The Saturday morning emergency broadcast - Herald Journal Publishing (2024)

At 8:33 a.m. (CST) Feb. 20, 1971, bells loudly dinged from teletype machines in radio and television newsrooms across the United States, printing out a single urgent message.

An emergency action notification (EAN) message triggered a nationwide alert and disrupted broadcasting.

The EAN originated from the National Warning Center, located within the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) at the Cheyenne Mountain Complex in Colorado.

But first, the backstory.

Wayland S. Eberhardt, a civilian teletype operator at the National Warning Center, prepared to transmit the weekly emergency broadcast system (EBS) routine test message for radio and television stations early Saturday morning, Feb. 20, 1971.

Stations used color-coded EAN cards with the EBS protocol to determine which message to broadcast based on the received EAN message and codeword.

The white card (EAN message number one) was used to alert broadcasters to an impending emergency, instruct them to interrupt regular programming, and inform their listeners to stay tuned for further instructions.

The red card (EAN message number two) was reserved for a confirmed attack on the US. It instructed stations to broadcast a warning message and direct listeners to seek shelter immediately.

Mr. Eberhardt had three punched paper tapes for the teletype machine in front of him: a routine test tape and two tapes for real emergencies, one instructing the use of EAN message number one and the other EAN message number two.

Unfortunately, instead of sending the routine test message, he accidentally transmitted the EAN message number one tape, along with its authenticator codeword “hatefulness,” to radio and television newsrooms nationwide.

EAN message number one, sent at 8:33 a.m. CST, was received by all Associated Press and United Press International teletype machines in radio and TV newsrooms across the country.

Cue the loudly dinging bells of the teletype machines.

“Hatefulness” matched the unique daily code word for Feb. 20. Thus, broadcasters considered the message an actual emergency alert.

Message number one read: “This is an emergency action notification (EAN) directed by the President. Normal broadcasting will cease immediately. All stations will broadcast EAN message number one.”

The Saturday morning emergency broadcast - Herald Journal Publishing (1)

Several national radio stations and many across Minnesota went off the air, including KLFD in Litchfield, KBUN in Bemidji, WMFG in Hibbing, KTMF in New Prague, and KDOM in Windom.

However, radio station WCCO (830 AM), with its National Defense Emergency Authorization (NDEA), remained on the air to transmit official news and information.

Within minutes of receiving the teletype message, WCCO radio broadcast the following:

“This is an emergency action notification. All broadcast stations shall broadcast emergency action notification message number one white card. This station has interrupted its regular program at the request of the United States government to participate in the emergency broadcast system, serving the Minneapolis-St. Paul area,” announced WCCO radio broadcaster Howard Viken.

He continued, “During this period, many radio stations will remain on the air, broadcasting news and official information for areas assigned to them. This station will remain on the air and will serve the Twin Cities area. If you are not located in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area, you should now tune your ra . . .” Viken’s audio was suddenly cut off.

After six seconds of radio silence, another voice is heard, “They’ve run the incorrect tape, Howard. This is a [the speaker hesitates] mistake.”

Viken then says, “This is ah . . . disregard . . . disregard the last message. Disregard the last message.”

He pauses, seemingly at a loss for words, and then says, “Fourteen until nine, Twin City temperature is 24 degrees. The wind is north-northeast at nine miles per hour.”

“Well, we’re sorry for that error on the part of somebody, but this was to be an emergency action notification, but there’s been an error, so disregard that emergency action notification. Disregard that last announcement,” Viken explained.

Approximately 15 minutes after the initial emergency action notification, Viken reported, “We just received this from our CONELRAD advisory. All stations. CONELRAD advises that they have run the incorrect tape for today’s test. Please disregard the authenticator message which moved on this circuit a short time ago. This notice came from CONELRAD in Chicago.”

Howard Viken (1924 to 2021), who started working at WCCO radio in 1950, likely used the term “CONELRAD” because it was still informally used among broadcasters at that time.

The CONELRAD (control of electromagnetic radiation) system was a Cold War-era emergency communications protocol designed in 1951 to disrupt enemy navigation during an attack on the US and to broadcast official news and information to the public.

