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- Timeline of United States history (1970-1989) (5473 bytes)
1: ...United States history]] concerns events from '''[[1970]] to [[1989]]'''.
3: === [[1970s]] ===
4: *[[1970]] - [[Environmental Protection Agency]] enacted
23: ...Moscow]] to protest [[1979]] [[Soviet invasion of Afghanistan]]
51: <td align="center"><B>1970-1989</b>
Page text matches
- History of China (45919 bytes)
7: ...d redistribute crops, and to support specialist craftsmen and administrators: in short, civilization a...
28: ...ilosophy)|Legalism]] and [[Mohism]] were founded. After further political consolidation, seven promine...
48: *[[Rafe de Crespigny|de Crespigny, Rafe]]. 1977. The Ch’iang Barbarians and the Em...
49: ...licies and Strategies of the Later Han Empire''. Rafe de Crespigny. 1984. Faculty of Asian Studies, Au...
50: ...y history of the Three Kingdoms state of Wu'' by Rafe de Crespigny, in Asian Studies Monographs, New S... - November 4 (10686 bytes)
7: ...], [[Spain]] captures [[Antwerp (city)|Antwerp]] (after three days the city was nearly destroyed).
32: * [[1970]] - [[Vietnam War]]: [[Vietnamization]] - The [[U...
38: * [[1995]] - After attending a peace rally in [[Tel Aviv]]'s King...
110: [[af:4 November]] - List of people by name: Ag (3474 bytes)
10: *[[Andre Agassi|Agassi, Andre]], (1970-), tennis player
29: *[[S.Y. Agnon|Agnon, S.Y.]], (1888-1970), [[Nobel]] prizewinning author - Nancy Astor, Viscountess Astor (3681 bytes)
17: # [[Robert Gould Shaw III]] (1898-1970) - Sonia Gandhi (4483 bytes)
7: ...couple had two children, [[Rahul Gandhi]] (born [[1970]]) and [[Priyanka Gandhi]] (born [[1971]]). She a...
11: ...lining to take up Indian citizenship for 15 years after her marriage and her lack of fluency in [[Hind... - Tarja Halonen (6272 bytes)
3: ...time common-law partner, Dr. [[Pentti Araj䲶i]], after she was elected president.
11: *Minister of Social Affairs and Health [[1987]]–[[1990]]
14: *Minister of Foreign Affairs [[1995]]–[[2000]]
18: ...anisation of Finnish Trade Unions for the years [[1970]]–[[1974]]. She joined the Social Democrati...
20: ...e president she served as the minister of foreign affairs. - Petra Kelly (3411 bytes)
2: ...d in the [[United States]] between [[1959]] and [[1970]].
4: ...[American University]] ([[Washington, DC]]), in [[1970]]. - Condoleezza Rice (23116 bytes)
27: ...n (after [[Colin Powell]]), and the second woman (after [[Madeleine Albright]]) to serve in that post.
31: ... first term. She was the second African American (after Powell) and the first female to have been appo...
37: ...Nair]] was killed in the bombing of the primarily African-American [[16th Street Baptist Church bombin...
41: After studying piano at an [[Aspen, Colorado|Aspen]]...
43: ... intern in the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs. In [[1981]], at age 26, she received her [[... - Mary Robinson (21825 bytes)
23: ...eth II of the United Kingdom|Queen Elizabeth II]] after a career as a judge in the Colonial Service; w...
27: In 1970 she married her husband [[Nick Robinson|Nicholas ...
33: **Chairman of its Social Affairs Sub-Committee (1977-87)
34: **Chairman of its Legal Affairs Committee (1987-89)
41: ...r house as an independent senator, but in the mid 1970s she joined the Labour Party. Subsequently she at... - Margaret Thatcher (46377 bytes)
29: ...ry]] in the government of [[Edward Heath]] from [[1970]] to [[1974]], and successfully challenged Heath ...
36: ...s not re-elected as an Alderman, a decision which affected his daughter deeply.
40: ==Political career between 1950 and 1970==
41: ...ervative candidate but fought in the [[safe seat|safe]] Labour seat of [[Dartford (UK Parliament const...
