June 1975

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The following events occurred in June 1975:

June 26, 1975: India's Prime Minister Indira Gandhi declares national emergency and suspends democratic process after being ruled ineligible for office
June 5, 1975: Suez Canal reopens after being closed eight years
June 25, 1975: People's Republic of Mozambique declared

June 1, 1975 (Sunday)

  • U.S. President
    Gerald R. Ford arrived in Salzburg, Austria for a meeting with Egypt's President Anwar Sadat, and slipped and fell on the stairway while descending from Air Force One.[1] Pictures of the tumbling U.S. President were seen again and again, giving Ford a reputation for being clumsy, both physically and in his handling of the presidency.[2]
  • Born: Nikol Pashinyan, Armenian politician, Prime Minister of Armenia, in Ijevan, Armenian SSR[3]

June 2, 1975 (Monday)

  • Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin announced that Israel would remove tanks, troops and weapons from the Suez Canal as a peace gesture to Egypt.[4]

June 3, 1975 (Tuesday)

June 4, 1975 (Wednesday)

June 5, 1975 (Thursday)

USS Little Rock on the Suez Canal
  • The Suez Canal opened for the first time since the Six-Day War eight years earlier.[9] Because there were still mines left in the waters from 1967, the American guided missile cruiser USS Little Rock made the first transit, sailing from Port Said, where Egypt's President Sadat oversaw the celebration, to Ismailia.[10]
  • In the first yes-or-no
    European Community by a margin of 17,378,581 to 8,470,073.[11]
  • Died: Paul Keres, 59, Estonian chess grandmaster

June 6, 1975 (Friday)

[15]

June 7, 1975 (Saturday)

  • General Paul Strehlin, former
    French Air Force Chief of Staff, was run over by a bus in Paris, hours after being revealed to have secretly been on the payroll of the Northrop aircraft manufacturing company. He would die of his injuries on June 22.[16]
  • A new
    Vouli ton Ellinon, the 300 member Greek Parliament, formally replacing the monarchy with a republic. All of the votes were by members of the ruling Nea Dimokratia (New Democracy) party, as members of the other parties boycotted the vote in protest over the power given to the President.[17]
  • The first
    Group B had the West Indies, Australia, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. Under the format, the teams in each group would play each other once (for a total of three games) and the top two teams in each group would qualify for a "knockout stage" playoff, with the first place finisher of one group playing the second place finisher of the other group. The first games were played simultaneously in London, Birmingham, Leeds and Manchester. [18]
  • Born: Allen Iverson, American NBA player, 2001 MVP, 4-time scoring leader, 3-time steals leader; in Hampton, Virginia

June 8, 1975 (Sunday)

  • The Venera 9 space probe was launched by the Soviet Union to explore the planet Venus. It would land on Venus on October 22 at 13:12 Venus solar time (0513 UTC) and transmit data for 53 minutes.[19]
  • Two passenger trains collided head on near Munich, West Germany, killing 38 people.[20]
  • Born: Shilpa Shetty, Indian film actress, in Mangalore

June 9, 1975 (Monday)

June 10, 1975 (Tuesday)

June 11, 1975 (Wednesday)

June 12, 1975 (Thursday)

June 13, 1975 (Friday)

  • In Baghdad, Iraq and Iran signed a peace treaty formalizing an agreement reached in Algiers. After the monarchy in Iran was replaced by a republic, Iraq's President Saddam Hussein would declare the agreement void on September 17, 1980, seize the Shatt al-Arab river dividing the two nations, and begin the eight-year-long Iran–Iraq War.[36]
  • Died: Merrill Denison, 81, Canadian playwright and author

June 14, 1975 (Saturday)

  • The Venera 10 space probe was launched by the Soviet Union to explore the planet Venus. It would land on Venus on October 25 at 13:42 Venus solar time (0102 UTC) and transmit data for 65 minutes.[19]
  • British commercial diver George Turner drowned after experiencing
    surface-orientated SCUBA dive from the construction/pipe laying barge Choctaw I in the North Sea.[37]
  • Died: Pablo Antonio, 74, Filipino modernist architect

