Harry encourages Marjorie to make more of an effort for the cause. He suggests that she and her friends go up to Harlem to find someone who can help them write letters in Spanish. Harry describes himself and asks Marjorie for a photograph. He says that when he gets back he'd like to meet Marjorie's friend who has analyzed Harry's handwriting. He says that he rarely sees women at the front and plans to make up for it when he gets home. He ends by saying that there are a few distinguished guests in the camp. They are Joe North of the Daily Worker, Ernest Toller the German writer, and a nephew of Franklin D. Roosevelt. Asks for cigarettes.