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Advance Warning?
The Red Cross Connection
By Daryl S. Borgquist
Naval History, June 1999 |
| TOM W. FREEMAN |
|
Families of the Pearl Harbor commanders
have been championing the theory that official Washingon
knew when and where the 1941 Japanese attack would occur.
Evidence of secret medical shipments prior to the attack
is lending credence to it.
A previously unsubstantiated
report that President Franklin D. Roosevelt requested
the national office of the American Red Cross to send
medical supplies secretly to Pearl Harbor in advance
of the 7 December 1941 Japanese attack is beginning
to look much more feasible.
Don C. Smith, who directed the War Service for the
Red Cross before World War II and was deputy administrator
of services to the armed forces from 1942 to 1946, when
he became administrator, apparently knew about the timing
of the Pearl Harbor attack in advance. Unfortunately,
Smith died in 1990 at age 98. But when his daughter,
Helen E. Hamman, saw news coverage of efforts by the
families of Husband Kimmel and Walter Short to restore
the two Pearl Harbor commanders posthumously to what
the families contend to be their deserved ranks, she
wrote a letter to President Bill Clinton on 5 September
1995. Recalling a conversation with her father, Hamman
wrote:
. . . Shortly before the attack
in 1941 President Roosevelt called him [Smith] to the
White House for a meeting concerning a Top Secret matter.
At this meeting the President advised my father that
his intelligence staff had informed him of a pending
attack on Pearl Harbor, by the Japanese. He anticipated
many casualties and much loss, he instructed my father
to send workers and supplies to a holding area at a
P.O.E. [port of entry] on the West Coast where they
would await further orders to ship out, no destination
was to be revealed. He left no doubt in my father's
mind that none of the Naval and Military officials in
Hawaii were to be informed and he was not to advise
the Red Cross officers who were already stationed in
the area. When he protested to the President, President
Roosevelt told him that the American people would never
agree to enter the war in Europe unless they were attack
[sic] within their own borders.
. . . He [Smith] was privy to Top
Secret operations and worked directly with all of our
outstanding leaders. He followed the orders of his President
and spent many later years contemplating this action
which he considered ethically and morally wrong.
I do not know the Kimmel family,
therefore would gain nothing by fabricating this situation,
however, I do feel the time has come for this conspiracy
to be exposed and Admiral Kimmel be vindicated of all
charges. In this manner perhaps both he and my father
may rest in peace.1
Smith first told his story to his daughter and granddaughter
in the 1970s, Hamman said, and it bothered him a great
deal. Hamman had herself served in the Red Cross on the
West Coast during World War II and never had heard anything
about this before. She was surprised by the story, but
she knew, she said, that "Papa would not lie." Unfortunately,
her father had left no papers and never told her of any
specific actions he took to fulfill President Roosevelt's
request. She had not thought about her father's story
again until she read about efforts to restore the ranks
of Kimmel and Short.
Because Hamman had nothing but her recollections to
corroborate the story, without further evidence it was
still only a story. Even if it were true, it would appear
to have been a merely quiet shift of employees, equipment,
and supplies within the overall massive buildup of the
Red Cross in preparation for war, paralleling a similar
effort in the military from the 1940 Soldier and Sailors
Act. Supporting information turned up in Red Cross records
at the National Archives, but no "smoking gun" indicated
that such an effort had taken place. Ultimately, however,
a copy of the Hawaii Chapter's Annual Report
for the fiscal year ending 30 June 1942 confirmed the
secret receipt of medical supplies by the Red Cross
at Pearl Harbor immediately before attack. In part,
it reads:
In the latter half of 1941, and indeed
prior thereto, the Hawaii Chapter took the definite
position that there was serious trouble ahead in the
Pacific. In spite of peaceful cooings from both American
and "enemy" sources, and suggestions to slow down, we
stepped up.
. . . We obtained from National Headquarters
of the American Red Cross in Washington vital medical
supplies and drugs to the value of some $50,000, which
were here before December 7th, unbeknown save to a very
few, and were stored in cooperation with the Army. We
likewise obtained from Washington First Aid equipment
and supplies to the value of about $25,000, which were
also available.2
This seems to correspond with Hamman's recollection of
what her father had told her. So why did the story not
come out at the time? And what about the cooperative efforts
with the Army to store the supplies? Who in the Army knew,
and where were the supplies stored? Did General Short,
the Army commanding officer for the Hawaiian Department,
know about these supplies? If he did, then he also would
have been better prepared for the attack. The best answer
to these questions is that Hawaiian Red Cross officials
must have thought the secret transfer of supplies was
in response to previous requests for assistance from national
headquarters. Additional evidence indicates, however,
that a few Hawaiian officials may have received an advance
warning.
