50 Years Ago This Week
September 15
September 16
September 17
September 18
September 19
September 20
September 21
Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
Leaving the chart:
New on the chart:
"Everlasting Love," Carl Carlton
(#6 US; #15 AC; #4 Dance; #11 R&B; originally a hit for Robert Knight in 1967)
"Back Home Again," John Denver
(#5 US; #1 AC; #1 Country)
"My Melody of Love," Bobby Vinton
(#3 US; #1 AC)
"You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet," Bachman-Turner Overdrive
(nuh-nuh-nuh-#1 US the week of Nov. 9, 1974; #2 UK)
And new on the boob tube:
Timeline entries are quoted from the Wiki page for the month.
Something that struck me about "The Coward" is that the basic plot was pretty similar to that of "Little Orphan Airplane," the Greg Morris episode.
September 15
- All 75 people aboard Air Vietnam Flight 706 were killed when three hijackers detonated grenades as the Boeing 727 was attempting an emergency landing at Phan Rang Air Base in South Vietnam. The terrorists had seized the jet after it had taken off from Da Nang on a flight to Saigon, and demanded to be flown to Hanoi in North Vietnam.
- Performer Liza Minnelli (whose mother was Judy Garland, Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz) and director and producer Jack Haley Jr. (whose father was Jack Haley, the Tin Man in the same film) married in Montecito, California. Minnelli and Haley would divorce in 1979.
September 16
- U.S. President Ford signed a presidential proclamation granting conditional amnesty to American draft evaders and military deserters from the Vietnam War era. To be eligible, individuals would need to agree to work for up to 24 months in alternative public service jobs. On his first full day in office (January 21, 1977), Ford's successor, Jimmy Carter, would issue an unconditional pardon to most evaders of the draft, which did not, however, include deserters.
- The first female "Mounties" began training at RCMP Academy, Depot Division, as 32 women entered the Royal Canadian Mounted Police as members of the new RCMP's Troop 17. The first all-female group would graduate on March 3, 1975.
- Martin McBirney QC, 56, and Rory Conaghan, 54, both judges in Northern Ireland, were assassinated in Belfast by terrorists from the Provisional Irish Republican Army. McBirney was Protestant and Conaghan (who was killed in front of his 8-year-old daughter) was Catholic.
- During a televised press conference, U.S. President Ford acknowledged that the Central Intelligence Agency had been active in Chile during the presidency of Salvador Allende, working to preserve the existence of opposition media and political parties, but denied CIA involvement in the September 1973 coup d'état during which Allende died.
September 17
- The three Japanese terrorists who had taken over the French Embassy in The Hague released their 9 remaining hostages and left Amsterdam by jetliner for Damascus, Syria, taking with them Japanese Red Army member Yutaka Furuya, whose release from a Parisian prison they had demanded.
- Died: Claudia Morgan, 63, American radio and stage actress, star from 1941 to 1950 of The Adventures of the Thin Man as Nora Charles
September 18
- American actress Doris Day won a $22,835,646 judgment against lawyer Jerome Rosenthal, whom she had accused of defrauding her and her husband, Martin Melcher, who died in 1968. Day would settle with Rosenthal's insurers in August 1977 for $6 million to be paid in 23 annual installments.
September 19
- Yuri Andropov, the Director of the Soviet Union's KGB spy agency, approved "Plan 5/9-16091", a disinformation campaign to discredit recently-expelled dissident Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn and to deter his contacts with other Soviet dissidents. The harassment led to Solzhenitsyn leaving Zürich in Switzerland, where he and all persons contacting him had been under Soviet surveillance, and settling in the small U.S. town of Cavendish, Vermont.
September 20
- Hurricane Fifi, later known as Hurricane Orlene, struck the Central American nation of Honduras, where it killed more than 8,000 people. On the first day, the town of Choloma was destroyed and more than 2,800 people washed away when the flood collapsed a natural dam.
- The National Highway, Australia's network of federally-funded roads, came into existence with the approval of the National Roads Act 1974.
