TESTIMONY OF DANIEL PATRICK POWERS
The testimony of Daniel Patrick
Powers was taken on May 1, 1964, at Courthouse, Chicago, Ill, by Mr. Albert E.
Jenner, Jr., assistant counsel of the President's Commission.
Daniel Patrick Powers, called as
a witness herein, having been first duly sworn, was examined, and testified as
follows:
Mr. JENNER. This young man is
Daniel Patrick Powers. He lives at 401 12th Avenue West, Menomonie, Wis. Did I correctly state those facts?
Mr. POWERS. That's correct.
Mr. JENNER. Mr. Powers, I have
given you what supplements my telephone conversation earlier in the week, Mr.
Rankin's letter--he is general counsel for the Commission--advising you of the
creation of the Commission and enclosing the Joint Resolution No. 137, which is
a resolution authorizing the creation of the Commission; and President
Johnson's Executive Order 11130, which did create the Commission; and then the
rules and regulations of the Commission itself for the taking of depositions.
And from those papers and my
conversation with you earlier, you are aware, are you not, that the Commission
has been enjoined and has the duty of investigating the facts and circumstances
surrounding and involved in the assassination of our late President John
Fitzgerald Kennedy. We have been interviewing a number of witnesses, persons
who, by pure happenstance, had some contact with some of the people involved,
who became involved in that tragic event.
One of those persons is a man by
the name of Lee Harvey Oswald. It is our information that you had some contact
with him while you were in the Armed Forces of the United States, and I would
like to ask you a few questions if I might. You are an ex-service man?
Mr. POWERS. That's correct.
Mr. JENNER. And you were a
member of the Marine Corps?
Mr. POWERS. Yes, sir.
Mr. JENNER. And your number was
1497089.
Mr. POWERS. 1497089; that's
correct.
Mr. JENNER. And the dates of
your service, according to our records, are December 18, 1954---that's wrong,
or am I right? You entered the Reserves of the Marines in December 18, 1954,
and served in active duty in the Marines November 1, 1956 to October 1, 1958?
Mr. POWERS. What's correct.
Mr. JENNER. Is that all correct?
Mr. POWERS. Yes, sir.
Mr. JENNER. I think it will be
well if you start out by telling us what and who you are right at the moment.
Mr. POWERS. At the moment, presently I'm teaching at the
Menomonie Public School System in Wisconsin, and I'm teaching physical
education with the additional duties of head football and wrestling coach.
Mr. JENNER. And you are a
married man?
Mr. POWERS. That's correct.
Mr. JENNER. And with a family?
Mr. POWERS. Of two children.
Mr. JENNER. Two children. And
you're a native-born American?
Mr. POWERS. That's also correct.
Mr. JENNER. And where were you
born?
Mr. POWERS. I was born in
Minneapolis, Minn. Actually, I believe
my birth certificate says Minneapolis, Minn.; that's correct.
Mr. JENNER. And Mrs. Powers?
Mr. POWERS. Was born in St.
Paul, Minn.
Mr. JENNER. Now, during your
service in the Marines, did you become acquainted with a man--fellow marine,
known as Lee Harvey Oswald?
Mr. POWERS. Yes, sir.
Mr. JENNER. And do you recall
him now?
Mr. POWERS. Yes; I do.
Mr. JENNER. When did you--when
did that acquaintance first arise?
Mr. POWERS As to the best of my
recollection, this acquaintance first arose when I was en route to
Jacksonville---rather from Jacksonville, Fla., to Biloxi, Miss.; attended
school there, and he was a member of the group that was--we were traveling
together, and was a senior marine in charge.
Mr. JENNER. Were you the senior
marine in charge?
Mr. POWERS. That's correct.
Mr. JENNER. What was your rank
at that time?
Mr. POWERS. At that time my rank
was private first class.
Mr. JENNER. Now, when was that?
Mr. POWERS. I have the travel
orders, and if you want them-----
Mr. JENNER. Fine. If you have
anything from which you may refresh your recollection so that we can have the
exact date, I appreciate it.
Mr. POWERS. This would be, 2 May
1957 is on the date of these orders.
Mr. JENNER. May 2, 1957?
Mr. POWERS. That's correct. We
were authorized to proceed to Shipping and Receiving Station, Keesler----
Mr. JENNER. Check that over
again and see if in fact it's the 2d of May 1956.
Mr. POWERS. I'm sorry. 2d of May
1957.
Mr. JENNER. 1957?
Mr. POWERS. Yes.
"Effective 3 May 1957, the
below listed marines are directed to report to the 3380th Technical Training
Group, 3383d Student Squadron, Block 21, Building 17, Shipping and Receiving
Section, Keesler Air Force Base, Biloxi, Miss., for duty under instruction,
USNAC&W Operators Course No. AB27037, Class 08057, for a period of about 6
weeks. Upon arrival thereat, they will
report to the Commanding Officer for duty."
And then it lists six marines
with Lee H. Oswald as one of these marines.
Mr. JENNER. All right. Now, I'm pleased that you have those orders
because an FBI report fixes that time as--in the interview they had with you as
you having reported to have been in June of 1956, and in fact it was May 2,
1957?
Mr. POWERS. That's correct, sir.
Yes.
Mr. JENNER. I have been a little
curious as to why you hadn't met him while you were at the Naval Air Technical
Center at Jacksonville, Fla. I mean previous to this May 2d order.
Mr. POWERS. There is a
possibility, sir; that I had met him, but he doesn't enter into my recollection
until this particular period of time. Now, in recalling Jacksonville, Fla.,
going to school there, the only individual that stands out in my mind, or
individuals that were directly concerned with me are the people that I was
associated with.
Mr. JENNER. All right.
Mr. POWERS. But as far as he was
not in this particular social group, if you would like to call it that.
Mr. JENNER. He also was a
private, first class at that time, was he not?
Mr. POWERS. I don't believe he was, sir. I believe he was a private. I'll go back to these orders and
substantiate that. Yes; that's correct. He was a private, first class, at that
particular time.
Mr. JENNER. Now, would you give
me the names of--this was a group in which you were the senior and you were. in
charge of the travel of your group from the Naval Air Technical Center in
Jacksonville, Fla., to----
Mr. POWERS. Keesler----
Mr. JENNER. That is spelled
K-e-e-s-l-e-r, Keesler Field, in Mississippi, Biloxi?
Mr. POWERS. That's correct.
Mr. JENNER. And who were the
others?
Mr. POWERS. There is a Pfc.
Edward J. Bandoni.
Mr. JENNER. Do you have his number there?
Mr. POWERS. Yes, I do.
Mr. JENNER. Read it, please.
Mr. POWERS. 1551427. Pfc. James
N. Brereton, 1644586; Pfc. Donald P. Camarata, 1632342.
Mr. JENNER. Excuse me. Would you check that number again
as against mine? I had 1653230, am I in
error?
