-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.ctrl.org/MilleganStews/warfever.html
Click Here: <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/MilleganStews/warfever.html";>War
Fever -  the secretary decided never to lea�</A>
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Millegan Stews
9/19/01

from:
1898
David Traxel�1998
Alfred A Knopf
0-679-45467-5
368 pps - First American Edition
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War Fever

F. J. HILGERT, the Associated Press man in Cuba, had managed to get a brief
cable out before the censors shut down the line. At 2:10 a.m. the New York
World's office was galvanized by the news, and within an hour had an edition
on the streets with a four-column headline: "U. S. S. MAINE BLOWN UP IN
HAVANA HARBOR." There was also a four-column engraving of the ship that had
been in the files, and a story about her reputation as a "Jonah" or "Hoodoo"
ship. Scovel's cable arrived soon after and was incorporated into later
editions with the headline "WORLD STAFF CORRESPONDENT CABLES IT IS NOT KNOWN
WHETHER EXPLO-SION OCCURRED ON OR UNDER THE MAINE.

Pulitzer's World had scored a "beat," but William Randolph Hearst and his
journal were not far behind. Hearst had gone home before news of the disaster
arrived, so the night editor immediately telephoned him. Hearst asked what
else was on the front page.

"Only the other big news," was the answer.

"There is not any other big news," Hearst said. "Please spread the story all
over the page. This means war!"

There was not much information in the early stories, but through the
headlines and the details emphasized there was already a slant being given to
the event. The World's first headline, given above, is an example: by using
"blown" instead of "blows" the act is presented as deliberate; in the second
the implication is that a submarine mine might have destroyed the ship. Both
the World and journal began their coverage of the story with implications of
Spanish treachery that were to become more overt in the coming days.
. . .

McKinley told Senator Charles Fairbanks of Indiana, "I don't propose to be
swept off my feet by the catastrophe. My duty is plain. We must learn the
truth and endeavor, if possible, to fix the responsibility. The country can
afford to withhold its judgment and not strike an avenging blow until the
truth is known. The Administration will go on preparing for war, but still
hoping to avert it. It will not be plunged into war until it is ready for it."

But many were being swept by their anger into making a quick judgment: "The
Maine was sunk by an act of dirty treachery by the Spaniards, I believe,
Theodore Roosevelt wrote a fellow member of Harvard's Porcellian Club on
February 16, but he expressed these feelings just to close friends, being
careful to use only the word "accident" in public dealings. In

Roosevelt now lived at the office most of the time, although both his wife
and his son Ted were still seriously ill. On the morning of Friday, February
25, Edith was so feverish that, afraid she was going to die, he summoned the
famed Sir William Osler from Johns Hopkins Medical School in Baltimore to
attend to her. Then, propelled by duty, he went off to the Navy Department.

John Long [Secretary of the Navy] had been unable to sleep much since his
nightmarish awakening in the predawn hours of the sixteenth, and his body had
been afflicted with aches and pains that could be relieved only by
"mechanical massage" applied to his stomach and legs by an unusual electric
-powered machine under the command of a Washington osteopath. Feeling a need
for the attentions of this technological wonder, Long took the afternoon off
on the twenty-fifth to hobble first to the osteopath, then to his corn
doctor. The burdens of office were left on the well-braced shoulders of
Theodore Roosevelt, who knew exactly what needed doing.

First a cable to Commodore Dewey ordering him to assemble the Asiatic
Squadron in Hong Kong and prepare it for offensive operations in the
Philippine Islands "in the event" of a declaration of war with Spain; then
orders to "Keep full of coal" to other squadron commanders around the world
and an authorization for navy coal-buyers to obtain all they could;
rendezvous points for scattered ships were named; ammunition in warsized
quantities was ordered; guns necessary to convert yachts and commercial
steamers to warships were commanded to be taken out of storage; requests were
made to both houses of Congress to pass bills authorizing the recruitment of e
nough sailors to man an expanded battle fleet. A very busy afternoon, and a
satisfying one.

After he had completed his labors, the assistant secretary stopped by to see
his chief at home, who was resting so comfortably that the younger man must
have decided not to worry him with too detailed an account of what he had
accomplished. When John Long came into his office the next morning he was
shocked, "because during my short absence I find that Roosevelt, in his
precipitate way, has come very near causing more of an explosion than
happened to the Maine ... the very devil seemed to possess him yesterday
afternoon." Nevertheless, however precipitate, none of the orders was
countermanded, although the secretary decided never to leave Roosevelt in
charge again.

-----
Om
K
-----
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Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
All My Relations.
Omnia Bona Bonis,
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End

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