There are several things that I love about this postcard. To begin with, and probably least important, I live about an hour away from Grand Forks, North Dakota. I'm reasonably familiar with the city, although I not with this Holiday Inn (which might be because it either no longer exists, or is no longer in this form due to remodeling). Another is just the sheer mundaneness of a postcard with a generic Holiday Inn on it--apparently there was no better postcard image for Jim to send to his parents in Memphis.
Which leads to another thing I love about it: how it represents a form of communication that is now nearly defunct, yet once was a vital method of relaying information. Jim didn't send this postcard because he was on vacation in Grand Forks; he sent it because he had just arrived in GF for school at UND and wanted to tell his parents (I presume that is who "M & D" are). Today, we would send a text message via cell phone, or maybe an e-mail, or just make a phone call (via cell or landline) to relay such information.
In 1971, though, a postcard probably was the most efficient and logical way of relaying this information. Cell phones, of course, were not even a glimmer in Nokia's eye. Long distance phone calls were expensive and were reserved for truly special occasions, or emergencies. Likewise for telegrams. (Talk about defunct forms of communication.) And Jim's message didn't require sending an entire letter--his brief bit of information and new campus address fit quite nicely on the back of the postcard he found in the hotel room he stayed in before moving into his dorm room, thank you very much.
Dateline: 1971
Blogging the Year of My Birth
5.28.2009
12.09.2008
Early-1970s Knick-Knacks & Tchotchkes: Mail Order Catalog from October 1970
Here, from a picture set on Flickr (which you can view in the slideshow above or click to directly), is a great relic from the early-1970s: a mail-order catalog from an outfit called Foster House. This thing is filled with all kinds of mainly worthless but absolutely compelling little things such as knick-knacks, personal hygienic items, and household objects. Totally mundane 38 years ago, the stuff that populates these pages is now totally fascinating. Just browsing the pages causes flashbacks of the '70s. Some of mine are:
• wicker paper plate holders (p. 4 of the catalog), of the kind that my family used for decades (and I think may still use) at our annual family reunion;
• calendars printed on towels (p. 5...and 13...and 18...and 23; what was up with these?)--I remember a variety of great-grandparents and older folks having these hung in their homes;
• crayons for coloring on yourself in the bathtub (p. 7); I actually have a picture of myself and my sister (at ages approximately 4 and 2) in the bathtub with these;
• expanding peg racks for coffee cups (p. 13); I think most of my relatives had one of these hung right next to their towel calendars;
• goofy decorative light switch plates (p. 13...and 18...and 22; almost as popular as the towel calendars, but not quite); while I don't actually have specific memories of these, they are characteristic of the kind of baroque interior decor that prevailed in the '70s (macrame anyone?);
• and, finally, speaking of baroque: "Victorian filigree frames" (p. 23); I had no idea that this is what these were called (nor, probably, did most of the people who had them back then), but I think many of my relatives and friends' families had these (hung, that's right, near their towel calendars)--for all of my childhood my parents' had their wedding portrait in one of these (color of baby blue, if you must know).
This catalog is packed with curiosities, completely apart from my memories (or yours). Check out the old credit card logos on p. 3 (Bank Americard, now Visa, and Master Charge, now Master Card). Among the things in the catalog I wish I'd had in the '70s is the magnetic wrist tic-tac-toe (p. 9). I could go on, but won't, except to recommend the Flickr user who posted this catalog, who goes by the handle of Wishbook. In addition to this kind of catalog, he also posts old Sears and Penney's Christmas catalogs--in their entirety! I've noticed that he's got a 1971 Sears catalog--hmmm, perhaps a future "D:71" posting?
12.01.2008
D:71-TV: "The Tonight Show" with guest host Burt Reynolds (Sept. 13, 1971)
Former "Tonight Show" host Johnny Carson was famous for not working--and for having a plethora of guest hosts sit in for him. Here's an excerpt from a September 1971 "Tonight Show" episode guest hosted by Burt Reynolds (who seems like an odd guest host choice to us now.) This is the opening segment of the episode (during which Burt's guests were Charo, Alex Karras, "Tonight Show" stalwart The Amazing Kreskin, and the newly-crowned Miss America), including a funky opening title sequence with neon-like imagery (preceded by the NBC peacock animation!) and Reynolds' monologue.
In the monologue Reynolds jokes about how infrequently Carson hosted his own show, indicating that Johnny's lax work ethic had already taken root and become famous at this (for Carson's tenure) fairly early date. Almost all of the jokes that Reynolds' cracks are woefully bad, proving that ability to deliver a monologue was not a prerequisite for the job of guest host. (Indeed, Johnny probably liked it that way, meaning he would not be shown up by a sub.)
(Length: 5:21; video source: YouTube)
11.07.2008
Woolworth's Stereo Spectacular '71
Here's a "spectacular" TV ad from 1971 for Woolworth's variety stores, featuring record albums and 8-track tapes. (It occurs to me that none of those three things--Woolworth's, record albums, or 8-track tapes--are around anymore.) Albums are on sale for $1.57 or 87¢, while 8-tracks come in at a wallet-busting $2.99. Some of the artists featured in this ad are head scratchers: Jack Jones? Petula Clark? Herb Alpert? Not exactly spectacular by the standards we now have for popular music of the late-1960s and early-1970s.
While the ad's groovy graphics are fun to look at, more interesting is the implication the ad makes for how popular music was marketed and sold in 1971. Obviously, this was before digital music downloads on iTunes or elsewhere, but it was also before Best Buy existed and before discount store chains like Target and Wal-Mart became the music-selling behemoths they are today. Woolworth's was a venerable variety store chain that had locations everywhere in the US, but with most of them in downtown or inner city locations. Records and tapes were only one of many product lines featured in the stores, so it's interesting too that they were given special (spectacular even!) treatment in a commercial such as this.
8.28.2006
West German Chancellor Willy Brandt Leads 1971 Nobel Prize Laureates
1971 was, of course, in the era when Germany was split into the democratic West and the Communist East. The Nobel Peace Prize that year was won by the West German Chancellor Willy Brandt, who was selected because of his efforts at improving his country's relations with East Germany, Poland, and the Soviet Union.
Other Nobel laureates from '71 included Pablo Neruda for literature, Dennis Gabor for physics, and Simon Kuznets for economics. The Nobel Prizes were begun by Alfred Nobel, who had made a fortune off of the invention of the explosive dynamite and wanted to redeem himself in light of the destruction his creation had caused. The Nobel Prizes in literature, psychics, medicine, economics, chemistry, and peace were the result of that desire, with the peace prize serving as the most important as it recognized efforts to counteract the kind of warfare that Nobel's dynamite had made possible.
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