A bomb exploded in the forward cargo compartment of
Middle East Airlines Flight 438, a
Boeing 720-023B, at an altitude of 11,300 meters (37,100 feet) over
Saudi Arabia. The airliner broke up and crashed northwest of
Al Qaysumah, killing all 81 people on board.[1][2] After more than 40 years, responsibility for the bombing has never been established.
Venezuela took formal possession of its oil industry, nationalizing the operations of 30 foreign oil companies, including Exxon, Gulf and Mobil, as part of the state-owned oil company
Petróleos de Venezuela, S.A. (PDVSA).[3]
Ontario became the first Canadian province (and one of the first sub-national governmental units in the world) to require the mandatory use of seat belts.
A fire at the Six-Neuf Club in the
Belgium city of
La Louviere, and the subsequent panic, killed 15 partygoers. After ringing in the year 1976, the crowd was celebrating when the electricity failed in the club. One of the people present used a cigarette lighter to see in the dark and accidentally set plastic holiday decorations on fire.[4]
The #1-ranked team in college football, the undefeated (11-0-0)
Ohio State Buckeyes, was upset by the #11
UCLA Bruins, 23 to 10, in the
Rose Bowl in the afternoon.[5] The loss, coming more than a week after #2-ranked
Texas A&M had lost its two final games of the season, placed the #3-ranked
Oklahoma Sooners in position to win the unofficial NCAA championship if they could beat the #5
Michigan Wolverines in the
Orange Bowl that evening. The Sooners won, 14 to 6,[6] and were voted #1 by both the AP writers' poll and the UPI coaches' poll the next day.
Shortly after the new year began, the
Liberty Bell was moved to a new location after 223 years at
Philadelphia's
Independence Hall. The temporary relocation was made to a pavilion 100 yards (91 m) from the Hall, deemed too small to handle tourists who would come for the U.S. bicentennial celebration.[7]
Born:Tank (stage name for Durrell Babbs), American R&B and rap singer; in
Milwaukee,
Wisconsin
January 2, 1976 (Friday)
The
Oklahoma Sooners were named as the unofficial college football national champions in
the two "wire service" polls recognized by the NCAA. In the Associated Press poll of sportswriters, Oklahoma received 54½ of the 63 first-place voted the day after their 14 to 6 win in the Orange Bowl, and 21 of the 36 voted in the United Press International poll of coaches.[8]
The
Overseas Citizens' Voting Rights Act was signed into law by U.S. President
Gerald Ford after having been passed by Congress, primarily because of the lobbying of
Andy Sundberg. Although the new law did not grant voting rights to citizens who were residents of U.S. territories (such as
Puerto Rico), it did allow the citizens registered to vote in one of the 50 states of the United States to vote in federal elections while temporarily living overseas.
The financially-ailing
Denver Spurs of the
World Hockey Association announced their mid-season relocation from the U.S. to Canada, hours before playing a road game against the
Cincinnati Stingers.[9] Although the team appeared in their Denver uniforms in their 2 to 1 loss, the scoreboard listed the 13-20-1 team under its new name, the
Ottawa Civics.[10] The WHA's Ottawa team would exist for only 13 days and play seven games before being disbanded by the league on January 17.[11]
Sheffield Cablevision, one of five community cable television experiments authorised by the UK's Minister for Posts and Telecommunications in 1972, closed down because of lack of funds.[12]
Aeroflot Flight 2003, a
Tupolev Tu-124V (registration CCCP-45037), entered clouds immediately after takeoff from
Vnukovo Airport in
Moscow. Its
artificial horizons failed, and the crew lost its spatial orientation, banking 95 degrees and diving the airliner into the ground 7 kilometers (4.3 miles) west of the airport at a rate of descent of 50 meters (160 feet) per second. The crash killed all 61 people on board and one person on the ground in a house.[13] In accordance with practices at the time, the Soviet Union's media did not mention the accident, and refused to confirm or deny that it had happened since only Soviet citizens were on the aircraft. The news reached the West on January 14 from "informed Soviet sources."[14]
The British Overseas Territory of
Tuvalu, formerly the
Ellice Islands, came into existence with its separation from the
Gilbert Islands in the South Pacific.[15] The Gilbert Islands later became independent as
Kiribati.
