This document appears to be a study guide or review for a history exam that covers various people, dates, locations, and events in a confusing and disorganized manner with questions labeled "who teh fwip", "when teh fwip", "where teh fwip", and "wut teh fwip". It includes topics related to World War 1 and 2, communism, fascism, and major political and economic events from the 20th century. However, it is written in an unusual format that does not clearly or coherently summarize the key information.
This document appears to be a study guide or review for a history exam that covers various people, dates, locations, and events in a confusing and disorganized manner with questions labeled "who teh fwip", "when teh fwip", "where teh fwip", and "wut teh fwip". It includes topics related to World War 1 and 2, communism, fascism, and major political and economic events from the 20th century. However, it is written in an unusual format that does not clearly or coherently summarize the key information.
This document appears to be a study guide or review for a history exam that covers various people, dates, locations, and events in a confusing and disorganized manner with questions labeled "who teh fwip", "when teh fwip", "where teh fwip", and "wut teh fwip". It includes topics related to World War 1 and 2, communism, fascism, and major political and economic events from the 20th century. However, it is written in an unusual format that does not clearly or coherently summarize the key information.
1. Gavrilo Princip 2. Adolf Hitler (Germany), Benito Mussolini (Italy), Hideki Tojo (Japan), Joseph Stalin (Soviet Union), Francisco Franco (Spain), Mao Zedong (China) 3. The Group of Seven 4. Franklin D. Roosevelt 5. Tommy Douglas (medicare) 6. Lester B. Pearson 7. Germany 8. Lester B. Pearson and Lyndon B. Johnson (over Vietnam) 9. 1.1 million 10. Joseph Stalin 11. Britain, Russia, France, Canada, USA 12. Germany, Austria, Italy, Turkey 13. Soviet Union, USA, United Kingdom, China 14. Germany, Japan, Italy
when teh fwip
1. 1917 2. Six years 3. 1931 (Statute of Westminster) 4. November 11th, 1918 5. September 1st, 1939 6. 1991 7. March 31st, 1949 8. 1965 9. Six weeks 10. Ten years
where teh fwip
1. Halifax 2. No Man’s Land 3. Suburbs 4. Front Lines? 5. Dust Bowl 6. Auschwitz 7. Nuremberg, Germany 8. Factories (men’s roles including war production and machining/factory employment)
wut teh fwip
1. League of Nations 2. Rationing food, buying victory bonds, growing victory gardens, censorship, income tax, debt, war production 3. Jobs, social security, benefits 4. The One Big Union 5. Bloody Saturday 6. Bennett Buggy 7. Black Tuesday 8. Grasshoppers 9. Relief Camp Workers’ Union 10. Start of WW2 11. Trains (riding the rails/rods) 12. Drought, high winds, dust storms, grasshopper plagues 13. Munich Agreement 14. German-Soviet Nonaggression Pact 15. Lightning War 16. Dieppe 17. Manhattan Project 18. Nuclear Tension 19. Iron Curtain 20. The day (June 6, 1944) in World War II on which Allied forces invaded northern France by means of beach landings in Normandy. 21. Led Canada to be an active participant in the Korean War in 1949. (??) 22. Colombo Plan 23. Treaty of Versailles, Germany’s attack on Poland (Sept. 1st, 1939) (switch??) 24. The Great Depression, Fascism / Dictatorship (switch??) 25. United Nations 26. General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 27. NATO - North Atlantic Treaty Organization 28. Korean War, Vietnam War, Suez 29. Megaprojects: a. St. Lawrence Seaway b. Trans-Canada Highway c. Trans-Canada Pipeline d. Avro Arrow 30. Louis St. Laurent 31. 1960, between Kennedy and Nixon 32. 50-100 million deaths; WW1 33. Baby Boom? 34. The Canadian Bill of Rights 35. 100th anniversary 36. October Crisis 37. Official Languages Act 38. Multiculturalism 39. Germans 40. Insulin 41. TV 42. Buying on margin 43. WW1, Over-dependence on the U.S, Buying on margin, 44. Drifters 45. 1.1 million 46. Jewish 47. Showcase power of UN and US military strength; Canada showed it was willing to “police the world” 48. Raise alert status to DEFCON-3 (heightened awareness and patrol) 49. Aid program implemented in US to rebuild war-ravaged economies 50. Marshall Plan but Europe and Canada (and some very sorry Asians) 51. A “war” of tension where the US and USSR were dangerously close to a nuclear war. 52. Communism is a political theory in which all property is publicly owned and each person works and is paid according to their abilities and needs 53. Fascism is a political theory in which the government is more important than the equality and rights of the people; extremely right-winged 54. A society where all members have social equality