Mr. POWERS. You're in error,
sir. It's 1632342. The next name that
appears is Lee H. Oswald, private, first class, 1653230. And the next name is my name, Powers, Daniel
P., 1497089. And the next name that
appears is Schrand, Martin E., private, first class, 1639694.
Mr. JENNER. And that is spelled
S-c-h-a-r-a-n-d?
Mr. POWERS. A-n-d, sir.
Mr. JENNER. Yes, -r-a-n-d. Or just Schrand, is it? Spell it, please.
Mr. POWERS. S-c-h-r-a-n-d.
Mr. JENNER. All right. I want to
get that straight because we, do have an incident that occurred with respect to
him that I want to ask you about.
Mr. POWERS. Yes, sir. It did.
Mr. JENNER. Those are all the
men. Now, were you fellows destined to
be together pretty much as a group from that point on for some time?
Mr. POWERS. How do you mean
"destined"?
Mr. JENNER. Did it turn out that
the five of you--your assignments from then on were ran relatively parallel?
Mr. POWERS. Up to--you could say
that's true to a certain extent. We did attend school there. Then from
Mississippi we were assigned orders to go overseas, and report to El Toro,
Calif. Here, while we were at Mississippi, it was parallel. We attended the same classes, and in the
same particular group as far as the initial starting of training and
graduation, if you would like to call it that.
Mr. JENNER Yes.
Mr. POWERS. And then once we got
to California, they changed somewhat because some of the people reported in
early to California and some of them reported later, so this getting into an
overseas draft meant that some were leaving out of California earlier than
others, of course, which would mean their assignments as far as orders, were
different.
I would say that four of the
names mentioned previously, Camarata, Oswald, Powers, and Schrand, went to the
Far East; Bandoni and Brereton, I'm not sure where they went. I think they went
to the east coast, as I recall.
Mr. JENNER. What was your first
impression of Oswald when you traveled from Jacksonville, Fla., to Biloxi, and
Keesler Field, in Mississippi?
Mr. POWERS. Well, my first
impression of this individual is that he was somewhat, to use the term,
"loner." He was an individual
who was normally outside the particular group of marines that were in this
attachment to Keesler.
I felt that he was a somewhat
younger individual, less matured than the other boys. Again, this was just a personal opinion.
Mr. JENNER. By the way, what is
your age?
Mr. POWERS. My age at the moment
is 27.
Mr. JENNER. All right. And what
is the date of your birth?
Mr. POWERS. July 20, 1936. At
that particular time I believe I was----
Mr. JENNER. So you were 3 years
older than Oswald. He was born October 18, 1939?
Mr. POWERS. Yes; that's correct.
Mr. JENNER. Did any incident
occur during your travel from the Naval Air Base in Jacksonville to Keesler
Field in Biloxi, Miss., with respect to Oswald which arrested your attention or
was there any question about him?
Mr. POWERS. No.
Mr. JENNER. Or was this
relatively uneventful?
Mr. POWERS. It was uneventful,
you might say. There is nothing that you would care to attach any significance
to other than to the fact that for the most of us, this was the first time that
we ever were on a train and this was somewhat a new experience for the most
part for most of us.
Mr. JENNER. I see. And how many days travel were you given?
Mr. POWERS. I believe it was an
overnight travel. So it probably--2
days, May 3 to May 4, is when we actually reported in here; departed
Jacksonville, Fla., on 2 May 1957 and arrived in Biloxi, Miss., 4 May. So we reported for duty on that particular
day.
Mr. JENNER. So you were then
there May 4, 1957?
Mr. POWERS. That's correct.
Mr. JENNER. What was the nature
of your training, and then after that, give his training, in Keesler Field.
Mr. POWERS. The nature of my
training was to be trained in the operation of radar equipment which was used
to guide or locate aircraft in the air.
His training was completely parallel to mine. It was similar; it was the same in context.
Mr. JENNER. And is that likewise
true of these other men?
Mr. POWERS. That's also correct,
yes.
Mr. JENNER. And your assignments
from day to day were relatively parallel then?
Mr. POWERS. I would think they
were exactly parallel as far as attending classes. We went to the same classes,
we were at the same level of instruction throughout the whole school. I mean we
were brought right along. Some were above the others, and in retention of what
they were learning; we still were similar, I would say exact in the classes
that we did attend.
Mr. JENNER. These were in
general--this was aircraft control and warning operator course?
Mr. POWERS. That's correct, yes.
Mr. JENNER. And it included the
classes of uses of radar and other aircraft warning devices?
Mr. POWERS. Yes, sir.
Mr. JENNER. Were you awarded
the--what is known as the M.O.S., Military Occupation Specialty?
Mr. POWERS. Yes; we were. I ,believe coming out of excuse me---coming
out of Jacksonville, Fla., we were given a general M.O.S. of 6700, and then
after----
Mr. JENNER. Explain what that
means to me.
Mr. POWERS. M.O.S. is a Military
Occupational Specialty, and all it does is categorize you as to what you are
going to fall in when they issue you orders; and 6700 is aircraft, as I
understand; my memory may be somewhat faded or dim.
And when we did come out of
Keesler, then we were added the additional digit of 47 which would make us a
ground--I better not say "ground control," radar operator for--as a
guess, I would call it an early warning system.
Mr. JENNER. And how long did you
boys remain at Keesler?
Mr. POWERS. Exact dates would be
from 4 May to 4 June 1957, is when we picked up our orders to go to California.
Mr. JENNER. That's a month from
the day?
Mr. POWERS. I'm sorry. It says
here, "You will stand transferred June 19, 1957, and you will report to
your temporary duty station at 12 July 1957." This is when we were 2400
hours--we were supposed to report in the temporary duty station, which was El
Toro, Calif.
Mr. JENNER. Did you boys travel
out to El Toro?
Mr. POWERS. From 19 June to 12
July 1957. This was somewhat blurred
here. 16 days delay and 4 days travel by commercial. So it would be---June is 30--it would be 11 and 12, which would be
20----
Mr. JENNER. 16 days. 11 and 12,
that would be 23 days.
Mr. POWERS. Yes; so actually it
must be 19 days and 4 days travel by commercial carrier. 14 days--rather 19
days' delay.
Mr. JENNER. Did you boys travel
out to El Toro?
Mr. POWERS. No; we did not. Most
of us went on leave from there to--rather from Mississippi to our homes and
spent time there, and then proceeded to California by commercial vehicle.
Mr. JENNER. And were you living
in Minneapolis at that time?
Mr. POWERS. No; I was not. My
leave address, Rural Route No. 2, Owatonna, Minn. That was my parents' home.
Mr. JENNER. Did you have any
recollection of Oswald while he was at Keesler? That is, did he continue to
be--you used the term "loner"--was he a loner while he was at Keesler
Field?
