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Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Leonard's Story: November 15, 1944

                                             Nov 15th Wed.
                               somewhere in the SWP
Dear Arnold,
     Well Bub, how are you? I expect
its getting pretty cold now where you are
How do you like the east in the autumn?
Do you still go boating on the Charles river?
And how are you coming in your classes, you
never mention that?  What about your
love life, have you met any cute chicks yet,
you old hermit?
     Things are going pretty well with me.
So far I have been given a free rein in my
work, and I hope to make some real progress.
At present I am loafing around, but I expect
to be busier than hell soon. I like this work
I sometimes wonder how I ever got into such a
sweet racket.
     Well Dewey lost the election, I see.
I guess we will have to grin and bear it. I
wish they could get off the dime in Europe,
and clean things up. As you have read by
the news we are going along pretty good down
here, and Bub, we're just getting started.
If I'm lucky I may be home in a year.

[page 2]
     When do you finish your course? Are you
going on to MIT and if so when will you finish
that? Take it easy and don't try to rush out
here. And by all means have a good time while
your in the states, it is nice to look back on. I'm
glad I spent seven months at Ritchie. I had
the time of my life. I spent over $1500 while I
was there, but I don't regret a cent of it. I will
be able to save plenty out here. Starting this
month I intend to sock away $175 per plus a
twenty-five dollar bond. I have been saving $75
plus a bond, and have been paying Dad the money I
owed him. I am now clear of debt and several hundred
dollars ahead. If I can stay with this outfit a
year I can save at least $2000 in that time. Jump
pay is a nice thing.
          I am inclosing some pictures that
were taken on Bougainville. My hair has
grown out now and I don't look quite so
bad.  Write soon.
                     Love
                    Leonard


Leonard's Story: November 1, 1944

The Curtiss C-46 Commando was a twin-engine transport aircraft employed in World War II, introduced in 1942 but mass produced in 1944-1945.  Now sure what M.I. is -- perhaps military intelligence?
____________________________________________________________________

                                                                             Wed, Nov 1st

Dear Arnold,

     Well your big brother is now a regular qualified paratrooper.
I finished or rather made my last qualifying jump this morning.
However, I expect to get several more jumps in, in the next three
or four days, just for the hell of it.  I am still doing M. I.
work, and the jumping is just a means of getting around.  It makes
my work much more interesting and exciting.  This looks like a
hot division, they're a wild assed bunch of boys.  The officers
in headquarters  seem like a swell bunch of fellows.  I get all
the cooperation I want, and I think this is going to be a swell
assignment, I only hope that I stay with them for a long time.

     As I know your are unfamiliar with the jumping procedure,
I am going to give you a blow by blow description of a jump.
Each man is assigned a position, and a group of men go out the
door at one time and are called a "stick".  A plane may carry
one or more sticks depending upon the number of men in a stick.
It is SOP for an officer to go first, so in all except my first
jump I went first in the stick I was in.  I was suppose to go
first in the first jump, but they increased it by two men at the
last minute, and I went out last.  After you are assigned your
number, you go over to the packing sheds and pick up your chutes.
A main chute of twenty-eight feet in diameter, which is of the
back pack type, and an emergency chute of twenty-two feet in
diameter, which is of the chest pack type, are the types we use.
You then put them on, and it is really fitted tightly and securely.
You march over to the ship, and then get a check for adjustment
and fit.  You climb into the ship and it takes off.  This is
the point where you start to "sweat it out".  The old timers
say they sweat it out.   By that term I mean you become a
little nervous.  You have that funny tingling in your stomach.
Although it may be a greater or less degree, depending upon
a number of circumstances, it is always there.

     In the first load or plane a man jumps first alone, and
is known as the wind dummy.  He neither slips or twists around,
but goes down to see which way the wind is drifting.  The plane
circles around again for the first stick to jump.  We jumped
two sticks in a place of six men each.  The door has been removed,
and since I was first man in the second stick, I was sitting quite
near and opposite the door, and had a wonderful view of the
ground 1200 feet below.  Some of the men make a small joke to try
to relieve the tension, other smoke or chew gum.  Some have tense
faces, while others look like they are merely riding home on the
street car. You look at one another and wink or smile, but you
know that no matter how the men look or what they do, they are
all sweating it out.

