. . . where the 1970s live forever!
Saturday February 12, 1972
Welcome to Ultimate70s.com, the most thorough site on the internet dedicated to those great years of the 1970s! Remember what it was like to live through that era — or learn more about it — by checking out the events from any of the 3,652 days of the decade. No other website has this much information about the 1970s in one easy-to-use place!

Pick a date from the dropdown above or click the Random link to select a random day, then choose a topic (News, Sports, Television, etc.) and see what was happening on that date — and please tell us what you think.


This Day In 1970's History: Saturday February 12, 1972
  • Large sections of Clifford Irving's book on Howard Hughes were found to be almost exactly like materials included in a manuscript by Bob Thomas based on the recollections of Noah Dietrich, a former Hughes executive. A similar comparison of the two manuscripts was thought to be the basis of a Time magazine story alleging to show that the Irving book was a hoax. Time won permission from an appeals court to publish excerpts from the Irving manuscript to make its point. [New York Times]
  • Donald Rumsfeld, director of the Cost of Living Council, disclosed that the administration was thinking of easing quota restrictions on imported meat as a means of slowing down the rising cost of domestic meat. Mr. Rumsfeld declined to discuss the possibility of placing raw agricultural products under economic controls. [New York Times]
  • British companies, moving to comply with government orders for a three-day week to conserve electricity, laid off thousands of workers. Some companies decided to cease production for the duration of the power crisis, caused by a 34-day strike by coal miners. Brief blackouts continued on a rotating basis across the country. [New York Times]
  • American planes intensely bombed enemy base areas along the Laos-South Vietnamese border for a fourth consecutive day today, and the United States command reported the heaviest American air raids inside South Vietnam in two years. An American military source said privately that the intensive bombing would continue at least until President Nixon left for China Thursday. [New York Times]
  • Sources closely associated with the National Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse said the conservatively oriented body would unanimously recommend that all criminal penalties for the private use and possession of marijuana be eliminated. But a majority of the commission's members will still recommend criminal penalties for growing the drug, transporting it, giving it to friends or smoking it in public. The commission concluded that the drug is not very harmful and does not lead to harder drugs such as heroin or to crime. [New York Times]
Click here for more news from this date....


  Copyright © 2014-2026. All Rights Reserved.   •   Privacy Policy   •   Contact Us