Saturday^ December 18, 1943 CLOUDBUSTER Page Three The Wolf by Sansone ^ IM) bjr Uoatrrf SjHUoqt, rfiihibutMl by Cunp* Newspa^ S«rvk* ... now that we’re off—what'll you miss th' most?” Norfolk Naval Air Station To Play Cloudbusters Wednesday at 1930 « An easy 60 to 23 victory over Emery & Henry last Saturday flight and the game with the Char leston Coast Guard last night took a back seat in interest as Lieut. R. A. Raese, head basketball men tor, prepared for the biggest test of the season on Wednesday ^'‘ight at 1930 in Woollen Gym- ^^asium. Furnishing the opposition will be the strong Naval Air Station from Norfolk. Last year the two teams played one contest with the Norfolk quintet winning by an easy 65 to 35 score. But things should be different this year. The Cloudbusters are ^uch stronger, have a better bal anced team. Since dropping their , opening game of the season by a ; 44 to 43 score, they have had little * trouble with the opposition. i Among others, Duke was defeated, j 58 to 39, and the Blue Devils are I ^ated tops in the Southern Con ference. The record of the Air Station is just as impressive. Most of their Sames have been won by lop-sided Scores. Some of the finest college stars of the past few years com pose their squad, and' they have been playing longer this year than the Cloudbusters. The game is a tossup; certainly ^t will be one of the best to be play ed in Woollen Gymnasium this year. The Emery & Henry contest saw Coach Raese use his starting five ^ess than half the game. Midway the first period the starting quin tet retired with a 20 to 4 advan tage. At halftime the score was 26 to 14, and the first stringers, back in for the start of the second half, Save the Pre-Flighters a quick 30 Point advantage. It was Cadet Bud Palmer who ' the scoring. Playing half the Same he connected for 10 field Soals and 20 points. Stanley Skaug had 10, John Smith 8, and 'I’ippy Dye 6. The other 16 points ^ere divided between seven Cloud busters. Cameron led the visitors in scor- with seven points, while Mc Clellan and Bakke had five each. In that the Coast Guard game played last night it was im possible to get the score in today’s Cloudbuster. Expected to start for the Pre- ^^ighters against the Air Station be Smith and Dye at the for wards, Palmer at center, and See BASKETBALL, page U Cadet Louis Gremp Returns as Member Of 39th Battalion Cadet Louis (Buddy) Gremp, one of the most popular cadets ever to take Pre-Flight Training here, returned to active participa tion in the Pre-Flight program last week. For the past four months he has been in the station hospital recovering from a knee operation. Young Gremp, who played pro fessional baseball for six years be fore enlisting in the V-5 program, injured his knee while playing first base for the Boston Braves in 1942. He was bothered with the injury again while playing for the Cloudbuster baseball team this past summer. Cadet Gremp played at both sec ond and third base for the base ball nine. His fielding was sensa tional, and his batting average was well over .300. A ball player’s ball player, Gremp always gave the game the best that was in him, and his hus tle and spirit was an inspiration for the whole club. Asked about his stay in the hos pital, he stated that he hated to get so far behind his mates in the program, but that he was deter mined to catch up with them. “I enlisted in V-5 because I wanted to fly for the Navy,” Gremp added, “and I hope that before very long I’ll be at my Primary Base.” From St. Louis, Missouri, Gremp got his first taste of professional baseball with Albany, Georgia of the Georgia-Florida League in 1936. He played there for two years and then moved to Colum bus, Georgia, Hamilton, Ontario, York, Pa., and the Boston Braves, in that order. He was with the Braves in both ’41 and ’42. A “bug” about baseball ever since he was a kid, Gremp was just beginning to hit his stride when he received the knee injury near the end of the 1942 season with the Braves. His first time at bat in a Cloud buster uniform, Gremp hit a home run in deep centerfield with one man on base. That won the game for the Pre-Flighters, 2 to 1. Gremp was a cadet battalion commander of the 25th battalion, but due to the setback resulting from his knee operation he is now in the 39th battalion. Mustangs Set Pace In Winter Sports Program Race Ending up in second place in the fall sports program was evi dently a good stimulus for the Mustang Squadron for with one week of the winter program fin ished they are in first place, some four points ahead of their near est rival. In wrestling, boxing and swim ming the leaders are undefeated, and in soccer they participated in one contest which ended in a tie. Only in basketball have they suf fered a loss. Five squadrons—the Devasta tors, Catalinas, Wildcats, Coro nados, and Buccaneers—are tied for second honors with 12 points. The Kingfishers have 10, Sky rockets and Mariners 8, and the Helldivers, Buffalos and Vindi cators 6 each. In wrestling the Devastators, Catalinas, Wildcats and Mariners are undefeated, while in boxing the Catalinas, Coronados,, Bucca neers, and Mariners have yet to suffer a loss. Victories in swim ming have been registered by the Devastators, Wildcats, Coronados, Buccaneers and Kingfishers, and in Soccer by the Catalinas, Wild cats and Kingfishers. The Coro nados, Skyrockets, and Helldivers See SPORTS PROGRAM, page SEA POWER (Continued from page one) tery of the seas. Japan, according to Kiralfy, is primarily a land power, and the Japanese army is the principal in strument of their aggression. When the Imperial navy is em ployed it is only for the establish ment of beachheads. In fact the role of the navy is limited to the protection of land forces in transit and the covering of amphibious operations. While every other navy assumes these duties, only in Japan is naval strategy complete ly subordinated to the require ments of the army. Hence the Japanese have no conceptions of naval strategy comparable to the control of the seas and blockade which have been fundamental ele ments of Anglo-American naval thought since Mahan’s time. Japan’s strategy of minimum naval risk is borne out in their naval history. During the Sino- Japanese War of 1894 Admiral Ito, commanding the Japanese fleet, neglected every opportunity for a Nelson-like victory over the Chinese. His warships were not exposed to unnecessary risk less their loss deprive troopships of protection. Admiral Togo, the commander- in-chief during the Russo-Jap anese War of 1904-1905, followed See SEA POWER, page U