June 15, 1975 (Sunday)

June 16, 1975 (Monday)

  • The Great Barrier Reef Marine Park was created in Australia which put the Great Barrier Reef under government protection.[42]
  • Japan's Prime Minister Takeo Miki was punched in the face while attending funeral services for former Japanese Prime Minister Eisaku Satō. Hiroyoshi Fudeyasu, a 34-year-old member of the Great Japan Nationalist Party, struck Miki, who then went on to deliver a eulogy for Sato.[43]
  • Died: Don Robey, 71, American record producer

June 17, 1975 (Tuesday)

  • Voters in the Northern Mariana Islands approved an agreement to become a commonwealth within the United States.[44] Congress would approve the new status on July 21, and the Commonwealth would come into existence on January 9, 1978, with the Northern Marianans becoming United States citizens.[45]
  • The most powerful
    Palm Springs and Indio, California.[46]

June 18, 1975 (Wednesday)

June 19, 1975 (Thursday)

Giancana
  • Five days before he was scheduled to testify before the U.S. Congress on organized crime, Sam Giancana, a former boss of Chicago mafia, was shot and killed while in the basement of his home in Oak Park, Illinois. The Chicago Police Department had had his home under surveillance that evening, but the two police drove away at 10:10 pm. At 10:30, the police heard a "popping noise" while listening, but didn't believe it was gunshots. Giancana was found the next day, shot in the mouth and the neck, despite having been in a room with an armored door.[51] The murderer, whom Giancana apparently knew well enough to open the door for, shot Giancana in the back of the head, then in the mouth and five more times under Giancana's chin; leaving seven bullet wounds was considered a warning sign left by the Mafia for those persons who were felt to have betrayed the organization.[52]
  • Constantine Tsatsos was approved by the Parliament of the new Republic of Greece to become the nation's first elected president.[53]
  • The International Convention on Civil Liability for Oil Pollution Damage, often referred to as the CLC, came into effect by its terms, six years after its 1969 signing. The CLC provides that the sole liability for pollution damage, caused by an oil spill, lies with the owner of the ship, unless the shipowner can prove one of the exceptions (such as a spill caused by an act of war).[54]
  • Died: Henry Nelson Wieman, 90, American Christian philosopher and theologian

June 20, 1975 (Friday)

  • Jaws, an action film about a white shark terrorizing a resort island, premiered nationwide.[55] Within two weeks, the film would recoup its costs, and by September 5, it would surpass The Godfather as the highest-grossing film in history (until surpassed by Star Wars in 1977).[56]
  • Underwater photographs, purporting to be of the Loch Ness Monster, were taken by an automatic high-speed camera triggered by a sonar. Some of the photos, the result of a project by Robert H. Rines, Charles Wyckoff, and the Academy of Applied Science.[57] The existence of the photos would be announced later in the year[58] and the journal Nature would purchase and publish the photos in December.[59]
  • Jorge Born, the son of the Argentine multinational corporation
    Bunge y Born, was released unharmed after the company paid a then-record $64,000,000 to the Montoneros, the terrorist organization that had kidnapped him and his brother on September 19, 1974. Juan had been released in April "for health reasons". The Montoneros group would be wiped out by the Argentine government by 1977 in the Dirty War.[60]
  • Former California Governor Ronald Reagan filed papers with the Federal Election Commission, declaring his intention to run for President of the United States in a challenge against incumbent Gerald Ford for the Republican Party nomination. Reagan would lose to Ford at the 1976 convention, but would win the party's nomination, and the presidency, in 1980.[61]
  • Died:
    Mathieu Kerekou. President Kerekou had been outraged after finding Minister Aikpe in bed with Mrs. Kerekou. A new Interior Minister was appointed on Monday.[62]

