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1960s-1970s%20Anti-war%20movement%20to%20the%20

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1960s-1970s Anti-war movement to the Me Decade. The My Lai Massacre - Vietnam 175-400 innocent civilians were killed in the massacre. Journalists documented the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 1960s-1970s%20Anti-war%20movement%20to%20the%20


1
1960s-1970sAnti-war movement to the Me Decade.
2
The My Lai Massacre - Vietnam
  • 175-400 innocent civilians were killed in the
    massacre.
  • Journalists documented the event.
  • People at home in the US saw this and believed
    war was terribly wrong, and something needed to
    be done!

3
Student Protest
  • Students in the 1960s demonstrated in support of
    free speech and other issues and protested
    against the Vietnam War.

4
Pentagon Papers
  • The Pentagon Papers was a study conducted by the
    New York Times that revealed that the government
    had lied to congress and the American people
    about the war.
  • This shocked the public.

5
Student Activism
  • College students were at the forefront of the
    antiwar movement.
  • During the early 1960s many more students started
    going to college after graduating high school.

6
Students for a Democratic Society (SDS)
  • Civil rights activists help organize Students for
    a Democratic Society (SDS) in 1960.
  • This group started small, but grew they became a
    huge influence in the anti-war movement.

7
The NEW LEFT
  • The SDS a major influence on a group called the
    New Left.
  • Members of the New Left called for radical
    changes in government, and wanted to end
    discrimination, racism, sexism and poverty.

8
Free Speech Movement
  • Students at UC Berkeley became angry when they
    were denied the right to distribute leaflets
    outside of the campus gates.
  • Students argued that their right to free speech
    was being denied.

9
  • On December 2, 1964, thousands of students took
    over Sproul Hall and shut down the university
    administration.
  • Police moved in and arrested more than 700
    people.
  • Students then stopped going to class to protest
    the administrations decision.

10
Teach-in Movement
  • Teach-in-First took place at the University of
    Michigan in 1965. Professors taught a special
    night class in which issues about the war could
    be aired.
  • Thousands of people showed up and similar
    teach-ins started occurring around the country.

11
Resistance to War
  • There was a draft, or required military service.
    People started refusing to go into the
    military/war.
  • Conscientious Objectors-People opposed fighting
    in the war on moral or religious reasons.
  • Deferment-college students could go to college
    and postpone their call to serve.

12
Columbia University 1968
  • Students linked the issues of civil rights to the
    war. Students took over the presidents office.
    They were arrested for their actions.
  • Many radical protests grew violent as the 60s
    moved on.

13
Kent State and Jackson State
  • The invasion of Cambodia in 1970 reignited the
    protests on college campuses.
  • At Kent State after one of Nixons speeches,
    students broke windows in the business district
    and also burned the ROTC building (which had
    become a symbol of the war).

14
The National Guard was called in to stop the Kent
State protests. They ended up killing 4 students.
15
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16
Kent State and Jackson State
  • A similar incident occurred at Jackson State (an
    all black college in the south). Violence
    erupted and 2 students were dead and 11 wounded.

17
Counterculture Movement
  • As a result of protest against the Vietnam war,
    the civil rights and womens rights movements, a
    counterculture movement emerged.
  • The 1960s youth culture promoted freedom and
    individuality. Its new attitudes about personal
    relationships, drugs, and music shocked many
    Americans.

18
Counterculture
  • People of the counterculture rejected most
    traditional social customs. They experimented
    with new forms of dress, different attitudes
    towards sexual relationships, and the
    recreational use of drugs.

19
  • Hippies or people who wanted to look hip, or
    aware of the latest styles-wanted to look
    different.
  • Some women wore loose fitting clothes and
    dresses, while other wore tight mini skirts.
  • Men often grew their hair long and wore beards.
  • People wore blue jeans (bell-bottoms) and plain
    tee shirts to look more natural.

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22
Sexual Revolution
  • Views about sexual relationships by the
    counterculture were labeled the sexual
    revolution.
  • This led to more open conversations about sex in
    light of newspapers, magazines and books.
  • Many people began living together and not getting
    married, which was shocking in comparison to the
    times before

23
Drug- 1960s
  • Two Harvard University researchers worked on the
    chemical compound known as lysergic acid
    diethylamide (LSD). LSD is a psychedelic drug.
  • Soldiers brought back drugs from Vietnam, and
    marijuana became common among middle class
    college students.

24
Music
  • Woodstock Festival-400,000 people gathered for
    several days in up state New York to listen to
    major bands of the time. Drug laws were not
    enforced. And the crowd remained in control.
  • Some members of society viewed the festival with
    disgust. Older people resented the
    hippie-counterculture.

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26
1970s
  • As the 1960s proceeded and became the 1970s, the
    Vietnam War dragged on.
  • Student activism continued
  • Music changed from rock to disco
  • Drugs changed from psychedelics (pot, LSD) to
    crank and cocaine.
  • The 1970s is known as the Me Decade

27
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