by presenting a summary of the Report. Th11 I-Vychology Ioural Review Conumittec of the Psychology Club will meet on Wedncsday, April 17, at 7:30 at the Psychological Clinic, 1027 E. Huron Street, for a demonstra- tion of the clinic's Electroencephalo- graphy equipment and a review of three journal articles related to EEG. Miss I. E. Hollingsworth will discuss Personality Types and EEG, Miss Annette Lambie will review a paper on EEG and Conditioning, and Physi- ological Correlates of EEG will be discussed by Allan Katcher. This meeting is for members only. The International Center: The In- ternational Center in conjunction with the Latin American Society and American Legion will present a pro- gram on Pan American Day, Sunday, April 14, at 7:30 p.m. in the ballroom of the Union. Highlighting the pro- gram will be a group of Pan Ameri- can songs and dances offered as a preview of the Pan American Ball. Included in the program will be a brief talk by Prof. Edgar G. John- ston, a movie, "Wings Over Latin America," followed by refreshments and a Community Sing in the Cen- ter. Foreign Students and Friends of the International Center are invited to attend. Veterans' Wives' Club will meet at 7:30 p.m., Monday, April 15, in the Michigan League. All wives of stu- dent Veterans are invited to attend. Spanish play: La Sociedad His- panica will present two one act plays: Rosina es Fragil and Las Codornices on Tuesday, April 16 and Wednes- day, April 17 at 8:30 p.m. in the Lydia MendelssohnaTheatre. Sale of tickets will start at the Theatre on Monday, April 15 at 2 p.m. Members of "La Sociedad" will pay the federal tax only. S A R I - Actress Joan Win- field models a modern version of the Indian sari fashioned from a white background print scat- tered withhuge poinsettias in shades of scarlet. Telephone 3008 We Deliver! C I S K I E R H U R T I N A L P S - Instructors in an American Red Cross first aid and ski natrol course rush to the aid of Pvt. Joseph Krupla of Swarthmore, Pa., (foreground) who suf- Teehn_08FeDlvr