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Show ijhtin1 Inghamites jeport Lil Jav Kuhni, an alumnus of Sm'high school, class of Si will graduate as a second Lnant from the . army air S's technical training school iYalc university, New Haven, In. according to word receiv-ftrom receiv-ftrom his parents. Mr. and Mrs. L Kuhni of Sandy, formerly fBingham. Jay was a student J the Utah State Agricultural ... school of engineering at I ; un before he left to begin j ning I . . eutenant Edward P. Saker, loned at Casper, Wyo., ar-lj ar-lj Saturday to spend a two--Its' leave with his wife, the iner Miss Donna Sturgill, at home of her parents, Mr. and ; . James Hill of Telegraph. . Corporal Rudolph Zaccaria, Itfth Africa, wrote a V-mail tt-r March 7 which was receiv-i receiv-i just a month later by the Bul-ftfc Bul-ftfc It's good to hear from the lots even when they are so e$or-shy or modest that they 0 jiot attempt to slip in a little 4unal news. Corporal Zaccaria ; $ two sheets to say how much ' ejenjoyed the Christmas edi- Iof the Bulletin. The adver-g, adver-g, sponsors of that issue would jeciate the picture given by ,aiia's letter: a soldier in jflth Africa, reading a Christ-i Christ-i edition of a home paper in fch and being sincerely grate-4 grate-4 "You'll never know how 1 1 was to receive it It was j first paper I have received the good old town since I f been overseas I let some jhe fellows read it and they li!ht it was swell I hope I Ave more of the papers soon fhank you very much." rporal Zaccaria recently fe his brother, Frank Zac-$, Zac-$, that he was well and that .in where I am it doesn't look the war will last much long- 1 Corporal Zaccaria went into tfee November 18, 1941, train-i train-i it Camp Wallace, Texas, and ;p Hulen, Texas and Palm wrings, Calif., and in August, i went overseas. i Soldier's Life Hi Yo! Walter Bolic, at officers' train- i:amp at Wilmington, N. C, s that boot training is the lest ordeal imaginable. The lircraft officers are given 17 s of intensive training in-of in-of 12, as formerly. The day s at 5:30 a.m. and the last is at 9:00 p.m. Lots of the wash out and many of them visions of being shipped in a box. vate First Class Peter C. ws, sun 'of Mr and Mrs. Eles Dimas, arrived home y to spend his first furlough, days. Inducted June 26, Pfc. Dimas spent a short at Fort Douglas and was A to Camp Carson, Colo., on !, 10, 1942, where he is with ;fiead headquarters' company, fraduate of Bingham high W, class of 1942, Pfc. Dimas ned 200 pounds when he en- service. The physical train-Jook train-Jook him down to 165 pounds ne has since built up to 180 fas, all muscle and no sur-1 sur-1 His fi iends in Salt Lake I and Bingham were delight- see "Pete". His father is a Ioer of the American Legion, lam post No. 30, and left Nv. 1917, was shipped eas the next February and d four months in France, and Mrs. David C Lyon fed word Monday that their "avid Reed Lyon, has been fron- the rank of lieu-f1 lieu-f1 to captain in the depart-f depart-f l communications at Fort i UKla., where he is an in- ,1 graduate of the University Mah in June, 1941, Captain T 5as commissioned a sec-S sec-S lieutenant in December, xhL es,m' officer in the field T2i In, J;'nuary of 1942 he J ordered to Camp Roberts, 4 where he remained a few before receiving an as-, as-, a communications Talst school at Fort Sill, Id norVvhich he was grad-rft?" grad-rft?" 8. Before leaving 1 f,ortK "uachuca, Ariz., on I ' iw married Miss Cherie I n r ' auShter of Mr. and lavpnT1' Moss of 1327 Michi- WnUSSalt Lake City. IjWW Lyon received his sum a; first lieutenant Fneu He was transferred mb Fort Sill d t' He was reas-;h reas-;h to Fort Huachuca on return !f a few weeks later turned to Fort SilL 1 Privl'Sr,frorn Tulsa. Okla., 123 X6 Gates p- Christen-Itenlr Christen-Itenlr 030 mother, Mrs. Pearl f whncp hyies in Richfield, Jensen rlfe' Ann Pollick 1 Sarin, 'T8 in the Bour" f ersitv LVnts arrivpd at the ?Kf Tulsa Mar 25 'face i, cmrse of army (monthc irrUctlon wnich lasts atm,LSnor to his appoint-r appoint-r Ued 0Q Page eiihU FIGHTIN' WNGHAMITES KEPORT (Continued from page one) ment as an aviation cadet in the air forces. He will receive numerous num-erous academic courses as well as elementary flying training. Upon completion of the course he will be classified as a pilot, navigator or bombardier and go to schools of the Flying Training Command for training in his specialty. Private Kendall Jones, who is stationed at Wilmington, N. C, air base, spent last week-end with his sister Officer Candidate Justine Jones, who is at Northampton, North-ampton, Mass-, training with the WAVES. Corporal Julian Baum, in New Guinea, says that he is stationed at a high elevation and is making mak-ing a collection of butterflies Recently he witnessed a native dance which he says was a gruesome grue-some and frightening sight for anyone to stumble upon unawares. unawar-es. A son of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Baum, Corporal Baum sailed March 11, 1942, and arrived in Australia April 1. He has been in New Guinea for four months. Sergeant Howard C. Thomas of Drew field, Florida, arrived Sunday night to spend a 10-day furlough with his mother, Mrs. J. J. Barrett, and brothers, Carl Barrett and Wilbur C- Thomas. Lieutenant Howard Bellows is now stationed at Camp White, Oregon. Lt. Bellows is a graduate of officers' training school at Fort Belvoir, Va. Petty Officer 3 C Robert (Bob) W. Kliebenstein arrived Monday to spend four days in Bingham as guest of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Blakely. Kliebenstein spent the past 10 months working out of Pearl Harbor. He left Thursday for Annapolis, Md., to attend officers' of-ficers' training school for five months. Bob met A. D. (Dee) Christensen at Pearl Harbor and also saw Tony Montoya on an island in the South Pacific. Before Kliebenstein entered the navy he was employed in the engineering department of Utah Copper company and lived at Cyprus hall. He joined the navy in April, 1943, and received his basic training at Norfolk, Va. Robert D. Goff, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey L. Goff of Copper-ton, Copper-ton, left five weeks ago for army air corps training. He was transferred trans-ferred from Fresno, Calif., last week and sent to East Oregon College of Education at LaGrande, Ore., to receive a five months' academic course before he is assigned as-signed to specialized training in some branch of the air corps. John L. Thurmond advanced from apprentice seaman to seaman sea-man second class on graduation from the U. S. naval training station sta-tion at Farragut, Idaho, March 26. Assigned as an aviation machinist ma-chinist and ordnance man, Thurmond Thur-mond is nov attending school at Norman, Ok la. A son of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Thurmond of Copper-field, Copper-field, he writes he is well and happy and says, "Tell everyone hello for me." Private Austin Loveless is attending at-tending a 10-week school in the signal training regiment at Fort Monmouth, Red Bank, New Jersey. Jer-sey. Pvt. Loveless was transferred transfer-red from Camp Kohler, Calif. He is a son of Mr. and Mrs. P. O. Loveless of Copperton. Seaman 2 c Jack Pollock came home Sunday to spend a 10 days' furlough with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Pollock. He is to report to Farragut, Ida., for assignment as-signment to sea dutv. |