Press Release
Press Release · Sunday, May 1, 1960
Press Release
May 30, 2002
U.S. Air Force History Featured in National Archives Lecture Series in July and August 2002
Washington, DC . . . In July and August, the National Archives and Records Administration presents a series of lectures relating to US Air Force History, Civil Rights, and the Civil War. Also a day-long symposium will be featured in August where authors, archivists, and military historians will gather to discuss recent books and articles relating to World War I records housed at the National Archives.
The programs are free and open to the public and will take place in Room 105 at the National Archives Building, Pennsylvania Avenue between 7th and 9th Streets, NW. Due to limited seating in Room 105 of the National Archives Building, reservations are recommended, call (202) 208-7345. The public may verify times and dates by calling the National Archives public events line at (202) 501-5000. TDD users may call (202) 501-5404.
July
Tuesday, July 9 - Civil Rights
Richard Leonard will discuss his book, Call to Selma: Eighteen Days of Witness.
In 1965, Mr. Leonard answered Dr. Martin Luther King's appeal to clergy to come
to Selma, Alabama, and assist the protesters in their demand for voting rights.
Mr. Leonard's journal forms the core of this book, and includes first-hand accounts
of more that two dozen Unitarians. Leonard is minister emeritus of the Unitarian
Church of All Souls in New York City. Noon.
Tuesday, July 9 - Military Legislation
James Locher will discuss his book, Victory on the Potomac: The Goldwater-Nichols
Act Unifies the Pentagon. Mr. Locher discusses the bitter political conflict
to produce this legislation as the struggle lasted four years and 241 days --
a period longer than American involvement in World War II -- and pitted Congress
against Pentagon elements determined to maintain excessive clout and independence
for the four services. Mr. Locher examines military operations from Pearl Harbor
to the 1983 Grenada incursion and identifies the organizational causes of operational
setbacks and failures. James Locher is the former assistant secretary of defense
(1989-93) and staffer on the Senate Armed Services Committee (1978-89). 7
p.m.
Wednesday, July 24 - Civil War
Brian Dirck will discuss his book, Lincoln & Davis: Imagining America,
1809-1865. Both Lincoln and Davis remain locked in the American psyche as
iconic symbols of victory and defeat in the American Civil War. Mr. Dirck examines
Lincoln's and Davis's respective ideas concerning national identity, highlighting
the strengths and shortcomings of each leader's worldview. He analyzes how their
everyday lives--the influence of fathers and friends, jobs and homes--worked
in complex ways to shape Lincoln's and Davis's perceptions of what the American
nation was supposed to be and could become and how those images could reject
or accommodate the institution of slavery. Noon.
Thursday, July 25 - Aviation
David Toomey will discuss his book, Stormchasers: The Hurricane Hunters and
Their Fateful Flight into Hurricane Janet. In the wake of World War II,
the Air Force and the Navy had discovered a new civilian arena where daring
pilots could test their courage and skill. In September 1955, Navy Lieutenant
Commander Grover B. Windham and a crew of eight flew out of Guantanamo Bay into
the eye of Hurricane Janet swirling in the Caribbean: a routine weather reconnaissance
mission from which they never returned. These "Hurricane Hunters"
flew into raging storms to gauge their strength and predict their paths. Noon.
Tuesday, July 30 -USAF Lecture Series
Francis Gary Powers, Jr., founder of the Cold War Museum, will talk about the
U-2 incident of May 1, 1960. His father, Pilot F. Gary Powers survived the crash
to be tried in the Soviet Union as a spy, convicted to imprisonment, swapped
for Soviet spy, and returned to the US in February 1962. Mr. Powers will also
talk about the Cold War Museum, which preserves Cold War history and honor Cold
War Veterans. 7 p.m.
Wednesday, July 31 - USAF Lecture Series
R. Cargill Hall will discuss "Early Cold War Overflights of the Sino-Soviet
Bloc." Based in part on his book, United States Air Force in Space,
1945 to the Twenty-First Century: Proceedings, Air Force Historical Foundation
Symposium, Mr. Hall examines the pre U-2 missions that employed military
reconnaissance aircraft between 1950 and 1956, when Eisenhower terminated the
program. Noon.
