AY, 'TU 1,1941 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Air, T 17, 1941 PAGE THREE. Re-Alignments In The Axis THE WEEK IN REVIEW Only A Signature Needed Now ......._.r.. ...+... I FOREIGN: 'Somewhere In The Atlani Red Setback In The South Following a surge of desperate of- fensive fighting, the Russians last week returned to the defensive, cut communiques again to indescriptive phrases, implied that all was not so well on the southern front. Capture of oft-claimed Smolensk was finally confirmed last week, as German military chiefs invited a U. S. newsman to tor the ruins of that strategic city on the road to Moscow. What AP correspondent Steinkopf saw and reported substantially con- firmed Russian adherence to Joe Stalin's scorched earth policy. The Nazis held Smolensk, and apparently had captured it sometime ago, but it was a prize hardly worth the winning. Of the 160,000 inhabitants, only 20,- 000 remained. Frightened and re- sourceless, they huddled in little bits of roof; all that remained of a once proud city. Though they had captured the city proper through bitter street to street fighting, the Nazi blitz drive had not proceeded far past Smolensk. Heavy artillery fire and th drone of planes was only a few kilometers further on the road to Moscow. Nor were things proceeding too well for the Russians in the Southern sec- tor. British and U. S. sources were already expressing grave concern ovei Soviet "strategic withdrawals." Large Nazi and Rumanian units ivere described as driving toward Kiev, but the main German southern drive centered toward Uman and Dnepropetrovsk, and was apparently timed to surround Russian forces at Nikolaev and Odessa. Worried Brit- ish observers saw the impending doom of another, more costly Dun- kirk at Odessa. Rich are the prizes to be had in the Ukraine battle. If she can reach this sector in time, Germany will have wheat; to Russia retreat means loss of two important Black Sea ports, including the naval base at Odessa. hnd the rich industrial city of Dne- propetrovsk. Complete Collaboration It was a weak France, exhausted by encirclement, undermined by Nazi terrorism, that last week submitted to complete collaboration with her former foe. Worn and haggard too last week was 85-year old Marshal Philippe Petain who sadly admitted to his countrymen that his program for the regeneration of France had been .a miserable failure, that French democracy had been completely re- duced to a lost ideal. Placed in sub-Hitler dictatorial power over France was pro-German Vice Premier Admiral Darlan, who immeditely set about to alleviate serious food shortages. Frankly ad- mitted was the critical shortage of meat, Vine and tobacco: the oncom-' ing winter may well see serious V- campaign in a hungry France. Worried by the collaboration were London and Washington. To them, the change meant complete Nazi control over Dakar and Martinique: a serious threat to the Western Hemi- sphere and to British shipping about the Horn. Japanese Preparations In the Far East, events tightened to the breaking point in more than one sector. In Thailand, Japan con- tinued to rush troops and supplies to forces now wetl-entrenched in Indo- China, while form Australia, England and the U. S. came ominous threats of reprisal. In Tokyo, the Konoye government tightened the economic belt another notch, announced that Nippon would be placed on a full economic war footing under the general mobiliza- tion act. And from Shanghai late in the week came word through diplomatic sources that Japan was getting set to attack Russian Siberia within the next few weeks. If the Soviets are hard pressed in the West, Nippon will be ready to cut off her share of Stal- in's empire in the east. No good news to the U. S. last week was the near-fatal shooting of Vice Premier Hiranuma, long con- sidered the moderating and steadying influence in the Japanese cabinet. From Two Sides Events on the Aerial front last week indicated that Germany would have to face consequences of the London threat that the two RAF's- the British Royal Air Force and the Red Air Force-would turn German cities into "hells of death and de- struction." From Britain came wave upon wave of English and high-flying American made bombers, from Russia came scores of six-motored slow, but bomb heavy planes. With the lenghening Somewhere in the Atlantic last week two graying, wearied leaders of two great nations met on board a British battleship, surrounded by de- stroyers and submarines as naval planes soared above. In that dramatic, secret scene President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Prime Minister Winston Churchill pledged their two nations never to make peace with Nazi Germany, sketched the post-war world order and laid