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Show I The young man who Bill Til-den Til-den said would be "the next great tennis champion" is now in basic training at this army air forces basic training center. Keep 'Em Flying Private Budge Patty, 19-year old national junior tennis champion cham-pion tennis champion, who rose from the obscurity of Los Angeles An-geles public parks tournaments to national prominence in the space of a single year, is the nation's nat-ion's top young player; he holds an exhibition victory over Bobby Riggs, ex-Davig Cupper. NEWS FROM KEARNS Easily the outstanding performance perform-ance last week at the Kearns Softball league was the amazing pitching of Cpl. Ray Sanders, who probably set some sort of a world record when he struck out 21 men in a seven inning Softball game. That ordinarily would have constituted enough outs to retire the side for the entire game but he failed to achieve the goal when his catcher muffed the third strike twice, allowing the batters to reach first base. Sanders, a speedball artist from Dallas, Texas, followed up that feat by twirling a no-hit, no-run game slamming out a home run in the third inning to show that pitchers CAN hit. Present record for Corporal Sanders is 86 strikeouts strike-outs in five games. Keep 'Em Flying Walter Winchell said "Don Marlowe is reason enough for viewing "Beyond the Horizon." Now this former actor and comic com-ic is taking his pre-aviation cadet basic training at this camp. His once curly, carefully combed hair has been shorn to GI length. And he loves it! His wife, Mrs. Marlowe, lives at 2519 Beachwood in Hollywood. Keep 'Em Flying "My job is delivering babies." "Last week was my toughest week. Five nights in a row I had to answer hurry calls; five times it was babies." Talking, was Captain Edwin G. Layton, attending surgeon at this army air force basic training centir, who cares for the dependents depend-ents of enlisted men and officers stationed here. He is quite a busy man. |