Saturday, November 7, 1942
CLOUDBUSTER
Page Three
‘Buster S/ts
Gone with the group of cadets trans
ferred Nov. 3 for flight training at
the NRAB, Robertson, Mo., is Wil
liam Joseph Peter O’Sullivan, ex-
flatfoot from New York whose impish
imitations mirthfully entertained sta
tion Smoker audiences during the past
couple of months. May his training
ship respond as faithfully and well
to the O’Sullivan touch as did his
audiences here.
Strong man of the 12th Battalion
is Cadet John T. Landry, of Dorches
ter, Mass. Landry, who lettered in
football and track in high school, is
weightlifting champion of the New
England States. . . . Cadet Leo Col-
leran (12th Battalion), of Jamaica
Plain, Mass., won a CMTC boxing
championship at Fort Ethan Allen,
Vt.
Cadet Philip E. Bauldry (9th
Battalion), of East Orange, N. J.,
served eight months as a quartermas
ter in the Coast Guard at Manhat
tan Beach, Brooklyn, N. Y., before
entering the naval aviation program.
. . . Teaching high school physics in
Paulsboro, N. J., was the occupation
of Cadet George W. Bond (9th Bat
talion), of Williamstown, Pa., before
joining the Navy. . . . Cadet Donald
COOGAN (9th Battalion), of Spring-
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DURHAM
DAIRY PRODUCTS
field, Mass., was admitted to the Mas
sachusetts bar on June 18, following
his graduation from Boston Univer
sity Law School last May.
U. S. aircraft companies from coast
to coast are represented by former
employees now serving as aviation
cadets at Chapel Hill.
Just to mention a few of the aspir
ing aviators who once worked in the
aircraft industry: Cadet Raymond E.
Carow (10th Battalion), of Malverne,
N. Y., formerly with Grumman Air
craft Engineering Corp., Bethpage,
L. I., N. Y.; Cadet Robert J. Bun-
BURY (10th Battalion), of Bellmore,
N. Y., with Republic Aviation Corp.,
Farmingdale, L. I., N. Y.; Cadet Wil
liam W. Burns (9th Battalion), of
Niagara Falls, N. Y., with Bell Air
craft Corp. located in his hometown;
Cadet Russell 0. Blaisdell (9th
Battalion), of Orangeburg, N. Y.,
with Consolidated Aircraft Corp., San
Diego, Cal.; Cadet Graham Bell
(10th Battalion), of Montclair, N. J.,
with Curtiss-Propeller Division, Cur-
tiss-Wright Corp., Caldwell, N. J.;
Cadet Donald Ferber (10th Battal
ion), of Ridgewood, N. J., with Wright
Aeronautical Corp., Paterson, N. J.;
Cadets Arthur W. Byam, of Chelms
ford, Mass., and Mervin W. Cole, of
Manchester, Conn. (both 8th Bat
talion), with Pratt & Whitney Divi
sion of United Aircraft Corp., E.
Hartford, Conn.
Cadet William C. Kerber, Jr.
(10th Battalion), of Upper Darby,
Pa., resigned a commission of lieuten
ant, junior grade, in the Naval Re
serve to enter aviation training. A
graduate of Drexel Institute of Tech
nology, Philadelphia, Pa., with a B.S.
degree in civil engineering, Kerber
formerly served as aircraft inspector
for the Navy at Brewster Aeronau
tical Corp.
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DANZIGER’S
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The Chaplain
By B. G. Leonard, Jr., Sp. 3c
The cadet with a problem that does
not quite fit into any department may
drift from office to office several times
before he hears the inevitable sugges-
W
Lieut. Arendt
tion, “Why don’t you try the Chap
lain’s office?”
In the Chaplain’s office the cadet
finds Lieut. Eric H. Arendt—and, al
most invariably, a solution to his
problem.
Lieut. Arendt’s educational back
ground and practical experience stamp
him as well qualified for his task. A
Navy Chaplain’s duties are not spec
tacular; they are many and varied,
often challenging.
Lieut. Arendt was born in Dallas,
Tex., Oct. 4, 1910. He attended Be
loit College, graduating in 1938. Dur
ing the next three years he supple
mented his undergraduate studies
with graduate work in the field of so
ciology, a study he has found valu
able in his work with Navy men, at
Northwestern University and at the
University of Chicago. Subsequently
he entered the Chicago Theological
Seminary and was graduated with the
class of 1938.
After graduation, Lieut. Arendt
served as assistant minister of the
First Congregational Church of Los
Angeles, the largest church of his de
nomination, assistant minister of the
New First Congregational Church of
Chicago, and minister of the First
Congregational Church of Williams
Bay, Wis.
Perceiving the approaching crisis in
international affairs, and disturbed by
the completely-pacifist views of the
majority of his fellow-clergymen, our
Chaplain applied for a commission in
the Naval Reserve in a move that was
a protest against the clergy’s paci
fism. He was accepted and called to
active duty in August, 1940, a few
months after his marriage to Miss
Mildred McKain of Los Angeles.
Finding himself especially adapt
able to the demands of the Navy, and
with a deepening appreciation of a
Chaplain’s opportunities, Lieut.
Arendt applied for a chaplaincy in the
Regular Navy and was accepted.
Lieut. Arendt’s first Navy duty was
a two-month period spent at the Quan-
tico, Va., Marine Barracks, which had
become a temporary recruit camp due
to the flooding of Paris Island. His
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CONSOLIDATED PB2Y-3 PATROL BOMBER
Shown above by the Aeronautical Chamber of Commerce of America
h a three-view silhouette of the Consolidated PB2Y-3 Coronado long-rangt
patrol bomber now in use by the United States Navy. Like all flying boats,
jfhich must travel long distances unescorted, the Coronado has heavy de-
fensive armament. It is powered by four Pratt & Whitney radial air cooled
engines. The Coronado’s wings are tapered slightly on the leading edge to
squared tips. Its tail surface ii almost rectangular and the stubby tip of
the hull extends slightly behind the elevators. There is little or no dihedral
on the wings, but a marked dihedral on the compound tail. The fins and
rudder are almost oval.
next assignment was to Newport, R.
I., where his preliminary training was
completed.
From Newport, Lieut. Arendt was
assigned to sea duty, and spent 20
months aboard the U.S.S. Quincy prior
to being ordered to Chapel Hill.
In addition to his duties as pastor
and counsellor, the Chaplain carries
on the work of Welfare Officer, and
supervises the program of entertain
ment at the station. Chaplain Arendt
finds the salient factor distinguish
ing the Chaplain’s work from the cler
gyman’s to be a lessening of emphasis
on Sunday services, with attention fo
cussed upon the maintenance of a
day-by-day program of attention to
spiritual life.
He considers it a great privilege to
be a Navy Chaplain, and a welcome
opportunity to be stationed here where
there is such a generous response to
his efforts.
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Chapel Hill, North Carolina
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Resources over $3,750,000.00
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