PAGE EIGHT THE MICIGAN AILY .......... .............. ----- - ------ PEACETIME SERVICE: Army Leaders Say Draft Is Needed for Post-War Force By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, May 12.- Con- gressional advocates of a peacetime draft said today Army leaders are convinced the draft is the only way a post-war military force of 4,500,000 "availables" can be maintained. While the Army aas insisted that Fine Arts Show Of Indian Art WIl Oen Here Rajput Brush-Drawing To Be Central Work An exhibition of examples of 18th century Rajput Indian art, spon- sored by the University Institute of Fine Arts, will open tomorrow and continue through May 26 in Rm. B, Alumni Memorial Hall. The exhibit is centered around a brush - drawing, entitled "Krishna Dancing with the Milkmaids", which has been loaned to the Institute by the Brooklyn Museum. Mrs. Ralph E. Gregg, who received her master's degree from the University this year, has used the hands of the dancing girls in the drawing as models for a series of 30 studies of various hand expressions. The Detroit Institute of Fine Arts has loaned a second drawing from the same school entitled "Krishna Sporting with the Milkmaids". Another feature of the exhibit is a tapestry .:zbroidred with dancing figures, similar, although of a cruder nature, to those of the brush-draw- ing. Indian students on campus have contributed several authentic Hindu costupnes and pieces of jewelry, which are being used as background mater- ial for the drawings. The exhibition is open to the pub- lic from 2-5 p.m. EWT (1-4 p.m. CWT) Monday throgA Friday, and from 10-12 a.m. EWT (9-11 a.m. CWT) on Saturday. Auto Manpower Available Soon WMC Believes No New Cars in Three Months By The Associated Press DETROIT, May 12-Edward L. Cushman, State Director of the Wars Manpower Commission, said todayi that manpower for automobile pro- duction will be available in the De-c troit area within the next three months but that he was convinced car manufacture will not start on July 1.1 The War Production Board has in-] dicated it expects to give the car in- dustry authorization by that date to go ahead with car production. At the same time George F. Ad- des, Secretary-Treasurer of the Unit- ed Automobile Workers (CIO) as- serted that a number of factories that formerly produced automobiles and parts could be returned to such production within three months. He said the assembly lines in those plants, because of the nature of war production, need little change, and added:t "If the managements are interest- ed in avoiding chaos and demoraliza- tion, these changes can be done in a hurry." T has no definite plans for the size f the post-war military establish- ient, it submitted to the House nilitary cmmittee this week a writ- ten statement containing these words: "The active reserve will be com- pcsed of those individuals and un- its sufficient in types and numbers which will, together with the other componerts, constitute an over-all balanced force in the Army of the United States of four and one-half million (4,500,000) men." 'that figure, an Army spokesman said, is strictly "a planning figure" and represents the - "availables" who could be called upon in a future emergency cr "M-Day" Reserves, Guardsmen Under present War Department plans, committee members said, at least 4,000,000 of the 4,500,000 would be reserves and national guardsmen and, if the entire quota is to be filled, the reinaining 500,000 presumably would Pre regular Army personnel. The War Department issued a statement last night, however, in which it said it was "not the fact" that it plans a peacetime standing Army of 500,000 men. "The size of the regular Army," it added, "ivhich the War Dpart- mclt will recommend after the war will depend upon the condi- tion of the world, the commitments of the United States at that time and the military policy adopted by the Congress." Two Alternatives Committee members represented Army spokesmen as asserting there were these two alternatives to the building up of a huge reserve through a peacetime draft law: an "inade- quate" defense establishment, or a huge standing Army which would cost billions annually. Hearings will start June 4 on peac etime draft legislation broadly