SUNDAY, JULY 7, 1940 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN Situation: OMINOUS THE In Germany... ON JUNE 18 the U.S. government dispatched a note to all belliger- ents warning that the United States would not tolerate any transfer of territories in the Western Hemi- sphere between non-American pow- ers. Last week the government of the Third Reich rejected this warn- ing as "without object." Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop declared in a note to this government that any interpretation of the Monroe Doctrine which al- lowed France and Great Britain to possess territories in the Western Hemisphere while barring Germany from such possessions was "unten- able." Ribbentrop asserted that the note did not apply to the Reich since Ger- many had given no grounds for an assumption that she intended to seize any territory in the Western Hemi- sphere. Meanwhile Nazis goose-stepped for joy as their Fuehrer took his first sight-seeing trip outside Greater Ger- many, visiting the Louvre, the Eiffel Tower, the Hotel des Invalides, the Opera in Paris. The High Command announced it was ready to defer temporarily dis- armament of the remaining units of the French fleet, under the armis- tice treaty provisions, as a result of the Oran battle, in which England disabled a good part of the fleet. The German armistice commission advised the French of the German de- cision. The Foreign Office advised the United States embassy in Berlin to discontinue all diplomatic missions in Norway, Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands. The missions must be closed by July 15, although con- sulates may remain open. France was not included. In France.. .. I N THE PICTURESQUE little town of Vichy, this week, Premier Mar- shall Henri Phillipe Petain attempt- ed to make order from the chaos of emasculated, war-shattered France. He succeeded in making himself one of Europe's new dictators, and put his country at virtual, although im- potent war with France's erstwhile ally, the mistress of the seas. Tuesday Anglophiles here and a- broad took cheer when the appoint- ment of Vice-Admiral Muselier as commander of "all free French naval forces" to "carry-on-the-war," bright- ened the dark picture of French sur- render. The following day the capitulation of France to Hitler in ideology as well as arms, destroyed the tem- porary British optimism. The French National Assembly met in Vichy to "eliminate unwieldy democratic pro- cedure"-thinly veiled diplomatic jargon for dictatorship. Under the direction of once-Premier Laval, and now-Premier Petain, a convenient constitution was worked out and the French parliament relegated to posi- tion of rubber stamp. Tmmediately rumors came from across the channel that aroused Eng- land was pointing its fleet at the French. Admiral Gensoul, looked at his alternatives of complete surren- der to either Germany o England, and flight to this country or French colonies, or coming to grips with his former ally. He decided on the lat- ter-if and when they tried to seize the French fleet. Within 24 hours fact substantiated rumor. Imitat- ing Chancellor Adolf Hitler's tactics of keeping machines of war from the enemy at all costs, England turned on France, and moving with un- precedented British swiftness, troun- ced Gensoul and seized in a triple thrust ranging from Scotland to Al- geria, approximately 250 ships of all sizes, and sank or damaged another dozen. Indications were yesterday that England will continue her new policy of 'with us or against us,' but much of value is already beyond their grasp. Ever since the fall of France became obvious a steady drone of French planes has been heard over southern Spain-indicating flight to temporary sanctuary in Africa. The smoke had hardly cleared from the greatest sea battle since Trafal- gar when Marshall Petain ordered reprisal by the remnants of the French fleet against British mer- chantmen-opening a new phase of the war. InE lan .. . BIG NEWS of the week in England; was the series of naval engage- THE VARc terms and French ships aided British in fighting off an Italian, ttack. The third, and most dra- ion c phase of the action occurred Am he coast of Oran, Algeria, where thi n hour and twenty minute fight, lux ritish battle squadron sank one me ich battleship, one seaplane car-mexp two destroyers, and damaged int new battle cruisers and a battle- usu Authoritative sources declare coin the number of French ships not sec in British hands or out of action Mr very few. spr P 1the Balkans ina or 'E BALKAN FUSE was simmer- def irn again this week, as dismem- por d