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==Events==
==Events==
* [[George Seibels]] succeeded [[Albert Boutwell]] as [[Mayor of Birmingham]].
[[Image:Seal of Hoover.jpg|right|thumb|[[Hoover]] was incorporated in 1967.]]
* [[Lurleen Wallace]] succeeded [[George Wallace]] as [[Governor of Alabama]].
[[Image:Hosea Williams leading march.jpg|right|thumb|375px|Hosea Williams led marchers protesting the incarceration of [[Martin Luther King Jr]] on contempt charges in November 1967.]]
* The City of [[Hoover]] was incorporated.
* Geddes Brecher Qualls Cunningham was selected as architect for the [[BJCC]].
* Geddes Brecher Qualls Cunningham was selected as architect for the [[BJCC]].
* The first [[Jefferson County Sales Tax]] of 1% was levied.
* The first [[Jefferson County Sales Tax]] of 1% was levied.
* Plans for the 30-story [[Regions Center]] were announced.
* The [[Alabama Environmental Council|Alabama Conservancy]] was founded.
* The [[106th Observation Squadron]] participated in Operation Clove Hitch III in the Caribbean.
* The [[106th Observation Squadron]] participated in Operation Clove Hitch III in the Caribbean.
* [[John Rice]], his wife Angelena, and daughter [[Condoleezza Rice|Condoleezza]] moved to Denver, Colorado.
* [[John Rice]], his wife Angelena, and daughter [[Condoleezza Rice|Condoleezza]] moved to Denver, Colorado.
* The [[Cahaba Girl Scout Council]] opened meeting houses in public housing projects.
* The [[Cahaba Girl Scout Council]] opened meeting houses in public housing projects.
* [[Harvey Terrell]] succeeded [[Warren Whitney]] as president of [[The Club]].
* The [[Regional Planning Commission]] was certified under the Demonstration Cities and Metropolitan Development Act of 1966.
* The [[Birmingham Festival of Arts]] held a [[Salute to Japan]].
* The [[Southern Club]] was demolished to make way for the 30-story [[Regions Center|First National-Southern Natural Building]].
* [[March 15]]-[[March 19|19]]: The Sinclair Oil dinosaurs were displayed at the [[Roebuck Marketplace|Roebuck Plaza Shopping Center]].
* [[March 16]]: [[Rites of Spring (band)|Rites of Spring]] appeared on Dick Clark's "Where the Action Is" program.
* [[April 3]]: "[[The Popeye Show]]", starring [[Cousin Cliff]] aired in color for the first time.
* [[May 6]]: An [[1967 West End tornado|F2 tornado]] caused significant damage to [[West End]].
* [[October 30]]: [[Martin Luther King Jr]], [[Ralph Abernathy]], [[Wyatt Walker]], and [[A. D. King]] returned to Birmingham to surrender themselves on contempt charges stemming from the 1963 marches.
* [[November 12]]: Rector [[Cotesworth Lewis]] delivered a controversial sermon with President Lyndon Johnson in attendance at his Bruton Parish Church in Williamsburg, Virginia.
* [[December 3]]: Exotic dancer [[Velvet Blaze]] was arrested for indecency during a performance at the [[Blue Note Lounge]].
* [[Hank Ballard|Hank Ballard and The Midnighters]] split up.
* The [[Beaux Arts Krewe]] was founded to support the [[Birmingham Museum of Art]].
* [[Gage Bush Englund]] founded the Huntington Dance Ensemble on Long Island.
* The former [[Hillman Hotel]] was demolished for a parking lot.
* The [[Birmingham Urban League]] was founded.


