1973: Difference between revisions

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==Individuals==
==Individuals==
* [[John Harbert III]] chaired the Governor's Energy Advisory Committee
* [[James Andrews]] joined the orthopedic practice of Jack Hughston in Columbus, Georgia.
* [[Ron McGuffie]] joined the [[Jefferson County Sheriff's Office]]
* [[Tom Bradley]] retired from the [[Birmingham Fire and Rescue Service]].
* [[Amasa Smith]] succeeded [[George Mattison, Jr]] as president of [[The Club]]
* [[Cecil Coghlan]] returned to [[UAB]] as a visiting professor.
* [[Virginia Tyler]] retired from directing the [[Ensley Community House]].
* [[Rick Dees]] began hosting a morning drive program on [[WSGN-AM]].
* [[Timothy Leary]] was arrested on a plane headed to Kabul, Afghanistan.
* [[Paschal English]] left the U. S. Air Force as a Captain.
* [[Betty Gamble]] joined the [[Birmingham Police Department]]
* [[Betty Gamble]] joined the [[Birmingham Police Department]]
* [[Joseph Giattina, Jr]] joined [[Giattina Aycock Architecture Studio|Giattina Fisher Aycock]].
* [[Joseph Giattina, Jr]] joined [[Giattina Aycock Architecture Studio|Giattina Fisher Aycock]].
* [[Rick Dees]] began hosting a morning drive program on [[WSGN-AM]].
* [[John Harbert III]] chaired the Governor's Energy Advisory Committee.
* [[Ruby Kile]] took over the radio ministry of the [[Powderly Faith Deliverance Center]].
* [[Ruby Kile]] took over the radio ministry of the [[Powderly Faith Deliverance Center]].
* [[James Andrews]] joined the orthopedic practice of Jack Hughston in Columbus, Georgia.
* [[Timothy Leary]] was arrested on a plane headed to Kabul, Afghanistan.
* [[Paschal English]] left the U. S. Air Force as a Captain.
* [[Ron McGuffie]] joined the [[Jefferson County Sheriff's Office]].
* [[Cecil Coghlan]] returned to [[UAB]] as a visiting professor.
* [[Mae Rosenberger]] became the first woman elected to the Board of Directors of the National Luggage Retailers Association.
* [[Tom Bradley]] retired from the [[Birmingham Fire and Rescue Service]].
* [[Amasa Smith]] succeeded [[George Mattison, Jr]] as president of [[The Club]].
* [[Virginia Tyler]] retired from directing the [[Ensley Community House]].


===Births===
===Births===

Revision as of 15:07, 12 February 2011

Brookwood Village opened in 1973

1973 was the 102nd year after the founding of the city of Birmingham.

Events

Government

Business

Dugan's logo.png

Sports

Works

Books

Buildings

Films and TV

Music

Individuals

Births

Awards

Graduations

Deaths

See also: List of Birmingham homicides in 1973

Context

1973 was the year that the Miami Dolphins completed a perfect NFL season with a win over the Redskins in Super Bowl VII. Ferdinand Marcos became President of the Philippines. Richard Nixon began his second term as President. The Supreme Court ruled in favor of abortion rights in Roe v. Wade. George Foreman won the heavyweight championship from Joe Frazier. The Vietnam War ended. Comet Kahoutek was discovered. The first cellular phone call was completed. The World Trade Center twin towers opened, soon followed by Chicago's Sears Tower. Federal Express was launched. Secretariat won the Triple Crown. Skylabs 1-4 were launched. The automatic teller machine was patented. The Watergate Scandal broke. An energy crisis was triggered by an Arab oil embargo. Gerald Ford succeeded Spiro Agnew as Vice-President. The Buffalo Bills' O. J. Simpson rushed for 2,000 yards. Henry Kissinger and Le Duc Tho shared the Nobel Peace Price.

Notable 1973 births include those of singer Sean Paul, boxer Oscar de la Hoya, gymnast Svetlana Boginskaya, quarterback Steve McNair, actress Tori Spelling, models Heidi Klum and Tyra Banks, actor Neil Patrick Harris, baseball players Nomar Garciaparra and Ichiro Suzuki, comedian Dave Chappelle, rapper Nas, animator Seth McFarlane, tennis player Monica Seles, and cyclist Jan Ullrich.

Deaths in 1973 included those of musicians Kid Ory, Gene Krupa, Bobby Darin, Jim Croce and Gram Parsons, actors Edward G. Robinson and Bruce Lee, writers Pearl Buck and J. R. R. Tolkein, artist Pablo Picasso, actress Veronica Lake, and poets Pablo Neruda and W. H. Auden.

Notable works of 1973 include William Friedkin's fim The Exorcist, Thomas Pynchon's novel Gravity's Rainbow, Pink Floyd's album Dark Side of the Moon. Other box office hits included The Sting, American Graffiti, Papillon, The Way We Were and Magnum Force. Hit singles included "Angie" by the Rolling Stones and "Tie a Yellow Ribbon 'round the Old Oak Tree" by Tony Orlando and Dawn. The Pulitzer Prize for Fiction went to Eudora Welty's The Optimist's Daughter.


1970s
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Births - Deaths - Establishments - Events - Works