American Decades
People in the News
In December 1966 the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously agreed to order the Georgia Legislature to allow civil rights worker and antiwar activist Julian Bond to take the seat in the State House of Representatives that he had won in 1965. The Court ruled that legislature had violated Bond's First Amendment rights when it denied him the seat because of his opposition to the Vietnam War.
In February 1965 Robert Collier, Michelle Duelos, Walter Bowe, and Khaleel Sayyed—members of the Black Liberation Front—were arrested for conspiracy to destroy government property. They had planned to dynamite the Statue of Liberty, the Washington Monument, and the Liberty Bell.
On 20 October 1969 Republican Senator Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois became the first senator to act in a movie when The Monitorss, a political satire featuring Ed Begley and Kennan Wynn, was released.
In October 1963 former...
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1960's Government and Politics
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Assassination and Violent Protest
- The Cold War Continued: Crisis Years, 1960-1965
- The Cold War Continued: The Cuban Missile Crisis
- The Cold War Continued: Nuclear Arms Race, Arms Control, and Détente
- The Cold War Continued: The Vietnam War
- Domestic Policy: Government, Civil Rights, and Race Relations
- Domestic Policy: Government and the Economy
- Domestic Policy: The Great Society
- National Politics: 1960 Elections
- National Politics: 1962 Elections
- National Politics: 1964 Elections
- National Politics: 1966 Elections
- National Politics: 1968 Elections
- Radical Politics: Black Power
- Radical Politics: The Far Right
- Radical Politics: The New Left
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Government and Politics, 1960–1969
