January 1975

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January 17, 1975: Deng Xiaoping returns to power
January 15, 1975: Space Mountain roller coaster opens
January 22, 1975: Landsat 2 launched into space
January 2, 1975: The World Tourism Organization is established

The following events occurred in January 1975:

January 1, 1975 (Wednesday)

January 2, 1975 (Thursday)

January 3, 1975 (Friday)

  • The University of Oklahoma Sooners were given the number 1 ranking in the final AP sportswriters poll of the 1974 college football season, and a share of the unofficial national college football championship. The Sooners had been the only undefeated and untied team, but had been ineligible for postseason play, and were not included in the UPI coaches' poll. The USC Trojans, #1 in UPI, were 2nd in the AP poll.[16]
  • In the largest return in history of U.S. government land to an American Indian tribe, 250 square miles of the
    Havasupai people with the signing of a bill by President Ford. The 400 members of the tribe had been limited to a reservation of only 518 acres, less than one square mile, at the bottom of Havasu Canyon, since 1882. The legislation also enlarged the National Park by adding 687,000 acres to bring its total size to 1,875 square miles.[17]
Governor Riley

January 4, 1975 (Saturday)

January 5, 1975 (Sunday)

  • The Wiz, a musical adaptation of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz with an African-American cast, opened on Broadway. It would go on to win two Tony Awards and run for 1,672 performances.[23]
  • The Tasman Bridge in Tasmania, Australia, was struck by the bulk ore carrier Lake Illawarra, killing 12 people. The ship struck a support on the mile-long bridge at about 9:00 pm, bringing down a 240-foot-long (73 m) section on top of it, and sank. Three vehicles on the bridge plunged into the River Derwent below.[24]
  • The leaders of the three military groups fighting for the independence of Angola- Jonas Savimbi of UNITA, Agostinho Neto of MPLA, and Holden Roberto of FNLA- signed the Mombasa Agreement in Kenya's capital, under the sponsorship of President Jomo Kenyatta, pledging to work together to negotiate with Portugal. The united front lasted only a few months, after the United States allied with UNITA and the Soviet Union assisted the MPLA.[25][26]
  • Born:
  • Died:
    • Don Wilson, 29, American MLB pitcher for the Houston Astros (1966–1974), by carbon monoxide poisoning
    • Gottlob Berger, 79, convicted German SS General and Nazi war criminal who spent six years at Spandau prison
    • Rudolf Demme, 80, German Panzer division general who spent ten years in a Soviet prison

January 6, 1975 (Monday)

January 7, 1975 (Tuesday)

  • The South Vietnamese province of
    Phuoc Binh became the first to be captured by Viet Cong invaders, who led an assault with tanks and three infantry divisions.[32] Out of 5,400 South Vietnamese Army defenders, only 850 survived, and twenty Vietnam Air Force planes were shot down; local officials were summarily executed.[33] U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger would later write, "Phuoc Binh was the test case" for the North Vietnamese government to decide whether to proceed with trying to conquer South Vietnam, and "If the United States reacted, there was still a chance for Hanoi to withdraw from the brink."[6]
  • The women's basketball team of Louisiana Tech, which would go on to win three national championships and more than 80% of its games, played its very first game, and lost, 59–55, to visiting Southeastern Louisiana University.[34] The crowd for the first was about 45 people.[35]

January 8, 1975 (Wednesday)

January 9, 1975 (Thursday)

  • Denmark's Liberal Party, led by Prime Minister Poul Hartling, gained seats in the election for the Parliament, the 179 seat Folketing, to increase its share to 42 members. The Social Democrats gained as well, winning 53 seats.[42]
  • A mountain in Mexico called the Mountain of Butterflies where many monarch butterflies go at wintertime is discovered.
  • "The Beatles & Co., Ltd.", the corporation created by John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr to pay them as employees in order to effect a savings on taxes, was formally dissolved by a court in London, four years after McCartney had filed suit in the year after the band's breakup.[43]
  • Died:
    • Li Fuchun, 74, Communist Chinese economic planner
    • Virginia Ellis Jenckes
      , 77, U.S. Representative, 1933–39 and first woman to represent Indiana in Congress
    • Pierre Fresnay, 77, French actor

