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7 February 1944
Diamond, Sidney, (1922-1945)
to Estelle Spero
Diamond describes the telephone operator, Kallor, as a Jewish dress cutter from New York who is in Sidney's father's union.
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8 February 1944
Diamond comments that he has never been ill during his army career.
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Diamond writes Estelle a "short note in field on message & overlay paper."
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9 February 1944
Diamond writes that their "apartment will have a double apron barbed wire fence about it covered by a slew of machine guns to keep all relatives away…"
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1861-1877
Sketch of Stanley Diamond as a boy
Diamond writes that the mouth is "too feminine".
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11 February 1944
Diamond again describes the process of selecting observational posts in trees.
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13 February 1944
Diamond asks Estelle to send him a book once a month to entertain him.
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14 February 1944
Diamond apologizes for having neglected Estelle on St. Valentines day.
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16 February 1944
Diamond describes using the typewriter in terms of a battle offensive.
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Diamond informs Estelle that he intends to attend his battalion motion picture show that evening.
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18 February 1944
Diamond writes that he imagines embracing Estelle.
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19 February 1944
Diamond reports that that evening they had gone to the cinema to see the film, "The Affairs of Martha
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21 February 1944
Diamond discusses the "present conflict" between labor and industry.
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Diamond talks of the constant rain, his desire for good cuisine and a recent nightmare about an air raid.
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23 February 1944
Diamond writes that his outfit boasts "a washing machine, ice box, and recently a generator & electric lights
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24 February 1944
Diamond describes his day as "quiet, dull, routine rot!"
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25 February 1944
Diamond tells Estelle that he no longer has "that burning hatred of the jungle and its mysteries", commenting on how peculiar it is that "a man can adapt himself to this way of living".
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Diamond describes writing to the wife of one of his men about his death, an experience that made him realize the "ridiculous emptiness of words".
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26 February 1944
Diamond describes the interior of his tent. He writes that it is "grand to be alive and well".
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28 February 1944
Diamond tells Estelle that her "guy is getting along satisfactorily - nothing to write about of any consequence
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29 February 1944
Diamond informs Estelle that his vocabulary is too limited to express how grateful he is for everything that she has done for him.
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1 March 1944
Diamond discusses his "bleak & uncertain" future.
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2 March 1944
Diamond writes that the day had been spent climbing steep hills to O.P.s (observation posts), and describes the view from them. Sidney gives Estelle some instructions pertaining to the "money order" enclosed and requests some garden seeds...
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3 March 1944
Diamond informs Estelle that she has become an integral part of his daily routine.
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5 March 1944
Diamond implies that since it was a leap year, Estelle should have proposed to him.
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