Gale-force winds of up to 105 miles per hour (169 km/h) swept across Western Europe, killing 26 people in the United Kingdom and 12 in West Germany, with 17 in several other nations.[16][17]
In the same storm, the East German coaster Capella sank off
Schiermonnikoog, Netherlands,[18] and the British ship Carnoustie also sank.[19]
Nineteen people were killed, and 38 injured, when the bus they were on in South Africa ran off of the road and fell 22 feet (6.7 m) into the Umtawalumi River in the
Natal province.[21]
Television was introduced to
South Africa for the first time in that nation's history, more than 25 years after it had been introduced in most of the industrial nations of the West, as the
South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) began its first nationwide broadcasts.[23] Prime Minister
John Vorster, whose government had opposed TV broadcasting for years, came on the air to launch the inaugural night's offering on SATV, starting with the first part of the miniseries documentary The World at War, followed by an episode of The Bob Newhart Show. "I must confess that as a person I am not overenthusiastic about television. But I am pleasantly surprised so far with the quality of test transmission," Vorster told reporters earlier in the day. Initially, South African TV was limited to five hours in the evening from 7 p.m. to midnight, with half of the programming in
English and half in
Afrikaans.[24]
"
No-fault divorce" went into effect in Australia as the
Family Law Act 1975 took effect nationwide, eliminating the previous requirement that specific reasons for dissolution of the marriage had to be proven.[25] On the first day, 200 applications for divorce were filed in the
Melbourne registry office of the Family Court of Australia, and 80 were filed in
Adelaide, while only 32 were filed in
Sydney.[26] The only requirement was that, after a 12-month separation, there was no reasonable prospect of reconciliation and that the marriage was irretrievably broken.[27]
The
Pol Pot regime proclaimed a new constitution for
Democratic Kampuchea, providing for a "
Kampuchean People's Representative Assembly" ("KPRA") of 250 members "consisting of 150 farmers, 50 workers and 50 soldiers", and guaranteed employment for all people, with the state owning all means of production. Regarding human rights in the totalitarian regime, speech and religion were protected as long as they did not "contribute to the destruction of a democratic Kampuchea" in the opinion of the ruling government.[28]
The U.S. state of
California assessed a $4,200,000 fine against the
American Motors Corporation for violations of the state's anti-pollution laws regarding motor vehicle equipment.[31]
Malcolm "Mal" Evans, 40, English
roadie who set up the concerts for
The Beatles from 1963 until their breakup, was shot and killed by Los Angeles police after pointing a
air rifle (BB gun) at them during a confrontation.[33][34][35]
Károly Takács, 65, sports shooter who won two gold medals, despite a disability, at the 1948 and 1952 Olympic Games[36]
January 6, 1976 (Tuesday)
The popular French television program 30 millions d'amis ("30 Million Friends"), a weekly children's show about pet care, made its debut on the TF1Télévision française network. The show would run for 40 years before ending in 2016.
In the U.S. state of
Hawaii, a group of indigenous
Hawaiian Islanders carried out "Operation Protect Kahoʻolawe ʻOhana" in order to stage a mock invasion to reclaim
Kahoolawe, the smallest of the eight main islands that make up the state, and to retake it from the exclusive use of the United States Navy. After setting out from the island of
Maui, a group of nine people, later called "The Kaho'olawe Nine", made a successful landing, while a larger group was stopped when their boat was intercepted by a Navy patrol boat. Three other members of PKO died when their boat overturned in severe weather.
