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Execution of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg (2:48)

Broadcast just 15 minutes before the execution of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg on June 19, 1953, a news report recounts the last-minute U.S. Supreme Court decision overturning a stay of execution for the pair. The Rosenbergs were the first U.S. citizens to be executed for espionage after their conviction for transmitting atomic bomb secrets to the Soviet Union.

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Speeches & Audio (39)

  • Execution of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg
    Execution of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg

    Audio Clip (2:48)

    Broadcast just 15 minutes before the execution of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg on June 19, 1953, a news report recounts the last-minute U.S. Supreme Court decision overturning a stay of execution for the pair. The Rosenbergs were the first U.S. citizens to be executed for espionage after their conviction for transmitting atomic bomb secrets to the Soviet Union.

    Audio Clip (2:48)
  • Amelia Earhart on Women in Flight
    Amelia Earhart on Women in Flight

    Audio Clip (2:02)

    In a 1935 radio broadcast on "a woman's place in science," Amelia Earhart encourages women to make their mark on the new field of aviation. On June 18, 1928, Earhart became the first woman to successfully fly across the Atlantic Ocean.

    Audio Clip (2:02)
  • Louis Beats Schmeling
    Louis Beats Schmeling

    Audio Clip (1:05)

    Two years after Max Schmeling's knockout of the undefeated Joe Louis in a non-title bout, they met again on June 22, 1938, for a dramatic rematch at Yankee Stadium. Playing out in live coverage, the match goes to Louis who defeats the German in two minutes and four seconds. Louis was hailed as a hero for all Americans.

    Audio Clip (1:05)
  • Will Rogers Nominates Henry Ford for President
    Will Rogers Nominates Henry Ford for President

    Audio Clip (2:00)

    On May 31, 1923, at a New York City event, American humorist and folk hero Will Rogers nominates automaker Henry Ford for U.S. president.

    Audio Clip (2:00)
  • Eyewitness Account of Hindenburg Disaster
    Eyewitness Account of Hindenburg Disaster

    Audio Clip (1:25)

    On May 6, 1937, WLS radio reporter Herb Morrison describes the arrival of the zeppelin Hindenburg at Lakehurst, New Jersey, after a three-day transatlantic voyage from Frankfurt, Germany, when the airship suddenly bursts into flames, killing 36 people.

    Audio Clip (1:25)
  • Harold L. Ickes Introduces Marian Anderson at Lincoln Memorial
    Harold L. Ickes Introduces Marian Anderson at Lincoln Memorial

    Audio Clip (5:16)

    Secretary of the Interior Harold L. Ickes stresses racial equality in his introduction of African-American singer Marian Anderson, who performs a concert on April 9, 1939, at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C.

    Audio Clip (5:16)
  • FDR Asks Congress to Declare War on Japan
    FDR Asks Congress to Declare War on Japan

    Audio Clip (7:47)

    On the day after the December 7, 1941, attack on Pearl Harbor, President Roosevelt tells a joint session of Congress that the United States must take up arms in response.

    Audio Clip (7:47)
  • William Jennings Bryan Delivers Anti-Imperialism Speech
    William Jennings Bryan Delivers Anti-Imperialism Speech

    Audio Clip (2:08)

    At the Democratic Convention in Kansas City on August 8, 1900, William Jennings Bryan devotes his acceptance speech to his viewpoint on imperialism.

    Audio Clip (2:08)
  • Eisenhower Broadcasts D-Day Invasion Order
    Eisenhower Broadcasts D-Day Invasion Order

    Audio Clip (1:43)

    On June 5, 1944, Supreme Allied Commander Dwight D. Eisenhower orders the massive Allied Expeditionary Force into action.

