April 1967

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April 27, 1967: Expo '67 World's Fair opens in Montreal[1]
April 27, 1967: Ostankino Tower finished
April 19, 1967: Surveyor 3 digs holes in the Moon
April 24, 1967: Cosmonaut Vladimir Komarov killed on Soyuz 1 mission

The following events occurred in April 1967:

April 1, 1967 (Saturday)

  • The
    Alexander M. Haig, would win the Distinguished Service Cross for his heroism in flying into gunfire and defending against multiple assaults against the American encampment; Haig would rise through the ranks quickly, becoming a general two years later, and retiring as a four-star general in 1979.[2] The U.S. Army lost 17 men, compared to 609 Viet Cong soldiers.[3]
  • UPI news bureau in an attempt to confirm the story. "Belief in the story was increased," a UPI dispatch noted, "because there are no week-end newspapers in Switzerland and television does not start broadcasting until 6 p.m."[4]
  • The United States Department of Transportation, created as a cabinet-level department separate from the U.S. Department of Commerce, began operations at 400 Seventh Street S.W. in Washington. As part of the opening day celebrations, new Transportation Secretary Alan S. Boyd arrived "in a horse-drawn omnibus" and "piloted a large yellow balloon" 20 feet (6.1 m) above the National Mall.[5]
  • French Prime Minister Georges Pompidou and his cabinet resigned in an apparent political maneuver to get a mandate of approval from the incoming National Assembly.[6]
  • In the
    ABC Sports
    .

April 2, 1967 (Sunday)

  • Local elections began in 1,004 of the 2,526 villages in South Vietnam, despite threats by the Viet Cong to attack polling places. The other 1,522 villages were either not in a secured area or were under the control of Viet Cong rebels. Village elections would be held every Sunday through May 7 as the new South Vietnamese constitution took effect.[7]
  • A United Nations delegation arrived in Aden as it approached independence. They would leave five days later, after accusing British authorities of a lack of cooperation. The British would say the delegation had not contacted them in advance.[8][9]
  • Born: Renée Estevez, American TV and film actress, daughter of actors Janet Sheen and Martin Sheen, and younger sister of actors Emilio Estevez, Ramon Estevez and Charlie Sheen; in New York City
  • Died:

April 3, 1967 (Monday)

  • Larry O'Brien, the United States Postmaster General (and the future Commissioner of the National Basketball Association) said in a speech that the U.S. Department of the Post Office should be abolished and replaced by a nonprofit government corporation. "If we ran our telephone system the way we run the post office, the carrier pigeon business would still have a great future," O'Brien told a gathering of magazine publishers and editors.[10] The Postal Reorganization Act would be signed in 1970 and the cabinet-level department would be replaced on July 1, 1971 by the U.S. Postal Service.
  • The island kingdom of Tonga adopted a new, decimal system of currency in advance of its full independence from the United Kingdom, replacing the Tongan pound, whose value had been tied to the Australian pound (and, for its final year, worth two Australian dollars). Whereas the Tongan pound had been divisible into 20 Tongan shillings or 240 Tongan pence, the new currency, the paʻanga (T$) could be divided into 100 seniti. The pa'anga was worth 10 Tongan shillings, and its value was on a par with one Australian dollar.[11]

April 4, 1967 (Tuesday)

  • By a vote estimated to be 139 to 11 in favor, the parliament of Spain amended the nation's criminal code to provide for terms of up to six years in prison for journalists who were convicted of repeatedly criticizing the government, and up to six months for publishing any news deemed to be "false reports or information dangerous for morals or good customs, or contrary to the exigencies of national defense, of the security of the state, or of the maintenance of internal public order and external peace." Journalists could also be incarcerated if they showed a lack of "due respect for institutions and individuals when criticizing political administrative action", including anything seen as an "attack" on the government of President Francisco Franco.[12]
  • In a speech titled Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break Silence, his strongest antiwar declaration up to that time, Martin Luther King Jr. denounced U.S. involvement in Vietnam and related his own discussions with African-Americans in the past several months. "I could never again raise my voice against the violence of the oppressed in the ghettos," King said, "without first having spoken clearly to the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today, our own government." King, who would be assassinated exactly one year later, addressed a gathering at the Riverside Church in New York City.[13][14]
  • Johnny Carson quit his job as host of The Tonight Show, the day after the NBC network had broadcast another rerun of one of his prior shows. Carson had not performed while the AFTRA strike continued against the American TV and radio networks.[15] During the two weeks after the AFTRA strike failed, singer Jimmy Dean and comedian Bob Newhart took over hosting duties. Carson would receive a raise and return on April 24.[16]
  • The popular Peanuts comic strip entered a new era with the introduction of a new character that would later be given the name "Woodstock".[17] The tiny bird, who landed on Snoopy, would become the dog's sidekick, and the comic would gradually shift from the misfortunes of Charlie Brown to the adventures of dog and bird.[18]
  • Died:

April 5, 1967 (Wednesday)

  • Police in West Berlin arrested 11 people, most of them students, on accusations they planned to assassinate U.S. Vice President
    Spassguerrilla group, dedicated to humorous protests, would be released 34 hours later, after Humphrey's departure and after a search of their apartments showed that they were harmless and that their attack on the Humphrey motorcade would consist of wheat flour, soluble paint, pies and the Vice President's favorite dessert, pudding.[20]
  • Corazon Amurao, the only eyewitness to Richard Speck's murder of eight nurses on July 13, 1966, testified in his criminal trial in Peoria, Illinois, and pointed him out as the man who had killed her roommates. Miss Amurao had seen Speck when she opened the door to the bedroom she shared with two fellow nurses, but had been able to hide under a bed during the killings.[21]
  • Prime Minister of the Netherlands, replacing Jelle Zijlstra after the February parliamentary elections.[22]
  • Born: Anu Garg, Indian-born American writer and creator of Wordsmith.org site; in Meerut
  • Died: Hermann Joseph Muller, 76, American geneticist, recipient of the 1946 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine

April 6, 1967 (Thursday)

Jet Shoe test run at Langley Research Center
  • Manned Spacecraft Center (MSC) Director of Flight Crew Operations, requested that the proposed T-020 "Jet Shoes" experiment be removed from all Apollo Applications Program (AAP) flights. The "Jet Shoes" experiment was an astronaut maneuvering system consisting of two small thrusters mounted one beneath each foot and oriented so that the thrust vectors passed close to the center of body mass with legs and feet in a comfortable position. During January, several astronauts tested an engineering development model of the "Jet Shoes" on the MSC air bearing facility. Although the tests by the astronauts were shirt-sleeve runs, a Langley Research Center (LaRC) test pilot made several runs in an inflated pressure suit. The results were unsatisfactory. In his objections to the experiment, Slayton suggested that its attempted use by an astronaut wearing a life support unit would provide extremely poor visibility.[23]
  • U.S. Supreme Court, which would, on March 22, 1972, reverse the lower courts in the case of Eisenstadt v. Baird.[25]
  • Marking the largest ransom in United States history up to that time, the president of a bank in Beverly Hills, California, paid $250,000 for the safe release of his 11-year-old son, who had been kidnapped from his home three days earlier.[26] A few days short of three years later, Ronald Lee Miller, an investigator for the Internal Revenue Service, would be indicted for the crime before the 3-year statute of limitations expired.[27] After his conviction, Miller would be sentenced to life imprisonment without parole.[28] None of the ransom money would ever be found.[29][30]
  • "The City on the Edge of Forever", a favorite episode of fans of the TV show Star Trek, was telecast for the first time, at 8:30 p.m. Eastern time and again at 8:30 Pacific time. One newspaper summarized that night's plot as "Under the influence of drugs, Dr. McCoy plunges through a time portal and into the New York City of the 1930s."[31]

April 7, 1967 (Friday)

  • MiG-21s in one day, two months before the start of the Six-Day War.[32] Earlier in the day, Syrian troops fired from the Golan Heights at a tractor being driven by a farmer from the kibbutz of Gadot, and then began firing mortar shells in and around the community. Israeli tanks took up positions and fired back, and Syrian tanks then mobilized. At 1:30 in the afternoon, Israel's Mirage fighters began bombing and strafing the Golan Heights, and at 1:45, the Syrian Air Force scrambled its MiG-21s, which were all shot down in the battle, while the Israelis suffered no losses.[33] The first air battle began at 1:58 when a pair of Mirages fired at two MiGs that were patrolling over the Syrian capital, Damascus. Israeli pilot Iftach Spector downed both planes with the assistance of his wingman, Beni Romach.[34]