Mr. POWERS. I would say yes and
no. A "loner" is a real poor
term to use.
Mr. JENNER. All right.
Mr. POWERS. I think that he was
an individual that found it hard to come in close relationship to any one
individual, and I don't say that he was one that
did try to avoid
it, but it seems like almost he was always striving for a relationship, but
whenever he did come, he would get into the group or something that his---that
his--just his general personality would alienate the group against him.
And to me, he was an individual
that--an individual that could come to a point that I don't--that he would come
to a point in his life where he would have to face a decision, now, this is
just again a personal opinion; he had a large homosexual tendency, as far as I
was concerned, and, well, maybe not these tendencies, but a lot of feminine
characteristics as far as the other individuals of the group were concerned,
and I think possibly he was an individual that would come to a point in his
life that would have to decide one way or the other.
Mr. JENNER. On what?
Mr. POWERS. On a homosexual or
leading a normal life, and again, now, this is a personal opinion.
And I think this, more than any
other factor, was the reason that he was on the outside of the group in this
particular group that we were in there in Mississippi.
He was always an individual that
was regarded as a meek person, one that you wouldn't have to worry about as far
as the leadership was concerned, a challenge for leadership or anything.
He could easily be led, an
individual that was influenced I think by education, and was impressed by a
person who had some education, an intelligent individual.
He had the name of Ozzie Rabbit,
as I recall.
Mr. JENNER. Of what?
Mr. POWERS. Ozzie Rabbit.
Mr. JENNER. Ozzie Rabbit?
Mr. POWERS. Yes; now, this goes
back to what I had said before that he was the meek mild individual that a
person felt if he had something, that he wouldn't really fight to keep it. He
would take the easy way out to avoid conflict.
But then again, I'm trying to recall this in my mind, and I'm not sure
whether something--whether it is something that is really true or something
that I want to recall----
Mr. JENNER. Yes, I would
like----
Mr. POWERS. About him.
Mr. JENNER. In your testimony,
do the best you can to give me your impressions as of that time, as free as it
is possible for you to do of influence upon that recollection by the course of
events that took place on the 22d of November, and what you read about this and
thereafter, because it's important to us to get as objective a report from you
as we possibly can.
Mr. POWERS. I realize that. And this is why I say I'm not sure that it's really true or
something that you want to remember. It
seems to me there was an incident that he had a fight in the barracks at that
particular time.
Mr. JENNER. Excuse me. You men
were quartered together in the same barracks?
Mr. POWERS. That's correct, in
the same wing of this particular barracks. They separated the Marines from the
Air Force as much as possible, although we did
have Air Force personnel in the room with us, two in the room.
It seems to me at this
particular time there was some kind of a squabble and I can't recall what it
was over, and this was the first time that he actually showed, say, some
backbone or willpower that he stood up to somebody, or what the incident was
over, I can't recall, but there is something that sticks in the back of my mind
there that something came up at this particular time.
He was a good student, as I
recall. I can't say that he was any better than anybody else. But again, as an individual he appeared to
be just as good as anybody wanted to be.
Mr. JENNER. Our records show
that he finished this course seventh in a class of 30. Is that score somewhat
of his ability?
Mr. POWERS. I couldn't
truthfully say; at that time I wasn't qualified to say who was----
Mr. JENNER. Were you boys
advised as to how each of you fared in the course of your studies?
Mr. POWERS. I can't truthfully
say that either. I don't remember.
Mr. JENNER. Mr. Reporter, I did
interrupt the witness when he was talking about his impression about Oswald.
Would you read that back to me, please?
(Whereupon, the record was read
by the reporter.)
Mr. JENNER. Had he had this
nickname, Ozzie Rabbit, did he acquire that before or--had he already acquired
it when you boys came from Jacksonville to Biloxi, or did you give it to him
when you arrived at Keesler?
Mr. POWERS. I think it was
attached to him at Keesler as far as any individual in our particular group
were concerned; this was the first contact that most of us had with each other
as individuals. We were brought together here at Keesler, and of coarse, living
and going to school together and in close proximity with each other, we did get
to know each other personally more than at any other time.
I think this is the period of
time that it was attached to my own mind as well as the other people in the
group.
Mr. JENNER. I take it you felt
he was not aggressive as far as leadership was concerned, and you boys felt
that you didn't have to worry about him as competitively?
Mr. POWERS. I would say so, yes;
but of course, at this time of our careers, if you would like to call it that,
of marines, there wasn't any real significance attached to leadership. It was
still--we were all the same rank. Of
course, one being in the service longer, there was always a senior marine as
far as I was concerned, and I was the marine in charge of this particular class
if you--I think this is the way they call it, class or flight squadron,
whatever they call it, and well, while at Keesler, I was promoted to corporal,
which again was an advancement in leadership, and, of course, there could never
be any differentiation of privates.
I was a corporal over privates,
first class, and still with the closest relationship that we had there, I don't
think there was any rank barrier or difference here.
I think we were all. regarded
that we were just marines at this school and not trying to enforce authority at
any particular time in which we would get more in the infantry of the Marines.
There a corporal is a corporal, but in going to school like this, you wouldn't
enforce discipline to a point where people jumped when a person of higher rank
said something.
Mr. JENNER. What was your rank
when you were mustered out?
Mr. POWERS. Out of the Marine
Corps?
Mr. JENNER. Yes.
Mr. POWERS. I was a sergeant.
Mr. JENNER. What gave you the
impression that he had or might have had homosexual tendencies?
Mr. POWERS. Again, this is an
unqualified opinion, and----
Mr. JENNER. Did you say
"unqualified"?
Mr. POWERS. Yes, because
obviously, I'm not qualified to say one is or is not, but having seen a number
of them and seeing their characteristics, as far as manner of walk, dress, and
just their personality, I would say possibly his was similar to them in some
respects.
Mr. JENNER. You found him a
feminine----
Mr. POWERS. I would say yes; a
lot of his mannerisms were closely related to other homosexuals that I had seen
in my life up to that period of time.
Mr. JENNER. You said, in the
course of your general statement, that your group had the impression that he
might be easily led. Can you elaborate
on that?
Mr. POWERS. Well, let's not say
the group felt that he was easy to lead. I felt--let's say that I felt he was
easily led, and the group felt that it was kind of a group response that you
would get here if what was good for the group was good for everyone, and he
would go along with what the group went along with, and he wouldn't go out on
the limb as one individual; at least at this particular period of time he did
not.
And I would say he was a group
response he was easily led; he was responsive to the group as a whole.
At the same time I felt that he
was an individual such as I see today.
I see
individuals that
they are fascinated by education, and of course, not knowing what his IQ was,
and what his capacity for education was---still at the time he impressed me as
an individual who was quite intelligent and he would read quite a lot, and so I
would say he, by "being led," it would be more of a personal opinion
of my own that he was an individual that you could sway.