January 10, 1975 (Friday)

  • Pope Paul VI broke a 900-year-old policy by accepting a woman as an envoy from to the Vatican. Bernadette Olowo was appointed by Uganda, which had 3.5 million Roman Catholics, more than any other nation in Africa, and was also that nation's ambassador to West Germany. A spokesman for the Vatican said, "The acceptance of a woman ambassador will be subject to the same rules as men," including good moral behavior and compliance with for Roman Catholic doctrine. The year before, the Pope had rejected an Australian nomination of a woman ambassador because she was a divorcee. Forty years earlier, Pope Pius XI had declared that women should not work at any occupation outside of the home.[44]
  • The Queen Elizabeth 2 began its first round-the-world cruise, departing New York City under tight security with 1,200 passengers.[45]
  • Born: Jake Delhomme, American NFL quarterback, in Breaux Bridge, Louisiana

January 11, 1975 (Saturday)

January 12, 1975 (Sunday)

January 13, 1975 (Monday)

January 14, 1975 (Tuesday)

  • The House Un-American Activities Committee, most notable for its investigations and accusations of Communist infiltration of Hollywood, was disbanded by the U.S. House of Representatives after 37 years. In 1969, it had been renamed the "Committee on Internal Security".[56][57]
  • U.S. Secretary of State
    most favored nation status, and had been aimed at putting pressure on the Soviet Union to drop its opposition to allowing its Jewish citizens to emigrate. Soviet First Secretary Leonid Brezhnev had sent a letter to U.S. President Ford on December 25, warning that the amendment was unacceptable. The amendment had the opposite effect, with Jewish emigration decreasing by 35% between 1974 and 1975.[58][59]
  • The Convention on Registration of Launched Objects into Outer Space, an international treaty requiring the signatory nations to keep the United Nations informed of the orbital details of any object launched into outer space, was signed in New York, and went into effect on September 15, 1976.[60]
  • U.S. Vice-President Nelson Rockefeller was named by President Ford to chair a special commission to investigate domestic spying by the Central Intelligence Agency.[61]

January 15, 1975 (Wednesday)

  • The Alvor Agreement was signed at the Penina Golfe Hotel in Alvor, Portugal, by the chiefs of the three groups fighting for the independence of Angola (Savimbi, Neto and Roberto) and President Costa Gomes of Portugal, after which the Portuguese government announced a date of November 11, 1975, for the independence of the colony of Portuguese West Africa as Angola.[26][62][63]
  • Space Mountain, an enclosed roller coaster, operated in near darkness, opened at Walt Disney World in Florida, and later was duplicated at the other Disney parks.[64]
  • CIA Director William Colby confirmed the reports from New York Times reporter Seymour Hersh and revealed to a U.S. Senate subcommittee that the agency had violated its charter by spying on American citizens for activities within the United States.[65]
  • Born: Mary Pierce, Canadian-born French professional tennis player; winner of Australian Open, 1995, and French Open, 2000; in Montreal
  • Died: Ernest Koliqi, 78, Albanian poet

January 16, 1975 (Thursday)

Ironside
  • A U.S. District Court jury awarded $12,000,000 to 1,200 anti-war demonstrators who had been illegally arrested on May 5, 1971, while they listened to a speech by Congressman
    Ronald Dellums of California at the U.S. Capitol. The amount was ordered payable by the District of Columbia government, following the suit by the ACLU. Many of the group had been detained at makeshift compounds, including the RFK Stadium. The ACLU had located 900 of the named plaintiffs [66][67]
  • The NBC television show
    Ironside, starring Raymond Burr as wheelchair-bound police detective Robert Ironside, showed its 199th and final episode after a run of eight seasons.[68]

January 17, 1975 (Friday)

January 18, 1975 (Saturday)

January 19, 1975 (Sunday)

January 20, 1975 (Monday)

