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TIME: Almanac 1990
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1990 Time Magazine Compact Almanac, The (1991)(Time).iso
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70s
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70edi
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1990-10-28
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Editor's Note
The 1970s seems a period of mixed gains and losses: detente between
the U.S. and the Soviet Union set against broad Soviet gains in the
Third World; the fall of the Indochinese states to ruthless Communist
regimes v. the revival of a pragmatic, outward-looking China; the
return of several Western European countries to democracy v. bloody
tyranny and widespread torture and human rights abuses in much of the
world; peace at last between Israel and its most powerful Arab
neighbor, Egypt, against a background of Palestinian terrorism that
cost dozens of lives and disrupted millions.
For the U.S. the 1970s were a decade of diminished prestige abroad
and self-doubt at home, caused by the Viet Nam debacle, the Watergate
scandal and deepening economic crisis. Yet by 1976, Aemericans could
celebrate not only the nation's Bicentennial but the vidndication of
a political system that had survived the strains and corruption to
which Watergate had subjected it. The decade also saw the rise of the
women's movement, the first sustained efforts to clean up the
environment and humankind's furthest reach yet into the cosmos.
TIME CAPSULE/THE 70s has been adapted and condensed from the
contents of TIME, The Weekly Newsmagazine. The words, except for the
connecting passages brackets [], are those of the magazine itself. The
date at the beginning of each excerpt is the issue date of the
magazine.
To an editor living in the late 1980s, the 1970s is the day before
yesterday. It is extremely difficult to evaluate what happened as
recently as nine or ten years ago with the same criteria as are used
on the events of ninety or even nineteen years ago; we simply do not
yet have the perspective to judge what was really important. At such
a close remove, journalism is more than ever the first draft of
history.
TIME of a decade or more ago reflected attitudes very similar to
our own, but also subtly different (viz. the treatment of women's
issues). That is why it is important to remember that the acts of
selecting the texts and writing the bridging passages reflect the
assumptions and attitudes, conscious or unconscious, of this decade
and of the editor.