Life in the Seventies
This is a list of items describing life in the 1970s, mainly in
the Los Angeles, California, USA, area.
  - 
    Economically, in the 1970s the United States economy
    experienced sluggish economic
    growth, high inflation, and two large rises in petroleum prices.  This
    situation became known as "stagflation".  But the Japanese
    economy surged, and there was a fear that Japan would surpass the United
    States as the world’s largest economy (which never happened). 
  - Telephones mostly had dials at the beginning of the decade, but
    Touch-Tone phones were becoming more common through the decade. The phone company owned all
    the telephones; you had to pay extra to have an "extension" phone,
    and extra for a color telephone, although color phones were now quite
    common.
    
      - There was only one telephone  area code, 213, for the whole Los Angeles area. 
    (There were eight area codes for the state of California; viz. 213,
    415, 916, 714, 805, 209, and 408. This situation existed from 1959 to 1982.
    In 1982, 619 was split off 714, and in 1984, 818 was split off 213.)
- The Los Angeles (213) area phone calls were based on "message
    units" according to distance and length of call.  A call of less
    than about 8 miles was local.  Thus a 15 minute call from Westchester
    to Downtown Los Angeles was three message units and cost about 61¢.
 
- The postage  for a first class letter was 6¢ per ounce since 1968,
    8¢ from 1971 to 1975, 10¢ from September, 1971, to the end of that year,
    13¢ from 1976 to 1978,  and 15¢ from 1978 to 1981.  Air mail
    cost more until 1977, and, starting in 1975, additional ounces cost less
    than the first ounce.
- Amtrak was formed in 1971, to take over (largely money-losing)
    passenger trains.  Many trains were discontinued.  The following
    trains to Los Angeles were run by Amtrak when they started (with two trains
    added later):
      - The Coast Starlight 
        to Seattle [daily]
- The  Sunset to New Orleans [three times a week]
- The  Super Chief-El Capitan to Chicago via
        Albuquerque [because Amtrak’s service was not up to
        Santa Fe standards, Amtrak changed the name to the Southwest Limited. 
        It is now called the Southwest Chief.]
- The  San Diegans to San Diego [now
        part of the Pacific Surfliners]
- The San Joaquins began operating in 1974 from Bakersfield to
        Oakland and Sacramento, with connecting bus service from Los Angeles to
        Bakersfield.
- The Desert Wind to Chicago via Las Vegas, Salt Lake City, and
        Omaha ran from 1979 to 1997.
- Air travel had become the main form of business travel, and was
    preferred for long-distance leisure travel.
    
      - There were many  airlines that no longer exist, including Eastern, Western,
  Braniff, Hughes Air West, TWA, National, and Pan American. Because the FAA regulated air
  traffic, and set interstate air fares, several in-state airlines charged lower
  fares, and drew sizable market share, including PSA (founded 1949) and Air
  California (founded 1967). These two airlines were began charging lower fares
  than the interstate airlines could legally charge, and virtually drove them
  out of the internal California market. Incidentally, Air California hired
  married stewardesses, when the rule at the time was for stewardesses to be
  unmarried.
- New jets  were introduced during the 1970s.  The Boeing 747,
    the first "jumbo jet", was introduced in 1970.  The McDonnell
    Douglas DC-10 entered service in 1971. The Lockheed L-1011 Tristar was first
    delivered in 1972, but because Lockheed was unable to sell enough to recover
    their costs, they left the commercial airliner business.
 
- The modern office used an IBM Selectric® typewriter and a  mimeograph
    machine (probably made by Gestetner or A.B. Dick).  Heavy-duty
    reprographic machines (probably made by Xerox) were becoming common, and so
    were computers.  Large companies owned or leased large mainframe
    computers (like the IBM 360 or 370); smaller companies used time-share
    services.  The beginnings of the internet happened in 1969, and
    bulletin board services began in the 1970s.  The Apple II computer,
    first sold in 1977, was the first successful personal computer. It was
    widely predicted that these "personal computers" would soon be
    found in every home.  But microcomputers remained largely the domain of
    hobbyists until the 1980s.
- Hand-held electronic calculators began to appear in 1971, but were
    very expensive. Before they were available, offices used mechanical adding
    machines, and scientists and engineers used slide rules, or tables of
    logarithms for more precise work. The first scientific calculator (which
    could replace a slide rule) appeared in 1972; it was the Hewlett-Packard
    HP-35, used RPL (reverse Polish logic), and it cost $395. Texas Instruments
    began introducing scientific calculators with "algebraic" logic
    (and lower prices) in 1973.  By 1975, calculators had largely
    supplanted slide rules in scientific and engineering use.
- Other advances in technology included Video Tape Recorders for home
    use.  Sony launched the Betamax in 1975.  In 1976, RCA introduced
    the VHS (Video Home System) format.  Although many believed the Beta
    format superior, VHS offered longer recording times (first two hours, then
    four).  In addition, the VHS format was licensed, and with more
    manufacturers, the price began to decline.
- Most home music systems consisted of an amplifier & radio and a phonograph.  Small portable transistor radios were
    common, with a single earphone. Music  was sold on LPs and 45s. Most
    record players had four speeds: 78, 45, 33 1/3, and 16 2/3. There were
    snap-in inserts for playing 45s on players lacking a large spindle. 8-track
    cartridges were the most popular medium for portable music at the start of
    the decade, reaching their peak of popularity in 1978, and then declined while compact cassettes gained popularity.
    The LP format also reached its peak of popularity in 1978.
- Smoking was permitted indoors, and even in airplanes; there were not even
    separate smoking sections. Trains, though, had some cars designated NO
    SMOKING, and buses usually only allowed smoking in the last few rows.  Cigarettes were advertised on television and radio until January 2,
    1972.
- Governors of California during the Seventies were
    
