American Experience
How the vice presidency went from pitiful to powerful
Show title: American Experience
Video title: How the vice presidency went from pitiful to powerful
Video duration: 2m 33sVideo description: America’s first vice president, John Adams, called his job “the most insignificant office that ever the invention of man contrived.” But that would change dramatically over the next two and a half centuries.
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Discrimination against Mexican-Americans
47s
In the 1950s life could be difficult for Latinos in the United States.
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Chapter 1 | The Trials of J. Robert Oppenheimer
6m 59s
Watch a preview of The Trials of J. Robert Oppenheimer.
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Behind the Scenes With David Strathairn
5m 54s
Learn more about the filming of The Trials of J. Robert Oppenheimer.
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From the film Freedom Riders: Victory for Nonviolence,...
2m 9s
Before getting on the bus, Freedom Riders participated in CORE training sessions, which included a demonstration of nonviolence in volatile situations. Rev. James Lawson and Julian Bond discuss how nonviolence courted to violence in order to attract publicity for the cause.
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From the film Freedom Riders: Freedom to Travel, part 1
57s
Diane Nash and Charles Person discuss the difficulties for black people traveling in the segregated South.
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From the film Freedom Riders: The Media, part 1
1m 5s
Rioters turn violent against the Freedom Riders despite the presence of the media. The resulting photographs were "about as dramatic as anything I think anyone had ever seen coming out of the Civil Rights struggle," says Ray Arsenault. "The notion that just for the attempt to sit on the front of a bus, that you could risk your life, that people could try to burn you to death was incredible."
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From the film Freedom Riders: The Media, part 2
1m 14s
In a news report from Herb Kaplow, the reporter recounts his experience when covering a Freedom Ride. "The mob came out and went straight to the reporters, and started beating them and kicking them and throwing their cameras down, smashing them on the ground." After the reporters were forced away, the mob turned on the Freedom Riders.
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From the film Freedom Riders: the Cold War
39s
Foreign newsreels contemplate the inequality between races in the United States.
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From the film Freedom Riders: Victory for Nonviolence,...
1m 6s
Rabbi Dresser and Delore Boyd comment on the power of nonviolent methods. Boyd points out that the tenacity of white participants opened her eyes to the fact that white people were not all the same.
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From the film Freedom Riders: the Solid South
1m 11s
In his bid for the presidency, JFK had to tread carefully around the heart of the Democratic Party - the white voting south. John Patterson, Governor of Alabama from 1959 to 1963, speaks about his endorsement of Kennedy for president.
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From the film Freedom Riders: Jim Crow Laws
19s
The segregation and disenfranchisement laws known as "Jim Crow" created a system of racial apartheid across the American South for more than 75 years. The laws affected almost every aspect of daily life, mandating segregation of schools, parks, libraries, drinking fountains, restrooms, buses, trains, and restaurants.
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From the film Freedom Riders: Freedom to Travel, part 2
51s
Ray Arsenault discusses the importance of Irene Morgan, who took her case to the Supreme Court with Morgan vs. Virginia. However, the subsequent Supreme Court ruling of the unconstitutionality of segregated interstate bus travel, Julian Bond points out, was largely ignored in the segregated South.
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From the film Freedom Riders: Democracy in Action
1m 1s
Glenda Gaither Davis is interviewed while riding on the bus toward Jackson, Mississippi.
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From the film Freedom Riders: Freedom to Travel, part 3
34s
On September 22, 1961, the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) orders all "colored only" and "whites only" signs to be taken down in all bus and rail stations across the country. "This was the first unambiguous victory in the long history of the civil rights movement," says Ray Arsenault. "It raised expectations across the board for greater victories in the future."
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From the film Freedom Riders: Jim Lawson on Why a Victory...
56s
Jim Lawson speaks about why he chose nonviolence intervention.
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From the film Freedom Riders: Genevieve Hughes on The Media
46s
Genevieve Hughes speaks about her disappointment at the lack of press coverage.
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From the film Freedom Riders: Genevieve Hughes on The...
54s
Genevieve Hughes speaks about Jim Farmer not wanting her on the Ride.
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From the film Freedom Riders: Bernard Lafayette on the...
2m 6s
Bernard Lafayette speaks about three groups from the Nashville Student Movement.
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From the film Freedom Riders: John Lewis on the Spirit of...
1m 53s
John Lewis speaks about the Freedom Rides' accomplishments.
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