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         |  1973 by topic | 
        
        
         | Subject:  Archaeology –  Architecture –  Art –  Aviation –  Comics –  Film –  Home video –  Literature ( Poetry) –  Meteorology –  Music ( Country,  Metal) –  Rail transport –  Radio –  Science –  Spaceflight –  Sports –  Television –  Video gaming | 
        
        
         | Countries:  Australia –  Canada –  People's Republic of China –  Ecuador –  France –  Germany –  Greece –  India –  Ireland –  Israel –  Italy –  Japan –  Luxembourg –  Malaysia –  Mexico –  New Zealand –  Norway –  Pakistan –  Philippines –  Singapore –  South Africa–  Soviet Union –  UK –  USA | 
        
        
         | Leaders:  Sovereign states –  State leaders –  Religious leaders –  Law | 
        
        
         | Categories:  Births –  Deaths –  Works –  Introductions –  Establishments –  Disestablishments –  Awards | 
        
        
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       Year 1973 (MCMLXXIII) was a  common year starting on Monday (link will display full calendar) of the 1973  Gregorian calendar.
       Events of 1973
       
        
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       January
       
        -  January 1
          - The United Kingdom, the Republic of Ireland and Denmark enter the  European Economic Community, which later became the European Union.
 
          -  CBS sells the  New York Yankees for $10 million to a 12-person syndicate led by  George Steinbrenner. It was 3.2 million dollars more than CBS bought the Yankees for.
 
         
         
        -  January 14
          - Elvis Presley's  concert in  Hawaii is watched by over a billion people live worldwide.
 
          - The  Miami Dolphins defeat the  Washington Redskins 14-7 in  Super Bowl VII to complete the NFL's first Perfect Season.
 
         
         
        -  January 15 - Vietnam War: Citing progress in peace negotiations, U.S. President Richard Nixon announces the suspension of offensive action in  North Vietnam.
 
        -  January 17 -  Ferdinand Marcos becomes  President for Life of the Philippines.
 
        -  January 18 - Eleven Labour Party councillors in  Clay Cross,  Derbyshire, England, were ordered to pay £6,985 for not enforcing the Housing Finance Act.
 
        -  January 20
        
 
        -  January 21 - The  Communist League is founded in Denmark.
 
        -  January 22
          -  George Foreman defeats  Joe Frazier for the heavyweight world  boxing championship.
 
          - A  Royal Jordanian  Boeing 707 flight from  Jeddah crashes in Kano, Nigeria; 176 people are killed.
 
          - Former U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson dies at his  Stonewall, Texas ranch leaving no former U.S. President living until the resignation of Richard M. Nixon in 1974.
 
         
         
        -  January 23
        
 
        -  January 27 -  Paris Peace Accords are signed. Allies officially wins Vietnam War.
 
       
       
        
       
       February
       
        
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        -  February 6
          - Toronto: Construction on the  CN Tower begins.
 
         
         
        -  February 11
        
 
        -  February 12 -  Ohio becomes the first  U.S. state to post distance in  metric on signs. (See:  Metric system in the United States).
 
        -  February 13 - The United States Dollar was devalued by 10%.
 
        -  February 21 -  Libyan Arab Airlines Flight 114 ( Boeing 727) is shot down by Israeli  fighter aircraft over the  Sinai Desert, after the passenger plane is suspected of being an enemy military plane. Only 5 (1 crew member and 4 passengers) of 113 survive.
 
        -  February 22 -  Sino-American relations: Following President Richard Nixon's  visit to  mainland China, the United States and the People's Republic of China agree to establish liaison offices.
 
        -  February 26 -  Edward Heath's British government publishes a Green Paper on prices and incomes policy.
 
        -  February 27 - The  American Indian Movement occupies  Wounded Knee, South Dakota.
 
        -  February 28 - Polling day in the Republic of Ireland general election.
 
