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American Experience
They Took Sledgehammers to Sidewalks – Here’s Why | ASL | The Curb Cut Effect
ASL Curb cuts—those small ramps at the edge of sidewalks—are now a standard part of city design, but they didn’t exist until disability rights advocates demanded them. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, students with disabilities at the University of California, Berkeley began organizing for better access to public spaces.
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53:00
The dramatic story of the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) in 1990.

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1:52:47
The story of one of the most influential yet forgotten civil rights figures, Walter White.

1:51:27
The little-known story of the deadly 1898 race massacre and coup d’etat in Wilmington, NC.

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52:36
A look at the US vice presidency, from constitutional afterthought to position of political import.

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1:53:04
When US inner cities erupted in violence in 1967, LBJ created a commission to investigate.

1:52:30
The story of housewives who led a grassroots movement to galvanize the Superfund Bill.

52:54
The untold story of the people who fought tirelessly to save women from cervical cancer.

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1:52:39
The lively but neglected history of the women who changed the world while flying it.

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52:32
The story of the German American Bund, a pro-Nazi group active across the US in the 1930s.

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51:27
Explore the culture war that erupted over the spectacular rise of disco music.

1:47:20
The story of a Mississippi town’s effort to integrate its public schools in 1970.

1:52:38
Revisit 1970s Boston, when court-mandated school integration unleashed racial unrest.