March 1970


The following events occurred in March 1970:

March 1, 1970 (Sunday)

March 2, 1970 (Monday)

March 3, 1970 (Tuesday)

  • Norma McCorvey, a pregnant 22-year old resident of Texas, filed a federal lawsuit under the name "Jane Roe" with the assistance of Dallas lawyers Sarah Weddington and Linda Coffee, seeking the right to an abortion and commencing what would become the landmark United States Supreme Court case of Roe v. Wade.
  • A mob of at least 150 white men and women attacked two school buses in the small town of Lamar, South Carolina as the vehicles were bringing African-American students to morning classes in compliance with a racial desegregation order. As the buses approached Lamar High School, they were struck by bricks and rocks, and some students were injured by broken glass. South Carolina Highway Patrol troopers, on alert for violence after incidents the day before, rescued the 32 students and escorted them to safety. The protesters then overturned the empty buses. Within two days, state police arrested 30 of the riot leaders, identified by photographs taken by the State Law Enforcement Division. The first man arrested was the owner of a cafe in nearby Lydia, who had created the anti-busing group "Darlington County Council of Citizens for Freedom of Choice". He would later serve a two year jail sentence for rioting.
  • Born: Julie Bowen, American TV actress and winner of two Emmy Awards for her role as Claire Dunphy on Modern Family; in Baltimore

March 4, 1970 (Wednesday)

March 5, 1970 (Thursday)

  • The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty went into effect after being ratified by 47 nations. Leaders of the three sponsoring nations — U.S. President Richard M. Nixon, Soviet Union Premier Alexei N. Kosygin, and United Kingdom Prime Minister Harold Wilson — signed instruments of ratification in their respective capitals, and leaders of five other nations executed similar documents. Treaty members agreed that they would not share nuclear weapons, nor acquire such weapons in the future. Under the terms of the agreement, signed on July 1, 1968, the pact would go into effect upon ratification by the three sponsors and by at least 40 other nations.
  • The disaster film genre of movies was revived with the premiere of Airport in New York City before its U.S. and worldwide release. Based on the bestselling suspense novel by Arthur Hailey, Airport was made on a budget of USD $10.2 million and would gross almost ten times that amount worldwide, using the formula of a cast of well-known actors facing a disaster
  • *John Frusciante, American rock guitarist for the Red Hot Chili Peppers; in Queens, New York City

March 6, 1970 (Friday)

March 7, 1970 (Saturday)

March 8, 1970 (Sunday)

  • A team of assassins in Nicosia attempted to assassinate Makarios III, the President of Cyprus, riddling the presidential helicopter with machine gun fire as it was lifting off from the rooftop of his residence, Nicosia Palace. Palace guards fired at the assassins, Greek Cypriot members of the EOKA group advocating the island's annexation by Greece, who had taken a position on the roof of a nearby building. President Makarios escaped injury; the helicopter pilot was critically wounded by three bullets, but managed to safely land the copter.
  • Born: Jason Elam, American-born pro football kicker; in Fort Walton Beach, Florida
  • Died: Waldo Peirce, 85, American impressionist painter nicknamed "The American Renoir"

March 9, 1970 (Monday)

  • The United States Department of Defense, on orders from President Nixon, reversed a policy of U.S. secrecy regarding American military involvement in Laos. The move came after a March 6 statement from Nixon, that no Americans stationed in Laos had been killed in combat; in fact, U.S. Army Captain Joseph K. Bush, Jr., based in Laos, had died 13 months earlier when his helicopter was shot down over the Plain of Jars. Previously, the DOD had listed U.S. casualties in Laos as being part of the war in Vietnam.
  • Died: Jackie Opel, 32, Barbados-born musician who created the Barbadian music style spouge, was killed in a car accident in Bridgetown

March 10, 1970 (Tuesday)

March 11, 1970 (Wednesday)

  • The government of Iraq and the leader of the nation's Kurdish people signed a 15-point autonomy agreement, bring an end to the First Iraqi–Kurdish War after eight and a half years of fighting. Future Iraqi President Saddam Hussein and Kurdish leader Mustafa Barzani concluded the pact after negotiations in Lebanon, but fighting would resume after Iraq's abrogation of the agreement in 1974.
  • Hawaii became the first state in the United States to allow abortion at the request of the woman, on the condition that the fetus not be viable outside the uterus and that the woman had been a resident of the state for at least 90 days. The bill had passed the state House of Representatives, 31-20, on February 18 and the state Senate followed, 15-9, on February 24. Personally opposed to abortion, Hawaii Governor John A. Burns refused to sign it into law, but also declined to veto the bill, allowing it to become law. Almost 1,200 abortions were legally performed in the first four months after the law took effect
  • Died: Erle Stanley Gardner, 80, American lawyer and author who created the Perry Mason mystery series of stories and novels starting in 1933.

