US History - The Nixon Years: 1969 - 1974
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Richard M. Nixon Links
- EPA History online
- Khrushchev-Nixon debate, 1959
Highly interesting and entertaining transcript -- The Soviet and US representatives discussed competing technologies. Nicknamed "The Kitchen Debate" for its discussions of gadgets. - The Vietnam War
This is a comprehensive online museum.
Apollo 11 - Heroes of the Nixon Years
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Nixon Player Watch - Men's Silver, One Size
Current Bid: $75.00
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NEW Authentic Nixon 51-30 Tide GOLD A057-502 Watch A057502
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Men's Nixon Wrist Watch The Volta Black Leather Solar Rechargeable Time Piece
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Apollo 11 Landing on YouTube
A Richard M. Nixon Time Line
1969
July 20, 1969: The Apollo 11 Mission permitted two US astronauts, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, to walk on the moon in a global first. The 1950s-1960s Space Race had been won against the Soviet Union. NASA later misplaced the video recording of these first steps on the Moon. This was likely the the highlight of the Nixon Adminstration.
Interestingly, Paramount's Star Trek® aired its last episode in the spring of 1969. However, supporting actress Nichelle Nichols and others from the series advocated for the recruitment of women and other minorites into the NASA astronaut program sucessfully. Ms Nichols is personally responsible for career decisions of several astronauts, engineers, doctors and other professionals from the minorities as well as from whites.
1970
Nixon informed the public of sending US armed forces to Cambodia, with negative results and increased war protests.
Ohio National Guardsmen went to at Kent State University during unarmed student war protests and killed four college students.
Nixon proposed the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
1971
The Supreme Court authorizes school busing for desegregation
Nixon begins trade agreements with Communist or Red China
Women are officially permitted to play five-player, full-court basketball.
July 5: Nixon certified the 26th Constituional Amendment, and the voting age went from twenty-one to eighteen years.
August 15: Nixon issued price and wage controls, while he also removed the USD from the gold standard for the first time in US history.
1972
The Equal Rights Amendment went out for ratification to the US States and finally died in 1982.
Nixon agreed to the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT I) with the USSR.
June 17: Five burglars arrested at the Watergate Hotel in DC, during a break-in to Democratic National Party HQ
June 23: Title IX of the Education Amendments succeeded in banning sex discrimination in schools for education, sports, and other activities.
Nixon began selling US wheat and corn surpluses to the USSR. About this time, a major US soft drink company created an alternative to milk that was sold only in the Soviet Union.
August 12: The United States withdrew from Vietnam
1973
January 22: Roe v. Wade Supreme Court case stopped all US States from outlawing abortion.
Autumn: Arab nations embargoed all oil shipments to the US to force the country to stop supporting for Israel, unsuccessfully. Nixon maintained that the USA must continue to support Israel.
1974
Winter: Nixon refused to turn over the Watergate Hotel spy tapes and the House of Representatives began impeachment in early May.
Patricia Hearst, daughter of newspaper tycoon Randolph Hearst, kidnapped by Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA)
The Equal Credit Opportunity Act passed, preventing discrimination in consumer credit practices becuase sex, race, marital status, religion, national origin, age, or receipt of public assistance.
June 3: The Supreme Court ruled in favor of equal pay for women for equal work
July: The Supreme Court ordered the president to surrender the Watergate Hotel tapes and documents to the special prosecutor, and Nixon resigned as President on August 9, 1974.
Internment Links
- Japanese-American Internment Camps
Online exhibits, infomration and actual photos. - Children of the camps.
A PBS website and documentary.
Kindergarten in the Camps
Denunciation of the WWII Japanese Internment Camps
Beginning with Richard M. Nixon, he and all subsequent US Presidents denounced the use of internment camps for Japanese people and Japanese-Americans during World War II.
In fact, the next President, Gerald Ford, revoked Franklin Delano Roosevelt's order to imprison Japanese and Japanese-Americans living in the US at the time of tthe war. Following Ford's term, President Jimmy Carter signed a bill into law that established a committee; that committe found the FDR internment order to be unjustified by any military evaluation of the war.
The next president, Ronald Reagan, decried internment as morally wrong and issued orders for reparations to the survivors of the first interns in these camps. These included common individuals as well as the actors Pat Morita and George Takei.
After Reagan, President George H. W. Bush pointed out that the internment created a series of serious injustices and issued orders for apology and pay, while President Bill Clinton followed suit. President George W. Bush also agreed that reparations were required and The House of Representatives passed legislation to that effect, finally, in 2007, 50+ years after the war..
Sex Slavery and STD War
During World War II and the Korean War, the use of sex slaves by the Japanese armed forces against the enemy was profligate, but unknown to the world unti as late as 1991. An estimated 200,000 teens and young adult women from across the Asian nations were captured and made into "comfort women" to serve Japanese military men. In addition, some were forcibly infected with STDS (sexually transmitted diseases) and sent into US and South Korean military camps to spread disease and death throughout the enemy. Richard Nixon and subsequent US Presidents dug this information out into the open through the decades following WWII.













Isabella Snow 4 years ago
That was a great clip with Frost!