The Soviet satellite
Kosmos 725 re-entered the Earth's atmosphere after eight months in orbit.[37]
Investigative reporter
Seymour Hersh of The New York Times published a news story that brought down the government of
Italy, after confirming through multiple sources that the
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) had made at least six million dollars in payments to individual anti-Communist politicians since December 8, with the approval of U.S. President Ford, in response to the gains of the
Italian Communist Party in elections in
June 1975.[38] The
Italian Socialist Party, whose 61 legislators had joined with 266 of Prime Minister
Aldo Moro's
Democrazia Cristiana (DC) party for a solid majority in the 630-member
Chamber of Deputies, pulled out of the coalition after a 15-minute discussion, ending Italy's 37th government since the end of Fascism in 1943.[39]
American astronomer
Eleanor Helin discovered asteroid
2062 Aten, the first of the "
Aten asteroid" group, a type known for having a semimajor axis of less than one
astronomical unit, closer to the Sun than the Earth's orbit at apogee.[40]
Police in France rescued Louis Hazan, the CEO of France's largest recording company, at a house in Tremblay-les-Villages near Chartres, one week after a gang had kidnapped him during a Board of Directors meeting on December 31. The gang had demanded $3.4 million in ransom and was caught when one of the gang members was arrested and found to have written a telephone number on the cuff of his pants leg. The number itself was traced to the building where Hazan was being held hostage.[41]
In a confrontation between the naval forces of Iceland and the United Kingdom in the "
Third Cod War", over fishing rights in the North Atlantic Ocean, the Icelandic gunboat
ICGV Thor collided with the
Royal Navy frigate
HMS Andromeda (F57), causing damage to both vessels. Andromeda returned to the
Royal Navy base in Devonport for repairs.[42][43]
Died:Sebastião Antônio de Oliveira, 60, Brazilian accused serial killer known as "The Monster of Bragança", found hanged in his jail cell.
January 8, 1976 (Thursday)
Zhou Enlai (then romanized as "Chou En-lai"), the Premier of the
People's Republic of China since its 1949 founding by the
Chinese Communist Party, and the second most powerful official after Party Chairman
Mao Zedong, died of cancer.[44] The Xinhua News Agency released a statement from the Chinese Communist Party that announced "with extreme grief" that "Comrade Chou En-lai... died of cancer at 9:57 A.M. on January 8, 1976, in
Peking at the age of 78," and closed with the eulogy "Eternal glory to Comrade Chou En-lai, great proletarian revolutionary of the Chinese people and outstanding Communist fighter!"[45] The death of Zhou removed the prospect that he would be Mao's successor, and brought Vice-Premier Deng Xiaoping into power as the head of the Chinese government in "the most remarkable political comeback in modern Chinese history." Deng had been purged from the Communist Party in 1966 and disgraced until his rehabilitation in 1973.
The comic strip Jon, written by 30-year-old cartoonist
Jim Davis, made its debut as a local feature in the Pendleton Times, a weekly newspaper in the small town of
Pendleton, Indiana, beginning what would become one of the most popular comic strips in the world. Initially, the comic focused on "
Jon Arbuckle", a young man who has a pet cat named "
Garfield".[46] The strip would be accepted by
United Feature Syndicate and, with a change of title and a shift in focus from the cat's owner to cat, debut as Garfield on June 16, 1978.
January 9, 1976 (Friday)
At least 18 ship construction workers were killed, and 20 seriously injured, in a shipyard in
Hamburg,
West Germany, when a boiler on the
Maersk Line container ship Anders Maersk exploded during a routine engine test.[47]
The
University of the Azores was founded on Portugal's Azores Islands,[48] with campuses on Ponta Delgada, Angra and Horta.
Baseball's
San Francisco Giants were sold to a group headed by
Labatt Breweries Ltd. of Canada for $13,250,000 with the expectation that the team would play as the Toronto Giants in the 1976 National League baseball season, pending approval by at least 9 of the other 11 National League teams. The Giants had moved from New York City to San Francisco in 1958.[49] The move was called off after the American League granted an expansion franchise to the Labatt consortium (Metro Baseball Ltd.) in February, with the
Toronto Blue Jays beginning play in the 1977 season.
