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About Camp Adair sentry. (Camp Adair, Or.) 1942-1944 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 27, 1943)
Adair Sentry Page Fifte^rï Friday, August 27, 1948. Art Workshop at Portland Art Museum Exhibits? September 1 » ♦ Portrait Mural Study Art Director Projects Second ies; Work Starts in Club 1 New King of Chow Enthroned as SCU QM Chomp Eater Battery Commanders' Scope The king is dead! Long live the ♦------------------------------------------------ king! T'5 Donald Lynch, director of . The mighty monarch of thç — . ; ing by. the Artist Workshop in Club 1, heavy appetite, T/3 Addaway, QM The series is being painted in has started a project of murals for Det., SCU 1911, has fallen by the Club 1 and is now working on the ^ll^> IW colors. Lynch is success- wayside in the kingdom of the second panel in the series of 17. 1 ful in achieving a rich, story-book 1 extra portion, and the qrown, de- The story of the murals is a quality in his work. When finished I noting the eating-est man in the fantasy, taking place in prehistoric the murals will add a very attrac detachment is temporarily resting Oregon, in the time of the happy tive note to the otherwise drab very lightly on the strangely square little people, the Webfeet. The plot wall of the club. dome of S/Sgt. T. Bingel. — is a burlesque of the actions of th* Addaway’s scepter, in this case European Axis of today. THAT OLD FIGHTING BLOOD 1 the knife and fork, was not lost in Future panels will show Hitler, the mess halt. Bingel’s right to Bayonne, N. J. (CNS)—Seven the royal eating robes came after as a caveman, writing his Mein Kampf, organizing the Bund, per ty-six-year-old Frederick F. Bulk- one peek at the amount of calories secuting the Webfeet, and then, eley is the father of a recently- and proteins he’s been able to finally, in turn, being overthrown born 4%-pound son. carry, lift and drag to his foot His wife is 42. by them. locker. Mr. Bulkeley is the father of Lt. The paintings are full of de After said look into sa.’d locker, lightful inconsistencies, such as, a Cdr. John D. Bulkeley, who was in Bingel was immediately granted prehistoric hot-dog man, children charge of the PT boat which res the right to plant his you-know- playing with kites, a steamboat on cued Gen. . MacArthur from Cor wjiat upon the throne as King ojf the lake, and a varsity “eight” row- regidor. Food. —Smith and Gaines. ---------------------------------------- j-------- Art Workshop Exhibit In Portland Sept. 1 Portlanders will have their first opportunity to see the work created by Camp Adair artists in the Soldiers Art Work shop of Club 1 when the Workshop opens its exhibit in the OH. THAT LUCKY SEVEN! A soldier with an ear, as well as an eye, to the future, is Cpl. John Suter of the 96th Division, who in civilian life was a piano instructor in Chicago, and who' now plays the organ in Chapel 7. Five years ago Cpl. Suter came upon a fine piano which he, then and there, decided he must have. For various and sundry rea sons. mostly financial, he was unable to realize his ambition until just recently. The instrument is a Steinway, and how being in the Army provided him the necessary wherewithal must remain a military secret. Be that as it may, the piano now reposes in an air-condi tioned, mothproof warehouse in Chicago, where it will remain silent until the day of victory and reunion with its owner. Entertainers & Emcee at Premieres Popskull New GI I Drink; Tunisian Homebrew Potent From Tunisia comes word of a 1 new GI drink—and we don’t mean soft. It’s called Popskull de Tunisia — strictly heavy-duty stuff, and you can make it without a bathtub. All you need is the copper tubing from a broken-up B-26 bomber, a water can, a five-gallon gasoline can, and a quantity of native wine. From the metal articles listed you make yourself a still. Then, you put in the native Tunisian wine, build a fire under the whole works, and what you get is a white fluid which is almost straight alcohol. One of the inventors of this desert dew kept a careful account of his reactions for the medical journal. His diary says: “The first swal low feels like so much molten lead going into your stomach. The sec- on swallow feels like someone was playing a piano concerto with his bare feet on your backbone. And the third drink feels like someone has dropped a flatiron on your head. That’s why we call it Pop- skull de Tunisia.” The inventors of Popskull have steadfastly resisted all offers to “From birth to age 18, a girl commercialize their creation. They needs good parents. From 18 to claim such a practice would cause 35 she needs good looks. From S3 trouble. They won’t sell PopiknII—but to 55, a woman needs personality. sometimes they’ll give a bottle And from 55 on, the old lady needs away—as a gesture. I cash!”—Kathleen Norris. 1 I SGT. NICK SANSONIA with his accordion. Sgt. Angelo Calabrese, master of ceremonies, and Pvt. Jack Gates, impersonator, sped between Corvallis and Albany last week when they put on enter tainment at both towns before the Oregon premiere of Marner Bros, technicolor picture, “This Is the Army,” the entire proceeds of which are going to the Army Emergency Belief funds.—Sentry photo. _____ Street Scene: 1943 Version rirht wTAvmvi1 i\ THF chow line that was formed <m Willamette Street in Eugere are, left to p T cs Harold Hal vers in and Edmund Numiz. and Marylon Jackson and Ernestine Anderson. Pfe. 2"3 .nd M.Vsg< Paul Whi.U, di«, it ont.-S.ntr, photo. 1 Portland Art Museum at West Park and Madison on September 1. The exhibit, which will continue for two weeks until September 15, will cover work done at the Work shop since its opening last March. Amateur, professional and stu dent work will be represented by caricatures, portraits and land scapes. Painters of all schools will rub shoulders, figuratively, in the showing. It is expected that about 27 men .will exhibit approximately 85 woi ■ Pfc. Paul Dannheiser, of the P. st MPs, will show two charcolil p. y- traits and several studies for his mural series, which is now being- accomplished in Service Club 2. ( Dannheiser studied in Philadelphia I and has worked for some of the ! nation’s leading fashion magazines. Timber Wolf Pvt. Ray Allen, v .10 recently had a one-man show in 1 the library of Club 1, will be veil (represented. Among his wo.lis there will be a beautiful composi- I tion in oil on paper, entitled, “Sor- | rowful Mother.” Another Timber Wolf painter will exhibit the two largest pic- tures of the group. Sgt. Morton, Dimondstein who 'is, himself, th© I subject of a portrait on a smaller 'canvas, studied in New York ami worked for a time in Mexico with the great Mexican muralist, Crosz- ' co. Cpl. Daniel S. Paulausky, Timber Wolf, and Pvt. Art Palermo, SCU, 1 both studied at the Chicago Art Institute. Pvt. Palermo is exhibit ing a sketch in oil of the Stockade, and Cpl. Paulausky is showing a charcoal sketch of “Pat.” M/Sgt. Hidalgo, of the 70th Division, who has developed a hi_ - ly personal style, w ill also be repre sented. Other exhibits will include: “Se • try” and tw'o charcoal heads, “Lady” and “No Lady,” by Pvt. Lifshultz; a pencil study by March». Halye; “6 x 2 x 2” by Pvt. Floy d D. Hager; abstractions by Sgt. Ortega of the 70th; water colon by Cpl. Hank Shea of the Timber Wolf Division; and an oil, “Oregon. Coast,” by T/5 Donald Lynch, tie Workshop’s director. Also represented will be Pvt. Leonard Kimbrell, Pvt. Joseph Booth and “Sutton,” who left, with disgust, his first and last attempt at “art.” This latter thing is called “Four Bags.”