T HE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, FEU, 9, 194a NOMMOMMWARINO War Casualties Total 764,584, Secretary Stimson Announces By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Feb. 8.--American casualties in all theatres now total enough to man 50 divisions. Secretary of War Stimson said to- day Army casualties--killed, wound- ed, missing and prisoner- totalled 676,796 on the basis of individual names compiled in Washington through Jan. 24. The Navy's 87,788 casualties puts the combined list at 764,584. However, about 200,000 of the woun- ded have returned to duty. Stimson also reported that 865,000 German prisoners were taken on the western front since D-Day. Simultaneously, the War Depart- ment reported that 359,248 prisoners of war are now held at camps in this country. Included are 305,867 Ger- mans, 50,561 Italians and 2,820 Jap- anese. Stimson reiterated at his news con- ference that there is "no pampering" of prisoners of war and suggested that the position of Italian service units is sometimes misunderstood. Men in the service units, he said, are volunteers for war work assign- ments and can be used for any task short of combat. Italians in the strict category of prisoners of war, on the other hand, he said, cannot be used in any work directly related to war operations. Billfold Recovered By Canine Friend KALAMAZOO, Mich., Feb. 8-P) -.Sailor Hugh Chapman returned LUome today on furlough to receive the usual canine welcome from his -dog, who then dashed beneath the front porch and reappeared with Chapman's billfold, containing mon- ey and important papers, which Chapman had lost before he entered se::vice more than a year ago. AlliedBombers1 Rain .Blows on Nazi Territor y Warplanes Blast Reich, Fleet at Copenhagen By The Associated Press LONDON, Feb. 8.- Allied war- planes kept up their widespread at- tacks on the enemy today and to- night with a series of strikes into Denmark, Holland, Austria and Ger- many itself. An Associated Press dispatch from Stockholm said Allied bombers poun- ded the harbor at Copenhagen, Den- mark, shortly after ten o'clock to-f night in a blow presumably directed at light units of the German Baltic fleet which have been reported there. The German radio said other Al- lied bombers were over Pomerania tonight in small formations, probably indicating an RAF attack on German targets lying in front of Marshal Gregory K. Zhukov's First White Russian Army. V-2 installations in Holland-the launching and supply sites for Ger- man rocket weapons which are still harassing southern England- were attacked in daylight by RAF fighter- bombers. Several direct hits were made dc,,pite severe flak. American heavy bombers based in England were held at their bases today, but the Mediterranean com- mend was able to send its heavies into the Vienna area for the second straight day. Medium bombers of the U.S. 12th Air Force turned from their routine daily hammering at the Brenner Pass railroad and hit rail bridges in north- eastern Italy. F DNB Reports Ancient Berlin Monument Strafed LONDON, Feb. 8.-(P)-The Ger- man News Agency DNB told the Ger- mans tonight that Berlin's center felt the full force of Saturday's daylight raid by U.S. heavy bombers and that "Lhe castle, a monument of Berlin and probably one of its most ancient buildings, is completely burned out." The report said direct hits inflicted heavy damage on the Berlin State Opera House and asserted, "It may give satisfaction to British and Amer- ican men of culture to have inflicted such wounds on us." Sample Ballot Ballot for Class Officers for L. S. A. College Robert C. Acton Patricia Coulter George Darrow Patricia Heil Sonya Heller Henry Mantho James P-late Ann Terbrucggell Pam Watts 2.................................................. 