  • Work was abandoned on the British end of the Channel Tunnel. The House of Commons approved cancellation of the project, 294–218, after Environment Secretary Anthony Crosland said that the nation could no longer afford the cost, which had increased to $4.6 billion.[81] Crosland, 56, said that he expected that the tunnel would be finished during his lifetime,[82] but he died two years later. Work was restarted in 1986 as a private venture, and the tunnel was completed in 1994.[83]
  • The
    Edward T. Gignoux ruled in Portland that the Interior Department had to intervene on their side in the case, based on the Nonintercourse Act of 1790.[84] The two small tribes would go on to obtain an $81,500,000 settlement and build a huge gambling empire.[85]
  • Life University, founded by Sid E. Williams and located in Marietta, Georgia, held its first classes, as Life Chiropractic College, with 22 students enrolled. By 1995, it had more than 4,000 students.[86]
  • Michael Rosenfeld, Ron Meyer, Bill Haber, and Rowland Perkins founded the Creative Artists Agency after departing from the William Morris agency, and built CAA into one of the most powerful groups of sports agents and entertainment agents.[87]
  • Provisional IRA member, Kevin Coen was killed by soldiers while attempting to hijack a bus in Kinawley, Northern Ireland.[79]
  • Born: David Eckstein, American MLB baseball player and 2006 World Series MVP; in Sanford, Florida
  • Died: Kay Summersby, 66, wartime chauffeur for General Dwight Eisenhower who wrote about their extramarital relationship in her book, Past Forgetting

January 21, 1975 (Tuesday)

  • In the English town of Todmorden, Dr. Harold Shipman, a young general practitioner, made a house call to 73-year-old widow Lily Crossley, who died half an hour after he left. Later in the day, he visited Elizabeth Pearce, 84, who died a few minutes later of what he listed as a cerebral hemorrhage. At the close of the day, he visited Robert Lingard, 63, who died minutes later of what Dr. Shipman described as a heart attack.[88] They were the first of hundreds of Dr. Shipman's patients to die after he treated them, until his arrest in 1998. Officially, there were 215 confirmed victims, and he was suspected in the deaths of another 200.[89]
  • The bodies of ten men and three women were found at Club Gargantua, a topless bar in Montreal, victims of an apparent gangland slaying. The club's manager was shot, and the entire group was herded into a storeroom, which was then padlocked and set afire.[90] The gangster suspected in the murders, Richard Blass, nicknamed "The Cat" for his ability to elude attempts on life and to escape jail three times, was killed three days later by Montreal police after going for his gun when he was cornered.[91]
  • The United States Supreme Court rendered its decision in Taylor v. Louisiana, invalidating a Louisiana state law that exempted women from jury duty unless they specifically requested to be eligible.[92]
  • The
    New York Times and Marcelle St. Cyr of Montreal radio station CKLM.[94]
  • Two would-be IRA bombers, John Kelly and John Stone, were killed when the bomb they are transporting detonates prematurely in Victoria Street, Belfast, Northern Ireland. Only the bombers are killed in the explosion.[79]

January 22, 1975 (Wednesday)

January 23, 1975 (Thursday)

January 24, 1975 (Friday)

Jarrett
  • Jazz pianist Keith Jarrett played the solo improvisation 'The Köln Concert' at the Cologne Opera. The live performance became the best-selling piano recording in history.[103][104]
  • Dr. Donald Coggan was made the new Archbishop of Canterbury, the administrator of the Church of England.[105]
  • A bomb, planted by the Puerto Rican nationalist group FALN, killed 4 people and injured 58 at
    Mayagüez, which the FALN said had been placed by the CIA, and had killed 2 people and injured 11.[106]
  • Dr.
    Jeffrey MacDonald was arrested at his home in Huntington Beach, California after being indicted by a federal grand jury in North Carolina, for the February 17, 1970 murders of his wife and two daughters while he had been in the U.S. Army. Murder charges had been brought against MacDonald but dropped that year for lack of evidence. MacDonald maintained that the killings had been done by four hippies who chanted "Acid is groovy, kill the pigs" before beating him unconscious, and that he had woken to find his family dead.[107] MacDonald was freed on bail a week later. His case came to trial in 1979, and he was found guilty of murder and sentenced to life imprisonment. A federal court reversed the conviction in 1980 and MacDonald was freed on bail again, then re-arrested and imprisoned in 1982 after the verdict was upheld.[108]
  • Only seven months after its launch, the Salyut 3 space station was deorbited by the Soviet Union, a day after the secret test-firing of its defensive cannon. It was later determined that the firing of the shells had not played a role in taking the station out of orbit. Salyut 3 re-entered the atmosphere over the Pacific Ocean and burned up.[109]
  • British soldier Thomas Lea died eight months after being injured in an IRA bomb attack in Belfast, Northern Ireland.[79]
  • Died: Larry Fine, 72, who had been one of The Three Stooges along with Moe Howard (who would die on May 4) and Curly Howard

