Album cover for "The Basement Tapes" (1975), by Bob Dylan and the Band, featuring the dog, Hamlet, in the foreground. "That's really the way to do a...
Latest post from my new project, AmeriDogs, available on Facebook, Instagram, and—soon—Tumblr.
NASA

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hello vonnie
Jules of Nature
Cosimo Galluzzi
Misplaced Lens Cap
dirt enthusiast
Stranger Things
noise dept.
wallacepolsom

izzy's playlists!
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ojovivo
trying on a metaphor

oozey mess
Three Goblin Art
we're not kids anymore.
Today's Document
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@mn70s
Album cover for "The Basement Tapes" (1975), by Bob Dylan and the Band, featuring the dog, Hamlet, in the foreground. "That's really the way to do a...
Latest post from my new project, AmeriDogs, available on Facebook, Instagram, and—soon—Tumblr.
For The Woman With A Mind Of Her Own
In 1978, Kimberly Clothing was a subsidiary of General Mills. This ad appeared in Vogue magazine and proved Kimberly was HIGH fashion! Hipsters.
Hi! I'm doing a school project on former state sen. Allan Spear and in the process of my research I came across your post about him. I'm wondering where you got all your information and the article picture, as I'm having trouble. Thanks!
The photo came from a pretty obscure collection at the Minnesota Historical Society. If you haven't done so already, you should probably start with Spear's autobiography, Crossing the Barriers. If you want to go deeper, I would suggest visiting the Minnesota Historical Society, where you can look through Spear's legislative records.Good luck!
I'm looking for the owner of the image of the Mankato monument (c.1970) to perhaps use it in an article I'm writing. Any help you can provide would be appreciated.
All I have is the web site cited on my tumblr post: http://ravenmn.buzznet.com/photos/default/?id=7148481Good luck!
Robert Whitman Photographs Prince, 1977
Installation will feature Revealing, Never Before Seen images of the Funky Pop Icon taken in his hometown of Minneapolis, Minnesota. On the Streets and in his manager’s home these portraits are probing and insightful. They show the honest, the moody and the playful sides of a burgeoning talent that was about to assault our senses and sexual sensibilities through his highly charged music while changing the definition of a pop star.
Opens February 20th, at Mr. Musichead Gallery in Los Angeles.
Joan Mondale and Artist Georgia O'Keeffe, 1977 (by John Duricka/AP) Joan Mondale established herself as one of the country's most passionate advocates for the arts during the years her husband, Walter Mondale, served U.S. vice president. "Joan of Art" died Monday at the age of 83. Photo via New York Daily News
Pete Seeger, Minneapolis, 1972, and Thank You Note to a Young Alan Freed
In early October 1972, folk music icon Pete Seeger came to the Twin Cities for a performance at Northrop Auditorium on the University of Minnesota campus. While he was here, he stayed with friends at their home on South Cedar Lake Road. At some point during his stay, a neighbor kid named Alan Freed showed up at the door with a new Sears cassette recorder, asking for an interview. Forty-two years later, a somewhat older Alan Freed has posted a link to that 10-minute interview as a memorial. Pete Seeger died Monday at the age of 94.
Alan Freed's interview with Pete Seeger
Alan Freed's Facebook page
Postcard and audio © Alan Freed, photo © Amy Winters Galberth, Ellie Borkon
Operator Sigrid Gellerstadt on Her Last Day at the Switchboard in Cotton, Minnesota, 1975 Hard to believe, but during the early 1970s there were still some places in Minnesota where you needed an operator to place a phone call. On January 18, 1975, the telephone exchange in Cotton, about 35 miles north of Duluth, switched to an automatic dial system, making it the last exchange in Minnesota to abandon hand-cranked magneto telephones. Photo via Minnesota Historical Society
"Co-op War" Factions Face Off Outside Mill City Foods, Minneapolis, 1976
Tensions between two competing factions in the Twin Cities food cooperative movement turned violent on January 9, 1976, when several members of the "Co-op Organization," or "CO," assaulted two workers at Minneapolis’s Seward Community Co-op. The CO was a group of politically-motivated activists dedicated to serving the interests of the working class. Opposing them were the more loosely organized “whole foods” folks who wanted to provide healthful and socially-responsible alternatives to the big grocery stores. The take-over at Seward was brief and helped galvanize opposition to the CO and its methods. By the end of the decade, it was clear that "hippy," whole food types had defeated the “Marxists” in what are now known as the Twin Cities co-op wars.
Photo via Minnesota Historical Society
P.S. We're giving away 10 signed copies of Minnesota in the 70s at Goodreads!
Sears DieHard Commercial, 1970s
As I struggled—and failed—to revive my nephew’s car in minus-20 temperatures early this morning, my mind drifted back to this classic 1970s commercial set in frigid International Falls.
Immediate Aftermath of Dave Forbes's Attack on Henry Boucha, 1975
There were about four minutes left in the first period of the January 4, 1975, game between the Minnesota North Stars and the Boston Bruins when the Bruins’ Dave Forbes took out his frustrations on Henry Boucha’s head. The two skaters had just returned to the ice after serving concurrent penalties. Boucha’s North Stars teammate Murray Oliver picked up the story from there:
