April 1971


The following events occurred in April 1971:

[April 1], 1971 (Thursday)

  • The United Kingdom lifted all restrictions on gold ownership with the Exchange Control Order 1971.
  • The postal code used in Canada was started with a test in Ottawa, with plans to introduce it in Manitoba in the autumn, Saskatchewan in the spring of 1972, and other provinces between 1972 and 1974.
  • The day after U.S. Army Second Lieutenant William Calley was sentenced to life in prison in his court-martial for 22 murders, he was transferred from prison to house arrest by order of U.S. President Richard M. Nixon.
  • An attempted coup d'état in Ecuador ended only hours after it started, without any violence. The night before, Army General Luis Jacome Chavez and about 50 Ecuadorian War Academy officers several disgruntled soldiers announced that they were commencing a revolt against President José Velasco Ibarra and his nephew, Defense Minister Jorge Acosta Velasco. Acosta's assistant announced on Thursday morning that Jacome had surrendered.
  • The city of Bizen was founded in the Okayama Prefecture of Japan. As of 2017, it had a population of almost 36,000 people.
  • Born:
  • *Danielle Smith, Canadian politician, Premier of Alberta, in Calgary
  • *Jessica Collins, American TV actress, as Jennifer Lynn Campogna in Schenectady, New York

[April 2], 1971 (Friday)

  • The Tripoli Agreement was signed in the Libyan city of Tripoli by representatives of oil companies from around the world and by oil ministers of OPEC, providing for higher prices to be paid to OPEC nations for petroleum until 1976.
  • The cult classic U.S. TV soap opera Dark Shadows broadcast its 1,226th and final episode.
  • Born: Todd Woodbridge, Australian professional tennis player and half of the Grand Slam doubles winning team of Woodbridge and Woodforde, and Woodbridge and Bjorkman ; in Sydney

[April 3], 1971 (Saturday)

[April 4], 1971 (Sunday)

[April 5], 1971 (Monday)

  • In Ceylon, the Marxist–Leninist group Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna began a rebellion against the government of Prime Minister Sirimavo Bandaranaike, starting with plans for a simultaneous surprise attack on police stations nationwide at 11:00 at night and a plot to kidnap Bandaranaike from her residence. Because of a failure to attend a planning meeting on April 2, and a misunderstanding of a specific time for the uprising to start, a unit assigned to assault the police station at Wellawaya launched its attack on the morning of April 5 and ruined the JVP's plan to catch the rest of Ceylon's police off guard.
  • Frances Phipps became the first woman to travel to the North Pole as she and her husband Welland Phipps, co-owners of the Atlas Aviation charter service, flew a Twin Otter ski plane to install a radar beacon at the Pole.
  • A major eruption of Mount Etna in Sicily began. In the course of the eruption, lava buried the Etna Observatory, destroyed the first generation of the Etna cable-car, and seriously threatened several small villages on Etna's east flank.
  • The Marxist government of Chile and the Communist government of East Germany established diplomatic relations.
  • Yu Song-gun, a diplomat of South Korea's Embassy in West Germany, was kidnapped by North Korean agents while he and his wife were visiting West Berlin.
  • Robert M. Blais was sworn into office as the mayor of tiny Lake George Village, New York, and would celebrate half a century in office in 2021. Blais retired in 2023 after more than 52 years in office.

[April 6], 1971 (Tuesday)

  • "Ping-pong diplomacy" began when the People's Republic of China sent an invitation to the U.S. national table tennis team to visit as the first Americans to be invited to mainland China since the Communist government had taken over in 1949. For more than 20 years, mainland China had been closed to the U.S. and other Western nations. The American team was in Nagoya, Japan for the world championships at the same time that the People's Republic was participating in the competition for the first time since 1965. Earlier, Glenn Cowan of the U.S. team was befriended by three-time men's world champion Zhuang Zedong of China and the press coverage led to the invitation. Rufford Harrison, the captain of the U.S. team accepted the invitation on behalf of the team the next day.
  • West Germany's Chancellor, Willy Brandt, wrote to French President Georges Pompidou to reiterate his determination to re-open negotiations for the United Kingdom to join the European Community.
  • Born: Lou Merloni, American baseball player and radio personality, in Framingham, Massachusetts
  • Died: Igor Stravinsky, 88, Russian composer, conductor and pianist

