Saturday, May 22, 1943 CLOUDBUSTER Page Five lighlights of the Past Year ® at this U. S. Navy Pre-Flight School. Across the top are shown views of ^ Hon. Josephus Daniels, who was Secretary of the Navy during the last war, of the School last May 23, and C^det Regimental Commander F. B. Har nessing, USN, the first Commanding Officer, in the lower center. Comdr. ^^mber 26 before leaving for duty afloat. Pictured in the inset, left to right, Ending Officer; Lt. Comdr. James P. Raugh, USNR, Executive Officer; Lt. L. Hamilton, USNR, Head of the Academic Department, and Lt. Comdr. USN (Ret.), who was a shipmate of Capt. Kessing when they both served in the destroyer U.S.S. Reuben James twenty odd years ago. Comdr. Graff has figured prom inently in the growth of the Pre- Flight School from its inception. He was the first line officer to arrive here and directed much of the organizational work involved in establishing the new Naval Station. As the School’s first Ex ecutive Officer, he was respon sible for administering the pol icies set forth by Capt. Kessing, and he took over command of the station last November when Capt. Kessing left for duty afloat. When Comdr. Graff took over command, the Regimental Com mander, Lieut. James P. Raugh, USNR, a graduate of the Naval ■Academy, was promoted to the position of Executive Officer. He has since been made a Lieutenant Commander, and is still serving in that capacity. About the Pre-Flight program itself. It is designed to turn out not only fliers but fighters; not only officers but real leaders who can think in a flash and decide correct ly ; men who not only can take pun ishment but who are schooled to win. It is the ultimate in phys ical and mental conditioning. It’s tough. Training for the cadet is divid ed into academic, athletic and military courses. In the classroom he takes the following subjects: Mathematics and principles of flight, Essentials of Naval Ser vice, aerology, and recognition of ships and aircraft. “We begin with fundamentals,” says Lieut. Comdr. Howard Ham ilton, USNR, head of the Aca demic Department. “You might call it a refresher course, but we take nothing for granted. You’d be surprised at the things these boys don’t know that they should know. “In teaching American history we are anything but objective. We’re inspirational. We have no patience with the recent debunk ing trend which has been so de structive of national ideals. His- I tory as we teach it is an anecdotal record of the gallant exploits of such heroes as John Paul Jones, Stephen Decatur and other fa mous naval heroes. Through their example the cadet is re minded of what is expected of him in the moments of his future bat tles.” Essentials of Naval Service aims to indoctrinate the cadet in Navy law, traditions, regulations. This course teaches him how to be an officer; it is training for lead ership. He gets history of naval aviation, organization afloat and ashore, enemy organization and methods. Important is the study of ideologies of Germany and Japan, the issues of the war, the essentials to victory, the moral values and the need for winning both the war and the peace. “In mathematics we start at the beginning,” continued Lt. Comdr. Hamilton, “simple arithmetic, fractions and decimals, and then building up to algebra, plane geometry and trigonometry. “Aerology takes the practical view of weather problems. It is non-scientiflc; we have weather scientists on the ground who do all the theoretical work for us. The pilot, however, must have certain principles to guide his de cisions and there are special prob- leitis such as icing conditions, fog and so on which he must under stand.” Recognition of ships and air craft develops the skill of the eye, and there is no more serious prob lem than this. Eleven weeks of a cadet’s time is spent on this course. He must learn to know in an instant whether a sighted plane or ship is friend or foe. The school is officered with the finest of teachers, men who would do credit to any university fac ulty. Although there are 10 PhD’s Mail It Home The detailed anniversary story appearing in this issue of the CLOUDBUSTER will be of particular interest to the folks back home, since it traces the development of the Pre- Flight training program and also describes the various phas es of training here. Why not mail them a copy of this issue? on the staff, any one of them can mix it up on the athletic field with the cadets. They are about as far away from the cartoonist’s idea of a college professor as can be imagined. Chosen for their force of character and ability to pre sent a subject, each had a thorough knowledge of his field. The athletic course is divided into two sections: (1) the train ing department in which activity is concentrated in those sports which have the highest carry-over for military usefulness; (2) com petitive, combative sports, de signed to sharpen the will to win. There is a preliminary testing period in which cadets are ti'ied out for strength, speed and agil ity, physical fitness and swim ming. At the end of the training period, cadets show an average in crease of 16 percent in strength, a gain of 22 percent in physical fitness, an average gain of V2 inch in height, a gain of 2 inches around the chest and a loss of 21/2 inches in the waistline. Posture deviations are auto matically corrected. Weight shows a variance of 8 to 22 pounds. The fat ones lose and the thin ones gain. “They get training table food here,” declares Lt. Comdr. Har vey Harman, USNR, in charge of athletics. Activity is divided among 10 sports: swimming, boxing, wrest ling, hand-to-hand combat, bas ketball, football, soccer, gym and tumbling, military track, and labor engineering. Participation in each is preceded by a 20-minute tune-up every day. In the huge University of North Carolina gymnasium is a large amount of equipment, much of it with a nau tical twist, and it is all used. As a cadet participates in these sports and shows a preference for certain of them, he is assigned to competitive teams. In this the cadet’s wishes count about half and the other factor is designed to be corrective. For instance, a lad of retiring temperament will be assigned boxing whether he See ANNIVERSARY, page 6