May 1973

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May 14, 1973: Skylab, first U.S. space station, in orbit
May 25, 1973: Weitz, Conrad and Kerwin sent on Skylab 2 repair mission

The following events occurred in May 1973:

May 1, 1973 (Tuesday)

May 2, 1973 (Wednesday)

May 3, 1973 (Thursday)

  • The Northern Ireland Assembly Act received royal assent, allowing the UK government to set up a Northern Ireland Assembly and to attempt power sharing.[13]
  • U.S. President Nixon sent his fourth annual "State of the World" address to Congress and warned the government of North Vietnam that "We will not tolerate violations of the Vietnam agreement" made in the Paris Peace Accords in January, and that an invasion of South Vietnam "would risk revived confrontation with us."[14]

May 4, 1973 (Friday)

May 5, 1973 (Saturday)

May 6, 1973 (Sunday)

May 7, 1973 (Monday)

  • A 71-day standoff between federal authorities and
    Pine Ridge Reservation at Wounded Knee, South Dakota, ended with the surrender of the leaders of the militants. Carter Camp and Leonard Crow Dog ordered the other militants to lay down their arms, and were transported to Rapid City to face criminal charges. Another 13 militants were arrested after they tried to slip through lines of federal agents who had surrounded the area.[28] Another 120 members and sympathizers of the American Indian Movement (AIM) surrendered their weapons the next day as FBI agents and United States Marshals retook Wounded Knee.[29][30][31]
  • The government of Peru nationalized the South American nation's fishing industry, creating the state enterprise PescaPeru and confiscating the resources of companies from the U.S., Argentina, France, Norway, the UK and Japan.[32]
  • The U.S. state of Maryland ratified the Fifteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, prohibiting states from interfering with a citizen's right to vote based on race, after having rejected it in 1870. The only states remaining that hadn't formally approved the 15th Amendment (which had become the law of the land in 1870 after approval by 30 of the then 40 U.S. states) were Kentucky, which would ratify in 1976, and Tennessee, which would do so in 1997.[33]
  • The Washington Post was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for public service as a result of the investigation of the Watergate break-in by Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, but the individual prize for reporting went instead to Robert Boyd and Clark Hoyt of the Knight Newspapers chain[34]

May 8, 1973 (Tuesday)

  • The government of the Sudan released all of its political prisoners as a new constitution went into effect, guaranteeing the right of a speedy and fair trial to anyone accused of breaking the law. Many of the persons freed had been members of opposition political parties who had been arrested in 1971 after a failed coup.[35]
  • Palden Thandup Namgyal, ruler of the Himalayan Kingdom of Sikkim, signed an agreement at the request of India, giving up his authority as an absolute monarch, creating an elected legislature, and having a government of ministers nominated by India.[36]
  • Lebanon's Prime Minister Amin Hafez resigned a few hours after fighting broke out between Lebanese troops and Palestinian guerrillas.[37]
  • In a 9–7 losing effort against the San Francisco Giants, St. Louis Cardinals baseball ace Bob Gibson made his 242nd consecutive start. It was a new 20th-century record, passing that of Red Ruffing.

May 9, 1973 (Wednesday)

artist's rendition of Lunokhod, with its protective cover open
  • Operating at the Le Monnier crater on the Moon, the Soviet lunar rover Lunokhod 2 encountered an accident due to a ground control mistake two days earlier that allowed dust to fall on the rover's solar cells. The protective lid, open in order to bring out sensory and transmission equipment, was left open when the rover was being maneuvered out of the crater and struck a wall, allowing the dust in.[38] The rover's batteries overheated and it stopped working on May 11, exactly four months after its January 11 launch. More than 40 years would pass before another motorized vehicle moved across the lunar surface, with the arrival of China's Yutu rover on December 14, 2013.[39]
  • Color television was introduced to Czechoslovakia, with Československá televise (ČST) TV2 showing the first color TV programs from its transmitting stations in Prague (now in the Czech Republic) and Bratislava (now in Slovakia).[40]

May 10, 1973 (Thursday)

May 11, 1973 (Friday)