      - Ronald Reagan (1967-75)--Elected on a campaign to "send
        the welfare bums back to work" and to "clean up the mess at
        Berkeley, he began to cut state spending and increase taxes to achieve a
        balanced budget. Early in his term, he signed a liberal bill to allow
        abortion in most cases, a decision he later regretted. There were
        student protests in his first term, including the "People's
        Park" protest, causing him to call the highway patrol. Eventually
        he called the National Guard to Berkeley to restore order.
- Edmund G. "Jerry" Brown, Jr (1975-83)--His father
        "Pat" Brown had been a fairly popular governor (1959-67),
        although the young Brown was much more liberal than his father.  He
        continued some of Reagan's budget-cutting, although in some mainly
        symbolic ways, such as declining to live in the governors' mansion and
        not riding in a limousine. His chief supporters were young liberals.
        Brown increased spending on environmental projects and welfare.  He
        appointed to the state supreme court the first black member (Wiley
        Manuel), the first Latino (Cruz Reynoso), and the first woman (Rose
        Bird, as chief justice).  Rose Bird was known as opposing the death
        penalty in every case that came before the court.  Both she and
        Reynoso were removed from office by recall in 1986. 
 
- U. S. Presidents during the decade were
    
      - Richard Nixon   (1969-74)--fairly popular in his first term,
        Nixon was reelected by a landslide in 1972,
        carrying 49 states. He despised northeastern elites (the feeling
        was mutual), and followed
        what he called an "American strategy" (but others called a
        "southern strategy") to build a moderate-conservative
        coalition to appeal to the South and West. But the election campaign was marred the Watergate scandal, and
        the (perceived) cover-up gradually eroded
        confidence in his presidency.  After Vice President Agnew was
        forced to resign, pressure for impeachment began to mount. 
        Congressman Ford was appointed Vice President, and approved by Congress.
        Nixon was pressured to resign, which he did on August 9, 1974.
- Gerald Ford  (1974-77)--the only un-elected president, he
        brought healing after the "nightmare" of Watergate, and almost
        won re-election in 1976, after beating a strong primary challenge from
        Ronald Reagan, and a weak challenge in the general election from the
        Democrat Jimmy Carter, who ran as the
        un-Nixon.  Partly because in his first month Watergate matters were
        consuming about 25% of the time and energy of the White House staff,
        President Ford pardoned Nixon for his involvement in Watergate.
- Jimmy Carter (1977-81)--elected by a hopeful country, his
        presidency was plagued by "stagflation" (a stagnant economy
        with high inflation, combined with high interest rates) and the Iran
        hostage crisis. By 1979 America and the West in general were perceived
        to be suffering from a "malaise" (Carter's own word). Some pundits regard Carter as the worst president of the
        20th century.
 
- International leaders of the decade included:
    
      - Popes were:
        
          - Paul VI (1963-78) implemented the decisions of the
            2nd Vatican Council, including the new missal in two editions, in
            1970 and 1975
- John Paul I (1978) for 33 days
- John
            Paul II (1978-2005), the first non-Italian pope since the XVI
            century, his impact was felt more in the Eighties and Nineties.
 
- Prime Ministers of Great Britain: Edward Heath
        (Conservative, 1970-74); Harold Wilson (Labour, 1974-76); James Callahan
        (Labour, 1976-79); Margaret Thatcher (Conservative, 1979-90). 
        Elizabeth II was queen throughout the decade.
- Prime Ministers of Canada: Pierre Trudeau
        (Liberal, 1968-79); Joe Clark (Progressive Conservative, 1979-80)
- Presidents of France: Georges Pompidou (UDR, 1969-74); Valéry Giscard
        d’Estaing (UDF, 1974-81)
- Dictator of the Soviet Union: Leonid Brezhnev
        (General Secretary, CPSU, 1964-82)
- Dictators of Communist China: Mao Zedong
        (1949-76); Hua Guofeng (1976-81)
 
- Several "right wing" dictatorships ended in the 1970s.  The
    notion developed afterward that right wing regimes could move toward
    democracy, but left wing regimes could not.
    