       
       March
       
        
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        -  March 1 -  Dick Taverne, who had resigned from the Parliament of the United Kingdom on leaving the Labour Party, was re-elected as a 'Democratic Labour' candidate.
 
        -  March 3 - Tottenham Hotspur win the  Football League Cup final at  Wembley, beating  Norwich City 1-0 in the final.
 
        -  March 7 -  Comet Kohoutek is discovered.
 
        -  March 8
          - In the 'Border Poll', voters in Northern Ireland vote to remain part of the United Kingdom. Irish nationalists are encouraged to boycott the referendum.
 
          -  Provisional Irish Republican Army bombs explode in  Whitehall and the Old Bailey in England.
 
         
         
        -  March 11 - Sir  Richard Sharples, Governor of Bermuda, was assassinated in Government House.
 
        -  March 17
          - Queen Elizabeth II opens the modern London Bridge.
 
          - Many of the few remaining United States soldiers begin to leave Vietnam. One reunion of a former POW reuniting with his family is immortalized in the  Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph  Burst of Joy.
 
          - Pink Floyd's  Dark Side of the Moon, one of rock's landmark albums, is released.
 
         
         
        -  March 20 - British government White Paper on Northern Ireland proposes re-establishment of an Assembly elected by proportional representation, with a possible All-Ireland council.
 
        -  March 21 -  Lofthouse Colliery disaster in Great Britain.
 
        -  March 22 - United Kingdom government announces that the Channel Tunnel could be finished by 1980, costing £366m.
 
        -  March 23 -  Watergate scandal (United States): In a letter to  Judge John Sirica,  Watergate burglar  James W. McCord Jr. admits that he and other defendants have been pressured to remain silent about the case. He names  Attorney General John Mitchell as 'overall boss' of the operation.
 
        -  March 29 - The last United States soldier leaves Vietnam.
 
        -  March 31 -  Carowinds opens.
 
       
       April
       
        
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        -  April 2 - The  LexisNexis computerized legal research service begins.
 
        -  April 3 - The first handheld cellular phone call made by  Martin Cooper, who conceived the phone, in New York City.
 
        -  April 4 - The World Trade Centre officially opens in New York City with a ribbon-cutting ceremony.
 
        -  April 6
          -  Pioneer 11 is launched on a mission to study the solar system.
 
          -  Ron Blomberg of the  New York Yankees becomes the first  designated hitter in  Major League Baseball.
 
         
         
        -  April 7 - Tu te reconnaîtras by Anne-Marie David (music by Claude Morgan, text by Vline Buggy) wins  Eurovision Song Contest 1973 for Luxembourg.
 
        -  April 10 - Israeli commandos raid Beirut, assassinating 3 leaders of the Palestinian Resistance Movement. The Lebanese army's inaction brings the immediate resignation of Prime Minister Saib Salam, a Sunni Muslim.
 
        -  April 11 - The British House of Commons voted against restoring  capital punishment by a margin of 142 votes.
 
        -  April 12 - The Labour Party wins control of the  Greater London Council.
 
        -  April 17
          - The German counter-terrorist force  GSG 9 is officially formed.
 
          -  Federal Express officially begins operations, with the launch of 14 small aircraft from  Memphis International Airport. On that night, Federal Express delivers 186 packages to 25 U.S. cities from Rochester, NY, to Miami, Fla.
 
         
         
        -  April 20 - An  Indian Pacific train en route to Perth, derails near  Broken Hill, New South Wales. The train destroyed a quarter mile of track when it left the rails.
 
        -  April 28 - Six Irishmen, including  Joe Cahill, are arrested by the  Irish Naval Service off  County Waterford on board a coaster carrying five tons of weapons destined for the  Provisional Irish Republican Army.
 
        -  April 30 - Watergate Scandal: President Richard Nixon announces that top White House aids H.R. Haldeman, John Ehrlichman, and others have resigned.
 