  • Sweden's parliament, the Riksdag, enacted the world's first computer data protection law, the Datalagen or Data Act, to take effect on July 1, 1974.[49]
  • West Germany's Bundestag voted, 268 to 217, to ratify the Grundlagenvertrag, the December 21, 1972 treaty with East Germany. In a separate vote, 90 members of the CDU opposition party broke ranks and joined in a 358 to 127 vote for West Germany to join the United Nations, despite a condition that East Germany would also be admitted.[50]
Premier Den Uyl with Queen Juliana
  • Joop den Uyl became the new Prime Minister of the Netherlands, replacing Barend Biesheuvel.
  • All federal espionage charges Daniel Ellsberg, arising from his 1971 leaking of the "Pentagon Papers", were dismissed by Judge William Byrne because of government misconduct in the prosecution and evidence-gathering.[51] Byrne said in his order that "The totality of the circumstances... offend a sense of justice. The bizarre events have incurably infected the prosecution of this case."[52]
  • The crash of
    Semipalatinsk.[53]
  • The Soviet Union made its fourth attempt to launch a space station, Salyut 3, having been successful with keeping Salyut 1 in orbit for six months in 1971, but failing to orbit a second station on July 29, 1972, and already seeing problems with Salyut 2, which had been unstable since its launch on April 3, 1973. The latest Salyut went up from Baikonur Cosmodrome at 6:20 in the morning local time, three days before the scheduled U.S. launch of Skylab, but was apparently damaged after it reached orbit, leading to the cancellation of the mission of two cosmonauts who would have docked with the orbiting station.[54] Salyut 3 orbited the Earth 175 times over 11 days before burning up in the Earth's atmosphere on May 22.
  • Died: Lex Barker, 54, American film actor best known for portraying Tarzan in five films, died of a heart attack.

May 12, 1973 (Saturday)

  • Two American mountaineers, John Roskelley and Louis Reichardt, made the highest ascent of a mountain without using supplemental oxygen, climbing the seventh-highest peak in the world, reaching the summit at 26,795 feet (8,167 m) without oxygen tanks.[55]
  • The
    Louisville.[56][57]
  • Born: Mackenzie Astin, American TV and film actor; as the son of actors John Astin and Patty Duke, in Los Angeles.
  • Died:
    • Monika Ertl, 35, German-born Bolivian terrorist known for her mission to avenge the execution of Che Guevara and her assassination of Colonel Roberto Quintanilla, was ambushed and killed by the Bolivian Army at the city of El Alto.
    • Art Pollard, 46, became the first of several people to be killed in the disastrous 1973 Indianapolis 500, after crashing during time trials at 191.4 miles per hour (308.0 km/h).[58][59] David "Swede" Savage would be fatally injured in the race itself, and Armando Moreno, a member of one of the pit crews, would die instantly after being hit by a fire truck racing to Savage's crash site.

May 13, 1973 (Sunday)

  • Ramona, California, northeast of San Diego. Riggs was 55 years old and had Wimbledon in 1939, as well as the U.S. Open in 1939 and 1941. Court, 30 years old, had won 24 Grand Slam singles titles and was the reigning champion of the Australian and French Open competitions (and would win the U.S. Open later in the year.[60] Riggs, a self-admitted male chauvinist who had said that "the girls" should not get as much money as "the men", said that he wanted to challenge Billie Jean King in a match.[61] Riggs won 6–2, 6–1,[62] which would lead to the huge Battle of the Sexes match against Billie Jean King
    on September 20.

May 14, 1973 (Monday)

May 15, 1973 (Tuesday)

  • Voting took place in Sierra Leone, with almost all seats won by the All People's Congress (APC). The main opposition party, the Sierra Leone People's Party boycotted the election because of irregularities, and most APC candidates were elected unopposed.
  • In the House of Commons of the United Kingdom, Prime Minister Edward Heath described large payments made by Lonrho to Duncan Sandys through the tax haven of the Cayman Islands, as the "unacceptable face of capitalism." The Sandys scandal came at a time when the government was trying to implement a counter-inflation policy,[68]
  • The Zambian Army shot three North American tourists who were visiting the Rhodesian side of Victoria Falls, killing two young women who were visiting from Canada and seriously wounding an American. Christine Sinclair of Guelph, Ontario, was killed instantly, while Marion Drijber of Rockwood was hit by bullets and fell into the river below and was swept away.[69][70]
  • Died: Colonel
    Ernesto Guevara, and Selich had later been a part of the three man military junta that had overthrown President Juan José Torres in 1971.[72]

