Resource Type

Month

[CSLA 2007 National Conference program] (open access)

[CSLA 2007 National Conference program]

Program for the 40th anniversary Church and Synagogue Library Association conference held at the Inn at Valley Forge in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania. The program provides details about the conference's logistics and schedule, as well as biographies for presenters, speakers, awardees, and entertainers. An ad for the 2008 CSLA national conference in Greenville, South Carolina is included.
Date: 2007-07~
Creator: Church and Synagogue Library Association
System: The UNT Digital Library
Community Input from Charleston, South Carolina dtd 7 June 2005 (open access)

Community Input from Charleston, South Carolina dtd 7 June 2005

Community Input from Charleston, South Carolina dtd 7 June 2005. Document includes information on Naval Facilities Engineering Command, Southern Division; Space and Naval Warfare Systems Center, Charleston; US Naval Submarine School, Charleston; and Charleston, SC: A Joint Military Complex.
Date: July 6, 2005
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Oral History Interview with James H. ""Herb"" Macia, July 21, 2000 (open access)

Oral History Interview with James H. ""Herb"" Macia, July 21, 2000

The National Museum of the Pacific War presents an oral interview with James H. ""Herb"" Macia. He discusses being a navigator/bombardier on the 14th plane in the Doolittle Raid, including the training leading up to the raid, the trip on the USS Hornet, the raid itself, bailing out over China, the weeks spent there before making it out through India and Egypt and stories about other men in the Raiders. He also discusses meeting with Generalissimo and Madam Chiang Kai-Shek, seeing the Egyptian pyramids, crossing Africa then to Brazil before getting back to the US, landing in Miami, his later deployments in North Africa and Europe, his work after the war and reunions the Raiders have had since the war.
Date: July 21, 2000
Creator: Macia, James H. ""Herb""
System: The Portal to Texas History