LizzieMaine
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Adolf Hitler's armies marched into Paris today at the peak of an offensive designed to break the Maginot Line and achieve the "final destruction" of the Allied armies in France. German tanks rolled down the Champs-Elysses, leading columns of marching troops along thoroughfares which last felt the tread of German boots almost seventy years ago following Bismarck's triumph in the War of 1870. The French Army was reported retreating southward while the government of Premier Paul Reynaud awaits response from President Roosevelt to the Premier's "last appeal" for aid from the United States, made in a broadcast last night.
Meanwhile, German authorities are denying a report from "trustworthy sources" that U. S. Ambassador to France William C. Bullitt has been placed in "protective custody" by Nazi occupation forces in Paris. Bullitt had remained in the French capital during the invasion by special permission of the US Government, and it was he who informed the German Government that France would make no military defense of Paris. President Roosevelt, asked about the Ambassador's status at a press conference today responded only with a counter-question -- "Could the ambassador be protected against what, and whom?" The US Embassy in Berlin reports that it has no word on Bullitt's fate.
President Roosevelt repeated today that "all possible help" is being extended to the Allies, and pointed to Hitler's past record in responding to a statement by the Nazi Fuehrer dismissing the possibility of a German invasion of the Western Hemisphere as "grotesque." The President said that the Chancellor's remark "brought up recollections," and that he could offer specific places and dates going back a period of years if required.
In London, the fall of Paris has prompted the Churchill government to go "all out" with its resources, and to offer the United States a "blank check" for the purchase of anything that can be used to convey or fire explosives. The funds for such purchases were to have been dispersed over a period of years, but are now to be used at once.
(Just the thing to ride while wearing your Davega bathing suit.)
The lead defense attorney in the Christian Front seditious conspiracy trial is accusing a prominent New Jersey rabbi and the vice president of the New York Central Railroad of plotting to "smear and destroy" the Front by bringing about the original arrests of the suspects in the case. Attorney Leo Healy claimed that Rabbi Benjamin Plotkin of Newark and rail executive Jacob Aaronson conspired against the Christian Front as revenge for its refusal to support involvement by the United States in a war against Germany. Healy also called Rabbi Plotkin a Communist.
Before 50,000 spectators, a bevy of radio microphones, and a pair of television cameras, the
battleship North Carolina slid into the East River yesterday in a ceremony marked by strict military security. Everyone attending the event, from the workers who built the ship to the wealthy dignitaries on the reviewing stand was subjected to careful scrutiny, as more three hundred Marines and two hundred plainclothes detectives patrolled the grounds of the Brooklyn Navy Yard for the occasion. The ship is approximately seventy-five percent complete, with extensive fitting-out yet to be finished before it will be ready for commissioning into active duty in September 1941.
Brooklyn's leading Catholic newspaper is denouncing a series of full-page advertisements that appeared this week in the metropolitan press. The dioscean weekly "The Tablet" accused the sponsors of the ads, The Committee to Aid The Allies led by William Allen White, of fomenting "a man-created hysteria," and announced it will respond to those advertisements, and to President Roosevelt's "partisan stand and belligerency" in his radio address this week with a front-page editorial under the title "America Beware!"
(Very soon, dear boy, you'll be making "$21 a day once a month.")
Ducky Medwick flapped into Brooklyn yesterday in high style, along with fellow ex-Cardinal Curt Davis, and will be officially unveiled at Ebbets Field this afternoon as the Dodgers take on their arch-rivals in the National League pennant race the Cincinnati Reds. Dodger fans are already nailing the 1940 pennant to the flagpole, but Tommy Holmes warns that while Medwick is a slugger with a gaudy batting average, he is not a replica of "the high flying Superman of the air waves," and that no matter how well he performs as a Dodger, the Flock is not likely to play at its current .698 pace for the rest of the season. Pennants are won, he emphasizes, by consistent performance over the course of a long season, and it's still too early in the campaign to be hoisting the flag.
Medwick himself is delighted to be a Dodger, with his spanking new uniform all fitted and ready to go, and predicts he'll hit .350 for the season. He had always hit well at Ebbets Field while in Cardinal raiment -- until his former Redbird buddy Leo Durocher took over as Brooklyn manager, and trained his pitching staff to focus on the Duck's weaknesses. Since 1938, Medwick has barely hit .250 at Ebbets Field, but he promises that will change.
Overshadowed by Medwick's arrival is the fact that the Dodgers will face a hard one-two-three pitching punch from the Reds over the coming series, with Bucky Walters, Paul Derringer, and Junior Thompson lining up for mound duty.
Cleveland Indians owner Alva Bradley is meeting today with key players on his team after a player insurrection against manager Oscar Vitt. Pitcher Bob Feller and first basement Hal Trosky have been named as leaders of the rebellion, with ten other players who were not named also identified as participants. Bradley met with eleven of the rebellious players in his Cleveland office, with Trosky meeting with him by telephone. The players are demanding Vitt's immediate dismissal, declaring that they "couldn't win for" Vitt, and accusing him of "insincerity," and of subjecting players to "caustic public ridicule." Vitt denies the charges, stating that he had "no reason to believe any member of the club has any enimity toward me." The rebellion follows a disastrous Eastern trip in which the second-place Indians dropped eight of thirteen games, and is believed to involve most of the veteran members of the team.
Radio's Amos 'n' Andy are now entertaining their third generation of radio listeners in a career dating back to 1928, and for the first time they're both celebrating Father's Day. Freeman "Amos" Gosden has long been a father, but now partner Charlie "Andy" Correll has a child, with his first daughter, Dorothy Alyce Correll, having been born this past February. "This is my first Father's Day," smiles Andy. "It's a new sensation and has aroused many new thoughts."
