Free France's vital position in the Allied war effort was outlined by three speakers at a meeting of Harvard's De Gaullist chapter last night, in the Winthrop Junior Common Room. The panel discussion, which was broadcast over the Crimson Network, emphasized the control that Free Frenchmen hold over important places such as Equatorial Africa, and the West Indian islands.
Andre Morize, professor of French literature, claimed that the forces of the French government in exile had grown from a handful of 10,000 men to an army of ever 100,000 in the past two years. Laurence B. Packard '09, visiting professor of History from Amherst College, explained the relation of the African theater of war to other Free French endeavors, while C. Crane Brinton '19, professor of History, sketched the background of French control in these areas.
Read more in News
RUMOR RATED AS CLUE TO MORALE OF NATIONRecommended Articles
-
A Modern French RepublicPierre Mendes France has been, with the possible exception of Charles de Gaulle, France's most imaginative statesman since the war.
-
Authors Study French National CharacterIN SEARCH OF FRANCE, by Stanley Hoffmann, Charles P. Kindleberger, Laurence Wylie, Jesse R. Pitts, Jean-Baptiste Duroselle, and Francois Goguel,
-
Over the WireLONDON--Adolf Hitler was reported tonight to have given up on his "intuition" and turned the direction of the war back
-
No HeadlineWe are glad to learn that the elective pamphlet, which will be issued in a few days, will show a
-
BASTILLE DAY HONORED HEREResuming its activities for the summer, the Harvard Unit of France Forever will open its celebration of Bastille Day, July