Added by: stoker | Karma: 5556.59 | Black Hole | 28 September 2010
0
TTC - United States and the Middle East: 1914 to 9/11
Course No. 8593 (24 lectures, 30 minutes/lecture) Taught by Salim Yaqub University of California at Santa Barbara Ph.D., Yale University 1. A Meeting of Two Worlds 2. Wilson & the Breakup of the Ottoman Empire 3. The Interwar Period 4. U.S. & the Middle East During World War II 5. Origins of the Cold War in the Middle East 6. Truman & the Creation of Israel 7. Eisenhower, the Cold War & the Middle East
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Added by: imans | Karma: 134.75 | Fiction literature | 26 September 2010
3
The princess
The Princess is a serio-comic blank verse narrative poem, written by Alfred Tennyson, published in 1847. Tennyson was Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom from 1850 to 1896 and remains one of the most popular English poets.
Half are brief economic terms and historical and geographical definitions, and the other half are era overviews, issues, biographies, state economic histories, historical events, and company and industry profiles with limited bibliographies.
Course No. 4855 (12 lectures, 30 minutes/lecture) Taught by Daniel N. Robinson Philosophy Faculty, Oxford University; Distinguished Professor, Emeritus, Georgetown University Ph.D., City University of New York
The Great War: Walk in Hell is the second installment of Harry Turtledove’s "The Great War" series, covering, more or less, the second year-and-a-half of the war, along with the continuation of the revolt of the Confederacy’s Black socialists and the United States’ Mormons. Throughout the majority of the novel, the United States manages to retain the position of dominance it carved for itself in the first book, although the novel ends with the war no closer to an end and the outcome in just as much doubt as it was at the beginning of the book.