May 16, 1973 (Wednesday)

May 17, 1973 (Thursday)

Senator Ervin chairing the Watergate hearings[76]
  • All three commercial television networks in the U.S. interrupted their regular daytime programming at 10:00 in the morning Washington DC time to show live hearings of witness testimony in the U. S. Senate's subcommittee investigation of the Watergate scandal, as the first hearings were held, chaired by North Carolina U.S. Senator Sam Ervin.[77] The first witness to testify was Robert C. Odle Jr., a former official with the Committee to Re-Elect the President.[78]
  • Four people were killed and 52 injured in Italy by a hand grenade, thrown by a terrorist during a ceremony at police headquarters in Milan. Gianfranco Bertoli, who declared himself an individualist anarchist, said that he had intended to assassinate Italy's Interior Minister, though Rumor had left the room a few minutes before the explosion. .[79][80]
  • North Korea received its first major international recognition after the World Health Organization (WHO) voted, 56 to 41, to admit the closed Communist nation as a member.[81]
  • The U.S. Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) set off three nuclear weapons underground at point 30 miles (48 km) from Meeker, Colorado, in the first test of Project Rio Blanco in the AEC's Operation Plowshare program for the peaceful use of atomic energy. The project, financed in large part by CER Geonuclear Corporation and Equity Oil Company, was done for the purpose of "freeing vast quantities of natural gas locked in tightly compacted subterranean rocks." The three atomic weapons were 30 kilotons apiece, with a combined force "four times that of the Hiroshima atomic bomb" used in 1945, and detonated at depths ranging from 5,530 feet (1,690 m) to 6,830 feet (2,080 m)[82]
  • Born: Josh Homme, American singer and musician; frontman of Queens of the Stone Age, in Joshua Tree, California[83]

May 18, 1973 (Friday)

  • All 81 people aboard Aeroflot Flight 109 were killed when the Tupolev Tu-104 exploded in the course of an attempted hijacking. The flight had originated in Moscow the night before, with multiple stops en route to a final scheduled destination of Chita, and had departed Irkutsk early in the morning with 72 passengers and nine crew. At 9:36 a.m. local time, as the plane was making its approach to Chita, the crew told the control tower that a hijacking was in progress. Three minutes later, at an altitude of 21,300 feet (6,500 m), the aircraft disappeared from radar. A subsequent investigation by Soviet authorities concluded that the hijacker, Chingis Rzayev, was carrying a TNT explosive device; that a security officer on board, Vladimir Yezhikov, had shot the Rzayev; and that as he was dying, Rzayev had detonated the 12 pounds (5.4 kg).[84] The crash was not mentioned in the censored Soviet press, but reports reached the West three weeks later.[85]
  • As the "
    Cod War" between the UK and Iceland continued, Joseph Godber, Britain's Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, announced that Royal Navy frigates would protect British trawlers fishing within the disputed 50 miles (80 km) territorial limit claimed by Iceland
    .
  • Archibald Cox, a professor at the Harvard University College of Law, was selected by U.S. Attorney General Elliot Richardson to serve as the U.S. Department of Justice's Special Prosecutor for crimes committed in the Watergate scandal.[86]
  • Chancellor Willy Brandt welcomed Brezhnev.[87]
  • Died: Dieudonné Costes, 80, French aviator

May 19, 1973 (Saturday)

May 20, 1973 (Sunday)

May 21, 1973 (Monday)

