top events of 1968
After reading through newspaper articles for the year 1968, I realized that the year was quite an eventful one. Politically, socially and economically speaking, the country endured a great deal of influential circumstances. Although the studying of vast articles from the New York Times succeeded in painting a clear, factual picture of that turbulent year, I was still eager to discover how incidents affected people growing up in that era. This fueled my motivation to begin the interviewing process, and to choose participants. In the end, I decided to interview my father, Mr. John Arthur Bartle, and a friend of my mother's, Mrs. Linda Pacelli. Although both came from completely different backgrounds, and both have differing views, their stories and descriptions were equally fascinating. Since I grew up with both my parents, I assumed that I knew a great deal about my father, John Bartle. I could not have been more wrong! I had heard stories about his being in the United States Airforce, but I never knew the governing factors surrounding them. It turns out that in 1968, my father, age twenty-two, was stationed in Spain. Apparently, he had enlisted in the Airforce because he was about to be drafted, and he claimed, "
Although I was not a part of the year 1968, I am lucky enough to now comprehend the impact the year had on society as I know it today. Linda found the whole situation both tragic and engaging. I gathered that the mission in the space program was a bright, optimistic spot in a year of turmoil. Linda remembered several terrible, graphic pictures in the newspapers. After speaking with my father and Linda, I know see how momentous it really was. Although reading through newspapers gave me a great deal of factual information, I truly learned how events affected society through these interviews. My father, in general, found the entire space program a "neat" one. " It was obvious that it had been a terrifying ordeal for the nation to be involved in, and that it still affects people today. " Also, he was disturbed by how North Koreans were treating the crew. Actually, I found it hard to picture a riot anywhere. My father had a different point of view on the whole situation. I feel that without the use of oral history in a project of this sort, one will never obtain the necessary quantitative information needed to internalize events studied. Instead of carrying on with that day's lesson, the class discussed what had happened. She reminded me that Martin Luther King would not have wanted it that way since he stood for nonviolence. I found that using the differing backgrounds of my subjects allowed me to understand the diversity of public reactions and opinions of that time period.
Common topics in this essay:
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