0:00:01.357,0:00:05.481 (Intro music) 0:00:05.481,0:00:09.579 (excerpt from speeches) 0:00:09.579,0:00:16.353 Seig Heil! Seig Heil! Ask not what your country can do for you. 0:00:16.353,0:00:25.542 One small step for man. We hold these truths to be self evident. That all men are created equal. 0:00:25.542,0:00:32.154 Mr Gorbachev, tear down this wall. 0:00:32.154,0:00:37.483 (sound effects) 0:00:37.483,0:00:49.587 (music) 0:00:49.587,0:00:53.120 As world fairs have in the past, the fair in 1964 0:00:53.120,0:01:00.803 provided a timely glimpse of the planet's current realities and future expectations. 0:01:01.712,0:01:07.968 The New York Times described it as a glittering mirror of our national opulence. 0:01:07.968,0:01:11.588 It seemed to portend a future where the biggest worry for average Americans 0:01:11.588,0:01:14.280 would be how to spend their leisure time. 0:01:14.280,0:01:17.288 "I just took it for granted that I would always have a roof 0:01:17.288,0:01:20.895 over my head and enough to eat. The thought that I'd have 0:01:20.895,0:01:23.727 to worry about where my next meal was coming from. 0:01:23.727,0:01:26.330 These thoughts just didn't occur to me. But, course 0:01:26.330,0:01:33.503 part of the reason we can think that way is that we took prosperity more or less for granted." 0:01:33.503,0:01:39.190 In his speech at the world's fair President Lyndon Johnson touted a world of prosperity. 0:01:39.190,0:01:45.911 "But that people, people they shall have the best. All of these dreams." 0:01:45.911,0:01:51.369 (People shouting) Only to find himself interrupted in mid speech by demonstraters 0:01:51.369,0:01:59.355 who felt themselves froze out of the world. (chanting) 0:01:59.355,0:02:02.428 Despite a lengthy struggle, millions of black Americans still 0:02:02.428,0:02:08.434 did not share in the nation's prosperity or enjoy the full rights of their citizenship. 0:02:08.434,0:02:14.107 In 1964 many expected that such inequities would soon be addressed. 0:02:14.107,0:02:18.307 "We thought that essentially the material problems of the world had been solved. 0:02:18.307,0:02:22.495 And that the important thing now was to solve the moral problems." 0:02:22.495,0:02:25.669 "It was a society that had to be changed. And it was not 0:02:25.669,0:02:27.858 going to be changed unless some people decided that 0:02:27.858,0:02:34.636 they would dedicate their lives to changing it. It was not going to change spontaneously." 0:02:34.636,0:02:37.999 The World's Fair that year was held in Flushing Meadows, New York. 0:02:37.999,0:02:42.254 It was supposed to promote the culture and customs of people everywhere. 0:02:42.254,0:02:45.496 In keeping with it's theme of peace through understanding. 0:02:45.496,0:02:48.418 But it would not be long before Americans would be driven 0:02:48.418,0:02:53.044 apart by societal disagreements within their own borders. 0:02:53.044,0:02:57.048 And a terrible costly war on the other side of the globe. 0:02:57.048,0:03:03.253 The country was not about to experience much of either peace or understanding. 0:03:03.253,0:03:07.588 (singing We Shall Overcome.) 0:03:07.588,0:03:10.694 In the mid 1960's the determination to challenge traditional 0:03:10.694,0:03:14.634 boundaries seemed to be growing in almost every arena. 0:03:14.634,0:03:18.003 Perhaps most striking was a broadening struggle for civil rights. 0:03:18.003,0:03:24.777 A struggle that many whites now joined in large numbers. 0:03:24.777,0:03:30.414 In the summer of 1964 hundreds of college students, white and black, 0:03:30.414,0:03:34.332 headed south to Mississippi, where many blacks were still 0:03:34.332,0:03:40.173 mired in a Jim Crow world of poverty and political impotence. 0:03:40.173,0:03:44.053 These students from the north hoped to register black voters 0:03:44.053,0:03:47.899 and establish so called Freedom Schools to teach literacy 0:03:47.899,0:03:51.322 skills to those who'd been denied them. 0:03:51.322,0:03:55.479 They were traveling into a world where many people were set in their ways. 0:03:55.479,0:03:58.148 President Lyndon Johnson warned the students that the 0:03:58.148,0:04:02.457 federal government could not guarantee their safety. 0:04:02.457,0:04:05.489 "They received a lot of training in order to prepare them for 0:04:05.489,0:04:09.157 life in Mississippi, which was not going to be very easy, it wasn't easy for us. 0:04:09.157,0:04:11.876 And we tried to make that very clear to people. 0:04:11.876,0:04:17.450 I mean our lives are, you know, in iminent danger every minute of the day." 0:04:17.450,0:04:24.320 "When we crossed the line into Mississippi and it said Mississippi welcomes you. 0:04:24.320,0:04:29.452 It was the first time I felt really afraid." 0:04:29.452,0:04:32.027 In the first group to arrive in Mississippi were students 0:04:32.027,0:04:36.464 Andrew Goodman, Michael Shwerner,and James Chainey. 