Died: Sir
Stanley Whitehead, 68, New Zealand politician, Speaker of the House of Representatives, died of a heart attack less than a week after receiving his knighthood.[50]
January 10, 1976 (Saturday)
In
Fremont, Nebraska, a powerful explosion at a six-story tall residential hotel, and the resulting fire, killed 23 people and injured more than 80. The blast at the Pathfinder Hotel, used mostly as apartments for senior citizens, happened at 9:30 in the morning and was traced to a natural gas explosion.[51][52]
Soviet Foreign Minister
Andrei Gromyko and Japan's Foreign Minister
Kiichi Miyazawa met in Tokyo to seek an agreement on a treaty between the two nations, ending the state of war that had been in effect since
August 1945. The Soviets rejected Japan's demand for the return of four northern islands—
Etorofu,
Kanashiri,
Shikotan and Hobomai—that had been under Soviet control for more than 30 years, as well as the release of 400 Japanese prisoners still incarcerated in the USSR.[53]
Died:Howlin' Wolf (Chester Arthur Burnett), 65, African-American Chicago blues singer and harmonica player ranked in Rolling Stone magazine in 2011 among the 100 greatest artists of all time. He died of complications from kidney surgery.[54]
January 11, 1976 (Sunday)
Ecuador's President, General
Guillermo Rodriguez Lara, resigned from office after five days of political violence in the South American nation, and was replaced by a three-man military junta. General Rodriguez, who had seized power in 1972 in a military coup, had been permitted to remain until the wedding of his daughter could take place on January 10, as scheduled, at the Presidential Palace. Hours later, he went on television and read a speech saying that he was stepping down "without there having been the slightest military pressure." The three-man junta was fronted by Ecuadorian Army General Guillermo Duran Arcentales, along with Navy Vice Admiral Alfredo Poveda and Air Force General Luis Leoro.[55] The ouster of Rodriguez came two days after Public Works Minister Raul Puma was arrested and Education Minister Gustavo Vasconez was ordered to retire from the Ecuadorian Army.[56]
The
United Nations Security Council voted, 11 to 1, with 3 abstentions, to allow the
Palestinian Liberation Organization to participate in its debate on Middle East peace and to be accorded the rights of a member nation for the limited purpose of the debate. The U.S. voted against, but did not veto, the resolution, while its allies in NATO, the UK, France and Italy, abstain.[57]
Thailand's Prime Minister
Kukrit Pramoj and his coalition government resigned, and King Bhumibol Adulayadej called for new parliamentary elections to be held in April.[58]
British commercial diver John Howell drowned after becoming distressed shortly after leaving the
diving bell while working from the
semi-submersible drill rig Western Pacesetter in the northern
North Sea. Howell may have knocked off his supply of breathing gas before leaving the bell.[59]
Died: Dame
Agatha Christie, 85, British mystery author. Her writing career had started in 1920 when she published The Mysterious Affair at Styles, the first of 60 novels and numerous short story mysteries.[61]
January 13, 1976 (Tuesday)
The first computer programmed to recognize written text after scanning it with an
optical character recognition system, and then to convert it to audio form as spoken words, was demonstrated by its inventor,
Ray Kurzweil of Kurzweil Computer Products, at a press event in
Cambridge, Massachusetts.[63]
The
World Hockey Association played its All-Star game, departing from its Eastern Division vs. Western Division format for Canadian teams All-Stars against American teams All-Stars, with players representing their clubs regardless of their nationality. The Canada team won, 6 to 1.
The government of
East Germany reversed a decision to prohibit a 6-year-old boy from joining his parents, who had fled to West Berlin in 1975.[64]
Born:
Mario Yepes, Colombian soccer football defender known as "Super Mario" in the French league, member of the national team; in
Cali
Died: Margaret Leighton, 53, English stage, film and television actress, died from a cardiac arrest.
January 14, 1976 (Wednesday)
George and Kathy Lutz fled from their home, at 112 Ocean Avenue in Amityville, New York, after having moved in on December 18, 1975, claiming to have been terrorized by several unexplainable paranormal phenomena at the house. The Lutzes' claims would go on to inspire the story of
The Amityville Horror, which would be the basis for several movies and books about the phenomenon.