      - In 1974, a military coup deposed the dictator of Portugal,
        which now moved toward democracy.  This movement is known as the
        "Carnation Revolution". 
- In 1975, Francisco Franco, dictator of Spain, died.  His
        designated successor was Don Juan Carlos, who took the title Juan Carlos
        I.  He is grandson of the last reigning king, Alfonso XIII.  (Alfonso’s
        son and Juan Carlos’s father Don Juan had been passed over by Franco,
        because Don Juan was a liberal, and Franco believed that Don Juan Carlos
        would be more in his own image.)  But King Juan Carlos proceeded to
        liberalize Spain, holding free democratic elections in 1977. 
 
- The Cold War continued throughout the decade. 
    Because of "stagflation" and a general feeling of malaise in the
    Western countries, plus President Carter’s statement about an
    "inordinate fear of communism", it was felt that communism may be
    permanent, and may even be advancing.
    
      - In 1972, President Nixon made a trip to Beijing. 
        This led to what became known as ping pong diplomacy and
        (eventually) the United States formally recognizing the (communist)
        Peoples’ Republic of China (and breaking formal ties with the Republic of
        China, on Taiwan).
- Later in 1972, President Nixon and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger
        announced the beginning of Strategic Arms Limitation Talks with
        the Soviet Union; this was the beginning of the period of détente.
- In 1975 the Helsinki accords were signed, recognizing the
        postwar boundaries in Europe, but also committing governments to basic
        human rights.  Although this latter provision did not have
        immediate major consequences, it laid the groundwork for the collapse of
        communism in eastern Europe, particularly in Poland.
- The Vietnam war was prominent in the first half of the
        decade.  President Nixon completed the program of
        "Vietnamization", turning over the defense of South Vietnam to
        the Vietnamese army.  The Paris peace talks brought a (as it turned
        out temporary) end to the war.  But in 1974 and 1975, North Vietnam
        launched an all-out invasion of the south.  Congress refused to
        allow any aid to South Vietnam (as promised in the Paris peace accords),
        and Saigon fell to the communists in 1975.  Subsequently Cambodia
        and Laos also became communist.  Later in the decade, and
        continuing into the ’eighties, about 1,000,000 "boat people"
        fled Vietnam.  Many were settled in the United States, after being
        processed in the Philippines, although many others died in the attempt
        to flee.  The Cambodian Khmer Rouge killed
        about 1,000,000 persons in attempting to implement their notion of an
        "ideal" society.
- In 1979, the Camp David accords, brokered by President Carter,
        brought a formal peace between Israel and Egypt. Israel agreed to return
        the Sinai peninsula to Egypt, which included dismantling many Israeli
        settlements.
- In 1979, following the Islamic revolution in Iran, the USSR intervened
        in Afghanistan, to support the Marxists against other factions.
        The country was effectively under Soviet occupation. The United States
        and Pakistan (among others) began sending aid to the rebels. This
        situation brought an effective end to the period of détente. Another
        consequence was that President Carter called for a boycott of the Moscow
        summer Olympic games in 1980.
 
- In 1973, the Supreme Court issued its ruling in Roe vs. Wade,
    invalidating all prohibitions on abortion in all states.  The ruling
    did not settle the issue, and vehement debate has continued.
- In 1978 California voters passed Proposition 13, which limited property
    tax rates to 1% of assessed value.  This had many consequences, some
    perhaps unintentional.  Because local governments had relied on
    property tax for most of their revenues, they found they were now short of
    money, and thus became dependent on the state government.  Because
    property taxes dropped, property values immediately went up, because this
    made more properties available to buyers.  Because property is only
    reassessed upon sale, it meant that adjacent properties could be taxed at
    wildly different rates, resulting essentially in a transfer of wealth from
    young homebuyers to the elderly who had stayed in their homes for many
    years.  Also because single-family residences change owners more than
    commercial properties, the property tax burden was transferred more and more
    to single families.  Sales taxes now generated more revenue per acre
    than property taxes, so local governments began to favor commercial
    development over residential. It was predicted that Proposition 13 would be
    the beginning of a nationwide "tax revolution".  There were a
    few tax-limitation laws passed in other states, but the
    "revolution" didn't materialize.
- Many social movements  that had their beginnings in the ’sixties
    became mainstream in the ’seventies. Except for the environmental
    movement, the time of mass social movements was over, but action continued
    in legislatures. The social activism of the 1960s began turning to
    social activities simply for one’s own pleasure, so that Tom Wolfe named
    the 1970s the "Me Decade".
    