0:04:36.464,0:04:43.769 Within days all three of them were missing. (music) 0:04:43.769,0:04:48.006 "Bob Moses, who was the head of the Mississippi Summer Project, 0:04:48.006,0:04:54.088 brought the group together. Told us that they were missing and it was clear 0:04:54.088,0:05:00.329 to all of us that it was extremely likely that they were dead." 0:05:00.329,0:05:06.793 (Police announcement)Six weeks after their disappearance 0:05:06.793,0:05:12.981 the three were discovered buried in a earthen dam, shot in the head. 0:05:12.981,0:05:21.546 (unclear talking)In that summer of 1964 the Ku Klux Klan was still trying 0:05:21.546,0:05:25.101 to stop the forces of change. But among the students 0:05:25.101,0:05:27.519 and in the homes and churches of the black community the 0:05:27.519,0:05:31.854 feeling grew stronger that change could not be prevented. 0:05:31.854,0:05:40.439 (music)"We went up to the home of a very poor black woman. 0:05:40.439,0:05:43.464 A sharecropper shack. She had a bunch of kids. She came 0:05:43.464,0:05:46.866 to the door. She looked at her feet. She said, "Yes'm, No'm" 0:05:46.866,0:05:51.641 to everything we said. And we tried to persuade her to sign this. 0:05:51.641,0:05:54.943 And it was very clear if she signed it she might get thrown out of her home. 0:05:54.943,0:05:58.595 After a few minutes of talking she suddenly straightened up, 0:05:58.595,0:06:01.751 looked us in the eyes, and said, "I'll sign it." 0:06:01.751,0:06:09.393 And she signed it. That's how powerful the movement was." 0:06:09.393,0:06:15.057 (crowd chatter)And the movement expanded to other 0:06:15.057,0:06:19.370 causes at the end of the so called Freedom Summer. 0:06:19.370,0:06:23.135 "The first amendment didn't apply to any campuses in the country. 0:06:23.135,0:06:28.540 You, you couldn't give a speech without getting it cleared by the administration." 0:06:28.540,0:06:32.268 When Freedom Summer veterans at the University of California, at Berkley 0:06:32.268,0:06:35.377 tried to recruit others to their cause, they were barred 0:06:35.377,0:06:39.576 by University regents. (Singing) 0:06:39.576,0:06:42.955 "It just set off this explosion among the students. And people 0:06:42.955,0:06:47.060 who had never had a political thought in their head just got 0:06:47.060,0:06:50.963 fired by the idea that someone couldn't tell them when 0:06:50.963,0:06:53.493 and where to say what they wanted to say." 0:06:53.493,0:06:57.903 "If we don't stand up for your freedom now your dead.(?)" 0:06:57.903,0:07:01.251 United by what they saw as an injustice, thousands of 0:07:01.251,0:07:05.686 students began a series of protests that lasted eight weeks. 0:07:05.686,0:07:09.328 When college officials threatened to expel several of the student leaders 0:07:09.328,0:07:13.826 the conflict reached a boiling point. 0:07:13.826,0:07:19.264 "In the time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious, 0:07:19.264,0:07:22.862 makes you so sick at heart that you can't take part. 0:07:22.862,0:07:25.323 You can't even passively take part." 0:07:25.323,0:07:28.470 "You have to put your body on the wheels and, um, we're 0:07:28.470,0:07:33.016 going to go in there and we're gonna take over this building. 0:07:33.016,0:07:37.032 And so then the crowd began to move, I just went with it." 0:07:37.032,0:07:41.403 "First floor is filled. Second floor is filled." 0:07:41.403,0:07:43.320 "Some people looked a little scared because they had never 0:07:43.320,0:07:46.364 done anything like that before. I was scared." 0:07:46.364,0:07:54.240 (chanting) "I think we're (something). We got pissed off and we're sick and tired." 0:07:54.240,0:07:58.434 When the student takeover of the campus building resulted in more than 800 arrests 0:07:58.434,0:08:06.408 the University faculty finally weighed in on the side of the demonstrators. 0:08:06.408,0:08:11.886 Cornered as they were the regents granted free speech to the students. 0:08:11.886,0:08:17.721 And thus began an era of confrontation at American universities. 0:08:17.721,0:08:21.429 In late 1964 another fight was looming for Americans. 0:08:21.429,0:08:27.766 This one thousands of miles from home and with far more devastating consequences. 0:08:27.766,0:08:30.168 For several years American advisers had been sent to 0:08:30.168,0:08:32.869 South Vietnam to help prevent what the administration said 0:08:32.869,0:08:38.285 was a takeover by the communist North. Things were not going well in the South. 0:08:38.285,0:08:42.081 President Lyndon Johnson decided to dramatically increase 0:08:42.081,0:08:46.712 the US military commitment to Vietnam. And just as they had 0:08:46.712,0:08:51.826 throughout history young Americans answered the call to arms. 0:08:51.826,0:08:56.491 "I didn't want to see my son go again. They promised nothing was going to happen 0:08:56.491,0:09:00.202 to him, you know. And, uh, that it was going to be over very shortly. 0:09:00.202,0:09:04.834 And he would be home before I, before I knew it." 0:09:04.834,0:09:07.274 "You grew up watching those John Wayne movies where 0:09:07.274,0:09:12.353 the good guys always win. I was being John Wayne. 0:09:12.353,0:09:15.683 I was gonna go and I was gonna beat them. And nothing could hurt me." 0:09:15.683,0:09:24.662 (engine noise) Like many other young men in 1965 Jack Bronson 0:09:24.662,0:09:29.625 knew very little about war, except that America didn't lose them. 0:09:29.625,0:09:33.407 This one looked, at first, to be no exception. 