In response to a strike by 4,000 postal workers in
Madrid that had stopped delivery of mail since Monday, the government of Spain issued an order drafting all strikers into military service, subject to court martial for failing to report for duty.[66]
Bob R. Dorsey, the chairman of the Board of the
Gulf Oil Corporation was fired, along with two other high executives, after the Board of Directors met to respond to reports that Dorsey and the other two, Vice President for Finance Fred Deering, and Division President William I. Henry, had used the company's money in an attempt to influence political campaigns for candidates who had pledged to support the company.[67]
Mahagama Sekara, 46, Sinhalese poet, teacher, lyricist, playwright, novelist, artist, translator and filmmaker, from a cardiac arrest
January 15, 1976 (Thursday)
A
Taxi Aéreo El VenadoC-54A Skymaster airplane crashed into a cloud-covered mountain peak 30 kilometers (19 miles) east of
Chipaque in
Colombia. The airliner struck the mountain at an altitude of 3,540 meters (11,610 feet) and fell 800 meters (2,600 feet) into a canyon, killing all 13 people on board.[69]
The government of
Spain announced that elections for both houses of the Spanish Parliament, the
Cortes Generales, scheduled for March, would be postponed for a year so that a new electoral law could be drawn up setting the requirements for political parties, campaigning and democratic multiparty voting. The March 1976 voting had been scheduled before the death in October of
Francisco Franco, who had limited voters to voting yes or no on a set of candidates chosen by Franco's party. The action was described as being made "to avoid the election in March of a new Parliament as unrepresentative as the present one".[70]
Sara Jane Moore, who had fired a pistol at U.S. President
Gerald Ford in San Francisco the previous September 22, was sentenced to life imprisonment by federal judge Samuel Conti, who scolded her for having "no remorse".[71] Judge Conti told her, "What really concerns me most about America was how calloused we have become to crime and violence. If you thought at that moment that you were going to press that trigger and fire that shot you would be subjected to capital punishment, you wouldn't be pulling the trigger." Mrs. Moore, 45 at the time of her appearance, said in a statement that her attempt "accomplished little except to throw away the rest of my life", but added that she was not sorry "because at the time it seemed a correct expression of my anger and, if successful, just might have triggered the kind of chaos that could have started the upheaval of change."[72] Moore would spend 32 years in prison before her release at the age of 77 on December 31, 2007, one year and five days after Gerald Ford's passing away at the age of 93.
The
Communications Technology Satellite, designated as "Hermes" by Canada's
Department of Communications and placed into outer space by the U.S. space agency
NASA, was launched from
Cape Canaveral in Florida. Described as "a harbinger of 'direct broadcasting' from space to rooftop antennas on earth",[74] the CTS was the most powerful communications satellite up to that time, with a 200 watt transmitter and the first to operate on the super-high frequency (SHF) band. The CTS was sent into its assigned geosynchronous position 22,300 miles (35,900 km) above the
Equator on January 29.
The 18th and final episode of the ABC television variety show Saturday Night Live with Howard Cosell was broadcast, after which Cosell took a hiatus to prepare for the broadcast of the 1976 Winter Olympics and the show was canceled due to low ratings. Having premiered on September 20, 1975, three weeks before the live comedy show
NBC's Saturday Night telecast its first episode, the ABC program featured some comedians who would later appear on the NBC program that would be renamed Saturday Night Live, including
Bill Murray and
Brian Doyle-Murray. Cosell's last guest stars were comedian
Billy Crystal and the pop music group
Bay City Rollers.[75]
On NBC's Saturday Night, comedian
John Belushi made his second appearance as "the Samurai", after having debuted the character on December 13 in a sketch called "Samurai Hotel". At the request of host
Buck Henry, Belushi's performances would become a recurring feature on the program, and Henry co-stars in the second sketch, "Samurai Delicatessen".
The
Ottawa Civics of the
World Hockey Association, who had relocated from Canada in mid-season after starting the 1975–76 season as the
Denver Spurs, disbanded after having played seven games (two in Ottawa), and two days after their 5 to 4 loss to the visiting
Houston Aeros.[76]
American commercial diver Clay Don Ellis died, and British diver Derek A. Bannister was left paralyzed from the chest down, after the weight tray was ripped off of their
diving bell in the central
North Sea, causing it to make an uncontrolled ascent from a depth of 77 metres (253 ft). The accident occurred during a dive from the supply boat Smit Lloyd 112 to repair a leaking connection in an oil pipeline. Both divers suffered lung
barotrauma, embolism and
pneumothorax.[77][78]
January 18, 1976 (Sunday)
The
Karantina massacre of Lebanese Muslims took place in a Palestinian
slum section of east
Beirut, when Christian Phalangist militia of the
Lebanese Forces, led by
Bachir Gemayel, carried out an attack.[79] Estimates of the number of civilians killed were as high as 1,500.[80] In retaliation, the
Damour massacre of Maronite Christians took place two days later. Gemayel himself would be assassinated on September 14, 1982, shortly after being elected President of Lebanon and before he could take office.
