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Show Service Men . . . I'l'': John K. Crandall, son of Mr. "rs. Karl !' Crand ill. 2sr,s Sit- Mnry's wuy. rccvii'.ly pari : : or: ' . d in month-Inn,,; firing i-suTrijii-s with Uw 5'Jtii Fii-U Artillery lialtaiimi in Ofrmany. Tin.' unit nnved i'.s mu.nsivc 2o) milliiiii'tcr puns some 250 miles fmi.i its home .st:.tii;n in Pirma-sens Pirma-sens ta the iniint nvor area in Vil.seek. Tiiu Army's largest artillery ar-tillery weapon, the 2S0 millimeter gun is capable ol: firing atomic shells. Crandall, a supply clerk in the battalion's Battery A, entered the Army in March 1955. A 1951 graduate of the University Uni-versity of Utah, he is a member of Delta Phi and Kappa Phi fra- j ternities. I Army PFC Helmut Kramer, son of Walter Kramer, 770 Ramona ave., recently was graduated from the 10th Infantry Division Medical Academy in Germany. Kramer completed the academy's acad-emy's first four-week course and was trained in the care of sick and wounded in combat. Army Reserve Maj. Burton K. Whcatlake, 39, whose wife, Florence, Flor-ence, lives at 1318 S. Milwaukee, Denver, is receiving two weeks of active duty training at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo. Major Wheatlake, son of Burton C. Wheatlake, 1180 S. 13th, E, was graduated from the University of Utah in 1938. He is employed by the Dearborn Dear-born Chemical Company in Chicago. |