Simon & Garfunkel's "Bridge Over Troubled Water" |
U. S. Apollo landed on the moon. Idi Amin took over Uganda. The Democratic Republic of Congo became
Zaire. President Richard Nixon oversaw the arrest of 13,000 anti-war
protesters. He lifted the U.S. trade
embargo of China. China replaced Taiwan at U.N. Okinawa was returned to
Japan. A tidal wave and cyclone off the
Bay of Bengal killed 10,000. The voting age in the U.S. was lowered from 21 to
18. The Libertarian Party was formed. The
U.S. Supreme Court approved bussing to achieve desegregation. The “Pentagon
Papers” were published. The Kennedy Center opened with Leonard Bernstein’s Mass.
National Public Radio began broadcasting.
Intel introduced microprocessors. Cigarette ads were banned on TV. “All
in the Family,” “McMillan and Wife” and “Cannon” premiered. “Benny Hill” was the top TV show. Charles Manson was convicted of murder.
Vice President Spiro Agnew injured
two onlookers with two, separate wild swings during a golf outing. Frazier won over Ali. Satchel Paige was inducted into baseball’s Hall of Fame. Oh Calcutta opened in NYC. Patton won the Academy Award. We also watched A Clockwork Orange, The
French Connection, The Last Picture
Show, Fiddler on the Roof and McCabe and Mrs. Miller. In Books & Literature, Chilean Pablo Neruda received the Nobel. The
Mystery Writers of America gave its top Edgar to Maj Sjöwall
and Per Wahlöö
for The Laughing Policeman. We also read Maurice by E. M. Forster,
The Tenants by Bernard Malamud, and Angles of
Repose by Wallace Stegner. Ernest Hemingway’s Islands in the Stream, Wheels
by Arthur Hailey and The French Lieutenant’s Woman by John Fowles were best sellers. Simon
& Garfunkel picked up three Grammys with Bridge Over Troubled Water. We also listened to “Joy To The World”
by Three Dog Night, “Maggie May” by Rod Stewart, “It’s Too Late” by Carole King, “One Bad Apple” by The Osmonds, “How Can You Heal A Broken
Heart” by The Bee Gees, “Indian
Reservation” by The Raiders, “Go Away
Little Girl” by Donnie Osmond, and “Take Me Home Country Roads” by John Denver. The music world lost rock legends
Jim Morrison and Duane Allman. The bell also tolled for J. C. Penny (the man), Igor Stravinsky, Audie Murphy, Van Heflin,
Harold Lloyd, Pier Angeli, Spring Byington,
Louis Armstrong and Edie Sedgwick. Tupac Shakur and Snoop Dog
took their first breaths, as did David
Tennant, Idina Menzel, Mark Wahlberg, Jared Leto and Mary J. Blige. If you were around, what were you doing
during this year of the metal pig?
1 comment:
Ah, the pre-disco '70s. Some good music there, and I own the S&G LP. I've read most of the books mentioned, too. this was the year I took my first full-time college teaching job and bought my first house.
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