The
Scottish Labour Party was formed, by a group breaking away from the UK
Labour Party because of dissatisfaction with the then Labour Government's failure to secure a devolved
Scottish Assembly, as well as with its social and economic agenda.[82]
Died:
Gertrud Gabl, 27, Austrian Alpine skier, 1969 Alpine skiing women's World Cup champion, was killed in an avalanche while skiing on the northern slope of Mount Gamberg at the ski resort of
St. Anton am Arlberg in Austria. Her two companions in the group survived being buried in the snow.[83]
Gurmukh Singh Musafir, 77, Indian short story writer and Chief Minister of the Punjab State in 1966 and 1967
January 19, 1976 (Monday)
Former
Georgia Governor
Jimmy Carter won the
Iowa Democratic Caucus, the first event for selecting delegates to decide the Democrat nominee for U.S. president. Carter, relatively unknown in the U.S., won twice as many precincts as his closest challenger, U.S. Senator
Birch Bayh of Indiana.[85]
The government of
Iceland delivered an ultimatum, threatening to break all diplomatic relations with the
United Kingdom if the U.K. did not withdraw all Royal Navy warships from Iceland's "fishing zone" within 200 miles (320 km) of the Icelandic coast. In order to avoid the break, British Prime Minister
James Callaghan ordered the vessels to leave.[86]
The government of Spain, which had conscripted striking postal workers into mandatory military service earlier in the month, issued an order drafting 72,000 striking railway workers into the Spanish armed services, on penalty of a court martial if they refused to work.[87]
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced that it was issuing a ban on "Red Dye Number 2", one of the most common coloring
dyes added to foods, drugs and cosmetics to enhance their appearance. FDA Commissioner Alexander M. Schmidt said that the ban was made because of a concern that the dye contains a weak
carcinogen, but that the public should not be alarmed about a health hazard.[88]
The Communist governments of the
Democratic Republic of Vietnam (North Vietnam) and of the
Republic of Vietnam (South Vietnam) announced that voting would take place on April 25 for a joint national assembly as the first step of the legal unification of Vietnam.[89]
Died: Hidetsugu Yagi, 89, Japanese electrical engineer who invented the
Yagi–Uda antenna directional
television antenna in use since the 1950s for receiving analog VHF and UHF signals before being superseded by cable and satellite transmissions[90]
Only eight of 42 people on a
TAMEEcuador flight survived when the
Hawker Siddeley HS 748 lost altitude while flying from
Loja to
Guayaquil, and crashed into the side of a mountain at an altitude of 10,000 feet (3,048 m). All six crewmembers and 28 other passengers were killed.[93][94]
The bells of
Big Ben in London were silenced for the first time in more than 19 years after the chimes ring at 9:00 in the morning, and workmen began the process of maintenance and repairs. The stoppage, which lasted for 51 hours, was required because of painting in the room where the striking mechanisms and the weights for the clock swing out to ring the bells inside the clock tower. Otherwise, an engineer noted, "You would have to dodge them every 15 minutes to paint the walls." The chimes would ring once more at noon on Thursday the 22nd. During the silencing of Big Ben, the large hands on all four faces of the clock would continue to operate.[95]
U.S. Representative
James F. Hastings, a Republican Congressman for New York since 1969, resigned to accept a private job as a lobbyist for Associated Industries. At the time, he was under investigation for corruption, and would be convicted of mail fraud at the end of the year and spend 14 months in prison.