April 8, 1967 (Saturday)

April 9, 1967 (Sunday)

  • The Boeing 737 made its first flight. A pair of test pilots (Brien Wygle and Lew Wallick Jr.)[41] guided the plane on its takeoff from Boeing Field in Seattle, flew over the Pacific Northwest for two and a half hours at speeds of up to 530 miles per hour (850 km/h), then landed at the nearby Paine Field about 20 miles (32 km) away near Everett, Washington.[42]

April 10, 1967 (Monday)

April 11, 1967 (Tuesday)

  • Bahamas for the rest of his term without taking his seat. After winning re-election again in 1968, he would take his seat in the House of Representatives in January 1969, but would fail to win the 1970 election.[48]
  • Oil from the sunken American supertanker
    Torrey Canyon washed ashore on the beaches of France for the first time, along a 30-mile stretch of the shores of Brittany.[51] Governors of coastal provinces were given authority by the national government to implement the ORSEC plan (Organisation de la Réponse de curité Civile) to combat the disaster.[52]
  • All 39 persons aboard an Air Algérie DC-4 were killed when the plane crashed into a hillside near the city of Ouargla in Algeria. The DC-4 was coming in for a final approach to the airport at Tamanrasset at the end of a flight from Algiers.[53][54]
  • Thailand allowed American B-52 bombers to begin flying bombing missions in Vietnam.[55]
  • Died: Sir
    Jamaican Labour Party and was sworn into office as the new Prime Minister. Shearer would serve until March 2, 1972.[57]

April 12, 1967 (Wednesday)

picture1
picture 2
L.A. attractions Ahmanson Theatre and Mark Taper Forum

April 13, 1967 (Thursday)

April 14, 1967 (Friday)

picture1
picture 2
Jenő Fock replaces Gyula Kallai

April 15, 1967 (Saturday)

  • A group of 20 U.S. servicemen marched at the forefront of a parade from New York's Central Park to the United Nations Plaza, behind a banner "
    Spring Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam, marking a new development in which American vets would join the anti-war movement.[67] Six of the veterans would form an organization of the same name after the march.[68] What was described as "the largest peace demonstration in decades"[69] in Manhattan lasted for four hours. Later in the day, a group called Veterans for Peace in Viet-Nam would be among 60,000 protesting the war at Kezar Stadium in San Francisco.[70][71][72]
  • When the New York marchers reached Sheep Meadow in Central Park, a group of protesters set fire to an American flag, and the Associated Press photograph ran in newspapers across the U.S.,[73] prompting the Congress to pass the first federal prohibition against flag burning.[74]
  • Elections for the Chamber of Deputies were held in the Kingdom of Jordan, with voters having a choice of 137 independent candidates for the 60 available seats. Political affiliations were banned, women were not allowed to vote,[75] and nearly half of the winners (28 of 60) were newcomers,[76] including Prime Minister Saad Jumaa.
  • Scotland defeated England 3–2 at Wembley Stadium, with goals from Law, Lennox and McCalligog, in the British Championships. The defeat marked England's first loss since they won the World Cup and ended a 19-game unbeaten streak.[77]
  • Forty-one South Vietnamese soldiers were killed and 50 seriously wounded in the
    Binh Dinh Province when two U.S. Air Force jets bombed them by mistake.[78]
  • Born:
  • Died: Totò (Antonio De Curtis), 69, Italian comedian and actor

April 16, 1967 (Sunday)

  • The
    soccer league in the United States, held its opening day with five games, starting with a 2:00 p.m. game at Baltimore that was televised nationally by CBS. League Commissioner Ken Macker kicked out the first ball prior to the contest, and was accompanied by his guest, NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle.[80] The Baltimore Bays won, 1–0, over the Atlanta Chiefs in front of 8,434 fans. In Philadelphia, more people (14,163) turned out to see the Philadelphia Spartans (who beat the Toronto Falcons, 2–0) than baseball's Philadelphia Phillies (9,213).[81] The rival United Soccer Association
    would debut a month later, on May 26.
  • Professor Ryokichi Minobe of the Tokyo Education University, backed by Japan's Socialist and Communist parties, won an election to become the Governor of the Tokyo metropolitan area and its 11,000,000 people.[82]

April 17, 1967 (Monday)

Joey Bishop (center) with Regis Philbin (left)

