Newspapers / Cloudbuster (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / Jan. 30, 1943, edition 1 / Page 2
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Page Two CLOUDBUSTER Saturday, January 30, 1943 CLOUDBUSTER Vol. 1—No. 19 Sat., Jan. 30, 1943 Published weekly at the U. S. Navy Pre-^ Flight School, Chapel Hill, N. C., under super vision of the Public Relations Office. Contribu tions of news, features, and cartoons are welcome from all hands and should be turned in to the editorial office, Room 218, Alexander Hall. ★ COMDR. John P. Graff, USN (Ret.) Commanding Officer Lieut. Comdr. James P’ Raugh, USNR Executive Officer Lieut, (jg) Kidd Brewer* USNR Public Relations Officer ★ Editor: Ensign Leonard Eiserer, USNR Associate Editor: Orville Campbell, Y3g By Lieut. Eric H. Arendt Chaplain Corps, USN At a time like this when unity of thought and action is the accepted source of strength, there is still too much bickering in religious circles. We Americans have always been taught that “in unity there is strength.” Un fortunately, there are still some smaller sects which stand their ground and expect to carry the burden of responsibility without the strength of a united movement. There is a united organization which is called the Federal Council of Churches of Christ in America and represents over seventy-five per cent of all Protestantism in America. And, we are happy to report, it is becoming increasingly more united and more important to the re ligious life of the entire country. One need only to be a chaplain in one of the services to appreciate fully the need for this united effort. A chaplain does not limit his work to the members of his denomination—he is the chaplain of all, even those who profess no religious affiliation whatsoever. The point of this thought is one which should be taken most seriously by those of you, who after the war, will return to your respective churches and become its leaders. To resign yourself to a greater resolve for Christian ser vice in your community is to work for the uni versal acceptance of a united church. “In things agreed, unite—in things disagreed, tolerance” must be our stand. The ideals for which we are enlisted cannot be disassociated from the ideals of religion. Hence, as long as we accept the strength of unity in other fields, the same would be ap plicable to religion. That is just another goal for which to strive, Pre-Flight personnel interested in Christian Science are invited to make contact with Mr. Wilfred B. Wells, C. S., Christian Science Wartime Minister for this area, who is an xious to be of service to those of his faith at this station. His address is P. 0. Box 1630, Durham, N, C., and telephone No. X-3943. You’ll Laugh Too A seaman returning to the Navy’s Armed Guard Center at South Brooklyn, N. Y., found 90 letters from the same girl waiting for him. He tore open the first and the last, and tossed the rest away. Then he went and married the girl. :j! ^ :;•! Many men at the new Naval Training Sta tion, Farragut, Idaho, were surprised recently to find “No Smoking” signs suddenly posted in the library. Investigation disclosed that a recruit had read the executive order about no smoking near magazines. ^ i{c sjc V Overheard inside a powdei’ rooir^/in a nightclub at Fort Worth, Texas: “Dearie, he’s wonderful—4-F with a B card and a C note.” i!: * And at Marion, North Carolina, a farmer appeared before his sugar rationing board requesting that he be relieved of buying so much sugar. “I have eight kids,” he said, “but I just be doggone if we can use up all the sugar we have to buy.” ❖ ❖ * Two very cute nurses slipping in late met two doctors going out: “Shh,—we’re coming in after hours.” Two doctors: “That’s okay, we’re going out after ours.” Buster Bits No stranger to the Far Eastern scene, or to the Navy either, is Cadet LeRoy McArthur (15th Battalion), from Buhl, Idaho. Before transferring to naval aviation, McArthur was on sea duty with the U. S. Navy for six and one-half years, three of them being spent in the China area. He has served as receiving ship drill instructor at New York, and held the rating of quartermaster, first class, before becoming a cadet. —It (Yiras joir\ the Marines and see the world for Cadet Henry J. Jacukiewicz (14th Bat talion), from East Orange, N. J., who traveled distance totaling more than two and three- fourths the circumference of the earth, since enlisting with the Leathernecks in January, 1939. His travels during his three years, 10 months with the Marines carried him some 69,600 miles. One of the few sports not included in the athletic program here is one in which Cadet Lanman T. Holmes (15th Battalion), from West Orange, N. J., is most adept. After let tering three years in hockey and serving as team captain at Williams College, Holmes played that sport in the Eastern Amateur Hockey League, Madison Square Garden, New York, for one and a half years. Terry and The Pirates Snif Test indicates Odors of Chanel No. 5 Wi'l PBTAIL 15 ^ WOULD you \ eORS! yjf pzAcnatie foc. a \ like lo bb \ ... i'm 'zU PE/MON$reAT/OM ON I THE"VJCT;M/ iKEApy, FUKMA?/5TEADV THE BUeTBIZ (5A56E$ ARE MORE LIABLE TO BE A&MNST CIVILIAN APEAS 5ECAU6E niEV LIN3BIZ IN CELLARS, PITCHES ANP OTHER LOW PLACED}...rATiBtiT msr FE REMOVEP TO HI6H GROUMP/ P/E$T AlP TO CIVILIANS iN A (3A6 ATTACK.' / / ^ Rvc U, S Pit Off I / CopyriKht. 194^. by New* Syndicate Co. I NOTICE How MANY A^N ARE HUKKYlWe TO WATCH THIS PKILL?...IT^5TKAN6E BECAUSE ALL OF THEM HAVE BBEtJ THROU6H \TBEFOSZE!j NEXT VICTIM CLOTH IN6 TUEYSEEfATO BE WAITJNO SOMETHING CSiif i /
Cloudbuster (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 30, 1943, edition 1
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