    Audio Clip (1:43)
  • MacArthur Gives Farewell Address
    MacArthur Gives Farewell Address

    Audio Clip (5:02)

    On April 11, 1951, President Harry Truman relieved Gen. Douglas MacArthur of his command due to their disagreement over the handling of the Korean War. On April 19, 1951, after 52 years of military service, Gen. Douglas MacArthur delivers a farewell address to Congress, setting off a controversy among congressional members over whether or not the Joint Chiefs of Staff had approved the MacArthur plan for operations.

    Audio Clip (5:02)
  • Army-McCarthy Hearings
    Army-McCarthy Hearings

    Audio Clip (1:02)

    On June 9, 1954, two-thirds of the way into the 36-day televised Army-McCarthy hearings in which Sen. Joseph McCarthy argued that the U.S. Army was harboring communists, the investigation hits a turning point. When Joseph Welch, the Army's special counsel, accuses McCarthy of having "no sense of decency," the tide of public opinion turns and McCarthy's career is eventually ruined.

    Audio Clip (1:02)
  • The Kitchen Debate
    The Kitchen Debate

    Audio Clip (7:24)

    In July 1959, Vice President Richard Nixon traveled to Moscow to open the U.S. Trade and Cultural Fair in Sokolniki Park. In the kitchen of the exhibit's model house built by General Electric, Nixon and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev began an impromptu series of debates on the merits of capitalism and communism. An audio segment of one of the exchanges, which was filmed by the American company Ampex on the first videotape recorder, illustrates the Cold War tensions simmering beneath the surface.

    Audio Clip (7:24)
  • Kennedy Diary Recording of Cuban Missile Crisis
    Kennedy Diary Recording of Cuban Missile Crisis

    Audio Clip (3:19)

    On October 18, 1962, President Kennedy met with nine of his advisers to discuss what to do about the Soviet missiles that U.S. aerial surveillance discovered in Cuba on October 16. After the meeting, President Kennedy went to the White House Oval Office and recorded his recollections of the meeting.

    Audio Clip (3:19)
  • John F. Kennedy Rallies Hope for Berlin
    John F. Kennedy Rallies Hope for Berlin

    Audio Clip (3:22)

    In a speech delivered in Berlin on June 26, 1963, President John F. Kennedy expresses his hopes for the reunification of Germany and shows solidarity with the crowd when he says, "I take pride in the words: Ich bin ein Berliner."

    Audio Clip (3:22)
  • McNamara Briefs President Johnson on Tonkin Gulf
    McNamara Briefs President Johnson on Tonkin Gulf

    Audio Clip (1:00)

    On August 4, 1964, as events in the Tonkin Gulf unfold, Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara apprised President Lyndon B. Johnson of the situation in a series of phone calls. In the third secretly recorded phone call of the day, McNamara reports that two U.S. destroyers deployed in the Gulf east of Vietnam are under attack. While McNamara did not know it at the time, the information he relayed was later determined to be false.

    Audio Clip (1:00)
  • John F. Kennedy on Desegregation at Ole Miss
    John F. Kennedy on Desegregation at Ole Miss

    Audio Clip (3:18)

    When Mississippi Gov. Ross Barnett refused to comply with the U.S. Supreme Court ruling demanding desegregation at the University of Mississippi and the admittance of James Meredith, President John F. Kennedy was forced to intervene. In his address to the nation on September 30, 1962, Kennedy explains his decision to federalize the state national guard in order to maintain law and order while Meredith registers at the college.

    Audio Clip (3:18)
  • Barry Goldwater Campaigns for Presidency
    Barry Goldwater Campaigns for Presidency

    Audio Clip (1:57)

    In a campaign speech during his run for president in 1964, Sen. Barry Goldwater talks about his ideas on national defense.

    Audio Clip (1:57)
  • Richard Nixon's Checkers Speech
    Richard Nixon's Checkers Speech

    Audio Clip (3:44)

    Why did Richard Nixon's infamous "Checkers" campaign speech about a cocker spaniel irrevocably damage his relationship with Dwight D. Eisenhower?

