PAE TO THE MICHIGAN DAILY tFirt 'Y, MARCH 1Gri . 1 945 Churtcll Sees arl ZNa ol se WAR PRISONERS: °% - - Says Luropean Conflict klayEndBefore Summer By The Associated Press LONDON, March 15-The war in Europe might well end "before sum- mer ends or even sooner," Prime Minister Churchill told a conference of the conservative party today. "Victory lies before us-certain and perhaps near," he declared. In making his prediction on the defeat of Germany, Churchill pointed out that with it "war conditions will no longer prevent, as they have hitherto prevented, the holding of a general election," Britain's first since 1935. - I' against the ideas of the "stay-at- home, left-wing intelligentsia." Fickle Froth. Saying "It is no cheap-jack utopia of airy phrases that lies before us," Churchill asserted the Conservative party would be better off going down to defeat telling the truth than gain- ing "a span of shabbily bought of- fice by easy and fickle froth and chatter." In this fighting pep-talk to the party which he heads, Churchill drop- ped the impartiality of his role as a coalition Premier and slugged orally at those who have criticized him and his party. Warden Alows Inmate Liberty ithut0 Guard LANSING, March 15-(,P)-Garrett Heyns, state Corrections Director, said today an inquiry has substantj- ated reports that Warden Harry H. Jackson of the state prison of south- ern Michigan allowed a prisoner four days of liberty without a guard to make a trip. "Furlough" From Prison Heyns said he has turned over to the Corrections Commission the sworn record of the testimony of the inmate, Kris Schumacher of Milling- ton, in which Schumacher told the state Parole Board of his unescorted "furlough" from prison on which he made a trip to Detroit and paid an overnight visit to his home in M-il lington. Heyns said the incident still is under. investigation but that a pre- liminary check up of the facts has established the story "is definitely true." Jackson elnies Thne director said Warden Jackson first denied but later admitted he had given permission to Schumacher to go to Detroit without a guard escort. Polish MOvies Of War, Peace TolBe Shown Post-War Council Will ( iv Technicolor Film Films showing war and peace ac- tivities in Poland will be presented by the Post-War Council at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Rackham Am- phitheatre. "Land of. My Mother," a techni- color movie of Polish scenery will be narrated by Eve Curie, French writer. Scenes of the Polish Tatra moun- tains and monuments in Lwow, Kra- kow, Poznan, Gydnia and Vilno will be shown. Peasants at work in the fields and Polish mountaineers will be depicted. Music accompaniment will be by Chopin. "Scottish Mazurka" will feature a chorus of Polish soldiers singing folk songs of Poland and Scotland. It will show the Polish Army training in Scotland after the fall of France. Maneuvers of tanks in the moor country and artillery drill will be shown. A movie entitled "Polish Under- ground" will tell the story of the re- sistance movement. Another film will show Polish refugee children in Iran and the camps of Africa. No admission will be charged. Secretry wfo ho With Red Cross McIntyre Will Leave SatrIayo r Training Elizabeth McIntyre, secretary in the Department of Speech, will leave Sat- urday for overseas duty with the Am- erican Red Cross. A native of Grand Rapids, Miss McIntyre graduated from the Uni- versityin 1937 with a degree in English. She has been with the speech departnment f fve years and plais to return when the war i over. Miss MIntyre will reort il Wah- ington, D. C., April Jo a two-week training period andi will become a staff assistant. She will receive her overseas assignment about six weeks after the training period Mrs. Viola Joynt began her duties this week as the new secretary of the speech department. H~ospitaM Chaplaiii The Rev. Lawrence W. Pearson was appointed full tiie hospital chaplain it was announced yesterday by Dr harley Ilanes, director of the University Hospital. A Rhodes scholar and a graduate of Hobart College, the University of Michigan and Berkely Divinity School, Mr. Pearson has taught at the Brent School, Baguio, Philippine Islands and the American School in Tokyo. M . Pearso, assigned to act as chaplain to all the Protestant hos- pital patients, will also be in charge of a clinical course for theoulogical students' w With the seat of the international Red Cross at its capital, Switzerland cares for the welfare of military pris- oners of war all over the world, Prof. Charles E. Koella of the Romance Language department, declared at a meeting of the Cercle Francais yes- terday at the Union. Alleviates Suffering Founded in 1863 at Geneva by Hen- ri Dunant, the international Red Cross, Prof. Koella asserted, has done much to alleviate the suffering of YANKS OF FIRST ARMY PASS ThROUGH HONNEF-Anierican soldiers, their packs on their backs, advance through the town of Honnef, Germany, on the east bank of the Rhine River. SGT. NEPPEL'S BRA VERY : Wound ed unn8er its Jerry Tank, Kills-8 Sige add LANSING, March 15-OP)-Senate and House committees today heard appeals from a state-wide delegation for the enactment of a Michigan fair employment'practice bill. The