t, because that to be reprmted a2cttc recently signed by Mar-19, 1942. affecting Jews out my authon-il said, and he Vichy decrees Fiench Afnca*’*Seen from a WmdmlH.d dead roundeda coastFourteen sol-o have drowned nng night ma-trm tossed gulf •Ida, the army’scommand an-is—two officers -wore rescuedntifiede wjtli the 191 aground on aibelle. Fla. Fri-. storm hit the roa*st and the IS accidentally •uncemcnt said ibera of the gar-ordon JohnstonE Johnson, of •n to be dead ssing was fromprotest rentalsiJP) Price Ad-itiss M Blown andlords are or-.u ide campaign oidcd particularly Detroit, snpport-i certain Detroit nge m Detroit’s Jrown said in adied to my at* , “that iccently imgton com mi t-I Association of is thru a circu-local members nizcd campaign scale to induce to members of ig agajnst rent ise m mail fromce appaiently is ipaign/'Ebcperts and public alike were charmed with Peter Hurd’s ‘'Wind-mill Crew,*' one of his New Mexican ranch pictures, full of bold color and sharp light, thru which one looks from the top of the windnnll across vast distances to the blue mountains on the horizon. Destined to be a popular favorite 15 Dons Lee’s ''Mountain Road/* •With its tiny frame “night club/* complete with barber pole, beer signs, proprietor lolling in the dooiway, his shack next door, and a waterfall, of all things, off to the rightAmong the best portiaits are Jerry Farnsworth s Head of Joe’* and painting of the head of Charles Weidman, the dancer, that looks like lough sculpture It IS the woik of Donoid Forbes.makes it hot forBremen a New Fmd.Heniy Mattson, whose ocean and full moon aroused much argument a year ago, has a much better marine, dark and stormy, with a lifeboat in the foreground The waters surge as one lookvS Ogden Pleissner another Lincoln favorite, sent a fine interior of a war plantfactory, one of a series he is doing, Raymond Bremen the Russian pauiter, has a strange scaie of Franciscan monks, horses and dreamhKc landscape m the exhibit, and nnoUier painting an the fedeial giCt that the dcpaitment likes even betterA neat bit of composition consists of Harry Cottleib's colcrlul silk screen print of bright red paiaduites In a war plant 3uing above a colored sculpture of a Ferdinand hurling a toreador about his head in which the flaring colors of the pamtmg are echoed Of and By Negroes.One wholft wall is dcvotmg to paintings by Negroes or Negro subjects, ranging from ‘'Woman Taken in Adultery with its amaz-mg use oC while as a color, to the appealing little black boy whOfer poitiait IS titled, Heres My Foots, Deal Lord *'A preview favoiite was a still life of Drooping Sunflovvcrs’’ m a majolica vase of the same color® by Simka Symkovitch Jacob Lawrence sent a bold colorful street scene in a Negro quarter and the univcisity has borowed half the ongmals of a series of painting done on commission, depicting the lustoiy of his raceFantasy is the keynote of one whole cast wall, the two units, a shimmering nude by GeorgeGerman tank forceAT THE TUNISIAN FRONT (Delayed!, UP) Where officers stop and chat they are still talking about the ‘good show put on by a guardsman gunner a fortnight ago ui fighting about Sbiba Three nazi tanks—a Mark Six, a Mark Four, and a Mark Three— took up a position from which they were able to put down a perilous fire among British tanks, but could not be reached by British artillery When the situation became apparent a heutenant m the Coldstream Guards, Lord James Levc-son, said*'*We must have a shot at themgomehow He took a two pounder gun into the open valley bebveen the enemy and the allied positions and set it up facing the tanks He warned hifi crew to work fast to get their shots in before the tanks turned on himThe third shot knocked out the Maik Three and set it afire Several others hit the other two tanksbut did not damage them sufficiently to put them out of action In all the crew fired 18 rounds They stopped only when the Mark Six turned on them. The first shot from the huge tank's 88-niilhmeter gun made a direct hit on the small British field piece, and it practically disappe^ed No member of the gun ci'ew'^vas hurt and a*J wei e able to crawl back to their positions-10—r-Chicago pigeons drafted; future ^military secreCCHICAGO (T) 'The army draft wlusked 6,605 swift-flying pigeons off to war Sunday The birds, some valued as high as $J00 apiece and reputedly able to fly 1,000 miles in two days, will be trained to carry messages from the far-flung battJefronts of the worldSaturday night and Sunday, members of the Chicago Racing Pigeon association deposited crates of the birds m several depots established, thriiout the city Later the crates weie loaded onto express trucks, then immediate destination remaunng a military secret.10 ' ■with the serving. Decorations for the table included a Silver bowl filled with dark r^d snapdragons and white candles in three-branched, siJvcr candelabraMrs. Walter White headed the committee that arranged for the Fivuig pictures which were posed as follows'‘Vaughan’s Portrait of George Washington by Gilbert Stuart, posed by Linus Burr Smith; The Artist*s Daughters by Rembrandt Peale, posed by Mrs Harold Stebbins and Mrs. George Lewis, •‘Whistling Boy** by Frank Du-venek, posed by Louis DuTeau, “Before the Window by Mary Cassatt, posed by Miss Jean Osborn and Ann Rogers, the central group of Pnsoners from the Front by Wuisiow Homer, posed by Lowe Folsom, Jim Baylor and David Andrews; “Jeanne Elngies as Sadie Thompson’* by Guy Pone du Bois, posed by Mrs Hoyt Hawke, Jean m Blue by Eugene Speich-er, posed by Hazel Abel, Portrait of Lafayette by Samuel T B Morse, posed by Burton Folsom, Sclf-Portraat by Madame Diego Rivera, posed by Mrs Early E W Duncan, Portrait of an Amencan Flyer by Peter Hurd, posed by Maj R W Ryder Dr Arthur Westbrook made arrangements for the music, which was furnished by Myron Cavendcr, organist.One ConclusioninAmericans shouldbe told true facts on food ratiouing’CHICAGO Mrs Rose Mane Kiefer, secietary-manager of the National Association of Retail Grocers, said Sunday that Americans needed the deep and actualfacts on rationing if an ora similar to liquor prohibition days is to be avoided‘One of our first and biggest jobs nght now is to toil the American people—consumers and business men alike—just w'hat is facing us all. she said on the Northwestern university reviewing stand broadcast over station VVGN, Dunng prohibition, we had bootleggers and today wr have meatlcggcrs Will more lestnc-tions and prohibitions do away with meatleggers and black markets’^ No—not without consumeracceptance of the regulations and prohibitions The facts wg need must come clearly and specificallyIt IS wrong to believe ferences m ideology wi organization of joint actu the enemyThe only conclusio drawn/* he said, is tha glo-Soviet-Amencan coa every chance of vanqui ItaJo-German coalition, a certainly vnll do so/*It IS important to r this speech was made tc cow soviet, before th States' landing m Nort After that, Slalm. m a the Associated Press, his confidence in Anie Bntxsh leaders, and wel North African campajgn ude to a second front inMany QuestromThat, for the Soviet mams the situation to Smce my return fron I have been asked many implying doubt in the s: the Soviet Union*s mem the United Nations I ci swer them with the au a participant m soviet a I can tell you the imp one which haa been ar but interested observer ' m Moscow thruout the Most of them an‘*e frc order of the day to the Feb. 23, in which he ass in the absence of a solt; m Europe, the Soviet 1 beanng the entire burc war against Germ any, mean a new alarm in £ tions?The answer is that tlr .__^ „ .....ft ....