"1 what were some of the key characteristics of vans earliest customers in the 1960 s and 1970 s" Essays and Research Papers

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    Were the Sixties Good….or Bad for America? There are two different positions taken about the 1960s in America. One side says that the sixties were good for America and changed the way Americans live for the better. The other side says that the sixties were bad for America and gave Americans new freedoms and ideas that changed their lives for the worse. Both positions have evidence to support their arguments and make the sixties look like a time of social and economic freedom and reform or make

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    felt outrage. I would think that since the post Jim Crow era in the 1960s‚ people especially Americans would be educated to not to condone such activities that discriminate others as it was done earlier during the 1830s-1970s when white people would dress up as Black people to entertain the audience‚ resulting in mockery towards Africans Americans. I could not believe how insensitive these people were‚ especially because they were college students and I expected them to be thoughtful‚ however‚ I am

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    THE COLD WAR in the 1960s * MAD Theory (Mutually Assured Destruction) * The Cuban Missile Crisis (Oct. 1962) * Why the crisis happened? (Khrushchev‚ Fidel Castro & Cuba) * Was JFK a hawk or a dove? * Impacts of the crisis: flexible response & trend toward détente * Missles out of Cuba * Missles out of Germany * Can’t invade Cuba with force. THE WAR IN VIETNAM * It was America’s longest war * Some numbers: $ 150 billion ($600

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    In the United States there have been many social changes. The Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s was the most powerful and compelling change to occur in our history. The Civil Rights Movement was a time dedicated to activism for equal rights and fairness for African Americans in the United States. The people pushed for nothing more than social‚ legal‚ and political changes to prohibit discrimination and end segregation. Though Abraham Lincoln abolishing slavery was one step in the right direction

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    City and Philadelphia during the late 1960s and early 1970s. While disco was a form of black commercial pop music and a craze among black gay men especially‚ it did not catch mainstream attention until it was picked up by the predominantly white gay clubs of New York. Latinos and women embraced disco as well‚ and the music eventually expanded to several other popular groups of the time. In what is considered a forerunner to disco style clubs‚ in February 1970‚ the New York City DJ David Mancuso opened

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    In the late 1960s and early 1970s cults first emerged as harmless religious sectors. The term cult is originally associated with the term religion. Cults are centered around new ideas and new beliefs. A cult is defined as a religious movement that believe in a particular figure or object. Cults are smaller than denominations and different than sects. A sect is a religion that has separated itself from a larger church and a denomination is a sub-group of a larger religion that have their own set

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    During the 1960s the black society began to revolt to fight for its rights. This was caused by the change in the mentality of the younger generation of the American society. The young generation considered the blacks to hold an equal position to the whites in the society‚ and narrow the racial gap. Flannery O’Connor successfully portrays the generation gap in America during the 1960s in her short story "Everything That Rises Must Converge". Julian represents the young generation of that time‚ trying

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    During the 1960s‚ America witnessed the rise of activist movements that addressed issues such as racial discrimination‚ equal representation in leadership‚ and equal access to education and business by all people in America. This involved a campaign to address the issues of social injustice‚ oppression‚ and suppression of the minority groups in society. They also wanted democratic rule in America where all people were to acquire full citizenship. Establishment Movement was the main operating mechanism

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    The 1960s-1970s Cultural Revolution’s Impact on Culture Today To what extent did the cultural revolution of the late 1960s – early 1970s impact culture today? The cultural revolution of the late 1960s – early 1970s has had a major impact on current American culture. The distress caused by the Vietnam war forced American citizens to search for a new outlet of false-happiness or an ability to forget their worries to avoid what was currently a dull and depressing war-time state of living.

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    1950’s The 1950’s where so called the birth of popular music. The first half of the decade was run by popular music‚ or classic pop. This more vocal driven music had replaced the earlier big band style. Artists such as Nat King Cole and Frank Sinatra where the leaders of this age of traditional pop. Often the most popular musicians that play this genre also played very well on the television and sometimes they would be featured on music special shows‚ or perhaps even have a music variety of their

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