Hello,

Finally reached  400 Mail Calls but had a problem with #399.AOL could not send it out with embedded files. Revised, deleted etc. and found out that it was a problem with AOL. All that ends well is a relief.

I have in this Mail Call  a message sent to us by Tom Dorman which should  be of interest  to those members who were "Army Brats"

Ben

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The Ardennes Battle (poem) 
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The following is the Christmas Greetings from Colonel Graves in December 1944._


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Subj: Re: MAIL CALL NO. 397 517TH PRCT 
Date: 12/18/2002 5:23:01 PM Eastern Standard Time
From: rcbc24@msn.com

Ben, as usual you did a good job. Pictures came through ok. Many thanks and Happy Holidays to all. Randolph Coleman
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Entry of Dec 18, 2002 at 14:21 [EST]
Name: Kim Allison
Unit: grandfather was in 517th Co H
EMail: kimallis@hotmail.com
How I found the 517th page: Other
Comments: I am looking to hear from anyone who knew George Monkhouse.I have heard only one story and loved it. My grandfather died when I was 10 and I have been researching his Military career. He is still a very special person to me and I would like to know him a bit better. I hope to hear from some one, anyone soon Take Care and Thnak you Kim
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Subj: Fwd: FW: Navy-Marine Corps Team 
Date: 12/17/2002 9:48:58 PM Eastern Standard Time
From: TDorman323

> High Speed Broadband
>   <http://www.usmc.mil/videos/ef.asf>
>  
> Low Speed Modem (Recommended)  <http://www.usmc.mil/videos/ef_lo.asf>
y ____________________________________________
Subj: Fwd: Subject: Military Spouses.... 
Date: 12/17/2002 9:33:22 PM Eastern Standard Time
From: TDorman323
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The Difference by retired: Lt. Gen. Edward J. Heinz
 
Over the years, I've talked a lot about military spouses ... how special they are and the price they pay for freedom, too. The funny thing about it is most military spouses don't consider themselves different from other spouses.
 
They do what they have to do, bound together not by blood or merely friendship, but with a shared spirit whose origin is in the very essence of what love truly is. Is there truly a difference? I think there is. You have to decide for yourself.
 
Other spouses get married and look forward to building equity in a home and putting down family roots. Military spouses get married and know they'll live in base housing or rent, and their roots must be short so they can be transplanted frequently.
 
Other spouses decorate a home with flair and personality that will last a lifetime. Military spouses decorate a home with flair tempered with the knowledge that no two base houses have the same size windows or same size rooms. Curtains have to be flexible and multiple sets are a plus.
Furniture must fit like puzzle pieces.
 
Other spouses have living rooms that are immaculate and seldom used.
Military spouses have immaculate living room-dining room combos. The coffee table got a scratch or two moving from Germany, but it still looks pretty good.
 
Other spouses say goodbye to their spouse for a business trip and know they won't see them for a week. They are lonely, but can survive.
Military spouses say goodbye to their deploying spouse and know they won't see them for months, or for a remote, a year. They are lonely, but will survive.
 
Other spouses, when a washer hose blows off, call Maytag and then write a check out for getting the hose reconnected.
Military spouses will cut the water off and fix it themselves.
 
Other spouses get used to saying hello to friends they see all the time.
Military spouses get used to saying goodbye to friends made the last two
 
years.
 
Other spouses worry about whether their child will be class president next year. Military spouses worry about whether their child will be accepted in yet another new school next year.
 
Other spouses can count on spouse participation in special events ...
birthdays, anniversaries, concerts, football games, graduation, and even the birth of a child.
Military spouses only count on each other; because they realize that the Flag has to come first if freedom is to survive. It has to be that way.
 
Other spouses put up yellow ribbons when the troops are imperiled across the globe and take them down when the troops come home.
Military spouses wear yellow ribbons around their hearts and they never go away.
 
Other spouses worry about being late for mom's Thanksgiving dinner.
Military spouses worry about getting back from Japan in time for dad's funeral.
 
And the television program showing an elderly lady putting a card down in front of a long, black wall that has names on it touches other spouses.
The card simply says 'Happy Birthday, Sweetheart. You would have been 60 today.' A military spouse is the one with the card. And the wall is the Vietnam Memorial.
 
I would never say military spouses are better or worse than other spouses are.
But I will say there is a difference.
 
And I will say that our country asks more of military spouses than is asked of other spouses. And I will say, without hesitation, that military spouses pay just as high a price for freedom as do their active duty husbands or
 
wives.
 
Perhaps the price they pay is even higher. Dying in service to our country isn't near as hard as loving someone who has died in service to our country, and having to live without them.
 
God bless our military spouses for all they freely give. And God bless America.
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