Episodes Nearest to January 1, 1970 to December 31, 1970: 1 through 25 of 25
- The New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival: Still Movin' and Groovin'
1970
Orleans, Louisiana
10th Annual New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, New OrelansAdam Mims
Dr. Benson
History 321-Urban America
The New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival: Still Movin' and Groovin'
In the beginning of 1970, the city of New Orleans and the music industry as a whole would be drastically changed in a way that would bolster its prominence like no other. This change would soon come to existence as being called the...
- The Rebirth of Zora
1970
Orange, Florida
From Sun to Sun, Female AuthorsThe collaboration between Zora Hurston and the Directors of The Museum in folklore entitled “From Sun to Sun” was revolutionary for both the museum and for the African American population at the time. The Museum was known at the time at Rollins to be “a house for the arts”. The theatre worked together with Hurston to present a series of one act plays, musical...
- Alma College Men's Soccer
1970
Gratiot, Michigan
Soccer, College SportsMen’s soccer began as a club team in 1970. Soccer became a varsity sport for the 1975-1976 season after Coach Beaumont successfully argued that if Alma College wanted to promote its connection to Scotland, the College should not ignore Scotland’s national sport.
Although instrumental to the foundation of men’s soccer, Beaumont only coached for the first season. The most successful coach...
- Spatial History Engine: Hamilton Hotel
1970
Orange, Florida
Winter Park, Florida, Orlando, Hamilton HotelBuilt in the 1920’s, the Hamilton Hotel was built as more modest accommodations than the only other hotel in town. The other hotel, the Seminole Hotel, boasted of visitors of such caliber as Henry Flagler, William Rockefeller, and even United States President Grover Cleveland. The Hamilton Hotel was the first in Winter Park to have a bathroom in each room; while it may seem strange to not have...
- The “Me” Generation: How Shirley Chisholm, Harvey Milk and the Weathermen Fought Against the 1970's Fantasy of Perfection
1970
District of Columbia, District of Columbia, San Francisco, California
Homosexuality, African-Americans, Politics, Anti War, Vietnam War, TerrorismThe 1970's became fertile ground for public outrage and violence against the American establishment due to national economic stress, assassinations of public figures, the Vietnam War, and other political scandals. By the 70's it seemed to a significant amount of Americans, that what the government wanted to portray and what they were realistically taking care of were two very different truths. What...
- Bayard Rustin and Israeli Air Support
June 28, 1970
New York, New York
Bayard Rustin, Civil Rights, PacifismIn 1970 Bayard Rustin gathered many civil rights leaders and black public officials in support of an appeal to Washington. This appeal pushed for the U.S. government to supply Israel with fighter jets for protective purposes. Their appeal, in the form of a full-page ad in the New York Times, was sponsored by the A. Philip Randolph Institute of which...
- The Game That Ended Segregation in Sports
September 12, 1970
Jefferson, Alabama
football, SegregationOn September 12, 1970 University of Alabama under legendary coach Paul "Bear" Bryant played the University of Southern California at Legion Field in Birmingham Alabama. The Trojans ran up and down the field on that hot September night. The final score was USC 42, Alabama 21. The Trojans dominated the game rushing on the ground for 485 rushing yards to Alabama's 32. This demanding win for...
- Vietnam Veteran Testifies in Winter Soldier Investigations
January 31, 1971
Wayne, Michigan
Diplomacy/International, Politics, WarOn returning home from Vietnam, some veterans were asked to testify before Congressional committees regarding their actions during the war. Rusty Sachs, a member of the Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron 362, testified before Congress and explained his recollection of destroying villages and killing innocent civilians. Approximately twenty other soldiers testified from various branches of the armed...
- The Fight of Ultimate Rivals
March 8, 1971
New York, New York
Civil Rights, BoxingThe night of March 8, 1971 is one that will never be forgotten in sports history. This was the night of an international sports spectacle. This was the night that Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier attempted to settle the controversy over the world heavyweight boxing championship at Madison Square Garden. Never before had a boxing match meant so much, cost so much, viewed so much, or edged out the My...
- John Kerry Denounces the War in Vietnam
April 23, 1971
Washington, Virginia
Diplomacy/International, Politics, WarSpeaking to the United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, former Army Captain John Kerry explained the atrocities and falsehoods that the soldiers on the ground were forced to carry out while serving in the Vietnam War from 1966-1970. He made it clear that the actions of the United States government and military leaders should not vanish into thin air.
According to...
- Apollo Mission Puts Neil Armstrong on the Moon
July 20, 1969
Brevard, Florida
Cold War, Science/TechnologyNeil Armstrong gained world-wide fame as he stepped off of the Apollo 11’s lunar module and became the first human to set foot on the moon. Completing the awe-inspiring moment he said, “That’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.” Earlier that day, Armstrong and Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin, the Eagle lunar module pilot, had undocked from the command...
- Neil Armstrong and Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin Walk on the Moon
July 16, 1969 to July 21, 1969
Harris, Texas
Science/Technology, Moon, Apollo 11On July 16, 1969, Americans Neil Armstrong, Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin, and Michael Collins sat atop a Saturn V rocket and were blasted away from the surface of the Earth on a journey across 300,000 kilometers to land and walk on the Moon. The choice of which astronaut would step on the lunar surface first came almost by chance- because Armstrong was the Commander of the flight, his seat...
August 13, 1971
Harris, Texas, San Francisco, California, Sedgwick, Kansas, Oakland, Michigan
african americans, Law, EducationIn 1971, schools attempting to overcome segregation faced fierce opposition in the North. The year before the South passed the North in integration of schools and the North’s integration record continued to decline in the 1960s. The question facing Americans was whether the busing plans would overcome the opposition. Some cities moved forward with the forced integration via busing, but other...
