September 19, 1942 CLOUDBUSTER Page Three Naval Aviators To be Promoted At Faster Rate More rapid promotions in the ex panding aeronautical organization of the Navy has been promised by Secre tary of the Navy Frank Knox, who announced recently that steps have been taken to insure that sufficient of ficers will be available in the various grades for the growing program. Lists of officers for temporary pro motion to higher grades have been pre pared using the selective system, and have been approved by the President. The lists will not be made public, but promotions will be made from these lists as the needs of the service require. In view of the rapidly expanding aeronautical organization, it may be expected that temporary promotions of naval aviators will occur at earlier dates than regular line officers, the Secretary said. 3^00 Students Expected at UNC Some 800 coeds and approximately 2,500 boys are expected to be on hand as the University of North Carolina, America’s oldest state university, be gins its 149th year next Thursday. Many of the students have already arrived, and they will continue to come over the weekend in preparation for the school opening. According to uni versity administrators, total student enrollment will approach the 3,300 mark, about 700 less than last year. Approximately 30% of the students come from out-of-state. New York state leads the Yankee invasion with about 150 students, with New Jersey contributing around 90. Ex-Coast Guarders No strangers to the sea are Cadets Joseph P. Van Vooren, and Robert Paul Weber, both of whom were in the Coast Guard before coming here. Van Voorens is from Patterson, N. J., and Weber is from Chester, Pa. RADIOS FOR RENT BOOKS FOR SALE The Intimate Bookshop Main Street, 0pp. the Campus Welcome CLOUDBUSTER and BEST WISHES • DURHAM DAIRY PRODLICTS C(m.o.o.KtssiHo- -SKIPPER- UMrrco stKtci MMnr IV^Ii^ScWI ^ OSSMUNnHGTON NICKNANV5EO GRAOUAte AmnKs AT THE ACADEMY A Cadet Goes Backstage With ^Scrappy* ^ By Cadet James G. Butler Armed with the doggerel advice of that infernal nonsense Pinafore, “Stick close to your desk, and never go to sea, Someday you may be ruler of the Queen’s Navy,” I prepared to meet the Captain. After the encounter I definitely decided that Gilbert had not met many men like the Captain. For his desk is still as new as his job, with scarcely a foot mark on it. Not only showing his intense ac tivity, but his unfamiliarity with the ways of the landlubber. The Skipper hails from Greensburg, Indiana (no, I never heard of it before either). His family were not tradi tional Navy men and as far as he knows, he is the first sailor in the Kes- sing clan. He still remembers the day he ap proached his father with the proposal that he would like to enter West Point. His dad referred him to a Congress man that lived across the street, (that was when they got home once in a while). He received the august assur ance of this Hoosier Representative, and after a period of time he received an official envelope containing his ap pointment—^but not to the Point. Rather to some unheard of place called Annapolis. When he again confronted the Congressman with the query “Why not the Point?”, he received the assur ance that “Son, that’s perfectly all right, it’s merely the Southern Branch.” Thus it was that 0. 0. Kessing, (the double O is classified as restricted ma terial, Oliver Owen) entered the Aca demy, in 1910. While there he partici pated, he will have you understand, not starred, in boxing, wrestling, football and lacrosse. His career there might be best described as that of a very energetic midshipman. Besides picking up more than his share of bruises on the athletic fields, he also picked up the cognomen “Scrappy” which has stuck as close to him through his life as a wet pair of pants. 0. 0. always pos sessed a mind of his own, and was never averse to airing his opinions. So adding up his strong will, a better than average boxing ability, subtracting his five, eight stature, one need not be a 4.0 math genius to see the result in j was brought to Soldiers field in Chi- “Scrappy.” cago. That 1926 team incidentally was He was graduated from the Aca-1 a Pippin, featuring such stars as Tom demy, right into the Mexican war and Hamilton in the backfield, and Walter the armored cruiser, Maryland. Dur- j Camp’s All-American Frank Wick- ing this campaign he was on the little, horst at one of the tackles. the first destroyer sunk in this, the second World War, in the northern Atlantic. In 1926 when Annapolis inaugu rated the system of a Graduate Man ager in Athletics, it was 0. 