[page 2]
     As we approach the field, the jumpmaster shouts "Stand up
and hook up".  Each man jumps to his feet, and hooks his "static
line" to the steel cable that is suspended down the center of the
ship.  Next he gives the command, " Check equipment".  You look
at the harness on the back of the man in front of you, and check
the front of your harness.  "Sound off for equipment check", the
last man shouts six OK, etc down to one OK.  Then "Close up",
you all shuffle with your left foot forward and your right foot
to the rear something like a boxer might move forward.  The
shuffling sounds like a subdued tone version of the marching feet
in the old Gangbusters program.  The jumpmaster then shouts,
" stand in the door and prepare to jump".  Number one man steps
forward with his right foot, pivots on it, and places his left
foot on the edge of the door.  At the same time he throws his
static line towards the rear of the ship and grasps the outer
edges of the door wtih his hands.  He is crouched slightly with
his body perpendicular to the floor, and his eyes on the horizon.
He stands tensed for the jump.  The jumpmaster slaps him on the
ass and he jumps out into space, throwing his right leg forward
so the slip stream of the props will catch it and give his body
a quarter turn, so that he faces the rear.  As you sail  through
the air you bend your head forward, keep your feet together, cross
your arms over your chest so that you can quuickly grab the ring
of your emergency chute if necessary, and count one thousand,
two thousand, and usually before you can say three, there is a
loud wham and a jerking snap that seems to almost stop you in
midair.  Incidentally, I usually forget to count.  If you go past
three thousand you should pull your emergency chute.  Once you
leave the door the tingling in your stomach stops.  There is no
sensation of falling through the air, but for just an instant you
seem to be suspended in space.

     You grab the risers and look up and check your canopy.  It
is a beautiful sight to see that white or sometimes camouflaged
canopy billowed out above you.  Your are usually swing back and
forth gently, and if you are ocillating too much, you and stop
it by roughly jerking down on the risers.  There are four of these
risers which are strong web belts which are fastened onto your
suspenion lines by a ring.  You can slip in any direction by
merely pulling down on the pair of risers in the direction that
you want to slip.

     You float down silently and gently, and you look over and
see your commrads coming down nearby.  You may call over and
talk to them if you wish.  The objects on the ground begin to
grow rapidly larger and larger.  You look down and pick the
spot you think you are going to land at and then reach up and
grab the risers above your heads.  You look up at the horizon,
and allow your legs to hang down in a relazed and natural postion.
A second later you hit the ground with a thump, and roll over
on your side, shoulder, or back depending upon the direction
you landed.  You jump to your feet and dump the air out of your
chute if necessary.  And there you stand, amazed that you are
all in one piece, unhurt, and that it was so easy.

[page 3]

     The men behind number one man follow the same procedure
that he [arrow #1] does, but do not wait to be slapped in the fanny.
When I was the last man, there seemed to be a confused wild
rush and the next thing I knew I was out.  In an operation they
usually jump one eighteen man stick per plane, but we now have
some new C-46s and you'd be amazed at the number of men they can
jump, I don't think I'd better say it because of military security.
Your not the only boy who is now drawing extra pay.  This extra
$100 I get a month is a soft racket.  I am not going to tell the
folks because I think that they would worry too much, so don't
you say anything to them.  I only have one set of wings, so would
you mind buying about two more wings and send them to me, because
they are hard to get out here, and be sure to get silver ones and
send me the bill, thanks.

     Enough of this dribble about myself.  How are you and the
Air Corps coming?  How soon will you be through at Harvard, and
are you going to MIT, I hope?  This move has mixed up my mail,
and I have'nt had a letter for over a week, or is it two weeks!
Write more about your luxuries, I like to hear about them it is
nice to go to sleep and dream about them.  And brother stay with
them as long as possible, you will be over here soon enough, and
I think you will become just as tired of canned rations, no place
to go, less to drink, and corny shows as I am.  Oh how I wish
I could have been at this Larconia Lodge with you, it must have
been swell.  Were there plenty of cute babes around?  I am now
dreaming about the luxuries of Manila, I only hope the Japs leave
a few joints standing.

     Well Bud, time for chow and I am out of breath.  Write
soon.

                                        love,
                              [signed] Leonard



Tuesday, June 3, 2014

Leonard's Story: October 20, 1944

                                                                          Friday, Oct 20

Dear Arnold,

     Received your letter of the 7th today.  You lucky stiff,
I envy you very much.  I used to think that I hit a soft touch,
but brother you have me beaten by a light year.  Keep it up.
I may sound adventuress to go overseas, bit it is'nt worth it.
Its not that it gets so tiresome and dull, but the main thing
is you wonder when you will ever get home again.  If you could
come over here and go through one campaign and then go back home
it might be worth it, but you can't do that.  I reall believe
that it will be about two years before I get home.  Don't rush
over here, if you are offered a job in the states take it.
Eventually you will get over here anyway, so let nature and the
army take its course.  If you don't beleive me ask the Major
that you know who is from this island.