Now, these are opinions that I
have of him after being educated further myself, and seeing people every day,
and in the teaching situation that I'm in, that is somewhat similar to a mass
hysteria, and I think he is the one that you could brainwash or maybe that's
the wrong term.
I think he is the individual
that you would brainwash, and quite easy, and this is the opinion of the
personality and mind that he did have.
I think once he believed in
something, by gosh he believed in it, and he stood in his beliefs.
Mr. JENNER. And how long have
you been teaching?
Mr. POWERS. This will be my
third year of teaching now.
Mr. JENNER. What is the extent
of your formal education beyond high school, if any?
Mr. POWERS The extent of my
formal education beyond high school was a Bachelor of Science Degree and
presently working on a Master's Degree from the University, and this will
either be in physical education or guidance; I'm not sure which way I'll go yet.
Mr. JENNER. Did you have your
University of Minnesota education attendance after you left the Marines?
Mr. POWERS. I had 1 year at the
university before going to the Marine Corps, and then I went after my service.
Mr. JENNER. Were you aware when
you were in the service, or this period about which we are speaking, that he
had not graduated from high school?
Mr. POWERS. Let's say I wasn't consciously aware of
it. I was aware of the fact that I was
one of the few boys or the individuals there that had a college education, and
consequently also I had, after being in the Marines a short period of time, I
had a firm belief in finishing my education.
And I think this here put---or
any individual, not only myself, or any individual that had a college
education, there was a number of them while I was in the Marines at that
particular time that did have a college education, we felt intellectually we
were somewhat above these boys in this particular group that we ran in this
particular time. And I think this was borne out by the fact that we did more
serious reading and we got into less crap games and went on less liberties and
things of this nature, and at this particular time, I only had 1 year of
college education.
Mr. JENNER. Do you have any
feeling with respect to Oswald, any disappointment on his part of his limited
education at this stage of his life or any thing resulting or desire on his
part for further education?
Did you ever have any
discussions with him on the subject?
Mr. POWERS. His opinions, is
that what you're asking?
Mr. JENNER. Yes.
Mr. POWERS. I think that the
reason he was in the Marine Corps was there wasn't anything better for him to
do at this time, was the reason that he felt, and at least now, in recalling,
again trying to recall, he felt this way about it. And he was somewhat of a rolling stone; he didn't care to go to
school. And he'd just as soon go into
the service to get out of the people's hair at home. This type of attitude.
Mr. JENNER. Did he get into any
fights or arguments other than marines jostling around as you would normally
do, anything that attracted your attention of any kind?
Mr. POWERS. No; I would not say
so. There isn't anything that stays in my mind at this time.
Mr. JENNER. Did you return home
and visit your folks during this----
Mr. POWERS. Yes; that's correct.
Mr. JENNER. Leave before you had
to return? You had to be at El Toro?
Mr. POWERS. Yes, sir.
Mr. JENNER. I gathered that you
had the impression that he---during this period of time that, this leave
period--that he visited New Orleans?
Mr. POWERS. Now that you brought
New Orleans up, he used to--he used to go home to New Orleans from Biloxi
there, as I recall again. This was only a short distance, between 50 and 71
miles, and he would go home on weekend passes; and once we were through classes
on Friday, we were free as long as we were in class again on Monday morning, as
I recall. And it seems to me that he mentioned, or he did go home, that he
wasn't in Mississippi or the Biloxi area on weekends.
I might be wrong in this, but it
seems to me that he did go all weekend, and I think that you did mention New
Orleans, that this possibly sticks in my mind as associated with New Orleans
and him at Biloxi, Miss.
Mr. JENNER. When you boys had
liberty, did you tend to stick together on your liberties or on occasion take
your liberties together, one or more of you?
Mr. POWERS. As I recall now, as
soon as school was over every day, we had our liberty cards, we could leave,
and then we could come back as long as we were back on base in the morning to
attend classes, and at this particular period of time, I was married and my
interests were somewhat different than the other fellows.
Mr. JENNER. Was your wife on the
base?
Mr. POWERS. No; she was not. She
was living with my parents back home in Minnesota, Owatonna. And my liberty
usually consisted of going to the beach and lying around suntanning or fooling
or swimming, and lots of times maybe three or four of us would go down--in my
mind, we used to eat all the spaghetti that we could get down there, and we
would go downtown once in a while; but as far as particularly going together, I
would possibly say that the boys from the east coast, Bandoni and Brereton,
they were quite close, and Camarata, that particular group, they were quite
close, and--but if we were just going down to lie around the beach, we would
usually go over, and I don't recall Oswald going with us, and I don't recall in
my mind that he was on liberty. And this would possibly bear out the fact that
it's in my mind that he went to New Orleans on weekends because it seems that
he wasn't ever around there.
Mr. JENNER. But even at night
when you were excused from class, did he have a tendency to join the group or
not join the group on your leave card periods?
Mr. POWERS. Well, there were so
many things. Normally, as I recall, it
wasn't a general practice that we left the base during the week. Now, we usually stayed around the barracks
and either studied or go over to the gym and work out or something of this
nature, and I can't recall him in the barracks except when we would have
inspection on Saturdays or something in the Air Force doing the inspection, and
all the marines were complaining that we shouldn't have to stay for an Air
Force inspection, and again this substantiates the idea that he went home to
New Orleans because I think it came once a month or something, and we happened
to get in the period that we had two of them, and he was anxious to go because
inspection was Saturday morning, and he wanted to get out early out of the base
to leave, and he had to stand inspection.
Mr. JENNER. Was this a fair
statement, Mr. Powers, whether or not he went to New Orleans on his weekend
leave, he did not remain in the Biloxi area, is your impression?
Mr. POWERS. I couldn't say truthfully because I don't
know what you mean by the "Biloxi area." At least he did not remain on the Air Force base. He left the Air Force base. Now, if he remained in Biloxi proper, the
town, the community, I'm not sure.
But it was my opinion that he
was not in the close proximity. He
would be traveling over a period of time, then he would return to the base.
Mr. JENNER. Our records show that at the time he left
Keesler to travel to El Toro, he was rated 4.2 in conduct and 4.5 in
proficiency. What is that? What do those grades mean in terms of the maximum or
the minimum?
Mr. POWERS. I'm not sure what
the scale--I cannot recollect what the scale is. I think it was 5.0 is the top.
Mr. JENNER. You're right. And would 4.2 in conduct and 4.5 in
proficiency be a pretty fair rating?
Mr. POWERS. Well, going back to
what you said, he graduated seventh out of 30, it would be 4.5, which would be
pretty good in the upper third of his class, so to speak. 4.2 couldn't be too
far behind. So I would imagine on a
five scale, 3.0 would be average. So 4.2 would be B plus.
Mr. JENNER. How did that compare
with yours, by the way?
Mr. POWERS. I don't know what
mine was.
