DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY , Washington, DC 20310 Phone, 703–695–6518. Internet, www.army.mil.

SECRETARY OF THE ARMY FRANCIS J. HARVEY Under Secretary of the Army PRESTON M. GREEN Assistant Secretary of the Army (Acquisition, CLAUDE M. BOLTON, JR. Logistics, and Technology) Assistant Secretary of the Army (Civil Works) JOHN PAUL WOODLEY, JR. Assistant Secretary of the Army (Financial VALERIE L. BALDWIN Management and Comptroller) Assistant Secretary of the Army (Installations KEITH EASTIN and Environment) Assistant Secretary of the Army (Manpower DANIEL DENNING, Acting and Reserve Affairs) General Counsel (VACANCY) Administrative Assistant to the Secretary of the SANDRA RILEY Army Chief Information Officer/G–6 LT. GEN. STEVEN W. BOUTELLE Inspector General MAJ. GEN. STANLEY E. GREEN Auditor General PATRICK FITZGERALD, Acting Deputy Under Secretary of the Army (VACANCY) Deputy Under Secretary of the Army WALTER W. HOLLIS (Operations Research) Chief of Legislative Liaison MAJ. GEN. GALEN JACKMAN Chief of Public Affairs BRIG. GEN. VINCENT BROOKS Director, Small and Disadvantaged Business TRACEY L. PINSON Utilization Office of the Chief of Staff: Chief of Staff, Army GEN. PETER J. SCHOOMAKER Vice Chief of Staff GEN. RICHARD A. CODY Director of the Army Staff LT. GEN. JAMES A. CAMPBELL Vice Director of the Army Staff BRIG. GEN. LEO A. BROOKS, JR. Army Staff: Deputy Chief of Staff, G–1 LT. GEN. JOHN F. KIMMONS Deputy Chief of Staff, G–2 LT. GEN. KEITH B. ALEXANDER Deputy Chief of Staff, G–3/5/7 LT. GEN. JAMES J. LOVELACE, JR. Deputy Chief of Staff, G–4 LT. GEN. ANNE E. DUNWOODY Deputy Chief of Staff, G–8 LT. GEN. DAVID F. MELCHER Chief, Army Reserve LT. GEN. JAMES R. HELMLY Chief, National Guard Bureau LT. GEN. H. STEVEN BLUM Chief of Engineers LT. GEN. CARL A. STROCK The Surgeon General LT. GEN. KEVIN C. KILEY Assistant Chief of Staff for Installation LT. GEN. DAVID BARNO Management Chief of Chaplains MAJ. GEN. DAVID H. HICKS Provost Marshall General MAJ. GEN. DONALD J. RYDER Judge Advocate General MAJ. GEN. SCOTT C. BLACK 165

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Director, Army National Guard LT. GEN. CLYDE A. VAUGHN Army Commands: Commanding General, U.S. Army Materiel GEN. BENJAMIN GRIFFIN Command Commanding General, U.S. Army Corps of LT. GEN. CARL A. STROCK Engineers Commanding General, U.S. Army Forces GEN. DAN K. MCNEILL Command Commanding General, U.S. Army Medical LT. GEN. KEVIN C. KILEY Command Commanding General, U.S. Army Space and LT. GEN. LARRY J. DODGEN Missile Defense Command Commanding General, U.S. Army Special LT. GEN. ROBERT W. WAGNER Operations Command Commanding General, U.S. Army Training and GEN. WILLIAM S. WALLACE Doctrine Command Commanding General, 8th U.S. Army LT. GEN. CHARLES C. CAMPBELL Commanding General, U.S. Army Pacific LT. GEN. JOHN M. BROWN III Commanding General, U.S. Army Europe and DAVID D. MCKIERNAN 7th Army Subordinate Commands: Commanding General, U.S. Army Military BRIG. GEN. CHARLES W. FLETCHER, Surface Deployment and Distribution JR. Command Commanding General, U.S. Army South BRIG. GEN. PAUL F. KEEN Headquarters-Direct Reporting Units: Commanding General, U.S. Army Military MAJ. GEN. GUY C. SWAN III District of Washington Commanding General, U.S. Army Criminal MAJ. GEN. DONALD J. RYDER Investigation Command Commanding General, U.S. Army Intelligence MAJ. GEN. JOHN DEFREITAL III and Security Command