4...................................................... NOTE: Vote for four people in the order of your preference for the four positions; i.e. your choice for president on the line oppo- site "1."; vice-president on the line opposite "2."; etc. This is the sample ballot that will be used in Fi iday's Literary College election. AFTER -INVENTORY FRIDAY and SATURDAY at 'SlowTime' Bill To Become Law March 17 By The Associated Press LANSING, Feb. 8-Governor Kel- ly announced today he would sign reluctantly the Porter "slow time" bill which was whipped through final Senate aproval this afternoon with one vote to spare to make it effect- ive at midnight March 17. With only two Detroit Democrats, Senators Charles N. Youngblood and Henry R. Kozak, opposing the move, the Senate had one more than the necessary two-thirds vote to give the bill immediate effect and make the March 17 date possible. Kelly, who maneuvered a compro- mise on the time fight two years ago, made it plain he did not agree with the Legislature's action, but said "I shall not veto this bill." "I have nothing," he said, "before me to justify placing my judgment against the overwhelming majority of the House and Senate." Best Capitol concensus was that a municipality may fix its time as it pleases. 521t4 66zeh 2/on Sho .'round the Corner on State A clean sweep of all winter odds and ends! Reduced for immediate disposal. COATS . . #35-06 5WI to wear for seasons to come! Beautiful shetlands, fleeces and Chesterfields, Balmacaan, Boy and fitted styles. Formerly $35.00 to $59.95. Three groups ... $17.50, $25.00, $29.95 REVERSII.ES . .. $12.95 A group of tweed reversibles. Good values and a splendid selection of colors. Sizes 10-20. Formerly priced to $19.95. DRESSES . . $7.00, $10.90, $12.95 Crepes, wools, rayons - Casual dresses - Dressy dresses .. . Former values to $35.00 . . . Sizes 9-17, 12-44. SKIRTS ...at $2.98 One group of all-wool plaids and solids. Values to $8.95. Sizes 24 to 30. JACKETS... at $5.00 One group of water repellent. Grand for Spring sportswear, campus or defense work. JUMPERS ... 3 groups ... $2.98, $3.98, $5.00 Plaids and solids. Were from $6.95 to $12.95. SLACKS ... at $2.98, $3.98, $5.00 Odds and ends in cotton, rayons and wools. Sizes to 40. BLOUSES ... at $1.98, $2.98, $3.98 Odds and ends. SCARFS... at 39c and 98e COSTUME JEWELRY,... at 49c, 98c, $1.98 ALL SALES FINAL! Newman Club SGive Frolic Fenner's Five To Play At St. Valentine Dance Fo -Foo Fener's Fascinatin' Five will highlight the entertainment planned for the Valentine Frolic of the local Newman Club. to be held from 8:30 p. m. to midnight today at St. Mary's Chapel. The Fenner Five, led by Joe Fen- ner, is a group of jazz-loving V-12 musicians who limit themselves to playing jump rhythms and individual interpretations thereof. They have appeared in prominence this seme- ster at the Union Christmas party, thc League New Year's Eve party and the Union Open House last month. Jim Dempstey, NRUTC, has pre- pared a series of specialty acts in- cluding songs and various imitations for the party. Beginning at 9 p. m., Alex Komosinski of Ypsilanti will stage several rounds of square danc- ing for an hour. Komosinski direct- ed a similar session of square danc- ing for the club last year. Navy V-12 student. stationed on campus have been granted special late liberty for the Valentine Frolic, being allowed out until 12:30 a. m. tomorrow, Tom Donnelly, chairman of the party, has announced. In addition to the planned enter- tainment, regular dancing will be in progress most of the evening to the music of the juke box. Refresh- ments have been prepared by club members and will be served at 10:30 p. m. Dr. and Mrs. J. E. iKempf have been named chaperones for the af- fai. - R E CORD FATE OF HIROHITO: How Severely Should We Treat Japanese Emperor? Valentine Dance . . . Allen-Rumsey .. . The International Center will hold Allen-Rumsey House will hold a its annual Valentine's Day dance from semi-formal Valentine dance between 8:30 p. m. to midnight tomorrow at 9 p.in. and midnight tomorrow at the Rackham Assembly Hall. the Grand Rapids Room in the Shirley Crawford and Enis Bas- League. kam will be in charge of decorations. The final International Center dance Only house members are invited, for the semester, the affair will be Tickets may be obtained from Dewey informal. tennent. OWI Researcher .. . David Eisendrath of the Office of War Information (OWI) arrived on campus yesterday to gather ma- I terial on research projects being conducted by the University for - use by the OWI in overseas publi- cation. Eisendrath stated that the ma- terial will "be used in Victory Magazine to be distributed among Allied' and neutral nations." The %,"' magazine is a slick paper picture p publication which is printed in more than a dozen languages, he added. Renowned U.S. 