What Was Importnat About the Arts in the 60s
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1960: Nosotros'll Always Love Lucy
It's the end of the I Honey Lucy franchise on March ii, when Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz divorce. Notwithstanding, they still spoke post-divorce. Here, Desi congratulates Lucille on her Broadway debut in Wildcat.
Run into rare photos of Lucille Ball »
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1960: The Goggle box Era of Politics
Millions tune in on September 26 for the first-ever televised argue. Though those listening on the radio thought Vice President Richard Nixon and Senator John F. Kennedy's performances were equal, the 70-million television viewers preferred Kennedy.
See rare Kennedy family unit photos »
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1961: Groundbreaking Gourmet
After years of work, Mastering The Fine art Of French Cooking is published in September. The cookbook isn't just a hit — it'll exist a bestseller for 5 years and make a star out of Julia Child. Her TV bear witness, The French Chef, would premiere in 1962.
Larn more lessons from Julia Child »
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1961: A New Favorite TV Couple
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1962: A Single Daughter's Best Friend
In May, Helen Gurley Brown publishes Sexual practice and the Single Girl, a lifestyle guide for working unmarried women. It was incredibly well-received, selling ii one thousand thousand copies in the first three weeks.
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1962: Adieu, Norma Jean
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1962: A Tennis Record
On September ii, Rod Laver becomes the third tennis histrion to earn the "Calendar Grand Slam" by winning all four prestigious major tournaments in the same year.
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1962: Come Fly With Me
Jet-age glamour arrives in New York when the TWA Flight Center, designed by Eero Saarinen, opens this year. Sadly, Saarinen would never see his long-term project debut — he died of a brain tumor in 1961.
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1962: Hither's Johnny!
On Oct ane, Groucho Marx introduces the new host of The Tonight Show: Johnny Carson. His kickoff guests are Joan Crawford, Rudy Vallee and The Phoenix Singers.
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1962: Noteworthy Nobel Winners
John Steinbeck wins the Nobel Prize in Literature. This same year, Linus Pauling wins the Nobel Peace Prize for his opposition to weapons of mass destruction. It's his second Nobel Prize (Pauling'due south previous was the 1954 Nobel Prize in Chemical science). This is also the year that James Watson and Francis Crick split the Nobel Prize in Physiology/Medicine with Maurice Wilkins for their advances in the discovery of the construction of Deoxyribonucleic acid.
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1963: The Terminate of the Rock
On March 21, Alcatraz is airtight as a prison due to high operation costs.
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1963: A Tragedy
On June 12, civil rights activist Medgar Evers is assassinated outside his home in Jackson, Mississippi.
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1963: Teen Scene
On July fourteen, the film Embankment Political party is released which helps brainstorm the "beach party" flick genre.
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1963: An Celebrated Voice communication
Martin Luther King, Jr. stands at the Lincoln Memorial and speaks to a crowd of 250,000 on August 28. The speech would become famous as his "I Have a Dream" speech.
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1963: End of an Era
Despite protests, destruction begins on the onetime Penn Station in 1963. "And we will probably exist judged not past the monuments we build merely by those we have destroyed," Ada Louise Huxtable writes in the New York Times. Its ruins would inspire laws for the preservation of landmarks.
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1963: A Nation in Mourning
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1964: A Tech Titan Is Born
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1964: And a Future First Lady
Source: https://www.goodhousekeeping.com/life/entertainment/g4543/facts-about-the-60s/
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