      - The  civil rights movement largely peaked in the 1960s, but major civil
        rights legislation was passed by Congress during the Seventies.
- The feminist movement, formerly called "women’s liberation"
        was in full swing.  Congress passed the "Equal Rights
        Amendment" (ERA) in 1972, but not enough states ratified it for it
        to become part of the constitution.
- The environmental movement, formerly called the "ecology"
        movement, made several advances. The first "earth day" was
        observed in 1970. In 1970, the Environmental Protection Agency
        was established; DDT was banned in 1972; in 1974 the Safe Drinking Water Act was passed.
- The American Indian Movement staged several protests in the ’70s, including the 1972 week-long takeover of the Bureau of Indian
        Affairs in Washington, DC; and a protest at Wounded Knee, SD, in 1973.
        Congress passed the Indian Self-Determination Act in 1974.
- In 1970, the United Farm Workers
        settled the grape boycott, when the growers agreed to recognize the
        union as representing the farm workers. In 1973, the U. S. Supreme Court
        declared the use of the short hoe illegal. In 1973, after many growers
        signed "sweetheart" contracts to have the Teamsters union
        represent farm workers, Cesar Chavez called for a boycott of grapes, lettuce, and
        Gallo wines.  In 1975, with "Jerry" Brown now governor of
        California, the state passes the Agricultural Labor Relations Act.
        During this decade, Chavez and other UFW leaders demanded the U. S.
        Immigration service crack down on illegal aliens, whom the growers had
        hired during union-organized strikes.
- In 1968, Paul Ehrlich published The Population Bomb, with the
        notion that the world’s population was reaching the earth’s carrying
        capacity, and that we needed to limit human population, lest there be
        widespread famine and starvation.  This led to such groups as Zero
        Population Growth, which Ehrlich co-founded.  Most of Ehrlich’s
        predictions did not materialize, partly due to the green revolution,
        which led to a tremendous increase in food production, as well as falling
        fertility rates, first in developed countries, and later in less
        developed countries.
- Because of the easy availability contraception, the Roe vs. Wade
        decision invalidating restrictions on abortion, and other factors, sex
        was seen as a "recreational activity", not necessarily
        connected to procreation, and premarital sex began to be
        practiced openly. (This was before the appearance of A.I.D.S. and other
        sexually transmitted diseases (STDs; formerly called [less accurately]
        "VD": venereal disease.)
- The gay rights movement made significant advances in the
        decade, including the election of Harvey Milk as the first openly gay
        supervisor of San Francisco in 1977.  He and Mayor George Moscone
        were assassinated the following year, and the murderer, using the
        "Twinkie" defense, got off with a sentence of involuntary
        manslaughter, leading to much outrage.  There was a reaction to what was perceived as overt
        militancy in the movement; as Canadian writer Robert Davies put it,
        "The love that dare not speak its name has become the love that won’t shut up."
- The "hippie" movement largely disappeared in the Seventies,
        partly because of the Manson murders, but many of its ideals had become
        mainstream, including "sex, drugs, and rock ’n’ roll".
- Because of the sharp jump in petroleum prices in 1973, partly caused
        by the Yom Kippur War, there was an energy crisis in the decade.
        This led to gas rationing, with those with certain license plates
        allowed to buy gas only on certain days, and green, yellow, and red
        flags. There was another larger jump in oil prices in 1979.  The notion
        arose that the world’s supply was finite, and that we would soon run
        out.
 
- Cults and gurus began to appear on the American scene, including
    the following.
    
      - Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, the founder of Transcendental
        Meditation
- Swami A. C. Bhaktivedanta (whose followers were known as
        the "Hare Krishnas", from their chant)
- Sun Young Moon (whose followers became known as "moonies")
        founded the so-called Unification Church. 
- The most dramatic (and tragic) of these cults was the People’s
        Temple, led by Jim Jones, who called his followers to move to Guyana
        in 1976.  In 1978 Rep. Leo Ryan went to investigate, and he and his
        party were murdered by the cult, who then committed mass suicide by
        drinking a poisoned drink. (This is the origin of the phrase "to
        drink the Kool-Aid" [even though it wasn’t Kool-Aid that they
        drank, but FlavrAid] meaning "to follow some cult-leader to the
        death".)
 
- There were important developments in  religion in the 1970s.  Many
    "mainline" protestant churches continued to lose membership
    throughout the decade, including the Episcopal Church, The United
    Presbyterian Church, the United Methodist Church, the American Lutheran
    Church, the Lutheran Church in America, The American Baptist Churches, and
    the United Church of Christ.
    
      - In the Roman Catholic Church, the  Mass of Paul VI was first issued in
        1970, and revised in 1975. Not only was the mass celebrated in the
        vernacular language, but it was expected that the priest would face the
        people instead of the wall.  (This was the first major revision of
        the mass since the XVI century, although there had been minor revisions
        since then, including using the vernacular soon after the Second Vatican
        Council.)
- The  United Presbyterian Church (the "northern
        church"), having adopted the Confession of 1967, continued to drift
        into a vague liberalism, formally abandoning its solid doctrinal
        position that it had had in the XIX century, which it had informally
        abandoned in the 1930s.  Many conservatives broke away from the Presbyterian
        Church in the United States (the "southern church") in
        1973 also adrift, the stated issue being the ordination of women, and
        (eventually) formed the  Presbyterian Church in America.
- The  Episcopal Church amended canon law in 1976 to accept women as
        priests. Several women had been ordained (irregularly) in 1974, and
        their ordinations were "regularized" in 1976. (Women had already
        been accepted as deacons.)
- The  Lutheran Church in America began ordaining women in 1970.
 