       
       May
       
        
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        -  May 1 - An estimated 1,600,000 workers in the United Kingdom stopped work in support of a Trade Union Congress "day of national protest and stoppage" against the Government's anti-inflation policy.
 
        -  May 3 - The  Sears Tower in Chicago is finished, becoming the world's tallest building.
 
        -  May 5
          -  Shambu Tamang becomes the youngest person to climb to the summit of Mount Everest.
 
          -  Sunderland AFC defeats  Leeds United A.F.C. in the FA Cup final.
 
          -  Secretariat wins the  Kentucky Derby.
 
         
         
        -  May 8 - A 71-day standoff between federal authorities and the  American Indian Movement who were occupying the  Pine Ridge Reservation at  Wounded Knee, South Dakota, ends with the surrender of the militants.
 
        -  May 10 - The  Polisario Front,a Sahrawi movement dedicated to the independence of Western Sahara, is formed.
 
        -  May 14
        
 
        -  May 17 -  Watergate scandal: Televised hearings begin in the United States Senate.
 
        -  May 18 -  Cod War:  Joseph Godber, British  Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, announces that Royal Navy  frigates will protect British trawlers fishing in the disputed 50-mile limit round Iceland.
 
        -  May 19 -  Secretariat wins the  Preakness Stakes.
 
        -  May 20 - Motorcycle racer  Jarno Saarinen dies at Monza, Italy.
 
        -  May 25 -  Skylab 2 ( Pete Conrad,  Paul Weitz,  Joseph Kerwin) is launched on a mission to repair the  Skylab space station.
 
       
       June
       
        
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        -  June 1 - The Greek military junta abolishes the monarchy and proclaims a  republic.
 
        -  June 3 - A  Tupolev Tu-144 crashes at the Paris air show; 15 are killed.
 
        -  June 4 - A  patent for the ATM is granted to  Donald Wetzel, Tom Barnes and George Chastain.
 
        -  June 16 - U.S. President Richard Nixon begins several talks with Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev.
 
        -  June 22 - W. Mark Felt ("Deep Throat") retires from the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
 
        -  June 24 - Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev addresses the American people on television, the first to do so.
 
        -  June 25
          -  Erskine Hamilton Childers is elected the fourth  President of Ireland.
 
          -  Watergate scandal: Former  White House counsel  John Dean begins his testimony before the Senate Watergate Committee.
 
         
         
        -  June 26 - At  Plesetsk Cosmodrome, 9 persons are killed in the explosion of a Cosmos 3-M rocket.
 
        -  June 28 - Elections are held for the  Northern Ireland Assembly, which will lead to power-sharing between  unionists and  nationalists in Northern Ireland for the first time.
 
        -  June 30 - Very long total solar eclipse. During the entire 2nd millennium, only 7 total solar eclipses exceeded 7 minutes of totality.
 
       
       July
       
        
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        -  July 2 - The United States Congress passes the Education of the Handicapped Act (EHA) mandating  Special Education federally.
 
        -  July 5
          - The  Isle of Man Post begins to issue its own postage stamps.
 
          - The catastrophic  BLEVE (Boiling Liquid Expanding Vapor Explosion) in  Kingman, Arizona, following a fire that broke out as propane was being transferred from a railroad car to a storage tank, kills 11 firefighters. This explosion has become a classic incident, studied in fire department training programs worldwide.
 
         
         
        -  July 6 -  St Andrew's Cathedral, Singapore was gazetted as a  national monument.
 
        -  July 10 - The Bahamas gains full independence within the Commonwealth of Nations.
 
        -  July 11 -  Varig Flight 820 disaster near  Orly, France - 123 killed.
 
        -  July 12 -  1973 National Archives Fire: A major fire destroys the entire 6th floor of the  National Personnel Records Centre in St. Louis, Missouri.
 
        -  July 16 -  Watergate Scandal: Former  White House aide  Alexander Butterfield informs the United States Senate Watergate Committee that President Richard Nixon had secretly recorded potentially incriminating conversations.
 
