February 1970

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February 13, 1970: Black Sabbath inaugurates heavy metal era
February 11, 1970: Japan becomes fourth nation to orbit a satellite[1]
February 1, 1970: Argentinian train wreck kills 236 commuters
February 23, 1970: Burnham declares Guyana as the first "Co-operative Republic"

The following events occurred in February 1970:

February 1, 1970 (Sunday)

February 2, 1970 (Monday)

  • U.S. President
    Richard M. Nixon sent the annual government budget proposal to Congress, sharply curtailing the American crewed space program and raising the amount to be spent on welfare programs. The amount of money budgeted for government programs for the 1971 fiscal year was a little more than 200 billion dollars USD. Fifty years later, the budget for FY 2020 would be 23 times higher, at 4,700 billion dollars ($4.7 trillion)[3]
  • Died: Bertrand Russell, 97, British philosopher, anti-war activist and logician; 1950 Nobel Prize in Literature laureate

February 3, 1970 (Tuesday)

  • NASA made its second, and more successful launch of a rocket with
    Vandenberg Air Force Base in California at 6:50 in the evening local time. On July 20, 1964, the first SERT (an acronym for Space Electric Rocket Test) operated for 31 minutes. SERT-2 remained in orbit for more than 11 years, and its two mercury engine thrusters successfully operated for 3,781 hours and 2,011 hours (157 days and 84 days)[5]
  • Born:
  • Died: General Italo Gariboldi, 90, Italian military officer who commanded the Italian Royal Army in the Battle of Stalingrad during World War II; Governor General of Libya in 1941

February 4, 1970 (Wednesday)

February 5, 1970 (Thursday)

  • The value of a share of
    Poseidon NL, an Australian nickel mining company, soared to a record high on the Australian Securities Exchange and what would prove to be its peak price of A$275 Australian dollars ($308 in U.S. dollars at the exchange rate at the time of A$1 to US$1.12)[9] The stock opened the day at A$225 and a rush of buying increased the price dramatically before the ASX asked Poseidon for further information; when Poseidon replied that drilling had commenced at Windarra and that "A report will be made at the end of March", prices began to drop.[10] Investors who had bought the stock in September, when it was priced at 80 cents per share ($US 0.90),[11] made a fortune in the months after the company had announced a major discovery of a nickel deposit at Mount Windarra, near Laverton, Western Australia. By March 23, the stock price had dropped to $131.79[12] and was at $74 by the end of April and $46 at year's end.[13]
  • Died: Rudy York, 56, American baseball player and 1943 American League leader in home runs and RBIs[14]

February 6, 1970 (Friday)

February 7, 1970 (Saturday)

February 8, 1970 (Sunday)

February 9, 1970 (Monday)

  • An explosion in the kitchen of the Venezuelan merchant ship Pampatar, and the subsequent fire and panic in the evacuation, killed 24 of the 27 sailors on board.[24] The ship was 10 miles off of the coast of La Guaira; the captain, Luis Martinez, survived and reported that some of the crewmen who jumped overboard had been attacked by sharks while awaiting rescue.
  • Born:
    • Dubbo, New South Wales
    • Chicago, Illinois[25]

February 10, 1970 (Tuesday)

February 11, 1970 (Wednesday)

February 12, 1970 (Thursday)

  • Guerrillas of the Pathet Lao, the Communist organization within the Kingdom of Laos, made attacks on Laotian Army units in the "Plain of Jars" region within the Xiangkhoang Plateau, prompting the Laotian Prime Minister, Prince Souvanna Phouma, to formally request U.S. aid. Five days later, the United States expanded its role in the Vietnam War by sending three B-52 bombers to bomb Pathet Lao and North Vietnamese Army troops in Laos.[28]
  • All 10 passengers and two crew aboard a Urraca Airlines plane were killed in Colombia when the Douglas DC-3 crashed shortly after the airplane took off from Villavicencio on a flight to Inírida and was forced to return because of engine problems. The plane went down on its way back to Villavicencio.[29][30]

February 13, 1970 (Friday)

  • The first heavy metal album, Black Sabbath went on sale in Britain.[31] Black Sabbath had been formed in the English city of Birmingham in 1968 by guitarist and chief songwriter Tony Iommi, lead singer Ozzy Osbourne, drummer Bill Ward, and bassist Geezer Butler. Within weeks, the debut record would be the eighth bestselling rock album on the British charts, and would be released in the United States on June 1.[32][33]
  • Joseph L. Searles III became the first African-American broker to trade on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.[34][35] As a member of the NYSE, Searles became a general partner in the investment firm of Neuberger, Loeb and Company.
  • The first print edition of
    Irish community, was published.[36]
  • FH Serpentis, described as "the nova among the best observed in the whole history of astronomy" and "the first observed in almost every part of the electromagnetic spectrum"[37] was discovered by Japanese astronomer Minoru Honda, roughly 2,934 years after the event (based on its estimated distance of 900 parsecs).
  • Sixty-eight civilian workers were killed in
    International Red Cross
    to notify the Egyptian government immediately.