[April 7], 1971 (Wednesday)

[April 8], 1971 (Thursday)

[April 9], 1971 (Friday)

  • The Politburo of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union was enlarged from 11 members to 15 as the Central Committee voted to approve the promotion of four men to full Politburo status. Dinmukhamed A. Kunayev, Vladimir V. Scherbitsky and Viktor V. Grishin were promoted from candidate members to full members, and the CPSU's secretary in charge of agriculture Fyodor D. Kulakov was added to the group that held the de facto power in the U.S.S.R., while the original 11 were elected to new terms. Party General Secretary Leonid I. Brezhnev was re-elected as the CPSU General Secretary.
  • Troops of the Pakistan Army invaded the home of Zakir Husain, a native Bengali and a former Governor of East Pakistan, killing most of his staff. Husain himself and his eldest son were almost executed on the scene until the unit's commanding officer realized what was happening and stopped the act.
  • Born: Jacques Villeneuve, Canadian racing driver, 1995 CART World Series champ, 1995 Indianapolis 500 winner and 1997 Formula One world champion; in Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Quebec

[April 10], 1971 (Saturday)

  • Sixteen members of the U.S. national table tennis team became the first contingent of Americans in more than 20 years to be welcomed to the People's Republic of China as nine players, four team officials and two wives walked across a bridge from British Hong Kong at the invitation of the Chinese government for an eight-day visit described as ping-pong diplomacy. The team and accompanying reporters were flown from Guangzhou to Tokyo seven days later after their historic visit.
  • A provisional Bangladeshi government took its oath of office in Meherpur Kushtia.
  • Veterans Stadium in Philadelphia, opened with the home team, the Phillies, defeating the Montreal Expos 4–1, in front of a crowd of 55,352. The first ball was dropped by helicopter to Mike Ryan.

[April 11], 1971 (Sunday)

[April 12], 1971 (Monday)

[April 13], 1971 (Tuesday)

  • American chemists Patsy O'Connell Sherman and her co-worker, Samuel Smith, and the 3M company was awarded U.S. Patent No. 3,574,791 for their invention, "Block and graft co-polymers containing water-solvatable polar groups and fluoroaliphatic groups", now a stain repellent marketed by 3M as Scotchguard.

[April 14], 1971 (Wednesday)

[April 15], 1971 (Thursday)

[April 16], 1971 (Friday)

[April 17], 1971 (Saturday)

[April 18], 1971 (Sunday)

[April 19], 1971 (Monday)

[April 20], 1971 (Tuesday)

[April 21], 1971 (Wednesday)

[April 22], 1971 (Thursday)

[April 23], 1971 (Friday)

[April 24], 1971 (Saturday)

  • At least 200,000 people in Washington, D.C., and 125,000 in San Francisco marched in protest against the Vietnam War.
  • The Soyuz 10 cosmonauts made the first ever attempt by a spacecraft to dock with a space station, achieving a partial docking with Salyut 1 at 01:47 UTC. For the next five and a half hours, the Soyuz 10 crew tried to complete the docking so that they could form the secure airlock necessary to safely board the station, then spent more time trying to extricate the Soyuz craft so that it could return to Earth.
  • One of the least successful musicals in Broadway history, Frank Merriwell, or Honor Unchallenged opened at the Longacre Theatre and closed the same evening. The critics' reviews the next day, which both noted that the show had closed after its single performance, and included comments like "the music is the least admirable aspect of a modestly deplorable adventure" and "all too forgettable" and "incredibly silly" and "there is no trace of imagination".
  • David Lewis was elected to succeed Tommy Douglas as leader of Canada's third major party, the New Democratic Party.
  • Born: Alejandro Fernández, Mexican singer, in Guadalajara

[April 25], 1971 (Sunday)

[April 26], 1971 (Monday)

[April 27], 1971 (Tuesday)

[April 28], 1971 (Wednesday)

[April 29], 1971 (Thursday)

[April 30], 1971 (Friday)