     I was in a town once similar to the one you mention.  It
was Reading, Penn., they hardly knew a war was on.  You buy a
good meal very reasonably, and we had a swell double hotel room
for only five bucks.  We (another officer and myself) met only
one other officer in town and about six enlisted men.  We were
going to pick up a couple of girls, but everybody treated us so
highly and took such an interest in us, that we just could'nt do
it.  We went into one drug store for a soda, and in five minutes
it was filled with girls from sixteen to twenty.  I always meant
to get back to that town, but bI never got around to it.

     Well I am going tomorrow by air with my S/Sgt, while my
M/Sgt is staying behind to bring the equipment by water.  My
new assignment ought to be very interesting and exciting.  I
hope you don't tell the folks what kind of an outfit it is they
might worry.  My new APO is 468, the rest of the address is the
same.

     I captured a spider today with a body over two inches long,
and a leg span of about six inches, he is a big ugly bastard.
The other night the men killed a nine inch centipede on my desk,
and up at Corp they have a pet lizard that is two feet long, with
a body about three or four inches wide, and he must way a couple [arrow] new way to spell weigh
pounds.  He is very friendly, and makes no effort to escape,
maybe he's just lazy?  The other day he ate a live centipede that
they gave him.  We have some of the queerest types of life here.
Yesterday I saw a bug that had a fuzz that looked like a peacocks
plume, only it was white.

     That word you mentioned that had been cut out, come to
think of it, it might have been a possible clue to our location,
so I don't blame the censor, it shows that he is on the ball.
Well Bud, I' about out of gaff, so I will close until later.
Keep'em coming, letters I mean.

                                           love,
                                 [signed] Leonard



Leonard's Story: October 15, 1944


                                                                                 Sunday, Oct 15th

Dear Arnold,

     I have already sent a bunch of negatives home and accord-
ing to Mother they have already been printed and some should
be back on their way out here.  So your getting per diem, if
you get your other allowances too, I figure that you should be
pulling around $336 per month, though, huh?  But I suppose you
will get used to it in time.  Talking about seeing pictures we
probably see them before you do.  Last night we saw DEVOTION
with Oliva Dehaviland, Ida Lupino, and Paul Henreid, which
is'nt going to be released in the States until 1945.  Recently
I have seen CASANOVA BROWN with Gary Cooper and Teresa Wright,
IMPATIENT YEARS with Jean Arthur, MR. SKEFFINGTON with Bette
Davis and Claude Rains, MR. WINKLE GOES TO WAR with Edward G
Robinson, MARRIAGE IS A PRIVATE AFFAIR with Lana Turner(this
one had its world Premere here), and a number of other lesser
pictures.  DEVOTION and MR. SKEFFINGTON are excellent, don't
miss them.  You know it was worth coming overseas just to be
able to see the pictures first?

     I guess I have told you that I am leaving this outfit
pretty soon.  So far my orders hav'nt come through yet.  I
am going to an Airbourne Division.  It ought to be pretty
interesting and lots of fun.  Don't tell the folks they might
worry too much.  Both of my enlisted men are going with me,
and frankly they don't seem to appreviate it as much as I do.
But in the type of work we are doing there is'nt much to
worry about, I only hope it turns out to be the good deal that
I hope it will be.

     You can tell the Major that things have changed quite
a bit since he was here, however there has been some recent
trouble up a well known trail, and they are killing Japs up
there every day.  At least when I leave I will have something
new to write about for awhile.  Things have fallen into such
a routine pattern here that it is difficult to write about
any thing that is interesting or intelligent.  So I dribble
on about the inconsequential little things, and try to fill
up a page of typing.  Excuse me while I go eat lunch.

     Well I've finished lunch, I did'nt feel like eating much,
they threw a big party here last night celebrating their fourth
year of army service.  Although I did'nt get fried, I did con-
sume a good deal of the free liquor.  It was a good party, and
for those people who base the success of a party on the number
potted guests, it was a hugh triumph.

     It has been hoter than hell this morning, and just as I
sat down here to finish this letter so I could go swimming,
the sun went behind a cloud, while all morning I could'nt find
a cloud in the sky.  Probably by the time I get down to the
beach it will be raining, the hell with it, I'll go anyway.
Well write soon, I'll send you some of those pictures.