Forbes came out of the penalty box and let Henry have it from behind with a butt end [of his stick]. I saw the blood right away, and Henry went down, face first. He obviously couldn’t see because of the blood, and Forbes jumped on his back and was still throwing punches.
The Bruins went on to defeat the stunned North Stars 8-0. The Minneapolis Tribune called it “the ugliest hockey game in the history of Metropolitan Sports Center.” Two weeks later, a Hennepin County grand jury indicted Forbes on charges of aggravated assault with a dangerous weapon (his hockey stick). It was the first time that a professional athlete was prosecuted in the United States for a crime allegedly committed during a sporting event. The trial, held later that year, ended with a hung jury.
Boucha suffered serious damage to his eye socket as a result of the attack. He was never the same player after that.
Screen Grabs from YouTube: BOS @ Minnesota North Stars 1/4/75 Part 3
Disrobed Customers at the Electric Fetus, Minneapolis, 1972 (above); The Electric Fetus at Its Original Cedar Riverside Location, 1972 (below)
The building that was nearly destroyed today in an explosion and fire in south Minneapolis's Cedar-Riverside neighborhood was the original location of the iconic Electric Fetus record shop. In memoriam, here's an earlier MN70s post regarding one of the more infamous moments in Fetus history:
Facing eviction from their original location at 514 Cedar Avenue, and looking to unload excess inventory, the owners of the Electric Fetus record shop hit on an idea sure to appeal to early 1970s Cedar-Riverside “freakos”—a “Naked Sale.” The promotion, which took place on Saturday, March 25, 1972, attracted about 50 uninhibited customers who were more than happy to shed their clothes in exchange for a free album (regularly $3.99) and stash pipe. Legend has it that public outcry over the “Naked Sale” led to the Fetus’s eviction, but the decision to boot the store had come much earlier. The Fetus moved into its current location at the corner of 4th Avenue and Franklin later that year.
Photos via Minnesota Daily (above) and Minnesota Historical Society (below)
Federal Judge Earl Larson, Minneapolis, 1972
The sweaty power walker shown in this photograph is the man who opened the door to free agency in the National Football League. On December 30, 1975, U.S. District Judge Earl Larson ruled that the NFL's long-standing "Rozelle Rule"—the device the league employed to bind each player to a single team—violated federal antitrust laws. The rule was, he wrote, an "unreasonable" and "perpetual restriction on a player, following him throughout his career." Larson's ruling was the first in a series of court decisions that forced NFL team owners to accept free agency. It also established the U.S. Courthouse in Minneapolis as a kind of legal nirvana for NFL players.
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Photo via Minnesota Historical Society
Target Christmas Ads, Early- to Mid-1970s
Everything from 89-cent cassette tapes to $23.98 leisure suits!
Images via A Bullseye View
"Ground-breaking Ceremonies," 1976 (by Scott Long)
This cartoon, published in the Minneapolis Tribune in 1976, is a reminder of just how long and ugly the battle to build a domed stadium in downtown Minneapolis really was. The Twins and Vikings started pushing in the early 1970s for a new home to replace old Met Stadium in Bloomington. It wasn't until December 20, 1979, that the teams and the city broke ground on the shrine to cut-corners that would eventually be known as the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome. Now, 34 years later, the dome is about a month away from demolition. Here's to planned obsolescence!
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Image via Scott Long Political Cartoon Collection, Minnesota Historical Society
The Willmar 8 During Their First Days on the Picket Line, 1977
On the morning of December 16, 1977, eight female employees of Citizens National Bank in Willmar, Minnesota, went on strike to protest what they considered unequal pay and unequal opportunities for advancement at their place of employment. It was the first ever strike against a Minnesota bank. The strike dragged on for nearly two years without resolution. It officially ended in 1979 when the National Labor Relations Board ruled that while the bank had engaged in unfair labor practices, the women had gone on strike for purely economic reasons. That meant the strikers had no right to back pay or rehiring. By most conventional measures, the strike failed, but the actions of the “Willmar 8” raised awareness of gender discrimination in the workplace and inspired a new generation of women’s rights activists.
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Image via Minnesota Historical Society
King Donovan as Scrooge in the Guthrie's Debut Production of A Christmas Carol, 1975
By the mid 1970s, the Guthrie Theater had been staging world-class productions for more than a decade, but it still hadn’t figured out how to attract audiences during the tough winter holiday season. That all changed on December 10, 1975, when the Guthrie premiered Barbara Fields’s adaptation of Charles Dickens’s A Christmas Carol. The show garnered glowing reviews (even the Minneapolis Star’s humbug-ish arts critic, Don Morrison, admitted whistling a Christmas tune on his way out of the theater), and audiences flocked to see it. In the years that followed, A Christmas Carol established itself as a reliable revenue generator for the Guthrie and a holiday tradition for many Twin Cities families.
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Photo via Guthrie Theater