===Business===
===Business===
* [[Frank P. Samford, Jr]] was named CEO of the [[Liberty National Life Insurance Company]].
* [[Frank Samford Jr]] was named CEO of the [[Liberty National Life Insurance Company]].
* [[Rust Engineering]] was acquired by Litton Industries.
* [[Rust Engineering]] was acquired by Litton Industries.
* [[Newman Waters]] sold [[Eastwood Mall]] to the [[Alabama Farm Bureau]].
* [[Newman Waters]] sold [[Eastwood Mall]] to the [[Alabama Farm Bureau]].
Line 20: Line 35:
* [[Tommy Charles]] opened [[Tommy Charles Imported Cars]].
* [[Tommy Charles]] opened [[Tommy Charles Imported Cars]].
* The [[Tutwiler Hotel (1914)|Tutwiler Hotel]] was bought by the [[Great Southern Investment Corporation]].
* The [[Tutwiler Hotel (1914)|Tutwiler Hotel]] was bought by the [[Great Southern Investment Corporation]].
* [[Joe Wheeler]] bought the [[Pell City Steak House]].
* [[Bruno's]] opened in a former [[Colonial Stores]] location on [[Carraway Boulevard]].
* [[Howard Bearman]] joined [[Pediatrics East]].
* [[O2 Ideas]] was founded by [[Cy Steiner]] and [[Shelley Stewart]].
* [[Oscar Adams Jr]] and [[Harvey Burg]] opened the state's first racially-integrated law practice.
* [[Eve's Leaves]] opened in [[Mountain Brook Village]].
* [[Paul Bryant]] and two other investors purchased [[Zeigler Meats]].
* [[Alan Kaufman]] opened his first [[Stand 'N Snack]] restaurant.
* [[Browdy's]] moved to the [[Hill's building]] in [[Mountain Brook Village]].
* [[Bob Sykes Bar-B-Q|Bob's Hickory Bar-B-Q]] moved from [[Central Park]] to [[Bessemer]] as [[Bob Sykes Bar-B-Q]].
* [[William Powell]] became vice-president and branch manager for the [[First National Bank of Birmingham]].
* [[Bob Watkins]] founded [[Bob Watkins Realty]].
* [[Thomas C. Brasfield Construction]] became [[Brasfield & Gorrie]].
* [[Jefferson Title Corp.]] was founded by [[E. Leon Sanders]].
* ''[[Birmingham Independent|The Birmingham Independent and the Cahaba Valley News]]'' became ''[[Birmingham Independent|The Alabama Independent and Birmingham Independent]]''
===Government===
* The City of [[Hoover]] was incorporated with [[Don Watts]] as mayor.
* [[October 12]]: [[Roosevelt City]] was incorporated.
* [[George Seibels]] succeeded [[Albert Boutwell]] as [[Mayor of Birmingham]].
* [[Lurleen Wallace]] succeeded [[George Wallace]] as [[Governor of Alabama]].
* [[Tom Bevill]] succeeded [[James Martin]] as Representative for the [[7th Congressional District of Alabama]].
* [[Thomas Stubbs]] was seated to represent [[Alabama Senate District 17]].
* The first law enabling a [[Jefferson County Occupational Tax]] was passed.
===Education===
* The [[Auburn University College of Business]] was founded.
* [[Gresham Junior High School]] was built.
* [[Lawson State Community College|Wenonah State Junior College]] graduated its first class.
* The [[University of Alabama School of Nursing]] moved from [[Tuscaloosa]] to [[Birmingham]].
* [[Roebuck Plaza Elementary School]] was closed.
* [[Perry Cannon]] took over management of [[UAB]]'s [[Mervyn H. Sterne Library|University College Library]].


===Sports===
===Sports===
* The [[Alabama Sports Hall of Fame]] was founded.
* The [[Alabama Sports Hall of Fame]] was founded.
* An Atlanta Braves vs. Southern League All-Stars exhibition game was called "on account of tornado".
* The [[1967 Birmingham A's]] won the [[Southern League]] title by 3 1/2 games.
* The [[1967 Birmingham A's]] won the [[Southern League]] title by 3 1/2 games.
* [[January 2]]: [[Alabama Crimson Tide football|Alabama]] won the Sugar Bowl 34-7 over Nebraska.
* [[July 8]]: The A's [[Reggie Jackson]] hit for the cycle in a game against Macon.
* [[July 8]]: The A's [[Reggie Jackson]] hit for the cycle in a game against Macon.
* An Atlanta Braves vs. Southern League All-Stars exhibition game was called "on account of tornado"
* [[June 17]]: [[Donald Cox]] caught a state record 40-pound channel catfish in [[Inland Lake]].
* Donald Cox caught a state record 40-pound channel catfish in [[Inland Lake]].
* [[August 12]]: The AFL's Kansas City Chiefs defeated the New York Jets 30-17 in an exhibition game at [[Legion Field]].
* [[Birmingham Vulcans RFC]] rugby team was founded.
* [[Birmingham Vulcans RFC]] rugby team was founded.
* The [[1967 Alabama Crimson Tide football]] team finished the regular season 8-2-1.
* The [[1967 Auburn Tigers football]] team finished the regular season 6-4.
* [[December 2]]: [[Kenny Stabler]] ran for the game winning touchdown in the mud-soaked [[1967 Iron Bowl]].
* [[Vida Blue]] was drafted by the Kansas City A's.
* [[Vince Gibson]] was named head football coach at Kansas State University.
* [[Tommie Reynolds]] played a season for the New York Mets.
* Quarterback [[Bart Starr]] and tackle [[Steve Wright]] helped the Green Bay Packers to an NFL Championship.
* The Atlanta Braves fired manager [[Billy Hitchcock]].
* [[Bill Yearby]] ended his football career with the Bridgeport Knights.
* [[Ted Kubiak]] made his major league debut with the Kansas City Athletics.


