v. 1. The decision to drop the atomic bomb on Japan -- v. 2. Planning for the postwar world -- v. 3. United States policy in occupied Germany after World War I -- v. 4. Demobilization and reconversion -- v. 5. Creating a pluralistic democracy in Japan -- v. 6. The Chinese Civil War -- v. 7. The ideological foundation of the Cold War--the "Long Telegram", the Clifford Report, and NSC 68 -- v. 8. The Truman Doctrine and the beginning of the COld War, 1947-1949 -- v. 10. President Truman's fight to unify the armed services, 1945-1949 -- v. 11 The Truman administration's civil rights program: the report of the Committee on Civil Rights and President Truman's message to Congress of February 2, 1948 -- v. 12. The Truman administration's civil rights program: President Truman's attempts to put the principles of racial justice into law, 1948-1950 -- v. 13. Establishing the Marshall Plan, 1947-1948 -- v. 14 Running from behind -- v. 15 The fair deal--President Truman's vision of the American future -- v. 16. Cold War confrontation -- v. 17. The origiins and establishment of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, 1948-1952 -- v. 18. The Korean War: the United States' response to North Korea's invasion of South Korea, June 25, 1950-November 1950 -- v. 19. The Korean War: Response to Communist China's intervention, October 1950-April 1951 -- v. 20. The Korean War: President Truman's dismissal of General Douglas MacArthur -- v. 28. The Truman scandals
v. 1. The decision to drop the atomic bomb on Japan -- v. 2. Planning for the postwar world -- v. 4. Demobilization and reconversion -- v. 5. Creating a pluralistic democracy in Japan -- v. 11 The Truman administration's civil rights program -- v. 14 Running from behind -- v. 15 The fair deal-- President Truman's vision of the American future -- v. 16. Cold war confrontation : Truman, Stalin, and the Berlin airlift -- v. 22. The Emergence of an Asian Pacific Rim in American foreign policy -- v. 28. The Truman scandals -- v. 32. The Emergence of an Asian Pacific Rim in American foreign policy: The Philippines, Indochina, Thailand, Burma, Malaya, and Indonesia