        -  July 17 - King  Mohammed Zahir Shah of Afghanistan is deposed by his cousin  Mohammed Daoud Khan while in Italy undergoing eye surgery.
 
        -  July 20 - France resumes nuclear bomb tests in  Mururoa Atoll, over the protests of Australia and New Zealand.
 
        -  July 21 - The Philippines receives its second  Miss Universe title, with  Margarita Moran as the winner.
 
        -  July 23 - The  Avianca Building in  Bogotá, Colombia suffers a serious fire.
 
        -  July 25 - The Soviet  Mars 5 space probe is launched.
 
        -  July 28
          - The  Summer Jam at Watkins Glen, a massive rock festival featuring  The Grateful Dead,  The Allman Brothers Band and  The Band, attracts over 600,000 music fans.
 
          -  Skylab 3 ( Owen Garriott,  Jack Lousma,  Alan Bean) is launched, to conduct various medical and scientific experiments aboard  Skylab.
 
         
         
        -  July 29 - Formula One racing driver  Roger Williamson dies in an accident, witnessed live on European television, during the  1973 Dutch Grand Prix.
 
        -  July 30 - An 11-year legal action for the victims of  Thalidomide ends. Confirmation needed
 
        -  July 31
          - Militant protesters led by  Ian Paisley disrupt the first sitting of the  Northern Ireland Assembly.
 
          - A  Delta Air Lines Flight 173  DC9-31 aircraft lands short of Boston's  Logan Airport runway in poor visibility, striking a sea wall about 165 feet (50 m) to the right of the runway centerline and about 3000 feet (914 m) short. All 6 crew members and 83 passengers are killed, 1 of the passengers dying several months after the accident.
 
         
         
       
       August
       
        
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        -  August 2 - A flash fire kills 51 at the  Summerland amusement centre at  Douglas, Isle of Man. Confirmation needed
 
        -  August 5 -  Black September members open fire at the Athens airport; 3 are killed, 55 injured.
 
        -  August 8
        
 
        -  August 15 - The U.S. bombing of Cambodia ends, marking the official halt to 12 years of combat activity in Southeast Asia.
 
        -  August 23 - The  Norrmalmstorg robbery occurs, famous for the origin of the term  Stockholm syndrome.
 
       
       September
       
        
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        -  September 3 - The British Trade Union Congress expelled 20 members for registering under the  Industrial Relations Act 1971.
 
        -  September 11 - Chile's democratically-elected government is overthrown in a military coup after serious instability. President  Salvador Allende  commits suicide during the coup in the presidential palace, and General  Augusto Pinochet heads a U.S.-backed  military junta that will govern Chile for the next 16 years.
 
        -  September 15 -  Gustav VI Adolf of Sweden dies. His grandson,  Carl XVI Gustav, becomes king.
 
        -  September 18 - The two German Republics, the Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) and the  German Democratic Republic (East Germany), are admitted to the United Nations.
 
        -  September 20 -  The Battle of the Sexes:  Billie Jean King defeats  Bobby Riggs in a televised tennis match, 6-4, 6-4, 6-3, at the  Astrodome in Houston,  Texas.
 
        -  September 22 -  Henry Kissinger,  United States National Security Advisor, starts his term as  United States Secretary of State.
 
        -  September 27 - Soviet  space programme: Launch of  Soyuz 12, the first manned flight since 1971.
 
        -  September 28 -  ITT is bombed in New York City by Leftist terrorists protesting the restoration of the Chilean Constitution ordered by the Chilean judicial and legislative branches against the Allende administration.
 
       
       October
       
        
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        -  October 6 - Yom Kippur War: The fourth and largest Arab-Israeli conflict begins, as Egyptian and Syrian forces attack Israeli forces in the  Sinai Peninsula and  Golan Heights on Yom Kippur.
 