- Americans were routinely given the smallpox vaccine until 1972, and
    the disease was eradicated worldwide by 1979.
- In 1977, the Bank of America gave up control of its BankAmericard,
    which was then renamed VISA. In 1979,  Master Charge was renamed MasterCard.
- Fashions of the decade.
    
      - Polyester textiles, introduced in 1964 by DuPont as Dacron®, became
    prominent in the Seventies, especially after the introduction of
        double-knit textiles.  Brightly colored polyester leisure
    suits, with a shirt-like jacket and worn with an open-collar shirt, became
        fashionable, peaking around 1978.
- Bell bottoms were popular early in the decade.
- Very short pants for women (called "hot pants") were
        popular, even becoming part of the uniform of stewardesses on Pacific
        Southwest Airlines (PSA).
- There was a fashion for outrageous colors, especially in ties,
    which peaked around 1973.
- Men’s hair was longer in this decade than before or after. 
        Many black men and women wore their hair in a style that came to be
        called "afro". Because of longer hair, hand-held pistol-shaped
        blow dryers became popular, even for men.
- Blue jeans, which in 1970 were considered the pants of the working
    class and of protesters, had become high fashion by 1979, with many designer
    labels available, including Jordache, Sergio Valente, Sassoon, Gloria Vanderbilt, Chic, Calvin Klein, Bonjour, and Guess.
 
- Popular music began to fragment in the 1970s, more than ever before.
    
      - Disco music and dancing was popular beginning around 1973, and
    reached its peak in 1978, its popularity ending around 1980.  Some of
    the more prominent disco artists were Donna Summer, the Village People, the
    Bee Gees, and Gloria Gaynor.
- Rap had its beginnings
- One genre of music neglected by the mainstream music industry burst
        onto the scene in the Seventies is what is now called Contemporary
        Christian Music with such artists as Evie Tornquist-Karlsson
        ("Pass It On"), Sandi Patty, Keith Green, Amy Grant, and Debby
        Boone ("You Light Up My Life").
 
- Sports news of the decade
    
      - Tennis featured Billie Jean King, who
        pressed for more suitable prize money for winners in women’s pro tennis,
        and accepted a challenge from Bobby Riggs in "the battle of the
        sexes", easily winning the $100,000 prize; and Arthur Ashe,
        who became the first black American to win Wimbledon; having been denied
        a visa to play in the South Africa Open, he campaigned for South Africa
        to be expelled from the professional tennis circuit.
- "Evel" Knievel made news with his
        motorcycle stunts.
- The 1972 Munich Olympiad was marred by Palestinian terrorists murdering two Israeli athletes and taking nine
        more hostage.  In the attempt to free them, all nine hostages were
        killed, along with some of the terrorists.
 
- Numerous fads came and went during the decade.
    
      - In 1975 the mood ring was introduced. People thought
        the ring would reveal their mood and so get in touch with their
        feelings, but the ring only indicated temperature.
- Also in 1975 the pet rock was sold, along with a
        "care and training booklet".
- Smiley faces seemed to be everywhere.
- Platform shoes were popular--this fad continued into the 1980s.
- Earth shoes (and imitations), with their high toes and low
        heels, were popular, especially among people that like granola: hippie
        and semi-hippie types.
- Quasi-religious mass seminars, such as, Erhard Seminars Training (est),
        became popular in the 1970s.  Started in 1971, it consisted of a
        two weekend intense "training" meetings.  (The word est
        is Latin for "it is"; those who completed the seminars were
        expected to "get it". The seminar is parodied in the 1977 film
        Semi-Tough.)  Similar kinds
        of psychological fads were primal therapy and rebirthing.
- Citizens’ Band radios enjoyed popularity during the
        decade, especially after the 1973 and 1979 jumps in gasoline prices and
        the (so-called) energy crisis led to the national setting of the highway
        speed limit at 55 miles/hour: drivers (especially truckers) would
        broadcast any sightings of "Smokeys" (highway patrol
        officers).
- Role-playing games, such as Dungeons and Dragons (introduced in
        1974) were popular.  Some people objected to them, because of their
        alleged ties to witchcraft and the occult, but others objected because
        they were huge time-consumers.
- Screaming Yellow Zonkers, a snack food introduced in the 1960s
        and still produced, became popular, partly because of being sold in
        black boxes with humorous notions and suggestions on the box. 
        Unlike Cracker Jack®, Screaming Yellow Zonkers do not have nuts.
 
- There was more heavy industry in the Los Angeles area than there is today.
    
      - Some aerospace companies that existed at the time were:
    McDonnell Douglas, Hughes, TRW, Convair (part of General Dynamics),
    AeroJet, Northrop, Lockheed, Martin-Marietta, Garrett AiResearch (part of
        Signal Companies), Honeywell, Boeing, The Aerospace Corporation, and North American
        Rockwell (became Rockwell International in 1973).
- Automobile assembly was an important industry in the Los Angeles
    area, with these plants: Chrysler (City of Commerce: closed, 1971), Ford
    (Pico Rivera), GM (South Gate: Buick-Oldsmobile-Pontiac), and GM (Van Nuys:
    Chevrolet).  In fact, Los Angeles produced more automobiles than any
    city except Detroit.
- There were also tire manufacturing plants in the Los Angeles
    area:  Firestone in South Gate, Goodyear in south central Los Angeles,
    and Uniroyal in the City of Commerce.  (These plants soon closed;
        however, I don’t know the dates.)
 