Mr. JENNER. You don't?
Mr. POWERS. No; I don't have any
idea what my proficiency report was.
Mr. JENNER. I see. I take it
that none of you boys traveled together to El Toro, you went by your own
respective routes?
Mr. POWERS. Camarata and myself,
seems to me we flew into Chicago together, and from there on, he went to Cedar
Rapids, Iowa. And I continued on to
Minneapolis in the plane there; there was another marine that went with us
from, I think now, from Mississippi--from Biloxi into New Orleans. We went on the bus together.
Mr. JENNER. Was it one of your
group?
Mr. POWERS. Yes; I think so. It
was one of our group that was leaving.
And I want to say, it was Bandoni----
Mr. JENNER. That's your best
recollection?
Mr. POWERS. But once into New
Orleans, it seems that Camarata and I--this is going through my mind of the
limousine and on to the airport, and we continued on. Maybe there was three of
us, I'm not sure. But it seems to me
there was two of us, and I think we were at a movie theater, as my mind goes
on. And we did run into some of the
other fellows there.
Mr. JENNER. But not Oswald?
Mr. POWERS. I can't say
truthfully if we ran into him or not.
Mr. JENNER. And El Toro is the
Marine station----
Mr. POWERS. That's correct, sir.
Mr. JENNER. What was your
reporting date at El Toro?
Mr. POWERS. My reporting date at
El Toro was 2400, 12 July 1967.
Mr. JENNER. Do you have any
recollection of what Oswald did during the intervening period, that is, this
leave period?
Mr. POWERS. No; I do not. Except possibly there was
something that was stuck in my mind; we were on the ship going overseas, he
mentioned Texas and his mother. That's all that I can recollect.
Mr. JENNER. So that he might
have visited his mother in Texas?
Mr. POWERS. It stays in my mind
of Texas and his mother. Whether this
is truly true or not, it sticks there, And what the relationship was, I don't
know, or if he did visit her or when, I'm not sure. I think I was under the
opinion that he was from Texas. He used
to say--I want to say Dallas, but I'm not sure again if that is planted----
Mr. JENNER. Fort Worth?
Mr. POWERS. Yes; maybe it was
Fort Worth, but it was some place in Texas, but I can't say for sure with
everything going; again I don't know.
Mr. JENNER. Did he say anything
during these periods or thereafter of having been a boy in New Orleans up to
his high school period, having lived for a while in Texas?
Mr. POWERS. Now, Texas and New
Orleans are not associated in my mind. New Orleans, this is where he used to go
on weekends; this is where he used to go quite a bit when he was in
Mississippi. But as far as, let's say, hometown, or home State, it was in my
mind; it stuck it was Texas, but there was no relationship between both of them
other than .this is where he went.
Mr. JENNER. How long did you
remain at El Toro?
Mr. POWERS. We arrived the 12th
of July in El Toro, Calif. This is when I reported in. Now, when I actually
went overseas, it was in the August draft, I don't--to be truthful, I can't say
when I went overseas. It was sometime in August, around the first of August.
Mr. JENNER. Could it have been
the middle of August, August 15th?
Mr. POWERS. It's possible. I
cannot say for sure.
Mr. JENNER. All right.
Mr. POWERS. I have no record of
when I did actually.
Mr. JENNER. All right. Assuming
that was the date, you were at El Toro approximately a month then?
Mr. POWERS. That's correct; yes,
sir.
Mr. JENNER. And what was your
classification there?
Mr. POWERS. How do you mean
"classification"?
Mr. JENNER. Well, our records
show that Oswald was classified as a replacement trainee.
Mr. POWERS. That's probably what
I was, too, a replacement trainee for overseas.
Mr. JENNER. What was Oswald's
response or attitude toward higher authority?
Mr. POWERS. Up to this
particular period of time, I don't think he showed any attitude or response to
higher authority other than he was like the rest of the trainees, if you want
to call it that; he did what he was told and that was it.
I think his aggressive attitude
came after he was away from his initial exposure to the Marine Corps-type
discipline.
Mr. JENNER. Were you with him
during that period of time?
Mr. POWERS. I was with him overseas.
Well, he was actually in the same unit as I was until I came home, and this is
where I noticed that he had started to be more aggressive, and outgoing in his
manner. In other words, he took on a
new personality, and now he was Oswald the man rather than Oswald the rabbit.
Mr. JENNER. This was after you
boys got overseas?
Mr. POWERS. Yes; I think so. I think--this is when I noticed--it can be safe to say that he
did start to have more incidents of where he would stand for his own rights if
there were rights to be had. In other
words, he was going to take everything that came, and he wasn't going to let
anybody else get what he could have.
Mr. JENNER. Do you remember
anything in the particular incident that you think might be helpful to the
Commission during that 1-month period of time that you were at El Toro?
Mr. POWERS. At this particular
time, I have no memory of the individual at all. It seems to me that he
reported in after I did, I think, and this is where again something is in my
mind of Texas. He said he was in Texas for this period of time, and him
coming--being there first--the most we got into--I think we got into an August
draft, and I don't think he was in the same draft that I was in. I think I
reported in and got in the July draft.
Now, again, I'm not sure on
this, but it seems to me that he was in a different draft than I was, and we
were all in the same barracks to start, and then they separate you in these
replacements drafts, and again it's in my mind when he reported in or possibly
he came in late off his leave, he took an extra week or something.
It might be in my mind, I can't
say for sure, but it still remains there, that he was in Texas or Texas was the
area he was visiting or he took his leave in.
Mr. JENNER. Well, then, you were
you boys were shipped out from El Toro?
Mr. POWERS. Yes.
Mr. JENNER. For overseas?
Mr. POWERS. Yes.
Mr. JENNER. Was he on the same
ship?
Mr. POWERS. Well, he must have
been in the same draft; he was on the same ship.
Mr. JENNER. From what port did
you sail?
Mr. POWERS. In my--we left from
San Diego.
Mr. JENNER. Do you remember the
name of the ship?
Mr. POWERS. No; I don't remember
the name of the ship.
Mr. JENNER. Would it refresh
your recollection if I uttered the name Bexar, B-e-x-a-r; would that mean
anything to you?
Mr. POWERS. I think possibly,
yes; I think it was on the Peter boats and Mike boats.
Mr. JENNER. What is a Mike boat?
Mr. POWERS. These are the terms
given to these landing crafts.
Mr. JENNER. That were on the
ship itself?
Mr. POWERS. Yes; they're running over the ship; they're
used for loading and unloading of supplies and running back and forth while
we're on the harbor, taking people off leave and from.
Mr. JENNER. Now, your embarkation was--would you check
your orders, the 21st of August, am I correct?
Mr. POWERS. I'm not sure. From here I don't have any orders.
Mr. JENNER. All right.
Mr. POWERS. I think these orders
are all in the group orders, and they are not given to individuals as such.