        -  October 8 -  LBC Radio's first broadcast on 97.3 FM
 
        -  October 10 -  Spiro T. Agnew resigns as Vice President of the United States and then, in federal court in  Baltimore, Maryland, pleads no contest to charges of  income tax evasion on $29,500 he received in 1967, while he was governor of  Maryland. He is fined $10,000 and put on 3 years' probation.
 
        -  October 14 -  Student Revolt in Bangkok, Thailand
 
        -  October 17 - The Arab Oil Embargo against several countries which support Israel triggers the 1973 energy crisis.
 
        -  October 20
          - The  Saturday Night Massacre: U.S. President Richard Nixon orders Attorney General  Elliot Richardson to dismiss  Watergate Special Prosecutor  Archibald Cox. Richardson refuses and resigns, along with Deputy Attorney General  William Ruckelshaus. Solicitor General  Robert Bork, third in line at the  Department of Justice, then fires Cox. The event raises calls for Nixon's impeachment.
 
          - The Sydney Opera House is opened by Elizabeth II after 14 years of construction work.
 
         
         
        -  October 26
        
 
        -  October 30 - The  Bosporus Bridge in Istanbul, Turkey is completed, connecting the continents of Europe and Asia over the  Bosporus for the first time in history.
 
        -  October 31 -  Mountjoy Prison helicopter escape. Three  Provisional Irish Republican Army members escaped from  Mountjoy Prison, Dublin, Republic of Ireland after a hijacked helicopter landed in the exercise yard.
 
       
       November
       
        
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        -  November 3
          -  Pan Am cargo flight 160, a  Boeing 707-321C, crashes at  Logan International Airport, Boston, killing 3.
 
          -  Mariner program: NASA launches  Mariner 10 toward Mercury (on  March 29, 1974 it becomes the first  space probe to reach that planet).
 
         
         
        -  November 7 - The Congress of the United States overrides President Richard M. Nixon's veto of the  War Powers Resolution, which limits presidential power to wage war without congressional approval.
 
        -  November 11 - Egypt and Israel sign a United States-sponsored cease-fire accord.
 
        -  November 14 - In the United Kingdom,  Princess Anne marries a commoner, Captain  Mark Phillips, in Westminster Abbey (they divorce in 1992).
 
        -  November 16
          -  Skylab program: NASA launches  Skylab 4 ( Gerald Carr,  William Pogue,  Edward Gibson) from  Cape Canaveral, Florida on an 84-day mission.
 
          - U.S. President Richard Nixon signs the  Trans-Alaska Pipeline Authorization Act into law, authorizing the construction of the  Alaska Pipeline.
 
         
         
        -  November 17
          -  Watergate scandal: In  Orlando, Florida, U.S. President Richard Nixon tells 400  Associated Press managing editors "I am not a crook."
 
          - A student uprising occurs against the military  regime in Athens, Greece.
 
         
         
        -  November 21 - U.S. President Richard Nixon's attorney, J. Fred Buzhardt, reveals the existence of an 18½-minute gap in one of the  White House tape recordings related to  Watergate.
 
        -  November 25 - Greek dictator  George Papadopoulos is ousted in a military  coup led by Lieutenant General  Phaidon Gizikis.
 
        -  November 27 - The United States Senate votes 92-3 to confirm Gerald Ford as  Vice President of the United States.
 
        -  November 29 - 104 people killed in a Taiyo department store fire in  Kumamoto,  Kyūshū, Japan.
 
       
       December
       
        
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        -  December 1 - Papua New Guinea gains self government from Australia.
 
        -  December 3 -  Pioneer program:  Pioneer 10 sends back the first close-up images of Jupiter.
 
        -  December 6 - The United States House of Representatives votes 387-35 to confirm Gerald Ford as Vice President of the United States; he is sworn in the same day.
 
        -  December 15 -  Gay rights: The  American Psychiatric Association removes  homosexuality from its  DSM-II.
 
        -  December 16 -  O.J. Simpson of the  Buffalo Bills became the first running back to rush for 2,000 yards in a pro football season.
 
