Love: Illegible writing
By Gilbert Love
…
Romance blooms on return home after escape from leopard
By Capt. Gen Genovese
…
Press writer chats with two district soldiers while touring through Austria
By Henry Ward
…
Browder kicked out; black republic urged
By Frederick Woltman, Scripps-Howard staff writer
…
Not the city, just black goat with red horns, mascot of Okinawa night-fighters
By Richard G. Harris, United Press staff writer
…
GOP suggestion opposed by 64%
By George Gallup, Director, American Institute of Public Opinion
…
Arrangement would aid merchant seaman and citizens in England
By William H. Stoneman
…
Returning soldiers vote against incumbents
By David Lawrence
…
Swing to nationalization of industry likely to have deep effect
By Maj. George Fielding Eliot
…
U.S. State Department (July 28, 1945)
Truman’s quarters, 2 Kaiserstrasse, Babelsberg
Present | ||
---|---|---|
United States | United Kingdom | |
President Truman | Prime Minister Attlee | |
Secretary Byrnes | Foreign Secretary Bevin | |
Fleet Admiral Leahy | Sir Alexander Cadogan |
Byrnes: “Soon after their arrival, Mr. Attlee and Mr. Bevin called on the President and the four of us discussed the work of the conference. The President mentioned the Soviet demand for East Prussia and indicated on a map the changes in the boundary lines of Germany, Poland and the Soviet Union that thus would be effected. Mr. Bevin immediately and forcefully presented his strong opposition to those boundaries.”
Leahy: “Prime Minister Attlee and his newly appointed Foreign Minister, Ernest Bevin, arrived shortly after 9 P.M. and called on the President. Byrnes and I were present and the conversation quickly centered on the possibility of settling the Polish boundary question and reparations.”