                                   [signed] Leonard



Monday, June 2, 2014

Leonard's Story: Yank Jungle Patrol

Uncle Len would be around 24 years old when he writes this narrative. I am not sure what “AA men” would be — AA is sometimes America’s Army, other times Anti-Aircraft  I am inclined to the latter interpretation. BAR stands for Browning Automatic Rifle — photo here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Browning_ar001.jpg. “Division CP” would be Division Command Post.
____________________________________________________________

[handwritten: Ed - Please return this when you are finished. Thanks, Arnold
by L. J. Nevis]

                              ON A YANK JUNGLE PATROL

     Several weeks ago I had requested the authority to go on a 
patrol outside the perimeter into Jap territory.  The other day Maj.
Ayres stopped by and said that preparations had been made for 
me to go out on a patrol.  Several hours letter the S-2 of one 
of our regiments called and told me to be at J (J because of 
censorship) Company at eight o’clock wednesday morning.   I drew
the necessary equipment, and spent the rest of the day cleaning 
my carbine.  Calling back the next day to check on the patrol, 
I found that I should be there at seven-thirty instead of eight 
o’clock.  Before I went to bed tuesday night I had everything 
ready. For the first time since i have been here I got up at 
reville.  After a hasty breakfast, I had Letwin drive me up to 
J Company area, which was situated thigh up on the ridge that forms
the perimeter.  I was introduced to the Lt. who was the patrol
leader, rations and ammunition were handed out, and a few instruc-
tions were given.  We then boarded a truck and are driven out to 
the Company whose lines we were to go out through.  our patrol 
consisted of fourteen infantry men, as we detracted we were met 
by fourteen AA men, who were to go out with us.  The AA men were 
designated to bring up the rear, and I followed behind the Patrol
Leader, whose was in turn behind two scouts.  We started out single 
file up over a little ridge.  On the other side we could see an 
outpost, as we approached they open the wire in front of them so 
that we could pass through.  At the outpost we stopped and made 
a check of the radio and our equipment.  The command was then 
given to load and look.  We went out through the wire and down 
a path through the mine field that was planted in front of the 
wire.  We were on our own now, out in no-mans-land.  We kept going
down,the trail getting steeper and steeper.  This was nice after 
climbing over the ridge to the outpost, but then I realized that 
every step we took down meant two steps up.

     The men in the patrol were all young, probably between twenty 
and twenty-five.  They were wiry, healthy, good looking kids.
They all looked capable  and looked like they knew what the score
was.  Apparently the misfits and weaklings had been weeded out long 
ago.  We finally reached the bottom of the little canyon, and 
started up  It was hard work climbing with a pack, I was sadly 
out of condition and became quickly winded, but somehow I kept 
up with them.  The morning passed slowly on, and we kept climbing 
or descending.  The trail became steeper and rougher.  Just about 
the time I felt I could go no farther, the patrol leader would
call for a halt.  The trail became even steeper; we would climb 
up for about fifty feet or so, and then rest.  I had only a piece
of toast and a cup of coffee for breakfast, and though I was wind-
ed before, I now began to feel weak.  I counted my pulse and it 
was constantly up around 150 or 160, and at times it went over
200.  I thought my heart was going to burst and my lungs ex-
plode with it.  Just about the time I felt I must stop, a call
came from the rear that that a man had fallen out.  We had to stop
and rest for a half hour, and wait for him to recover. This
certainly was a break for me.  A little while later two men fell
out and said that they could’nt go any further.  We radioed in 