        -  December 28 - The  Endangered Species Act is passed.
 
        -  December 31 - In the United Kingdom, due to coal shortages caused by industrial action, the electricity consumption reduction measure - the  Three-Day Week comes into force.
 
       
       
        
       
       Deaths
       January-March
       
        -  January 19 -  Max Adrian, Northern Irish actor (b. 1903)
 
        -  January 22 - Lyndon Johnson, President of the United States (b. 1908)
 
        -  January 23 -  Kid Ory, American musician (b. 1886)
 
        -  January 24 -  J. Carrol Naish, American actor (b. 1897)
 
        -  January 26 -  Edward G. Robinson, American actor (b. 1893)
 
        -  January 31 -  Ragnar Anton Kittil Frisch, Norwegian economist,  Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1895)
 
        -  February 11 -  Hans D Jensen, German physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1907)
 
        -  February 15 -  Wally Cox, American actor (b. 1924)
 
        -  February 16 -  Francisco Caamaño, Dominican politician (b. 1932) (executed)
 
        -  February 19 -  Joseph Szigeti, Hungarian violinist (b. 1892)
 
        -  February 22 -  Elizabeth Bowen, Irish novelist (b. 1899)
 
        -  February 23 -  Dickinson W. Richards, American physician, recipient of the  Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (b. 1895)
 
        -  March 3 -  Vera Panova, Soviet-Russian writer (b. 1905)
 
        -  March 6 -  Pearl S. Buck, American writer, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1892)
 
        -  March 8 -  Ron Pigpen McKernan, American musician ( Grateful Dead) (b. 1945)
 
        -  March 14
          -  Rafael Godoy, Colombian composer (b. 1907)
 
          -  Chic Young, American cartoonist (b. 1901)
 
         
         
        -  March 26
          -  Noel Coward, English composer and playwright (b. 1899)
 
          -  George Sisler, American baseball player (b. 1893)
 
         
         
       
       April-June
       
        -  April 8 - Pablo Picasso, Spanish artist (b. 1881)
 
        -  April 16 -  Istvan Kertesz, Hungarian conductor (b. 1929)
 
        -  April 19 -  Hans Kelsen, Austrian-born legal theorist (b. 1881)
 
        -  April 21 -  Arthur Fadden, thirteenth  Prime Minister of Australia (b. 1894)
 
        -  April 26 -  Irene Ryan, American actress (b. 1902)
 
        -  April 30 -  Václav Renč, Czech poet, dramatist and translator (b. 1911)
 
        -  May 2 -  Alan Carney, American actor and comedian (b. 1909)
 
        -  May 11 -  Lex Barker, American actor (b. 1919)
 
        -  May 14 -  Jean Gebser, German author, linguist, and poet (b. 1905)
 
        -  May 18 -  Jeannette Rankin, first U.S. Congresswoman (b. 1880)
 
        -  June 4 -  Arna Bontemps, Harlem Renaissance writer (b. 1902)
 
        -  June 18 -  Roger Delgado, English actor (b. 1918)
 
        -  June 30 - Blessed  Vasyl Velychkovsky C.Ss.R Bishop and  Martyr (b. 1903)
 
       
       July - September
       
        -  July 2 -  Swede Savage, American race car driver (b. 1946)
 
        -  July 6 -  Otto Klemperer, German-born conductor (b. 1885)
 
        -  July 7 -  Veronica Lake, American actress (b. 1922)
 
        -  July 8 -  Wilfred Rhodes, English cricketer (b. 1877)
 
        -  July 20 -  Robert Smithson, American artist (b. 1938)
 
        -  July 20 - Bruce Lee, Chinese American martial artist and actor (b. 1940)
 
        -  July 29 -  Roger Williamson, British race car driver (b. 1948)
 
        -  August 1
          -  Gian Francesco Malipiero, Italian composer (b. 1882)
 
