Friday, January 26, 1945 CLOUDBUSTER Page Three Smash Records In Navy War Bond Program All Navy War Bond records ^ere smashed in December, when bond purchases for the month totaled $120,701,910, it been announced by the Office of Coordinator for War Bonds in Washington. The December total ^ar surpassed the previous high of $78,587,569, registered last July. The tremendous total was Reached not only because of the Pearl Harbor Day volume of $62,568,845 but also because of Another record - breaking per formance—the December allot- *^ent total of over 42 million ^ollars. Bond purchases for 1944 totaled $576,201,731, as against «99,116,307 for 1943, or an in crease of 93 per cent. Navy Yards, NAS Lead December purchases showed ^112 per cent increase over the ^ecember 1943 figure of $57,- 1,654 and brought the grand total since the inception of the Navy War Bond program in Oc tober, 1941, to $982,492,371. The Navy Yards and the Naval ^ir Stations led the bond pro gram in December with 93.6 per Cent of the civilian personnel of the yards investing 11.2 per cent of their gross payroll and 94.6 Per cent of the Air Stations in vesting 11 per cent. As of December 31 effective ^^lotments of uniformed person- 'jiel totaled 1,982,577. Of these, 1)631,010 were by Navy person- JJ^el; 266,000 by the Marine ^orps and 85,567 by the Coast ^uard. Chicken Supper A buffet chicken supper will ?e held Sunday, Jan. 28, at 1900 the Officers’ Club. Officers their wives are invited. The Wolf by Sansofie opT^ght I94S by Leonard Sanson«. distributed by Camp Newspaper Servic* \ 0 r/1/ ^ mw lilt Mb IMt Wmf- \ " I I t "A simple 'hello will do!" —Correction— In the 5 January issue of “Cloudhuster” the headline and article about Comdr. William R. (Killer) Kane, USN, were in error in that he was referred to as the “New Pre-Flight Head” and as “Commanding Officer” of the Naval Aviation Physical and Military Training Program. Com mander Kane is head of Physical and Military Training for Naval Aviation, under the Director of the Aviation Training Division, Office of Chief of Naval Opera tions. The Navy’s Pre-Flight School here is one of the units of the Naval Air Primary Training Cadet Place Was Pacific Vet Before The job of steering a destroyer ^Uring general quarters once be- ^nged to Aviation Cadet George Place of Somerville, N. J. When the USS Connor put out t^om Boston in 1943, Place was Aboard a s a ^ U artermaster m participat- , in ensuing battles and ^aids off Wake island. New ^ f i t a i n and ^New Ireland, as J'^ell as the in vasion of the ^ filberts. Upon ' :|^e occasion of ^ the New Brit- attack. Cadet Place spent ^hristmas Eve at the wheel of Connor, executing zig-zag to avoid possible Jap to ^Pedoes. Quartermaster^ Reporting To Hill In February the Connor was making raids off Truk, the Mari anas, Saipan and Guam, seeking Jap shipping. After the comple tion of this duty Place boarded a Dutch ship at Pearl Harbor and returned to the United States to enter cadet training. Place, who enlisted in the Navy in October of 1940, was as signed to the USS Savannah on completion of his boot training and received a pre-war taste of sea duty during a good-will tour to New Zealand and South America’s east coast. Later, still aboard the Savannah, he took part in the African invasion. As an athlete, Place still holds the one-mile record he estab lished at Somerville, N. J., high school, and he was a member of the Pre-Flight varsity track team here at Chapel Hill. Command, of which Rear Ad miral O. B. Hardison, USN, is Chief, with command headquar ters at Naval Air Station, Glen view, 111. COMING EVENTS TOMORROW MOVIES Village: Free movies, "This Is the Life,” with Susanna Foster and Donald O’Connor, at 1315 and 1449, and "Thousands Cheer,” with Kathryn Gray son and Gene Kelly, at 1900 and 2113. Carolina: "Dark Waters,” with Merle Oberon and Franchot Tone. Pick: "Louisiana Hayride,” with Judy Canova. BASKETBALL Carolina Pre-Flight vs. Georgia Pre- Flight, Woollen Gym at 1930. BOXING Carolina Pre-Flight vs. Cherry Point Marines, Woollen Gym at 2100. SUNDAY DIVINE SERVICES Protestant: Memorial Hall at 1000. Catholic: Gerrard Hall at 0615, Hill Music Hall at 1000. Jewish: Hillel House at 1000. MOVIES Village: Free movies, "Swing Fever,” with Kay Kyser and Marilyn Maxwell, at 1310 and 1448. Carolina: "Thin Man Goes Home,” with William Powell and Myrna Ley. Pick: "Sensations of 1945,” with Elea nor Powell. MONDAY BASKETBALL Pre-Flight vs. Camp Lejeune, Woollen Gym at 1930. TUESDAY WRESTLING Pre-Flight vs. Duke, Woollen Gym at 1930. WEDNESDAY BASKETBALL Pre-Flight vs. Edenton Marines, Woollen Gym at 1930. 80th Jap Admiral Dies Honolulu (CNS)—Eighty Jap admirals have died since last May, according to a Tokyo broadcast picked up here. Latest to go was Vice Admiral Hiroshi Nakagawa. Cause of his demise was not announced. Former Cadet Here Made Heroic Fight To Defend His Ship A former Pre-Flight cadet at Chapel Hill—Lieut, (jg) Wil liam Gallagher of Belmont, Mass.—now is listed as missing in action following a heroic choice to defend his ship with little gasoline rather than fly to safety. Lieut, (jg) Gallagher, who reported to this school on Oct. 1, 1942, was in the 10th battalion. A Navy torpedo plane pilot— with only a few minutes’ supply of gas in his Avenger—Lieut, (jg) Gallagher calmly elected to strike the Japanese battle fleet instead of flying to a ship, a combat report reveals. It hap pened in the Second Battle of the Philippines, during the epi sode in which a powerful force of enemy battleships and cruis ers closed on a small group of U. S. baby flattops and destroy ers off Samar Island. Japs Cross Target Lieut, (jg) Gallagher was aboard the USS Gambier Bay. Later sent to the bottom, this escort carrier hurriedly was launching its planes while Jap shells kicked up towering geys ers on both sides of the flight deck. Lieut, (jg) Gallagher had only enough gasoline in his plane to last 10 to 12 minutes, and there was no time to put in more. Told he had barely enough to fly to another carrier, the 22- year-old airman chose instead to defend his own ship. “I’ll use the gas for fighting,” he said. As soon as his plane was in the air he headed for a Jap cruiser, maneuvered into position, and executed a bombing run through a vicious barrage of anti-aircraft fire. A few minutes later an other Navy pilot saw Lieut, (jg) GaUagher’s plane smoking and losing altitude. Possibly hit by flak and certainly out of gaso line, the Avenger made a forced landing in the very center of the Jap fleet. Shortly afterward the enemy warships, harried by planes from the baby flattops and threatened by the approach' of other Navy units, broke off the engagement and fled through San Bernardino Strait. —Fighter Ace— (Continued from Page 1) exploits during this and the Sec ond Battle of the Philippine Sea. During the seven months of operations before it returned to the United States for a rest pe riod, Air Group 15 compiled a carrier group record of 312 enemy planes destroyed in the air; 348 destroyed on the ground; 388 probably destroyed or dam aged in the air and on the ground; a carrier, a destroyer, and a destroyer escort sunk without aid from other air groups.