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July 6, 1971: Hastings Banda becomes President for life of Malawi

The following events occurred in July 1971:

July 1, 1971 (Thursday)

old U.S. Mail box
new USPS box

July 2, 1971 (Friday)

July 3, 1971 (Saturday)

Morrison
  • Died: Jim Morrison, 27, American singer and leader of The Doors, was found dead in his bathtub in Paris, France; the cause of death remains uncertain, but an unintentional heroin overdose was the most popular theory.

July 4, 1971 (Sunday)

July 5, 1971 (Monday)

July 6, 1971 (Tuesday)

July 6, 1971: Jazz legend Louis Armstrong dies, aged 69

July 7, 1971 (Wednesday)

  • The U.S. Army began the process of destroying its stockpile of biological warfare weapons. All of the germ and toxin weapons had been created and stored from 1953 to 1969 at the Pine Bluff Arsenal in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, without being used. Microorganisms kept for use were capable of infecting people with anthrax, tularemia ("rabbit fever"), Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (VEE), Q fever, botulism or a staph infection.
  • The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) ordered a nationwide recall of all canned products of the Bon Vivant Soup Company and a shutdown of the factory in Newark, New Jersey., one week after the June 30 death of a New York man from botulism poisoning from a contaminated can of vichyssoise. Out of 324 cans sampled, five were found to be contaminated by the botulism toxin; the shutdown caused the Bon Vivant Company to go out of business by 1974.
  • Todor Zhivkov, already the de facto leader of Bulgaria as the First Secretary of that nation's Communist Party and the nation's Prime Minister, was elected to the newly created position of Chairman of the State Council as head of state. Georgi Traykov, the last "Chairman of the Presidium of the National Assembly" had been the ceremonial head of state and became the State Council First Deputy Chairman, while Stanko Todorov took Zhivkov's place as Prime Minister.

July 8, 1971 (Thursday)

July 9, 1971 (Friday)

July 10, 1971 (Saturday)

King Hassan II
Gloria Steinem
  • During the 42nd birthday party of King Hassan II of Morocco, 1,400 cadets took over the king's palace for three hours and killed 93 guests; 158 rebels died when the king's troops stormed the palace. Ten high-ranking Moroccan Army officers — four generals, five colonels and a major— were executed by a firing squad a few days later for involvement.
  • Gloria Steinem made her Address to the Women of America at the founding of the National Women's Political Caucus.
  • American golfer Lee Trevino won the British Open by a single stroke over Lu Liang-Huan of Taiwan. The margin of victory was Trevino's 69 to 70 lead over Lu on the first day of play; in the other rounds, the two had finished identically every day with 70, 69, and 70 strokes, giving Trevino the 278 to 279 victory on 72 holes.
  • Died: Samuel Bronfman, 80, Canadian whiskey distiller who built the Seagram liquor company into a worldwide billion dollar retailer.

July 11, 1971 (Sunday)

  • The wreckage of England's first royal yacht, HMY Mary, was discovered off the coast of Anglesey almost 300 years after its sinking. On March 25, 1675, HMY Mary struck rocks and shattered, with the loss of 35 of the 74 passengers and crew.
  • The Chilean Congress unanimously approved an amendment to the South American nation's constitution to give authority to President Salvador Allende to nationalize the nation's largest copper mines. Those affected were operated by the U.S. companies Kennecott, Anaconda and Cerro, which had previously operated as a joint venture with the state-owned Codelco corporation (Corporacion Nacional del Cobre de Chile). The vote was 158 to 0, with 42 of the 200 members not in attendance, and was written to take effect immediately.
Rodriguez one week before his death
  • Died:
    • Bold Ruler, 17, American thoroughbred racehorse and 1957 horse of the year whose descendants would win seven of the 10 Kentucky Derby races during the decade of the 1970s.
    • Pedro Rodríguez, 31, Mexican Formula One racing driver, was killed in an Interserie sports car race at the Norisring Nürnberg 200 at Nuremberg in West Germany. Rodríguez, whose brother Ricardo Rodríguez had been killed in 1962, was driving a 750-horsepower Ferrari 513M on its racing debut, rather than his own British Racing Motors BRM car, which was not ready for entry. On the 12th lap of the race, a tire blew and the Ferrari "struck a guard rail and the wall of a bridge spanning the track, was catapulted across the track and immediately caught fire".

July 12, 1971 (Monday)

July 13, 1971 (Tuesday)

July 14, 1971 (Wednesday)

  • Libya severed its diplomatic ties with Morocco following accusations by Morocco of Libyan involvement in the failed coup of July 10.
  • A British soldier was shot and killed in an IRA ambush on a mobile patrol in the Andersonstown area of Belfast. Three IRA gunmen using automatic weapons fired at least 35 shots at the patrol.