==Works==
==Works==
* ''Cosmic Tones for Mental Therapy'' by [[Sun Ra]] and his Myth Science Arkestra
* ''Cosmic Tones for Mental Therapy'' by [[Sun Ra]] and his Myth Science Arkestra
* ''Turn On, Tune In, Drop Out'' by [[Timothy Leary]]
* ''Odetta'' by [[Odetta]]
* "Anyway the Wind Blows"/"Don't Let Go" by the [[Rockin' Rebellions]]


===Publications===
===Publications===
* ''The Theory of Island Biogeography'' by [[E. O. Wilson]]
* [[October 26]]: The first issue of [[UAB]]'s ''[[Kaleidoscope]]'' was published.
* ''The Theory of Island Biogeography'' by Robert MacArthur & [[E. O. Wilson]]
* "Start Your Own Religion" pamphlet by [[Timothy Leary]]


===Buildings===
===Buildings===
[[Image:Central Bank building rendering.png|right|thumb|275px|Rendering for the Central Bank and Trust Building]]
* [[Birmingham Museum of Art]] east wing
* [[Birmingham Museum of Art]] east wing
* [[1967 Birmingham Police Department West Precinct|Birmingham Police Department West Precinct]] in downtown [[Ensley]]
* [[Phillips High School]] renovations
* [[Phillips High School]] renovations
* [[Highland Avenue Overpass]] over [[Elton B. Stephens Expressway]]
* [[Highland Avenue Overpass]] over [[Elton B. Stephens Expressway]]
* [[John C. Yarbrough Community Center]]
* [[John C. Yarbrough Community Center]]
* [[McElwain Baptist Church]] sanctuary
* [[McElwain Baptist Church]] sanctuary
* [[Mountain Brook City Hall (1967)]]
* [[UAB administration building|Central Bank and Trust building]]
* [[UAB administration building|Central Bank and Trust building]]
* [[Bouldin Dam]]
* [[Bouldin Dam]]
* [[Houston Blount residence]]
* [[Cliffview Apartments]]
* [[Khalaf residence]] in [[Roebuck Springs-South Roebuck]]
* [[Western Supermarket]] at [[Shades Mountain Plaza]]
* [[Western Supermarket]] at [[Shades Mountain Plaza]]
* [[Midfield Theater]]
* [[Japanese Gardens]] at the [[Birmingham Botanical Gardens]]
* [[Green Springs Shopping Center]]
* [[Gresham Junior High School]]
* construction of the [[Daniel Building]] began.
* [[Hayes High School]] library/auditorium expansion
* [[Eastwood Mall]] extension ([[Blach's]])
* [[Center Point Fire Station No. 1 (1967)|Center Point Fire Station No. 1]]
* [[Huffman High School]]
* [[Pizitz Middle School]]
* [[Shades Crest Baptist Church]], new sanctuary
* [[Timberlane Apartments]]
* Vocational building at [[Fultondale High School|New Castle High School]]
* Vocational building at [[Rogers Area Vocational Center]] in [[Gardendale]]
* [[Serenity Apartments on Valley Creek|Westlee Park]] apartments (Phase 1)
* [[November 18]]: The [[Hayden Bridge]] was destroyed by fire.


==People==
==Individuals==
* [[January 1]]: [[Duard Le Grand]] was appointed editor of the ''[[Birmingham Post-Herald]]''.
* Poet [[John Beecher]] returned to Birmingham to teach at [[Miles College]].
* Poet [[John Beecher]] returned to Birmingham to teach at [[Miles College]].
* [[U. W. Clemon|U. W.]] and [[Barbara Clemon]] were married.
* Rabbi [[Morton Wallack]] left [[Temple Beth-El]].
* Rabbi [[Morton Wallack]] left [[Temple Beth-El]].
* Rabbi [[Nahum Benathan]] left the [[Knesseth Israel Congregation]].
* [[Fritz Woehle]] served as president of [[AIA Birmingham]].
* [[Fritz Woehle]] served as president of [[AIA Birmingham]].
 
