Dawes plan was march 1924, was it not? It involved the US lending Germany loans to pump into her economy to increase her ability to pay reparations to the allies; in the end it really worsened to depression dramatically for Germany though, because she became reliant on US funding.
Young plan, to my understanding, involved basically delaying reparations until after the depression, though I'm not completely sure on that one.
What'd stresemann do? Well basically I thought they stopped it by introducing a new currency and just not printing so much of it.
Hindenburg: He appointed alota chancellors, I don't know all of them, but the important ones in later years were Muller, Von Papen, Schleicher, more but I can't remember off top of my head.
Who influenced him? His aristocratic, traditional upper-class voters. Schleicher, he was in the army. His son, Oscar.
Basically Hitler got really popular (almost 40% of the vote in presidential elections for 1932, for instance), and the nazi party, being the largest in the reichstag, were revolting as others would not allow Hitler chancellorship. But they had a long succession of poor chancellors, including those mentioned above, and in the end Von Papen and Hindenburg made a deal with Hitler, which he took advantage of. Once he was chancellor he took advantage of a string of events to revoke German civil liberties and remove political opposition, and just before Hindenburg died in...August? 1934 he passed on act making him Fuhrer (or chancellor-president) when Hindenburg died.
...Yeah that's as much as I can say for now
Add this to what above post said and that's a reasonable explanation. Yeah, other chancellor was Bruning; I think it went Muller, Bruning, Von Papen, Schleicher, Hitler