S1X THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAT, 1ARCH 31, 1944 RAKIN' IN THE DOUGH: AEF Stages 'Saratoga Handicap' ASSOCIATED DU PRESS NEWSiwk By KENNETH L. DIXON Asociated Press Correspondent WITH THE AEF IN SARDINIA, March 21.-(Delayed)-The bombing of this B26 group has been so blasted accurate of late that the "Saratoga Club" has gone bankrupt and all the betting on the daily "Saratoga Han- dicap" has been forced into a "pari- mutuel system." And the men of the Marauders are laughing their heads off-as they count their dough-at the headquar- ters offices. The idea for the handicap was thought up by Captain Neil H. Dunn, assistant group intelligence officer, and Major Joseph Perrin, group bombardier of Johnstown, Pa. and Chicago, who thought a little gam- bling might increase the bombing competition in the squadron. They formed the "Saratoga Club" and sold shares to the other officers at $25 a clip. - They also figured the idea might help publicize the various bombar- diers, often submerged in the em- phasis on pilots. Under the system the pilot was the horse, the bombardier was the jockey, the squadron commanding officer was referred to as "Kunn'l So and So" and the squadron col- ors became the silks of the "Kun- n'l's" stables. All of which was fine except that Dunn and Perrin then elected to set the betting odds on the basis of various pilots' and bombardiers' past performances- which is where a slight case of insolvency soon set in. At the pre-mission briefing Dunn announced the horse and jockey of each squadron stable-- from the flight leading plane-along with the dope on the pairs' record such as "in 110 To Give Dane Toi Music by Records Featured at Social For the first time since military units took over the Union, an in- formal dance will be given from 7:30 p.m. to midnight today in the north lounge, starting week-end activities at the Union. Union officers plan to continue the Friday night dances as a regular feature if it is successful. All serv- icemen and civilians with dates are invited. . Music will be provided by records and the taproom will be open. There is no admission charge. Chaperons will be Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kuenzel and Mr. and Mrs. Hayes Meyers. All stag coeds and servicemen are invited to the G-I Stomp to be given from 3 to 5 p.m. tomorrow in the north lounge of the Union. Special hostesses will be Betsy Bar- bour, Helen Newberry, Stockwell, Kappa Alpha Theta, Delta Gamma; Sorosis and Alpha Phi. Dancing will be to records and the taproom and soda bar will be open. The Sunday Social from 3 to 5 p m. Sunday will complete the week- end, with bridge games and funnies available to all. Court Martial Acquits Military Police Officer DETROIT, March 30.-(A)-Major Edward J. Eggleston, former execu- tive officer of the 728th Military Po- lice Battalion at Camp River Rouge, was acquitted today by a general court martial of charges of violating the articles of war. The court martial had convicted two other battalion officers on simi- lar charges and recommended their dismissal from the service. The con- victed officers, who are awaiting re- view of their cases by the command- ing officer of the Sixth Service Com- mand, are Col. Victor L. Colson, for- mer commander, and Capt. Leighton E. Ware, former adjutant. Eggleston, who will be reassigned to active duty, was exonerated of charges that he asked for a voucher for $44.66 for expenses for a trip to Chicago. He testified he was given the voucher by a sergeant and as- sumed it was correct. When it was pointed out he had received more money than he was entitled to, he Major said, he refunded $16.26. Lt. Harry R. Scott testified that Eggle- ston did not ask for the voucher. - - ~ - the money twice but still not a win- ner" or "a consistent winner" or "not a winner yet but still promising"+ then he announced the odds he and Perrin had set; three to one or four to one or even money. , Around the room the bombardiers' faces grew grim, red and angry. Three to one, huh, four to one, so that's all the chance they thought he had of coming closer to the target than so and so. They stalked out to the planes still mumbling after bet-. ting their shirts on themselves. The crews got mad too. After all, it was their flight, their squadron if not their plane, and the squad- ron bombardier-whose name they may not even have known before -suddenly became their bombar- dier. Ditto the pilot. Even the grounderews were getting their dough on the line. Every mission became a photo fin- ish, for the payoffs were based on which flight the photographs had bombed closest to the target's central aiming point. To understand how this competi- tive angle will produce results you have to realize that these guys have been going on bombing missions for months and that the first keen edge inevitably wears off no matter how hard they try to hold it. But now it was re-sharpened. They didn't forget about the flak and they didn't forget about the fighters. But along with sweating out each bomb run they remembered the money they'd bet and the insult- ing odds against them. "It definitely intensifies compe- tition," grinned 28-year-old Major Lawrence E. Horras of St. Louis, the acting group commanding offi- cer half proudly, half ruefully. He got nicked for more dough than he'll admit by helping underwrite the "Saratoga Club." "The second day after the handicap started the group got the first hundred per cent bombing job in the wing's history." A one hundred per cent bombing job means all the bombs in the group must be dropped into the area marked by a mythical circle which has a radius of 600 feet and from more than 10,000 feet such a circle looks about as big as a dime. But Dunn, Perrin and Company, who secretly are pretty pleased with the whole affair, even though it al- ready has cost them upwards of a hundred