•
Mobutu Sese Seko, the President of
Zaire, announced his new campaign,
"Authenticité", to remove all traces of the former
Belgian Congo's colonial past in favor of "Africanized" names, customs and dress. Having changed his own name from Joseph-Desire Mobutu, the President required citizens with European-sounding names to change them to something more authentic. • U.S. First Lady
Pat Nixon arrived in
Liberia for the beginning of an 8-day tour of Africa, which also included
Ghana and
Côte d'Ivoire. • A group of six men stole $4,000,000 worth of jewelry in the
Pierre Hotel Robbery, from safe deposit boxes at the
New York luxury hotel. After being tipped off by an informant, the FBI captured the robbers, but recovered only one million of the loot. •
Juliane Koepcke, the sole survivor of the Christmas Eve crash of
LANSA Flight 508, was found alive by three hunters deep inside the Amazon jungle in
Peru. The only survivor of 93 people on the plane, she had followed a stream for nine days until finding help. • Serial killer
John Wayne Gacy committed the first of at least 33 murders at his home in
Norwood Park Township, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago. Gacy approached 16-year-old Timothy McCoy at the Greyhound bus terminal in
Chicago and took him to the Gacy home, where he stabbed McCoy to death in the early hours of January 3. Gacy then buried McCoy's body under the crawlspace. McCoy remained unidentified until May 1986. •
Born: Álvaro Díaz González, Chilean journalist and director, in
Santiago. •
Died: Lillian Gilbreth, 93, efficiency expert and heroine of
Cheaper by the Dozen ==January 3, 1972 (Monday)==