- Old Main: 1886-1969
March 9, 1969
Gratiot, Michigan
Buildings - Old Main, Alma CollegeOld Main was one of most important buildings on Alma College’s campus in 1969. This building had housed many departments and classrooms, since the College’s opening day. In the first twenty-five years of Alma College, there were only five buildings on campus: Folsom Hall (gymnasium and chemistry), the library, Hood (museum), Old Main (classrooms and offices) and Pioneer Hall (dormitory).
Old...
- Birmingham's Air Pollution Crisis and Federal Intervention
November 18, 1971 to November 20, 1971
Jefferson, Alabama
Clean Air Act, Air Pollution, NEPA, EPA, Environmentalism, Birmingham, AlabamaBirmingham’s pollution trouble had long been a recurring theme. For years, many had simply lived with the pollution as an everyday part of life. However, in 1971 the County Health Department issued pollution alerts on two separate occasions with daily particulate counts well above national averages. These measurements collected over separate areas of the city could not be ignored any further as...
- "More Negroes Being Hired"
October 2, 1968
Wake, North Carolina
Black Labor, African American jobsThe North Carolina Good Neighbor Council, according to the Rockingham Daily Journal, indicate that by 1968, more African Americans were finding jobs in North Carolina State Government than ever before. The jobs of interest were in education, health, or hospitals, while fields not associated with education, health, or hospitals were still filled with white employees. A survey was preformed...
- State Begins to Hire More Black Workers
October 2, 1968
Cumberland, North Carolina
african americans, employmentOn October 2, 1968, the North Carolina Good Neighbor Council submitted a survey to Raleigh demonstrating that blacks were being hired for more positions within the state government. That rise came over the previous two years. There were still state agencies that are all white, but those agencies did not include education, health or hospitals. “The study showed that 38 percent of the blacks employed...
- Birth Control
August 18, 1968
Cumberland, North Carolina
birth control, Cold War, WomenIn the Fayetteville Observer on Sunday August 18, 1968, the paper noted that a Russian man came up to a Westerner and asked him for some birth control pills for his wife. Normally, a man would ask for whisky or chewing gum, but this time it was different, and the request took the Westerner by surprise. The reason he asked for birth control pills was because there was a housing shortage...
- Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment Examined by HEW
July 26, 1972
Madison, Illinois
African-Americans, Health/Death, Medicine, Tuskegee, Syphilis, StudyOn July 26, 1972 The Alton Evening Telegraph, a newspaper in Alton, Illinois, released an article discussing The Department of Health Education and Welfare's investigation of the Tuskegee Syphilis experiment. Although the experiment was conducted in Alabama, the news was a national story. Jean Heller, the author of the article, found this study so disturbing that she decided to...
- Student Demonstrations at Fayetteville State University
April, 1968 to 1968
Cumberland, North Carolina
African-Americans, Education, ProtestThe Raleigh Observer reported that by April 1968 the students at Fayetteville State University were outraged due to the lack luster condition of their campus. A small group of students seized control of the administration building and phone systems on Thursday. The students were all male upperclassmen. Dr. Jones, the college president was the first to discover the students and speak with...
- Bill Christofferson, a Vietnam Veteran, Experiences Forty Years of Coming Home
February, 1968 to 1968
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
War, Diplomacy/InternationalThe Vietnam War was one of the most traumatic events in postwar American history. At its peak, the United States had 543,400 soldiers stationed in Vietnam and as a whole, the United States sent over three million soldiers to Vietnam. One of these veterans of the Vietnam War was Bill Christofferson, who was a combat correspondent who returned from active duty in 1968. However, like many other Vietnam...
- Man's Heart Transcends Apartheid
January 4, 1968
Durham, North Carolina
South Africans, Apartheid, Civil RightsIn South Africa, the walls of apartheid were about to be transcended by the loss of a young “cape colored” in January 1968. Young Clive Haupt was a “colored” of South Africa who died at the age of 24; while his death was tragic; it had also achieved something, though it was small. While Clive was dead, his heart was to be given to Dr. Phillip Blaiberg, a white South African man. Though this...
- The Who and the New Generation
September 17, 1967
San Francisco, California
Counterculture, The Who, 1960sThe appearance of The Who on the Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour in 1967 marked the beginning of a changing American society. Much like the Beatles began the First British Invasion when they appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show years earlier, they epitomized a significant change in thinking. However, unlike the Beatles, who were simply not part of the status quo, The Who actively challenged the social...
- African Americans and Southern Labor Unions
1967
Jefferson, Alabama
Labor Unions, Race Relations, Civil Rights, african americans“The union wasn’t right by us,” was how James Manley summed up his experiences as an African American union member during an interview conducted by the Sloss Furnace Association. In 1984 Manley sat down in an interview with the goal of recording his thoughts on his career at Sloss Furnaces, a pig-iron producing blast furnace in Birmingham, Alabama. Manley spoke of being laid off in 1967 for...
- Muhammad Ali: How One Man's Dissent Illustrates the Story of the American Opposition of the Vietnam War
1967
Dist Columbia, District of Columbia
Cold War, Draft, Vietnam War, Anti Draft, Anti WarDuring the Cold War, the Vietnam War was probably considered one of America's more unnecessary and counterproductive ideas to stop the spreading of Communism. As the American government continued the war with little thought to whom it effected on both sides of the spectrum many people both Black and White, poor and rich and overall different came together as one to protest the continuation of a...