- Paris Peace Conference
- Paris Peace Treaties and League of Nations
- Motives of the USA
- Motives of France
- Motives of Great Britain
- "The Big Three"
- Woodrow Wilson's 14 Points
- The War Guilt Clause
- Nationalism and the Formation of New Countries
- War Reparations
- The Treaties with the Lesser Powers
- The Formation of the League of Nations (Collective Security)
- Russia 1917-1945
- Abdication of the Tsar, Feb./ March Revolution 1917
- The Provisional Government
- The Bolsheviks: October/ November Revolution 1917
- Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, 1918
- Vladimir Lenin
- Russian Civil War 1919-21
- War Communism
- New Economic Policy
- “Socialism in One Country”
- Collectivization
- Show Trials and the Great Purges
- Industrialization, 5 year plans 1928-1941
- Nazi-Soviet Non Aggression Pact
- Operation Barbarossa
- Stalingrad
- USA in the 20s and 30s
- A Consumer Society
- Henry Ford, Assembly Lines and the Model T
- Isolationism
- Prohibition
- The Washington Naval Conference, 1921
- The Dawes Plan, 1924 and The Young Plan, 1929
- Buying on the Margin
- Black Tuesday, October 22, 1929: Stock Market Crash
- Herbert Hoover and Hoovervilles
- Franklin D. Roosevelt and the 100 Days
- The New Deal
- Alphabet Agencies
- John Mavnard Kevnes
- Fireside Chats
- Europe in the 20s and 30s
- The Weimar Republic
- The Maginot Line
- The Beer Hall Putsch (Munich Putsch) and Mein Kampf
- Mussolini and the Rise of Fascism
- Locarno and Kellogg-Briand Pacts
- Gustaf Stresemann and The Dawes Plan
- Early Acts of Appeasement
- Final Acts of Appeasement
- The Spanish Civil War
- Hitler and the Rise of Nazism
- Anti Semitism and the Holocaust
- World War II
- The Invasion of Poland
- The Invasion of Norway and Low Countries
- Invasion of France (Dunkirk)
- The Battle of Britain (Operation Sea Lion)
- The Battle of the Atlantic
- North Africa
- Italy in Greece and Yugoslavia
- Operation Barbarossa
- Pearl Harbor
- Japan's Need For Natural Resources
- Turning Point 1943: Stalingrad, Kursk, El Alamein
- Island Hopping
- Invasion of Italy
- D-Day
- The Battle of the Bulge
- Iwo Jima and Okinagawa
- The Manhattan Project
- Hiroshima and Nagasaki
- The Wartime Conference: The Opening shots of the Cold War
- Advances in Technology and the Role of Women
- The Nuremburg Trial
- Early Cold War
- A Bi-Polar World
- The Truman Doctrine and Marshall Plan
- 1948 Coup in Czechoslovakia
- Yugoslavia and Albania "Cracks in the Iron Curtain"
- The Berlin Blockade Airlift 1948
- NATO and Warsaw Pact
- The Korean War, 1950-53
- McCarthyism
- Nikita Krushchev and De-Stalinization
- Eisenhower Doctrine
- The Hungarian Uprising, 1956
- The Space Race and Inter Continental Ballistic Missiles (ICBM's)
- The Rise of John F. Kennedy
- The Berlin Wall, 1961
- The Cuban Missile Crisis, 1962
- The Assassination of John F. Kennedy, 1963
- The Late Cold War
- The Gulf of Tonkin and the Vietnam War
- Ho Chi Minh and Vietcong
- Vietnamization
- The Leonid Brezhnev Era
- Czechoslovakia, 1968
- Lyndon B. Johnson
- Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD)
- Richard Nixon and Detente
- Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter
- Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT) I and II 1972, 1974
- The Helsinki Accords, 1975
- Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan, 1979
- Ronald Reagan
- Star Wars and Strategic Defense Initiative
- Mikhail Gorbachev
- Perestoika and Glasnost
- The Falling of the Berlin Wall 1989
- The Russian Coup, 1991
- China, 1919 - 1991
- Chiang Kai-Shek and the Kuomintang
- The Japanese and Manchuria
- The Stimson Doctrine
- The Long March, 1934
- Mao Tse-Tung (Zedong)
- Chinese Civil War, 1946-1949
- The Korean War and Yalu River