January 25, 1975 (Saturday)

January 26, 1975 (Sunday)

January 27, 1975 (Monday)

  • The U.S. Senate voted 82-4 to establish its own special committee to investigate the CIA, with Frank Church of Idaho as the chairman.[116]

January 28, 1975 (Tuesday)

  • Sakhalin Island, former Japanese territory that became part of the USSR. In return for funding of the development, Japan would receive "a significant discount on half of the pumped oil" for ten years.[117]
  • Be My Valentine, Charlie Brown premiered on CBS.
  • Died:
    • Antonín Novotný, 70, President of Czechoslovakia 1957-1968
    • Arthur Judson, 93, artists' manager for New York Philharmonic and Philadelphia Orchestra and a co-founder of the Columbia Broadcasting System

January 29, 1975 (Wednesday)

January 30, 1975 (Thursday)

January 31, 1975 (Friday)

  • The last victim, of the serial killer known as the "Skid Row Slasher", was claimed after Clyde Hay, a 43-year-old cash register repairman, was found dead in his home in Hollywood, California. Hay was the killer's ninth victim in two months. The first seven had been transients in Los Angeles. Two days later, the killer was forced to flee during his next murder attempt but left a clue that would end his spree. Vaughn Greenwood would be convicted on nine counts of first degree murder almost two years later.[126]
  • Twenty-seven people on board the Greek oil tanker SS Corinthos were killed after their ship was struck by the American freighter Edgar M. Queeny. The Corinthos had been docked at
    British Petroleum, when it was struck by the freighter, which was making a course change.[127]
  • RUC Constable George Coulter was shot dead by the IRA while at a mobile Police patrol near Dungannon, Northern Ireland. He was the ninth and last official Northern Ireland Troubles related fatality during the month and the only Police Officer killed.[79]
  • Born: Preity Zinta, Indian film actress, in Shimla, Himachal Pradesh state.
  • Died:

References

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    . January 2, 1975. p. 1.
  2. Pittsburgh Press
    . January 2, 1975. p. 1.
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  4. ^ "Trojans Disdain Tie in 18-17 Victory". Milwaukee Journal. January 2, 1975. p. 2-1.
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  7. St. Petersburg Times
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  46. ^ "2 Cosmonauts Settle Into Salyut 4 'Home'", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, January 13, 1975, p3
  47. ^ Philip Baker, The Story of Manned Space Stations: An Introduction (Springer, 2007) p53
  48. ^ "Remains of Rocket End Journey", Milwaukee Journal, January 11, 1975, p3
  49. ^ "SUPER STEELERS WIN, 16-6", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, January 13, 1975, p1
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  51. ^ Bob Oates, Celebrating the Dawn: Maharishi Mahesh Yogi and the TM Technique (Putnam, 1976) p57
  52. ^ "Chrysler Rebates May Set Trend", Milwaukee Journal, January 8, 1975, p1
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  58. ^ "Trade Pact Repudiated By Russia". Pittsburgh Press. January 15, 1975. p. 1.
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  63. ^ Witney W. Schneidman, Engaging Africa: Washington and the Fall of Portugal's Colonial Empire (University Press of America, 2004) p198
  64. ^ Susan Veness, The Hidden Magic of Walt Disney World (Adams Media, 2009) p54; "Disney World Opens Space Mountain", Lakeland (FL) Ledger, January 17, 1975, p1D
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  66. ^ "D.C. Protesters Get $12 Million", Pittsburgh Press, January 17, 1975, p1
  67. ^ "Calls Pour In For Share Of D.C. Suit", Pittsburgh Press, January 18, 1975, p3
  68. ^ "'Ironside' Ending Tonight", Ocala (FL) Star-Banner, January 16, 1975, p12B
  69. ^ "China Re-elects Ailing Chou" Pittsburgh Press, January 18, 1975, p1
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  84. ^ "Maine Indians upheld in landmark suit against U.S.", Bangor Daily News, January 22, 1975, p1
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  97. ^ Kali Charan Sahu, Textbook of Remote Sensing and Geographical Information Systems (Atlantic Publishers, 2007) p172
  98. ^ Benedict Anderson, The Spectre of Comparisons: Nationalism, Southeast Asia, and the World (Verso, 1998) p161
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  102. ^ Stephen J. Edberg and David H. Levy, Observing Comets, Asteroids, Meteors, and the Zodiacal Light (Cambridge University Press, 1994) p103
  103. ^ "Keith Jarrett - Biography". All About Jazz. Archived from the original on 2011-03-18. Retrieved 2011-04-09.
  104. ^ David Davies, Philosophy of the Performing Arts (John Wiley & Sons, 2011) p135
  105. ^ "Anglicans Install 101st Archbishop", Pittsburgh Press, January 24, 1975, p4
  106. ^ "N.Y. Bomb Kills 4, Injures 40", Pittsburgh Press, January 25, 1975, p1; David N. Bossie, Hillary: The Politics of Personal Destruction (Thomas Nelson Inc, 2008)
  107. ^ "Ex-Army Doctor Arrested Again In Family Killing", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, January 25, 1975, p2
  108. ^ Jerry Allen Potter and Fred Bost, Fatal Justice: Reinvestigating the MacDonald Murders (W. W. Norton & Company, 1997)
  109. ^ Ben Evans, Foothold in the Heavens: The Seventies (Springer, 2010) p286; "Salyut 3 Ends Mission, Burns in Space", Milwaukee Sentinel, January 25, 1975
  110. ^ Craig Baxter and Syedur Rahman, Historical Dictionary of Bangladesh (Scarecrow Press, 2003) p20
  111. ^ "Results Saturday 25th January 1975 - statto.com". www.statto.com. Archived from the original on 2011-06-29.
  112. ^ "Women Cagers Make TV Debut", Ocala (FL) Star-Banner, January 27, 1975, p2B
  113. ^ "Thailand's Free Election", New York Times, February 3, 1975
  114. ^ Takashi Shiraishi and P. N. Abinales,After the Crisis: Hegemony, Technocracy and Governance in Southeast Asia (Trans Pacific Press, 2005) p28
  115. ^ Christopher McCreery, The Order of Canada: its origins, history, and development (University of Toronto Press, 2005)
  116. ^ L. Britt Snider, Agency and the hill: the cia's relationship with congress (Government Printing Office, Aug 7, 2008) p34
  117. ^ Werner D. Lippert, The Economic Diplomacy of Ostpolitik: Origins of NATO's Energy Dilemma (Berghahn Books, 2010) p169
  118. ^ "State Department Bombed", Miami News, January 28, 1975, p1
  119. ^ "Jan. 30, 1975: Rubik Applies for Patent on Magic Cube", This Day in Tech, Wired magazine, January 30, 2009
  120. ^ HU 170062 B", Lens.org, Queensland University of Technology
  121. ^ "Rubik Ernő: Térbeli logikai játék", Hungarian Intellectual Property Office (in Hungarian)
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  124. ^ "Ford Extends Clemency Plan 1 Month, Milwaukee Sentinel, January 31, 1975, p3
  125. .
  126. ^ "Greenwood, Vaughn Orrin", in The Encyclopedia of Serial Killers, by Michael Newton (Infobase Publishing, 2006) pp101-102
  127. ^ "Two Dead, 25 Missing As Ship Rams Tanker", Sarasota (FL) Herald-Tribune, February 1, 1975, p1