The Germans conquered or destroyed everything in their path
toward world domination. Jews were rounded up, imprisoned, tortured, and killed
in one of the most brutal periods in modern history. The Japanese bombed Pearl
Harbor. RCA built an electron microscope
with a magnification of 100,000. Edward
Hopper painted “Nighthawk.” Greta
Garbo retired. Ted Williams’
batting average hit .400. Citizen Cane
premiered. So did Arsenic & Old Lace
and Noel Coward’s Blithe Spirit. Duke Ellington released “Take the ‘A’ Train.” Robert E. Sherwood picked up the Pulitzer for There Shall Be No Night. The New York Times Bestseller List
appeared — with, appropriately, Arthur
Koestler’s Darkness at Noon on it. In the movie theaters we watched Men of Boys Town, Suspicion, The Maltese Falcon,
Dumbo and Babes on Broadway. We listened to “Moonlight Cocktail,” by Glenn Miller, “Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy “by
the Andrew Sisters, “I’ve Got A Gal
in Kalamazoo” by Glenn Miller, “Stardust
“ by Artie Shaw and “White Christmas”
by Bing Crosby. James Joyce, Sherwood
Anderson and Louis Chevrolet
died that year. Many notables were born:
Art Garfunkel, Otis Redding, Twyla Tharp,
Bob Dylan, Chick Corea, Paul Simon,
Dick Cheney, Kim Jong-il, Martha Stewart,
Nick Nolte, Joan Baez and Placido
Domingo. If you were around, what
were you doing during this year of the metal snake?
1941 Chevrolet DeLuxe |
2 comments:
My birth brightened that dark year.
No doubt, that's why you came along -- to turn things around. And you did.
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