August
Thursday, August 1 - USAF Lecture Series
Dr. Richard P. Hallion, Air Force Historian and author of Air Power Confronts
An Unstable World, will discuss "Air Power in the 20th Century and
Beyond." Dr. Hallion has flown a range of military and civilian fixed and
rotary-wing aircraft and is the author of more than 20 books relating to aerospace
history. Noon.
Tuesday, August 6 -World War I Symposium
The National Archives presents a day-long symposium about the First World War.
Titled "The Guns of August Revisited," authors, archivists, and military
historians will gather to discuss recent books and articles relating to records
housed at the National Archives relating to World War I. Speakers include Nancy
Gentile-Ford, author of Americans All: Foreign Born Soldiers in World War
I; James Cooke, author of Billy Mitchell; Lee Kennett, author of First
Air War, 1914-1918; Jennifer Keene, author of Doughboys, the Great War,
and the Remaking of America; and Doug Johnson author of Soissons 1918.
They will be joined by archivists Mitch Yockelson and Tim Nenninger, and other
guest speakers. For the schedule of events and more information, please call
(202) 208-7345 or visit the online calendar of events at www.archives.gov.
Wednesday, August 7 - USAF Lecture Series
Chief Master Sergeant Ron Dandeneau USAF (Ret.) will discuss "Rustic Air
Operations in Cambodia during the Vietnam War". Beginning in June 1970,
the White House ordered top-secret, round-the-clock air support over Cambodia,
and US forward air controllers provided twenty-four-hour air support to the
Cambodian ground commanders by flying low and slow over enemy positions. Sitting
in the back seat of the OV-10 aircraft, Chief Dandeneau's proficiency with the
French language allowed him to act as interpreter between the American pilots
and the Cambodian Army field commanders. Noon.
Thursday, August 8 - USAF Lecture Series
Lieutenant Colonel Donald S. Lopez, USAF (Ret.) Will talk about flight testing
at Eglin Air Force Base and the first military jets. Based on his latest book,
Fighter Pilot's Heaven: Flight Testing the Early Jets, he presents the
inside story of the American military's transition into the jet age, as told
by a flyer whose life depended on its success. Lieutenant Colonel Lopez is the
deputy director of the Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum and a former
pilot with the 23rd Flying Tiger Fighter Group in China. Noon.
Thursday, August 8 - USAF Lecture Series/Oral History
Chief Master Sergeant James Clemenson will discuss how he became and why he
is an Air National Guard Chief. Chief Clemenson will share his experiences from
over 32 years of service in the United States Air Force. 7 p.m.
Tuesday, August 13 - USAF Lecture Series
Greg Touma and John Ware will discuss US humanitarian airlifts to the Afghan
mujahadeen freedom fighters 1986-1990. Mr. Ware participated in the logistics
and planning of these airlifts, as he validated over 100 Special Assignment
Airlift Missions (SAAM). Mr. Touma served aboard one dozen flights and provides
firsthand accounts from the forward areas. Noon.
Wednesday, August 14 - USAF Lecture Series
Chief Master Sergeant Larry Parthum USAF (Ret.) Will discuss "The Development
of Air Force Enlisted Corps," based on his experiences in the United States
Air Force. Chief Parthum served eleven years as an officer, working beside those
who were present at the creation of the Air Force by the National Security Act
of 1947 and the second generation of Air Force personnel. After a reduction
in force, he served in the enlisted ranks for nineteen years and became the
only known prior officer to reach the top enlisted rank, Chief Master Sergeant.
Noon.
Thursday, August 15 - USAF Lecture Series /Oral History
Colonel Greg Bailey, USAF (Ret.), Will compare and contrast combat aviation
between the Vietnam War to the Persian Gulf War. Describing what each time period
was like, and weaving humor with historical anecdotes and first person perspective,
Colonel Bailey will recount his combat experiences as a captain flying RF-4
jets in Vietnam (1971 -2) - when he felt "young and bulletproof" -
to his role as a Colonel flying F-111's in the Gulf War. 7 p.m.
For additional PRESS information, please contact the National Archives Public Affairs staff at (301) 837-1700 or by e-mail. To verify the date and times of the programs, the public should call the Public Events Line at: 202-501-5000, or visit the National Archives Home Page on the World Wide Web at http://www.archives.gov.
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