Millions of Americans and foreigners see G. I. Joe as a mindless war toy, the symbol of American military adventurism, but that’s not how it used to be. To the men and women who _____(1)in World War II and the people they liberated, the G. I. was the _____(2)man grown into hero, the poor farm kid tom away from his home, the guy who _____(3)all the burdens of battle, who slept in cold foxholes, who went without the _____(4)of food and shelter, who stuck it out and drove back the Nazi reign of murder. This was not a volunteer soldier, not someone well paid, _____(5)an average guy, up _____(6)the best trained, best equipped, fiercest, most brutal enemies seen in centuries.
His name isn’t much. G. I. is just a military abbreviation _____(7)Government Issue, and it was on all of the articles _____(8)to soldiers. And Joe? A common name for a guy who never _____(9)it to the top. Joe Blow, Joe Palooka, Joe Magrac...a working class name. The United States has _____(10)had a president or vice-president or secretary of state Joe.
G. I. Joe had a _____(11)career fighting German, Japanese, and Korean troops. He appears as a character, or a _____(12)of American personalities, in the 1945 movie The Story of G.I. Joe, based on the last days of war correspondent Ernie Pyle. Some of the soldiers Pyle _____(13)portrayed themselves in the film. Pyle was famous for covering the _____(14)side of the war, writing about the dirt-snow-and-mud soldiers, not how many miles were _____(15)or what towns were captured or liberated. His reports _____(16)the “Willie” cartoons of famed Stars and Stripes artist Bill Maulden. Both men _____(17)the dirt and exhaustion of war, the _____(18)of civilization that the soldiers shared with each other and the civilians: coffee, tobacco, whiskey, shelter, sleep. _____(19)Egypt, France, and a dozen more countries, G. I. Joe was any American soldier, _____(20)the most important person in their lives.