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About Camp Adair sentry. (Camp Adair, Or.) 1942-1944 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 31, 1943)
Jr ( amP Adair Sentry ~ ~ '1 ‘ * I----------- ( It' Friday, December 31, 1943. Entire 91 st Division Passes in Review Before Commanding Generals Things Should Start A-Buzzing lilt. M AG It1 ACT of the Great I.ester in 'Dim’ Your Lights" reaches a climax when the ma gician runs a three-foot whirl ing buzz saw through the torso of his assistant, pretty Diane Rivers. Since Diane has been "sawed in half" ah >ut 2.000 times, it is reasonable to suppose that everything will come out all right. "Dim Your Lights." a I S()-Camp Show, will be on the Post .Monday and Tuesday nights. TUI? DH/tfir’x/ xr . --- Dhisinn Photo 5 . - 1 ” h 1 1SI(»N AL B\1 PA LION of t Ji' *63rd Inf. Rep.. 91st Division, passes in review pV,<nCkt r,K2d,er (.eneral Ralph Hospital. Major Genera! William G. !.ive>a\ and Major (¡eneral John anlquist. General Dahlquist. commanding ge teral of the 7Cth Division.* was the guest review ing officer, and (general Hospital, division aMil ery commander, was commander of the troops. The retie* was held last Thursday, at which time Gen ral Livesay took the opportunity to extend holi- _ day greetings to entire personnel of his command. Gen. Dahlquist Guest At All-Division Review Major General John E. Dahlquist. commander of the 70th Infantry Division, was the guest of the 91st Infantry Division and its com-! mander, Major General William G. Livesay, at the division review held a week ago yesterday. Brigadier General Ralph Hospi tal, acting as commander of the troops, presented the command to General Livesay and General Dahlquist. at which time General Livesay made a brief address of holiday greetings to the division. Then with the band leading, the entire division passed in review before the three generals, (See pictures). T*oLocal Reporters Spend Day with 91sf Impressed by Typical Army Day of Training HOLIDAY TOMORROW Division commanders have given their men something to i In the interest of keeping the ’ be thankful for in the form of a public informed on the activities of ! very tangible New A’ear’s greet their Army, two reporters repre- I senting the Salem Capitol Journal ' ing. • (Continued from page one) and the Corvallis Gazette-Times | hundred ambulatory patients T Training schedules have been were conducted through a cross enjoy a ¡»arty presented this e" < • adjusted to permit as many men section of the 91st Division train- , ning under the direction of Eliza as possible in both the. 70th and ing last week. beth Stetson, chief recreat i the 91st Divisions to enjoy a worker of the Red Cross. full holiday on New Year's I Fred E. Zimmerman of the Capi There will be a two-hour New Day. Troops attached to the 4th tol Journal and Myron K. Myers Year’s Eve cabaret program in ‘ Army’s 7th Hqs. will also have of the Corvallis Gazette-Times auditorium from 6:30 to K:30 with (Continued from page one) a full holiday, it has been an were the guests of Major General William G. Livesay in an all-day Magazine as a permanent picture refreshments served at the c - nounced. tour of training. record of their Army career, copies elusion. The two reporters were highly of the first number will also be on The New Year will be brought . impressed with the demonstration sale at orderly rooms. Special in at the Medical Officers Club witn Somebody Steals Alarm of the famous rocket launcher as money-saving price« will be made an evening which will include dk: • well as the new .45-cal. machine for these copies when bought in ing to Sgt. Joe Sieff’s 10-pi-ve Clock of SCU Buglers; (gun pistol, which was fired by the combination with Number 2. Tee Hee Hee, Hee Hee! 91st Division Reconnaissance Over 1500 photographs make up snappy orchestra. A midnight s. - per is planned. | Troop. the magazine, each one captioned Regimental and unit non-ce » --------- Some day the six SCU buglers None of the normal training and in most cases every man iden dubs in the 91st are planning z A scintillating program opens are to murder somebody, schedule was disrupted for the tour, tified. The book strikes a balance dances, and all the non-coms r-f the new year for the Trailblazer Th*s nTaJ' problematical, for the The reporters were conducted among all the units in the 70th the Post will likewise spread their radio show, Mondaj- evening, at "hole problem revolve« around