[page 2]
our position and then left them there.  We then started forward
again, but this time a little slower.  We continued to climb and 
then descend, hour after hour, yard after yard.  A little before
twelve, we reached the crest of the ridge that we were to follow.
The mission of the patrol was to find a trail along this ridge to
an outpost that was our destination.  After following the ridge 
for about twenty minutes we stopped for lunch.  After I had eaten,
drank a good quantity of water and rested, I felt much better. At 
this point I learned that six of the AA boys had dropped out about 
eleven o’clock and started back, this decreased out patrol to twen-
ty men.  I was also told that the hardest part of the hike was be-
hind us, and so with the food, rest, and this knowledge I started 
off feeling more like my former self.  Although the ridge was eas-
ier than climbing up and down, it was was still rough.  The trail was 
narrow, and the ground sloped away rapidly on both sides.  If you 
can picture a flea walking along the top of a chipped and broken 
razor, you will have a rough idea of what it was like.  Occasion-
ally we would pass an old Jap gun position with some 75mm ammunition 
scattered around.  From these old positions we could look right 
down on our perimeter.  It must have been a terrific job for the 
Japs to get these 75mm’s up there.  Once in a while we would pass
a few abandoned Jap helmets.  Suddenly the Patrol Leader signaled
for a quick halt.  Ahead I could see a trip wire across the trail.
A scout went ahead to examine it.  It turned out to be merely a 
warning system, as it was attached to a couple of cans.  One of 
the men cut it and we proceeded, however a little more carefully. 
These two scouts had a tough job, every time the trail forked at 
a questionable place, they would drop their packs and each would 
investigate a branch.  They would then come back, and report their
findings to the Patrol Leader, who would decide which trail to 
take.  If any enemy was ahead they would be the first to contact 
them.  Behind me was a man with a BAR (automatic rifle) who could 
give immediate heavy fire power in case of contact with the enemy.

     We continued on when suddenly we were once again signaled to 
a quick halt.  Ahead was a newly prepared gun position.  We took 
cover, and the man with the BAR came forward to cover the scouts
while theyexamined the position.  One went to the left, the other 
to the right, and they started slowly crawling forward to flank 
the position.  Suddenly they jumped up and signaled us to come
ahead.  They postion was empty.  A little while later we reached some 
more old 75mm positions and the ridge fork at this point.  We
dropped down to rest, while the scouts went to investigate the 
fork.  In the distance we could hear artillery fire and some auto-
matic weapons firing.  I was so tired that I did’nt even bother to
try to find out how far away, where, or who it was.  The scouts 
finally came back, and it was decided to take the ridge to the 
left.  We were find later that this was to be an expensive 
mistake.  We started down the ridge, the going became rougher. 
Fortunately, the noon rest had done me a great deal of good and 
I was’nt any more tired than the others.  Once again we started 
to go up and down. The trail became steeper, and in many places 
it was necessary to use vines, or pull a man up with a rifle.
                                            -2-

[page 3]
Finally we started up a rather steep ridge, it was tough going,
but a least we thought we were on our way back to the main ridge.
However much to our disappointment we found our selves on top 
of a little pinnacle shaped mountain.  He we rested and the Patrol
leader planned the next move.  The dense jungle was a great hind-
erence on climbing up an down, but the vines are often handy at
a particularly tough spot.  We again got under way, this time we 
kept going down.  The slope became steeper, it was more and more 
difficult to descend we came to a little stream that was damp
but dry.  Here we started up again.  After a long climb we finally 
started down again.  The trail was an old one and hard to follow.
Suddenly the Patrol Leader signaled us to an abrupt halt.  The 
scouts went forward to examine a trip wire.  They were able to 
follow it for only about five feet on either side of the trail,
and then the going became too rough.  As it was slick they decided 
to cut it.  I got well back under cover, for if any booby traps 
were going to go off, I did’nt want to be around.  One man went 
forward and carefully cut the wire.  Nothing happened so we pro-
ceeded on down the trail.  After continuing down for several hun-
dred yards we found ourselves hacking through the brush.  Some-
where we had missed the trail.  The going got steeper, when we 
suddenly found ourselves on a ledge over a straight drop down.

     There was only one thing to do, and that was to go back.  I’ll
never forget that going back.  Once the Patrol Leader slipped and 
slid down about twenty feet before he finally caught hold of a 
root.  Somehow we finally made it back up and then down to the 
little damp stream bed.  Several of the men said that they could-
‘nt go up any more, they would have to go down.  We started to 
follow the stream down.  The rocks were slimmy with moss, here 
I took my first fall of the day.  The stream suddenly took a 
drop of thirty feet.  We went down a vine hand over hand. Every 
hold I took on the vine creaked and cracked, and I expected any 
minute to have it snap and go plunging down to the rocks below.
I was the fourth man down, the twentieth and last man said it had 
creaked and cracked on him.  Now we must continue downward for the 
vine would never hold if all of us tried to climb up it.  For some 
time now the men knew that we were lost, and they began to bitch 
bitterly.  A little further down the stream there was another straight 
drop.  We looked down and could’nt even see the bottom as it was 
obscured by folaige.  It looked like we were really stuck this
time.  The afternoon was wearing away, and in a few hours it 
would be dark.  The Lt. in charge finally worked his way around
a narrow ledge to the left, and we all followed.  After hacking 
along the edge of a very steep slope we finally came upon an old 
trail.  We started down, for over an hour we kept climbing down,
it was fast and rough going, as the Patrol Leader was trying to 
get us down to level ground before the sun went down.  We finally 
came out on an old Jap bivouac area, and upon crossing it we found 
a little stream.  Here we paused and filled our canteens, being 
careful to chlorinate the water.  Continuing on the trail, which 
now had become more  or less level we entered the site of a former
Jap hospital.  There were boxes, bottles, shoes, skulls, bones, 
and helmets strewn about. It was rather a funny feeling to look 
over at an old rusty Jap helmet, and see a skull nearby, sardonicly
leering up at you.  There were numerous foxholes, dugouts, and 
old fortifications on the other side of the hospital area.  About 
five-thirty somebody shouted, “This is far enough, lets stop for
                                             -3-