* [[Karl Seitz]] and [[Charlie Blair]] joined the staff of the ''[[Birmingham Post-Herald]]''.
===Awards===
* [[Ferd Weil]] began a 2-year term as president of [[Temple Emanu-El]].
* [[Ron McGuffie]] graduated from [[McAdory High School]]
* Engineer [[Bill Edmonds]] moved to Brussels, Belgium to head up Coppee Rust, an affiliate of [[Rust Engineering]].
* [[Earl Hilliard]] earned his juris doctorate at Howard University
* [[Harold Long]] retired from [[First Congregational Christian Church]].
* [[John Harbert III]] was named "Marketing Man of the Year in Alabama"
* Immunologist [[Max D. Cooper]] and surgeon [[Bill Holdefer]] came to [[UAB]].
* [[Shin Oh]] completed his medical residency at Georgetown University Hospital.
* [[Jimmy Piersall]] joined the New York Mets' front office staff.
* Quarterback [[Watson Brown]] was named to the Tennessee High School All-Star Football team.
* [[Ida Moffett]] became chief of nursing for the [[Baptist Health Care System]].
* [[Joseph Ellwanger]] left [[St Paul Lutheran Church]].
* [[C. Ray Shubert]] succeeded [[Henry Gary]] as pastor of [[Avondale United Methodist Church]].
* [[Barry Beckett]] came to work at [[FAME Studios]].
* Singer [[Roscoe Robinson]] left [[Wand Records]].
* [[Robert Adams]] became chief photographer for the ''[[Birmingham News]]''.
* [[Sidney Smyer Jr]] succeeded [[Sidney Smyer|his father]] as president of the [[Birmingham Realty Company]].
* Harvard College dean [[John Monro]] left Cambridge to teach at [[Miles College]] in [[Fairfield]].


===Births===
===Births===
* [[January 1]]: [[Derrick Thomas]], football player
* [[January 19]]: [[Eric Dover]], guitarist and vocalist
* [[January 19]]: [[Eric Dover]], guitarist and vocalist
* [[January 26]]: [[Giles Perkins]], attorney
* [[February 6]]: [[Kenneth Coleman]], [[Birmingham Business Alliance]] CEO
* [[February 8]]: [[Michael Ansley]], basketball player
* [[February 8]]: [[Michael Ansley]], basketball player
* [[March 23]]: [[John P. Strohm]], guitarist and attorney
* [[April 8]]: [[Angela Wells]], environmental specialist
* [[April 23]]: Siberian tigers [[Peggy]] and [[Sally]] were born at the [[Birmingham Zoo]].
* [[April 24]]: [[Omar Vizquel]], baseball player and [[2019 Birmingham Barons]] manager
* [[May 25]]: [[Ruthie Bolton]], WNBA player
* [[May 28]]: [[Keith Hall]], housing manager
* [[June 6]]: [[Kathleen Rose-Byington]], artist
* [[June 13]]: [[Ken Ward]], television reporter
* [[July 5]]: [[Alan Ogg]], basketball player
* [[July 5]]: [[Alan Ogg]], basketball player
* [[July 20]]: [[Paul DeMarco]], attorney and state legislator
* [[September 21]]: [[Jeff Trotman]], software entrepreneur
* [[September 27]]: [[Willie Wyatt]], football player
* [[October 9]]: [[Artur Davis]], U. S. Congress
* [[December 13]]: [[Mike Mordecai]], baseball player
* [[Dorothea Batiste]], Circuit Court judge
* [[John Cassimus]], entrepreneur
* [[John Cassimus]], entrepreneur
* [[Marquita Davis]], early learning specialist and former Alabama Finance Director
* [[Scott Dawson]], evangelist
* [[Tim Dyson]], truck driver
* [[Tim Dyson]], truck driver
* [[Brian Giattina]], developer and accountant
* [[Chuck Hagler]], [[Hueytown Police Department|Hueytown Police Chief]]
* [[Barbara Humphrey]], track coach
* [[Rick Journey]], television reporter
* [[Yakov Kasman]], pianist
* [[Joe Maluff]], co-owner of [[Full Moon Bar-B-Que]]
* [[Scott Myers]], executive director of the [[Alabama Sports Hall of Fame]]
* [[Eric Ramsey]], football player
* [[Seay family|Yolanda Seay]], accused murderer
* [[Warren Slater]], murderer
* [[Sheila Snoddy]], radio personality
===Graduations===
* [[Barbara Allen]] graduated from [[Ullman High School]].
* [[James Andrews]] completed his M.D. at the LSU School of Medicine.
* [[Hank Erwin]] graduated from [[Ensley High School]].
* [[Charles Gaines]] earned a Master of Fine Arts in writing at the University of Iowa.
* [[Art Hanes Jr]] earned a law degree from the [[University of Alabama]].
* [[Earl Hilliard]] earned his juris doctorate at Howard University.
* [[D. Paul Jones]] earned his juris doctorate at the New York University School of Law.
* [[Ron McGuffie]] graduated from [[McAdory High School]].
* [[Martha Myers]] earned a bachelor of arts at [[Samford University]].
* [[Shin Oh]] completed his medical residency at Georgetown University Hospital.
* [[Dannetta K. Thornton Owens]] earned an advanced certificate in French at Carleton University.
* [[James H. Woodward]] completed a doctorate in engineering mathematics at Georgia Tech.
* [[Auburn University]] awarded its first doctoral degree to an African American student.
===Marriages===
* [[June 22]]: Writer [[Fred Bonnie]] to Susan Marchant.
* [[U. W. Clemon]] to [[Barbara Clemon]]
* [[Hank Penny]] to his fifth wife, Shari.
* [[Sandy Posey]] to Elvis impersonator Wade Cummings.
===Awards===
* [[John Harbert III]] was named "Marketing Man of the Year in Alabama".
* Quarterback [[Watson Brown]] was named to the Tennessee High School All-Star Football team.
* Mary Cobb Martin's "Waiting for What?" won the purchase award from the [[Bluff Park Art Association]].
* [[Miss Alabama]]: [[Becky Alford]]
* AIA Architecture Firm Award: [[Hugh Stubbins|Hugh Stubbins and Associates]]