43: Thatcher had begun to look for a safe Conservative seat, and was narrowly rejected as ... - The Valiant Five (3833 bytes)
13: ...pointed to the Senate. Among other reasons, until 1970 the Senate approved divorces.
20: ...d a point of legal and political controversy long after. - Rosa Luxemburg (23905 bytes)
8: After her family moved to [[Warsaw]], Rosa attended ...
10: ...y. Her specialised subjects were ''Staatswissenschaft'' (the science of [[form of government|forms of ...
34: ...n]]s. Luxemburg herself took on the name "Junius" after [[Lucius Junius Brutus]], who was said to have...
38: ... as rulers of the new republic alongside the SPD, after the abdication of the [[Wilhelm II of Germany|...
74: After the October Revolution, it becomes the "histor... - Isabel Allende (3632 bytes)
6: ...dor Allende]], the President of [[Chile]] from [[1970]] to [[1973|73]]. In 1945, her parents separated...
12: Beginning in 1967, Allende was on the editorial staff for ''Paula'' magazine, and from 1973 to 1974 fo...
18: ...lived since then in [[San Rafael, California|San Rafael]]. In [[2003]] she obtained [[United States|U....
27: *''Afrodite'' (1997) - Margaret Atwood (6318 bytes)
2: ...ity of Toronto|Victoria College]] in [[Toronto]]. After living in various places in North America and ...
4: ...h [[Canadian nationalism]] in the [[1960s]] and [[1970s]].
37: :''[[The Journals of Susanna Moodie]]'' ([[1970]])
38: :''[[Procedures for Underground]]'' ([[1970]]) - Toni Morrison (2576 bytes)
2: '''Toni Morrison''' is an [[African-American]] [[author]], born '''Chloe Anthony...
6: ...tion of literature from small minority subsets ([[African-American Literature]] or [[Hispanic Literatu...
8: ...obel Prize in Literature]] in [[1993]], the first African-American woman to receive this prize.
15: *''[[The Bluest Eye]]'' (1970)
39: *[[African-American literature]] - Ella Fitzgerald (9400 bytes)
1: [[Image:Ellafitzgerald.jpeg|thumb|Ella Fitzgerald photographed ...
22: ...1996]] she died in [[Beverly Hills, California]], after having made some sad last [[Television|TV]] ap...
28: ...n releasing albums on the [[Decca Records]] label after years of releasing singles.
81: *1970 ''[[Things Ain't What They Used to Be]]''
90: *1970 ''[[Ella in Budapest, Hungary]]'' - Aretha Franklin (7875 bytes)
2: ... (born [[March 25]], [[1942]]) is an [[iconic]] [[African-American]] [[gospel music|gospel]], [[soul m...
6: ...the age 14. She signed with [[Columbia Records]] after being discovered by legendary A&R man [[John H...
8: ...lly famous artist and a symbol of pride for the [[African American]] community. Franklin said herself ...
10: ...merous Top Ten hits in the late 1960s and early [[1970s]], dabbling in [[gospel music]], [[blues music]]...
12: ...edding]] single which became her signature song. After the R&B category was added to the [[Grammy Awa... - Sofia Gubaidulina (8325 bytes)
7: In the mid-1970s Gubaidulina founded Astreja, a folk-instrument i...
21: *''Vivente - Non Vivente'' for electronics (1970) - Janis Joplin (8673 bytes)
2: ...[[January 19]], [[1943]] – [[October 4]], [[1970]]) was an American [[blues]]-influenced [[rock an...
6: ...part after her female blues heroines, and in part after the [[beat poet]]s. She left Texas for [[San F...
8: ...rly singles led to the album being withheld until after their subsequent success.
14: After splitting from Big Brother, she formed a new b...
16: ...c appearance was on [[The Dick Cavett Show]] in [[1970]], where she announced that she would attend her ... - Joni Mitchell (9996 bytes)
3: ...mid-[[1960s]] in [[New York City]]. Through the [[1970s]] she expanded her horizons, predominantly to [[...
9: By her third album, ''[[Ladies of the Canyon]]'' (1970), maturity brought a record infused with the spir...
13: ...ly diverse, with complex vocal harmonies set with African drumming (the [[Drum|Warrior Drums]] of [[Bu...
36: *[[1970]] [[Ladies of the Canyon]]
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