Born: Anastasia Volochkova, Russian prima ballerina; in
Leningrad (now Saint Petersburg), Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Died: Lloyd W. Nordstrom, 65, executive of the
Nordstrom chain of department stores and majority owner of the new
Seattle Seahawks NFL franchise, eight months before the team played its first game in the National Football League. Nordstrom was playing tennis while on vacation in the Mexican resort of
Cancun, and suffered a fatal heart attack.[96]
January 21, 1976 (Wednesday)
The first commercial flights of the Concorde supersonic airliner took place, as two of the jets— a
British Airways flight from
London's
Heathrow Airport and an
Air France flight from
Paris's
Orly Airport— departed simultaneously at 11:40 in the morning. With 98 passengers (only 27 of them paying customers), and Norman Todd as the pilot, British Airways Flight 300 landed at
Bahrain after a trip of 4 hours and 10 minutes. The price of a round trip (return fare) ticket was £676.20[97] (US$1,366 at the time, equivalent to $6,675 or £4,800 in 2021). The French Concorde, with 100 passengers (90 of whom bought tickets) landed in
Senegal at
Dakar for refueling before flying on to
Brazil and landing in
Rio de Janeiro.[98][99]
A
CAAC airliner crashed on approach to
Changsha Huanghua International Airport in
Changsha in the
Hunan province of the
People's Republic of China, killing all 45 people on board, during its arrival from
Canton. The crash of the Antonov An-24 was reported in the West after the Foreign Ministry of Denmark, had received information of the disaster because two Danish businessmen were among the dead.[100][101][102]
By a vote of only 120 for and 181 against, the British House of Commons rejected a bill, sponsored by Labour MP
Dennis Canavan, that would have banned corporal punishment in schools.[103]
Major
Otelo Saraiva de Carvalho,
Portugal's former military security minister as director of
COPCON, was arrested in
Lisbon on charges of conspiracy to overthrow the government with an attempted leftist military coup.[104] Carvalho was released on March 4 after posting a bond.[105]
President
Suleiman Franjieh of
Lebanon announced that a political and military agreement had been reached between warring Muslim and Christian communities for a ceasefire in the
Lebanese Civil War that had started in April.[106] The ceasefire, brokered by the government of Syria, went into effect at 8:00 in the evening, enforced by troops from the armies of Syria and Lebanon, and Palestinian militias, all acting under the authority of the Higher Military Committee.[107]
Gujarmal Modi, 73, Indian industrialist and philanthropist
January 23, 1976 (Friday)
The first manned test of a tank designed to be parachuted to the ground, the
BMD-1, was carried out by Soviet Army Lieutenant Colonel
Leonid Ivanovich Shcherbakov and Major Aleksandr Margelov, who remain inside the armored vehicle as it was dropped from an airplane and guided to the ground with a system of jets and parachutes to slow to a safe descent, and then driven successfully by Shcherbakov and Margelov.[108] The tank name was an abbreviation for Boyevaya Mashina Desanta (Combat Machine, Airborne).
A federal appeals court dismissed the indictment against Dr.
Jeffrey R. MacDonald, a former U.S. Army captain, for charges of three counts of the February 17, 1970 murder of his wife and two daughters, after finding that Dr. MacDonald had been denied the
right to a speedy trial guaranteed in the Sixth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.[109] Although it appeared at first that Dr. MacDonald would no longer be tried, the U.S. Supreme Court would unanimously reverse the decision of the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals on May 1, 1978, and MacDonald would be convicted on August 29, 1979, on three counts of murder.
Died: Paul Robeson, 77, African American athlete, singer, actor and civil rights activist blacklisted during the
McCarthy era for being a Communist sympathizer[110]
The United States and Spain sign a five-year "Treaty of Friendship and Cooperation" in
Madrid, with U.S. Secretary of State
Henry Kissinger traveling to the Spanish Ministry of Foreign Affairs in
Madrid, where he and Spain's Foreign Minister
José María de Areilza agreed upon the first defense pact between the two nations.[111]
Kettering Town FC became the first British football club to play with a sponsor's name printed on the front of player jerseys, after signing a deal with Kettering Tyres.
An attempt by Italy's Premier
Aldo Moro to form a new coalition government, after the Italian Socialist Party had withdrawn its support of Moro's Christian Democrats (DC), collapsed when Moro was unable to supplement DC's 266 legislators with enough from the Social Democrats and the Italian Republicans for the 316 majority.[113]
Inez Brown Burns, 87, American activist and business leader who operated, from 1927 to 1946, an extensive set of hygienic (but illegal) abortion clinics before being convicted of illegal abortions and for tax evasion.[115]
Ralph Townsend, 75, American pacifist and war opponent who was arrested for sedition during World War II
January 26, 1976 (Monday)
For only the 13th time since the founding of the
United Nations in 1945, the United States exercised its veto power in the
UN Security Council resolution that would have place the UN on record for supporting the creation of an independent
Palestinian state.[116]
Died:João Branco Núncio, 74, Portuguese cavaleiro tauromáquico (bullfighter) for 42 years, was gored by a bull during a bullfight at
Golegã
January 27, 1976 (Tuesday)
The popular American situation comedy Laverne & Shirley premiered on the ABC television network. Though earning mixed reviews from critics[117][118] the debut episode show was ranked #1 in the Nielsen ratings, only the second time for a TV series premiere, with a 35.1 rating and 49% of the television audience watching[119] Starring
Penny Marshall and
Cindy Williams as the title characters, the show, a
spin-off of Happy Days, would be the highest-rated show by its third season, and continue for eight seasons.