July 15, 1971 (Thursday)

  • U.S. President Nixon announced in a nationwide radio and television address that he had accepted an invitation to become the first U.S. president to visit the People's Republic of China, after being invited by China's Prime Minister Zhou Enlai. Nixon said that the visit would take place sometime before May 1972. Nixon's visit, the first by an American president, would take place on February 21, 1972.
  • The Pontifical Council Cor Unum for Human and Christian Development was established by Pope Paul VI.
  • The United Red Army was established by revolutionaries in Japan.
  • The Holden HQ series of automobiles was launched in Australia as the first redesign of the original Holden Motor Company model since the General Motors subsidiary's founding in 1948. It was marketed as the Chevrolet El Camino in the United States.
  • Born: Akira Yanagawa, Japanese motorcycle road racer; in Kagoshima
  • Died: Sir Tyrone Guthrie, 70, Anglo-Irish theatrical director

July 16, 1971 (Friday)

  • Spanish dictator and head of state Francisco Franco, who, on July 22, 1969, had already named Prince Juan Carlos as his successor, issued a decree making it possible for Juan Carlos to rule Spain if Franco were to become ill or was out of the country.
  • Jeanne M. Holm became the first woman in the United States Air Force to receive the rank of general. She had enlisted in the Air Force in 1948 as a student at Lewis and Clark College because, as she noted in her remarks, "I was between semesters, had nothing to do anyway, and was flat broke."

July 17, 1971 (Saturday)

July 18, 1971 (Sunday)

July 19, 1971 (Monday)

July 20, 1971 (Tuesday)

July 21, 1971 (Wednesday)

July 22, 1971 (Thursday)

  • In Sudan, troops supporting President Gaafar Nimeiri defeated those of Major Hashem al-Atta. Lieutenant Colonel Babakr al-Nur Osman, an exile who had agreed to assume control as Chairman of the Ruling Council, boarded a BOAC airliner in London and was attempting to fly to Khartoum to take office when the Libyan Air Force intercepted his plane and forced it to land at Benghazi. Major Al-Atta and three of his officers were executed by a firing squad the next day.
  • The national convention of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks (B.P.O.E., commonly known as "The Elks Club") rejected a resolution that would have ended the service club's policy of barring non-White members by removing the word "white" from the Elks' membership requirements. Voting by about 3,000 members, meeting in a closed session, was made by a show of hands. The members approved a separate resolution that would give the Grand Exalted Ruler of the Elks authority to suspend the Whites-only requirement for a year if the Grand Ruler found that it was "in the best interests of the Order".
  • Born: Mikheil Kavelashvili, Georgian politician and former football player, President elect of Georgia, in Bolnisi, Georgian SSR

July 23, 1971 (Friday)

July 24, 1971 (Saturday)

July 25, 1971 (Sunday)

  • The crash of Aeroflot Flight 1912 killed 97 of the 118 people on board as the Tupolev Tu-104 jet made a hard landing 500 feet (150 m) short of the runway on its arrival at Irkutsk. The airliner's left wing broke off and the aircraft caught fire. News of the disaster reached the Western press almost three weeks later.
  • Under the direction and planning of Muhammad Kamaruzzaman, the Al-Badr paramilitary group aided the Pakistan Army in a massacre of 187 men living in the Bangladesh village of Sohaghpur in the Nalitabari division of the Sherpur District. Afterwards, the troops raped the wives of the men killed. Kamaruzzaman would be executed for the massacre more than 40 years later after being convicted by an international war crimes tribunal.
  • Died: David Tsugio Tsutada, 65, Japanese missionary, "the John Wesley of Japan"
North America (lower right) on July 26, 1971

July 26, 1971 (Monday)

  • Apollo 15, carrying astronauts David Scott, Alfred Worden, and James Irwin, was launched from Cape Kennedy in Florida at 9:34 in the morning local time on its mission to the Moon. After separating from the attached lunar module, turning around and docking with the module without incident, the spacecraft then departed Earth orbit at 12:24 in the afternoon and proceeded on a four-day journey to the Moon.

July 27, 1971 (Tuesday)

July 28, 1971 (Wednesday)

  • The United States announced that it would discontinue further airplane surveillance flights over the People's Republic of China, after years of flying SR-71 spy planes and sending unmanned reconnaissance drones into Chinese airspace.
  • Mikhail S. Solomentsev was named as the new Premier of the Russian SFSR, upon the retirement of Gennadi I. Voronov, as part of the opening of the new session of the RSFSR Supreme Soviet legislature. Voronov, a member of the 15-man Soviet Communist Party Politburo, was apparently demoted by being reassigned to the job of chairman of the People's Control Committee after disagreeing with the economic policies of Communist Party First Secretary Leonid Brezhnev. Solomentsev was promoted from being the CPSU Party Secretary for Heavy Industry.
  • A Gillette Cup semi-final between Lancashire and Gloucestershire became one of the most famous matches in English cricket after David Hughes scored 24 off one over to win the match for Lancashire just before 9pm.
  • The body of Diane Arbus, 48, U.S. photographer, was found in her New York City apartment. She had committed suicide by ingesting barbiturates and slashing her wrists with a razor, and was thought to have died two days earlier.
  • Died: Abdel Khaliq Mahjub, 43, Sudanese communist leader, was hanged for treason following his attempted coup d'état on July 19.