April 18, 1967 (Tuesday)

  • At a presentation to the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology, Dr. Walter Bortz II of Philadelphia's Lankenau Medical Center, Dr. Willard A. Krehl of the University of Iowa, and Dr. W. M. Bortz presented the first objective data that Americans were getting dangerously high amounts of salt in their diets. Dr. Bortz said that most Americans were consuming more than 100 times as much salt as they needed. Dr. Krehl said that the average amount added to foods prior to sale and from the saltshaker at mealtime equated to two spoonfuls per day.[92]
  • Through the Vatican's official newspaper, L'Osservatore Romano, Pope Paul VI clarified that his March 28 encyclical Populorum progressio should not be misinterpreted as a change in the Roman Catholic Church's position against artificial birth control, despite earlier press reports. The only Church-approved contraceptive measure was abstinence.[93]
  • On April 18 and 19, a meeting was held at
    aluminum foil flame retardative liner.[23]
  • Born: Maria Bello, American film and TV actress; in Norristown, Pennsylvania
  • Died:
    • Norwood Hanson
      , 42, American scientific philosopher and author of Patterns of Discovery, was killed when his private plane crashed while he was flying home.
    • Friedrich Heiler, 75, German theologian and historian

April 19, 1967 (Wednesday)

  • The American
    probe landed on the Moon at 7:04 p.m. Florida time (0004 April 20 UTC).[94] After bouncing three times during the landing on the Oceanus Procellarum, the probe was the first to analyze the chemical composition of the lunar surface. Using a robotic scoop called the Soil Mechanics Surface Sampler, the probe dug four different trenches and sent data back to Earth, revealing that the Moon soil was "like coarse damp beach sand, being cohesive and clumpy."[95] On May 3, the Surveyor probe would power down as it entered a two-week long "night cycle", when temperatures on the darkened surface fell to -250 °F; after the cycle's end, however, engineers on Earth would try in vain to locate Surveyor's transmitter frequency to reactivate the craft, which "apparently froze to death" and would be declared a loss upon entering its second night cycle on June 1.[96] The bouncing would later be traced to "unexpectedly high reflectivity" from rocks on the lunar surface "at a critical point in the touchdown"; nonetheless, the spacecraft "scored history's longest hole-in-one by hopping into a crater at the end of its quarter-million mile flight."[97]
  • Roberta Gibb who jumped in from the crowd at the 26-mile event's start, but she was the first to apply for entry. Switzer would finish the race in 4 hours, 20 minutes, while Gibb, running again without registration, would cross the line after 3 hours, 27 minutes and 17 seconds. Dave McKenzie of New Zealand would win the race in a time of 2:15:45.[101]
Adenauer
  • Died:
    • Rhöndorf, near Bonn, a week after he had contracted influenza. Leaders from across the Western world made plans to attend his April 25 funeral.[102]
    • William Boyle, 93, British Royal Navy officer and peer

April 20, 1967 (Thursday)

April 21, 1967 (Friday)

  • At 2:00 in the morning local time,
    Konstantinos Kollias was sworn in as Prime Minister the next day.[109] The dictatorship would finally end in 1974
    .
  • An outbreak of tornadoes struck the upper Midwest section of the United States, killing 59 people[110] and injuring hundreds more, mostly in the Chicago suburbs of Oak Lawn (where 31 people were killed) and Belvidere, Illinois (where 21 died).[111]

April 22, 1967 (Saturday)

  • American inspectors were allowed to make a second inspection of Israel's
    Negev Nuclear Research Center near Dimona, and concluded that although Israel was not developing atomic weapons, the Jewish state "was aiming to reach a point where it could have a nuclear option at a moment's notice"; seven weeks later, on May 28, the Israelis would assemble two nuclear bombs in preparation for war.[112]
  • The Big Mac, signature sandwich for the McDonald's hamburger restaurant chain, was introduced at a franchise owned by Jim Delligatti, and located in Uniontown, Pennsylvania,[113][114] selling for US$0.45 (equivalent to $4.11 in 2023) at the Uniontown Shopping Center. The Big Mac would then be introduced to all other McDonald's restaurants in 1968.[115]
  • Walter Ulbricht was unanimously re-elected as leader of East Germany's Communist Party, the Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED) in a vote by the party's Central Committee. Former British spy Klaus Fuchs, who provided American nuclear secrets to the Soviet Union, was named one of the new members of the 120-member Committee.[116]
  • Born:
  • Died: Tom Conway, 62, British film, radio and TV actor

