GSH

national constitution center in philadelphia welcomes \'the 1968 exhibit\'

by:GSH     2020-10-12
On January 1968, a \"Huey\" helicopter landed in the living room of every American family, bringing them the scene of the first television war in the history of the country --
Vietnam War.
At the National Constitutional Center of Philadelphia, the \"1968 exhibition\" describes the original horror with a complete descriptionsized Bell UH-
A moloqui \"Huey\" helicopter sits quietly in a typical 1968 living room.
\"Exhibition 1968\" is more than onemedia, multi-
A Generation exhibition that brings one of America\'s most colorful and chaotic cultures-
Transfer the years to life
The \"1968 exhibition\" jointly organized by the Minnesota Historical Center and the Atlanta Historical Center, the Chicago Historical Museum and the Oakland Museum of California will be held in Philadelphia from September.
Brian Holligan, director of the Minnesota Historical Society Exhibition Hall, recently visited the Constitution Center to discuss the exhibition.
Horrigan said: \"When we in 2010 and 2011 2009 development this exhibition when we never considered exhibition came to here . \".
\"We are delighted to see it at the center of the Constitution.
Horrigan personally remembers 1968, when he said he recalled how much the country had changed over the past 12 months.
He said: \"At the end of 1968, I am not the original me . \"
\"They described the year as a year that shook the world.
The CBS 3 and CW Philadelphia sports director, Beasley Reese, also remembers the high-profile year.
\"The first time I thought of 1968 was fear. . .
He said at the exhibition preview. “For a 14-year-
There was a lot of fighting and turmoil when we were old, but it was also an inspiring moment and we saw a lot of changes.
The \"1968 exhibition\" takes visitors on a walking tour of the iconic year in chronological order.
I was born in 1970, but with fashion, TV and toys like my favorite Barbie, the atmosphere of 1968 is still very familiar to me.
However, it was not until I walked through the Pearl curtain into the new attraction \"exhibition 1968\" at the National Constitutional Center that I experienced the emotions of that time.
We talked about the Vietnam War in high school, and I heard the speech \"I Have a Dream\", but until I was immersed in the reality of 1968, do I understand how chaotic this is.
The exhibition began in January 1968, when the great TV miracle of the Vietnam War became the reality of our hometown.
To illustrate this, a complete
In the comfortable living room of the exhibition, the size Huey helicopter sits behind a console TV.
One side of the helicopter is open and a set of lit buttons allow visitors to see the story told by Vietnamese veterans.
I pressed a button to make the story of Marine Tim Dobell vivid.
Tim played guitar in Vietnam one day.
Because it helped him leave the country for the time being, he said.
When he was young, a colleague from the Marine Corps asked him to teach him how to play.
When the two soldiers shared the music moment, an explosion occurred and the young man was \"hit by a piece of metal in the chest \".
The young soldier died later.
Press another button to make Donna-
Mary \"DM\" Boulay tells her story.
During the war, DM was an intensive care unit nurse and a field nurse.
She said that when she saw many soldiers lose their limbs during her stay in the ICU, she found that the pressure there was less than when dealing with minor injuries.
\"The only good thing is that they are going home,\" she said of ICU patients . \".
\"They will not go back to war.
\"When I pulled out of the story of the Vietnam War and the dough hole, I turned and saw a flag --
The coffin stands for thousands of young people killed in the massacre.
Because of the week of February, the coffin was exhibited in the February part of the exhibition.
1968 is the deadliest week of the Vietnam War.
Entering March, some bright colors and peaceful dreams begin to be shown through a recreated 1960 dorm room with a transistor radio, hippie glasses and multiple
Colorful love beads.
However, the next month is the saddest month.
Behind a photo-covered wall, in front of a padded bench, a 7-
Minute video demo about Martin Luther King\'s life
His assassination took place on April 4.
Vincent Harding of African descent
American historians and scholars describe Kim as \"one of the crazy members of the Christian community who really takes Jesus seriously\"
James Lawson, nonviolent tactician of the American civil rights movement, said he was \"one of the most hated and loved people in the United States \". ”Sen.
Speaking after the death of the King, Robert Kennedy said that the blind use of violence by the United States \"tarnished our land.
In the \"1968\" section of June, what is coming is a memorial to the death of Kennedy himself.
That year, however, was filled with too many deaths and sorrows, and it was also an era of independence, strength and freedom.
The feminist movement celebrated in September, and the rights of black, American Indians and Mexican citizens were reviewed in October.
In the last month of the year, I was brought back to the living room from January.
The one from Hugh-
But this time, the Apollo 8 Command Module sat comfortably next to the console TV.
The TV screen showed three astronauts who had successfully launched, the first to fly around the moon.
It was amazing to watch the press conference and think it was really a long time ago.
When I turned and left, I found an old Barbie box under the coffee table in the living room, which is very much like the one I still have somewhere, it was filled with dolls of my best friends when I was a child.
It just shows that memory is some of the most powerful ideas we have, no matter how much time goes.
The \"1968 exhibition\" is on display at the National Constitutional Center of the independent mall of Philadelphia. 2.
For more information, please call 215-409-
6600 or visit www.
Constitutional Centerorg.
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