requiring every able-bodied male citi- zen to take a year of military training as scon as he becomes 18. I dian Dancer Give Native Entertainment Hindustan Association Announces Program Mrs. Kamla Chowdry of Lahore, India, will highlight the folk dances to be presented on the Hindustan As- sociation program at 8 p. m. EWT (7 p. m. CWT) May 23 in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Mrs. Chowdry studied dancing at the Shantinketan Academy founded by the late Dr. Rabindranath Tagore, famous Indian poet and Nobel Prize winner. "Prayer Dance" and "Harvest Dance" will be two of the solos per- formed. These interpretations por- tray the mode of Hindu worship and an artist's concept of the Indian peasant's harvest activities. In the "Radha Krisna Dance," Mrs. Chowdry and Gaspa Plumer will present the love of Radha Lord Kris- na from the ancient epic of Mahab- harata. Rusian Circle Will u.old V-F Day Celebration Russky Kruzhok, the Russian Cir- cle, will meet at 8:30 p. m. EWT 7:30 p. m. CWT) tomorrow at the International Center to celebrate V-E Day. A business meeting will follow the program. The following officers were elected last week: Wilma Myron, president: Rose Lessin, vice president; Martha Bradshaw, secretary; Lolly Metropolsky, treasurer. Social committee chairman is Rose Lessin. Other committee members are Violet Misekow, Kathie Stase- wich, Renee Lichtenstein and Faye Eisenberg. George Petrossin and Clau- dia Ivash will head the publicity committee. P URE ASSOCIATED PRESS NEWS NI .i ,..kl I SWASTIKA OVERCOAT - Irving C. Suellau, man- ager of the Russian War Relief warehouse in New York, and Catherine Duffy, guard, examine a man's overcoat with swastika.- embroidered lining, received from an anonymous donor. BA T T L E S H I P'S SCOUT - A U. S. Navy Kingfisher lands in a cloud of salty spray alongside its battleship home after completing a scouting mission. I DIE-1IARD NIPS LINGER' Yanks Huint Japs on Corregidor Two Months After Invasion CORREGIDOR, Manila Bay-/P)- More than two months after this fort- ress island was invaded by American paratroopers and amphibious forces, a visitor still gets an escort. Some die-hard Japanese soldiers still ling- er in Corregidor caves. The escort consists of a truck load of helmeted, green-clad men of Maj. Gen. William C. Chase's 38th Divi- sion with carbines ready for instant action. Near the point to be visited they fan out, peering down slopes, keeping eyes on cliff sides, wary about thickets. Only a day before a group of American war correspondents, tour- ing Pacific bases, visited Corregi- dor, soldiers came upon a Japanese sitting near the shore, holding a machine gun. The Yanks opened up but he dived for a cave, pulling his weapon after him. Grenades were topped in but the foe, willing to live a rat's life, probably was safe within the recesses. "If they were Germans, they'd know the jig's up," said General Chase. "But these dirty little Nips have to be picked off." A week before the correspondents visited Corregidor, a group of sol- diers, finding a shaft leading from a cliff top to a big cave, poured oil into it but before the fuel could be ignited, Japanese in the cave committed sui- cide by touching off the biggest explo- sion yet to rock the island. Corregidor, its barracks, its facili- ties and structures such as Gen. Douglas McArthur's demolished home, is conquered. There's no mistaking that. But the dirty, desolate business of hunting the enemy night and day co.nstitutes a capsule picture of what is happening everywhere that Japa- nese are to be found. Teaching Fellow Receives Award Emiliano Gallo-Ruiz, a teaching fellow in the department of romance languages, was recently granted a $50 award by the American Numis- matic Association. He received the award for an article entitled "Paul Manship Medal of Dionysus," which was selected as one of the three best articles published in "The Numisma- tist" during 1944. NAT U R A L- Songstress Georgia Gibbs chose this picture in response to requests from overseas service men for a pin- up posed "like a guy's own girl." I A * THE MICHIGAN DAILY SERVICE EDITION * I ANN ARBOR, MICH. SUNDAY, MAY 13, 1945 fluence making for separa- tion and divorce will be the hasty and ill-advised