The supplies might have been kept secret for several
reasons. Hawaiian Red Cross officials might have wanted
to protect them from potential Japanese saboteurs, about
whom military officials had been duly warned. Those
officials also were soliciting donations and volunteers
from the community to help in preparing supplies. Publicizing
receipt of the medical supplies might have dampened
enthusiasm and support for Red Cross projects.
Regarding the question of Army cooperation, the Army
had been supportive of the Red Cross and civilian defense
preparations and was undoubtedly supporting these efforts
at the time. General Short's Army Day Speech to the
Honolulu Chamber of Commerce on 6 April 1941 corroborates
this. The subject of this major speech was civilian
defense preparation--including preparations that should
be made by the Red Cross--and was deemed important enough
by the Army board and the joint congressional committee
to have been included in the official record.3
Red Cross personnel activities and assignments appear
to support the Hamman story as well. A select number
of experienced people were tapped to go to Hawaii in
fall 1941--all of them directed from Washington. Some
arrived as regular transfers; others appear to have
been special transfers. Almost all arrived just in time
to prepare for the Pearl Harbor attack in the rapid
and massive buildup that resulted from the Selective
Service Act of 1940.4
From required Red Cross monthly field reports, nurses
recruited for the military by the Red Cross and those
who had received commissions as Army nurses filed reports,
noting their times of arrival. One of the two new Red
Cross nurses at Station Hospital Hickam Field in Honolulu,
on duty the morning of 7 December 1941, wrote in a 16
February 1942 letter to Major Julia O. Flikke, Superintendent
of the Army Nurse Corps in Washington:
. . . As you may recall, there were
just six of us, who, on November 15th were transferred
to Station Hospital, Hickam Field. We felt that we were
the happiest group of nurses anywhere--a new 30 bed
hospital, lovely quarters--just two blocks from the
Officer's Club, nice working hours, more social activity
than we could possibly crowd in, the hospitality of
our Medicos, and above all--the grandest chief nurse,
Miss A[nnie Gayton] Fox, who enjoys everything as much
as we do.5
The writer, who is not identified in the correspondence
but who was one of the two nurses on duty the morning
of 7 December (along with a Miss Boyd, according to the
text), had transferred from Walter Reed Army Hospital
in July 1941 and had been transferred again from somewhere
else, arriving for duty in Hawaii at the new hospital
on 15 November 1941.
Red Cross Field Director Nell Ennis, at the U.S. Naval
Hospital in Pearl Harbor, filed her first narrative
report for November to December 1941. She wrote:
The greatest difficulty was the fact
that the supplies ordered in October had not been received.
This was a real handicap, for, as we were expecting
this shipment daily we did not want to make local purchases
thereby duplicating the order.
. . . the following month [December]
brought an avalanche of work entirely foreign to any
previous services I have ever been called upon to do.
. . . The Red Cross volunteers were
my only workers and without them I could not have carried
on. . . . There were six Gray Ladies who had received
training at other naval stations and the medical staff
frequently spoke of their efficiency and endurance.6
On 22 November 1941, William Carl Hunt, acting manager
of the Eastern Area, sent a memorandum on American Red
Cross National Headquarters letterhead to the Eastern
Area headquarters staff and New England field staff
that read:
Mr. Robert Shepard has accepted an
emergency assignmant [sic] as Executive Director of
the Hawaii Chapter. He will be leaving for this post
about the first of December. . . . in these times such
changes of assignment are necessary in order to bring
the full strength of the Red Cross to bear upon whatever
emergencies arise.7
According to the National American Red Cross Human Resources
office, Shepard was one of the organization's most experienced
and capable people. He arrived in Hawaii a few days after
the Pearl Harbor attack, but he never became executive
director. The Honolulu Advertiser recorded his
arrival and qualifications on Christmas Day 1941.
Shepard is not the only national office staff member
sent to Hawaii during this critical period, as a 12
December 1941 national office press release states.