The mission of the Department of the Army is to organize, train, and equip active duty and reserve forces for the preservation of peace, security, and the defense of our Nation. As part of our national military team, the Army focuses on land operations; its soldiers must be trained with modern arms and equipment and be ready to respond quickly. The Army also administers programs aimed at protecting the environment, improving waterway navigation, flood and beach erosion control, and water resource development. It provides military assistance to Federal, State, and local government agencies, including natural disaster relief assistance.

The American Continental Army, now created the National Military called the , was Establishment, and the Department of established by the Continental Congress War was designated the Department of on June 14, 1775, more than a year the Army. The title of its Secretary before the Declaration of Independence. became Secretary of the Army (5 U.S.C. The Department of War was established 171). The National Security Act as an executive department at the seat of Amendments of 1949 (63 Stat. 578) government by act approved August 7, provided that the Department of the 1789 (1 Stat. 49). The Secretary of War Army be a military department within was established as its head. The National Security Act of 1947 (50 U.S.C. 401) the Department of Defense.

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DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE 167

GENERAL

STAFF FOR STAFF

JUDGE ADVOCATE JUDGE

INSTALLATION

MANAGEMENT

ASSISTANT CHIEF OF CHIEF ASSISTANT

SMALL AND AND SMALL

DISADVANTAGED

GENERAL COUNSEL GENERAL

DIRECTOR, OFFICE OF OFFICE DIRECTOR,

BUSINESS UTILIZATION BUSINESS

GENERAL

MAJOR

ASSISTANT

PROVOST MARSHAL PROVOST

SERGEANT

ADMINISTRATIVE

OF THE ARMY THE OF

TO THE SECRETARY THE TO

CHIEF OF CHIEF

DEPUTY CHIEF OF CHIEF DEPUTY

PUBLIC AFFAIRS PUBLIC

(MANPOWER AND (MANPOWER

STAFF, G–8 (PROGRAMS) G–8 STAFF,

RESERVE AFFAIRS) RESERVE

ASSISTANT SECRETARY ASSISTANT

CHIEF OF CHIEF

CHAPLAINS

CHIEF OF CHIEF

DEPUTY CHIEF OF CHIEF DEPUTY

ENVIRONMENT)