June 21, 1975 (Saturday)

June 22, 1975 (Sunday)

  • Uganda's dictator, Idi Amin, postponed the execution of British citizen Denis Hills, a day before Hills was set to go before a firing squad for statements made in the unpublished manuscript of The White Pumpkin. Amin's decision came after he hosted two British envoys at his hometown of Arua. The envoys, bearing a written appeal from Queen Elizabeth II, had been Amin's commanding officers when Amin had been a sergeant in the King's African Rifles in the colonial British Army.[66] Hills would be released by Amin on July 10.[67]

June 23, 1975 (Monday)

  • The
    Richard M. Nixon from practice before the court.[68]
  • The events of
    George Perec's 1978 novel Life: A User's Manual (La Vie mode d'emploi), as Peret describes each character's fate on that date at an apartment building at 11 Rue Simon-Crubellier in Paris, shortly before 8:00 pm.[69]

June 24, 1975 (Tuesday)

June 25, 1975 (Wednesday)

  • The
    Portuguese East Africa, gained independence from Portugal shortly after midnight, with Samora Machel of the FRELIMO Party as its first President.[79] Within two years, the civil war would be renewed in Mozambique as a new group, the Mozambican National Resistance (RENAMO), supported by South Africa would begin a 15-year-long war against Machel's Soviet supported government. Machel would die in a plane crash in 1986. The Marxist republic would give way to a democratic regime in 1990.[80]
  • India's President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed signed the proclamation to declare a state of emergency. The order was implemented the next day.
  • Born:
    Russian SFSR, Soviet Union

June 26, 1975 (Thursday)

June 27, 1975 (Friday)

  • International terrorist Ilich Ramírez Sánchez, more commonly known as "Carlos the Jackal", eluded capture after three policemen of the French Intelligence Service arrived at his Paris apartment to question him about a recent terrorist attack at the Orly Airport. After getting permission to use the bathroom, Carlos came back out firing a gun and killed two of the officers,[87] Raymond Dous and Jean Donatini, along with Michel Moukharbal, the informer who had betrayed him, then escaped; the third officer, Jean Herranz, survived.[88] Carlos would finally be captured in 1994.[89]
  • Professional golfers Lee Trevino and Jerry Heard were struck by lightning when a thunderstorm interrupted the Western Open PGA Tournament.[90] Trevino, who was hospitalized for burns on his left shoulder, remained in pain for two years before winning the Canadian Open in 1977.[91]
  • Born: Tobey Maguire, American film actor, in Santa Monica, California
  • Died:
    • Geoffrey Ingram Taylor
      , 89, British physicist
    • Robert Stolz, 94, Austrian composer of operettas and film music, conductor and songwriter

June 28, 1975 (Saturday)

June 29, 1975 (Sunday)

  • The ship Greenpeace V, operated by the environmentalist Canadian group Greenpeace Foundation, made the first of many confrontations with whalers to save the world's whales from being hunted to extinction. Paul Watson and several other members of the crew conducted the first "hunt sabotage" against the Soviet whaling ship Dalniy Vostok, steering rafts between the ships and the whales in an effort to prevent the firing of harpoons. In that first meeting, the Soviets fired their harpoons anyway, without injury to the Greenpeace members.[93]
  • On the night of June 29-30, 20-year-old Donald Watt Cressey of
    FBI would investigate.[94]
  • Died:

June 30, 1975 (Monday)