- The Great Leap Forward, 1956
- The Cultural Revolution, 1966-1976
- Mao dies, 1976
- Deng Xiaoping takes over, 1978
- Special Economic zones
- Tiannamen Square, 1989
- Middle East 1919 - 1991
- Middle East Blog
- Breakup of the Ottoman Empire and the French and English Mandates
- The Balfour Declaration, 1917
- The Israech War of Independence, 1948
- The Suez Crisis, 1956
- The Six Days War, 1967
- The Yom Kippur War, 1973
- Anwar Sadat
- The Camp David Accords, 1978
- The Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO)
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- Kuwait and the Gulf War, 1991
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- Amritsar, 1919
- Self Rule and the Salt March, 1929
- Partition
- Muhammad Ali Jinnah and the Muslim League, 1947-48
- India and Pakistan (Bangladesh)
- Martin Luther King
- Great Society
- Malcolm X
- Black Panthers
- Little Rock
- Universal Suffrage and the Right to Vote
- Margaret Thatcher (The Falkland Islands War, 1982)
- Ghandi and Women's Rights
- Golda Meir
- Benazir Bhutto
- Birth Control
- Equal Pay
Ghandi and Women’s Rights
- Indira Ghandi was a child of Nehru
- Elected as leader of the Indian Congress Party in 1955
- Became India’s P.M. in 1965
- Declared martial law in 1975 amidst an election scandal
- Lost in the polls in 1977
- Returned in 1980 with a landslide victory
- Assassinated in 1984 by one of her own bodyguards
- Pushed for the end of poverty and for women’s rights in India
- Also popular over the exploding of India’s first nuclear weapon and their successful war over Pakistan in 1971
The Women’s Rights Movement
- The modern women’s rights movement began with Betty Frieden’s “The Feminine Mystique” a book about women being dissatisfied with their role
- 1966 She founds the National Organization for Women (NOW)
- They fought for the Equal Rights Amendment, which prohibited discrimination by gender
- It was defeated
- 1973 the Supreme Court struck down laws, which prohibited abortion
- 1970 Gloria Steinem took over NOW
The group split over the abortion issue in the 1980s
Summary:
Indira Ghandi was a child of Nehru, and became India’s P.M. in 1965, where she pushed for the end of poverty and for women’s rights in India.The modern women's rights movemnt began with Betty Frieden and here book. She finds the National Organization for Women, the group split over the abortion issue.
- Elected as leader of the Indian Congress Party in 1955
- Became India’s P.M. in 1965
- Declared martial law in 1975 amidst an election scandal
- Lost in the polls in 1977
- Returned in 1980 with a landslide victory
- Assassinated in 1984 by one of her own bodyguards
- Pushed for the end of poverty and for women’s rights in India
- Also popular over the exploding of India’s first nuclear weapon and their successful war over Pakistan in 1971
The Women’s Rights Movement
- The modern women’s rights movement began with Betty Frieden’s “The Feminine Mystique” a book about women being dissatisfied with their role
- 1966 She founds the National Organization for Women (NOW)
- They fought for the Equal Rights Amendment, which prohibited discrimination by gender
- It was defeated
- 1973 the Supreme Court struck down laws, which prohibited abortion
- 1970 Gloria Steinem took over NOW
The group split over the abortion issue in the 1980s
Summary:
Indira Ghandi was a child of Nehru, and became India’s P.M. in 1965, where she pushed for the end of poverty and for women’s rights in India.The modern women's rights movemnt began with Betty Frieden and here book. She finds the National Organization for Women, the group split over the abortion issue.
"You must be the change you wish to see in the world." - Mahatma Gandhi