STAFF, G–4 (LOGISTICS) G–4 STAFF,

(INSTALLATIONS AND (INSTALLATIONS

LEGISLATIVE LIAISON LEGISLATIVE

ASSISTANT SECRETARY ASSISTANT

GENERAL SURGEON

ARMY CHIEF OF STAFF, ARMY STAFF, OF CHIEF UNDER SECRETARY OF THE

VICE CHIEF OF STAFF, ARMY

SECRETARY OF THE ARMY THE OF SECRETARY STAFF, G–3 G–3 STAFF,

DIRECTOR OF THE ARMY STAFF

(FINANCIAL

MANAGEMENT

DEPUTY CHIEF OF CHIEF DEPUTY

AUDITOR GENERAL AUDITOR

AND COMPTROLLER AND

(OPERATIONS AND PLANS) AND (OPERATIONS

CHIEF OF CHIEF

ASSISTANT SECRETARY ASSISTANT

DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY THE OF DEPARTMENT

ENGINEERS

(CIVIL WORKS) (CIVIL

CHIEF, CHIEF,

DEPUTY CHIEF OF CHIEF DEPUTY

BUREAU

INSPECTOR GENERAL INSPECTOR

ASSISTANT SECRETARY ASSISTANT

STAFF, G–2 (INTELLIGENCE) G–2 STAFF,

NATIONAL GUARD NATIONAL

OF THE ARMY THE OF

AND RESEARCH) AND

OF THE ARMY (OPERATIONS ARMY THE OF

DEPUTY UNDER SECRETARY UNDER DEPUTY

DEPUTY UNDER SECRETARY UNDER DEPUTY

LOGISTICS

CHIEF,

OFFICER, G–6 OFFICER,

(ACQUISITION,

DEPUTY CHIEF OF CHIEF DEPUTY

AND TECHNOLOGY) AND

ARMY RESERVE ARMY

CHIEF INFORMATION CHIEF

ASSISTANT SECRETARY ASSISTANT STAFF, G–1 (PERSONNEL) G–1 STAFF,

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Secretary The Secretary of the Army is the duty of the Army Staff to perform the the senior official of the Department of following functions: the Army. Subject to the direction, —prepare for deployment of the Army authority, and control of the President as and for such recruiting, organizing, Commander in Chief and of the supplying, equipping, training, Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of the mobilizing, and demobilizing of the Army is responsible for and has the Army as will assist the execution of any authority to conduct all affairs of the power, duty, or function of the Secretary Department of the Army, including its or the Chief of Staff; organization, administration, operation, —investigate and report upon the efficiency, and such other activities as efficiency of the Army and its may be prescribed by the President or preparation for military operations; —act as the agent of the Secretary of the Secretary of Defense as authorized the Army and the Chief of Staff in by law. coordinating the action of all For further information, call 703–695–7922. organizations of the Department of the Army; and Army Staff Presided over by the Chief —perform such other duties not of Staff, the Army Staff is the military otherwise assigned by law as may be staff of the Secretary of the Army. It is prescribed by the Secretary of the Army.

Program Areas

Civil Functions Civil functions of the welfare, and recreation; real property Department of the Army include the maintenance and repair; environmental Civil Works Program, the Nation’s major programs; military construction; housing; Federal water resources development base realignment and closure; and activity involving engineering works competitive sourcing. such as major dams, reservoirs, levees, Intelligence This area includes harbors, waterways, locks, and many management of Army intelligence with other types of structures; the responsibility for policy formulation, administration of Arlington and Soldiers’ planning, programming, budgeting, Home National Cemeteries; and other evaluation, and oversight of intelligence related matters. activities. The Army staff is responsible History This area includes advisory and for monitoring relevant foreign coordination service provided on intelligence developments and foreign historical matters, including historical disclosure; imagery, signals, human, properties; formulation and execution of open-source, measurement, and the Army Historical Program; and signatures intelligence; preparation and publication of histories counterintelligence; threat models and required by the Army. simulations; and security Installations This area consists of countermeasures. policies, procedures, and resources for Medical This area includes management of installations to ensure management of health services for the the availability of efficient and affordable Army and, as directed for other services, base services and infrastructure in agencies, and organizations; health support of military missions. It includes standards for Army personnel; health the review of facilities requirements and professional education and training; stationing, identification and validation career management authority over of resource requirements, and program commissioned and warrant officer and budget development and personnel of the Army Medical justification. Other activities include Department; medical research, materiel support for base operations; morale, development, testing and evaluation;

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policies concerning health aspects of command and control; automation and Army environmental programs and communications programs and activities; prevention of disease; and planning, management of the program for law programming, and budgeting for Army- enforcement, correction, and crime wide health services. prevention for military members of the Military Operations and Plans This Army; special operations forces; foreign includes Army forces strategy formation; language and distance learning; and mid-range, long-range, and regional physical security. strategy application; arms control, Reserve Components This area negotiation, and disarmament; national includes management of individual and security affairs; joint service matters; net unit readiness and mobilization for assessment; politico-military affairs; force Reserve components, comprised of the mobilization and demobilization; force Army National Guard and the U.S. Army planning, programming structuring, Reserve. development, analysis, requirements, Religious This area includes and management; operational readiness; management of religious and moral overall roles and missions; collective leadership and chaplain support security; individual and unit training; activities throughout the Department; psychological operations; information religious ministrations, religious operations; unconventional warfare; education, pastoral care, and counseling counterterrorism; operations security; for Army military personnel; liaison with signal security; special plans; table of the ecclesiastical agencies; chapel equipment development and approval; construction requirements and design nuclear and chemical matters; civil approval; and career management of affairs; military support of civil defense; clergymen serving in the Chaplains civil disturbance; domestic actions; Branch.

