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Tale of the 'Evans, v. 4, issue 2, Spring 1946
Page 12
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opinion, the finest value obtainable to anyone interested in anything of this sort. I have never ceased to be grateful I was given a chance to become a member of FAPA. I LIKED IT. There was the Navy jet-pilot who radioed in to base: "Have one hundred miles yet to go; fuel for only fifty miles more." However, a short time later, he landed at the base field. When questioned as to how he made it he replied: "I was stumped when I radioed, but later remembered an old deep-sea saying, and applied it." "An old deep-sea saying? What one is that?" "'Flotsam and jetsam'." FAN-TODS came in just before I started to run this, so I will review it a bit here. Your defense of TTB in your review of R&C pleases me a lot, Norm. But I still feel that articles on the Social Sciences (even admitting that they are not exact sciences) DOES have a rightful place in FAPA. However, I'll gladly abide by the general feeling in the matter. After all, it was put in FAPA in the first place merely because, when I was making out my mailing list for the first issue, I found that all but 3 or 4 of the FAPA members would be on my list anyway... "Yesterday's 10,000 Years" still continues to be the most interesting column in FAPA. I enjoyed the review-analysis of A exceedingly. BEYOND . . The pics are all good, especially do I like "Web of Discord", and the bacover. "The Devil's Wife" was quite something! The fable was up to the usual standard fo excellence; the poems very, very good. Let's hope Wright gets back to civilifan status before too long. He's a grand kid. LET'S ALL PLAN TO ATTENT THE PACIFICON, JULY 4, 5, 6, 7, 1946. Goombye, now! 12
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opinion, the finest value obtainable to anyone interested in anything of this sort. I have never ceased to be grateful I was given a chance to become a member of FAPA. I LIKED IT. There was the Navy jet-pilot who radioed in to base: "Have one hundred miles yet to go; fuel for only fifty miles more." However, a short time later, he landed at the base field. When questioned as to how he made it he replied: "I was stumped when I radioed, but later remembered an old deep-sea saying, and applied it." "An old deep-sea saying? What one is that?" "'Flotsam and jetsam'." FAN-TODS came in just before I started to run this, so I will review it a bit here. Your defense of TTB in your review of R&C pleases me a lot, Norm. But I still feel that articles on the Social Sciences (even admitting that they are not exact sciences) DOES have a rightful place in FAPA. However, I'll gladly abide by the general feeling in the matter. After all, it was put in FAPA in the first place merely because, when I was making out my mailing list for the first issue, I found that all but 3 or 4 of the FAPA members would be on my list anyway... "Yesterday's 10,000 Years" still continues to be the most interesting column in FAPA. I enjoyed the review-analysis of A exceedingly. BEYOND . . The pics are all good, especially do I like "Web of Discord", and the bacover. "The Devil's Wife" was quite something! The fable was up to the usual standard fo excellence; the poems very, very good. Let's hope Wright gets back to civilifan status before too long. He's a grand kid. LET'S ALL PLAN TO ATTENT THE PACIFICON, JULY 4, 5, 6, 7, 1946. Goombye, now! 12
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