  • The "Masagana 99" economic program was launched in the Philippines by President Ferdinand Marcos to increase the nation's rice production after a severe shortage in an important staple. The word "masagana" was a Tagalog language word for bountiful, and "99" referred to the target for the number of sacks of rice per hectare of land. The program would be successful in that respect, more than doubling production as measured by cavans (60 kilograms) per hectare from 40 to 99, with the Philippines attaining self-sufficiency by 1976, and becoming an exporter of rice by 1978, but also left thousands of poor farmers in debt.[93]
  • The
    Tun Abdul Razak and Thailand's Thanom Kittikachorn
    .
  • In the Italian city of Bergamo, Mriko Panattoni, 8-year-old son of a caterer, was abducted in front of the school; two weeks later, he was freed in exchange for a 300-million-lira (about US$500,000 at the time) ransom.[94]  
  • At the 1973 Cannes Film Festival, the screening of La Grande Bouffe, by Marco Ferreri, a willfully provocative and extreme apologue about consumerism, infuriated some members of the crowd. The director and actors had to be escorted by the police to the hotel.[95]
  • Born:
  • Died:
    • Ivan Konev, 73, Marshal of the Soviet Union who led the Red Army's counteroffensive against Nazi Germany during World War II and who was responsible for taking much of Eastern Europe into Soviet control.
    • Vaughn Monroe, 62, American bandleader and singer known for "Racing With the Moon" and "There, I've Said It Again", died from complications of stomach surgery[98]

May 22, 1973 (Tuesday)

  • Lord Lambton, Undersecretary of Defence for the Royal Air Force, resigned from the British government over a 'call girl' scandal.[99] Lord Lambton said in a handwritten statement that the call girl's husband had photographed the two of them together and tried to sell the pictures to a London tabloid, but that "There has been no security risk and no blackmail," adding "I have behaved with credulous stupidity."[100]
  • White House press secretary
    Ronald Ziegler delivered U.S. President Nixon's statement regarding the Watergate scandal. The president admitted that he had, on occasion, ordered wiretapping of telephones to discover the source of leaks of confidential information, as well as having created the "Plumbers" until to stop information leaking, but denied any involvement in the installation of listening devices in Democratic Party offices in the Watergate Hotel.[101]

May 23, 1973 (Wednesday)

May 24, 1973 (Thursday)

  • Earl Jellicoe, Lord Privy Seal and Leader of the House of Lords in Britain, resigned over a separate prostitution scandal.[104]
  • President of Israel
    .
  • An Indian Army brigade of 700 troops ended a three-day revolt revolt of 300 paramilitary police in the state of Uttar Pradesh, after at least 40 people had been killed. The members of the Provincial Armed Constabulary had caused uprisings in the cities of Gorakhpur and Jahangirabad earlier in the week.[105]
  • In Athens, a mutiny of the Hellenic Navy against the Greek junta, plotted by the retired admirals Engofopulos and Minaios, was nipped in the bud by the police, who arrested the two conspirators.[106]
  • Died: U.S. Congressman William O. Mills, 48, committed suicide with a shotgun wound to his chest, after being implicated in the Watergate scandal. Mills, of Maryland, had failed to report that he had received $25,000 from President Nixon's re-election committee.[107] His death came the day after the Washington Post had reported the contribution, and four days after the Washington Star-News had broken the story. Before killing himself at his farm home in Easton, Maryland, Mills called a local radio station and played a recording denying that he had done anything improper.[108]

May 25, 1973 (Friday)

  • The Skylab 2 space mission, with U.S. astronauts Pete Conrad, Paul J. Weitz, and Joseph P. Kerwin, was launched to repair damage to the recently launched Skylab space station.[109] Using a vehicle and equipment from the canceled Apollo 18 mission, Skylab 2 was the first crewed space mission for the U.S. since the end of the Apollo program in 1972.[110]
Argentine President Cámpora wearing the inaugural sash[111]

May 26, 1973 (Saturday)