===Deaths===
===Deaths===
 
* [[January 16]]: [[Robert Van de Graaff]], physicist and inventor
* [[February 28]]: [[Matthew Leonard]] was killed in action in Viet Nam.
* [[April 21]]: Former [[Birmingham City Schools]] superintendent [[Charles Glenn]] died in [[Birmingham]].
* [[May 6]]: Elephant keeper [[John Todd]] died.
* [[July 1]]: Air Force general and "[[Yea Alabama!]]" composer [[Epp Sykes]] died in Cocoa Beach, Florida.
* [[December 27]]: [[Paul Lehner]], former Major League outfielder, died in [[Birmingham]].
* [[Kirk Newell]], football player and coach


:''See also: [[List of Birmingham homicides in 1967]]''
:''See also: [[List of Birmingham homicides in 1967]]''


==Context==
==Context==
1967 is remembered as the "Summer of Love", with mass "be in"s and peace demonstrations across the United States. The UK nationalized its steel industry. Gus Grissom, Ed White and Roger Chaffee died in a fire aboard the Apollo I launch vehicle. The American Basketball Association was organized. The 25th Amendment to the U. S. Constitution was ratified. Greece and Sierra Leone experienced military coups. Israel defeated Egypt, Jordan and Syria in the Six Day War. Expo '67 was held in Montreal, Quebec. Muhammad Ali refused to report for military duty. Elvis Presley married Priscilla Beaulieu. The US and USSR agree to ban nuclear weapons in outer space. Thurgood Marshall was nominated to the Supreme Court. Race riots occurred in Tampa, Buffalo, Newark, Minneapolis, Detroit, Milwaukee, and Washington DC. Pulsars and black holes were described for the first time. The Association of Southeast Asia Nations was formed. Che Guevara was executed. John McCain was taken prisoner in North Vietnam. The Corporation for Public Broadcasting was created. Robert McNamara resigned from the Johnson administration. Nicolae Ceauşescu rose to power in Romania. The Concorde aircraft was unveiled.
1967 births included those of actors Nicole Kidman, Julia Roberts, Jamie Foxx, Mira Sorvino, Laura Dern, Will Ferrell, Vin Diesel, Phillip Seymour Hoffman, and Benicio del Toro; musicians Kurt Cobain, R. Kelly, Dave Matthews; Billy Corgan, Harry Connick Jr, Faith Hill, and Tim McGraw, and athletes John Smoltz, Kenny Lofton, Deion Sanders, and Ty Detmer.
Deaths in 1967 included those of assassins Jack Ruby and Felix Yussupov; revolutionary Che Guevara, musicians Nelson Eddy, Woody Guthrie, Otis Redding and John Coltrane; artists Edward Hopper and René Magritte; writer Langston Hughes; poet Carl Sandburg; actors Claude Rains, Jayne Mansfield, Vivian Leigh and Spencer Tracy
The Nobel Peace Prize was not awarded in 1967. ''A Man for All Seasons'' swept the Academy Awards. Top grossing films include ''The Jungle Book'', ''The Graduate'', ''Guess Who's Coming to Dinner'', ''Bonnie and Clyde'' and ''The Dirty Dozen''. Albums released in 1967 included the Beatles' "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band", debuts by Pink Floyd, the Grateful Dead, the Velvet Underground, the Jimi Hendrix Experience and the Doors. Top singles included "A Whiter Shade of Pale" by Procol Harum, "I'm a Believer" by the Monkees, and "All You Need is Love" by the Beatles. Super Bowl I was simulcast on CBS an NBC (while the Rolling Stones made their Ed Sullivan Show debut on CBS). "Flipper" and "Gilligan's Island" both got canceled during the year while "The Newlywed Game" and "Mannix" premiered.