These staff members are not named or identified, but
another Red Cross document indicates their titles.
Mr. Castle's [Alfred Castle, chairman,
Hawaii Red Cross Chapter] cable also stated that cooperation
between the Red Cross and the local Civilian Defense
in the emergency was excellent. The Hawaiian Red Cross
was equipped with large supplies of clothing, made by
women volunteers in the islands, and also had stores
of food and medical supplies. Five members of the national
Red Cross staff from Washington, were sent to the islands
some time ago.8
The secret cache of medical supplies appears to have
had a bearing on a discrepancy concerning the number
of first aid stations established between 8 December
and 12 December. An 8 December 1941 press release of
the American Red Cross News Service states that, "Prior
to the beginning of hostilities the American Red Cross
established 10 emergency medical stations on the islands
and made other plans for emergency operations."9
According to a 12 December 1941 press release from
American Red Cross News Service-based Hawaiian Red Cross
Cables, "Twelve 50-bed Red Cross first aid stations
had been set up in Hawaii, completely equipped with
doctors, nurses and first aid personnel, the Red Cross
stated."10
As difficult as it was to get equipment and supplies
to Hawaii, two extra 50-bed first aid stations represented
either a large expectation of casualties or a large
error on someone's part, particularly in light of Ennis's
complaint that by November she had not received all
of her supplies ordered in October.
The site where the medical supplies were stored continues
to be elusive. The most complete account for 7 December
1941 is by Betty MacDonald, the social page editor of
The Honolulu Star-Bulletin, in an article published
on Saturday, 13 December 1941. "To the Women of Hawaii--There
Is Work To Be Done" states that the Red Cross Motor
Corps was mobilized completely by 1400 on the 7th at
their headquarters in the Castle Kindergarten Building
in downtown Honolulu. The activities of the motor corps
in evacuating civilians through that night and into
the next morning is well documented.
MacDonald, now Betty McIntire, remembers nothing more
than what she wrote in her article, except that the
editor had cut out all graphic details of the condition
of the wounded. The editor had revised significantly
what she wrote and may have added material, because
McIntire did not remember some of the points in the
article.
The most probable location of the secret supplies
was in downtown Honolulu, somewhere that was accessible
from the motor corps headquarters. An outbuilding at
the then-sprawling Fort DeRussy is the most likely site.
The existence and location of the surgical dressings
made by the Hawaii Chapter are well documented and known;
these also were distributed by the motor corps. The
motor corps probably began its 7 December trips downtown,
picking up supplies and delivering them to hospital
and medical sites and then picking up evacuees or wounded
and delivering them to medical facilities or civilian
relocation centers on the return trip to Honolulu.
In the book At His Side: The Story of the American
Red Cross Overseas in World War II (New York: Coward-McCann,
1945), George Gershon Korson writes that the motor corps'
"first assignment on 7 December was the delivery of
Red Cross surgical dressing and medical supplies to
the Army and naval hospitals and civilian emergency
hospitals set up in school and government buildings."
None of the first-hand accounts from military hospital
personnel and commanding officers records the delivery
of any Red Cross supplies or the work of Red Cross ambulances,
nor can any reference be found for Korson's statement.
In his monthly report for November 1941, American
Red Cross Director of Personnel J. Blaine Gwin made
a significant statement about the escalation in staffing:
It is interesting to note that we
have reached the point where the total number of temporary
staff members exceeds the number of permanent or regular
staff members, being 1,505 temporary employees as compared
with 1,029 permanent or regular employees.11
In order to determine how many volunteers would be needed,
the National Headquarters conducted a study on the "proposed
utilization of volunteers on the national organization
staff." It was completed on 29 October 1941, sent to the
chairman, and subsequently forwarded to Red Cross national
office area directors by Director of Domestic Operations
DeWitt Smith on 2 December 1941.12
Only a few positions could be identified as suitable for
volunteers at the national headquarters, where full-time
permanent employees were needed, but many volunteers would
be needed by the Red Cross chapters.
While it is noteworthy that the study was completed
a month in advance of the Pearl Harbor attack and forwarded
to the area directors just five days before it, the
most significant fact seems to be that the Red Cross
national office had for all practical purposes already
staffed up to wartime operational levels by November
1941, even though war had not yet begun.