- There were more department stores, including Robinson’s, I. Magnin,
    Joseph Magnin, Bullock’s, Ohrbach’s, The May Company, and The
    Broadway.  Both J. C. Penney and Sears had retail stores that have
    since closed.
- Three cities competed to have the world's tallest building in the
    Seventies: Boston with the John Hancock Tower, Chicago with the Sears Tower,
    and New York with the twin World Trade Center towers.
- Notable books published in the Seventies included
    
      - 1970:  The French Lieutenant's Woman (John Fowles); Everything
        You Wanted to Know About Sex But Were Afraid to Ask (David Reuben,
        MD); Love Story (Erich Segal); The New English Bible
- 1971:  The Exorcist (William P. Blatty)
- 1972:  I'm O.K., You're O.K. (Thomas Harris--originally
        published in 1969; became a bestseller in 1972); Jonathan Livingston
        Seagull (Richard Bach); Watership Down (Richard Adams); Dr
        Atkins' Diet Revolution (Dr Robert Atkins)
- 1973:  Breakfast of Champions (Kurt Vonnegut)
-   1974:  The Total Woman (Maribel Morgan); All the
        President's Men (Carl Bernstein & BobWoodward); Centennial
        (James A. Michener); Carrie (Stephen King)
- 1975: Chesapeake (James A. Michener)
- 1976:  Ragtime (E. L. Doctorow); Roots: The Saga of
        an American Family (Alex Haley)
- 1977:  The Amityville Horror (Jay Anson); The Shining
        (Stephen King)
- 1978:  The Complete Book of Running (James Fixx)
- 1979: The Dead Zone (Stephen King); The Complete Scarsdale Medical Diet
        (Dr Herman Tarnower & Samm Sinclair Baker); The Right Stuff
        (Tom Wolfe)
 
- Notable  songs in popular music
    for the 1970s (More songs are given on a separate list).
    
      - 1970: Close
        to You (Carpenters);
        25 or 6 to 4 (Chicago); The Letter (Joe Cocker); Venus (Shocking Blue); Let It Be
        (Beatles); We’ve Only Just Begun (Carpenters);  
        Coal Miner’s Daughter (Loretta Lynne); Bridge Over Troubled Water (Simon and
        Garfunkel); Our House (Crosby Stills Nash and Young); Cecilia (Simon and Garfunkel);   
        Rubber Ducky (Ernie [Jim Henson, Sesame Street]); My Sweet Lord (George Harrison);
        Raindrops Keep Fallin’ On My Head (B. J. Thomas); Cracklin’ Rosie (Neil Diamond);
        Amos Moses (Jerry Reed); El Condor Pasa (Simon & Garfunkel); Reach Out and Touch
        (Somebody’s Hand) (Diana Ross)
- 1971: Joy
        to the World (Three Dog Night); Imagine (John Lennon);
        Proud Mary (Ike and Tina Turner); I Don’t Know How to Love Him
        (Yvonne Elliman);
        Take Me Home, Country Roads (John Denver); The Wedding Song (There Is Love)
        (Paul Stookey); Theme
        from Shaft (Isaac Hayes); Rainy Days and Mondays (Carpenters)
- 1972:
        American Pie (Don McLean); Saturday
        in the Park (Chicago); Morning Has Broken
        (Cat Stevens); I Am Woman (Helen Reddy); I Can See Clearly Now (Johnny Nash); Everything Is Beautiful (Ray
        Stevens); I’d Like To Teach the World To Sing (In Perfect Harmony) (The New Seekers), Listen to the Music
        (Doobie Brothers)
- 1973:
        Crocodile Rock
        (Elton John); Bad, Bad Leroy Brown
        (Jim Croce); Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door (Bob Dylan); Tie a Yellow Ribbon ’Round
        the Old Oak Tree (Dawn featuring Tony Orlando); Midnight Train to Georgia
        (Gladys Knight & the Pips); Goodbye Yellow Brick Road (Elton John); Cover of
        Rolling Stone (Dr Hook & The Medicine Show); Behind Closed Doors
        (Charlie Rich); You’re So Vain (Carly Simon); Killing Me Softly With His Song
        (Roberta Flack); The Most Beautiful Girl
        (Charlie Rich); Rocky Mountain High (John Denver)
- 1974:
        Takin’ Care
        of Business (Bachman Turner Overdrive [BTO]); The Way We Were (Barbara
        Streisand);
        I Shot the Sheriff (Eric Clapton)
- 1975: Thank God
        I’m A Country Boy
        (John Denver); 
        Send In the Clowns (Judy Collins); 
        You Are So Beautiful (Joe Cocker); 
        The Entertainer (Billy Joel); 
        Volare (Al Martino); 
        Love Will Keep Us Together (The Captain & Tennille); Una Paloma Blanca
        (George Baker
        Selection)
- 1976:
        Shake Your Booty (KC and The Sunshine Band); 
        I Heard It Through The Grapevine (Creedence Clearwater Revival); 
        I Write The Songs (Barry Manilow); Breaking Up Is Hard to Do (Neil Sedaka)
- 1977: Da Doo Ron Ron
        (Shaun Cassidy); Star Wars Theme/Cantina Band (Meco); You Light Up My Life
        (Debby
        Boone); Luckenbach,Texas (Back to the Basics of Love) (Waylon Jennings)
- 1978:
        Last Dance (Donna Summer); 
        Summer Nights (Olivia Newton-John & John Travolta); 
        Copacabana (Barry Manilow); 
        Greased Lightnin’ (John Travolta); Macho Man (Village People); 
        Mamas Don’t Let Your Babies Grow Up To Be Cowboys (Waylon Jennings & Willie
        Nelson); Stayin’ Alive (Bee Gees); 
        MacArthur Park (Donna Summer)
- 1979:
        Y.M.C.A. (Village People); 
        I Will Survive (Gloria Gaynor); 
        We Are Family (Sister Sledge); The Devil Went Down to Georgia (Charlie Daniels
        Band) 
      
