North Korea invaded South Korea. The Chinese invaded Tibet. We helped
overthrow the government of Iran, installing the Shah. Big mistake, we learn later, but paying for it still. Rosa
Parks refused to give up her seat in the front of the bus. Dwight
Eisenhower set up the U.S. Interstate highway system. The first successful
kidney transplant was performed. The first Xerox machine was produced. Senator Joseph
McCarthy began his red-baiting purge. Top songs were “Rudolph, The Red
Nosed Reindeer” by Gene Autry and “I
Can Dream Can’t I,” by the Andrew
Sisters. Some classic films were released that year: Cinderella, Sunset Boulevard,
All About Eve, Rashomon, and Harvey. Ernest Hemingway’s Across The River And Into The Trees came in third in books, after The Cardinal by Henry Morton Robinson and Joy
Street by Frances Parkinson Keys.
Ray Bradbury’s The Martian Chronicles and Paul
Bowles’ Delicate Prey were also
published in 1950. Guys and Dolls
debuted. This wasn’t a bountiful year for those who would be famous. Jay
Leno and Karl Rove were born in 1950. It was however, a year of loss for
literature. Edgar Rice Burroughs, George
Orwell and George Bernard Shaw
left the planet. If you were around,
what were you doing during the year of the metal Tiger?
2 comments:
Wait a minute. Hold the phone. You forget. I was born in 1950!
I must have forgotten. Dr. Phil called and was upset that I left him out as well. Actually, from the Chinese astrological calendar, you were born in late 1949. Maybe that's it.
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