Mr. JENNER. I see.
All right. You went from San
Diego to what port, what foreign port?
Mr. POWERS. Yokohama.
Again, I'm not sure. I think it was Yokohama.
Mr. JENNER. Yokosuka rather than
Yokohama?
Mr. POWERS. Yes; there is two of
them right in the same proximity.
Yokosuka is probably the right one.
I'm not sure now.
Mr. JENNER. What was the military base?
Mr. POWERS. That we reported to?
Mr. JENNER. Yes.
Mr. POWERS. Atsugi.
Mr. JENNER. A-t-s-u-g-i?
Mr. POWERS. That's correct.
Mr. JENNER. And that is the Marine base?
Mr. POWERS. Navy base with
Marine squadrons flying out of it, but it's primary mission is a Navy base.
Mr. JENNER. Now, were these same
boys, Bandoni, Brereton, Camarata, yourself, Schrand, and Oswald, were you
still a group?
Mr. POWERS. I don't think
Bandoni was part of the group; no. He must have been because I have pictures. I
don't think that he----
Mr. JENNER. By the way, do you
have pictures of--any pictures of these taken during the course of your time in
the Marines which Oswald appears in?
Mr. POWERS. Just the one picture that I have of him
appearing is a class-type photo when we got out of Keesler Air Force Base, and
it shows Marine and Air Force personnel that graduated.
I have never run across any
pictures of him of barracks life or anything like that.
Going back to your original
question: Brereton was on it, and Camarata and Schrand--maybe Schrand came
later, I can't say for sure. But Oswald
and myself, but I think that Bandoni went on the east coast, but Brereton went
to Iwakuni, which is another Air Force rather Marine base, and Camarata went
down to a helicopter base somewhere in Japan, down in the harbor somewhere. I
used to call him on the phone once in a while and talk to him.
And Brereton, I think--no, by
gosh, maybe Bandoni was down at--no, that was Mike Cainey. We were flying
between the Philippines, and if he would stop in at Iwakuni, I would stop in and see Mike.
Mr. JENNER. Where?
Mr. POWERS. Iwakun, this is a
base in the lower part of Japan.
Mr. JENNER. I-o-w-c------
Mr. POWERS. I-o-w-a-k-o-n-n-i, I
think. Iwakuni--i-e-, possibly. I think
it's -i. I don't know. I'm lost, where I was. It seems to me that Brereton was
over there, too, at Iwakuni, but I don't recall if I possibly saw him over
there once or twice; it was either on a football trip or when I was flying down
to the Philippines after wrestling season.
Mr. JENNER. Now, tell us about
the trip over to Yokosuka, the life on the boat and what he did and what you
did and what things you did together, if anything, conversations that you had,
those that you overheard, your opinion of him during that period, and reaction
of the platoon or group to Oswald.
Mr. POWERS. At this particular
period of time, now, you're starting to get into, say, the rank association
that people of higher rank associate with people of lower rank at this
particular period of time, you do see it more coming in the group relationship
and this was brought about by my becoming a corporal, and I wasn't assigned
some of the tasks that the privates, first class, and privates were assigned,
and I recall I didn't have to do anything going over, and there were some
duties assigned naturally, and with him as an individual, I can remember that
he taught me how to play chess going over, and he was quite a proficient chess
player, and, well, let's not say he was not real proficient; he used to beat
me, and it wouldn't take too much proficiency to beat me. And he would sit and play, and we would
maybe play--usually we played I game a day, and sometimes we would play 4 to 8
hours, playing chess.
Mr. JENNER. Four?
Mr. POWERS. Four to eight hours
playing chess. And I got to a point
where I beat him once in a while, and it would irritate him a little bit that
someone beat him, but not to a point where he would get violent or anything of
this nature, but he was real happy and pleased when he would win.
And again looking back at this,
it gives me some impressions about him.
He was real happy to win, like he was accomplishing something in his
life.
And he used to read quite a bit.
I remember we got these paperbacks, and there was some good literature in
these, and he would swap books back and forth, and he would never be reading
any of the shoot-em-up westerns or anything like that. Normally, it would be a
good type of literature; and the one that I recall was "Leaves of
Grass," by Walt Whitman. And he
had it for a period of time, and I would want to read it for myself, and as it
came about, he did let me have It. I think I still have the book.
Mr. JENNER. Do you recall the
titles of any other books that he read?
Mr. POWERS. Oh, I'm not saying
that he read them, but the reason that I recall these titles is because I still
have most of these paperbacks that I kept quite a few of these, and they were
the "Age of Reason," and "Age of Enlightenment," and
whether he read these or not, I'm not sure. But I think there is something on
the "Greatest President of the United States," and democracy, and
books of that nature.
Mr. JENNER. Where did you obtain
these books?
Mr. POWERS. They were given to
the troops---I'll use that for a lack of a better term--periodically throughout
the voyage going over, where they got them, I don't know. I think they probably
just picked them up and it was standard procedure, I assume.
Mr. JENNER. They were books that
were distributed through the Marines?
Mr. POWERS. That's correct.
Mr. JENNER. And you could read
them or not as you saw fit?
Mr. POWERS. Right.
Mr. JENNER. And your
recollection is that you do recall Oswald did read "Leaves of Grass"?
Mr. POWERS. Right. Whether he
read the other books, I'm not sure, but this leads me to the impression that he
was trying to read something that was deeper than the average paperback that
you see in the drug store or something of that nature.
Mr. JENNER. These were books
which you were interested in?
Mr. POWERS. Yes; these were
books which I was interested in mainly because the image that I held at that
time that I was more educated than the other individuals and in order to maintain
this image, and for my own personal satisfaction as well, I read these books,
and I think this is--whether he read these books for his own personal
satisfaction or to create an image similar to the ones that we had--I say
"we," the people that had more education than the average marine
there.
Mr. JENNER. Was he a voracious
reader?
Mr. POWERS. What do you mean by
the word "voracious"?
Mr. JENNER. Did he read a great
deal?
Mr. POWERS. I can't truthfully
say. I think everyone at that
particular time read more than they possibly did at any other period that they
had in the Marine Corps. Mainly, you are in a limited space and this was the
thing to do; it was easy to do, and you could entertain yourself this way.
Mr. JENNER. Yes. I take it it
was not your impression, then, at least at this stage of the game, he devoted a
great deal of his time to reading as distinguished from what other Marines were
doing in that regard?
Mr. POWERS. Well, I don't know.
It seems to me when we were in Mississippi that he did read some he was doing
further reading than other--what the normal individual was doing at that
time. I can't recall what would
substantiate that in my mind; it just stuck in my mind that he did some
reading, or all during this period of time that he was an individual that,
rather than play poker or go out on liberty, he was just as well content to
stay and read a book or things of this nature, and this may be that he was
outside of the group and he did this to----
Mr. JENNER. You mentioned poker,
so I assume that you played poker on the trip over?
