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Heads of government of the Soviet Union

Allegorical Representations In Animal Farm

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Mr. Jones Tsar Nicholas II (terrible ruler) Old Major V. I. Lenin (starter of revolution, inspired by animalism/communism, both were set in their ways, Lenin changed Russia to USSR and Major changed Manor Farm to Animal Farm) Animalism Communism (theory that everyone is equal) Snowball Leon Trotsky (Both led army, were counterparts of major/Lenin, created new ideas that encompassed communism/animalism, both exiled by Stalin/Napoleon) Napoleon Stalin (Valued power, was brutal) Napoleon?s dogs Stalin?s KGB (eliminated opposition) Squealer Propaganda (made Stalin/Napoleon look better) Plan to build wind mill Stalin?s 5 year plan The Battle of the Cowshed Civil war in 1917 Mollie Russia?s upper class Animal Farm USSR

AP EURO NOTES

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AP Euro Notes Sec 27-2 pp.868-872 AND 876- 888 Nalani Story THE AFTERMATH OF THE WAR: EMERGENCE OF THE COLD WAR Tehran Conference (1943) Stalin, Roosevelt, and Churchill, the leaders of the Big Three of the Grand Alliance, met at Tehran, Iran in November of 1943 primary purpose was to determine the way the final assault on Germany would be conducted Roosevelt and Stalin overruled Churchill and decided that the British and Americans would invade the continent through France in the Spring of 1944 not through the Balkans as Churchill wanted decision meant that Eastern Europe would be liberated by the Russians agreed to link up with the Soviets in Germany and partition Germany upon its defeat Yalta Conference (1945)

A People and A Nation Chapters 24 and 25 Study Guide

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Chapters 24 and 25 ? Test Study Guide Chapter 24 ? The Cold War and American Globalism (1945-1961) From Allies to Adversaries Decolonization Imperial states set their colonies free 1943 ? Lebanon gained independence 1946 ? Syria gained independence 1946 ? Jordan gained independence 1946 ? Philippines gained independence from the US 1947 ? Britain relinquished India and Pakistan 1948 ? Britain relinquished Burma and Sri Lanka 1949 ? Dutch left Indonesia British officials in Palestine and Iraq faced tension and pressure Palestine ? Zionists (people who wish for he return of the Jewish homeland) wanted a Jewish homeland and Arab leaders were opposed to this Iraq ? National agitation towards British rule

period 6 world history review

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Period 6 Note Packet Major Events Specific examples Main Ideas Dates Lessr events/concepts Global Concerns Population Growing Population Outstrip the food supply Difficulty producing enough housing, fuel, and food. nations support family planning Some families are large in order to use children for labor and future support Some religions oppose birth control while the gov?t sometimes limits their growth rate (China?s One Child Policy). The United Nations helps to spread family planning ideas Overpopulation result of improved standard of living HIV/AIDS in Africa **Serious problem that still exists up until today** Desertification Areas began making attempts to increase food production but combined with years of drought lead to an expansion of desert land

APUSH Brinkly Chapter 30.2 terms

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Chapter?30.2:?The??Other?America?,?Eisenhower?Republicanism? ? The?Other?America?(1962)? Book?written?by?Michael?Harrington?which? chronicled?the?continuing?existence?of?poverty in?US.? ?culture?of?poverty?? Inner?cities??poverty,?lack?of?strong?educational or?service?institutions,?crime,??violence,? apparent?hopelessness?which?made?it?more? difficult?for?individuals?to?advance.? the??national?epidemic??of??juvenile? delinquency?? Troubling?subculture?of?inner?youth? (embittered,?rebellious?adolescents)?w/?no? hope?of?advancement?&?no?sense?of?having?a? stake?in?the?structure?of?their?society.? Brown?v.?Board?of?Education??Thurgood? Marshall? Considered?the?legal?segregation?of?a?Kansas public?school?system.?Ruled?that? communities?must?work?to?desegregate?their?

euro 28

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Chapter 28 Cold War and a New Western World, 1945-1970 The Development of the Cold War The Confrontation of the Superpowers Rivalry between U.S. and USSR stemmed from their different historical perspectives and irreconcilable political ambitions Eastern Europe was first area of disagreement pro-Soviet governments installed in Poland, Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary 1946: Greek Civil War Communist PLA and non-Communist forces fight over control of Greece Truman Doctrine: economic and military aid for Greece Truman Doctrine: U.S. provide money to countries ?threatened? by Communist ?expansion? June 1947: Marshall Plan (European Recovery Program) $13 billion for economic recovery of war-torn Europe Soviets considered Marshall Plan capitalist imperialism

Chapter 17 and 19 World History Patterns of Interaction

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2nd Semester Comp: 4th Quarter Notes Chapter 17: Restructuring the Postwar World, (1945-Present) Section 1: Cold War: Superpowers Face Off Setting the Stage US and USSR won WW2. However, both had different political philosophies ? led to Cold War. Allies Become Enemies US upset Stalin signed nonaggression pact. Stalin mad US didn?t invade earlier. Both had opposite goals. Yalta Conference: A Postwar Plan In Feb. 1945, before war ended. Agreed to divide Germany into zones of occupation. Germany to compensate for USSR. Stalin to promise East Europe free elections. Churchill was skeptical. Creation of the United Nations ? international organization to protect its members Created in June 1945, set in New York.

Global History 2 mid term review

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Enlightenment: a cultural movement of intellectuals in the 17th and 18th centuries, first in Europe and later in the American colonies. Its purpose was to reform society using reason, challenge ideas grounded in tradition and faith, and advance knowledge through the scientific method. John Locke- Natural Rights; life, liberty, and property; Limited Government Thomas Hobbes- Strong Government maintained order and peace Voltaire- Advocate of religious tolerance and criticized power of the Church Adam Smith-Father of common economics; believed in big business; free-market Rousseau- People agree to be governed as long as the government protects them Montesquieu- Promoted the separation of powers French Revolution:

Joseph Stalin's Death

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Through a succession of bulletins, the Soviet people had been made aware that Stalin was gravely ill. At four in the morning of March 6, 1953, it was announced: "The heart of the comrade-in-arms and continuer of genius of Lenin's cause, of the wise leader and teacher of the Communist Party and the Soviet Union, has ceased to beat." Joseph Stalin, 73 years of age, had suffered a cerebral hemorrhage and died at 9:50 p.m. on March 5, 1953. Stalin's body was washed by a nurse and then carried via a white car to the Kremlin mortuary. There, an autopsy was performed. After the autopsy was completed, Stalin's body was given to the embalmers to prepare it for the three days it would lay-in-state.
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