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^ Saturday, November 18, 1944 CLOUDBUSTER Page Three Rep. Judd, Noted Medical Missionary, To Address Cadet Regiment at Chapel Rep. Walter Judd, Minnesota, a^ doctor who served as a medical 1 missionary in China for many • years, will address the cadet regi- ' ment in the chapel services tomor- ' row in Memorial Hall. Dr. Judd was on the staff of the ' Mayo Clinic when he went to ' China under the Federal Board of ^ Commissioners for Foreign Mis- •' sions. Until Japanese restrictions ' prevented his continuing in 1938, " he supervised, hospital work. Up on his return to the United States he toured the country as a lectur- 3 er on the Chinese-Japanese situa- 1 tion. { In 1941 he retired to private 1 practice of medicine in Minnesota ; but his lectures attracted such at- - tention that he was urged to run • for Congress. Elected, he went to - Washington in 1942. 1 Further discussion of his Sun- ■ day topic will take place on Mon- • day at 1900 in Murphey Audi- ! torium, when Rep. Judd will lead ) a forum for the cadets. CAMP PEARY I (Continued from page one) ' great teams of 1937-38-39 and a former Chicago Bear. Andy Uram, one of the finest backs ever to play at Minnesota, heads a backfield which includes John Kordich of Southern Cali fornia, Bob Morrow of the Chica go Cardinals and Joe Bukant, an other Cardinals ace. Pre-Plight emerged from the 33-to-18 victory over Georgia Pre- Flight in good condition, with the exception of Stan Koslowski, hard hitting fullback. Koslowski may *iot play any of the game. The re- ; turn, however, of Ray Bray and Gene Flick in the line, and J. T. Levay, Jitterbug Kellogg and Spec Sanders in the backfield will take up some, if not all, of the slack. AROUND the STATION Among the service teams in the nation, the Cloudbusters rank fourth in the Williamson Ratings and seventh in the Associated Press standings as released this past week. Only Randolph Field (99.2), Bainbridge Navy (97.4) and Nor man Air Station (96.0) rank high er than the Cloudbusters (95.4) in the Williamson Rating. Others in the first 10 include Iowa Pre- Flight (94.2), March Field (94.0), Great Lakes (93.8), Third A.A.F. (93.2), Second Air Force (93,0) and Fort Pierce (92.9). Ensign Johnny Pesky, who played shortstop on the Cloud- buster baseball nine in 1943, was present at the game with Georgia Pre-Flight last Saturday at At hens. Now stationed at the Naval Air Station in Atlanta, Ensign Pesky was on the Cloudbuster bench for part of the game. Prior to enlist ing in V-5 he played shortstop for the Boston Red Sox in the Amer ican League, and in 1942 was named the “Rookie of the Year.” The Cloudbuster baseball nine on which Pesky performed here was considered one of the finest service teams in the nation. Such stars as Buddy Hassett, Ted Wil liams, Harry Craft, Dusty Cooke, Buddy Gremp, Joe Coleman and John Sain, all former major leaguers, were on the club. r. HOW TO RELAX in a coach car, or are they really sleeping? This candid shot was snapped on the return trip from Athens last Sun day. On the left is Cadet Dan Weitekamp, Cloudbuster quarter back and regimental commander of the 59th Battalion, while rest ing on his shoulder is Irene Con tois, HA2c, who is one of the WAVE cheerleaders. —Coming Up— TODAY: Football Cloudbusters vs. Camp Peary in Kenan Stadium at 1430. At the Movies Village: Free Movie, “Pin Up Girl,” starring Betty Grable and Joe E. Brown. Features start at 1916 and 2055. Carolina: “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.” Pick: “Call of the Jungle,” starring Ann Corio. SUNDAY: At the Movies Village: “Meet the People,” starring Lucille Ball and Dick Powell. Carolina: “Kismet,” starring Ronald Colman. Pick: “Son of Dracula,” featur ing Louise Albritton. WEDNESDAY, NOV. 22: Memorial Hall Happy Hour with movie fea ture and shorts. Starts 1920. Cross Country Team Closes 1944 Season With 6-1 Record Scoring another victory at Athens last Saturday, the Cloud buster cross-country team ended the season with a record of 6 wins against a single loss. In Saturday’s meet, in which Georgia Pre-Flight, Georgia Tech and the Cloudbusters participat ed, the local runners won with a low total of 26 points. Georgia Pre-Flight was second with 29 points and Georgia Tech was third with 95. Over the past two seasons the Cloudbusters have won 11 meets against one loss. Only the Naval Academy has emerged victorious, and its team this year is consid ered the finest in the nation. Victories in 1944 were regis tered against the University of North Carolina, Duke, Virginia, Cherry Point, and the aforemen tioned Georgia Pre-Flight and Georgia Tech. Cadets M. G. Knox, 60th Bat talion, and J. N. Wilson, 59th, were outstanding competitors fol lowed closely by Cadets G. C. Place, E. R. Clappsaddle, K. D. Faust, D. A. Dyer, H. K. Griffith, H. M. Dufford, J. G. Buckley. On ly two men on the entire squad had previous running experience. Lt. (jg) Mark Panther and Lt. (jg) Charles Beetham of the track department have been in charge of the team all season. San Francisco (CNS) — San Francisco’s post war-plans in clude a proposed fleet of 26 14- engined Pan American clippers, based here for one-day round trip to Hawaii. Long Beach, Cal. (CNS)—The will of Ellis Scates, 76, leaves $250 to a local, church—with this note appended: “St. Peter, Take Note!”
Cloudbuster (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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