Mr. POWERS. I don't play. I don't play cards.
Mr. JENNER. Well, were there
poker games, however, on the way over?
Mr. POWERS. I imagine there
was. There was card games to some
nature, whether it was poker or something, I don't know. To be truthful, I don't recall.
Mr. JENNER. Did Oswald engage in
the card games whenever there were----
Mr. POWERS. I don't know; I
don't recall.
Mr. JENNER. Do you recall
whether he did any gambling?
Mr. POWERS. I don't recall; no,
sir.
Mr. JENNER. Anything else that
you recall occurred on this ship, either something that occurred or impressions
that you have or now have of this man during this period of time?
Mr. POWERS. No.
Mr. JENNER. For the purpose of
perhaps refreshing your recollection, was there an occasion in which he made
some comment that "All the Marine Corps did was to teach you to
kill," and after you got out of the Marines, you might be good gangsters?
Mr. POWERS. Yes; he made that
statement. Now, whether it was at this
particular period of time or not, I'm not sure.
Mr. JENNER. You do recall that
he made that statement?
Mr. POWERS. That statement was made and I think it
was--he was probably parroting somebody else that made the statement
previously. And I think it was this was
a common statement, but as I recall, he---he did say this.
Mr. JENNER. Yes.
Mr. POWERS. But now when we were
playing chess at one period of time, whether it was on the ship or not, I'm not
sure, possibly it could have been in Japan, but it would most likely have been
on that ship.
Mr. JENNER. I take it, however,
that this you might classify as some griping----
Mr. POWERS. Yes.
Mr. JENNER. Over the Marines?
Mr. POWERS. This would be
normal.
Mr. JENNER. Or something
similar?
Mr. POWERS. You wouldn't attach
any significance to it. Someone would
say, "The Marine Corps stinks," or something of this type, and
whether one individual said it or another, you wouldn't attach any significance
to it.
Mr. JENNER. I see.
Atsugi is about 35 miles from
Tokyo, isn't it?
Mr. POWERS. Yes; it is.
Mr. JENNER. When you reached
Atsugki, what was your assignment?
Mr. POWERS. We were assigned to
Marine Air Control Squadron No. 1, and assigned to crews within this squadron.
Mr. JENNER. Did you have some
abbreviation for that?
Mr. POWERS. MACS 1, M-A-C-S 1.
Mr. JENNER. And you were
headquartered at the naval air station at Atsugi, Japan?
Mr. POWERS. Yes, sir.
Mr. JENNER. Oswald--what did he
serve as? I mean, was he a radar
operator?
Mr. POWERS. I assume he was a
radar operator. From here I lost almost
total contact with the individual other than just seeing him. I played football
during the fall and during this period of time we would play, we played in the
bowl games, and the squadron went down to the Philippines, and I stayed in
Japan.
Mr. JENNER. You didn't go to the
Philippines?
Mr. POWERS. I did at a later
date, but when the rest of the squadron went
down to the
Philippines, they went down, oh, I don't know, probably sometime in November,
and I stayed down and played football, and then after that, I was wrestling--I
wrestled for a while, and then out of the blue came orders to go to the
Philippines, and from that time, I think this was sometime in the middle of
January----
Mr. JENNER. What was the
function of MACS 1?
Mr. POWERS. It was a squadron
composed of a radar group.
Mr. JENNER. About how many men?
Mr. POWERS. Oh, in estimating, I
would say 100 personnel at the most, and its function was to support landings
with the control of aircraft to particular target areas or target sites, and
you would control the aircraft by radar rather than trying to use it all by
visual flight.
Mr. JENNER. When you say
"control aircraft," what do you mean by that?
Mr. POWERS. You would not
actually control the aircraft by flying it yourself, the operator or pilot
would have to control the aircraft, and you would direct him as far as his turn
is concerned, and his degrees, and turn 90° right, and you would control him to
an intercept, so to speak, to another aircraft and you would intercept it until
he got in range or where he could see it visually, and they took over.
Mr. JENNER. And you would be
communicating with him in some fashion?
Mr. POWERS. Yes; you would have
him on radio, and at the same time, when we were in Atsugi, we were assigned,
it seems to me, a particular sector of the horizon to cover to protect against
incoming foreign aircraft, and you plotted it all on the board. You called it a
"bogey" coming in, and they would scramble aircraft and intercept
this bogey, if it didn't have the identification system on.
Mr. JENNER. And were these
simulated enemy----
Mr. POWERS. Yes; I would say in
our operations that they were in the Philippines, as I recall, it was all
simulated. When we were in Japan,
however, you would get the actual thing where you would have the scramble aircraft
on a hot bogey--I think is the term that they used--and maybe it would be a
Russian aircraft or Chinese aircraft straying into this particular area, and
they would scramble aircraft after it and go up and take a look-see. And that is as far as I knew.
Mr. JENNER. And so while you
were in Japan, you would be actually looking for hot bogeys?
Mr. POWERS. Yes; I actually
never spent that much time on the site. I was playing football or----
Mr. JENNER. Yes.
Mr. POWERS. So as I recall, that
is what we used to do.
Mr. JENNER. Did Oswald play
football?
Mr. POWERS. No; he was not
athletic in any form.
Mr. JENNER. He didn't engage in
any athletics?
Mr. POWERS. Not while I was in
contact with him; no.
Mr. JENNER. You mentioned when
you boys were in Keesler you sometimes went to the gym. Did he go to the gym
and work out?
Mr. POWERS. I can't recall that
he ever did; no, sir.
Mr. JENNER. You eventually
rejoined the squadron or the group, did you, in the Philippines?
Mr. POWERS. Yes, sir.
Mr. JENNER. And when was that?
Mr. POWERS. Oh, it was in the
middle of January or February.
Mr. JENNER. Of 1958?
Mr. POWERS. Of 1958; yes, sir.
Mr. JENNER. And where in the
Philippines?
Mr. POWERS. Cubi Point.
Mr. JENNER. C-u-b-i?
Mr. POWERS. Yes; Cubi Point.
Mr. JENNER. And what was the
nature of that installation?
Mr. POWERS. This was just
temporary quarters for the squadron.
They were caught in between. They were at an operation early in November
and then this---something----
Mr. JENNER. That would be
November of 1957?
Mr. POWERS. Yes. Something
flared up, I believe, in Indonesia, somewhere in that area, and they held the
squadron on the ship for a particular Period of time; and then there was another operation going to start in
February or sometime, or March, and they just----
Mr. JENNER. Of 1958?
Mr. POWERS. Yes, sir; instead of
sending them back up to Japan, and then have to come all the way back again,
they just put them ashore at Cubi Point.