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  2. ^ Karla K. Gower, Public Relations and the Press: The Troubled Embrace (Northwestern University Press, 2007) pp115-117
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  4. ^ "Israel Plans Pullback; Ford Maps Peace Plan", Milwaukee Journal, June 2, 1975, p1
  5. ^ "New Rules to Bar School Sex Bias", Milwaukee Sentinel, June 4, 1975, p3
  6. ^ David H. Shinn and Thomas P. Ofcansky, Historical Dictionary of Ethiopia (Scarecrow Press, 2004) p10
  7. ^ "Ugandan Land Nationalized", Milwaukee Sentinel, June 4, 1975, p3
  8. ^ "Israel Completes Sinai Withdrawal", Milwaukee Sentinel, June 5, 1975, p2
  9. ^ "Sadat Leads Rites to Open Suez Canal", Milwaukee Sentinel, June 6, 1975, p3
  10. ^ Chester G. Hearn, The Illustrated Directory of The United States Navy (Zenith Imprint, 2003) p305
  11. ^ Bill Jones and Lynton Robins, Two Decades in British Politics: Essays to Mark Twenty-One Years of the Politics Association, 1969-90 (Manchester University Press, 1992); "Britain Votes to Stay in Euromart", Milwaukee Sentinel, June 7, 1975, p3
  12. ^ "Copter Pilot Navigates Daring Escape"", Milwaukee Sentinel, June 7, 1975, p1
  13. ^ "Copter Caper Con Captured In Bar", Pittsburgh Press, June 7, 1975, p1
  14. ^ "Larry Blyden Dies of Auto Injuries". Los Angeles Times. AP. June 7, 1975. p. I-7.
  15. ISSN 0362-4331
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  21. ^ "11 Killed in Florida Jail Blaze", Milwaukee Sentinel, June 10, 1975, p1
  22. ^ "Pele Melee— Soccer Star Attracts News Mob", Milwaukee Journal, June 11, 1975, p16
  23. ^ "U.S. RIGHTS VIOLATIONS DETAILED IN CIA REPORT", Milwaukee Sentinel, June 11, 1975, p1
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  53. ^ "Tsatsos Elected", Milwaukee Sentinel, June 20, 1975, p2
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  55. ^ "A Movie With Teeth", Milwaukee Journal, June 21, 1975, p1
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  65. ^ "Lloyd's Day at Lord's", by David Hunn, The Observer (London), June 22, 1975, p. 18
  66. ^ "Briton's execution delayed", Spokane Spokesman-Review, June 23, 1975, p9
  67. ^ "British lecturer Denis Hills is freed by Uganda's Amin", St. Petersburg Times, July 11, 1975, p1
  68. ^ "Nixon Quits Bar", Milwaukee Journal, June 24, 1975, p. 2
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  73. ^ Michael M. Baden, with Judith Adler Hennessee, Unnatural Death: Confessions of a Medical Examiner (Ivy Books, 1990) p83; James Wagner, with Patrick Picciarelli, My Life in the NYPD:: Jimmy the Wags (Penguin, 2002)
  74. ^ Gerry Byrne, Flight 427: Anatomy of an Air Disaster (Springer, 2002) p42
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  83. ^ "Emergency Declared Without Cabinet OK, Indira Concedes". Los Angeles Times. April 7, 1977. p. I-21.
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  87. ^ "Carlos: The Most Dangerous Man In the World", by Ovid Demaris, New York Magazine, November 7, 1977, p39
  88. ^ "27 juin 1975, trois morts rue Toullier à Paris. Un carnage signé Carlos", by Karl Laske, Libération, June 27, 1975
  89. ^ Stephen E. Atkins, Encyclopedia of Modern Worldwide Extremists and Extremist Groups (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2004) pp 287-289
  90. ^ "Lightning hits Trevino, Heard", St. Petersburg Times, June 28, 1975, pC1
  91. ^ "Learn to live with lightning", by Derek Kisom, NewScientist (June 24, 1989) p55
  92. ^ S. C. B. Gascoigne, The Creation of the Anglo-Australian Observatory (Cambridge University Press, 1990) p. 25
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  94. .
  95. ^ "Women in the U.S. Army: A New Era"
  96. ^ "Divorce leaves Ann Answerless", Milwaukee Sentinel, July 1, 1975, p2