February 14, 1970 (Saturday)

  • North Korea released 39 of the South Korean 46 passengers that it had held after the hijacking of a Korean Air Lines airplane and allowed them to return to South Korea at the DMZ in Panmunjom.[39] The other seven passengers, both stewardesses, the pilot and co-pilot were not allowed to leave and, more than 50 years later, their fate remained unknown[40]
Blue plaque at the Refectory

February 15, 1970 (Sunday)

February 16, 1970 (Monday)

picture1
picture2
WBC's Frazier and WBA's Ellis

February 17, 1970 (Tuesday)

  • U.S. Army Captain and physician, Dr.
    Criminal Investigation Division (CID) doubted Dr. MacDonald's story. Within six weeks of the killings, CID began interrogating MacDonald as a suspect. The Army confined him to quarters and relieved him of duty, and, on May 1, the U.S. Army would arrest him and charge him with the triple murder.[48] As of the end of 2018, MacDonald remained imprisoned after a federal appellate court affirmed the a lower court denying him a new trial[49]
  • Born: Tommy Moe, American alpine ski racer and 1994 Olympic gold medalist; in Missoula, Montana
  • Died:
    • Dr. Peyton Rous, 90, American virologist and 1966 Nobel Prize in Medicine laureate for his finding that cancer could be transmitted by a virus
    • S. Y. Agnon, 81, Austro-Hungarian-born Israeli novelist and 1966 Nobel Prize in Literature laureate
    • Alfred Newman
      , 69, American film score composer and conductor, and winner of nine Academy Awards

February 18, 1970 (Wednesday)

  • After five months, the trial of the "Chicago Seven" – American antiwar activists Abbie Hoffman, Jerry Rubin, David Dellinger, Tom Hayden, Rennie Davis, John Froines, and Lee Weiner – concluded with a federal district court jury acquitting the group of charges of conspiracy to foment the rioting that took place at the 1968 Democratic National Convention. Froines and Weiner were acquitted of all charges, while the remaining five were convicted of crossing state lines in order to incite a riot.[50] On February 20, Judge Julius Hoffman (no relation to Abbie Hoffman) sentenced each of the convicted men to five years in prison and a fine of $5,000, as well as ordering them to pay the costs of their prosecution, while defense attorney William Kunstler was sentenced to four years and 13 days imprisonment for contempt of court. After Kunstler stated that "I think it is wrong legally and morally" to issue sentences so quickly after trial, Judge Hoffman replied, "To say I am morally wrong can only add to your present troubles."[51] On February 28, the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals ordered the men to be released from jail, on bond.[52] On November 21, 1972, their convictions were overturned by the appellate court.[53][54]
  • Born:
    Weston, Ontario

February 19, 1970 (Thursday)

Denny McLain
  • Major League Baseball pitcher Denny McLain was suspended indefinitely, a week after Sports Illustrated broke the story of his involvement with gamblers and a day after testifying before a federal grand jury.[58] MLB Commissioner Bowie Kuhn, who announced the decision, later decided on a ban until July 1, the first 71 games of the 162 game MLB season.[59] McLain, who had won 31 games for the Detroit Tigers in 1968 and helped them reach and win the World Series, had won his second consecutive Cy Young Award four months earlier.
  • Died: Talmadge "Tab" Prince, 32, American race car driver, was killed in an accident at the Daytona International Speedway while competing in the second of two qualifying races in preparation for the 1970 Daytona 500. Prince lost control of his 1969 Dodge on the 21st of 50 laps, when his car blew its engine and went into a spin, into the path of another driver, Bill Seifert[60]

February 20, 1970 (Friday)

The TAGBOARD drone
  • After the first mission of the supersonic D-21 TAGBOARD drone failed on November 10, the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) made improvements to the computer software of its inertial navigation system, and "flew a completely successful test mission to validate the software" and a new "'fail-safe' feature" to allow "positive control of the drone's flight path" on aerial reconnaissance missions.[61]
(1970 Georgia flag)
  • The House of Representatives of the U.S. state of Georgia unanimously approved the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, a day after the state Senate had done so and almost 50 years after the amendment had granted American women the right to vote.[62] The amendment had taken effect on August 18, 1920, when Tennessee became the 36th of the then 48 U.S. states to approve it. The Georgia legislature had previously voted against ratification on July 24, 1919.[63] Louisiana and North Carolina would follow in the next 15 months, while Mississippi would not get around to giving its ratification until March 22, 1984.
  • Died:
    João Café Filho, 71, the 18th President of Brazil
    (1954 to 1955)

