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Show I "'A 1 Sf i,.-- - i i v - 3 r '-Kyi'? l( !r-( n V' ' v';-H ,-fl -r mr r-iVTirt mr fa Tr nmtn i mil"''-- --"m ..-j.-n-w. . fflyj-Mi,. v.' -t m,h hi i n loam 7 QlU&CM .. Mail call means so much to him. You can't know unless you've been there yourself. Stateside, somebody some-body sits down with a pen and begins, "Hi, Kid" or, "My Son" or, "Dear Superman" or, "My Very Own Darling." And then, not too much later, the guy with a big canvas pouch shows up, and your man if he's lucky rips open an envelope and "goes home" for a little while. Do you know what it's like out there, with the ' familiar pattern of living broken, with friends and loved ones in another world? Whether he's in combat com-bat or in training back home, he's been cut off. The monstrous monotony of fighting and waiting gives him the feel of having been forgotten. you could watch his face some time when he doesn't hear . . . when mail call passes him by . . . But when word from you makes him feel remembered re-membered and wanted, that's good. Maybe just the hometown paper, telling how Aunt Jenny took first prize with her strawberry jam. Or a box of something some-thing good to eat to share with a sidekick who wasn't so lucky this time. And best of all a letter the closeness and reassurance and belonging that the right kind of letter always brings that magic carpet trip back to Sheboygan, Brooklyn, Water-ville, Water-ville, Four Corners. Only you can put the magic in mail call. You mean to write often, but you're busy busy? and sometimes you forget, or put it off. Don't. And if you have no one in Service to write to, remember the men who have no one to hear from and find out what you can do about it. |