an through a normal day of the 91st. Division, with most of the empha’is wings with parties which will r- firing on the ’ known being on candid shots of the final elude dancing at most clubs. •Club 2. alarm clock, missing since Tues- ’ This ru:“ ! included ’ distance range, the Medical De phase of basic training. First number of 1944 will be the ^ay. The magazine is published by the appropriate “Strike Up, The Band”! Apparently, an alarm clock is tachment obstacle course for Ball Studios of Corvallis, in coop stretcher bearers, artillery crews by the 70th Band under CWO Lor-, what wakens buglers. en E. Christensen, and T/Sgt. Bill] It follows from this that the in action, .50-cal. machine Runs eration with the Public Relations Six of the Bloody Axe 276th I*X Section of G-2. cannoneers won promotions rece-’. Rodenbaugh's dance orchestra will clock which woke the bugler who in field firing, the new’ engineers’ Captain George Godfrey, Division recall that perennial favorite' was reported a month or so ago in obstacle course and many of the Public Relations Officer, took many Iv, it was announced by Catr.'- i other phases of training in which Co. "What Is This Thing Called Lore." the Sentry as having blown Reveille of the striking photographs, includ William I.. Griffith and Cliff- •< By popular request, Sgt. Mattie!an hour early, mutt have been off the division is now engaged. ing the cover shot at a mass forma Carnevale's rhumba band encores its cuckoo. 1 Mr. Myers showed that a little tion of the 274th Infantry Regi T, Meredith were advanced to his arrangement of numbers from But that was a month ago and hunting experience comes in handy ment which appeared on page 3 of géant, and corporal’s stripes w •> given Roia rt E. Bailey. William H. "Oklahoma” and also does two t.yp- now the only fact that remains is when it comes to shooting, as he last week’s Sentry. McPherson, Jack J. DcTairgy :• 1 ical numbers. “Besame Mucho" and ' that the lone clock has been miss- shot a four and two three’« in three The new Trailblazer will sell at Chester L. Vannoy. shots with the M-l. The two re “Mama Yo Quiero.” i ing since Tuesday. Nobody has off- 30c, wrapped for mailing. At the porters lunched with Major Gen The dance band has a novelty.ered a reward. Enlisted men wishing to cv?h same time, a limited number of number called “Story,” and the, Probably the "entry, which is eral Livesay at noon. the last issue will be available to checks at any of the PXs rr.-rt military band closes the program always sitting down in wet paint, purchasers of the new issue only, first have the checks endorsed / with the martial "Footlifter.” I shouldn’t have printed this article. their own company commander at 15c each. Varied Post Events Will Usher in 1944 ''Trailblazer' On Sale Today Snappy Program To Open 70th/s '44 Radio Show Series Cannoneers Up Field Army Instructs ASTU Army “HOW CAN SUCH a crade device perforw »ach reatark- abie thing«?" ■ “'» ASTI' ■ «« at Oregon State t oilege aa T/HgL Jalta OTIri»» pataU M« tbe differeel famrlieeta st i the Arm* Paet- m «» abie Water r«rW»er Tba» is gort at tbe prograai te give tbe »be - deut eegtneer. practica! MMt met le«. Lt. Ross Succeeds Capt. Moore, Post Exchange Officer Lt. William H. Ross has been named Post Exchange Officer to succeed Capt. Frank L. Moore, I who will assume a new assignment at another posft in the very near future. Arriving at Camp Adair in May, I 1943, Lt. R<*s has been working as • assistant to Capt. .Moore, and from July until November he was in l charge of PX operations in the I Dei d Maneuver Area. A native of Chicago. Lt. Ross ! cn-ne by his merchandising exper- i ience through association with the I S. S K reeve Co. in stores through out the Middle West. He attended the Army Exchange School at Princeton University and prior to I receiving his commission was an ; 1 enlisted man at Camp Grant. III. | Capt. Moore originally came to Adair in November, 1942. ami served as assistant to Maj. Ru dolph J. Ayres. He assumed com plete responsibility when Maj. Ayr«» was transferred to an over seas assignment. He recently com pleted special courses at the Army Exchange School. 1 ------- — 1 Burmese women still smoke 1 cheroots and chew betel nuts. I New ’Long Tom' Anti-Tank Gun Trailblazer Fi ANTI-TANKMEN OF the t-T <».. 27«th lai . get ¡Mr fi»t rNaipa» «4 the Arar'» uew 57-a»m. aati-taah ian. the first of it- kind to he exhibited to Ben of the 7*th Di«i«ioa. V.