Rumania, beset with new to: ats and demands from Soviet iro ia, Hungary and Bulgaria, list hed out for Adolph Hitler's hand E asked for guidance. pro ter being forced to capitulate por ussian demands last week, King den 1, whose prime objective had 000 to preserve the gains of the wil Id War, renounced the Franco- of sh unilateral guarantee of ter- we ial integrity which the Allies had ' a him voluntarily April 13, 1939, vot announced that henceforth Ru- sio ia "would follow the new orien- 000 in of Europe." ofd the completion of Soviet occu- tor n of Bessarabia and Northern equ )vina, King Carol, amidst rum- 011 of his own abdication, appoint- Wo a strongly pro-German, anti- t tic Cabinet, headed by 54 year no Ion Gigurtu, and embarked his spe .try on a course of totalitarian wee as King Victor Emmanuel did tar taly in 1922. Gr .ngary and Rumania traded re- inations Tuesday, but to fore- a war over "unredeemed Tran- ,nia" which Rumania took from Magyar monarchy in 1919, Buda- was reported ready to negotiate claims. Bulgaria, too, pressed arest for rectification of her nds in the Dobruja province. awhile, some 200,000 Rumanian >s were reported on their way e Hungarian and Bulgarian bor- in preparation for possible in- >ns from the west and south. .e Balkans are thus a logical for ensuing serious develop- s. The three small countries- tania Hungary and Bulgaria- little voice in power politics, of these nations depends now Wussia and Germany, and secon- .y, Italy. These great powers ; certainly may be expected to o avoid a war in the Balkans at time-the Axis nations, preoc- d with war on England and ia, because of inherent military ness. If war does come in the ans, only Britain stands to gain. Caribbean, . OFFICIAL reports that a British ruiser squadron was threatening >lish a blockade and/or occupa- of the strategic French island artinique in the Caribbean took dded meaning after an exchange otes between Germany and the ed States revealed that the Third h believed Washington's interpre- n of the Monroe Doctrine was enable." ould another naval battle devel- 1 this region between the French British, it was felt in Washing- that the United States would be d to take action, either to as- e a protectorate over the island o force the British to abandon effort to seize it. t he Far East WORLD THIS ;itizens Start Paying For National Defense WEEK As Rearming ContinusS State Merit Act Wilikie Revitalizes Republicans, Goes On Ballotl Wants FDR To Run Against Him T-i e m , a nY ir Outlook: UNCHANGED Footing the bill for the new na- nal defense program affected Mr. erican Citizen for the first time s week as he was called on to pay ury levies on cigarettes, amuse-! nt, and automobiles which are pected to yield about $475,000,000 the coming year. There were the aal expressions of surprise and 2plaint, but reports from various tions of the country reveal that . itizen shouldered this new re- nsibility with painful dignity. President Roosevelt put a virtual bargo on the sale to any foreign tions of any munitions, materials machinery needed in the national tense program, by making all ex- ts of such conimodities subject rigid military direction. Scrap n was not included in the new xtension of the national defense gram was foreseen with the re- t from Washington that the Presi- nt was rounding out a new $5,000,- ,000 supplemental program which I be urged on Congress in the form a special message this coming ek. With the $5,082,210,080 already ed for defense at the present ses- n of Congress, the added $5,000,- ,000 will bring the estimated cost defense preparations now planned more than $10,000,000,000, nearly alling the all-time record of $11,- ,387,000 appropriated for the rld War fiscal year of 1918. the President's two new Cabinet trinees were approved by the re- ctive Senate Committees this ek-Renry L. 8timson, as Secre- y of War, by the Military Affairs oup and Col. Frank Knox, as Sec- 11*3 1 NIL)jV U t I Iuu11 With Washtenaw Cointy contrib- uting more than its quota of signers, the Michigan Merit System Associa- lion Friday filed petitions bearing 212,306 signatures to place on the November ballot a constitutional1 amendment which would write a civilA > service act into law. In this county petitions were signed by 4,486 persons, 500 over Washte- now's quota. The petitions were from 48 coun- ties 28 more than required. James A. Kennedy. of Ann Arbor, president of the associationtold newsmen at the filing ceremonies in the office of the Secretary of State that "the people have done a good ijob for themselves-we were just the articulate group for them." Predicting