February 1980

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February 18, 1980: Canada's Liberal Party wins elections, replaces Progressive Conservative government
February 13, 1980: Winter Olympic games open in the U.S. at Lake Placid, New York
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Outgoing Canadian PM Joe Clark, returning PM Pierre Trudeau

The following events happened in February 1980:

February 1, 1980 (Friday)

  • The U.S. Department of Energy released its emergency plans for gasoline rationing in the event of a fuel shortage during the summer. Features of the plan, which never needed to be implemented, included a four-day workweek, requirements that car drivers choose three days per week not to drive, limiting gasoline purchases to $7.00, and allowing gasoline to be bought only on odd or even numbered days of the month.[1]
  • The U.S. television soap opera Love of Life broadcast its 7,316th and last episode after a run of more than 28 years that had started on September 24, 1951. Larry Auerbach, who had directed every one of the episodes, commented that "It hasn't really died a natural death. It was murdered."[2] The show's declining ratings had become worse after it was moved from 11:30 to 4:00 in the afternoon, after which it was dropped by 40 CBS affiliates in favor of local programming and reruns.[3][4]
  • The film "erotic historical drama" Caligula, which had premiered in Italy in 1979, was released in the United States by its co-producer, Penthouse magazine publisher Bob Guccione. The unrated and pornographic film, about the decadent reign of Gaius Caesar Germanicus (Emperor of Rome from 37 to 41 AD) had a cast of distinguished actors, including Malcolm McDowell in the title role, Sir John Gielgud as Marcus Cocceius Nerva, Peter O'Toole as the Emperor Tiberius Caesar and Helen Mirren as Caligula's wife Milonia Caesonia. New York Daily News film critic Kathleen Carroll wrote that "'Caligula,' like its leading character, is doomed from the very start," and added "[T]wo hours of 'Caligula'... is two hours more than anyone should have to endure."[5]
  • Died: Jack Bailey, 72, American game show host known for the TV series Queen for a Day

February 2, 1980 (Saturday)

  • The New Mexico State Penitentiary riot began at 1:40 in the morning in Santa Fe.[6] After 36 hours, the New Mexico National Guard and a police SWAT team were able to bring an end to the inmate takeover of the New Mexico State Penitentiary, but not before 33 inmates had been killed and more than 100 injured.[7] Many of the deaths were inmates who were discovered, after prisoners had broken into the warden's office, to have secretly been informants. An "execution squad" used blowtorches and axes to torture and then kill inmates deemed to have betrayed others.[8][9]
  • Born:
  • Died:

February 3, 1980 (Sunday)

  • "Operation Abscam" the FBI's sting operation against members of the United States Congress suspected of bribery, was revealed by the Bureau. Over a period of 14 months in 1978 and 1979, agents posing as Arab sheiks contacted and offered bribes to 20 public officials and 10 private individuals who were secretly being filmed.[10] The code name "Abscam" was derived from "Arab Scam".[11] U.S. Senator Harrison A. Williams and U.S. Representatives Frank Thompson, both of New Jersey, would be convicted later bribery, along with U.S. Representatives John Jenrette of South Carolina, Raymond Lederer and Michael "Ozzie" Myers of Pennsylvania, John M. Murphy of New York, and Richard Kelly of Florida. All of the members of Congress except for Kelly were Democrats.[12]
  • Died: Ray Heindorf, 71, American film score composer who won three Academy Awards

February 4, 1980 (Monday)

  • An unidentified patient at Johns Hopkins University Hospital became the first human being to be implanted with an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD), developed by a team of physicians headed by an Israeli cardiologist, Dr. Michel Mirowski.[13] The device was implanted by Dr. Levi Watkins. In the years since, millions of patients would have their lives prolonged by the Mirowski ICD.[14]
  • Abolhassan Banisadr was sworn in as the first president of Iran at a hospital room in Tehran. The Islamic Republic's de facto leader, the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, administered the oath from his hospital bed in a nationally televised ceremony, then endorsed Banisadr, who had been elected to a four-year term.[15] The TV broadcast was poorly handled by the television crew, and the chairman of Iran's state radio and television council resigned the next day. According to a Reuters account of the telecast, "Parts of it were virtually inaudible and the camera was frequently jolted and out of focus."[16]
  • Rioters in Tripoli, Libya broke into the French Embassy and destroyed much of the first floor and set fire to cars in the embassy courtyard. Embassy personnel were able to escape unharmed. The attack arose from a demonstration against France for its aid in helping Tunisia repel a Libyan attack on Gafsa.[17] On December 2, a mob of about 2,000 people had set fire to the first and second floors of the U.S. Embassy in Tripoli.