    Audio Clip (3:44)
  • Ribicoff Protests "Gestapo Tactics" at 1968 Chicago Convention
    Ribicoff Protests "Gestapo Tactics" at 1968 Chicago Convention

    Audio Clip (1:15)

    When bloody riots broke out between anti-Vietnam War protestors and Chicago police outside the 1968 Democratic National Convention, Sen. Abraham Ribicoff ditched his prepared support speech for George McGovern and instead criticized Mayor Richard Daly's handling of the situation.

    Audio Clip (1:15)
  • Christmas Eve Broadcast to Earth
    Christmas Eve Broadcast to Earth

    Audio Clip (0:36)

    On December 24, 1968, astronauts Frank Borman, Jim Lovell and Bill Anders entered into lunar orbit aboard the Apollo 8 spacecraft. That evening, in a live radio and television transmission, Borman reads a passage from the Book of Genesis.

    Audio Clip (0:36)
  • Neil Armstrong Walks on the Moon
    Neil Armstrong Walks on the Moon

    Audio Clip (4:19)

    On July 20, 1969, at 10:56 p.m. EDT, American astronaut Neil Armstrong, 240,000 miles from Earth, communicates with Mission Control as he takes "one small step" off the Eagle landing module and onto the moon.

    Audio Clip (4:19)
  • Edison's Phonograph
    Edison's Phonograph

    Audio Clip (2:08)

    In a turn-of-the-century advertisement, Thomas Edison's newly invented phonograph "talks" to customers, describing its unique characteristics.

    Audio Clip (2:08)
  • Patty Hearst Speaks During Captivity
    Patty Hearst Speaks During Captivity

    Audio Clip (1:29)

    On February 12, 1974, eight days after the abduction of newspaper heiress Patty Hearst, California's KPFA radio played an audiotape sent by the Symbionese Liberation Army, the radical militants responsible for the kidnapping.

    Audio Clip (1:29)
  • Vietnam POWs Return Home
    Vietnam POWs Return Home

    Audio Clip (1:07)

    On February 14, 1973, 18 days after the Vietnam peace agreement was signed, the first American prisoners of war returned home from Vietnam. The first man off the plane, Capt. Jeremiah A. Denton Jr., calls for U.S. citizens to unify.

    Audio Clip (1:07)
  • Stokely Carmichael on Assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.
    Stokely Carmichael on Assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.

    Audio Clip (2:42)

    On April 5, 1968, in a press conference held the day after the slaying of Martin Luther King Jr., civil rights activist Stokely Carmichael predicts the outbreak of more violence across the nation in retaliation for "white America's biggest mistake."

    Audio Clip (2:42)
  • George Wallace on Desegregation
    George Wallace on Desegregation

    Audio Clip (2:00)

    Gov. George Wallace holds a press conference to argue against integration of the state's public schools. Almost 10 years after the U.S. Supreme Court ruling to desegregate schools, Alabama had still not complied. On June 11, 1963, Wallace made national news when he stood in the doorway at the University of Alabama to block African-American students from entering.

    Audio Clip (2:00)
  • The "Vast Wasteland" of Television
    The "Vast Wasteland" of Television

    Audio Clip (2:49)

    On May 9, 1961, in a speech before a meeting of television executives, Federal Communications Commission Chairman Newton N. Minow characterizes television programming as a "vast wasteland" of senseless violence, mindless comedy and offensive advertising.

    Audio Clip (2:49)
  • Death of Elvis Presley
    Death of Elvis Presley

    Audio Clip (0:26)

    On August 16, 1977, Elvis Presley died of cardiac arrhythmia at the age of 42. A news report the following day describes the scene as thousands of mourners gather at Presley's Graceland mansion to view his body as it lay in state.

