50 Years Ago This Week
August 19
August 20
August 21
August 22
August 23
August 25
Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
Leaving the chart:
New on the chart:
"Ramblin' Man," The Allman Brothers Band
(#2 US; #12 AC)
"Keep On Truckin'," Eddie Kendricks
(#1 US the weeks of Nov. 10 and 17, 1973; #1 R&B; #18 UK)
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Timeline entries are quoted from the Wiki page for the month.
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IIRC from the earlier seasons, he also had a rod of some sort concealed in the chair, which could be used as a nightstick.
August 19
- George Papadopoulos was sworn in as President of Greece after his June 1 overthrow of the monarchy had been confirmed by voters in a referendum.
- Bruce Lee's final martial arts film before his death, Enter the Dragon, premiered in the United States 30 days after his death on July 20, and would become one of the most profitable movies of all time, with revenues of $400,000,000 after being filmed with a budget of $850,000.
- Died: Willy Rey (stage name for Wilhelmina Rietveld), 23, Dutch-born Canadian model and Playboy magazine feature in February 1971, died of an overdose of barbiturates.
August 20
- In the Kingdom of Laos, former Laotian Army General Thao Ma led 60 officers in an attempt to overthrow the government. Arriving in the capital, Vientiane, he and his group took over the Wattay International Airport and seized several AT-28 fighter bombers and tried, unsuccessfully, to bomb the home and office of Major General Kouprasith Abhay. While General Thao was still in flight, Royal Laotian troops retook the airport and his airplane was shot down as he was attempting to land. He was rescued and survived the crash, but then put into a truck where he was driven to Kouprasith's headquarters, where he was executed by one of Kouprasith's bodyguards. The Laotian government executed 11 other coup participants the next day by firing squad.
- U.S. President Nixon grabbed and shoved his White House Press Secretary, Ron Ziegler, into a crowd of reporters after getting angry at being followed. Nixon shouted, "I don't want any press with me!," spun Ziegler around and shoved him, and yelled "Take care of it!" The incident was captured on film by a CBS News crew that had been covering Nixon's visit to a Veterans of Foreign Wars convention in New Orleans. A few years later, Ziegler would tell the Washington Journalism Review that Nixon apologized to him in front of the entire staff and said "I'm sorry for what I did back there."
August 21
- Major Hubert O'Neill, the coroner in the inquest on the "Bloody Sunday" massacre, accused the British Army of "sheer unadulterated murder" after the coroner's jury returned an open verdict with no indictments recommended against anyone. On January 30, 1972, the British Army shot 26 unarmed civilians in Derry, and killed 14.
August 22
- The resignation of William P. Rogers as U.S. Secretary of State was announced by President Nixon, who said that he would nominate his National Security Adviser, Henry Kissinger, to the position. Rogers, the only member of Nixon's first Cabinet who was still in office, formally departed on September 4 to return to a private law practice.
August 23
- The Norrmalmstorg robbery, the first criminal event in Sweden covered by live television, began in Stockholm as Jan-Erik Olsson entered the Kreditbanken bank on Norrmalmstorg Square, displayed a sub-machine gun, and took four employees hostage. After firing three shots and responding policemen, he demanded that the police release convicted robber Clark Olofsson, that the two be provided three million Swedish krona (equivalent at the time to $650,000 U.S.), and that they be provided a car and free passage to a flight out of Sweden, all of which was done. The police balked, however, at allowing the duo to take a hostage with them to the airport. Police would lock the two robbers and four hostages inside the bank's vault as the standoff continued, and would end the incident with a tear gas assault after five days. The incident would become famous for the origin of the term Stockholm syndrome, referring to hostages becoming sympathetic to their captors, in that the four hostages refused to testify against Olsson and Olofsson.
August 25
- The receipt of a large number of letter bombs in the mail, all sent from West London, began with the sending to department stores of 4 ounces of explosives hidden in ordinary envelopes. According to Scotland Yard, each of the bombs "was hidden inside a BBC music pamphlet", with the explosive charge detonating as soon as the book was opened. On August 27, a bomb mailed to the British Embassy in Washington D.C. exploded, causing a secretary to lose her left hand and mangling her right hand, and the British government issued a worldwide alert the next day.
Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "Brother Louie," Stories
2. "Live and Let Die," Paul McCartney & Wings
3. "Touch Me in the Morning," Diana Ross
4. "Let's Get It On," Marvin Gaye
5. "The Morning After," Maureen McGovern
6. "Delta Dawn," Helen Reddy
7. "Get Down," Gilbert O'Sullivan
8. "Say, Has Anybody Seen My Sweet Gypsy Rose," Dawn feat. Tony Orlando
9. "Uneasy Rider," The Charlie Daniels Band
10. "Bad, Bad Leroy Brown," Jim Croce
11. "Feelin' Stronger Every Day," Chicago
12. "I Believe in You (You Believe in Me)," Johnnie Taylor
13. "Monster Mash," Bobby "Boris" Pickett & The Crypt-Kickers
14. "If You Want Me to Stay," Sly & The Family Stone
15. "Here I Am (Come and Take Me)," Al Green
16. "Loves Me Like a Rock," Paul Simon
17. "Are You Man Enough," Four Tops
18. "Gypsy Man," War
19. "We're an American Band," Grand Funk
20. "Saturday Night's Alright for Fighting," Elton John
21. "Angel," Aretha Franklin
23. "Smoke on the Water," Deep Purple
24. "Diamond Girl," Seals & Crofts
26. "Yesterday Once More," Carpenters
27. "That Lady (Part 1)," The Isley Brothers
28. "Shambala," Three Dog Night
30. "Believe in Humanity," Carole King
32. "Why Me," Kris Kristofferson
34. "Theme from Cleopatra Jones," Joe Simon feat. The Mainstreeters
35. "My Maria," B. W. Stevenson
36. "Behind Closed Doors," Charlie Rich
37. "Natural High," Bloodstone
39. "So Very Hard to Go," Tower of Power
42. "Money," Pink Floyd
45. "Will It Go Round in Circles," Billy Preston
46. "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy," Bette Midler
48. "Right Place, Wrong Time," Dr. John
51. "Higher Ground," Stevie Wonder
54. "Half-Breed," Cher
55. "Free Ride," The Edgar Winter Group
62. "Playground in My Mind," Clint Holmes
63. "Where Peaceful Waters Flow," Gladys Knight & the Pips
71. "China Grove," The Doobie Brothers
78. "Yes We Can Can," The Pointer Sisters
79. "Keep On Truckin'," Eddie Kendricks
85. "Ramblin' Man," The Allman Brothers Band
87. "Rocky Mountain Way," Joe Walsh
Leaving the chart:
- "Give Me Love (Give Me Peace on Earth)," George Harrison (14 weeks)
- "Kodachrome," Paul Simon (14 weeks)
- "Long Train Runnin'," The Doobie Brothers (18 weeks)
New on the chart:
"Ramblin' Man," The Allman Brothers Band
(#2 US; #12 AC)
"Keep On Truckin'," Eddie Kendricks
(#1 US the weeks of Nov. 10 and 17, 1973; #1 R&B; #18 UK)
_______
Timeline entries are quoted from the Wiki page for the month.
_______
There wasn't much going on in that department. It looked like a darkened stage set...no doubt what it actually was.That could make it even spookier.
Nope, he's in his chair in that shot. The whole gist of the opening credits is that it shows him getting shot, then demonstrates that he's still an active cop while in the wheelchair, by flashing us the traditional accoutrements.Before the wheelchair, when he was still on active duty.
IIRC from the earlier seasons, he also had a rod of some sort concealed in the chair, which could be used as a nightstick.
I might have trouble getting past the premise being based on a huge historical inaccuracy--Jake being an ex-Flying Tiger in 1938, when the American volunteer squadron in China was barely being conceived. It wasn't a fully operational squadron until 1941, and didn't see combat until the aftermath of Pearl Harbor.Highly recommended. It's in my top tier of shows, like Star Trek, Outer Limits, Night Stalker, et cetera....
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