And they just set up a temporary base and continued the operation out of
there. There was actually no radar site setup at that area, and we just got the
gear and other materiel and trucks and apparatus and things, and equipment was
repaired and made ready for the next operation.
Mr. JENNER. And during your stay
at the Philippines, were you ever at Subic Bay instead of Cubi Point?
Mr. POWERS. Cubi Point and Subic
Bay are at close proximity. Cubi Point is the landing actually, and Subic Bay
is the harbor, and you can almost call
it one actual installation as far as I was concerned, but they were
designated---Cubi Point was the landing strip and Subic Bay was the landing
area.
Mr. JENNER. In some of Oswald's
autobiographical material prepared either then or later, he refers to the fact
that it was at Subic Bay, and that doesn't appear in the official orders, and
we wondered where he got that, and now you explained it for us.
Mr. POWERS. You traveled in
between both, as far as they had the swimming paint there; I remember it was at
Subic--isn't it S-u-b-i-c?
Mr. JENNER. I don't want to say
it.
Mr. POWERS. I thought it was
Subic; I'm probably wrong.
Mr. JENNER. I won't say that
you're wrong. I think you're right. It's Cubi Point and Subic Bay.
Mr. POWERS. Yes; there was
actually one installation in my mind. They were separated, but one was the
harbor for the ships and the other was for the aircraft.
Mr. JENNER. Now, was the same
group that we that you described earlier that came from Jacksonville, Fla.,
still together at Cubi Point when you rejoined the squadron?
Mr. POWERS. All but certain
elements. I think the people in my particular group that originated in
Jacksonville, the only people that were left was Schrand, Oswald, and myself.
And the rest of them were dispersed in Japan or the Far East area or in the
United States somewhere.
Mr. JENNER. And did an incident
occur with respect to Mr. Schrand?
Mr. POWERS. Yes; he was--this
happened after I arrived from the Japanese mainland. He was on guard duty one evening and he was shot to death. Now, I have never seen the official report
or anything, but the scuttlebutt at that time was that he was shot underneath
the right arm and it came up from underneath the left neck, and it was by a
shotgun which we were authorized to carry while we were on guard duty.
Mr. JENNER. Were these also
sometimes called riot guns?
Mr. POWERS. Riot guns; yes. And
that is the only thing that--significance I attach to it other than he was
either leaning against the shotgun or was fooling with it, but he was shot
anyway.
Mr. JENNER. Was there you don't
know what the official finding was with respect to----
Mr. POWERS. No; I do not. I
never had access to anything of this nature.
Mr. JENNER. Was there any
scuttlebutt about it?
Mr. POWERS. No; other than that
he was fooling with the weapon. Other than that, we couldn't--as I recall, we
could never realize how a 'guy could have shot himself there other than he was
leaning on it this way [indicating], and "boom," it went off.
Mr. JENNER. As far as you boys
were concerned at that time, was there any scuttlebutt or speculation about
anyone of you being involved in that incident?
Mr. POWERS. Not to my
recollection at all.
Mr. JENNER. When I say "you,"
that includes Oswald.
Mr. POWERS. Not that I know of;
no, sir.
Mr. JENNER. Weren't there some
instructions in connection with the use
of those riot
guns when you were on guard duty that you would keep the chamber free of slugs?
Mr. POWERS. I'm almost sure
again I can't say for sure, but it seems to me that we were issued three
shells, and--again, I'm not sure; it seems to me that we were not supposed to
put them in the weapon or supposed to put them in the weapon and keep it out of
the chamber; in other words, you jacked it into the chamber if you needed it,
but your chamber itself should be kept free.
Mr. JENNER. To avoid accidents?
Mr. POWERS. Yes; I think this
was the rule because you would have to click them to get them out this way and
to avoid an incident such as happened.
Mr. JENNER. Did you boys do any
maintenance work in connection with your radar scanning assignment?
Mr. POWERS. We were not trained
to do it; no. They had the assigned personnel do it.
Mr. JENNER. Do you recall
anything in this connection with respect to guard duty relating to some kind of
a special airplane?
Mr. POWERS. Yes, we this
happened again, I think, after the rest of the squadron left to go hack to the
Japanese mainland, and some of us were assigned temporary duty in Cubi Point
there. I believe there were two of us, or three of us from the squadron.
Mr. JENNER. Who were they?
Mr. POWERS. Murphy; I believe,
was one of them; and Private----Private, First Class Murphy, and I don't recall
the other individuals, who the other individuals were, but anyway, we were
assigned there, and at this particular time, they were closely guarding a
hangar. And as it developed, this was,
not knowing then what it was, it was a U-2 aircraft, but this was after the
rest of the squadron left, which Oswald was included in, for the mainland.
Mr. JENNER. Oswald was included
in a group that had returned to the mainland?
Mr. POWERS. Yes, sir.
Mr. JENNER. Was Oswald still at
Cubi Point when Marine Schrand was shot?
Mr. POWERS. I believe he was;
yes. The whole squadron was there then, so he must have been there: yes.
Mr. JENNER. But Schrand's guard
duty was not guard duty in connection with these special airplanes of which,
you now speak?
Mr. POWERS. Well, no; I don't
believe so. I can't say that for sure, what it was regarding. But I don't think
so. I think they were on the site guarding the equipment that he had there, and
it seems to me that the Air Force moved in that particular hangar after the
squadron went up. I think this is correct.
Mr. JENNER. Was there a--did you
have an assignment when you were shipped to Corregidor?
Mr. POWERS. Yes; this assignment
came between when I originally flew in to Cubi Point and then the squadron went
on another operation where they were preparing--after they prepared their
equipment there, and we went down to Corregidor and we stayed there
approximately a month or 6 Weeks at the most, and then we came back and then
the people, they dropped off the four or five personnel that were on temporary
duty, and then the rest of the squadron continued, on to the mainland.
Mr. JENNER. Was Oswald part of
the group that was assigned to Corregidor?
Mr. POWERS. Yes; the whole
squadron was assigned to it.
Mr. JENNER. And what did you do
at Corregidor?
Mr. POWERS. We participated in
a--I think it was the 3d Marine Division in the operation of military
exercises.
Mr. JENNER. The same sort of
thing that you had been doing back in Cubi Point?
Mr. POWERS. Yes; with the
exception now that we were plotting simulated aircraft, scanning for it.
Mr. JENNER. Any incident occur
during that period involving Oswald?
Mr. POWERS. No; nothing that I
recall. Something sticks in my mind about being on mess duty, but I can't
recall what the incident was. I have a picture of it in my mind.
Mr. JENNER. You did mention to
the FBI when you were interviewed that he was on mess duty, and I assume in the
first place he was not on mess duty all the time while he was in the
Philippines, was he?
Mr. POWERS. No; you're
assigned--privates and privates first class are assigned this duty
periodically. I think you're assigned one week out of the year.
Mr. JENNER. This was not a mess
duty assignment by way of punishment?