Major Army Commands

Eighth U.S. Army Eighth U.S. Army navigation, flood damage reduction, provides forces to the commander of the recreation, hydropower, environmental U.S. Forces Korea who in turn provides regulation, and other missions. The them to the commander of the Republic military program includes construction of of Korea/U.S. Combined Forces Army and Air Force facilities, base Command. realignment and closure activities, installation support, military contingency For further information, contact Eighth U.S. Army. Phone, 011–82–279–13–6544. Internet, http:// support, environmental restoration, 8tharmy.korea.army.mil. strategic mobility, and international activities. USACE provides real estate U.S. Army Corps of Engineers The U.S. acquisition, management, and disposal Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) for the Army and Air Force, and provides engineering, construction researches and develops advanced management, and environmental technology for mobility/countermobility, services in peace and in support of the force protection, and sustainment global war on terror. In Iraq, USACE engineering. It also supports several soldiers and civilians are responsible for Federal agencies and responds to natural constructing training facilities, military disasters and other emergencies as the bases, police and fire stations, and Nation’s primary engineering agency. rehabilitating or building schools and For further information, contact USACE. Phone, clinics. In Afghanistan, USACE personnel 202–761–0011. Internet, www.usace.army.mil. are working to reform the security sector and military construction for coalition U.S. Army Europe and 7th Army The forces. The civil works program includes U.S. Army Europe and 7th Army

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provides the principal land component U.S. Army Medical Command The U.S. for the U.S. European Command Army Medical Command (MEDCOM) is (EUCOM). U.S. Army Europe (USAREUR) responsible for worldwide Army Medical forms, trains, and projects expeditionary Department policy, planning, and forces and JTF-capable headquarters to operations. Through six Regional prosecute joint and combined operations Medical Commands, MEDCOM oversees throughout a 91-country area. As the Army medical centers, hospitals, and the U.S. Army’s largest forward-deployed Fisher Houses. It’s also responsible for expeditionary force, USAREUR supports 32 Army and DOD Executive Agencies NATO and U.S. bilateral, multinational, and operates the U.S. Army Medical and unilateral objectives. It supports U.S. Department Center and School, the U.S. Army forces in the European command Army Medical Research and Materiel Command, and the U.S. Army Center for area; receives and assists in the Health Promotion and Preventive reception, staging, and onward Medicine. MEDCOM’s mission includes movement and integration of U.S. forces; providing the vision, direction, and long- establishes, operates, and expands range planning for Army medicine; operational lines of communication; developing and integrating doctrine, ensures regional security, access, and training, leader development, stability through presence and security organization, materiel, and soldier cooperation; and supports U.S. support for the Army health service combatant commanders and joint and system; allocating resources, analyzing combined commanders. health services utilization, and For further information, contact USAREUR. Phone, conducting performance assessments; 011–49–6221–39–4100. Internet, and coordinating and managing graduate www.hqusareur.army.mil. medical education programs at Army Medical Centers. U.S. Army Forces Command The U.S. Army Forces Command (FORSCOM) For further information, contact MEDCOM/OTSG. Phone, 703–681–3000. Internet, trains, mobilizes, deploys, sustains, www.armymedicine.army.mil. transforms, and reconstitutes conventional forces, providing relevant U.S. Army Pacific The U.S. Army and ready land power to combatant Pacific (USARPAC) provides trained and commanders worldwide in defense of ready forces in support of military the Nation at home and abroad. operations and peacetime engagements in the Asia-Pacific area. USARPAC For further information, contact FORSCOM. Phone, carries out a cooperative engagement 404–464–5023. Internet, www.forscom.army.mil. strategy known as the Theater Security U.S. Army Materiel Command The Cooperation Program with the 43 Asian U.S. Army Materiel Command (AMC) is and Pacific nations within or bordering the Army’s principal materiel developer. its area of responsibility. These countries AMC’s missions include the include the Philippines, Thailand, development of weapon systems, Vietnam, Japan, Mongolia, Russia, advanced research on future China, South Korea, India, Bangladesh, technologies, and maintenance and Australia, New Zealand, Marshall distribution of spare parts and Islands, and Papua New Guinea. equipment. AMC works closely with For further information, contact USARPAC. Phone, Program Executive Offices, industry, 808–438–1393. Internet, www.usarpac.army.mil. academia, and other military services U.S. Army Special Operations and Government agencies to develop, Command The U.S. Army Special test, and acquire equipment that soldiers Operations Command (USASOC) trains, and units need to accomplish their equips, deploys, and sustains Army missions. special operations forces for worldwide For further information, contact AMC. Phone, 703– special operations supporting regional 806–8010. Internet, www.amc.army.mil. combatant commanders and country

