Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 August 1946 — Page 13

20, 1946

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‘THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ___ Ue PAGE 13)

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By PAUL F, United Press Staff NEW YORK, Aug. 20.—Winston Frankli~ D. Roosevelt's nose and told

the feeling between the two wartime le

{son of the late president.

likely to stir up a new controversy| |

reliably reported, paid $30,000 for|ba Tells of Meeting

cident, the condensation quotes son | Elliott as saying, occurred during = one of the Atlantic Charter sessions between the prime minister and the President aboard the U, 8S. cruiser Augusta before the United | States entered the war. Author Roosevelt was with his father at that meeting and numerous others during the war, Mr. ‘Roosevelt, whose book comes out Oct. 1, tells of the meeting between his father and Churchill; how they clashed head-on over ideas; how the leadership slipped away fron Churchill and was captured by the laté President. Author Roosevelt said that during one informal meeting, Mr. Church. {ll walked about the room and final- |= ly stopped in front of the President. | He then “brandished a stubby forefinger under father's nose,” Roosevelt reports. He quotes Mr. Churchill directly | as saying: “Mr. President: I believe you are trying to do.gway with the British empire.. Every idea you entertain about the structure of the postwar | world demongtrates it. But in spite {of that—in spite of that, we know {that you constitute our only hope.

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/ admission that “he knew peace

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{And you know that we.know it. You |know that we know that without | America, the empife won't stand.” | Admitted He Needed U. 8S. | Author Roosevelt contends that {Mr. Churchill's statement was an

could only be won according to the | precepts which the United Sues) 3! would lay down.” “He was acknowledging that Brit- | ish colonial policy would be a dead duck,” the condensation of the book quotes the author as saying, “and British attempts to dominate world trade would be a dead duck, and British ambitions to play off the U. 8. S. R. against. the U. 8. A. worl? beoa-s-54 duck wc SSE Wows: Bae Doda athe

father ‘told him the prime minister {had no faith in Rlssia’s ability to [stay in the war; and that Mr. | Churchill urged Mr. Roosevelt to, enter the war immediately. He quoted Churchill as telling’ the | President: “The Americans must come in at our side! You must come in, if you are to survive.” Author Roosevelt makes numerous conclusions, contending that the peace structure as laid down

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Elliott Roosevelt in His Book “As | Saw It, Says All Was, | Not Serene Between Wartime Leaders.

dent was “trying to do away” with the British empire, This dramatic scene and other incidents ly

are reported in a forthcoming book, “As I Saw In” by Elliott Roosevelt,

The first installment of a con- - Mr. Roosevelt to Mr, Churehill| densation of the book, which seems Das been disavowed. He writes: over Mr. Roosevelt's secret agree- lin ments, was published today in Look structure of peace. magaziné. THe publication, it was donversations led to them, ‘of the

the advance publication rights. “And I have seen the promises . violated, the conditions cynically

disregarded, the pea - Mr. Churchill's finger-waving in-|avowed.” peace structure dis “Now If we could find the ones who married someone else, we could make

AT ET I OT TOT OTN OR ON TIT

Anim

By Science Service | Of the group who scored highest. WASHINGTON, Aug. 20A real-|in the army general classification ly bright truck-driver may be a est, all of them capable of absorbmore capable man than the execu- | ing a college education, only one« tive who sits in the office and gives! fourth were college graduates, Dr. him. orders. Bingham points out. In a world | About one boilermaker in every where there is an actual famine of {11 is as able-minded as the average trained intellects und skills, he eon. lawyer. sliders this tragic. : | These sample findings from the| As one partial remedy, he calls army general classification test,|for a greatly increased number of given to 10 million young men scholarships available to really {during the war, are offered by Dr.|superior applicants for higher edu- | Walter V. Bingham, chief psychol- cation. He also thinks all univerogist of thie adjutant general's office, | sities and colleges should have stalls to point a mori! in a discussion of [of specidlists to pick out and en< the general abilities of American courage the most promising stu adults. dents. His inference is that if you are i ————————————————— hited to be complacent about a VETERANS PLAY BALL truck-driver being better than his boss, or a boilermaker just as good| SPRINGFIELD, Mass. W. Plow as a lawyer you are looking at/ World war I and world wer II things wrong-end-up. Rather, you {veterans played on opposite sides should be asking why the truck-lin the American Legion baseball driver isn't glivng orders instead game here. In some cases, ‘mem of taking them, or why the boiler- bers of the team representing the maker isn't making briefs instead recent war were sons of players of boilers. on. the other side.

RC y Men Were College Graduates .

ELLIS Correspondent Churchill waved a finger under him that he believed the presi-

rting to show that aders was not always too friendly

‘I know what conditions FrankRoosevelt predicated for the I know what

rgains and promises.

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