Monday, September 23th, 2013
Do you know what happened to the girl in this iconic Pulitzer prize winning photo from the Vietnam War?
8 June 1972, a plane bombed the village of Trang Bang, near Saigon (now Ho Chi Minh City) in South Vietnam after the South Vietnamese pilot mistook a group of civilians leaving the temple for enemy troops.The bombs contained napalm, a highly flammable fuel, which killed and badly burned the people on the ground.The iconic black-and-white image taken of children… [Read Full Article]Global Education,Kim Phúc,Kim Phúc Vietnam War Survivor,Nick Ut,Peace Works Travel,Peace Works Travel Upcoming Trips,Vietnam War,War/Photography
Saturday, September 21th, 2013
Vietnam Legacy: Finding G.I. Fathers, and Children Left Behind
SALTILLO, Miss. — Soon after he departed Vietnam in 1970, Specialist James Copeland received a letter from his Vietnamese girlfriend. She was pregnant, she wrote, and he was the father.He re-enlisted, hoping to be sent back. But the Army was drawing down and kept him stateside. By the time Saigon fell to the North Vietnamese in 1975, he had lost… [Read Full Article]Live Learn Travel,Vietnam War,War
Thursday, September 12th, 2013
13 moments of culture shock for the first-time American traveler
MY FIRST TIME ABROAD, I knew things were going to be different the moment I saw my European host dad strip down to a speedo tighter than my bikini bottoms and dive into the Baltic Sea. Cultural differences will surprise you, but you have to learn to live with them to enjoy traveling.When you realize you’re not as smart as… [Read Full Article]Education Travel,education travel programs,education travel tours,Live Learn Travel,Student Travel Tips,Student travelers
Monday, September 09th, 2013
California Students Document the Aftermath of the U.S. “Secret War” in Laos
Bomb craters create stagnant ponds, often harboringwater-born diseases, in Laotian farming villages.In spring of 2013, a group of 13 aspiring video journalists from Harvard-Westlake School in Studio City, California, spent ten adventurous days in Laos immersing themselves in the culture, volunteering at preschools, and interviewing cluster bomb victims. Forty years earlier, the U.S. military ceased its air war in Southeast Asia, but… [Read Full Article]Education Travel,education travel programs,education travel tours,Educational travel programs,Global Community,Global Education,Laos Student Trips,Peace Works Travel,War
Monday, September 02th, 2013
The U.S.S.R. and U.S. Came Closer to Nuclear War Than We Thought
A series of war games held in 1983 triggered "the moment of maximum danger of the late Cold War."An ailing, 69-year-old Yuri Andropov was running the Soviet Union from his Moscow hospital bed in 1983 as the United States and its NATO allies conducted a massive series of war games that seemed to confirm some of his darkest fears.Two years… [Read Full Article]Education Travel,Global Community,Global Education,Live Learn Travel,Power to the Peaceful,War