February 5, 1980 (Tuesday)

  • As the Iran Hostage Crisis started its 94th day, the American captives at the U.S. Embassy were woken up by guards wearing black ski masks, blindfolded and led to other rooms, where they were told to disrobe, put up their hands, and kneel down. Blindfolded, the hostages could hear weapons being readied to fire and a commander ordering the guards to take aim, an experience that was the most terrifying of their captivity.[18] One of the hostages would later tell an author, "It was an embarrassing moment. However, we were too scared to realize it." A moment later, the prisoners were told to get dressed again, and were told that the mock execution was a practical joke that their student captors had wanted to try.[19]

February 6, 1980 (Wednesday)

artist's rendition of Aegyptopithecus zeuxis [20]
  • Scientists announced the discovery of the earliest-known primate ancestor of human beings, with remains of Aegyptopithecus, described by The New York Times as "the oldest ape-human evolutionary link found so far" and dated to 30 million years ago.[21] Elwyn Simons, who had discovered more than 20 skeletal fossils in the Sahara Desert in Egypt since 1966, said that the species, later classified as Aegyptopithecus zeuxis had been about the size of a cat.[22] The fossils had been found inside a geological formation called the Jebel Qatrani Formation, outside of Faiyum.[23]
  • Mathieu Kérékou was re-elected, unopposed, as the President of Benin.
  • The trial of serial killer John Wayne Gacy began in Chicago before a jury from Rockford, Illinois.[24] Gacy, suspected of the murder of 27 victims between 1972 and 1978, would be executed in the electric chair on May 9, 1994.

February 7, 1980 (Thursday)

  • The "hotline" between Seoul and Pyongyang reopened at 10:00 in the morning, the day after reunification talks between South Korea and North Korea at Panmunjom, in a meeting room of the Neutral Nations Supervisory Commission to discuss a meeting between the two nations' prime ministers.[25] The direct telephone communications link had been disconnected since 1976.

February 8, 1980 (Friday)

  • Gunnar Thoroddsen deserted his political party, the Sjálfstæðisflokkurinn (Independence Party) to form a coalition government to replace Benedikt Gröndal and to become the oldest Prime Minister of Iceland in the north Atlantic nation's history. Thoroddsen, the former mayor of Reykjavik and a losing candidate in the 1968 presidential election, allied with the Framsóknarflokkurinn (FSF or Progressive Party) and the Alþýðubandalagið (People's Alliance) to control 31 of the 60 seats in the Althing, Iceland's parliament.
  • Less than one week after the FBI revealed its Abscam sting operation against Congress members, the Bureau announced the results of a second operation, Brilab, against state government officials suspected of taking money from organized crime.[26] The code name "Brilab" was coined from the words "bribery" and "labor". Teams of FBI investigators were sent to Texas and Louisiana after the existence of Brilab had been leaked to the public.
  • Born:
  • Died: Nikos Xilouris, 43, Cretan Greek composer and folk singer, from lung cancer

February 9, 1980 (Saturday)

February 10, 1980 (Sunday)

  • The Partido dos Trabalhadores (PT) political party was founded in São Paulo.[28] In 2002, it would capture the presidency with the election of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.
  • An eight-year-old boy on a camping trip in the U.S. state of Washington, Brian Ingram, found roughly $3,000 of the $200,000 ransom that had been paid as a ransom to hijacker D. B. Cooper on November 24, 1971.[29] A man, who had bought a ticket under the fictitious name of Dan Cooper, had hijacked Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 305. He parachuted from the Boeing 727 somewhere over Oregon after being paid cash.[30] No other trace of "Cooper", nor his actual identity, would ever be found. Brian was allowed to keep about half of the cash and would sell some of it at a 2008 auction for $37,000.[31]
  • Died: Dr. Louis W. Sauer, 94, American pediatrician who, in 1931, developed the first practical vaccine for whooping cough and helped create the DPT vaccine.