that voters would adopt the amendment, Kennedy said that circulation of the petitions was the "first step and the hardest job." The petitions were submitted only; a short time before the deadline for such filing by a delegation composed of HENRY L STIMSON William P. Lovett, of the Detroit Citizens League; Kennedy, Mrs. Craig retary of the Navy by the Naval Af- Miller, of Marshall, former president fairs Committee. Confirmation by of the Michigan League of Women the entire Senate is expected. Voters; Mrs. Seigel W. Judd, of Grand Rapids, member of the late Gov. Fitz- Airplane runways longer than any gerald's Civil Service Study Commis- in the world are being laid down on sion; Mrs. Paul W. Jones, of Grand on the Alaskan tundra by the Army Rapids, member of the original State Air corps at its new bases outside Civil Service Commission; S. V. Nor- Fairbanks and Achorage. ton, of Bloomfield Hills, director of Both bases are nearer to Europe the association; G. F. Langford, of by the Soviet-pioneered across-the- Jackson; Luther Pahl, of Jackson; Pole route than any air base under George Meder, of Ann Arbor, coun- the American flag. sel for the association. most. The dramatic surge of Will- kie to the top in the late balloting at the Republican National Convention indicates the degree of his appeal to the rank and file delegate-and to the rank and file voter. With Me- Nary to entice the Western vote (which Willkie couldn't) this GOP combine is making Democratic bosses burn the midnight oil before the Party Convention in Chicago next week. Willkie turned in his resignation as boss of Commonwelth"and South- ern last week in order to devote his full time to the campaign. He also will resign his other corporate -con- nections including directorships in the Ohio Edison Company, the Con- sumers Power Company, the Trans- portation Securities Corporation, the Central Illinois Light Company and the Southern Indiana Gas and Elec- tric Company. More than any other one man in the party, Willkie stands for opposi- tion to the New Deal. The party rank and file look to him as the most vocal anti-New Dealer in the ranks. Willkie told reporters last week: "You'll hear me called a New Deal- er and a Democrat. If there's one thing I have done it's fight the New Deal. Why, some of these other fel- lows who call themselves Republi- cans were selling off the regalia while I was defending the lodge." Undismayed last week were party leaders at the news that Lizzie, 42- year-old elephant in the Philadelphia Zoo had passed away during the Con- vention. They immediately named her cousin, Josephine, official sym- bol of the Republican Party. WENDELL WILLKIE * * * The new poltical dynamic of the Republican Party, Wendell L. Will- kie, last week declared he hoped President Roosevelt would run for a third term because "I want to beat him." Characteristic of the new spirit of the Republican Party was this crack made to newspapermen by the 48- year-old ex-utilities executive. And it is this spirit that has Democratic polticos worried, for behind it lies a smooth-functioning political ma- chine ready to exploit it to the ut- CAN ENGLAND BE BLITZKRIEGED? a I e rcw I. STAVANGR^'1 LTIL I THE OUTLOOK in Far East seems relieved considerably of late, de- spite British insistence that England is not ready to sacrifice China to satisfy the Japanese request for stop- page of shipment of war supplies to China over the Burma road. Of course, Japan is still deter- mined, as much as ever, to take ad- vantage of the course of the Euro- pean war to enlarge her empire in the Far East. But the zeal of the Japanese authorities at Hong Kong, Tokyo and Shanghai to calm the critical Hong Kong situation indi- cates that Nipponese policymake'rs are still undecided on the next move. But the appearance of the follow- ing signs must be taken as symp- toms of an abated atmosphere in the East: 1) The statement by the Japanese consul general at Hong Kong that British and Japanese authorities are negotiating with a view to assuring adequate food supplies for Hong Kong, whose land frontiers face Chi- ENGLAND imports much of her food and pays for much of it by manufacturing other imports. /"!.x~~vw. ..xs r r r4fn , n n of the approach of a convoy. Similar1 submarine-airplane teamwork jeop- ardizes the northern route around the key Nazi bases. A great strip through the vital manufacturing midlands is within range of all three r~~ n nic. path for it then swept ftee of Brit- ish mines. Diversion Possibilities move might divert British troops needed for defense again a Dover thrust. Likewise, an offense launched