1,721,027 research outputs found
Personal -- Gordon W. Prange trip to Japan, 1964
12 photographs belonging to Gordon W. Prange showing the city of Nemuro on the island of Hokkaido, Japan, 1964
Gordon W. Prange Collection: Accessible Materials from Japan
This poster introduces the various types and formats of the materials held at the Gordon W. Prange Collection, Special Collections and University Archives (SCUA), University of Maryland Libraries
University of Maryland -- Gordon W. Prange, circa 1966
12 photographs of Gordon W. Prange from his time teaching in the History Department at the University of Maryland, College Park, circa 1966. Includes duplicate photographs
Overview of the Gordon W. Prange Collection, University of Maryland Libraries
The National Japan Bowl is a Japanese-language competition, hosted by the Japan-America Society of Washington DC. The author was invited as one of the workshop hosts to introduce the Gordon W. Prange Collection, Special Collections and University Archives, University of Maryland Libraries. This is a PDF version of the power point presentation slides that were shared at the workshop
Gordon W. Prange Papers
Dr. Gordon W. Prange (July 16, 1910 - May 15, 1980) was an historian and history professor at the University of Maryland from 1937 until his death in 1980. While teaching at the University of Maryland, Prange published many books and articles on a variety of historical topics, but he is probably best known for his research on the December 7, 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor by Japanese forces during World War II. Prange conducted interviews and collected accounts from diaries, articles, and correspondence with many of the key participants in the battle, both Japanese and American, as well as completed extensive research on the causes, planning, build-up to, and execution and consequences of the attack. Prange's Pearl Harbor research was published posthumously in three volumes: At Dawn We Slept: The Untold Story of Pearl Harbor (1981), Pearl Harbor: The Verdict of History (1986), and December 7, 1941: The Day the Japanese Attacked Pearl Harbor (1988). The Gordon W. Prange Papers cover the period from 1866 to 2002, with the bulk of the materials dating from 1936 to 1980. The collection consists of both personal and professional papers and includes unpublished manuscripts, correspondence, interview notes and transcripts, research notes, articles, maps, and photographs related to Prange�s research on the attack on Pearl Harbor, the Battle of Midway, the Russian spy Richard Sorge, and the speeches of Adolf Hitler. There are also materials related to Prange's tenure as a history professor at the University of Maryland and Prange's service as an historian for the US Army under General Douglas MacArthur during the Allied occupation of Japan
G-2 Historical Division -- Gordon W. Prange, 1949
Seven photographs of Deputy Chief Gordon W. Prange and other staff of the G-2 Section, Historical Division, General Headquarters of Far East Command in Tokyo, Japan, December 9, 1949
The Gordon W. Prange Collection: saving hidden history, Japan 1945-1949
Introduction of the Gordon W. Prange Collection, University of Maryland Libraries
Gordon W. Prange, History 498E lecture recordings, University of Maryland, May 1976
Portions of two World War Two history lectures that Gordon W. Prange delivered in his History 498E class at the University of Maryland on May 3rd (Lecture 18) and May 5th (Lecture 19), 1976
The Network Visualization and Analysis of Twitter Followers, Gordon W. Prange Collection
This poster introduces a creative method to analyze the relationship of Twitter followers at the Gordon W. Prange Collection, Special Collections and University Archives (SCUA), University of Maryland Libraries. By using Gephi, a visualization and exploration open-source software for network analysis, "diagrams" of the Prange Collection Twitter followers (both English and Japanese accounts) are generated. These easy-to-read visualizations enable the Prange staff member to make a data-driven decision to define the cultivable groups of people in order to make the Prange Collection social media initiative via Twitter more effective.This poster introduces a creative method to analyze the relationship of Twitter followers at the Gordon W. Prange Collection, Special Collections and University Archives (SCUA), University of Maryland Libraries. By using Gephi, a visualization and exploration open-source software for network analysis, "diagrams" of the Prange Collection Twitter followers (both English and Japanese accounts) are generated. These easy-to-read visualizations enable the Prange staff member to make a data-driven decision to define the cultivable groups of people in order to make the Prange Collection social media initiative via Twitter more effective
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