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HomeMy WebLinkAboutPearl Harbor 51st Annive... Pearl Harbor anniversary marked in ceremonies across the nation The Associated Press The passage of 51 years hasn't dimmed Frederick Bowen's recollection of what happened at Pearl Har- bor. Bowen, of Parker, Colo., was the only one on duty in. his U.S. Anny Air Corps unit stationed at Wheeler Field in Hawaii when he heard planes roar past. "I thought it was the Navy buzzing us," Bowen said. "They were always doing that. We'd buzz them and they'd buzz us back." On Monday, Bowen will join more than 700 others at a dinner in Little Rock, Ark., sponsored by the Pearl Harbor Survivors Association. The banquet commemorates the 51st anniversary of the Japanese attack on the U.S. naval station at Pearl Harbor, an event that plunged the United States into World War II. TIus year's ceremonies are more low-key than the weeklong 50th anniversary commemoration held last year at Pearl Harbor that included President Bush. In Hawaii, Retired Vice Adm. Samuel Gravely, the Navy's first black admiral, is to speak at a ceremony that will focus on the role that minorities played in the U.S. military at the time of the attack. "We've never examined the Pearl Harbor attack through the eyes of ethnic minorities - and each one has a different story to tell," said Blanca Stransky" spokeswoman for the National Park Service that runs. the USS Arizona Memorial. The attack, which came without warning or a. declaration of war, killed 2,403 Americans and wound-; edl,178. . Samuel Bishop, a mess attendant trained to set fuses on the USS Bagley, was one of the few blacks on deck during the attack, Stransky said. His ship was credited with shooting down one of the Japanese planes, she said. Gravely, 70, wasn't at Pearl Harbor. He signed on' with the Navy the following September, at age 20. In 1962 he became the first black to command a Navy ship, the USS Falgout. . "Certainly there were some rough moments, but I'd do it all over again if I had the choice," said Gravely, who retired from active service in 1980 and now lives in Virginia with his wife, Alma. For Elmer Boehm of Hot Springs, Ark., the an-. niversary date continues to evoke vivid memories. "We were hit by a bomb and one enemy dive, bomber crashed into us," said Boehm, a messenger for, the forward engineer aboard the USS Curtiss. "I was bringing down life jackets and gas masks and. running messages for the engine officer and doing everything he wanted me to."