United Service Organizations

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"USO" redirects here, for other uses see USO (disambiguation)
The United Service Organizations
The United Service Organizations

The United Service Organizations Inc. (USO) is a private, nonprofit organization that provides morale and recreational services to members of the U.S. military worldwide.

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[edit] Background

The USO was founded in 1941 in response to a request from President Franklin D. Roosevelt to provide morale and recreation services to U.S. uniformed military personnel. This request led six civilian agencies—the Salvation Army, YMCA, YWCA, NCCS, NTAA and the NJWB—to unite in support of the U.S. troops. The USO was incorporated in New York February 4, 1941.

USO centers and clubs opened around the world as a “Home Away from Home” for GIs. The local USO was a place to go for dances and social events, for movies and music, for a quiet place to talk or write a letter home, or for a free cup of coffee and an egg. The USO also brought Hollywood celebrities and volunteer entertainers to perform for the troops.

At its high point in 1944, the USO had more than 3,000 clubs, and curtains were rising on USO shows 700 times a day. From 1941 to 1947, the USO presented more than 400,000 performances, featuring entertainers such as Bing Crosby, Judy Garland, Bette Davis, Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall, Frank Sinatra, Marlene Dietrich, Hattie McDaniel, Ann Sheridan, Laurel and Hardy, The Marx Brothers, Jack Benny, James Cagney, James Stewart, Gary Cooper, Danny Kaye, The Rockettes, Al Jolson, Fred Astaire, Curly Joe DeRita,The Andrews Sisters, Joe E. Brown, Lucille Ball, Glenn Miller, Martha Raye, Mickey Rooney, Betty Hutton, Dinah Shore, and most famously, Bob Hope.

In 1950, when the United States entered the Korean War, the USO brought its services and entertainment tours, including Errol Flynn, Debbie Reynolds, Donald O'Connor, Piper Laurie, Jane Russell, Paul Douglas, Terry Moore, and Marilyn Monroe, to the American troops. This effort continued after the war ended, and the USO expanded to serve the more than one million U.S. troops who remained stationed overseas. During the 1960s, as tensions escalated in Vietnam, the USO began to open centers in combat zones. The 23 centers in Vietnam and Thailand served as many as a million service members a month, and the USO presented more than 5,000 performances during the Vietnam War featuring stars such as John Wayne, Ann-Margret, Sammy Davis Jr., Phyllis Diller, Martha Raye, Joey Heatherton, Wayne Newton, Jayne Mansfield, Redd Foxx, Rosey Grier, Anita Bryant, Nancy Sinatra, Lola Falana, and (of course) Bob Hope. In addition, the USO operates centers at major U.S. airports to provide a lounge and place to sleep for American servicemen between their flights.

To support troops participating in Operations Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom, USO centers opened in Afghanistan, Iraq, Kuwait and Qatar. USO centers number more than 130 around the world. Recently, the USO opened the Rocky Mountain USO Center at Denver International Airport, a third center in Kuwait and its first center in Iraq at Balad Air Base. The USO provides a variety of programs and services, including orientation programs, family events, travel assistance, free Internet and e-mail access, and recreation services. A new program called "USO in a Box," delivers program materials ranging from DVD players and videos to musical instruments to remote forward operating bases in Afghanistan and Iraq

U.S. military personnel and their families visit USO centers more than five million times each year.

A nonprofit, charitable organization, the USO receives donations from private citizens, foundations, organizations and corporations. As of April 2008, some schools across the United States are donating money to the United Services Organization as a school program.

[edit] Financials

Edward A. Powell is identified as current president & CEO, receiving compensation totalling $312,299 (2004 compensation, including annual salary, benefit plans, expense accounts, and other allowances). It has a paid staff of approximately 240. Additionally, more than 26,000 USO volunteers provide an estimated 371,417 hours of service annually. As reported by the USO, the unpaid volunteer to paid employee ratio overseas is 20 to 1. Within the United States, the number is "significantly higher".

The following information is based on USO's audited financial statements[citation needed] for the year ended December 31, 2006:

Source of Funds
In-kind contributions $83,497,430
Public appeals $32,325,150
USO center revenue $13,660,792
Corporate, foundation and individual giving $8,748,594
Investment income $6,440,121
Entertainment sponsorships $2,593,504
United Way, CFC and other federated $1,040,528
Rental and other income $393,703
Total Income $148,699,822
Expenses
Program expenses $124,008,404
Fund raising expenses $12,767,448
Administrative expenses $6,571,080
Total expenses $143,346,932

In 1943, a United States Liberty ship named the SS U.S.O. was launched. She was scrapped in 1967.

[edit] News

In December 2003, the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) released a 40-page study which reported that the USO spent approximately $433,000 of government funds for luxury expenses, including 50 business and first-class tickets worth about $76,000, limousine services and airport lounge costs of $3,054, alcohol, and $343,910 in various unsupported production support items and celebrity honorarium payments from 2000 through 2002. One example cited was the reimbursement of one unnamed celebrity $27,000, as well as a payment of $56,520 to an unnamed production tour manager, both without supporting documentation.

In a public response to the GAO report and a subsequent Los Angeles Times article, the USO blamed the run-ups on inexperienced employees and poor bookkeeping, ultimately realigning the entertainment accounting function to full-time staff in their financial management office. They also reiterated the GAO report finding that there was no improper behavior on the part of any of the entertainers involved with the tours cited in the GAO report and no evidence of malfeasance on the part of any employees.

[edit] Notable modern entertainers

The following is a partial list of USO performers, since 2001.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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