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[Letter from Arthur R. Gomez to Houston LULAC, page 1 - 1951-09-14]
Page one of a letter from Arthur R. Gomez of Houston, Texas to LULAC of Houston, Texas, dated September 14, 1951. This is a thank-you letter to Houston LULAC for setting up a scholarship honoring Gomez's brother, Roy Gomez, who died in the service of his country
[Letter from Arthur R. Gomez to Houston LULAC, page 2 - September 14, 1951]
Page two of a letter from Arthur R. Gomez of Houston, Texas to LULAC of Houston, Texas, dated September 14, 1951. This is a thank-you letter to Houston LULAC for setting up a scholarship honoring Gomez's brother, Roy Gomez, who died in the service of his country
Letter to Arthur R. Stewart, Executives\u27 Club of Chicago, January 13, 1960
Letter from Fayez Sayegh to Arthur R. Stewart of the Executives\u27 Club of Chicago dated January 13, 1960, regarding Sayegh\u27s speech at the club on September 18, 1959 and requesting transcripts of the speech
Letter from Arthur R. Allen to Oscar Monnig (August 23, 1949)
Letter from Arthur R. Allen (meteorite collector from Trinidad, Colorado) to Oscar Monnig sharing information relating to the Blackwell Meteorite which he has in his collection
Oral History Interview with Arthur R. Grace, October 14, 1977
Interview with Arthur R. Grace regarding his experiences while stationed at Kaneohe Naval Air Station during the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and other installations on the island on December 7th, 1941
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Oral History Interview with Arthur R. Grace, October 14, 1977
Interview with Arthur R. Grace regarding his experiences while stationed at Kaneohe Naval Air Station during the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and other installations on the island on December 7th, 1941
Oral History Interview with Arthur R. Liberty, August 25, 2005
The National Museum of the Pacific War presents an oral interview with Arthur Liberty. Born in Vermont, Liberty quit high school in 1942 to join the Marine Corps. He took boot training at Parris Island for nine weeks before going to Camp Lejeune where he was assigned to Company M, 3rd Battalion, 23rd Marines. After three more weeks of training, the company boarded a troop train to Camp Pendleton. Liberty boarded a ship bound for Rio-Namur during January 1944. He was in the third wave of the invasion and was wounded one hour after landing. He was taken to Aiea Naval Hospital in Pearl Harbor for treatment and recovery. Upon recovering, he returned to his division in time for the invasion of Saipan in June 1944. He landed with the first wave, endured heavy Japanese artillery and machine gun fire, which killed or wounded several members of his squad. Later, the battalion invaded Tinian where Liberty recalls being in a foxhole with three others when an artillery shell exploded close by wounding one and killing two others leaving him unharmed. Next, Liberty landed on Iwo Jima on 19 February. Of the 350 men in his company who landed on Iwo Jima, only seventy-nine survived. Once the island was secured, the battalion returned to Hawaii for replacements and retraining. While there Japan surrendered and a month later Liberty boarded the USS Casablanca (CVE-55) to return to the United States. He went to Camp Pendleton where he received his discharge November 1945. Returning to high school, he earned his diploma. Re-enlisting in the Marine Corps in 1949, he retired in 196
Correspondence with Arthur R. Stewart, Executives\u27 Club of Chicago
Letter from Arthur R. Stewart of the Executives\u27 Club of Chicago to Fayez Sayegh dated January 14, 1960, and Sayegh\u27s response dated January 24, 1960, regarding transcripts and news clippings of Sayegh\u27s speech at the club on September 18, 1959; includes brochure from the Executives\u27 Club of Chicago featuring a list of guest speakers
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