(Ding ding ding!)
(The part of Gov. Swiller will be played, in a rare dramatic turn, by Mr. James Durante. "Ev-ry-body wants to get into de act! Ah-cha-cha-cha-cha-cha! Umbriago!")
(The Head Hood is immediately electrocuted by a huge spark as the shorted antenna leads blow out the output stage of his transmitter in a spectacular high-voltage blast. The reek of transformer oil fills the room as the acrid smoke shrouds his fallen body. Oh, and Dan got shot.)
Meanwhile, German authorities are denying a report from "trustworthy sources" that U. S. Ambassador to France William C. Bullitt has been placed in "protective custody" by Nazi occupation forces in Paris. Bullitt had remained in the French capital during the invasion by special permission of the US Government, and it was he who informed the German Government that France would make no military defense of Paris. President Roosevelt, asked about the Ambassador's status at a press conference today responded only with a counter-question -- "Could the ambassador be protected against what, and whom?" The US Embassy in Berlin reports that it has no word on Bullitt's fate.
President Roosevelt repeated today that "all possible help" is being extended to the Allies, and pointed to Hitler's past record in responding to a statement by the Nazi Fuehrer dismissing the possibility of a German invasion of the Western Hemisphere as "grotesque." The President said that the Chancellor's remark "brought up recollections," and that he could offer specific places and dates going back a period of years if required.
In London, the fall of Paris has prompted the Churchill government to go "all out" with its resources, and to offer the United States a "blank check" for the purchase of anything that can be used to convey or fire explosives. The funds for such purchases were to have been dispersed over a period of years, but are now to be used at once.
The lead defense attorney in the Christian Front seditious conspiracy trial is accusing a prominent New Jersey rabbi and the vice president of the New York Central Railroad of plotting to "smear and destroy" the Front by bringing about the original arrests of the suspects in the case. Attorney Leo Healy claimed that Rabbi Benjamin Plotkin of Newark and rail executive Jacob Aaronson conspired against the Christian Front as revenge for its refusal to support involvement by the United States in a war against Germany. Healy also called Rabbi Plotkin a Communist.
Before 50,000 spectators, a bevy of radio microphones, and a pair of television cameras, the
battleship North Carolina slid into the East River yesterday in a ceremony marked by strict military security. Everyone attending the event, from the workers who built the ship to the wealthy dignitaries on the reviewing stand was subjected to careful scrutiny, as more three hundred Marines and two hundred plainclothes detectives patrolled the grounds of the Brooklyn Navy Yard for the occasion. The ship is approximately seventy-five percent complete, with extensive fitting-out yet to be finished before it will be ready for commissioning into active duty in September 1941.
Brooklyn's leading Catholic newspaper is denouncing a series of full-page advertisements that appeared this week in the metropolitan press. The dioscean weekly "The Tablet" accused the sponsors of the ads, The Committee to Aid The Allies led by William Allen White, of fomenting "a man-created hysteria," and announced it will respond to those advertisements, and to President Roosevelt's "partisan stand and belligerency" in his radio address this week with a front-page editorial under the title "America Beware!"
(Very soon, dear boy, you'll be making "$21 a day once a month.")
Ducky Medwick flapped into Brooklyn yesterday in high style, along with fellow ex-Cardinal Curt Davis, and will be officially unveiled at Ebbets Field this afternoon as the Dodgers take on their arch-rivals in the National League pennant race the Cincinnati Reds. Dodger fans are already nailing the 1940 pennant to the flagpole, but Tommy Holmes warns that while Medwick is a slugger with a gaudy batting average, he is not a replica of "the high flying Superman of the air waves," and that no matter how well he performs as a Dodger, the Flock is not likely to play at its current .698 pace for the rest of the season. Pennants are won, he emphasizes, by consistent performance over the course of a long season, and it's still too early in the campaign to be hoisting the flag.
Medwick himself is delighted to be a Dodger, with his spanking new uniform all fitted and ready to go, and predicts he'll hit .350 for the season. He had always hit well at Ebbets Field while in Cardinal raiment -- until his former Redbird buddy Leo Durocher took over as Brooklyn manager, and trained his pitching staff to focus on the Duck's weaknesses. Since 1938, Medwick has barely hit .250 at Ebbets Field, but he promises that will change.
Overshadowed by Medwick's arrival is the fact that the Dodgers will face a hard one-two-three pitching punch from the Reds over the coming series, with Bucky Walters, Paul Derringer, and Junior Thompson lining up for mound duty.
Cleveland Indians owner Alva Bradley is meeting today with key players on his team after a player insurrection against manager Oscar Vitt. Pitcher Bob Feller and first basement Hal Trosky have been named as leaders of the rebellion, with ten other players who were not named also identified as participants. Bradley met with eleven of the rebellious players in his Cleveland office, with Trosky meeting with him by telephone. The players are demanding Vitt's immediate dismissal, declaring that they "couldn't win for" Vitt, and accusing him of "insincerity," and of subjecting players to "caustic public ridicule." Vitt denies the charges, stating that he had "no reason to believe any member of the club has any enimity toward me." The rebellion follows a disastrous Eastern trip in which the second-place Indians dropped eight of thirteen games, and is believed to involve most of the veteran members of the team.
Radio's Amos 'n' Andy are now entertaining their third generation of radio listeners in a career dating back to 1928, and for the first time they're both celebrating Father's Day. Freeman "Amos" Gosden has long been a father, but now partner Charlie "Andy" Correll has a child, with his first daughter, Dorothy Alyce Correll, having been born this past February. "This is my first Father's Day," smiles Andy. "It's a new sensation and has aroused many new thoughts."