March 12, 1970 (Thursday)

  • For the first time in British history, citizens younger than 21 were able to cast ballots in a parliamentary election. The opportunity came in the by-election, to fill a vacancy in the Bridgwater constituency in the House of Commons that followed the October 31 death of Gerald Wills. Miss Trudy Sellick, a secretary who had turned 18 years old earlier in the day, registered the first under-21 vote in British history; she was in line when the polling station at North Newton, Somerset, opened at 7:00 in the morning. Conservative Party candidate Tom King began a 31 year career as a Member of Parliament, winning the by-election with 55 percent of the votes cast.
  • At the annual Geneva Motor Show in Switzerland, Citroën introduced the Citroën-Maserati SM, at the time the fastest front-wheel drive in the world

March 13, 1970 (Friday)

  • The sinking of the Iranian ship Viaqtar killed 105 of the 180 people on board. The ship, bringing Muslims back to Iran after their pilgrimage to Mecca, capsized and sank off of the coast of Abu Dhabi.

March 14, 1970 (Saturday)

  • The U.S. merchant vessel SS Columbia Eagle was seized by two members of the crew in a mutiny while transporting bombs to the Thailand port of Sattahip. Armed with pistols, Clyde McKay Jr. and Alvin Glatkowski threatened the captain and the rest of the crew of the ship by claiming that they were prepared to detonate one of the bombs in the cargo. Twenty-four men evacuated in lifeboats and McKay and Glatkowski then forced the remaining 13 crew to pilot the vessel to Cambodia. The new government of Cambodia permitted Columbia eagle to leave on April 8, and imprisoned McKay and Glatkowski for extradition to the United States.
  • An explosion at a Yugoslavian coal mine in Breza killed 48 workers
  • Born: Meredith Salenger, American film actress and winner of Young Artist Award at age 15 for the title role in The Journey of Natty Gann; in Malibu, California

March 15, 1970 (Sunday)

March 16, 1970 (Monday)

  • The New English Bible, an updated translation, went on sale worldwide after the completion of translation of the Old Testament. Rather than making a revision of previous English versions, a team of Biblical scholars worked from Hebrew language texts, and the publishers of the universities at Oxford and Cambridge stated that the new version was "as truthful as human skill could make it— and carried out by the best scholars and translators that the churches possessed". The release came a little more than nine years after the release of the NEB New Testament translation on March 14, 1961.
  • Opposition in the U.S. Senate, to the nomination of Judge G. Harrold Carswell to the United States Supreme Court, grew after U.S. Senate hearings revealed that more than half of the rulings written by Carswell had been reversed on appeal for legal errors. U.S. Senator Roman Hruska of Nebraska defended Carswell's lack of qualifications, commenting that "even if he were mediocre, there are a lot of mediocre judges and people and lawyers. Aren't they entitled to a little representation and a little chance?" Carswell's nomination would fail to win the approval of the U.S. Senate in the vote taken on April 8.
  • Voters elected overwhelmingly to incorporate Gary, West Virginia, as a city, more than 60 years after the United States Steel Corporation had built the McDowell County settlement as a company town for its coal miners and their families. In addition to the former corporate-owned property, the new city included other coal mining towns such as Venus, Wilcoe, Thorpe, Ream, Filbert, Leslie and Elbert, another town named for U.S. Steel founder Elbert H. Gary.
  • Born:
  • *Oleg Pavlov, Russian novelist and winner of the Russian Booker Prize for 1994's Captain of the Steppe
  • *Paul Oscar, Icelandic pop music singer and gay rights activist; in Reykjavík
  • Died: Tammi Terrell, 24, African-American R & B singer, from a brain tumor

March 17, 1970 (Tuesday)

  • A passenger on Eastern Air Lines Shuttle Flight 1320 killed the co-pilot and seriously wounded the pilot after entering the cockpit of the DC-9 in mid-flight. Robert Wilbur, Jr. was able to safely land the jet despite being wounded. His first officer, James E. Hartley, was fatally shot in the chest but was able to wrest the gun away and shoot the assailant, John J. Divivo, during the struggle after the shooting began. Carrying 68 passengers and a crew of five, the shuttle was making its approach to Boston on its flight from Newark, New Jersey. Shortly after 8:00 in the evening, Divivo forced his way into the cabin with a.38 caliber revolver and ordered the crew to "fly east", then panicked and began shooting when Wilbur told him that the plane would have to land in Boston to refuel.
  • For the first time in its 24 year history of being a member of the United Nations Security Council, the United States used its veto power. The original version of Resolution 277 would have prohibited UN member nations from having any communications with Rhodesia, and had the support of 9 of the 15 members of the Security Council, but under UN rules, a no vote by any of the five permanent members overruled the majority. The United Kingdom's no vote marked only the fifth time that the UK had cast a veto.
  • The United States Army charged 14 of its officers with suppressing information about the 1968 My Lai Massacre in South Vietnam, and referred charges for court martial. Charges would later be dropped against Major General Samuel W. Koster and against Brigadier General George H. Young, Jr.; Colonel Oran Henderson would be tried and acquitted reassigned after a court-martial. Lieutenant William L. Calley Jr. would be the only one of the officers to be tried and convicted.