mar- riages after the war. Many young people will wish to make up for what they have missed of marital bliss because of the war, and will marry after only a short acquaintance, courtship, and engagement. Burgess said that to insure strong family relations after the war it is necessary to have economic security for fam- ilies, education and coun- seling in such problems as child development, divor- ces, juvenile delinquency and knowledge of human behavior. THE ENGINEERING, SCIENCE and Manage- ment War Training pro- gram, which has trained more than 12,000 men and women since November; 1940, will be discontinued after July 1, the engineer- ing college revealed. The purpose of the program was to supply additional per- sonnel in technical fields and to upgrade skills of those already in industry. All courses were given on non-credit basis with the armed services were pres- ented here on campus. l- though most of the traine'es at first were men, women were trained to a great ex- tent. The University train- ed 1,500 inspectors for Army Ordnance and the Army Air Forces. Survey- ing, topography mapping, and photogrammetry for women college graduates were offered here to train them for work with the Army Map Service. Men were sent here from Wright Field, Ohio, for courses dealing with radar and radio for the Signal Corps. ESMWT took over much of the college level work of training men in technical fields that many large cor- porations had been doing because the Universities and college could handle it more conveniently and ef- fectively. 4* * * LT. ELROY HIRSCH (USMC), who wrote a new page into Michigan sports record books last year when he hauled down major let- ters in four sports, return- ed to the scene of his ath- letic triumphs this week on his way to his home in during his short one-year span in a Maize and Blue uniform, but he also left his mark as one of the fin- est sportsmen and compet- itors in the nation. After being transferred to the Michigan campus from the University of Wisconsin, Hirsc:i promptly went out for football and disting- uished himself on the grid- iron despite a succession of injuries, climaxing his pig- skin career by running off the bench to kick an extra point against Wisconsin without the knowledge of the coaches. * * * RAY "RED" LOUTLHEN breezed through his fourth win of the season as his teammates banged out 17 hits off two Notre Dame hurlers. Coach Ray Fisher's nine trounced the Irish in a style that has been char- acteristic of the Wolverines all season. Jack Barrett, Notre Dame slow ball artist, was the victim of the Mich- igan base hit barrage in his second meeting of the sea- son with Louthen. He was relieved in the eighth inn- ing when 14 Wolverines came to the plate to put the left fielder's head. Leading hitter Tom Rose- ma also came through with a triple and a single in 5 trips to the plate. It was the third meeting of the two teams and the third time Michigan has come out on top. The final score was 12-3. Michigan scored their 12 runs on 17 hits and com- mitted 2 errors, while Notre Dame had 3 runs, 4 hits, and 2 errors. The second game of this series was called off because of rain and Coach Fisher has an- nounced that it will not be played off at some later time. MICHIGAN opened its home outdoor track season by playing host to Great Lakes, Illinois, and Ohio State in a quadrangular meet. Great Lakes emerg- ed the victor with a total of 43% points. Next came the Wolverines with 41 1/3, followed by Illinois with 35% and OCU with 31 5/6. The Sailors, led by Les Eis- enhart, former Buckeye ace, and Grover Klemmer, took 4 firsts and a place in N A V Y P OW E R H O U S E - The 16-inch guns of her main, battery and 40-mm. anti-aircraft batteries of the USS South Dakota loom in the foreground in this picturesque view. 4 BLONDE-Vivacious blande June Haver (above) is a newcomer to the ranks of movie starlets. She's 18 years old, 5 feet 2 inches tall, blue-eyed and Irish. I u . { .; z ;a? '?' ' ;c # . ' . ,' a ' ': s . ' s + .:.: ,k" w ..; of .a ."::. . .. .. r..-. t"... .....-.ntY. ....i2x's...fi+. 'n ... %'.k..$N? . ... a..c>s. ' }, ..., 'Y'..,. _,.t.."..?u: _..{ ix..." ... r . ,.:: ... ,..t ~._ f r.....,,. .tv._...,..........-'- +*k " ': ' Zax". '"d