the foundations for a bitter death, struggle with the totalitarian powers. But even hore ominous sounding to isolationists in this country was strong. implication in the official statement issued after the meeting that agreement had been reached on points of strategy to meet new Axis military threats on a far-flung front, -in the East, in the West and in sprawling, struggling Russia. Arsenal Of Democracy Officially the United States was assigned only the position of "the arsenal of the democracies" by the declaration; but there was no indica- tion from the pronouncement that this nation woud remain indefinitely on a "short of war" basis in "the steps which their countries are re- spectively taking for their safety in the face of these dangers." Gist of the official proclamation was contained in the eight-point program, comparable to the famous fourteen points of Woodrow Wilson- proclaimed on Jan. 8, 1918. The two leaders, representing the people of the United States of Ameri- ca and His Majesty's Government in the United Kingdom, proclaimed to the world these eight common principles: 1) That their countries seek no aggrandizement, territorial or other; 2) That they desire to see no terr- borial changes that do not accord with the freely expressed wishes of ,he peoples concerned; 3) That they respect the right of all peoples to choose the for~n of government under which they will live; 4) That they will endeavor, with due respect to their existing obliga- tions, to further the enjoyment by all States, great or small, victor or van- quished, of access, on equal terms, to the trade and to the raw materials of the world which are needed for their economic prosperity; 5) That they desire to bring about fullest collaboration between all na- tions in the economic field with the object of securing for all improved labor standards, economic adjust- ment and social security; 6) That after final destruction of Nazi tyranny, they hope to see a peace which will afford to all nations the'means of dwelling in safety with- in their own boundaries, and which will afford assurance that all the men in all the lands may live out their lives in freedom from fear and want; 7) That such a peace should en- able all men to traverse the high seas and oceans without hindrance; 8) That they believe that all of, the nations of the world, for realistic ,as well as spiritual reasons, must come to the abandonment of the use of force. Since no further peace can be maintained if land, sea or air armaments continue to be employed by nations which threaten, or may threaten, aggression outside of their frontiers, they believe, pending estab- lishment of a wider and permanent system of general security, that the tisarmament of such nations is essen- tial. They will likewise aid and en- courage all other practicable measures which will lighten for peace-loving peoples the crushing burden of arma- ments. Signed And Sealed To this historic yet unpretentious document the lfourishing signatures of the two graying, wearied leaders, were attached: Franklin D. Roosevelt and-Winston S. Churchill. And thus as Russian and British warplanes flew over German cities dropping bombs, as Germany claimed new gains in the - Battle of the Uk- raine, and as Japan girded its loinsc for a blow against Russian Siberia,a came the first joint declaration ofa Anglo-American war aims, the ulti-v mate warning that the U.S. wasr aligned against Hitler and Co. for keeps.t In this country reaction to the eight points was varied, with isola- tionists viewing with alarm the ir-t revocable commission of the U.S. to aid Bditain, and interventionists sett- ling back into the easy chair of vic-c tory, their battle for American in- tervention vitrually won. Said administration foe Senatorf McCarran (Dem.-Nev.): "The declar- ation was made on the unwarrantedt assumption that the United States is a belligerent in this war. It ist tantamount to a declaration of war by this country, which is the provincei of Congress only."< Somewhat different was the re-i action of another administration foe,i New Hampshire's Republican Sena-I tor Bridges, who praised wholeheart- edly the proposal and its aims. Outside of Congress most quoted Italian Pants Up, Italian Pants Down Last year in order. to preserve the nation's cloth supply, Italy's Supreme Council of Autarch (commission on self-sufficiency, headed by self-suffi- cient boss-man Benito Mussolini) ex-1 horted Italian men to get out of long! pants, get into shorts. Newspapers praised shorts as "not only hygienic but masculine and patriotic." Last week from Italy came an abrupt about-face in styles, a harsh pants-down order. Telegrafo, organ of Count Ciano, breeches-wearing husband of Edda Mussolini, herself notorious as