Friday, March 21, 2014
Observation — 1964, It Was A Beatlesmania Year
Half a century ago, the best way to find out what was going
on in the world was to read Time or Newsweek. If you did you would have seen the seeds of
the conservative movement in the rise of Arizona Senator Barry Goldwater, who became the Republican nominee for president in
1964. Though the movement didn’t “take” until Ronald Reagan came along, Goldwater is generally acknowledged as
the founder. President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the landmark 1964 Civil Rights Bill. 1964 was also all about the
British invasion with the Beatles
dominating the Billboard charts
throughout the year. “I Wanna Hold Your
Hand” and “She Loves You” were numbers one and two. ‘Hello Dolly” by Louis Armstrong and Roy
Orbison’s “Oh, Pretty Woman” managed to make it into the top five. Mary
Poppins and Dr. Strangelove, strangely
juxtapositioned, were the top movies. John
LeCarre’s The Spy Who Came In From
The Cold, Candy by Terry Southern and Herzog by Saul Bellow,
were fiction best sellers. Cassius Clay
became Muhammad Ali. The Ford Mustang was born. So were Michelle
Obama and Barry Bonds. Cole
Porter and Ian Fleming died. If
you were around, what were you doing during this year of the wood dragon?
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1 comment:
How could a movement so pure and noble become so corrupted by greed and stupidity?
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