The U.S. House of Representatives joined the U.S. Senate in approving a ban on U.S. military aid to private paramilitary groups operating in Angola, with a 323 to 99 vote to amend the
Arms Export Control Act. The Senate had passed the bill, 54 to 22, on December 19. U.S. President Ford signed the bill into law on February 9.[124]
January 28, 1976 (Wednesday)
Following the example of other nations, the United States Senate voted, 77 to 19, to create an exclusive fishing zone, off limits to all non-American fishing vessels, extending 200 miles (320 km) off of the shores of the United States, effective July 1, 1977.[125]
Died: Gabriele Allegra 68, Italian-born
friar of the
Franciscans and Biblical translator, known for his accuracy in translating of the
Holy Bible into the Chinese language in a 23-year long project
January 29, 1976 (Thursday)
India's
Lok Sabha, the lower house of its Parliament, voted to make Government censorship of the nation's newspapers permanent, approving the "Prevention of Publication of Objectionable Matter Ordinance" by a vote of 146 to 27. Despite a boycott of the vote by more than half of its 521 members, with 348 not showing up, the Lok Sabha was ruled by its parliamentarian as having a quorum and the measure was sent to the upper house, the Rajya Sabha.[126]
The government of the Soviet Union publicly acknowledged, for the first time, the existence of the city of
Leninsk in the
Kazakh SSR near
Tyuaratam, the site housing the employees of the Soviet manned space program. The mention came in a dispatch published in the republic's party newspaper, Kazakhstankaya Pravda, that Leninsk had been connected to the Central Asian power grid. A report noted that "It was not clear whether the mention of Leninsk in a Soviet press article represented a censor's oversight or a decision to make the name public."[127]
Died: Jesse Fuller, 79, American "
one-man band" blues musician known for playing several instruments simultaneously.
January 30, 1976 (Friday)
George Bush, formerly the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations and later the first American liaison to Communist China, became the new
Director of Central Intelligence after being appointed by President Ford to restore the reputation of the
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).[128] On January 27, the U.S. Senate had voted, 64 to 27, to confirm Bush's nomination.[129] Bush would serve until the end of Ford's term, and later take office on January 20, 1989, as the 41st President of the United States.
In its ruling in Buckley v. Valeo, the
United States Supreme Court struck down most limits on political campaign spending as unconstitutional, opening the door for unprecedented amounts of donations to candidates for public office and the massive growth of campaign advertising.[130] Among the results were that candidates for the U.S. Senate and the U.S. House of Representatives could now raise and spend unlimited amounts of funds, after previously having been limited to $70,000 for a primary election race and another $70,000 for the general election; individual donors were no longer limited to $1,000 per candidate; and presidential candidates were no longer limited to ten million dollars spending.
Died: James Edmondson, 65, American comedian known to television audiences as "Professor Backwards", was murdered the day after being kidnapped from his home in
College Park, Georgia.[131]
January 31, 1976 (Saturday)
In a large art theft at an exhibition in France of the works of
Pablo Picasso, 118 paintings, drawings and other works by Picasso were stolen from an exhibition at the
Palais des Papes in
Avignon.[132][133] The stolen Picasso works remained missing until October 6, when they were discovered in a truck that the thieves parked in front of an art gallery in
Marseille, and six people were arrested.[134]
President's Rule was imposed for the first time in the Indian state of
Tamil Nadu under article 356 of the
Constitution of India. The move, forced by Prime Minister
Indira Gandhi, was viewed by political observers as a means of ousting Tamil Nadu Chief Minister
Muthuvel Karunanidhi, one of the most vocal opponents of the Emergency Rule that she had proclaimed on June 26.[135]
Died: Ernesto Miranda, 34, American laborer whose conviction for crimes, without being advised of his right to remain silent, was reversed on appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court in Miranda v. Arizona. The necessary advising of a suspect's constitutional right against self-incrimination, including the right to remain silent and to have an attorney present for questioning would become known as the "
Miranda warning". Miranda was stabbed to death during a fight in a bar in
Phoenix, Arizona. A "Miranda warning" card was found in his pocket.[138]
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