In 1963, it was replaced by the emergency broadcast system.

It required most radio stations to cease transmissions, except for designated CONELRAD stations broadcasting at 640 kHz and 1240 kHz.

The Saturday morning emergency broadcast - Herald Journal Publishing (2)

Many radio models during that time had symbols printed on their dials, such as triangles, indicating these frequencies.

Despite multiple attempts to officially retract the erroneous emergency action notification, it persisted for 40 minutes until 9:13 a.m. CST, when the EBS transmitted the correct code word, “impish,” finally canceling the EAN.

You can listen to the archived WCCO radio broadcast from Feb. 20, 1971, with the EAN announcement starting 26 seconds into the audio file, along with news clips from that day, at tinyurl.com/1971WCCO.

More From Go To The Section

A father’s farewellFrom bits to petabits per secondA dad’s dilemma: balancing love and sanity on vacation
The Saturday morning emergency broadcast - Herald Journal Publishing (2024)

References

Top Articles
Blitzo and Moxxie, Sometimes Friends - Chapter 1 - Cranberryfriend
Algebra 1 - What is Algebra 1? Problems, Topics, Formulas
895 Area Code Time Zone
Ffxiv Ixali Lightwing
La Qua Brothers Funeral Home
Anchor Martha MacCallum Talks Her 20-Year Journey With FOX News and How She Stays Grounded (EXCLUSIVE)
Stitch And Tie Promo Code Reddit
Crestwood Funeral Home Obituaries Gadsden Al
Kitchen Exhaust Cleaning Companies Clearwater
Costco Plaza Alhambra Photos
Chlamydia - Chlamydia - MSD Manual Profi-Ausgabe
Hotleak.vip
Ice Crates Terraria
As Trump and Harris spar, ABC's moderators grapple with conducting a debate in a polarized country
Craigslist Columbus Ohio Craigslist
352-730-1982
Sas Majors
Bonduel Amish Auction 2023
Diabetes Care - Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey
Zen Leaf New Kensington Menu
Eros Indy
Toernooien, drives en clubcompetities
Bfri Forum
Hendraheim Skyrim
Gold Bowl Vidalia La Menu
How to get tink dissipator coil? - Dish De
Prisoners Metacritic
Lawson Uhs
Ny Trapping Forum
2005 Volvo XC 70 XC90 V70 SUV Wagon for sale by owner - Banning, CA - craigslist
Mo Craiglist
Credit Bureau Contact Information
Craigslist General Fresno
Greg Teaches An Art Class
Arti kata petang-petang - Kamus Besar Bahasa Indonesia (KBBI) Online
Brian Lizer Life Below Zero Next Generation
101 Riddles for Adults That Will Test Your Smarts
Idaho Pets Craigslist
Accuradio Unblocked
Xfiles Wiki
Erica Mena Net Worth Forbes
German American Bank Owenton Ky
Best Of Clinton Inc Used Cars
Greenville Sc Greyhound
Top-Filme und Serien mit Maggie Smith
Power Outage Chehalis
Dive Sports Bars Near Me
Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness - Wikiquote
Love In Orbit Manga Buddy
Level A Sarasota
[US/EU] ARENA 2v2 DF S4 Rating Boost 0-1800 / Piloted/Selfplay / ... | ID 217616976 | PlayerAuctions
Priority Pass: How to Invite as Many Guests as Possible to Airport Lounges?
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Nathanial Hackett

Last Updated:

Views: 5965

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (72 voted)

Reviews: 95% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Nathanial Hackett

Birthday: 1997-10-09

Address: Apt. 935 264 Abshire Canyon, South Nerissachester, NM 01800

Phone: +9752624861224

Job: Forward Technology Assistant

Hobby: Listening to music, Shopping, Vacation, Baton twirling, Flower arranging, Blacksmithing, Do it yourself

Introduction: My name is Nathanial Hackett, I am a lovely, curious, smiling, lively, thoughtful, courageous, lively person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.