April 23, 1967 (Sunday)

Ray
  • James Earl Ray, a 39-year old convict serving a 20-year sentence for armed robbery, escaped from the Missouri State Penitentiary in Jefferson City.[117] He would later tell interrogators that other inmates helped him conceal himself inside a four-foot by four-foot container that was used to deliver loaves of bread to prisons in the area, then helped load him onto a truck.[118] Forty-nine weeks later, on April 4, 1968, Ray allegedly committed the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. in Memphis, Tennessee, and would finally be recaptured on June 10 of that year at Heathrow Airport in London.[119]
  • The Soviet Union announced the launch of Air Force Colonel Vladimir Komarov on "a powerful new carrier rocket" as Soyuz 1 was sent into orbit at 3:35 a.m. local time from Baikonur on what was to be a 72-hour mission. In a separate announcement, the Soviet news agency Tass suggested that it would soon send up a second spacecraft that would link to Soyuz 1, and that the pilots would trade places.[120][121] Soyuz 2 would have been launched the next day with Valery Bykovsky, Yevgeny Khrunov and Aleksei Yeliseyev, but Soyuz 1 began experiencing problems soon after launch.[122]
  • Born: Melina Kanakaredes, American actress; in Akron, Ohio
  • Died: Edgar Neville, 67, Spanish playwright and film director

April 24, 1967 (Monday)

  • Soviet
    cosmonaut Vladimir Komarov became the first person to be killed during a spaceflight when the parachute of his space capsule Soyuz 1 failed during re-entry. The capsule crashed at 8:24 a.m. local time, 40 miles (64 km) east of the city of Orsk, and rescuers found that "the base of the spacecraft had been completely burned through" and that Komarov's remains had been burned into a "blackened lump measuring 30 x 80 cm".[123] His launch the day before had been complicated by a drain of battery power caused by the failure of a solar panel to deploy, and he had made 18 orbits at a lower altitude than planned.[124] On his last three circuits of the Earth, as the orbit was decaying due to friction, he was having difficulty controlling the vehicle before he made his emergency re-entry.[122][125] In the investigation that followed, it was found that the parachute design for the Soyuz capsules had been faulty and that the manufacture and testing had been poor, resulting in "the chilling conclusion that had Soyuz 2 been launched, that crew would also have perished on its return."[126]
  • The
    San Francisco Warriors, 125–122, in game six of the NBA Championship series, to win the title. Playing at home, San Francisco had a 12-point lead in the third quarter. In the final 15 seconds, when Philadelphia had a 123–122 lead, the Warriors' Rick Barry (who made 44 points in the game) missed a shot that would have put his team ahead.[127]
  • Died:

April 25, 1967 (Tuesday)

  • John A. Love, the Republican Governor of Colorado, signed a bill "giving Colorado the nation's most liberal abortion law. Under the law's terms, if a three member board in an accredited hospital agreed unanimously that a pregnancy met one of four specified conditions (death or serious impairment to the mother, the likelihood of a child being born with a "grave and permanent physical deformity or mental retardation", a pregnancy of less than 16 weeks arising from forcible rape or incest, or a girl under the age of 16 made pregnant by rape or incest).[128] Previously, Colorado and other states in the U.S. allowed abortion of a pregnancy only in cases of "a severe threat to the physical health of the mother" or "pregnancies resulting from forcible rape"; Love said that letters and telegrams were "about 2,600 against and about 2,400 for the bill".[129] On May 17, the state director of health and hospitals announced that a 12-year old rape victim would be given the first legalized abortion in the United States.[130] The reform of the law took place in the wake of an increase of babies born with birth defects; North Carolina and California would make similar changes in their laws later in the year, and Georgia and Maryland would follow in 1968.[131]
  • Twenty-seven people in
    Ukrainian SSR. In a departure from the existing Soviet policy to not publicize accidents, the newspaper for the Ukrainian SSR Communist Party reported the accident nine days later. Government investigators concluded that the driver had "violated traffic rules by passing a truck, causing the bus to become accidentally hitched to a streetcar bumper", then swerved out of control and crashed through a guard rail. Only five people were rescued from the river.[132]
  • The colony of
    Swaziland was made a protectorate by the United Kingdom, with internal self-government. The Ngwenyama (Paramount Chief) of the Swazi people, Sobhuza II, was recognized as King and head of the government. Full independence would be granted on September 6, 1968.[133]
  • The U.S. Senate voted unanimously (88 to 0) to ratify the 79-nation Outer Space Treaty prohibiting weapons in outer space.[134]
  • Died:

April 26, 1967 (Wednesday)

  • For the first time, a satellite was launched into orbit from an ocean platform.
    Scout B rocket carried the 285-pound (129 kg) research satellite into an equatorial orbit. The satellite's purpose was to gather "data on air density and ionospheric conditions above the earth's equator."[135] It would re-enter the atmosphere on October 14 after 171 days in orbit.[136]
  • Born:
Lt. Commander Estocin
  • Died:
    SA-2 Guideline missile. Despite the damage, he took out another missile site before gliding back to the Ticonderoga. On his final mission, Estocin's A-4 was struck by another missile, and he fired his own missiles before plunging to the ground. Estocin would be promoted posthumously to the rank of captain and would be awarded the Medal of Honor in 1978 for "conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty on 20 and 26 April 1967".[137]

April 27, 1967 (Thursday)

April 28, 1967 (Friday)

Expo 67 logo
  • Expo 67 opened to the public, with over 310,000 people attending on the first day.[141] The very first visitor, as noted by Expo officials, was an American, Al Carter of Chicago. Carter, a jazz drummer, had been waiting at the main gate since 10:00 the previous morning.[142]
  • World heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali refused to take the oath of induction into the United States Army after reporting as scheduled to an induction center in Houston, Texas. Ali stood in line with 11 other inductees, underwent a physical examination, blood tests and x-rays, but refused to step forward when his name was called by Army Lt. Steven Dunkley. He then told Navy Lt. C. P. Hartman that he understood the penalties and said that his refusal was based on his religious beliefs. The World Boxing Association stripped Ali of his boxing title on the same day; he would not be allowed to fight for the title again until 1970.[143][144] On June 20, Ali would be convicted of draft evasion, fined $10,000 and sentenced to five years in prison, but the U.S. Supreme Court would overturn the conviction on June 28, 1967.[145]
  • U.S. Army General
    William C. Westmoreland, commander of U.S. forces in the Vietnam War, spoke to a joint session of the U.S. Congress in hopes of raising a budget for additional servicemen beyond the 470,000 who were already in South Vietnam. As an author would note later, "Never before had a military commander addressed Congress while he was directing an ongoing war." Westmoreland told Congress that he would need a minimum of 80,500 more troops and hoped that he could have 200,000 more men at his disposal.[146]
  • U.S. Army Corporal Dennis Brown returned to his home in Hinckley, Ohio, five days after his parents had mistakenly been told that he had been killed in action in Vietnam. Corporal Brown took his girlfriend to a high school senior prom, then returned to duty at the end of May.[147][148][149]
  • Aircraft manufacturers
    Boeing would buy the company out three decades later.[151]

April 29, 1967 (Saturday)

  • Voters in the northeastern portion of
    Muswellbrook and Gunnedah. If the measure had passed, a "yes" vote would have been required in a referendum of voters in New South Wales, and if that had succeeded, the Commonwealth would still have had to vote on approving the division.[153][154]
  • Fidel Castro announced that all intellectual property belonged to the world's people and that Cuba intended to translate and publish technical literature without compensation. "We proclaim publicly that we consider all intellectual products patrimony to which all humanity has a right," Castro said in a televised speech.[155]
  • Izvestia became the first daily newspaper in the Soviet Union to publish a comic strip. "Ivan Ivanich", which appeared on Saturdays, was described in a UPI dispatch as "a pipe-puffing engineer with a Dagwood haircut" who "uses heavyhanded humor to point up shortcomings in Soviet services".[156][157]
  • U.S. President
    Lyndon Johnson announced that he would ask Congress for $198 million toward financing the development of the $1.14 billion SST, the proposed supersonic transport airplane that would be capable of flying at 1,800 miles per hour (2,900 km/h) and carrying 300 passengers.[158]
  • Aretha Franklin's signature song, "Respect", was released by Atlantic Records and would reach #1 by June. Although Otis Redding had written and recorded the song in 1965, Franklin added the chorus "R-E-S-P-E-C-T, find out what it means to me".[159]
  • Born:
  • Died:
    • U.S. Secretary of Agriculture (1940 to 1945); in an auto accident near Delphi, Indiana, after he turned his car into the path of an oncoming truck.[160]
    • Anthony Mann, 60, American film actor and director; in West Berlin while directing some location shots for his final film, A Dandy in Aspic.[161]
    • J. B. Lenoir, 38, African-American blues musician; from a heart attack three weeks after injuring his chest in an automobile accident.