Red Cross Home Service Director Sanderson opened his
November 1941 monthly report, dated 3 December 1941,
with the statement: "Every phase of our Home Service
program has continued to develop new interests and a
tremendous increase in activity has been in evidence
during the month." All of the Home Service field representative
staffs had been called in on 10 November for "instructions
regarding the study now being made of Chapters in areas
adjacent to military centers." Buried in this report
is another statement worthy of note:
The report from the Pacific Area
shows that the Home Service staff has been augmented
for the special study by the Director of Disaster Relief,
Director of Personnel, Administrative Assistant, and
three General Field Representatives, all of whom met
with the Home Service group on the 10th and 11th [November
1941].13
These must be the Washington people mentioned in the
previously cited 12 December press release, even though
the release said five were from Washington and six are
named here. This group met with the Home Service group
early in the month as part of a special Pacific emphasis.
When they were deployed to Hawaii is not stated, but
it was in time to be on-site for the Pearl Harbor attack.
The national Red Cross office was giving particular
attention to the Pacific, which could be expected. But
does any evidence support the notion that they were
given advance planning information of the Pearl Harbor
attack? A possible answer can be found in the diaries
of William Castle, a former Under Secretary of State
whose brother Alfred was the Chairman of the Red Cross
in Hawaii. On 26 December 1941, William received his
first correspondence from brother Alfred after the bombing
on 7 December and recorded in his diary:
This morning I actually had letters
from Alfred in Honolulu. . . . Alfred and his family
always go to the country for the week-end; this was
the first time this year they had not gone. Alfred said
that he felt the moment to be exceedingly critical and
that he did not want to be out of town. This remark
made me think very hard, because it would suggest that
they knew in Honolulu, far better than we did here,
how critical the situation was.14
Alfred Castle's daughter Gwendolyn remembers an unusual
conversation with her father about going to the Laie house
on Friday, 5 December. She wrote:
Indeed, I do know why Father and
Mother didn't go to Laie the weekend of December 7th.
Father felt that, from news he had received from letters
from Uncle Billy [William Castle] in Washington war
with Japan was imminent. Charlie (my then-husband) and
I wanted to use the Laie house that weekend as we had
been invited to the Spaldings' (nearby) for tennis and
lunch on Sunday. On Friday Father called me and said
he would rather we wouldn't go to Laie as he felt a
Japanese attack was imminent. I told Charlie that when
he came home that evening, and he said that as the navy
had its patrol planes 2,000 miles out there was no way
the Japanese could have a surprise attack. I told Father
this the next day, and he reluctantly agreed to let
us go. So of course that is where we were when the attack
came that Sunday morning.
The timing of this conversation two days before the Pearl
Harbor attack raises a question, especially since William
Castle's diary entries do not support the reason given
by Alfred for knowing that an attack by the Japanese was
imminent. It appears that Alfred was covering another
confidential source by using his brother's name. No one
would question that the former Under Secretary of State
would have confidential sources and that he might convey
such information. The Castle family has indicated that
the former Hawaii Red Cross chairman had many confidential
sources, and much of his correspondence or notes of conversations
no longer exist.
Taken alone, this might mean nothing and be merely
coincidental, but the comments reflect a striking correlation
with actions by some of President Roosevelt's closest
staff 6,000 miles away. The President's Naval Aide,
Captain John R. Beardall, had come unannounced to the
White House in full uniform for Sunday duty, a first
since his arrival in May 1941. Beardall testified in
the congressional hearings on the Pearl Harbor attack
in 1946 that he also put his staff on 24-hour duty for
the first time beginning Friday, 5 December 1941. His
response to questioning from Senator Homer Ferguson
(R-MI) used almost the same language as Castle, even
though they were recorded years apart and no evidence
exists that the two had never conversed: "The situation
was getting more tense in the diplomatic relations,
and I wanted somebody to be there in case I was going
out for dinner or somewhere else . . . ."15
Beardall was someone with direct access to MAGIC--the
deciphered intercepts of Japanese diplomatic messages.
So how was it that Alfred Castle came up with this language
and stayed home that weekend in Honolulu? This appears
to be evidence of contact with someone who either had
access, or was being advised by someone with access,
to MAGIC intelligence.
As Hamman pointed out in her letter, her father had
top-secret clearance and was privy to other secret operations
during the war. Why not this one?