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ambassadors. USASOC soldiers deploy recruiting a quality all-volunteer force; to numerous countries conducting providing rigor and relevance in training missions such as peacekeeping, and leader development; fostering humanitarian assistance, demining, and innovation; preparing the Army for joint foreign internal defense. USASOC operations; and developing the future includes special forces, rangers, civil forces. affairs, psychological operations, special operations aviation, and signal and For further information, contact TRADOC. Phone, 757–788–4465. Internet, www.tradoc.army.mil. support. For further information, contact USASOC. Phone, Subordinate Commands 910–432–3000. Internet, www.usasoc.soc.mil. U.S. Army Military Surface Deployment U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense and Distribution Command The U.S. Command The U.S. Army Space and Army Military Surface Deployment and Missile Defense Command (SMDC) Distribution Command (SDDC) provides serves as the Army’s specified proponent global surface deployment command for space and national missile defense and control and distribution operations and operational integrator for theater to meet national security objectives for missile defense. SMDC coordinates, DOD. This requires a presence in 24 integrates, and/or executes combat ports worldwide as DOD’s single-port development, materiel development, manager, transportation, traffic- technology, and advanced research and management services, deployment development for missile defense and planning and engineering, and space programs. It also serves as the development of new technologies. Army Service Component Command, the SDDC is also the link between DOD primary land component for the U.S. shippers and the commercial surface Strategic Command. SMDC’s mission transportation industry. includes space operations, information operations, global strike, integrated For further information, contact SDDC. Phone, missle defense, and command and 703–428–3207. Internet, www.sddc.army.mil. control, communications, computers, U.S. Army South The U.S. Army South intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance. In addition, SMDC (USARSO) is a major subordinate serves as a primary research and command of the U.S. Army Forces development organization for the Missile Command, Fort McPherson, Georgia, Defense Agency. From its headquarters and is the Army Service Component in Arlington, Virginia, SMDC also Command of the U.S. Southern oversees a number of Army elements Command. USARSO executes and is around the globe, ensuring missile responsible for all Army operations defense protection for the Nation and within the U.S. Southern Command’s deployed forces, and facilitates access to area (Central and South America and the space assets and products. Caribbean Islands). USARSO seeks to build regional cooperative security and For further information, contact SMDC. Phone, increase hemispheric cooperation by 703–607–1873. Internet, www.smdc.army.mil. planning and executing multilateral U.S. Army Training and Doctrine exercises and carrying out humanitarian Command Headquartered in Fort aid, peacekeeping, engineering, and Monroe, Virginia, the U.S. Army medical assistance exercises. USARSO Training and Doctrine Command maintains a deployable headquarters at (TRADOC) recruits, trains, and educates Fort Sam Houston, Texas, where they the Army’s soldiers; develops leaders; conduct strategic and operational supports training in units; develops planning. doctrine; establishes standards; and For further information, contact the USARSO builds the future Army. TRADOC Public Affairs Office. Phone, 210–295–6388. E-mail, operates schools and centers at Army [email protected]. Internet, installations. TRADOC’s priorities are http://usarso.army.mil.