0. Kes sing who took the position. He had long been a close friend of the late Knute Rockne, and it was only natural that he was the one to put Notre Dame on the Navy Schedule. It was through his efforts that the Army-Navy game known West Coast of Mexico and served with distinction. With the outbreak of the W'orld War he was assigned to the USS Hunting ton on convoy duty, and volunteered as a Kite Balloon Pilot. The K. B. was a forerunner of the barrage balloon, but with a basket. It was attached to the ship by cable and flown some eight hundred to a thousand feet in the air. K. B.’s were supposedly super-lookout for submarines but it was soon dis covered that the U boats could spot the kite balloons long before the K. B. P. even suspected that underwater craft were around. When the Hunting ton finally lost the balloon, and couldn’t replace it, “Scrappy” came down to earth. His Naval career continued with heavier-than-air training at Pensacola following the war. Abruptly inter rupted, it was succeeded by destroyer duty for several years in the Mediter ranean and Adriatic. Shipmate and boon companion with him on this trip was Lieutenant Commander John P. Graff; the ship was the Reuben James, SERVICE FOR YOUR CAR Is More Important Now Than Ever LET US DO THIS FOR YOU Texaco Products—Washing—Polishing—Simonizing Lubrication University Service Station H. S. Pendergraft, Prop. UNIVERSITY HARDWARE CO. All Kinds of Hardware TERMS 30 DAYS PHONE 6981 We Welcome the Cadets The Captain left this post in 1929, but his enthusiasm for athletics never left him. He was a member of the National Collegiate boxing I’ules com mittee for five years and associated with the ’36 Olympics committee. Sea duty called him again, this time aboard the USS Holland, and two years later he was transferred to the Augusta as Executive Officer. Aboard this cruiser, the flagship, he made a China Cruise until 1937. He bobbed back again at the Naval Academy, this time as assistant to the officer in charge of buildings and grounds. His last as- Send It Home Why not supplement your let ters home with a copy of the CLOUDBUSTER? Remember though—it may not be mailed under the “free” mail ing privilege. Postage is re quired. signment before coming to Chapel Hill was as C. 0. of the USS Chaumont, a naval transport on the Asiatic Station, until December 1941. In all he has 22 years of sea duty, and holds medals for the Mexican cam paign in 1914, the World War, the Haitian campaign, and for China Ser vice. Shrouded behind the naval rec ords hang two tales of being reported ly killed twice. On one of these occa sions he had the “rare privilege” of reading his own obituary in the United States newspapers. Looking at the record, it is not hard to see why Captain Kessing was picked to be the prime mover in the setting up of the four Naval Pre-Flight Schools. In this job he inspected over sixty universities before the final se lections were made. And now still act ing in an advisory capacity, he keeps the airlines busy with his hops to the capital, and the West Coast and to other points North and South. In charting the Skipper’s career, his course seems to be laid out in straight lines, with successive jobs well done. It is a story of perspicacity and energy leading to success. But his has been a tale without one of the usual accoutre ments of success. It is best described in the words of Lt. Comdr. Graff, ex ecutive officer of this station: “It is the good fortune of very few naval of ficers to have as many friends both senior and junior contemporary, as 0. 0. Kessing.” From the Argentine Army That “Latin-American Way” was acquired by Cadet Roland B. Smith in Buenos Aires, Argentina. He served 13 months in the Argentine Army as a private. He attended Cornell and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, graduating this year. His brother is in the 26th Glider Pilot Training De tachment. SPALDING SHOES Carolina Sport Shop Everything Found in a Modern Drug Store LARGEST STOCK IN TOWN We make our own ice cream fresh daily SUTTON’S DRUG STORE COURTESY ~ QUALITY — SERVICE UNIFORMS Ties, Shoes, Sox, White Shirts and All Other Officers’ Supplies CAROLINA BOOTERY 167 E. Franklin St.