Page Two CLOUDBUSTER Friday, November 19, 1943 CLOUDBUSTER Vol. 2—No. 10 Fri., November 19, 1943 Published weekly at the U. S. Navy Pre- Flight School, Chapel Hill, N. C., under super vision of the Public Relations Office. Contri butions of news, features, and cartoons are welcome from all hands and should be turned in to the Public Relations Office, Navy Hall. CLOUDBUSTER receives Camp Newspaper Service material. Republication of credited matter prohibited without permission of CNS, War Department, 205 E. 42nd St., N.Y.C. CoMDR. John P. Graff, USN (Ret.) Commanding Officer Lieut. Comdr. James P. Raugh, USNR Executive Officer Lieut. P. 0. Brewer, USNR Public Relations Officer Editor: Lt. (jg) Leonard Eiserer, USNR Associate Editor: Orville Campbell, Y2c By George J. Grewenow Chaplain Corps, USNR Thanksgiving 1621-1943 Starvation faced the little band of Pilgrims huddled together on the bleak New England hillside. Thirty-one graves were grim re minders of the winter past and the meagre stores of a scant harvest were gi’im forebod ings of the winter ahead. It was proposed that a day be set aside for the giving of thanks. On the designated day a dish of clams and a glass of cold water wei*e set before Elder Brewster. He lifted his eyes toward heaven and gave thanks. This year—listing them at random—^we have; the greatest production of material things our country has known; a New York department store recording profits five times that of any other year; a fur shop advertis ing: “We have sold more mink coats this year than in any previous year”; a 21% increase hog butchering; a 10% increase in the orange crop; etc., etc. W"as it the scarcity of things in 1621 and is it the abundance of things in 1943 that makes thanksgiving? Scarcely that. Rather it is the mercy of our God abundant in days of adversity as well as in days of prosperity. It is the eternal promise, “Fear thou not; for I am with thee: be not dismayed; for I am thy God: I will strengthen thee; yea, I will.hplp thee; yea, I will uphold thee with the right hand of my righteousness. Behold, all they that were incensed against thee shall be ashamed and confounded: they shall be as nothing; and they that strive with thee shall perish.” Herein lies the thanksgiving of every vear! Book Reviews ... From the Land of Silent People by Robert St. John. Halcyon House, Garden City, New York, 1943, 353 pp. As a youngster in World War I, Robert St. John began his wandering career swabbing decks in the transport service of the U. S. Navy. During succeeding years, as a journal ist, he has literally covered the world with particular emphasis on the international polit ical scene. Few writers have his familiarity with the tangled skein of Balkan relationships. He was heard on this subject recently over the CBS University of Chicago round table. A realist, a keen observer with a deftness of de- sci’iption comparable to Richard Harding Davis, he unfolds his tale of the “Silent People” of southeastern Europe, a graphic “action picture” covering but a few weeks and detailing incidents from Belgrade to the Greek peninsula during the Nazi invasion. St. John’s diary begins at Belgrade in April 1941 as bombs rained on the doomed city. It continues through Sarajevo where nearly thirty years ago, the assassination of an Aus trian Archduke ignited the flame of the other war; thence on to Budva on the Yugo-SIavian coast of the Adriatic and by small boat to Corfu, Petras, Argos, Crete, eventually to re spite at Alexandria, Egypt, where war seemed distant, unreal, almost non-existent in the splendor of the Majestic Hotel where women in organdy and men in white linen suits danced on roof gardens and leisurely sipped cocktails, with the soi'did side of war among the “unrnentionables.” In conclusion, he comments: “I didn’t make pleasant remarks in my nar rative. . . . But I have told j^ou now all that I saw and heard and smelled, and just a bit of what I thought, during a few weeks of war. This book will not please you. Yet it will inspire the thinking process, and nearly every American who reads it will be inclined to tighten the belt with a determination that these things may not happen again. —Reviewed by Lieut. Ray C. Witter, USNR Academic Department Sunday Divine Services Protestant 1000 Memorial Hall Roman Catholic 0616 Gerrard Hall 1000 Hill Music Hall Jewish 1000 Graham Memorial * * « Chaplain’s Office Hours: Daily, 0830-1700; Monday and Wednesday, 0830-1800. Father Sullivan will be in Chaplain’s Office on Tuesdays, 1845-1930. Confessions: Saturdays in Gerrard Hall, 1900- 2015. Male Call Heart Chart by Milton Caniff, creator of “Terry and the Pirates’ — (CNS) BA^IC FIELD) MANUAL (UNOFFICIAL) JUNGLE WARFARE ( HOME FRONT VAKIETy^ DEFENSE: TRY THI$ ACCLIMATION: IN JUN0LE WARPASE THE ENEMIES AE£ MAKl AMP NATtlKE- VOU FIMP VOUR^ELP ALONE, TAKE IT EA5V — PON'T BECOME PANICKV... t. fm OR THIS SIGNAL COMMUNICATION.- semaphore and WI6WAa6lN6^^ [TM MAY sme FRIENDLY TKOOP$>^ . 1^*1 ]■ THE VM6£^d\}6> 0HE9 ARB ^OMETIME^ HARP TO tPENTIFV AT HR$T (YOU CAM BE ^rnZE WHEN THeV fTART TO COlU) LfQUIPS: BE gURE OF WHAT YOD PKINK -VOL) M16UT6ET BOILED & Q! ■MENTAL’ATTITUOE# IN THE ABSENCE OF / VOUR C.0.,U5E YOUR.'' 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