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This compelling resource chronicles the memorable events of December 7, 1941, the day that Japan attacked Pearl Harbor, provoking the United States into entering World War II. Readers will see the attack through the eyes of survivors, such as Donald Kirby Ross, the first WWII–era recipient of the Medal of Honor, and Lee Embree, who took the first air-to-air photos of Japanese planes and pilots in the attack. Beyond Pearl Harbor, the Ni‘ihau Incident and the assault on Oahu’s airfields are also explained.
Chronicles Early's loyalty to Roosevelt, their close but sometimes-tumultuous personal and professional relationship, from Roosevelts appearance as a New York delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1912 through his four terms as US President.
A re-created World War II nostalgic-style scrapbook details Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, December 7, 1941, and its repercussions, integrating authentic photographs, newspaper clippings, maps, telegrams, and a multitude of vintage artifacts.
Jerome Rabow has contributed significant research to the fields of social psychology and education. This memoir, however, is very different from his academic work, and is aimed at people who wish to enhance their lives and for people who feel stuck. It is not a conventional how to book, but rather ahow you can book: how you can learn from your failures, improve your family relationships, your relationships with your intimates, and deepen your relationship to your self. It is for the elderly who may not realize there can be a good life ahead. It is for professors who want to change how they teach or how they respond to their students. It is for those who dwell on their failures and cannot look afresh and unearth new possibilities. This book may help you understand that poverty is not just a matter of money but can be something deeply psychological. This book may help you appreciate the value of persistence, help you recognize the ways your childhood experiences provide you with a template of how to be. This template paints how your adult experiences will be viewed, evaluated, and colored: blue, gray, black, or yellow. If you wear rose-colored glasses, this book may help you face your truths and see more clearly what is possible beyond the lens you are familiar with.
This book contains true stories and documentation of how our family became endangered refugees in WWII Europe. Some family-members escaped legally to the States. A few others 'illegally immigrated' into Mandatory Palestine. Many survived in Hungary until late 1944, and hoped to travel to Palestine. Instead, most were murdered in Nazi extermination camps in Poland. These stories are illustrated with annotated archival material collected by Greta (nee Schwartz) Reisman including photographs, government-issued identification and travel documents, hand-written notes, newspaper clippings, and Greta's autobiographical essays. The Schwarz children were separated from their parents for over a year, and escaped to the States in late May, 1940.
A narrative history based on the experiences and memories of hundreds of participants in the dramatic events of 1941.
From the Editors of MyFamily.com/Ancestry Publishing Strengthen family bonds with the help of the experts from MyFamily.com, a multiple award-winning website for family resources. In these pages you will learn to produce a visual legacy that will be passed down among your family for generations. From researching the past and producing a family tree to creating scrapbooks for the future, from keeping in contact when you're apart to arranging a family reunion, this is a how-to book that will encourage pride in your unique family heritage.
A history of a California Bay Area family from the end of World War II through the societal passions of the 1960s and 1970s right up to the political and social tumult of today.
Chiefly a record of some of the ancestors of John Edward Vance. He was born 14 May 1945 in Chicago, Illinois, to Joseph Harvey Vance and Betty Joan Markwith. He married Marie Esterline in Ot 1968. He died 29 Jan 1969. Ancestors lived in the midwest and east coast areas of the United States.