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Headquarters-Direct Reporting U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Units Command The U.S. Army Criminal U.S. Army Military District of Investigation Command (CID) is a law Washington The U.S. Army Military enforcement agency that supports the District of Washington (MDW) provides Army in peacetime and during war. CID force protection, conducts official and special agents conduct criminal public events on behalf of the Nation’s investigations and protective service civilian and military leadership, and operations worldwide. furnishes administrative, legal, and For further information, contact CID Headquarters support services for assigned Public Affairs Office. Phone, 703–806–0376. installations. MDW provides the core Internet, www.cid.army.mil. command and staff for the Joint Force Headquarters-National Capital Region. It U.S. Army Intelligence and Security is also responsible for planning, Command The U.S. Army Intelligence coordinating, and maintaining situational and Security Command (INSCOM) is a awareness and, as directed, employing multi-discipline, values-based forces for homeland defense and defense intelligence organization that conducts support to civil authorities in the and supports relevant intelligence, National Capital Region to deter, security, and information operations for prevent, and defeat threats. Army, joint, and combined forces.

For further information, contact the U.S. Army For further information, contact the INSCOM Military District Public Affairs Office. Phone, 202– Public Affairs Office. Phone, 703–428–4553. 685–6249. E-mail, [email protected]. Internet, www.inscom.army.mil. Internet, www.mdw.army.mil.

United States Military Academy West Point, NY 10996

Superintendent LT. GEN. WILLIAM J. LENNOX, JR. Commandant of Cadets BRIG. GEN. CURTIS M. SCAPARROTTI Dean of the Academic Board BRIG. GEN. PATRICK FINNEGAN

The United States Military Academy is training as junior officers. Cadets who located at West Point, NY. The course is complete the course satisfactorily receive of 4 years’ duration, during which the the degree of Bachelor of Science and a cadets receive, besides a general commission as second lieutenant in the education, theoretical and practical Army.

For further information, contact the Public Affairs Office, United States Military Academy, West Point, NY 10996. Phone, 845–938–4261. For information about Military Academy admission criteria and policies, contact the Office of the Registrar, United States Military Academy, West Point, NY 10996.

Sources of Information

Arlington and Soldiers’ and Airmen’s Army Historical Program For Home National Cemeteries For information concerning the Army information write to the Superintendent, Historical Program, write to the U.S. Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, Army Center of Military History, Collins VA 22211–5003. Phone, 703–607–8545. Hall, 103 Third Avenue, Fort Lesley J.

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McNair, Washington, DC 20319–5058. of the Chief of Public Affairs, Phone, 202–685–2714. Fax, 202–685– Department of the Army, Washington, 4570. Internet, www.army.mil/cmh. DC 20310–1508. Phone, 703–697– Information on historic buildings 5081. During nonoffice hours, call 703– preservation and reuse is available 697–4200. through the Office of Historic Properties. Publications Requests should be Phone, 703–692–9892. addressed to either the proponent listed Civilian Employment For information, on the title page of the document or the visit the Army civilian personnel Web Information Management Officer of the site (Internet, www.cpol.army.mil) or Army activity that publishes the contact the civilian personnel advisory requested publication. Official texts center at the desired Army installation. published by Headquarters, Department Contracts Contract procurement of the Army, are available from the policies and procedures are the National Technical Information Service, responsibility of the Deputy for Department of Commerce, Attn: Order Procurement, Office of the Assistant Preprocessing Section, 5285 Port Royal Secretary of the Army (Acquisition, Road, Springfield, VA 22161–2171. Logistics, and Technology), Room Phone, 703–487–4600. Internet, 2E532, The Pentagon, Washington, DC www.ntis.gov. If it is uncertain which 20310–0103. Phone, 703–695–6154. Army activity published the document, Environment Contact the Public Affairs forward the request to the Publishing Office, Office of the Chief of Public Division, Army Publishing Directorate, Affairs Headquarters, Department of the Room 1050, 2461 Eisenhower Avenue, Army, Washington, DC 20314–1000 Alexandria, VA 22331–0301. Phone, (Phone, 202–761–0010); the Army 703–325–6292. Internet, Environmental Center (Internet, http:// www.apd.army.mil. aec.army.mil/usaec/); or the Army Research Industry may obtain Environmental Policy Institute (Internet, information on long-range research and www.aepi.army.mil). development plans concerning future Films, Videotapes, and Videodiscs materiel requirements and objectives Requests for loan of Army-produced from the Commander, U.S. Army films should be addressed to the Visual Research Development and Engineering Information Support Centers of Army Command, Attn: AMSRD–PA, Bldg. installations. Unclassified Army E5101, 5183 Blackhawk Road, Aberdeen productions are available for sale from Proving Ground, MD 21010–5424. the National Audiovisual Center, Small Business Activities Assistance for National Technical Information Service, small businesses and minority 5285 Port Royal Road, Springfield, VA educational institutions to enhance their 22161. Phone, 800–553–NTIS. Internet, ability to participate in the Army www.ntis.gov/nac. contracting program is available through Freedom of Information and Privacy Act the Office of Small and Disadvantaged Requests Requests should be addressed Business Utilization, Office of the to the Information Management Officer Secretary of the Army, 106 Army of the Army installation or activity Pentagon, Room 3B514, Washington, responsible for the requested DC 20310–0106. Phone, 703–697– information. 2868. Military Surface Deployment and Speakers Civilian organizations desiring Distribution Command Information an Army speaker may contact a nearby concerning military transportation news Army installation or write or call the and issues is available electronically Community Relations Division, Office of through the Internet, the Chief of Public Affairs, Department www.mtmc.army.mil. of the Army, Washington, DC 20310– Public Affairs and Community Relations 1508. Phone, 703–697–5081. Requests For official Army information and for Army Reserve speakers may be community relations, contact the Office addressed to HQDA (DAAR–PA),

