Dedicated to the week­ ly issue of interesting, accurate and complete GI news to the per­ sonnel of Camp Adair, Oregon. Ry special arrange­ ment, USO programs for towns surrounding Camp Adair will be published each week. You will find them tab­ ulated on Page 11. Vol. 2, No. 8. Camp Adair, Oregon, Thursday, June 10, 1943. $1.50 a Year by Mail - MAY MAKE SACS SAD SACKS ■ ■ I ---------- V — -■ 'Wolf Ball Nine Plays Army & Loggers Portland, Sacramento To Combat Fires Meet Coast Guard Here Friday; Battle Solons in Salem Monday Two great ball games, one on the Post tomorrow, will be played by the Timber Wolf Division nine. Lt. Bob Duffy, division athletic officer, yesterday an- I ----------------------------- ♦nounced the first “home game" played by the potent Wolf team will take place on the Sea Gull diamond at 5:30 p. m. tomorrow, against the powerful Coast Guard team of Portland. Post Switches to I Sun Tan Monday Memo Out Today; No ODs In Camp; Field Jackets Taboo I I Monday, the division nine will play the Pacific Coast league contenders, the Sacramento So­ lons. at the George E. Waters ball park, Salem. Game is called for 6 p. m. / ---------- Monday, Camp Col. Frazier Warns Oi Incendiary Fire Menace to Timber A program of cooperatiqp to combat incendiary forest fires be- gan last Monday with an opening adaress by Lt. Col. Joseph E. Fraz­ er, Post Ordnance Officer, before loggers of the Willamette Valley Tree Farm Association, in Dorena, Giegon. Col. Frazer attacked the mili­ tary aspects of the problem while Major Earl F. Armstrong, Post Chemical Warfare Officer, dis­ cussed various types of incend­ iary bombs. All EM are invited to attend both The main point of Col. Frazer’s Adair will games. The Sea Gull playing field is at 12th St. N. and C Ave. Details speech was that “a basic strategy switch over to sun tans. in Sentry sports section. of modern warfare is to weaken This was the announcement re­ | the enemy by knocking out his war ceived just before going to press . industries.” last night, from the office of Capt. The enemy objective is “to cut Gilbert A. Waite, Post Adjutant. off or destroy the supply of raw Today’s memo, signed by the Post materials.” Few, if gny, raw ma­ Commander, Col. Gordon•. H- Mc­ terials ate- more basic to national Coy, will detail the general condi­ defense than the timber stands of tions, viz.: Opportunity Offered the Pacific Northwest. (1) Sun Tans will be the dress To Advance in Ranks The responsibilities of combat­ uniform on the Post at all times. ting saboteurs and incendiary (2) ODs may only be worn off Captain Joseph C. Herron, Resi- bombs lie with the loggers, Who the Post. dent Engineer, Camp Adair, Ore- know the local terrain better than (3) Field jackets may not be gon, has announced that nine Army authorities do. The Army, worn off the 0ost unless the wear­ thousand trade specialists per however, will advise and assist er is going to or from his home. month are needed by the construc­ to the fullest extent. tion branch, Army Corps of En­ The order is Post-wide. A series of meetings were held gineers. in the local lumbering towns, but The Army does not want men the “Buy Bonds Now! Later Is Too movement will eventually who are at present engaged in es­ spread to every logging communi­ Late!” sential war work. However, skilled ty in Oregon. construction workers, who are shortly to be inducted, are urged NO. THIS ISN’T A MIRACLE! On Corps of Engineers Needs Specialists SGT. JACK KNOTT, former St. Louis Browns’ pitcher, who will not start in game against Portland Coast Guards tomorrow, but will exercise some of his big-league potency against Sacra­ mento next Monday in game at Salem. Who Stole My Cerne? or — 'Dix Cadre' in Conclave Blow It Out! By Sgt. Tommy “Blivet” Ryan THEY HAVE EVEN LESS HAIR THAN THE EDITOR During the course of every man’s life there must come one unforget­ table moment—a moment that will always live in his memory, that will withstand #the repeated attacks of i time on the march; that will be | vivid and burning long after, far into the years. Such will be June 28. 1942, in the minds of 400 men from Ft. Dix, New Jersey, whose fate it was to be the first official group of men to arrive at Camp Adair. Re­ cruits from the induction center, j they liked to be called “cadremen.” I Sits and Gazes As I sit here and gaze at the maze of buildings that now dot the Oregon countryside my mind races back—no, not to New Jer­ sey, but to Wellsdale. as the se­ lect few really saw it. A dilapidated SP Station house just across the tracks from a big red barn. It was early summer, the breeze was balmy, too. The poi­ son oak was in bloom. Bloom was from the Bronx. The red men had long since van­ ished. tired and oppressed by the ^ver-rising taxes. The local hoosiers had gone to work for Kaiser. Camp Adair, in the shadow of Coffin Butte, was dumped into the laps (Continued oh Page. A Col. 3) Scene: Mess Hall, Post Head­ quarters company. Opposing each other at noon chow are S/Sgt. Bradford Col­ lins and Sgt. John Bach, both capable of getting sunburned on the terp of the head (to put it mildly). Peering across the stacks of food S/Sgt. Collins asked: “By the way Bach, did you have blond hair when you were a baby?” Sgt. B., suspiciously: “I dun- no—why ?” S/Sgt. C.—“Well I did. And it was curly. And lots of it— honest.” Well, old fellows—. Pfc. Andrew Soreiano found a field jacket which had been returned to him by mistake by the Post Laundry. According to Miss Betty Schliep, in charge of the office, he promptly turned in the jacket. Surprised? We aren’t; every­ one is honest here! Oh yeah? NO SPEAKAPHONE EDDIE DAVIS ILL Genial Eddie Davis, the Pepsi­ , Cola representative who operates the Speakaphone machine at Serv­ ice Club 2. is on sick leave this week. He wishes to inform those that want to make voice recordings ! that he will be hack again as soon as the Doc says it is O.K. Have you bought your theater coupon book? 12 for $1.20—Save: And buy war stamps. FROM TAPS TO REVEILLE ... or more correctly speaking, from reveille to taps. Pfc. Ted Dutton is the bugler who, with the assistance of th s newly installed gig-t megaphone directly in front of Post Headquarters, awakens the EM and makes with the bugle call« until taps at 11 p. m. He demonstrates the new megaphone for Capt. Gilbert A. Waite, Pest Adjutant. ...-.•“little boy blue, let’s blow that horn!” —Public Relations Photo.