Québec’s plan to speed war to be revealed
Roosevelt, Churchill to continue sessions
Québec, Canada (UP) –
President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill today will reveal some of the decisions made in their momentous Second Quebec Conference on Pacific war plans and the Allied program for a Europe entirely freed of Nazi influences.
After announcing as much as military security and fluctuating international politics will permit, the President and the Prime Minister – according to hints by official spokesmen – will go to an undisclosed place to continue their discussions on a more intimate basis.
The new talks were certain to involve questions of a world peace organization, the future of Germany, and Anglo-American dealings with Russia.
In between military planning for the destruction of Japan, these other topics were touched upon during the week’s conference here.
Evidence of these political angles was found in the hasty trips here of British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden, and his No. 1 assistant, Sit Alexander Cadogan, who has been heading the British delegation at the Dumbarton Oaks world security conference in Washington.
It seemed equally evident that Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Churchill had not finished their business although the Québec phase of their conferences ended today.