American Decades
The Boys on the Bus
Memoir
By: Timothy Crouse
Date: 1973
Source: Crouse, Timothy. The Boys on the Bus. New York: Random House, 1973, 3–8, 10–15.
About the Author: Timothy Crouse (1947–), New York City native, completed his bachelor's degree at Harvard University in 1968. After a tour in the Peace Corps, he wrote for the Boston Herald, before joining the staff of Rolling Stone as a contributing editor from 1971 to 1975. While at the magazine, he covered the presidential campaign of South Dakota senator George S. McGovern, the subject of his 1973 book The Boys on the Bus.
Introduction
Through the 1970s, journalists adopted a mostly deferential tone when reporting on public figures. Pictures of President Franklin D. Roosevelt (served 1933–1945), who was confined to a wheelchair after a crippling bout of polio, were never publicized; nor did reports...
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1970's Government and Politics Primary Sources
- The End of the Vietnam War
- Law and Order
- "Presidential Speech Announcing Acceptance of an Invitation to Visit the People's Republic of China"
- A Thaw in the Cold War
- Dark Days in the White House
- "Text of Address by McGovern Accepting the Democratic Presidential Nomination"
- From Victor to Vanquished
- The Boys on the Bus
- Why Not the Best
- "Is America Turning Right?"
- "Foreign Affairs: The Need for Leadership"
- Harvard Hates America: The Odyssey of a Born-Again American
- A National Malaise
- I'm Mad as Hell: The Exclusive Story of the Tax Revolt and Its Leader
- Yellow Ribbon: The Secret Journal of Bruce Laingen
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
