SUN4DAY, JU3NE 28, M2 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE ______0 --The Foreign--Near East Imperiled Veek Half of the strands in the slender thread that prevents the Nazi sword of Damocles from sweeping through the Near East snapped last week as much beleaguered, taken, and re- taken Tobruk fell before the swift, balanced striking forces of Field Marshal Rommel. The other strands were strained to the utmost by the drive and fury of full-tilt German assaults on Sevas- topol and Kharkov. Thus the long feared spring campaigns of Hitler and his legions broke upon a world that had forgotten their might, that had complacently thought produc- tion the only answer to the chal- lenge of the Axis.y It was apparent at the close of last week that the Nazis held an upper hand in the Libyan and Soviet thea- tres of war, but confident officials and peoples of the United Nations merely turned it off with "The tem- porary fortunes of war." No longer can anyone look at those areas with that attitude. Outstanding General Rommel ignored British press re- leases and the much-publicized To- bruk outer ring of defenses to cap- ture the war-devastated city with a minimum of difficulty. After days of preparation with larger guns, and it^ now appears with superior tanks, the wily general who is certainly the war's outstanding director of mech- anized units and probably its great- est tactician-strategist, swept into Tobruk from all sides. Once again Americans bitterly cri- ticized their desert-weary ally, but it was nothing like the ruckus kicked up in London. Newspapers swore that the government had completely misled them, conservatives and lib- erals paced the floor of the House of Commons, and a few old boys in the House of Lords had caustic words for the military leadership of the Churchill government. Whether or not the storm of pro- test would unseat Churchill or any of his supporters did not change the facts in Libya-or rather Egypt. Rommel was in full movement over the border headed for the next Brit- Nazis Capture Russian Rail Junction STATUT MILESLine of farthest German edvanc KN (December, 19411 wR~jrKUPYANSK. K 1 E N C t;k~rCa ZYUM 13ARVENKOVA N ONIEPERO PE TROVSK $TALI NO. ZAPOROZHE RUSSIA M!rt I TOPOL -O A zov CRIMEA KERCH To Caucasus And Oil Fields Black Sea a A full-fledged Nazi offensive in the Ukraine appeared under way as the Russians acknowledged that a German drive (arrow) had captured Kupyansky, a railway junction 60 miles southeast of Kharkov, and a city of 18,000 population. The broken line indicates the front previous to the Nazi break-through. Sevastopol still with- stood the German siege. 1 I ish bastion at Matruh. He captured the unprepared tank and infantry groups. In short, Matruh is in des- perate condition. * * * Invaders Halted Russian defenders of the huge Black Sea port of Sevastopol could feel little safer than residents of Sunday at the Wolverine 209 SOUTH STATE Chilled Tomato or Grapefrut Juice or Cream of Mushroom Soup Radishes, Olives Mixed Pickles Creamed Chicken on Tea Biscuit - or Grilled Tenderloin Steak Whipped Potatoes or Frenchfried Potatoes New Green Beans, Carrots Julienne Fresh Vegetable Salad or Florida Fruit Salad Hot Rolls and Butter Tea Coffee Milk Ice Tea Ice Cream Guest Price 55c Cairo. Hemmed in by German hordes intent on successful ending of one of the longest sieges in history, the Reds were compelled to close breach after breach in their defenses. Of- ten they had no sooner closed one gap then another was opened. But still they hung on. What Leningrad and Moscow had done it now ap- peared Se astopol could do-that is, resist the fullest effort of the Nazis, makewaste of Hitler's greatest ex- penditures of time, money and men. Always behind the men of Sevas- topol remains the thought: The clock is running out, and every minute we hold back the barbarians is a minute blow struck for civilization. They may not be able to hold, but they are winning a victory no matter what happens. The loss of Sevastopol would be a terrible one. The Nazi sword of Damocles no longer poised, but strik- ing with terrible force toward the Caucasus would get OIL. Singapore's would be repeated and the war's end postponed almost indefinitely. Nazis Advance wmw I East of Kharkov the Germans ad- vanced too. They took more terri- tory, but it was less vital and from other parts of the long, obscure Rus- sian front no news of importance ap- peared. No. 3 man in the Axis acrobatic team-in point of time-Japan, also was up to monkeyshines. Relations between Tokyo's back-biters and Russian diplomats were strained to the breaking point when a Jap sub- marine treacherously sunk a Soviet freighter promised safe conduct. Ac- cording to Moscow reports, 1,000,000 Japanese troops in Manchuria are poised for a swift invasion of Siberia next month. Australia seemed still in the pro- cess of building a land offensive base while Japanese appeared to have concentrated their main fdrces else- where, both of them exchanging token air raids of no import. Meanwhile Gracie Allen knew as much as George Burns about the Aleutians. Navy officials seem un- perturbed about a few thousand stray Japs swarming over American territory under cover of fog-at least if they are worried they don't reveal it. That about covers things except for the 'second front' but nobody knows any details-which is as it should be. They come out for it one by one-the big shots, I mean, but what we wonder is when the little guys are going to be allowed to get to work on the diversion front. - Hale Champion F SINGING, SPEECH RADIO VOICES are QUICKLY, SIMPLY, SURELY developed by VOICE SCIENTIST i III i I 11