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Show NO TIME FOR WEEPING She's a middle-aged woman a wife and mother who is comfortably fixed, financially and socially. Her elder son is a marine, now stationed in the Marshall islands. The younger is still in grade school and her 17-year-old daughter has her first job. So far, everything is going all right, but this woman says she cries frequently during dur-ing the day, and at night she sobs in the darkness. "It isn't so much my own problem," she writes, "it's just the awful problem of the whole world that has broken down . . . the magnificence of the boys . . . the wounded . . . the thought of all the ruin in Europe . . ." Every woman's part, replies Miss Norris, is to do something to bring the terrible war to a speedy end and to help the men and women who will return re-turn from service to re-enter civilian life. The weeping women are those who have little lit-tle or nothing to do. The busy ones don't have time to cry. |