 
- Because of some bad decisions (like not knowing when the Sixties were
    over), major Hollywood studios were losing money early in the decade. MGM
    sold off many properties, including Dorothy’s ruby slippers and its own
    back lots. The movie ratings changed during the 1970s.  In 1970 the M
    rating became GP, and then PG in 1972. Very popular during the decade were James Bond films:
    On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (1970, George Lazenby); Diamonds Are Forever (1971, Sean Connery);
    Live and Let Die (1973: Roger Moore); The Man with the Golden Gun (1974: Roger Moore);
    The Spy Who Loved Me (1977: Roger Moore); and Moonraker (1979: Roger Moore). 
    Other notable movies of the 1970s included:
    
      - 1970:  Patton; Airport; Five Easy Pieces; Catch-22;
        Cactus Flower; Love Story;
        Shaft; M*A*S*H; The Aristocats; Airport;
        Ryan’s Daughter; Scrooge
- 1971:  The French Connection; A Clockwork Orange; Fiddler on the Roof;
        The Last Picture Show; Nicholas and Alexandra; Dirty
        Harry; Billy Jack; Carnal Knowledge; Bedknobs and
        Broomsticks; Willard; Klute; The Andromeda Strain
- 1972:  The Godfather; Cabaret; Deliverance; Sounder;
        The Emigrants; Summer of ’42; The Poseidon
        Adventure; What’s Up Doc?; Lady Sings the Blues; Sounder;
        1776
- 1973:  The Sting; American Graffiti; The Exorcist;
        A Touch of Class; Cries and Whispers; The Way We Were;
        Magnum Force; Paper Moon; Serpico; Jesus Christ
        Superstar; Enter the Dragon; Save the Tiger
-   1974:  The Godfather, Part II;  Chinatown; The Conversation;
        Lenny; The Towering Inferno, Earthquake, Jaws;
        Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore; Blazing Saddles; Young
        Frankenstein; Benji; Harry and Tonto; Murder on the
        Orient Express
- 1975: One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest; Barry Lyndon; Dog Day Afternoon;
        Jaws; Nashville; The Rocky Horror Picture Show; The
        Return of the Pink Panther; The Sunshine Boys
- 1976:  Rocky; All the President’s Men; Network; Taxi Driver;
        Marathon Man; The Omen
- 1977:  Annie Hall; The Goodbye Girl; Julia; Star Wars;
         The Turning Point, Close Encounters of the Third Kind; Saturday
        Night Fever; Smokey and the Bandit; Oh, God!; Semi-Tough;
        Pete’s Dragon
- 1978:  The Deer Hunter; Coming Home; Heaven Can Wait;
        Midnight Express; An Unmarried Woman, Grease, Superman:
        The Movie; International Velvet; National Lampoon’s Animal
        House; Foul Play; Jaws 2; Halloween; Revenge
        of the Pink Panther
- 1979:  Kramer vs. Kramer; Apocalypse Now; All That Jazz;
        Being There;
        Breaking Away; The Onion Field; Norma Rae; Alien;
        10; The China Syndrome;
        The Muppet Movie; Rocky; Monty Python’s Life of Bryan
 
- Notable Broadway musicals of the 1970s included:
    
