All the People

Front Cover
Oxford University Press, 2002 - Juvenile Nonfiction - 160 pages
People call it "post-war," but All the People covers a period in U.S. history that features battles of another kind-from Cold War combat overseas to struggles for equality at home to learning to live with the threat of terrorism on U.S. soil. During these years, the United States began to be a nation for all its people, outlawing school segregation, protesting war in Vietnam, and campaigning for equal rights for women. From Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall to seamstress Rosa Parks, extraordinary individuals led us back to the ideals espoused by the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the Bill of Rights. But mostly-as it always has been in the United States-it was ordinary citizens who marched and voted and hoped and dreamed and made things happen.

All the People includes the events of September 11, 2001, and a discussion of how many aspects of the terrorist attacks have brought to the forefront the qualities that keep America strong: representative democracy, freedom of speech and press, and, especially in the face of religious totalitarianism, the basic freedom of religious tolerance.

From inside the book

Contents

About Democracy and Struggles
9
BUILDING AMERICA
10
The Making of a President
13
A Major Leaguer
18
A Very Short History of Russia
23
A Curtain of Iron
27
The Marshall Plan
30
ISRAEL AND AN AMERICAN PEACEMAKER
34
Friedan Schlafly and Friends
137
As Important As the Cotton Gin
144
Picking and Picketing
147
These Are the Times That Try Mens Souls
153
CIVIL RIGHTS FOR NATIVE AMERICANS
156
Up to the Mountain
157
A New Kind of Power
161
The Counterculture Rocks
165

A Lost Election
36
Spies
40
Tail Gunner Joe
44
Liking Ike
49
Houses Kids Cars and Fast Food
54
French Indochina
60
JFK Jr saluting his 12 Separate but Unequal
64
JIM CROW IN THE FAR NORTH
66
Linda Brownand Others
68
GETTING INTEGRATED
73
MLKS Senior and Junior
74
Rosa Parks Was Tired
78
Three Boys and Six Girls
83
Passing the Torch
88
A SOLITARY CHILD
90
Being President Isnt Easy
93
Some Brave Children Meet a Roaring Bull
97
Standing With Lincoln
101
The Presidents Number
105
LBJ
109
The Biggest Vote in History
112
Salt and Pepper the Kids
116
A King Gets a Prize and Goes to Jail
120
From Selma to Montgomery
124
War in Southeast Asia
128
AN UNWILLING GUEST AT THE HANOI HILTON
131
Lyndon in Trouble
133
A FARMING VILLAGE IN VIETNAM
136
Vietnam China and Watergate
170
MERCURY GEMINI AND SATURN
176
A Congressman and a Peanut Farmer
179
Taking a Leading Role
182
Living on the Edge
191
The End of the Cold War
194
A Quilt Not a Blanket
198
THE NEW TECHNOLOGY
201
Is It Me or We?
203
PICTURING OURSELVES
206
The Land That Never Has Been Yet
208
A Boy from Hope
211
Politics and Values
214
COVERING UP OR JUST PLAIN LYING
217
Electing the 21st Centurys First President
219
Of Colleges and Courts
223
Big Ideas
228
WATCH THAT BRIEFCASE
231
Catastrophe War and a New Century
232
New York and the American Way
238
The Best in US and Some Civics
240
Its Freedom to Think For Yourself
245
CHRONOLOGY OF EVENTS
250
MORE BOOKS TO READ
251
PICTURE CREDITS
252
Dr Martin Luther King Jr A NOTE FROM THE AUTHOR
257
ATLAS
259
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Bibliographic information