The shoulder patch of the 13th Airborne Division, my late maternal grandfather's outfit for much of his service during 1942-1946. T hinking today of my late maternal grandfather, David Lewis Stokes from Lexington North Carolina, who answered the call like so many others more than 80 years ago following the attack on Pearl Harbor. Initially anti-aircraft personnel, he later trained and served as glider infantry before taking the opportunity to train as a paratrooper ahead of the planned invasion of France. Miraculously, he, along with his two older brothers and three brothers-in-law (Uncles Baxter, Jack, Sid, Charlie, and Bob) all managed to come home and lead relatively normal lives for many decades afterwards. Likewise, a special mention of the only First World War veteran I knew, Harrison Terrell, the neighbor of my maternal grandparents, who I used to see and say hello to daily as I climbed off the school bus each afternoon as a small child. A Philadelphia attorney, and