Camp Adair Sentry
Friday, July 21, 1944.
Page Ten
MANY BLACK AND WHITE »ketches such as this (depicting the trip of a
G! suck through Pont laundry) added to prestige of Pfc. Paul Dannheiser. who left
Theodore the V/olf
Adair for Camp Ellis. Dannheiser. incidentally, is no« attending GI brick-layers school.
Now, Look Here, Corporal'
BEST SENTRY
Cartoons
Here are a few of what we be
lieve to be most representative
cartoons run by the Sentry in the
past two years.
Chosen are works by cartoonists
who have appeared often in these
pages. Four are local, two syndi
cated. Dozens of others we would
! like to use, but the space situation
I prohibits.
I On page 11 is a story covering
I art at Adair.
ALTHOIGH THEODORE, by Sgt. Sansone, is a syndicated
release from Camn Newspaper Service, this cartoon, used exclu
sively for two years, in a sense ’belongs' to the Sentry. Originally
the cartoon simply depicted a “dogface." Because of the division
here at the time, the Sentry chose the title "Theodore the Timber
Wolf.” Later Sansone began calling his own creation “The Wolf.”
Theme of "The Wolf" cartoons is definitely simple. Its great appeal
seems to lie in the ingenious quirks, with which Sansone imbues
his central character. Theodore has followed the Sergeant through
training camp, to Alaska and to the South Pacific area.
3ATH '
y
x/
X
MF OF
OOmO
1
ROST-WAR CARS TO
BE DOLLED <JR '42>*
BOSTON. Mass. (ALNS) — A
meeting of automobile distributors
•»eld here was told by the general
manager of a Detroit automobile
ABOVE. CARTOON
plant that tne first post-war cars
rill be DM2 models “dolled pp." He
leclared that a job of debunking
.»ad to be done, to correct an im-
•rvssion that entirely new models
Bitter Irony Dept.
will roll off the assembly lines after
Salt Lake City tCNSi — Ear
the war. The number of models will Campbell, of Chicago, director of
also be cut down, he declared.
the National Safety Council, was all
booked up for a speakinc engage
ment here. But he couldn't keep
the date. He fell down stairs and
broke a leg. •