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Washington, DC 20310–2423, or the www.healthcare.goarmy.com. local Army Reserve Center. Army National Guard training opportunities: Army National Guard, NGB–ASM, 1411 Jefferson Davis Organizations in the Washington, DC, Highway, Arlington, VA 22202–3231. Phone, area desiring chaplain speakers may 703–607–5834. Internet, www.arng.army.mil. contact the Chief of Chaplains, Army Reserve training opportunities for enlisted Department of the Army, Washington, personnel and officers: Army Reserve Personnel DC 20310–2700. Phone, 703–601– Command, One Reserve Way, St. Louis, MO 63132–5200. Phone, 314–592–0000 or 800–318– 1140. Information on speakers may be 5298. Internet, www.goarmyreserve.com. obtained by contacting the Public Affairs Army Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (ROTC): U.S. Office, Office of the Chief of Engineers, Army Cadet Command, Recruiting, Retention and Washington, DC 20314, or the nearest Operations Directorate, ATCC-OP, 55 Patch Road, Corps of Engineer Division or District Fort Monroe, VA 23651. Phone, 757–788–3770. Or, contact a professor of military science or Office. Army ROTC Advisor at the nearest college or Military Career and Training university offering the program in your area. Opportunities Information on all phases Internet, www.armyrotc.com. of Army enlistments and specialized Chaplain Recruiting Branch HQ: U.S. Army Recruiting Command, Attn: RCRO- SM-CH, 1307 training is available by writing to the Third Avenue, Fort Knox, KY 40121–2726. Phone, U.S. Army Recruiting Command, 1307 502–626–0722 or 866–684–1571. Fax, 502–626– Third Avenue, Fort Knox, KY 40121– 1213. Internet, www.chaplain.goarmy.com. 2725. For information about career and Judge Advocate General’s Corps: Department of the training opportunities, contact the Army, Judge Advocate Recruiting Office, 1777 North Kent Street, Suite 5200, Rosslyn, VA appropriate office listed below: 20124–2194. Phone, 866–ARMY–JAG. Internet, Army health professions: Headquarters U.S. Army www.law.goarmy.com. Recruiting Command, Health Services Directorate U.S. Military Academy: Director of Admissions, (RCHS–OP), 1307 Third Avenue, Fort Knox, KY United States Military Academy, Building 606, 40121–2725. Phone, 502–626–0367. E-mail, West Point, NY 10996. Phone, 845–938–4041. [email protected]. Internet, Internet, www.usma.edu.

For further information concerning the Department of the Army, contact the Office of the Chief of Public Affairs, Headquarters, Department of the Army, Washington, DC 20310–1508. Phone, 703–697–5081. Internet, www.army.mil.

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