Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 September 1949 — Page 13

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES . ———— sirenreron

IT WAVE ' Prlitvee Doter \ALS D. Th, n als? Catholic Group Marks 25th Year a sg Pulitzer Prize Winner Pens ‘The Age Of Roosevelt’ a aa Bon yar 30% : . ’ " nts out i o Hea raternity o e . Third] a chain, | BEAUTY Ambitious Young Writer Began Intricate Job anuty | NSW is the rary history,” he points out. [final account will go light on the Heart Fraternity of the. Third

| memento of the jubilee,| |* Whatever you te, there's al- War events and stress the domes- Order of St. Francis will mark ql ne the services. 3 | the 25th anniversary of their| —————————— |

enrollment in. the . Third ‘Order NO PURE RACES | Sunday afternoon. Anthropologists do not believe The Rev. Fr. Medard Buvala,| that any absolutely pure =ace of!

OLLEGE » In 1946; Studies ‘Mountains’ of Files By BRUCE BIOSSAT, NEA Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Sept. 23—The America of Franklin D. Roosevelt's time is having its first big portrait painted,

ic scene. “As for the telephone, it is so ways the fear that some living ' 5 easy to do business that way person will pop up and sa$: Ho. ith Ici, says Mr. Schlesinger. nowadays that many vital -deci- was there, and it wasn't at all the | 1051 a I o the finished sions are made in wire conversa- way you have it'” | re and. give wi boii " ; The artist who has undertaken this ambitious task is 32-year-/tions. All the historian gets is a. To correct for the inevitable PO 3 sometime that year, 0. F. M., fraternity director, people exists in the world today. old Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., one of the youngest historians ever|lctter from the President saying: errors®growing out of the unce-| ; Will officiate at the silver jubllee| —— to achieve Pulitzer prize-winning fame. In 1945, at the age of 28,| This is to confirm our telephone tainties in the source material, How to Celebrate at 90 celebration at 3 p. m. in the Check Itching ; he was accorded that honor for his penetrating study of “The (CORVersation of yesterday." |Mr. Schlesinger will submit a frst] yr, 1) \cnre eye © Sacred "Heart “Cathotte Church, First Applicati ! Age of Jackson.” epee: | Plainly, the history of a period|draft of his book to many indi T lebrate Bi Dirthda {The jubilarians will kneel at the| rs pplication Since 1946, Mr. Schlesinger has . There were no typewriters and/more than a century ago is more viduals personally involved in the|—T© Celebrate his 90th ¥:/altar and renew their vows dedi- Mehing of ugly ecsema, Rash, been at work on “The po e of telephones, The historian today| self-contained,” adds Mr. Schles- story. Out of this trial by fire will William R, Damon, *Williams- cating their lives to the principles peier, Ringworm, Pimples, Scabies, Tos Roosevelt,” He intends ay as a Can't be sure that a typed letteriinger. All the participants ‘are come the. most reliable version he|burg's oldest resident, mowed his set forth by St. Francis of Assisi, lth is checked on ONE APPLICATION of | | comprehensive attempt to catch #'#ned by Roosevelt was not com-|dead, all'the memoirs are written, can. produce—helped again by|lawn, took a walk and ate some They will be met at the BLUR AR at ah the mood and tem a the late Pofed by a secretary or adviser.'all the evidence in. {more background studies in the of the six boxes of candy friends entrance of the church before Inet Jar falls 10 aatialy, Ty Rt today. + President's 12 pe in office, to In Jackson's papers, the Presi-' “It's different with contempo- newspaper files of 1032-1945. The sent him, : {the services begin and escorted” = TLD Tmo + single out the chief strands of a a . ; = fttory generally viewed as one of Ee TE

the most spectacular chapters in American life. Not a Biography | The bespectacled young histor- === = fan says the book will not be a E28 = biography of Roosevelt, except === incidentally. And obviously it will not be what historians call the i “definitive”—final and complete— history of the period. It all happened too recently, Many price- == less clues to the times may not become known to scholars for many years more. How does a historian go about A big job like this? “Well,” says Mr, Schlesinger, “since 1946 I've read all the existing books on Roosevelt and his" times. I've waded through the files of weekly news magazines and other periodicals covering the ¢ years from 1932 to 1945. And I've : dipped-into-the writings-of major columnists.”

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. » 3 But all these represent only the b f h 60. . first broad brush strokes of back- “3 eauty 0 f IS suite ..8.9 : . ground for America’s portrait in == " . .. . . 0. 4 the Roosevelt era. : then come see it because no picture can do it full justice. It . Starting in July of this year

Mr. Schlesinger began to pack " into his mind the rich; exciting : detail he will need to give color and substance to this picture. He took up summer residence at the : Roosevelt library in Hyde Park, : N Y., for this part of the job. There he undertook a painstaking study of the vast array of Roosevelt's papers, which only now are becoming available to scholars. Mr. Schlesinger is the fist historian of major stature EAE 100K AE them, - Kept Everything “Roosevelt kept everything.” he gays, “He had a personal file for more or less confidential material, $4 a general White House file, a special speech file which he loaded up with ideas for talks, and a big collection of miscellaneous material, including thousands of letters from ordinary citizens.”

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In these various mountains of papers are memoranda of kirds, notes, letters, government documents ports—a high percentage of the written matter that passed on through the President's hands. And, naturally, a good deal of it

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