a pants-wearer, spoke thus: "Men wearing short pants look absurd .. Grown men.,with hairy legs barely covered and short panties re- semble ridiculous absent-minded pro- fessors . . . there was a short-pants campaign last year, but this medio- cre idea has failed." comment was made by Socialist and anti-interventionist Norman Thom- as, who claimed that President Roose- velt had "definitely committed this nation to war." Slice Up The World In Axis capitals comment was bit- ter but not surprising. ' Said Berlin: "A case of plagiarism of Wilson's abortive Fourteen/Points-and a bad one at that." Vichy rejected the aims as "old stuff," and a cartoonist mouthpiece of the Mussolini Govern- ment depicted "Roosevelt and col- league" slicing up the world between them. On the whole general recation was that the program was a condensed version of the famed fourteen points, issued in a time of even greater stress. The fate of Wilson's procla- mation was recalled, and commenta- tors warily wondered if the Eight Points would meet a like fate in a war-torn world. Whether the proclamation was nothing more than the hollow words of two diplomats, a typical scrap of paper of the Frightful Forties, re- mained to be seen. Backed by the combined forces of American indus- try and British armament, it may o may not meet a different fate. On thing was definite at week's end however: that secret, dramatic meet. ing "somewhere in the Atlantic' scored for the Democracies their big- gest victory to date in the war o nerves. As this eventful week of unarme war moves drew to a close, however news came jointly from London an Washington that seemed to answer skeptics who viewed the proclamation as merely a hollow piece of democra tic verbosity. An Invitation A proposal was issued to Russia Premier Joseph Stalin that high Bri tish and American representative meet with him in Moscow to discus allocation of war supplies to th Soviet Union. '>- * C The note, couched in didactic diplo- matic language, was handed to Stalin by American and British ambassa- dors in Moscow. It praised the "splendid defense of the Soviet Union" and asserted that the Uniteds States and Great Britain were "co-s operating to provide you the veryt maximum of supplies that you urg-r ently need." In diplomatic circles the plan wass seen to have a threefold purpose: 1)s To seek to draw Russia into the An-t glo-American plan for a new worldt era based on lasting peace and theX mutual advancement of the commons welfare of mankind; 2) To ascertain the strategic position of the Red armies on the eastern front and soundE out Stalin on the possibility of Bri- tish military advisers aiding the Sovi-r et general staff in directing Russian resistance; and 3) To seek assurance that the Soviet far eastern army will be maintained intact as a check on1 Japan regardless of developments on the western front. s Wa r Pow-Wow f I Ever eager to secure additional aid from his new bedfellows, Bearded Joe . accepted the invitation readily, made r plank for the three-power pow-wow, which observers predicted would be attended by Washington's Harry Hop- , kins and London's dapper Anthony Eden. Stalin himself, in his dual role - of premier and defense commissar, f will be the chief delegate of the U.S.S.R. And thus at week's end the first move was made to put teeth into an , eight point proposal that came from r the dramatic sea meeting of the lead- n ers of the two great democracies. - Not so long ago mortal enemies, Communism and Democracy this week drew closer together in their struggle against a common enemy, geared their people and industry for n all-out action in World - War II- - civilization's worst war, fought on s three fronts: "in the East, in the s West and in sprawling, struggling e Russia." -Bln lB.r- AT HOME: Army Bill Sent ' Dill nrax To President . Sent to President Roosevelt for his signature last week was the Army service extension bill after squeezing through the. House by a one-vote margin. Authorizing the President to hold selectees, National Guardsmen, re- servists and enlisted men 18 months beyond their present service period, the bill would grant a $10 per month pay increase to all men who have served 12 months. The bill differs from original Army requests inasmuch as it limits the extension, rather than granting pow- er for indefinite extension, and does not erase the ban on sending selectees outside the Western Hemisphere. After passing the House the bill went back to the Senate where it was passed after eight minutes of debate. It was assumed that the bill would be flown to the President at sea in order for quickest possible action. Secretary of War Stimson ex- plained the necessity of the legisla- tion to soldiers in a radio address Friday, saying the