July 29, 1971 (Thursday)

  • A flood and subsequent landslide in Afghanistan destroyed a village in the Khinjan District in the northeast part of the kingdom, and reportedly killed more than 1,000 people. The disaster occurred near the Khinjan Pass.
  • Josip Broz Tito was re-elected unanimously to another five-year term as President of Yugoslavia by the Yugoslav Parliament. Dzemal Bijedic, a Bosnian, was sworn in as the new Premier the next day.
  • Joe Kachingwe of Malawi became the first black ambassador to white-ruled South Africa after the two nations established diplomatic relations.
  • The United Kingdom opted out of the Space Race, with the cancellation of its Black Arrow launch vehicle.

July 30, 1971 (Friday)

  • In what was, at the time, the worst civil aviation disaster in history, all 162 crew and passengers on All Nippon Airways Flight 58 were killed after the Boeing 727 collided with a Japanese Air Force F-86 Sabrejet fighter while flying over Shizukuishi in Japan's Iwate Prefecture. The flight had departed Tokyo and was on its way to Sapporo; 125 of the 155 passengers were in a tour group for the flight for a society for relatives of Japanese servicemen who had been killed in World War II. The mid-air collision happened at an altitude of 26,000 feet (7,900 m). The pilot of the F-86, a Japanese Air Force sergeant with only 21 hours of training in flying the fighter, parachuted to safety. The 22-year old student pilot was arrested, as well as his instructor, who had been flying in another F-86, and both were charged with criminal negligence.
  • All 37 paratroopers and crew aboard a French Air Force military transport were killed when the airplane crashed during a training mission. An air force captain and a lieutenant had safely parachuted out of the plane minutes earlier to test the wind over the drop zone, and the trainees were preparing to follow when one of the airplane's engines caught fire.
  • Pan Am Flight 845, a Boeing 747 taking off from San Francisco toward Tokyo, struck the Approach Lighting System (ALS) structures located past the end of the runway. The accident was the worst for a 747 "jumbo jet" since the aircraft line began operation on January 21, 1970. The Federal Aviation Administration concluded that the 747 jet had been overloaded beyond its weight capacity, by as much as 25 tons. All aboard survived, but 13 were hospitalized and three were seriously injured, including one passenger whose foot was amputated, and another who had lost an arm.
  • Apollo 15 made the fourth crewed landing on the Moon at 6:16 p.m. Eastern time (2316 UTC), as astronauts David Scott and James Irwin descended in the lunar module "Falcon" and touched down at the eastern edge of the Mare Imbrium near the Hadley Rille. Alfred Worden remained in orbit around the Moon.
  • The 1971 Pan American Games opened at Cali, Colombia. The highlight of the opening ceremony was a synchronized dance routine by 12,000 girls in native costumes.
  • U.S. President Nixon renamed the Air Force One 707 presidential aircraft "Spirit of '76" as one of the initial activities of the American Revolution Bicentennial Commission in preparation for the 200th anniversary of the ratification of the United States Declaration of Independence scheduled for July 4, 1976.

July 31, 1971 (Saturday)

July 31, 1971: U.S. astronaut David R. Scott becomes first driver on the Moon
  • At 1620 UTC (11:20 a.m. Eastern time in the U.S.), US Apollo 15 astronaut David Scott became the first person to drive a wheeled vehicle on the surface of the Moon, after landing the day before, with James Irwin travelling as a passenger. The two drove roughly 2.5 miles (4.0 km) from the landing site, returning after six hours and 34 minutes. At 9:52 a.m. Eastern time (1442 UTC), Scott and Irwin removed Rover 1, the lunar rover, from the compartment below the module and unfolded it.

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  117. "Pilot Arrested in Japanese Crash". The New York Times. August 1, 1971. p. 12.
  118. "37 Killed in French Crash". The New York Times. July 31, 1971. p. 3.
  119. "26 Hurt in San Francisco Take-Off Accident, Worst Mishap for a 747". The New York Times. July 31, 1971. p. 3.
  120. Witkin, Richard (August 7, 1971). "747 Jet in Mishap Called Too Heavy". The New York Times. p. 9.
  121. "Two Astronauts Land on Moon Near Mountains and a Canyon; Exploration Will Begin Today". The New York Times. July 31, 1971. p. 1.
  122. "60,000 See Games Open at Cali". The New York Times. July 31, 1971. p. 17.
  123. "Air Force 1 Is Named Spirit of '76 by Nixon". The New York Times. July 31, 1971. p. 10.
  124. "Astronauts Explore Moon 6½ Hours, Drive Electric Car on Rough Terrain", by John Noble Wilford, The New York Times, August 1, 1971, p. 1
  125. "Two Tourists View the Moon", The New York Times, August 1, 1971, p. 1
  126. Dialogue and Universalism. Warsaw University, Centre of Universalism. 1996. p. 29.
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