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October 1974

Month of 1974 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

October 1974
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The following events occurred in October 1974:

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October 30, 1974: Muhammad Ali defeats George Foreman in "The Rumble in the Jungle" in Kinshasa, Zaire.
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October 1, 1974 (Tuesday)

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October 2, 1974 (Wednesday)

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October 3, 1974 (Thursday)

October 4, 1974 (Friday)

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October 5, 1974 (Saturday)

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October 6, 1974 (Sunday)

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Emerson Fittipaldi during the 1974 United States Grand Prix
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October 7, 1974 (Monday)

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1974 East German Republic Day Parade
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October 8, 1974 (Tuesday)

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October 9, 1974 (Wednesday)

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The palm-sized, 50MB 3850 cartridge
  • The IBM 3850 computer accessory, the first to use compact cartridges for nearline storage, was introduced by the IBM company. The 3850 Mass Storage System could store a then-record 50 megabytes of memory on a small 4 inches (100 mm) long cartridge with a 70 inches (1,800 mm) long spool of magnetic tape, useful for holding infrequently used programming and data. Each cartridge could be loaded, when necessary, at a cost cheaper than maintaining data in a computer hard drive.[77]
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Schindler

October 10, 1974 (Thursday)

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Harold Wilson (Labour) and Edward Heath (Tory)
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October 11, 1974 (Friday)

  • One of the first popular crime horror films, The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (as billed in the credits and in its copyright registration), more popularly written as The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, premiered in theaters. Produced and directed by Tobe Hooper, the low-budget ($140,000) movie, with a cast of unknowns (starring Marilyn Burns and Paul A. Partain), returned more than 200 times its investment, grossing $30,900,000 worldwide.[91]
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Lull in the Battle ((L to R Joe Guild, Tom Gudmestad, Chris Kitterman and Jim Flick)
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October 12, 1974 (Saturday)

October 13, 1974 (Sunday)

October 14, 1974 (Monday)

October 15, 1974 (Tuesday)

October 16, 1974 (Wednesday)

October 17, 1974 (Thursday)

  • The Oakland A's won the 1974 World Series, four games to one, over the Los Angeles Dodgers, defeating the Dodgers 3 to 2 in Game 5.[152]
  • U.S. President Gerald Ford became the first incumbent President since Woodrow Wilson (and, as of 2024, the last) to testify in a Congressional hearing as he made a personal appearance before a subcommittee of the House Judiciary Committee to answer questions about his reasons for pardoning former President Richard M. Nixon. Ford testified that the pardon had not been prearranged, and that he made the decision because of his concern over reports of Nixon's deteriorating mental and physical health.[153]
  • An early morning fire killed 16 people and injured 30 at the New Nam San Hotel in Seoul in South Korea. Some of the guests, unable to escape, jumped to their deaths from the fourth and fifth floors of the hotel.[154]
  • In Stratford, Connecticut, the first flight of the Sikorsky UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter was made by test pilots James R. Wright and John Dixson.[155]
  • The first private manufacturer of space rockets, OTRAG (Orbital Transport-und Raketen-Aktiengesellschaft), was founded in Neu-Isenburg in West Germany, near Frankfurt, by aerospace engineer Lutz Kayser.[156] The company would make one successful launch of a launch vehicle on May 20, 1978, from facilities in the African nation of Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of the Congo). International opposition to the first manufacturing, since World War II, of German rockets and missiles led to the West German government closing down OTRAG facilities, after which OTRAG would move its operations to Libya and finally close entirely in 1987.[157]
  • Born: Matthew Macfadyen, English actor; in Great Yarmouth, Norfolk[158]
  • Died: Johannes Krahn, 66, German architect[159]

October 18, 1974 (Friday)

October 19, 1974 (Saturday)

Niue

October 20, 1974 (Sunday)

October 21, 1974 (Monday)

  • The Wiz, a musical based on L. Frank Baum's 1900 children's book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, but retold in the context of 1970s African-American culture and featuring an all-Black cast, was given its first performance. The show premiered at the Morris A. Mechanic Theatre in Baltimore.[181]
  • The white minority government of South Africa announced that it would increase the minimum wage paid to the nation's 400,000 black miners by 33 percent, effective December 1, though still less than the wages paid to 4,000 white miners. For the black and coloured South Africans, the increase for underground miners was to $2.28 per day from $1.71, and surface miner daily wages would increase from to $1.71 from $1.43.[182]
  • Former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations George Bush arrived at the U.S. diplomatic mission in Beijing to begin service as the U.S. liaison to the People's Republic of China.[183] The U.S. and China would not have full diplomatic relations until 1979.
  • Died: Donald Goines, 37, African-American writer of urban fiction, and his common-law wife, Shirley Sailor, were murdered in their apartment in Highland Park, Michigan. The murders remain unsolved.[184][185]

October 22, 1974 (Tuesday)

  • Venezuela's President Carlos Andres Perez announced that his government would nationalize the South American nation's oil industry and its iron industry before the end of the year. At the time, Venezuela, a member of OPEC, was the fifth-largest exporter of oil in the world.[186]
  • A fire in a pipeline link killed 9 people, including one American and one British oil expert, at the Kuwait Oil Company's installations in Umm al-Aish.[187]
  • A bombing at 3:30 in the morning caused $1,500 in damage to a room at the Midway Elementary School southeast of Charleston, West Virginia as violent protests over textbooks continued in Kanawha County. There were no injuries.[188] Two men — Reverend Marvin Horan, a former truck driver and a self‐ordained Fundamentalist minister, and a young coal miner, Larry Elmer Stevens — would be found guilty of charges related to the bombing on April 18, 1975 and sentenced to three years in prison.[189]
  • The makers of the American children's television series Sesame Street filed a copyright infringement suit against Bergen Liquidators, Inc., of New Jersey, charging that the company had planned to sell defective hand puppets of characters from the series.[190]
  • The explosion of an IRA bomb thrown into a dining room at Brooks's gentlemen's club in London injured three wine stewards.[39][191]
  • Died: Loyd Wright, 81, American attorney, former president of the American Bar Association[192]

October 23, 1974 (Wednesday)

October 24, 1974 (Thursday)

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Minuteman air launch test

October 25, 1974 (Friday)

October 26, 1974 (Saturday)

October 27, 1974 (Sunday)

October 28, 1974 (Monday)

October 29, 1974 (Tuesday)

October 30, 1974 (Wednesday)

October 31, 1974 (Thursday)

References

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