world now faces a more dangerous threat to general peace than any which has existed during all the years of recorded his- tory. Reactions from the armed forces to Stimson's address were not publicized. Meanwhile, in order to speed ac- tion on the construction of fortifica- tions, troop housing units and similar {tems, the President suspended the eight-hour day for mechanics and laborers employed by the War De- partment on public works necessary to national defense. Curbing Credit In an attempt to curb inflationary tendencies and conserve materials vi- tal to defense a system of installment credit control was set up by the President last week. An Executive :Order directed. the Federal Reserve Board tousea World War statute to curb installment cred- it used for the purchase of consum- ers' durable goods. Consumers' durable goods, accord- ing to Federal Reserve Board Chair- man Marriner. S; Eccle, meant "au- tomobiles, washing machines, refrig- erators, ironers, vacuum cleaners and many other goods. Eccles stated regulations would be issued in several days and at that time a date would be set after which it would be unlawful for anyone to sell listed items on any more liberal credit terms than those specified. First To Be Cut After a week of slashing and re- storing items, the House and Senate finally agreed on a form for the d- fense appropriations bill, approved it and sent it to the President. As it passed, the, measure would appropriate $7,586,895,000 additional for the continuance of the defense program. Remarkable was the fact that this was the first defense appropriation bill to be at all cut by Congress since the beginning of "all-out" defense 15 months ago. Among items reduced or eliminated were $1,000,000 for po- licing naval establishments with a special guard force, $640,000 off the funds for ship facilities at New Or leans, $200,000 off the funds for' a naval warehouse at Norfolk and $1,- 500,000 off the President's "confi- dential" fund, to be spent by him without accounting to Congress, re- ducing that item to $2,500,000. Gas 10 Per Cent Off Failure of the voluntary cut in use of gasoline by motorists -in Eastern and Southern seaboard states was admitted Friday when the OPACS ordered a restriction of gasoline to be supplied retailers in the area. Service stations, under the order, will receive only 90% of their usual supply. The proclamation came from Leon Henderson at the request of Secretary Ickes, Defense Petroleum Coordinator. Earlier in the week eleven oil com- panies submitted a plan to Ickes for a 1,820-mile pipeline to transpoft 250,000 barrels of crude oil a day into the New York-Philadelphia area. The system would be privately fi- nanced at an estimated cost of $70,- 000,000. Presidential action would be neces- sary before any such proposition could be put into action, the Secre- tary said. It is transportatioi diffi- culties that create the present threatened shortage. First 100 The Hardest The national debt jumped over the halfway mark of the first hundred billion dollars last Wednesday and KREMLIN: from the high, parapeted Kremlin all Russia is governed. Josef Stalin and other high Soviet officials have both offices and resi- dences on its 63 acres. Q : PALACE OF THE SOVIETS, taller than the Empire State Building, is being built here. I Grand Palace (Stalin's Residence) 9 New Government House 17 Kremlin Hospital 2 Headquarters, Central Executive Committee 3 Cathedral of St. Basil 4 Lenin's Tomb 5 Historical Museum 6 Theater Square 7 Mostorg (Central Department Store) 8 Grand (Bolshoi) Theater 10 State Bank 18 Central Market I1 Moscow Art Theater 12 Moscow Soviet (City Half) 13 Central Telegraph and Post Office 14 American Embassy 15 Moscow University (First) 16 Kalinin's Office 19 Lenin Public Library 20 Palace of Soviets (Under construction) 21 Kamern Bridge 22 Tretiakov Art Gallery 23 Moscow Bridge 24 Main Power Plant I - MOSCOW, first city of the Soviet and target of Hitler's panzer columns, has been vulnerable in past wars, is wide open to air attack in this on. of dwellings conceivably could cause a holocaust unequalled in this war. Nazi airmen over the city see five cities in one, clearly defined rings simbolizing the growth of the town. ope's most congested population cen- ters. But this very congestion has inspired measures resulting in some sources of safety in air raids. New housing has taken the form princi- THE U.S.S.R. has made definite ef- forts to end dependence on Mos- cow as prime manufactory for the country by construction of industrial centers far to the east. Nevertheless, MOSCOW'S principal defense has been the Stalin line, a system of defense-in-depth along 'the borders of pre-war Russia. When pierced, little but the river lines stand be-