'ssure Club OrganizeradCompany Winter weather brings harsh D ies in etrit treatment to sensitive lips But with a tube of Roger & Gallet DETROIT, Feb. 8-(P)-Mrs. Emma original Lip Pomade in your A. Fox, 97, nationally known parli- pocket, you can laugh at "Sloppy amentarian, clubwoman and author Sleet". died today at Osteopathic Hospital Just smooth on Lip Pomade's where she had been confined since Jan. 22 suffering from pneumonia. invisible, soothing film and defy Her death ended a colorful career the climate. There's no safer, during which Mrs. Fox won country- surer protection against painful wide fame as an expert on club- chapping and cracking. women's parliamentary procedure Stop at any drug store and ask and as a pioneer in the fight for women's suffrage, for the handy pocket tube. Mrs. Fox held high office in many state and national women's organiza-2 tions and was for many years parlia- mentarian of the Daughters of the /r' American Revolution and the Uniteda'/ Daughters of the Confederacy. She was the author of "Parliamen- tary Usage," published in 1902 and R O G E R & G A L L E T now in its fourth edition and of "Your Rights as a Member," writ- 500 FIFTH AVE., NEW YORK.18, N.Y. ten in 1941. t Jumper With a Future I N TH E CASUAL SHOP Jumper with an eye to the future . . . YOUR future . . its trim lines, square shoulders, and fly front make it the perfect jumper to fill your campus needs. In Royal blue, aqua, chartreuse, fuschia, and light blue. Misses' sizes. I0.95 Other jumnpers in a collection of styles and colors that reflect the very essence of spring! 8.95 to 16.95 f \VASHINGTON-(1R)-If, tonight, you could write the orders that would seal the fate of the Emperor of Japan, what would you write? You could exile him "in an ice-box in China." But suppose Japanese troops in China fight on after Tokyo falls? United Nations leaders might need Hirohito back in Tokyo to or- der them to lay down arms. May Become Martyr Also, if he is treated too severely he could become a martyr to his people. In a couple of generations they might break out into a war of revenge. You might, as a Chinese has sug- gested, give him somewhat luxurious exile in London. But how would women who lost sons at Guam and Saipan feel to hear of him rolling off to the opera in a big limousine? You might order that he remain in Japan as long as he's useful; or you might decorate his neck imme- diately with a hangman's rope. Pacific "Dumbarton Oaks" All but the plan to hang him came up at the recent Hot Springs, Va., conclave of the Institute of Pacific Relations, which gathered together 160 experts from 12 nations border- ing the Pacific. It was sort of semi- official "Dumbarton Oaks" for the Pacific. The majority of the experts agreed that the "imperial institution" must go in favor of democratic govern- ment complete with free press and speech. Opinion of Asiatics Some Occidental delegates felt the United Nations should insist on the governmental about-face. But sev- eral Asiatics, evidencing some dis- trust of the Western world, objected that it should be left to the Japanese people. What would you do with Japan's industry and trade? That brought up the most compli- cated arguments. The majority agreed that Japan's army, navy, air fleet and heavy indu- stry must be abolished. But how to make sure, in the years to come, that she isn't turning out machine tools to bore new guns? Say ten years from now, when the people of the United States are only interested in their next automobile. AT THE RADIO & RECORD SHOP 715 N. UNIVERSITY J 13acL cw Me 13,en0 . 1' I KNOCK IT OFF Forget the Books! I {oGo to the BLUEBOOK BRLL Saturday 9-12 UNION BALLRO4 U/I I 0-1 /h-t Ar10 SADDLE Saddle oxfords, all-time hits frm coast to coast . . are '= OXFORDS! A -b OW 11 , I I ii ,I I I