          -  Walter Ulbricht, East German Statesman (b. 1893)
 
         
         
        -  August 6
          -  James Beck, British actor (b. 1929)
 
          -  Fulgencio Batista, Cuban dictator (b. 1901)
 
         
         
        -  August 11 -  Karl Ziegler, German chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1898)
 
        -  August 12
          -  Dayanand Bandodkar, Chief Minister of Goa (b. 1911)
 
          -  Walter Rudolf Hess, Swiss physiologist,  Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1881)
 
         
         
        -  August 16 -  Selman Waksman, Ukrainian-born biochemist, recipient of the  Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (b. 1888)
 
        -  August 17
          -  Conrad Aiken, American writer (b. 1889)
 
          -  Jean Barraqué, French composer (b. 1928)
 
          -  Paul Williams, American singer (The  Temptations) (b. 1939)
 
         
         
        -  August 31 -  John Ford, American film director (b. 1895)
 
        -  September 2 - J. R. R. Tolkien, British writer (b. 1892)
 
        -  September 11 -  Salvador Allende,  President of Chile (b. 1908)
 
        -  September 15 - King  Gustav VI Adolf of Sweden (b. 1882)
 
        -  September 19 -  Gram Parsons, American musician (b. 1946)
 
        -  September 20 -  Jim Croce, American songwriter (b. 1943)
 
        -  September 23 -  Pablo Neruda, Chilean poet, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1904)
 
        -  September 26 -  Ralph Earnhardt, American race car driver (b. 1928)
 
        -  September 29 -  W. H. Auden, English poet (b. 1907)
 
        -  September 30 -  Peter Pitseolak, Inuit photographer and author (b. 1902)
 
       
       October - December
       
        -  October 2 -  Paavo Nurmi, Finnish runner (b. 1897)
 
        -  October 6 -  François Cevert. French race car driver (b. 1944)
 
        -  October 10 -  Ludwig von Mises, Austrian economist (b. 1881)
 
        -  October 14 -  Edmund A. Chester, American broadcaster and journalist (b.1897)
 
        -  October 16 -  Gene Krupa, American jazz drummer (b. 1909)
 
        -  October 18 -  Margaret Caroline Anderson, American magazine publisher (b. 1886)
 
        -  October 17 -  Ingeborg Bachmann, Austrian writer (b. 1926)
 
        -  October 22 -  Pablo Casals, Catalan cellist and conductor (b. 1876)
 
        -  November 10 -  David "Stringbean" Akeman, American banjo player (b. 1915)
 
        -  November 11 -  Artturi Ilmari Virtanen, Finnish chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1895)
 
        -  November 27 -  Frank Christian, American musician (b. 1887)
 
       
       
        -  December 1 -  David Ben-Gurion,  Prime Minister of Israel (b. 1886)
 
        -  December 3 -  Emile Christian, American musician (b. 1895)
 
        -  December 20 -  Bobby Darin, American singer (b. 1936)
 
        -  December 20 -  Luis Carrero Blanco, first minister of Spain (assassinated) (b. 1907)
 
        -  December 25 -  Gabriel Voisin, French aviation pioneer (b. 1880)
 
        -  December 25 -  İsmet İnönü, Turkish general, prime minister, and president (b. 1884)
 
        -  December 26 -  Harold B. Lee, president of  The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (b. 1899)
 
       
       Undated
       
        -  Jay C. Higginbotham, American musician (b. 1906)
 
       
       Nobel prizes
       
        - Physics -  Leo Esaki,  Ivar Giaever,  Brian David Josephson
 
        - Chemistry -  Ernst Otto Fischer,  Geoffrey Wilkinson
 
        -  Medicine -  Karl von Frisch, Konrad Lorenz,  Nikolaas Tinbergen
 
        - Literature -  Patrick White
 
        - Peace -  Henry A. Kissinger,  Le Duc Tho
 
        -  Economics -  Wassily Leontief
 
       
       Templeton Prize