In fall 1941, the Red Cross conducted its most
aggressive peacetime annual "Roll Call" fundraising
campaigns, with national coverage and using well-known
personalities and heavy business involvement. Most of
the cabinet officers, particularly high military officials,
gave significantly throughout the fall on behalf of
the Roll Call. Behind the scenes, some unusual budgetary
activity was taking place. Red Cross records show the
change from peacetime to wartime before the Pearl Harbor
attack.
At the meeting of the American Red Cross Central Committee
on 24 June 1941, committee members adopted its first
resolution moving it to a war footing:
That the Central Committee hereby
approves the following general provisions with reference
to a possible campaign for a national Defense Fund,
or for a War Relief Fund in the event of the involvement
of this country in war. It is recognized that the development
of events and other unforeseen conditions may require
some adaptation of these general provisions and the
Chairman is authorized to take such steps in this connection
as seem to him wise and necessary.16
The provisions that follow the resolution
recognize:
That the National Defense activities
or the War Relief activities, if this country becomes
involved, will require the participation of practically
the entire organization and activities of the Red Cross,
and that it is not practicable to segregate these activities
in such a way as to finance some of them from the General
Fund and others from the National Defense or the War
Relief Fund or the Foreign War Relief Fund.
The Chairman is authorized, if in
his judgment the timing of events makes such a step
necessary, to combine the fund raising campaign with
the regular annual Roll Call and the Junior enrollment,
under such terms and conditions as he may approve.
At the 16 September 1941 meeting of the central committee,
the chairman was authorized to make special arrangements
for the national office to receive more than the usual
50 cents from some of the larger membership gifts in
the intensified Roll Call drive.17
A member was defined as anyone giving more than one
dollar. The standard peacetime practice was for the
national office to receive 50 cents per membership,
and the remainder of the gift would remain with the
chapters to fund their activities. The reason for the
change appears in the statement approved by the central
committee:
It was recognized that major emergencies
might develop before the Roll Call which would require
changes in the fund raising plans and the Chairman was
authorized to take appropriate steps should such emergencies
occur.
On Saturday, 29 November 1941, DeWitt Smith sent three
memos to key Red Cross managers with an attachment for
$1 million to finance expenditures not covered in the
current budget. This had been approved by the chairman
the day before, using the emergency authority. Smith also
wrote in the cover memo that they should not wait until
the end of December as planned to revamp the budget but
should do so at the end of November. The date of the memo
being 29 November, this was an order to make an immediate
revision of the budget, because the next day was the end
of the month.18 Most of the
materials were for running a massive support system for
servicemen after the war had begun. But the war had not
begun; this was eight days before the Pearl Harbor attack.
The role played by the Red Cross at Pearl Harbor
has been neglected by historians, mostly because accounts
inevitably focus on the military attack. In all of the
confusion after the Japanese attack and with military
censorship, the arrival and activities of Red Cross
medical workers at all of the major military locations
immediately before the Pearl Harbor attack were not
questioned, most likely because of the high esteem in
which the organization always had been held. Their arrival
had been coordinated quietly from Washington and even
most of the workers themselves--although some seem to
have had more information--thought it a mere coincidence
that they were there just before the attack. But thanks
to Don Smith's daughter, it is now known that it was
no accident that specific pieces were in place in the
nick of time. It appears to have been part of a planned
operation within the rapid overall growth of the Red
Cross.
In 1941, only a small group of people close to President
Roosevelt were the real players and were actually part
of the decision-making process. Many of these same people
were also on the Red Cross Board. In effect, the Red
Cross became an extension of their policy-execution
process, which explains why the personnel and budget
activities so closely paralleled White House insiders'
knowledge and decision-making. They could operate quietly,
without the rest of Washington knowing. The location
of the Red Cross two blocks from the White House and
the State Department (now the Old Executive Office Building)
made this even easier. And in the case of the Red Cross,
some of President Roosevelt's closest war advisers and
some who received MAGIC intelligence were the same ones
who served on the Red Cross board and sat on its central
committee. This included the President's physician,
Rear Admiral Ross T. McIntire, the Navy Department representative
and the Navy Surgeon General; Sumner Wells, the Under
Secretary of State; and Harry Hopkins (who was closely
involved with the Red Cross Roll Call in fall 1941 and
was appointed to the central committee in 1942).19
The relationship between the Red Cross, the military,
and the White House always has been close, but at no
time does it appear to have been closer than just before
the outbreak of the Pacific War at Pearl Harbor.