{{Decade box|196|195|197}}
{{Decade box|196|195|197}}
[[Category:1967|*]]
[[Category:1967|*]]

Latest revision as of 13:07, 17 August 2023

1967 was the 96th year after the founding of the city of Birmingham.

Events

Hoover was incorporated in 1967.
Hosea Williams led marchers protesting the incarceration of Martin Luther King Jr on contempt charges in November 1967.

Business

Government

Education

Sports

Works

Publications

Buildings

Rendering for the Central Bank and Trust Building

Individuals

Births

Graduations

Marriages

Awards

Deaths

See also: List of Birmingham homicides in 1967

Context

1967 is remembered as the "Summer of Love", with mass "be in"s and peace demonstrations across the United States. The UK nationalized its steel industry. Gus Grissom, Ed White and Roger Chaffee died in a fire aboard the Apollo I launch vehicle. The American Basketball Association was organized. The 25th Amendment to the U. S. Constitution was ratified. Greece and Sierra Leone experienced military coups. Israel defeated Egypt, Jordan and Syria in the Six Day War. Expo '67 was held in Montreal, Quebec. Muhammad Ali refused to report for military duty. Elvis Presley married Priscilla Beaulieu. The US and USSR agree to ban nuclear weapons in outer space. Thurgood Marshall was nominated to the Supreme Court. Race riots occurred in Tampa, Buffalo, Newark, Minneapolis, Detroit, Milwaukee, and Washington DC. Pulsars and black holes were described for the first time. The Association of Southeast Asia Nations was formed. Che Guevara was executed. John McCain was taken prisoner in North Vietnam. The Corporation for Public Broadcasting was created. Robert McNamara resigned from the Johnson administration. Nicolae Ceauşescu rose to power in Romania. The Concorde aircraft was unveiled.

1967 births included those of actors Nicole Kidman, Julia Roberts, Jamie Foxx, Mira Sorvino, Laura Dern, Will Ferrell, Vin Diesel, Phillip Seymour Hoffman, and Benicio del Toro; musicians Kurt Cobain, R. Kelly, Dave Matthews; Billy Corgan, Harry Connick Jr, Faith Hill, and Tim McGraw, and athletes John Smoltz, Kenny Lofton, Deion Sanders, and Ty Detmer.

Deaths in 1967 included those of assassins Jack Ruby and Felix Yussupov; revolutionary Che Guevara, musicians Nelson Eddy, Woody Guthrie, Otis Redding and John Coltrane; artists Edward Hopper and René Magritte; writer Langston Hughes; poet Carl Sandburg; actors Claude Rains, Jayne Mansfield, Vivian Leigh and Spencer Tracy

The Nobel Peace Prize was not awarded in 1967. A Man for All Seasons swept the Academy Awards. Top grossing films include The Jungle Book, The Graduate, Guess Who's Coming to Dinner, Bonnie and Clyde and The Dirty Dozen. Albums released in 1967 included the Beatles' "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band", debuts by Pink Floyd, the Grateful Dead, the Velvet Underground, the Jimi Hendrix Experience and the Doors. Top singles included "A Whiter Shade of Pale" by Procol Harum, "I'm a Believer" by the Monkees, and "All You Need is Love" by the Beatles. Super Bowl I was simulcast on CBS an NBC (while the Rolling Stones made their Ed Sullivan Show debut on CBS). "Flipper" and "Gilligan's Island" both got canceled during the year while "The Newlywed Game" and "Mannix" premiered.

1960s
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