- The war crimes trial of Bruno Streckenbach, director of Nazi Germany's Einsatzgruppen within Poland, on charges of one million counts of murder, was postponed indefinitely because of his cardiac problems. Streckenbach would survive for three more years, never facing a verdict, until his death on October 28, 1977.
- The Kootenai Tribe of Idaho, under the leadership of tribal elder Amelia Trice, announced a declaration of war against the U.S. government. The Tribe set up informational pickets and requested 10-cent tolls on U.S. Highway 95 in Bonners Ferry, Idaho. Trice would lead a delegation to Washington, D.C., for talks, resulting in U.S. President Ford signing a bill transferring two tracts of federal land to the tribe.
- Officer Gail Cobb, 24, of the Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia, was shot and killed by a bank robbery suspect whom she was attempting to arrest, becoming the first female African-American police officer to be killed in the line of duty. Over 900 people attended her funeral on September 24 at the Holy Comforter Catholic Church in Southeast Washington, D.C., including FBI Director Clarence M. Kelley and Walter Washington, Mayor-Commissioner of the District of Columbia, with 2,000 more mourners on the street outside.
September 21
- About 3,000 people were evacuated in Houston, Texas, and 19 people were hospitalized, for injuries that happened within a 5-mile (8.0 km) radius of an explosion and leak of the gas butadiene in a Houston railyard.
- The U.S. planetary probe Mariner 10, which had made a flyby of the planet Mercury on March 29, was able to make a second, but more distant, pass for data collection because of Mercury's frequent orbit (every 88 days) around the Sun.
- Jacqueline Susann, 56, American writer known for the bestselling novels Valley of the Dolls (1966), The Love Machine (1969), and Once Is Not Enough (1973), died of lung cancer, 19 months after being diagnosed. After her death, her final novel, Dolores, was the third highest selling novel in the U.S. for 1976.
- Walter Brennan, 80, American film and television actor and star of the TV show The Real McCoys, winner of three Academy Awards for Best Supporting Actor (including the first ever supporting actor award, for Come and Get It), died of emphysema.
Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Can't Get Enough of Your Love, Babe," Barry White
2. "Rock Me Gently," Andy Kim
3. "I Honestly Love You," Olivia Newton-John
4. "Nothing from Nothing," Billy Preston
5. "I Shot the Sheriff," Eric Clapton
6. "Then Came You," Dionne Warwick & The Spinners
7. "(You're) Having My Baby," Paul Anka
8. "Clap for the Wolfman," The Guess Who
9. "You Haven't Done Nothin'," Stevie Wonder
10. "Hang On in There Baby," Johnny Bristol
11. "Another Saturday Night," Cat Stevens
12. "Beach Baby," The First Class
13. "I'm Leaving It (All) Up to You," Donny & Marie Osmond
14. "Sweet Home Alabama," Lynyrd Skynyrd
15. "Who Do You Think You Are," Bo Donaldson & The Heywoods
16. "It's Only Rock 'N Roll (But I Like It)," The Rolling Stones
17. "You and Me Against the World," Helen Reddy
18. "Let's Put It All Together," The Stylistics
19. "Earache My Eye," Cheech & Chong
20. "Can't Get Enough," Bad Company
21. "Never My Love," Blue Swede
22. "You Little Trustmaker," The Tymes
23. "Free Man in Paris," Joni Mitchell
24. "Tell Me Something Good," Rufus
25. "Steppin' Out (Gonna Boogie Tonight)," Tony Orlando & Dawn
26. "Stop and Smell the Roses," Mac Davis
27. "Skin Tight," Ohio Players
29. "Jazzman," Carole King
30. "The Bitch Is Back," Elton John
31. "The Night Chicago Died," Paper Lace