April 30, 1967 (Sunday)

  • Under federal law, daylight saving time went into effect throughout the United States for the first time, with the 1966 Uniform Time Act mandating that clocks be set ahead one hour at 2:00 in the morning on the last Sunday in April and then turned back one hour on the last Sunday in October. However, the law provided that any state could seek exemption from compliance by the United States Department of Transportation, and five of the 50 states chose to effectively change time zones rather than to change their clocks. The legislatures of Michigan and Hawaii voted to be exempt, and Alaska applied for a delay so that it could delineate its time zones.[162] In Indiana and Kentucky, which shifted from the Eastern to Central time zones, the matter was complicated further because local governments were allowed the option to move their clocks forward if they chose, such as Dearborn County, Indiana[163] or Muhlenberg County, Kentucky.[164]
  • The British cabinet voted, 13 to 8, to seek the admission of the United Kingdom into the European Economic Community, referred to at the time as the "Common Market". Prime Minister Harold Wilson would announce his plans on May 2 and the House of Commons would approve the resolution, 488 to 62.[165]
  • U.S. Senator and former presidential candidate Barry Goldwater retired from military service with the rank of major general in the United States Air Force Reserve.[166]
  • Born:

References

  1. ^ Attribution:Carolinebn8
  2. ^ Palmer, Bruce Jr. (2014). The 25-Year War: America's Military Role in Vietnam. University Press of Kentucky. p. 59.
  3. ^ Clodfelter, Micheal (2017). Warfare and Armed Conflicts: A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures, 1492-2015 (4th ed.). McFarland. p. 696.
  4. ^ "Men-on-Moon Hoax Fools Swiss". Chicago Tribune. April 2, 1967. p. 18.
  5. ^ "Launch Transport Department". Chicago Tribune. April 2, 1967. p. 12.
  6. ^ "Premier of France Quits in Tactical Bid". Chicago Tribune. April 2, 1967. p. 10.
  7. ^ "Hold Village Elections in S. Viet Today", Chicago Tribune, April 2, 1967, p10
  8. ^ "U.N. Mission Ends Aden Visit; Lack of British Help Charged", Minneapolis Star, April 7, 1967, p2B
  9. ^ "Angry UN mission flies out of Aden", The Age (Melbourne), April 8, 1967, p1
  10. ^ "Postal Boss Urges Office Be Abolished", Chicago Tribune, April 4, 1967, p1
  11. ^ "Tonga" in The Statesman's Year-Book 1967-68: The One-Volume Encyclopaedia of All Nations (Springer, 1967) p184
  12. ^ "Spain Passes Stiff Laws Against Press", Chicago Tribune, April 5, 1967, p1A-6
  13. ^ "U.S. 'Purveyor of Violence,' King Asserts", Chicago Tribune, April 5, 1967, p1A-8
  14. ^ Manning Marable, Race, Reform, and Rebellion: The Second Reconstruction in Black America, 1945-1990 (University Press of Mississippi, 1984) p102
  15. ^ "Carson Quits TV Show Over Reruns", Chicago Tribune, April 5, 1967, p1
  16. ^ "Carson Returns To TV's 'Tonight'", Des Moines Register, April 25, 1967, p3-S
  17. ^ Charles Schulz. "Peanuts Comic Strip, April 4, 1967 on GoComics.com". GoComics.
  18. ^ Charles M. Schulz, Celebrating Peanuts: 60 Years (Andrews McMeel Publishing, 2009) p106
  19. ^ "Berlin Nabs 11 in Plot to Kill Hubert", Chicago Tribune, April 6, 1967, p1
  20. ^ "Humour as a Guerrilla Tactic: The West German Student Movement's Mockery of the Establishment", by Simon Teune, in Humour and Social Protest (Cambridge University Press, 2007) pp121-122
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