Physically and mentally, Harry Tru man was prepared for the exciting
days of last week. His return trip from Potsdam — including 125
pleasant hours on the Atlantic — had been relaxing and restful.
Before he lost his sea legs, many stories about the voyage of the
cruiser Augusta had been told around Washington.
Wearing informal clothes and his mouse-grey fedora, Harry Truman
strolled the decks, arm in arm with Jimmy Byrnes or Admiral Bill
Leahy. At other times, he and Speechwriter Sam Rosenman lounged in the
President's stateroom or sat on the open deck; there they wrote and
rewrote the President's report to the nation.
One afternoon, Harry Truman attended a ship's smoker, intently
following the Navy boxers. When the portable ring collapsed and a post
struck Bosun's Mate H. W. Beemans, the President scurried below deck
to sick bay, checked the sailor's injuries and stayed for a short
chat.
He seemed interested in everything the ship's crew did. Standing at
the rail one sunny morning, he watched the ship's company solve a
battle problem, intrigued by the smoke bombs. He told the enlisted men
first about the atomic bomb—casually, as if chatting with old old
friends, at chow.
Time & again he summoned reporters to his quarters. Each time, they
ran and lurched through the passageways, expecting a formal press
conference, only to find the President wanting nothing more than a few
hours of his favorite pastime—poker and liquid refreshment.
The President's luck was good. He often scooped in the chips when
nobody called his raise. Whenever anybody won on an uncalled hand, the
President invariably smiled and referred to it as "an Archbishop of
Canterbury hand." He used the phrase often, but he would not explain
it.
After the last shipboard game, he told a story. Two Londoners, he
said, had been arguing about a passing cleric. Said one: "I say he's
the Archbishop of Canterbury. I can see his gaiters." Said the other:
"He's not." To settle a bet, the passerby was hailed, asked his
identity. Staring stonily over his high collar, the cleric replied :
"It's none of your damned business who I am." So, the President
grinned, they never knew—just like the suckers who do not call a poker
hand.