bucks apiece, today shifted the "Saratoga Handicap" betting from the prearranged odds to pari- mutuel odds. Thus the various squadrons liter- ally will bet against each other rather than against the odds and the goal once set for the "Saratoga Club"- which was busted by bullseye bomb- ing. SINOER -Lovely Mildred Law ,(above), a native of Boston, has gained notice with her singing and next may blossom forth in motion pictures. D I R T Y N 0 S E C U A R D S H E R 0 W N-The mother of quintuplets, "Dirty Nose," lioness at Highland Park Zoo in Pittsburgh, gathers her offspring close to her and retires to a corner. ACCELERATED PROGRAM: Education School Announces T enty-Five Day Intersession The June Intersession of the School of Education will begin on June 5 and run until June 30, the March number of the departmental Bulletin reported today. "The Intersession is designed to serve those who desire to complete some summer study before July 1, to prepare intensively for the counseling of returned veterans and displaced war workers, or for the work of the visiting teacher." The regular eight- week Summer Session will open Mon- day, July 3. Such courses as The Philosophy of Education and State and National Trends in Education will be offered. Courses for individual interests, such as Honors Reading in Current Prob- lems and a Seminar on Individual Research Problems, will also be avail- able to the student. Two special Post-War Group Will Hold Polls Council Will Circulate Mimeographed Sheets As a preliminary to its regular weekly panel discussions, the Post- War Council will circulate mimeo- graphed information sheets and con- duct polls on questions relating to proposed discussions, it was decided at a meeting yesterday. The information sheets, which will be prepared by the editorial commit- tee, will attempt to present both sides of the question under consi- deration and students will then be asked to express their own opinions, Gloria Rewoldt, '45, Council presi- dent, said. Committee chairmen announced at the meeting yesterday, are as follows: Julie Slokum, polls; Mary Jackson, personnel; Elizabeth Hawley, pro- gram; Gwen Switzer and Mary Ellen Galarno, publicity; Chuck English and Allen Anderson, public relations; Barney Laschever and Lyle Albright, conference. Plans for the regular spring semes- ter conference, to be held in May, were discussed. It was also decided that the program of weekly deputa- tions to neighboring communities will begin to function immediately under the direction of Prof. Howard Mc- Cluskey. -- - - ~ courses for post-war counselors and visiting teachers will be given. Another article of prime interest in the bulletin is a discussion of secondard school science in the post- war world by Francis D. Curtis, co- author of "Everyday Biology" and "Everyday Science," high school texts. Howard McClusky, a member of the University education faculty, is the author of an article on adult education, which stresses the role of the community in this field. A letter from President Ruthven. presented at the Michigan Breakfasts held at the regional of the American Association of School Administrators in Chicago, Atlanta and Kansas City, sums up the part the University has played in the training of servicemen and veterans. The final article deals with the community health service courses in Michigan high schools. This project is being sponsored by the State Board of Education. Miss Mabel E. Rugen, who served as resource person and conference summarizer at the Health Education Conference at Midland in February, describes the program. The bulletin concludes with a summary of the professional activities of the education faculty during February. Co. A's Choir To Sing Sunday Co. A's Soldier Choir will be fea- tured in a program with the Ann Arbor Civic Orchestra at 4:15 p.m. Sunday in the Ann Arbor High School Auditorium. The orchestra will accompany the choir in "Land Sighting" by Grieg. Cpl. Robert Miller, baritone, will take the solo part in this number. The remaining portion of the pro- gram, which will be the first to be presented this season by the com- pletely reorganized Soldier Choir, will consist of a capella selections. As Cpl. Joseph Running of Co. A has replaced Bill Sawyer as director of the choir, the personnel of the choir is now entirely military. Cpl. Running was a member of the music faculties of Stanford University and of St. Olaf College. The Civic Orchestra is directed by Dr. Joseph Maddy of the School of Music and director of the National Music Camp at Interlochen. - B A C K IN H A R N E S S-Dr. James W. W. Boyd, 72, ex- a'mined doughboys in 1917, couldn't get back in service, so he took job at Package Machinery Co. in Springfield, Mass. He holds a strobotac, with which he examines a gyro compass. S C R A M, M U T T I-It was the right church but the wrong pew. for "Skippy," Mary Gallagher's dog who wandered into the cat-section of the Madison Square Boys' Club's annual pet show in New York City-and got a cool welcome. C U T E -During a rally at War Bond Square, New York, Cheryl Archer, six-year-old "cover girl," makes a record to be sent to her brother Bob at Fort Bel- voir, Va. Cheryl sold the biggest bond during the rally-a $50,000 one-to Hope Hampton. N E W F O U N D L A N D G R A V E Y'A R D --At Argentia, Newfoundland, last port of call for ships bound to United Kingdom over the northern route, graves of war dead are marked with crosses'. We've the newest, prettiest dresses for Easter-and you'll star in them 'z thru Spring, too. Soft, flattering 4: lines in prints, sheer blacks, and pastels. Also see our collection of summer cottons. Hosiery Blouses Sweaters Housecoats Slacks and CI - - l ,c a. NIGERIAN CHIEFS PARLEY-Partofthepanoply I T A L I A N Z 0 T S U I T-Cpl. Vernon E. Mikels (left) of Buena Vista, Va., and Esther Freeman of Chicago, American 111111 . ll