[page 4]
the night.  The Patrol Leader guided us off the trail to a little
level spot, and we threw off out packs.  I picked me a spot, and 
started to hack out a clearing with my knife.  About that time it
started to rain.  I did’nt even bother to put on a poncho, as I 
was already wet and covered with mud.  Normally guards and out-
posts would be posted, but we were all so tired that we were or-
dered to bunch up, and the Patrol Leader let it go at that. 
I asked him why we did’nt stop at the Jap bivouac area, as it was 
a much better spot.  He said that this place, well concealed and 
off the trail would be much safer.

     I opened my “K” rations and proceeded to eat a cold dinner of 
crackers, spam, and a choclate bar.  I took a couple of salt tablets
and some dextrose tablets, and prepared to settle down for the night.
I took off my wet fatigue jacket and slipped on a dry “T” shirt.
I dropped my poncho over my head and made a pillow out of my shelter
half, using part of it for a flap to keep the rain out of my face.
An hour later I woke up in a puddle, and had to move to higher 
ground.  Soon the rain let up and I fell asleep wet and cold with 
any and spiders crawling over my legs, and oblivious to the many 
sounds of the jungle night.About one in the morning I woke up ex-
tremely cold, I found that the warmest position was to lie on my 
side, cross my arms at my chest, and draw my legs up.  So once
again I fell asleep, however, this time with the moon shinning 
through a break in the trees right in my face.  About every hour 
i would wake up with a sore hip, then I would turn over on my back.
An hour later I would wake up very cold, so I would turn over on 
my other hip, curl up and go back asleep.  I did this alternately
all night.  We got up at six o’clock, ate breakfast, packed our gear,
and started off.  We figured ( or rather they did) that it would 
take us about two or three hours to hit the main trail that ran
out to a trail block and outpost.

     We went along a pretty good clip, I I was feeling pretty good
and did’nt mind it too much.  At one point it looked like we were 
going to have to cross a swamp, but they finally found a muddy
trail around the edge.  We were making pretty good time, when we 
found out that the rest of the patrol was quite a ways behind us.
They finally caught up with us, and they were pretty mad.  Mean 
words flew back and forth.  A man with a BAR wanted to throw it
away.  The Patrol Leader tried to find somebody else to carry it.
Every one declined, declaring that he was too tired.  Finally the 
Patrol Leader said that we would levee this spot until someone
would carry the gun.  The man that owned it then said, “I’ll carry 
the damn thing, lets get the hell out of here.”  Once again we 
plodded our weary way forward.  The jungle became very dense, you
could not see a man on the trail five feet in front of you.  Forty-five
minutes later we suddenly came out on the main trail, what a grand
and glorious feeling.  Because of the jungle out radio had not worked
since three the previous afternoon, so we flagged down a jeep and 
gave him the message to have the trucks come out and pick us up.
Two hours later I was sitting in my tent freshly showered and in 
clean sun tans relating my experiences to some friends.  Although 
we did’nt contact the enemy, I was well satisfied with patrolling, 
and determined to stay near the Division CP unless ordered to do
otherwise.



Leonard's Story: October 5, 1944

                                      Thurs, 5th Oct.

                        [handwritten at angle] 1944

Dear Arnold,

     Thanks for your letter. It sure

sounds swell in the New England states

I wish I could be there for the fall.

Enclosed you will find a description

of a overnight jungle patrol.  I want

you to meet the guys that are winning

this war.  Please send this copy on

to Flavell after you are through with

it.  Write soon.


                      love,

P.S. His address:
           Lt E W. Flavell
           40 Kirkland St.
           Cambridge, Mass.

This is his old address, I can't find
the lastest one, would you see if you
can?  If not send it there, they'll
forward it.