0:09:33.407,0:09:35.731 The United States, which had defeated Nazi Germany and 0:09:35.731,0:09:40.578 Imperial Japan and held back the communist Chinese in Korea, 0:09:40.578,0:09:43.936 now faced a third world army of North Vietnamese soldiers 0:09:43.936,0:09:48.405 and South Vietnamese Viet Cong guerillas. 0:09:48.405,0:09:51.543 (helicopter noise) American commanders confidently predicted 0:09:51.543,0:09:54.918 a swift and positive conclusion. 0:09:54.918,0:09:57.520 "I was excited about going to war. The whole battalion 0:09:57.520,0:10:01.958 was excited about going to war. We were, uh, we were gung ho." 0:10:01.958,0:10:07.866 (Helicopter noise) 0:10:07.866,0:10:11.498 With a 125,000 fresh troops and armada of helicopters 0:10:11.498,0:10:19.353 ranging all over South Vietnam American generals were spoiling for a good fight. 0:10:19.353,0:10:25.558 They were about to get one. 0:10:25.558,0:10:29.086 On November the 15th 1965 Lt. Larry Gwin's unit was 0:10:29.086,0:10:33.957 helicoptered to a valley in central Vietnam near the Cambodian border. 0:10:33.957,0:10:38.062 They had gone to intersect the North Vietnamese supply routes 0:10:38.062,9:59:59.000 to the south. North Vietnamese soldiers watched them arrive. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 "It was my first real hot landing zone. (Shots fired) 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 And it was so hot that I had exited my ship, knelt in the grass 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 for about 10 seconds, and a guy pops up next to me whom I knew 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 who had just been shot through the shoulder and 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 said, "I'm hit Lt." (boom) 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 A major battle with the enemy was just what the military 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 brass had been hoping for. Only it was not going according to plan. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 At ten in the morning Lt. Gwin was fighting for his life. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 "Our first platoon was overrun. Our second platoon was 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 pinned down by mortar fire. I saw about 40 North Vietnamese 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 soldiers coming across the landing zone at us. And all I did 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 was say, "Here they come. And start shooting at 'em." 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 1:00pm the American commander sent out an emergency 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 signal, Broken Arrow. US troops in danger of being overrun. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 (radio communication) Every available aircraft was called 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 in against the North Vietnamese positions. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 (airplane noise) (explosions) 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 Including the giant B-52 bombers. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 "The B-52 is, uh, terrible. Terrible in many way. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 Because firstly, there was no way you can fight back. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 You can't run. There's no time for you to run. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 We just lay there. Waited for the death to come and grip you. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 (explosions)(radio communication) 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 And thousands of men died in those desperate hours. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 By the time the battle was over 35 hundred North Vietnamese 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 and 305 Americans had been killed. It was obvious to the 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 men in the field what lay ahead. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 (music) 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 Preoccupied as he was with the growing war in Vietnam 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 President Johnson knew that he had to address problems at home. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 Despite America's prosperity, 40 million citizens still lived below the poverty line. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 "This administration today, here and now, declares 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 unconditional war on poverty in America." 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 In May 1964 the President unveiled the grand plan for 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 what he called the Great Society. Mr. Johnson hoped to 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 match the power and vitality of Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 With a list of welfare, job, and educational opportunities to