Rev. Jerome V. Mac Eachin, secretary of the Michigan Catholic Welfare Committee, declared in a formal statement that the bill "is in- tended to abolish a gross injustice to which vast numbers of our Negro fellow citizens and others are shame- fully subjected by being excluded from the right to work and to gain a self respecting livelihood. The state of Michigan is amply justified, in fact, it has the ilain duty to use its police power to abolish this disgraceful wrong, alike un-Christian and un- American." Gloster B. Current, executive sec- retary of the Detroit branch of the National Association for the Advance- lnsnt of Colored People, recited dif- ficulties Negroes had in finding em- ployment in Michigan industry be- fore the war. SINCE 1$4$ IDERL GIFT'S for ERSTER ARROW TIES for Mailing By WES GALLAGHER Associated Press Correspondent WITH THE 83RD INFANTRY DI- VISION IN GERMANY, March 14-. (Delayed)-If you had your right leg blown off and the other leg ripped to shreds after a direct hit with a tank shell- If you had been !)lown away from your rachinegun and struck in the head with a shell fragment. and everyone around you had been killed or wounded- If you saw a 40-ton Gernman tank 1T yards away from where you: were lying and 20 German infaiitry- men moving up behind it- If all these things happened, what would you do? This is what Sgt. Ralph G. Neppel, 21, Glidden, Iowa, a machinegun de- tachment leader in the 83rd Division, dlid: He dug his elbows into the street and painfully pulled himself 10 yards to his machinegun. Somehow he pulled himself into firing position with BASEBALL: Wounded Ment. BATTLE CREEK, Mar. 15.-UP/) Patients not yet well enough to take part filled Percy Jones Hospital field house here today to cheer on approx- imately 400 hospital mates who par- ticipated in the institution's first field day. Enthusiasm at times exceedel thai' of big stadium football games. The men, some without an arm or leg--others recovering from various types of wounds, played basketball, volleyball, ping-pong, bowled, wres- tied, swam and boxed. They -received their wounds on battlefronts all over the world. A basketball team, 6omposed of men who have lost an arm, put up a stiff fight against a team of ambu- latory patients, who won the event, 10 to 6. The ability of the amputees to shoot baskets, dribble, and guard brought howls of delight from the audience. Sgt. Ralph Roth, 25, of Donnelly, Minn., who lost a leg in the Italian campaign, came .out on top today despite an artificial limb, to win the under the basket shooting with 19) baskets in 30 seconds. Gift To Libary The General Library has received an anonymous gift of books honor- ing James Rowland Angell, President Emeritus of Yale, a graduate of the University in 1890. The collection of 288 books valued at $1,000 were printed at the Yale University Press are on exhibit in the cases in the lobby of the library. OFLOERS TO FIT EVERY SAS(ON AN) ()CC.ASION A '%w rr " ,,4i, ', i El s, blood spurting from his wounds and he started firing at the infantrymen while the German tank crunched to a halt alongside his position. Neppel killed eight Germans and drove the rest ofi before he slump- ed over his gun. The tank crew, frightened by the loss of protect- ing infantry, retreating without tiring another shot., Medical men carried the still con- :sious sergeant into a nearby house. They nave him morphine and he lay for eight hours before being evacuat- ed. Once during that period he in- sisted that a wounded fellow sergeant be removed first. NTepl)el is in England now, recov- ering from his wounds. ASSIFIED DIR E TORY. Gov. Kelly Signs Bill on Stite Post-War Reserve L Tirie if) Rem-ie? LANSING, March 15-(/P)-Govern- or Kelly today signed into a law a bill declaring that the state's $50,000,- 000 postwar reserve fund must not be included in any computation of the state's surplus or deficit. WAR BONDS ISSUED HERE! - - Day or Night - - Continuous from I P.M. NOW LOST ANDFOUND LOST :Brown leather wallet con- taing about $15. Reward. Call x Mary Anne Berger, 22543. A 4 LOST: Gold Tau Beta Pi pin. Call 4121 Ext. 458. Reward. LOST: Liberal reward for man's [larnilton watch. Left in room 1121 -ej Natural Science Wed. a. m. Call z Psychology department office. " LO;ST : Silver thunderbirdin.m, green stone. Sentimental value. Finder call 5974. Reward. LOSl: 1ack and white Schaeffer pen with name written in gold. Call 24471, 5516 Stockwell. LOST: Whoever left me a black vel- vet cape and took my evening coat V-Ball nite, please call 2-3225, Eve- lyn Luhrs WANTED WILL PAY NEW PRICE for used "Student's Cambridge Edition of Shakespeare " Call 8703 afternoons or evenings ROOM AND BOARD MEALS FOR GIRLS: Evening dinner P in Ker h at Craglea House, 604 E. Madison creor of the faru fr rint erelfhefnt Phone 4489. Romance Masterpiece * Career Girl Flower of the Month Gwith Envy jib ~don't take her to the SRAY DANCE @M lillg m mfl Now's the time to stock up on those swellooking Arrow ties! Arrow has smart numbers to suit every taste in a wide range of fabrics, including foulards, macclesweaves, satins, and repps. Arrow ties are extra special because they are made with a patented lining which resists wrinkles, and tie into easy good- - .A . -