  • Syria completed two days of parliamentary elections, the first in almost 10 years, as voters chose from 931 candidates for the 186 seats on the People's Council. The ruling Ba'ath Party and its allies won roughly 70 percent of the vote.[118]
  • The Cod Wars between Iceland and the UK escalated when the Icelandic Coast Guard gunboat Aegir fired shells at the British fish trawler Everton, after the fishing vessel's captain ignored several warning shots. The Everton had at least two holes in it but its crew of 21 was uninjured.[119]
  • Two days after the failed mutiny of the Hellenic Navy, the Greek destroyer Velos departed from NATO maneuvers in the Tyrrhenian Sea and dropped anchor off the coast of Fiumicino, as a protest against the Greek junta. Commander Nicholas Papas, the other officers and part of the crew received political asylum in Italy.[120][121]
  • Zaid Rifai was selected to be the new prime minister of Jordan by King Hussein as part of a policy to work further at ridding the Middle Eastern kingdom of Palestinian guerrillas. Rifai, who had survived a 1970 assassination attempt by Black September, replaced Ahmad Al Lawzi, who had resigned for health reasons.[122]
  • The BBC's long-running, highly rated magazine show That's Life!, introduced by Esther Rantzen, was broadcast for the first time.[123]
  • Argentina's new president Hector Campora announced a pardon for all political prisoners in the South American nation, including members of the Montoneros terrorist group. At the Villa Devoto jail, guards fired on a crowd demanding the prisoners' liberation and killed two protesters.[124]
  • A
    Sikorsky VH-3A aircraft crashed into the Atlantic Ocean while patrolling the waters around President Nixon's vacation home at Grand Cay Island in the Bahamas. J. Clifford Dietrich was one of seven agents who had been sent from Nixon's Key Biscayne residence in Florida to replace other agents who had been on duty.[125][126]
  • Died: Jacques Lipchitz, 81, Latvian-born American Cubist sculptor[127]

May 27, 1973 (Sunday)

  • As part of the reforms of Argentina's new civilian regime under President Campora, the Argentine Congress repealed an anti-Communist law that that had been decreed on August 25, 1967, by Lieutenant General and President Juan Carlos Ongania.[128]
  • By virtue of the non-retroactivity of Soviet copyright laws, all works published in Russia and the U.S.S.R. before this date are public domain. This applies worldwide.
  • Died: Herman A. Barnett, 47, American surgeon and former aviator of the Tuskegee Airmen, was killed in a plane crash.[129]

May 28, 1973 (Monday)

  • The Salyut 2 space station, which had been damaged soon after being launched into orbit by the Soviet Union on April 3, 1973, fell out of orbit after 56 days and burned up in Earth's atmosphere over the south Pacific Ocean.[130][131]
  • The 1973 Indianapolis 500, already marked by the death of a driver in qualifications, started as scheduled on Memorial Day and soon was halted because of a pileup of 11 cars and the serious injury of Salt Walther in a fiery crash.[132] In addition, 12 spectators received injuries after stricken by debris from the crash.[133]

May 29, 1973 (Tuesday)

May 30, 1973 (Wednesday)

  • The Indianapolis 500, associated with three deaths, was won by Gordon Johncock, after heavy rains had canceled the event twice.[138] Less than an hour after the race was started at 2:10 in the afternoon, on the 59th lap, David "Swede" Savage was fatally injured in a fiery crash after losing control of his car. Armando Teran, a member of the pit crew for another driver, Graham McRae, stepped out on to the track and was killed by a truck racing to the scene of the crash. Because of the weather and delays that had prevented the race from being run on Memorial Day, attendance at the race was only 35,000.[139] Johncock left shortly after his victory to visit Savage in the hospital.[140] Savage would die of complications from his injuries on July 2, almost weeks after the crash.
  • Sheik Mohammed Ali Othman, one of the three members of the North Yemen's ruling executive council of the
    People's Democratic Republic of Yemen (South Yemen). Othman was being driven from his home in Taiz to his office and his car was "fired at by ambushers using bazookas and machine guns, who apparently came from the other side of the border", according to a statement from the Middle East News Agency.[141]
  • Erskine H. Childers, a native of Great Britain and a Protestant, was elected as the new President of Ireland, defeating Tom O'Higgins.[142][143]
  • Local elections were held in Northern Ireland, part of the UK, with results decided for the first time by proportional representation, using the single transferable vote system.[144]

May 31, 1973 (Thursday)

  • The crash of
    Madras.[145] Making its descent, the aircraft collided with high tension wires 4 miles (6.4 km) from its destination.[146] The dead included India's Minister of Iron and Steel Mines, Mohan Kumaramangalam.[147]

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  3. ^ "Japan Ends Debt for U.S. Food Aid", Los Angeles Times, May 2, 1973, p. I-2
  4. ^ "Gunmen Get $500,000 Gems at N.Y. Airport", Los Angeles Times, May 2, 1973, p. I-2
  5. ^ "Gunmen Hold Pupils Hostage", Los Angeles Times, May 2, 1973, p. I-15
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