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Page 33 text:
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The Free French Forces have their own French newspaper. Special Broadcasts in French are sent out by the B.B.C. which many people in France also listen to, although this has been forbidden and severe punishments instituted. They have already proved their worth in Lybia and Greece where many gave their lives in the service of their country. But the men are only a part of the strength of the Free French Forces. Since the armistice, a quarter of the French colonies have rallied to the de Gaullist movement and among them such rich regions as the Ubangi-Shari, where gold is extracted; New Caledonia in which are found cobalt, chromium, nickel and magnesium; and the five French ports in India and finally the Lake Tchad and Congo territories which are important for strategic reasons. All these colonies represent a total of 1,500,000 square kilometres. They are fighting by the side of the English because they will not admit that as long as any help what- soever can be rendered, a country can abandon its allies and that the duty of all free men is to fight for their liberty. Thus they want to help England to win the war and they believe that though the night be long and weary, dawn will come at last and France will live again. FRANgoiSE Pleven, Matric. I, Ross House. THE SEAGULL Into the blue the seagull silvr ' y streaks; Below, the snowy-plumed array in rank Sound battle charge to the eternal fray Against the gallant cliffs that guard our home. Atop the cliffs the silence sudden breaks. The roar of loud-mouth ' d guns awakes the mom; A challenge to the coast across the sea, Defiant rings the answer to their cry. A shining squadron wings to meet attack; The air is full of sound of screaming planes. Upon the rocks the shattered seagull lies. No longer is he master of his sky. Margery Campbell, Form Va, Barclay House. WENDELL WILKIE The President, he tried to be. But Roosevelt had more votes than he — Republicans said he ' d go far. But Democrats said— F.D.R. He took his beating with a smile, And said the try was well worth while [31]
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Page 32 text:
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he published a book in which he stated that the army of the next war would be a fast moving unit made up largely of tanks and armoured cars, and he pointed out where the weak points in Frances ' defence-line lay and how it could be remedied. General Guderian, a German officer, understood his theory and put it into execution under the name of the Panzer division. Although he acknowledged many times his indebtedness to General de Gaulle, nobody in France took it seriously, and people went on thinking that there was nothing to fear because the Maginot line was there. Later, in January 1940, he sent a memorandum to the same effect to Messrs. Daladier, Reynaud, Gamelin and Weygand, but this again was disregarded. General de Gaulle ' s personal courage is as remarkable as his foresight. In the 1914- 1918 war he was wounded twice and captured by the Ger mans. And in this war it is, I think, significant that the very General Weygand who had condemned his theories and who is now one of the most important men in the Vichy regime, cited General de Gaulle in his order of the day of May 31st, 1940 as this admirable, audacious and energetic leader. Many men of valour and repute have rallied to General de Gaulle ' s side, too many to enumerate here, but this would be no true picture of the Free French Forces if I did not mention Vice-Admiral Muselier, head of the Free French Navy and Air Forces. To serve under these officers men escape every day from France by all possible means. The tale of each new escape shows more courage than that of the previous one and I want to relate two which are particularly noteworthy. One concerns a young man who for months stole parts from the neighbouring aeroplane factory and built himself a ' plane. Then, choosing a stormy night so as to be less easily spotted by the German patrols he took off and managed to reach England without even having tested the machine before. The other is about some men who lived in the Ardeche, and had never seen the sea in all their lives. Yet they achieved the feat of passing from unoccupied to occupied France, escaping from the jail into which they were thrust by the Germans for not having the proper papers, stealing a sailing boat and reaching England after a ten-day sea-voyage. These men sound brave, yet this kind of adventure is not really the difficult part for most of them; the true hardship is that they must leave their families without even the consolation of an occasional letter; for the Nazis have issued a decree that they will seize and torture the wife or child or a close relative of any man who keeps up the fight against them. Even the Vichy government condemns as traitors those who join the British and General de Gaulle has been sentenced to death for rebelling against the defeatist orders and continuing the fight. For this reason most of them sign up under the name of the French Free Forces, although knowing that if they are killed, their family will never know when or where. A few months ago these men numbered 35,000 soldiers and sailors and 1,000 airmen. They have tanks, armored cars, 80 naval units and 50 merchantmen. To this is daily added the various boats in which the people of the coastal regions escape to England. A great many of these are fishermen who know the Channel waters better than any one else and are therefore invaluable for the obscure but dangerous task of mine-sweeping. [30]
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Page 34 text:
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Then overseas he made his way To see how war is waged today. King George and Churchill liked him well, With everyone he did excel. Then home he went with much more fame, And soon to Canada he came. In Montreal he did arrive To help our great War Savings Drive. Now, and ever he will be The Spirit of Democracy. Frances Gyde, Form IVa, Barclay House. A NIGHT ON THE ACROPOLIS THE pale moon shining down on the Acropolis, as it had done for many hundreds of years, saw a new sight tonight. It was the limp folds of the German flag guarded by a young Nazi sentry. For the past week clouds had obscured the moon ' s view and she had not been able to see the Greek flag replaced by the Nazi swastika until now. She wondered what the sentry was doing, and was relieved to see that the wind was blowing hard enough to make him uncomfortable. Young Hans Schreiber shivered in the cold blast and cursed himself for question- ing the orders of his captain. If he had only held his tongue he would be sleeping in comparatively warm quarters instead of watching to see that none of the Greeks dared to haul down this flag as they had done to the previous ones. He felt that if he himself was given any encoura gement he would haul down the flag and burn it. He leaned up against a tall rock and dropped into a fitful and troubled sleep. He was awakened by a voice calling out, He is asleep. All ' s safe. Well, answered another voice, Is the Temple of the Winged Victory awake? Yes Parthenon, I ' m awake. It ' s your turn to send one of your statues to haul that flag down. Cyrene called the Parthenon softly, Go and pull that thing off its post and bury it. One of the marble caryatids from the Porch of Maidens scrambled down from her pedestal and started towards the flagpole. Hans tried to stop her but he was rooted to the spot. Cyrene was tall and strong so instead of untying the rope, she snapped the flagpole in two, and hurled it as far away from her as possible. All the buildings on the Acropolis cheered as she crept back on her perch. Tomorrow the Germans would say there had been a slight earthquake. Ugh! shuddered Cyrene, I hate touching anything like that worse than having lizards crawl over me. Thank goodness it ' s your turn tomorrow night, Thalia. I did it last week, replied Thalia, It ' s Philomela ' s turn. Hush, warned the Parthenon, The temple of the Winged Victory wants to speak. What is it Victory? [32]
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