AIR UNIT’S MASCOT.
BED-RIDDEN YOUNG WOMAN. (R.N.Z.A.F. Official News Service.) NEW GEORGIA. Nineteen-year-old Gloria Lyons lies in the Christchurch Public Hospital with tuberculosis of the spine. Patient but cheerful, she faces a stay of two years.
At a forward Pacific base of the R.N.Z.A.F. stands another Gloria Lyons, a sleek Warhawk fighter, and in the pilot’s cockpit a small typewritten note is pasted: “To the pilot: Gloria Lyons is our 4SU mascot. She is doing a long term in hospital and we want both our Glorias to last a long time. 4SU, December, 1943.”
Four young New Zealand airmen for No. 4 Servicing Unit attached to a New Zealand fighter wing sat in their tent one evening reading their mail, which had come in that day. For one there were seven or eight letters, another had also received a good batch, but for the other two it was a lean mail day.
So they got their heads together and not long afterwards this advertisement appeared in a Christchurch newspaper:
“Two lonely airmen wish to correspond with two smart young ladies, 18-21, with a view to friendship. Interests: Dancing, music and sport. Photo if possible.”
Among the replies came one, rather diffidently, from Gloria Lyons on behalf of herself and a fellow patient. A few more letters broke the ice, and now a regular correspondence has been established. She tells the airman to whom she writes of what, goes on at home in New Zealand; he describes to her what life is like in the tropics.
It is amazing how things get round in these camps, hut the airman did not have to stand banter from his mates.
Instead, the story caught their imagination, and when a Warhawk with the identification letter G was passing through the maintenance line the idea blossomed in some head of naming the fighter after the bedridden girl and adopting her as the unit’s mascot.
So, while Gloria Lyons of the Pacific front line takes the air with her colleagues to beat the Japanese out of the skies, her namesake follows their fortunes keenly and hopefully, and the thoughts of the boys of No. 4 Servicing Unit are with the welfare of both.
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Bibliographic details
Ashburton Guardian, Volume 64, Issue 91, 27 January 1944, Page 3
Word Count
367AIR UNIT’S MASCOT. Ashburton Guardian, Volume 64, Issue 91, 27 January 1944, Page 3
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