    Audio Clip (0:26)
  • Mount St. Helens Erupts
    Mount St. Helens Erupts

    Audio Clip (1:03)

    A report from Portland, Oregon, describes alarming volcanic activity on Mount St. Helens in Washington's Cascade Range. Starting on March 20, 1980, a series of intensifying earthquakes blasted a 300-foot crater near the top of the peak, putting the nearby population on alert. On May 18, 1980, the volcano erupted.

    Audio Clip (1:03)
  • U.S. Pulls Off "Miracle on Ice"
    U.S. Pulls Off "Miracle on Ice"

    Audio Clip (1:03)

    A report from the 1980 Olympic Games in Lake Placid, New York, recaps the astonishing victory of the U.S. men's hockey team over the more experienced Soviets.

    Audio Clip (1:03)
  • Legionnaire's Disease Mystery
    Legionnaire's Disease Mystery

    Audio Clip (1:13)

    In late July 1976, a pneumonia-like illness began killing people who had attended an American Legion convention at the Bellevue Stratford Hotel in Philadelphia one week earlier. As scientists are on the verge of a breakthrough in determining the cause, CBS News provides an update on the mysterious killer.

    Audio Clip (1:13)
  • Ted Kennedy's "Dreams Shall Never Die" Speech
    Ted Kennedy's "Dreams Shall Never Die" Speech

    Audio Clip (1:28)

    After losing his challenge for the presidential nomination to Jimmy Carter, Sen. Edward Kennedy delivers one of the most memorable speeches of his career at the Democratic National Convention on August 14, 1980, offering his support for Carter and the Democratic Party.

    Audio Clip (1:28)
  • George H. W. Bush Announces Start of Persian Gulf War
    George H. W. Bush Announces Start of Persian Gulf War

    Audio Clip (6:33)

    On the evening of January 16,1991, President George H. W. Bush addresses the nation to discuss the launch of Operation Desert Storm.

    Audio Clip (6:33)
  • Mario Cuomo Delivers Keynote Address to Democratic National Convention
    Mario Cuomo Delivers Keynote Address to Democratic National Convention

    Audio Clip (10:21)

    In one of his most celebrated speeches, delivered July 16, 1984, New York Governor Mario Cuomo rises to national attention by highlighting President Reagan's failures.

    Audio Clip (10:21)
  • Magic Johnson's HIV Announcement
    Magic Johnson's HIV Announcement

    Audio Clip (1:05)

    On November 8, 1991, Earvin "Magic" Johnson announced in a press conference that he had tested positive for HIV and would be retiring from basketball immediately. A news report covers the story, including a host of reactions from the shocked public.

    Audio Clip (1:05)
  • Unabomber Arrested
    Unabomber Arrested

    Audio Clip (1:29)

    On April 3, 1996, a CBS news report announces the arrest of Theodore Kaczynski, the Harvard graduate who was suspected and later proven to be the Unabomber. Kaczynski terrorized the country for nearly two decades with a series of mail bombings that killed three people and wounded 23.

    Audio Clip (1:29)
  • O.J. Simpson Verdict Announced
    O.J. Simpson Verdict Announced

    Audio Clip (3:26)

    In 1995, O. J. Simpson was acquitted of the 1994 double murder of his estranged wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend Ronald Goldman.

    Audio Clip (3:26)
  • Clinton Responds to the Oklahoma City Bombing
    Clinton Responds to the Oklahoma City Bombing

    Audio Clip (1:51)

    On April 23, 1995, President Bill Clinton attends the Time of Healing prayer service held in Oklahoma in response to the act of terrorism that killed 168 people. President Clinton speaks at the event and expresses the nation's grief.

    Audio Clip (1:51)
  • George W. Bush Vows Revenge for 9/11
    George W. Bush Vows Revenge for 9/11

    Audio Clip (0:31)

    On September 14, 2001, a day he declares a national day of mourning and remembrance, President George W. Bush stands atop a pile of rubble at Ground Zero and says that the terrorists responsible for the September 11 attacks will hear from America soon.

    Audio Clip (0:31)

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