32. "Do It Baby," The Miracles
33. "Feel Like Makin' Love," Roberta Flack
34. "Rub It In," Billy "Crash" Craddock
35. "Wild Thing," Fancy
36. "Wildwood Weed," Jim Stafford
37. "Love Me for a Reason," The Osmonds
38. "Papa Don't Take No Mess, Pt. 1," James Brown
40. "Tin Man," America
41. "Surfin' U.S.A.," The Beach Boys
42. "Sideshow," Blue Magic
43. "Please Come to Boston," Dave Loggins
45. "One Hell of a Woman," Mac Davis
48. "Waterloo," ABBA
49. "Shinin' On," Grand Funk
51. "Life Is a Rock (But the Radio Rolled Me)," Reunion
52. "Give It to the People," The Righteous Brothers
55. "Straight Shootin' Woman," Steppenwolf
56. "Carefree Highway," Gordon Lightfoot
57. "Keep on Smilin'," Wet Willie
61. "Call on Me," Chicago
62. "Takin' Care of Business," Bachman-Turner Overdrive
63. "Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me," Elton John
64. "Radar Love," Golden Earring
65. "You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet" / "Free Wheelin'", Bachman-Turner Overdrive
67. "The Need to Be," Jim Weatherly
68. "Annie's Song," John Denver
70. "Back Home Again," John Denver
72. "Honey, Honey," ABBA
78. "Overnight Sensation (Hit Record)," Raspberries
79. "I've Got the Music in Me," The Kiki Dee Band
84. "Love Don't Love Nobody, Pt. 1" The Spinners
87. "Everlasting Love," Carl Carlton
88. "My Melody of Love," Bobby Vinton
93. "Rock the Boat," Hues Corporation
96. "Time for Livin'," Sly & The Family Stone
98. "Rock Your Baby," George McCrae
99. "Sure as I'm Sittin' Here," Three Dog Night
Leaving the chart:
- "My Thang," James Brown (13 weeks)
- "On and On," Gladys Knight & The Pips (17 weeks)
- "Rikki Don't Lose That Number," Steely Dan (19 weeks)
- "Rock and Roll Heaven," The Righteous Brothers (17 weeks)
New on the chart:
"Everlasting Love," Carl Carlton
(#6 US; #15 AC; #4 Dance; #11 R&B; originally a hit for Robert Knight in 1967)
"Back Home Again," John Denver
(#5 US; #1 AC; #1 Country)
"My Melody of Love," Bobby Vinton
(#3 US; #1 AC)
"You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet," Bachman-Turner Overdrive
(nuh-nuh-nuh-#1 US the week of Nov. 9, 1974; #2 UK)
And new on the boob tube:
- Happy Days, "Richie's Car"
- M*A*S*H, "Rainbow Bridge"
- Hawaii Five-O, "A Hawaiian Nightmare"
- The Odd Couple, "To Bowl or Not to Bowl"
- Ironside, "Raise the Devil: Part 2"
- The Six Million Dollar Man, "The Pioneers"
- Planet of the Apes, "The Gladiators"
- Shazam!, "Thou Shalt Not Kill"
- Star Trek, "The Practical Joker"
- Kung Fu, "A Small Beheading"
- All in the Family, "The Bunkers and Inflation: Part 2; Archie Underfoot"
- Emergency!, "I'll Fix It"
- The Mary Tyler Moore Show, "Not Just Another Pretty Face"
- The Bob Newhart Show, "The Battle of the Groups"
Timeline entries are quoted from the Wiki page for the month.
More early superhero exposure!And I think we established that Hong Kong Phooey was my last foray into Saturday morning cartoons (and that premiered this year too).
Actually, it looks like they were doing original stories, but went into a reprints phase in late '75.Yes, the stories were all by CC Beck and I assume they were all reprints (although he was still alive then). Looking at a cover gallery, I had issues 1,3, 4, and 6.
Nowhere to be seen.As long as he throws in Namorita, I'm cool with that.![]()
We didn't even get that good of a look at it...it was a longshot of a framed black and white photo.Funny they didn't use a picture of Lee Majors with a period hairstyle or something.
Something that struck me about "The Coward" is that the basic plot was pretty similar to that of "Little Orphan Airplane," the Greg Morris episode.