February 21, 1970 (Saturday)

Memorial to Flight 330[64]
  • All 47 people aboard Swissair Flight 330 were killed when the Convair 990 jet was damaged in midflight by a terrorist bomb.[65][66] The flight departed Zürich at 1:14 in the afternoon, bound for Tel Aviv and, seven minutes later, the bomb's barometric pressure mechanism triggered the explosion in the cargo hold when the Convair reached an altitude 4,300 metres (14,100 ft). The pilot, Karl Berlinger, turned the plane back toward Zürich upon detecting the loss in cabin pressure, and the crew realized there was fire at 1:26 before smoke filled the cabin. By 1:33, the plane was so full of smoke that the crew couldn't see the instruments and Berlinger radioed his last message to the tower (in English) — "We are crashing. Goodbye everybody."[67] The jet crashed in the Unterwald forest, at Würenlingen, went into a dive, and impacted at a speed of 770 kilometres per hour (480 mph), obliterating the plane and everyone and everything onboard.
  • An end to the draft of young American men into the military was recommended by a special commission chaired by former U.S. Defense Secretary Thomas S. Gates Jr., in a report presented to President Nixon.[68] The 15-member commission recommended that the United States shift to a force of volunteers, and that the existing draft law not be renewed after its expiration on June 30, 1971. However, Nixon would reverse his position and ask Congress to extend the draft for two more years, signing the legislation to do so on September 28, 1971[69]
  • Died: David H. Stahl, 49, judge on the U.S. Third Circuit Court of Appeals since 1968, died of carbon monoxide poisoning at his Pittsburgh home in Brookline. A coroner's investigation concluded that Judge Stahl's death had been accidental, the result of closing the door of his garage after driving home.[70]

February 22, 1970 (Sunday)

February 23, 1970 (Monday)

Guyana flag

February 24, 1970 (Tuesday)

  • Separate avalanches killed at least 36 people in the European Alps. In Switzerland, snow swept down a mountain into the village of Reckingen, destroying an army barracks and killing 29 people, most of whom were officers in the Swiss Army. The onslaught of the 30 feet of snow decapitated several of the soldiers. A separate avalanche in France struck the Hotel du Gran Signal in the ski resort of Villard-de-Lans, killing at least seven guests.[74]
  • Joseph Franklin Sills, a 49-year-old convicted robber in Texas, was sentenced to 1,000 years in prison. A jury in Dallas had recommended the sentence after convicting Sills for the armed robbery of $73.10 from a Dallas dry cleaners, and meted out the punishment after being told that he had 20 prior felony convictions.[75] Other juries in Texas would follow in recommending similarly long imprisonment time, primarily as a protest against Texas law, which allowed convicts to be eligible for parole after 20 years or after one-third of their sentence had been served, whichever came first.[76] Mr. Sills's sentence would be upheld on appeal.[77]
  • Born: The
    fertility drugs, and only the second set ever to be born in the United States.[78]
  • Died: Conrad Nagel, 72, American film, radio and television actor

February 25, 1970 (Wednesday)

  • A routine in an episode of the children's TV series Sesame Street was performed for the first time and would soon become a best-selling record, as the muppet character Ernie sang "Rubber Duckie" (with Jim Henson supplying the voice)[79] as an ode to the rubber duck bathtub toy. The latex toy duck had been invented by sculptor Peter Ganine, who applied for a patent on December 29, 1947, and received U.S. Patent No. 153,514 on April 26, 1949.[80] The song itself was written by Jeff Moss and arranged by Joe Raposo.
  • After a speech by Attorney
    William M. Kunstler at the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB), a crowd of demonstrators rioted in the Isla Vista section of town near the campus, and burned down a branch of the Bank of America.[81] A 17-year old demonstrator was quoted nationwide, after telling an Associated Press reporter that the crowd attacked the bank branch "because it was there. It was the biggest capitalist establishment thing around."[82]
  • Died: Mark Rothko, 66, Latvian-born American abstract expressionist artist, by suicide

February 26, 1970 (Thursday)

February 27, 1970 (Friday)

  • The first Women's Liberation Movement (WLM) Conference in British history opened at Ruskin College at Oxford, with about 500 women from 15 groups in the United Kingdom gathering to discuss common goals. From the three-day gathering came demands for equal pay, equal opportunities for education and jobs, free contraception, the right to abortion of a pregnancy, and 24-hour child care[85][86]

February 28, 1970 (Saturday)

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