Don t think of them. The pain becomes a part of you. Get everybody out here to my house now. He came home and found her, his entire family gone. I said what are you talking about, what are you saying? it was surreal. As fellow cops suspected him. I did not do this. I did not do this. She was upset. She felt like history is repeating itself. Or police just plain wrong? it s like a twilight zone. Lies become truth and the truth becomes lies. May be the real killer was still out there. You have lied to the police about this case. So devastating. We know that was probably the key to solving this. 13 years of hell. Such an awful crime. The wife, the little boy and girl, shot at pointblank range. I was dumbfounded with shock. How to comprehend it? i said what, wait, what are you talking about, what are you saying? the husband had an alibi. He could have done anything, but he didn t. 13 years, three trials, appeals, reversals and changing stories. The big picture here for a lot of people as i
Sticks, please. There are colonies of hippies springing up in most american cities. Its all related. The psychedelics and the war, the protesting. Im planning on having a good time as long as i can. Smoke pot with your kids and then youll understand why the kids are happier. Its a giant lovein. People should be uninhibited in their sexual expression. You cannot ignore it, a change in morality. Theyre fascist. They dont like hippies and they dont like the things we do. We do have to maintain law, order, and decency on the streets. What were thinking about is a peaceful planet. Were not thinking about anything else. They are trying to do what no one else has ever done before, find a new way for humanity. Fors america in the early 60s, it was a real good time of prosperity, but it was also kind of a stagnant time in terms of spiritual growth. Things were kind of at a standstill. The Baseline Culture was materialism and also the feeling that the culture itself didnt honor the human spirit
movement was all about, an idea of sharing everything clothes, and food, and everything, people could just help themselves, you know. we lived communally because it was the cheapest way to live. a lot of people began to clarify and simplify their lives. what will follow this dispersal of the hippie movement to the countryside is hard to predict. they may be, as they say, coming here to build the foundations for a new society in this nation. or they may be coming, like the wooly mammoth, to find their own extinction. down where the woodbine twine that s where i meet my love down where the sun don t shine down in the woods where the woodbina twine i was working for the new york times in the catskills, and there were just a couple of us going up there. as we went north of the city, we began to run into traffic jams. i found a state cop and said, what the hell is going on? he says, i don t know, there are thousands of people here, and they re all going to some farm.
us going up there. as we went north of the city, we began to run into traffic jams. i found a state cop and said, what the hell was going on? and he says, i don t know. there are thousands of people here and they re all going to some farm. and it was, of course, woodstock. i think woodstock was an opportunity for people to realize they weren t alone. a lot of people who in their hometown or in their family felt isolated, realized they weren t. the townspeople, quite frankly, were terrified at the prospect of the hippie arrival. i was apprehensive. this little hamlet has a population of under 100 people. when i started hearing the figures of 200,000, 300, finally 500,000, we had a sea of people there. the word got out. everybody and their brother came