- Department of Defense Investigation,
"Memorandum for the Secretary of Defense: Advancement
of Rear Admiral Kimmel and Major General Short" (also
known as the "Dorn Report") signed by Under Secretary
of Defense for Personnel and Readiness, Edwin Dorn,
15 December 1995.
- Annual Report for the Year Ending June 30, 1940,
Hawaii Chapter of the American Red Cross, p. 1. The
Hawaii Chapter and the National Archives do not have
copies in their collections. What is likely the last
existing copy of the document is in the Hawaii War
Records Depository, University of Hawaii, Manoa, document
#59.02.
- LGEN Walter C. Short, Army Day Speech, Exhibit 1-O,
"Proceedings of the Army Pearl Harbor Board," found
at pp. 2607-2610, Part 30, in the Hearings before
the Joint Committee on the Investigation of the Pearl
Harbor Attack, U.S. Congress, 1946.
- American Red Cross, 1935-1946, National Archives
Record Group 200 (Hereafter cited as ARC 1935-1946,
RG 200), "1940-1941 Annual Report of Military and
Naval Welfare Service." The general history of the
ARC in World War II is in Box 1.
- ARC 1935-1946, RG 200, Box 1705 Serial Code
900.11/6131 P.O.A., File: "Station Hospital, Hickam
Field, TH."
- ARC 1935-1946, RG 200, Box 1705, Serial Code
900.11/6131, P.O.A., File: "Hawaii Area--218th General
Hospital."
- ARC 1935-1946, RG 200, Boxes 456-457, Serial
Code 187.211 (C 141.02).
- ARC 1935-1946, RG 200, Box 14, Serial Code 020.1801,
Press Release # 67107, 12 December 1941. The success
of the civilian defense organization and credit for
its planning belongs to LGEN Short, who devoted great
effort to this throughout 1941. Correspondence from
a major Hawaiian business owner after the war in Shortis
papers at the U.S. Army Military History Institute
and Army War College Library, Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania,
attest to this.
- ARC 1935-1946, RG 200, Box 14, Serial Code
020.1801, Press Release #67047, 8 December 1941.
- Same citation as in endnote 8.
- ARC 1935-1946, RG 200, Box 164, Serial Code
140.18.
- ARC 1935-1946, RG 200, Box 591, Serial #
300.02. Memorandum of 2 December 1941, with attachments;
to Mr. Hunt, Mr. Baxter, Mr. Schafer; from DeWitt
Smith, "Subject: Proposed utilization of volunteers
on the national organization staff."
- ARC 1935-1946, RG 200, Box 185, Serial Code
140.14 Document at this location is coded 140.18 H.S.
- Diaries of William Richardson Castle, unpublished,
Houghton Library, Harvard University, ms Am 2021,
vol. 42, page 320.
- Hearings before the Joint Committee of the Pearl
Harbor Attack, U.S. Congress, Part 10, 15, 16,
18, 19, and 20 February 1946, pp. 5280-5283.
- "Minutes of the Central Committee Meeting," 24 June
1941, memorandum dated 25 June 1941. ARC 1935-1946,
RG 200, Box 112, Serial Code 114.22, File: "Central
Committee."
- "Minutes of September 16, 1941, Meeting of the ARC
Central Committee," memorandum dated 18 October 1941.
ARC 1935-1946, RG 200, Box 112.
- ARC 1935-1946, RG 200, Box 579, Serial code
240.12 S.A. 7. Memorandum from DeWitt Smith, Director,
Domestic Operations to Mr. Betts, dated 29 November
1941, "Additional Appropriations."
- Two American Red Cross lists provide a good overview
of board composition during this critical time period:
"Members of the Central Committee During the World
War II Period" and "Members of the Central and Executive
Committee for 1941." ARC 1935-1946, RG 200,
Box 110. McIntire's whereabouts on 7 December 1941,
are described generally in his autobiography, Ross
T. McIntire, White House Physician (New York:
G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1946), pp. 136-137.
Mr. Borgquist is media affairs officer
for the Community Relations Service Headquarters, U.S.
Department of Justice. He also is a U.S. Naval Reserve
public affairs officer. The views reflected here are
his own. This article was not prepared as part of any
of his offical duties.
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