      - 1969-70:  Applause; Coco; Purlie
- 1970-71: Company; The Me Nobody Knows; The
        Rothschilds
- 1971-72:  Two Gentlemen of Verona; Ain’t Supposed to Die a Natural
        Death; Follies; Grease
- 1972-73:  A Little Night Music; Don’t Bother Me, I
        Can’t
        Cope; Pippin; Sugar
- 1973-74: Raisin; Over Here; Seesaw
- 1974-75:  The Wiz; Mack and Mabel; The
        Lieutenant; Shenandoah
- 1975-76:  A Chorus Line; Bubbling Brown Sugar;
        Chicago; Pacific Overtures
- 1976-77: Annie; Happy End; I Love My Wife;
        Side by Side by Sondheim
- 1977-78:  Ain’t Misbehavin’; Dancin’; On the Twentieth
        Century; Runaways
- 1978-79:  Sweeney Todd; Ballroom; The Best Little Whorehouse in
        Texas; They’re Playing Our Song
- 1979-80: Evita; Barnum;  Sugar Babies
 
- During the fifth season of the TV sitcom Happy Days in 1977,
    Fonzie, while water skiing and wearing a leather jacket, jumped over a
    shark.  Many people felt that this was an indication that the series
    had passed its peak, and was running out of good story ideas.  This led
    to the term "jumping the shark"
    to refer to the same thing in other shows.  Notable television shows of the 1970s included:
    
      - Dramas: Gunsmoke (CBS, 1955-75); Bonanza (NBC, 1959-73);
        Marcus Welby, M.D. 
    (ABC, 1969-76); Ironside  (NBC, 1967-75);
    Hawaii Five-O  (CBS, 1968-80); Medical Center  (CBS, 1969-76);
    The F.B.I.  (ABC, 1965-74); The Mod Squad  (ABC, 1968-73); Mannix  (CBS, 1967-75); Adam 12  (NBC, 1968-75);
    The Waltons  (CBS, 1972-81);  Kojak 
    (CBS, 1973-78); Cannon  (CBS, 1971-76); The Rockford Files (NBC,
        1974-80); The Six Million Dollar Man 
    (ABC, 1973-78); The Bionic Woman  (ABC, 1976-77 and NBC, 1977-78); Family
        (ABC, 1976-80); Charlie’s Angels 
    (ABC, 1976-81); Little House on the Prairie 
    (NBC, 1974-83); Dallas  (CBS,
    1978-91); The
    Love Boat  (ABC, 1977-86); Fantasy Island  (ABC, 1978-84);
- Situation Comedies:
    The Flip Wilson Show  (NBC, 1970-74); Here’s Lucy  (CBS,
        1968-74); Bewitched (ABC, 1964-72); The
    Brady Bunch  (ABC, 1969-74); All in the Family 
    (CBS, 1971-79);
    Sanford and Son  (NBC, 1972-77); Funny Face 
    (CBS, 1971);
    The Mary Tyler Moore Show  (CBS, 1970-77); The Bob Newhart Show (CBS,
        1972-78); Maude  (CBS,
    1972-78);
    Bridget Loves Bernie  (CBS, 1972-73); M*A*S*H  (CBS, 1972-83); The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour  (CBS, 1971-74);
        Chico and the Man  (NBC, 1974-78); The Jeffersons 
    (CBS, 1975-85);
    Rhoda  (CBS, 1974-78); Good Times  (CBS, 1974-79);
    Laverne and Shirley  (ABC, 1976-83);
    Phyllis  (CBS, 1975-77); Happy Days  (ABC, 1974-84);
    Three’s Company  (ABC, 1977-84);
    Alice  (CBS, 1976-85); Mork & Mindy  (ABC, 1978-82); Angie 
    (ABC, 1979-80); The Ropers  (ABC, 1979-80); Taxi (ABC/NBC,
        1978-83); The Dukes of Hazzard  (CBS,
        1979-85).
- (Otherwise) unclassified: The Wonderful World of Disney 
    (NBC, 1969-79);
    The Big Event  (NBC); Baretta  (ABC, 1975-78); One Day at a Time 
    (CBS, 1975-84); 60 Minutes  (CBS, 1968- ); Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-In (NBC,
      1968-73); Rich Man, Poor Man 
    (ABC, 1976, a mini-series); Saturday Night Live (NBC, 1975–); and The Carol Burnett Show (CBS,
      1967-78)
 
- The blockbuster television mini-series began with Centennial
    (1976) and Roots
    (1977: ABC).  Other such miniseries were I, Claudius (1976: BBC,
    but broadcast in the US later) and Shogun (1980: NBC).  Earlier
    miniseries (a term not used in Great Britain), often broadcast on PBS’s
    "Masterpiece Theater", were The Six Wives of Henry VIII
    (1972: BBC) and Elizabeth R (1972: BBC).
This list is intended to be similar to the "Mindset List",
published each year by  Beloit College. For
more information about social, political and cultural trends in the decade, see
the Wikipedia article on the 1970s.
For suggestions, additions, and
corrections to this list, please email me: tf_mcq {at} yahoo {dot} com.
References:
  - Wikipedia
- Feinstein, Stephen. The 1970s From Watergate to Disco (part of the Decades
    of the 20th Century series). Berkeley Heights, NJ: Enslow
    Publishers, Inc., 2000.  A nice summary, written about an 8th grade
    level.
See also:
  - Last updated: February 22, 2008.