[sci.military] 50 Years Ago: Wednesday, 7 February, 1940

military@att.att.com (Bill Thacker) (02/07/90)

From: military@att.att.com (Bill Thacker)
Wednesday, 7 February, 1940

The Munster, an Irish mail ship, strikes a mine in the Irish
Sea and sinks.  It is initially feared that the sinking was by
an IRA bomb, in retribution for the hanging of two IRA men convicted
of an earlier bombing.

The US Senate approves a $20 million credit advance to Finland, 
while in the House, an amendment to the Sate Department Supply Bill
which proposes to eliminate the salary of the Ambassador to Russia
is defeated by only three votes.

The Soviet freighter Kim docks at San Francisco bearing $5.6 million
in gold bullion, in an effort to balance Soviet commercial accounts
in the United States.

Japan announces that it is preparing for "anticipated difficulties"
in its economic relations with the USA, and is considering an
abrogation of the 1922 Nine-Power Treaty

--	--	--	--	--	--	--	--	--
Bill Thacker			            military@cbnews.att.com
Send submissions for "50 Years Ago" to military-request@att.att.com

"On broader lines, the childish reverence the Russian is knwn to have 
for anything mechanical - toys, industrial plants, armed forces, or 
air fleets - has proved a detriment to efficiency." - Maj. Gen. Stephen
O. Fuqua, US Army, Ret.