March 18, 1970 (Wednesday)

March 19, 1970 (Thursday)

  • Willy Brandt became the first Chancellor of West Germany to visit East Germany, arriving in the city of Erfurt, from the border of the two nations, to meet with Willi Stoph, the Ministerpräsidenten. Enthusiastic East German crowds cheered Brandt along the route as he traveled across the border between Hesse and the Erfurt District in what is now Thuringia. The Erfurt Summit marked the first meeting between the heads of government of divided Germany since Brandt began the Ostpolitik policy of dialogue with the Communists. Brandt rejected Stoph's demand for recognition of the Communist DDR, but the leaders agreed that Stoph would travel to Kassel in West Germany on May 21.
  • The first issue of the humor magazine National Lampoon, dated April 1970, went on sale at newsstands after having been founded by Harvard University graduates Douglas Kenney, Henry Beard and Rob Hoffman, who had worked as publishers of the Harvard Lampoon. The magazine, which would franchise popular comedy films and media, would be printed monthly until 1998.

March 20, 1970 (Friday)

  • Twenty-one people were killed, and 15 injured by an arsonist who set fire to the Ozark Hotel in Seattle, Washington. Most of the victims, all of whom had been staying on the fourth and fifth floors, died from burns or from smoke inhalation, but one victim fell five stories to her death from a fire escape. The perpetrator, who had splashed a flammable liquid in the hotel's stairwells, was never found.
  • The Agency for Cultural and Technical Co-operation was founded in Canada.
  • Born:
  • *Linda Larkin, American actress who supplied the voice for Princess Jasmine in Disney's Aladdin and its sequels; in Los Angeles
  • *Bernhard Hoëcker, German comedian, in Neustadt an der Weinstraße, Rheinland-Pfalz, West Germany

March 21, 1970 (Saturday)

March 22, 1970 (Sunday)

  • The United States first used the BLU-82 bomb in combat, dropping the most powerful conventional weapon up to that time on North Vietnamese Army and Pathet Lao guerrilla troops in Long Tieng in Laos. The bomb, nicknamed the "Daisy Cutter", had originally been designed to clear jungles to create landing zones for helicopters because it could clear an area within a radius of without leaving a bomb crater.
  • Born: Leontien van Moorsel, Netherlands cyclist, gold medalist at the 2000 and 2004 Olympics and multiple women's world championships; in Boekel

March 23, 1970 (Monday)

  • U.S. President Nixon declared the nationwide walkout of postal workers to be a national emergency, and ordered the first of 2,500 United States troops to begin sorting and moving six days worth of undelivered mail. Busloads U.S. Air Force members arrived in New York City and began work that evening in the General Post Office in Manhattan, a second office serving the Wall Street financial district, and the main subdivision serving Brooklyn. The U.S. Department of Defense announced that 30,000 members of the Air Force, Army and Navy had been placed on alert, and called 12,000 from the 42nd Infantry Division of the multi-state U.S. Army National Guard to active duty, along with 15,5000 reservists. At the peak of the strike, 627 American post offices had had work stoppages
  • Died: Skull Murphy, 39, Canadian professional wrestler, committed suicide shortly before he was scheduled for a bout in Charlotte, North Carolina

March 24, 1970 (Tuesday)

March 25, 1970 (Wednesday)

March 26, 1970 (Thursday)

  • North Vietnam refused an offer by South Vietnam for the release and repatriation of 343 wounded or ill prisoners of war, declaring that there were no members of the North Vietnamese Army in the south. The Hanoi representatives at the Paris Peace Talks asserted that the captives were, instead, "illegally arrested patriots" from among South Vietnamese citizens rebelling against the Saigon government.
  • Born: Luis Jimenez, Puerto Rican American comedian and host of one of the most popular Spanish language radio programs in the United States, The Luis Jimenez Show.
  • Died: Patricia Ellis, 51, American film leading lady of the late 1930s; from cancer

March 27, 1970 (Friday)

  • In the largest air battle in the Middle East since the end of the 1967 Six-Day War, approximately 80 jets fought in the skies over the Port Suez, with 40 Egyptian MiG fighters and 40 Israeli Air Force Phantom jets. The Israeli fighters returned home safely, and reported shooting down five of the Egyptian MiGs.
  • The American labor union PATCO Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization, unable to call a strike without violating federal law, staged a "sick-out", with roughly one out of every four members telephoning to report that they would not be able to come to work because of illness. The shortage of workers to track airplane movement resulted in the cancellation of 250 scheduled airline flights on Good Friday, the first day of the busy Easter weekend.
  • Born:
  • *Elizabeth Mitchell, American TV and film actress; in Los Angeles
  • *Maribel Díaz Cabello, First Lady of Peru from 2018 to 2020 until the impeachment of her husband Peruvian President Martín Vizcarra; in Moquegua
  • *Princess Leila Pahlavi, the youngest child of the Shah of Iran and a member of Iranian royalty until the 1979 Iranian Revolution; in Tehran

March 28, 1970 (Saturday)

March 29, 1970 (Sunday)

March 30, 1970 (Monday)

March 31, 1970 (Tuesday)