February 11, 1980 (Monday)

  • Three former Nazi Gestapo officers were sentenced to jail terms after being convicted of assisting in the mass murder of 70,000 Jews in France during World War II. All three had overseen the arrest and deportation of Jewish residents in Vichy France. All three had lived freely in West Germany after the war, beyond the reach of prosecution until the statute of limitations for war crimes had been extended. Herbert Hagen, nicknamed "The Butcher of Paris" by his accusers, was a business executive after having been the Gestapo's chief on France's west coast from 1940 to 1942 and received a 12-year sentence. Kurt Lischka, the former Gestapo commandant of Paris, was convicted of war crimes and sentenced to 10 years. His deputy chief, Ernst Heinrichsohn, mayor of the town of Bürgstadt at the time of the trial, got six years.[32]
  • Died: Yakov Malik, 73, Soviet Russian diplomat and the USSR's Representative to the United Nations from 1948 to 1952 and 1968 to 1976. Because he was absent during the UN Security Council's vote on its Resolution 82 on June 25, 1950, the Soviet Union was unable to veto the sending of United Nations troops to the Korean War

February 12, 1980 (Tuesday)

February 13, 1980 (Wednesday)

Janssen
  • Died: David Janssen (stage name for David Harold Meyer), 48, American television and film actor best known for his portrayal of Dr. Richard Kimble in The Fugitive; from a heart attack

February 14, 1980 (Thursday)

  • Dr. Algirdas Statkevičius, a Soviet dissident member of the Lithuanian Helsinki Group, was arrested in Vilnius and would be sentenced on 11 August 1980 to forcible psychiatric treatment, reportedly for "anti-Soviet activities". Dr. Statkevičius was transferred to the Chernyakhovsk Special Hospital, near Vilnius, for confinement.[35]
Artist's rendition of the Solar Max satellite
  • The Solar Max (Solar Maximum Mission) satellite, designed by the U.S. to investigate solar flares and other solar phenomena, was launched at 10:57 in the morning from Cape Canaveral.[36] It would fail nine months after its launch until its repair by a space shuttle crew in 1984, and would continue experiments until re-entering the Earth atmosphere on December 2, 1989.[37]
  • The CBS television network announced that anchorman Walter Cronkite would retire in 1981, prior to his mandatory retirement on his 65th birthday. The CBS Network announced that Dan Rather would succeed Cronkite, the anchor since the program started in 1963, rather than the other candidate for Cronkite's successor, Roger Mudd.[38] Cronkite's last broadcast of the CBS Evening News would be on March 6, 1981.
  • Died:

February 15, 1980 (Friday)

Jaroszewicz
  • The Polish United Workers' Party dismissed Prime Minister Piotr Jaroszewicz from office and replaced him with Edward Babiuch.[41] Edward Gierek, the general secretary of the PUWP, Poland's governing Communist Party, told the 1,800 delegates at the close of the five-day Party Congress that Jaroszewicz had "asked to be relieved" of his posts in the government and in the Party, along with Foreign Minister Stefan Olszowski, both of whom were blamed for Poland's worsening economy. The day before Jaroszewicz's departure, a PUWP official told the Congress that the officials responsible for Poland's failure to achieve production targets would have to leave.
  • In Vanuatu, called at that time the New Hebrides, followers of John Frum's cargo cult on the island of Tanna seceded as the nation of Tafea.[42]
  • Born: Conor Oberst, American folk singer and songwriter, in Omaha, Nebraska

February 16, 1980 (Saturday)

  • The longest traffic jam in history took place in France, backing up vehicles for 109 miles (175 km) on the A6 autoroute, the multi-lane highway between Lyon and Paris. Thousands of vacationing skiers were returning from the French Alps, traveling north along A6, along with normal Saturday traffic.[43] Starting with the 1981 edition of the Guinness Book of World Records, the incident was reported under the category of "Longest Traffic Jam".[44]
  • A total solar eclipse was seen in central Africa and south Asia, with totality lasting 4 minutes and eight seconds and peaking at 0853 UTC, 11:53 in the morning over Somalia.[45] Half of the world's population at the time, two billion people, were in the shadow of the Moon.[46]

February 17, 1980 (Sunday)

February 18, 1980 (Monday)

February 19, 1980 (Tuesday)

  • AC/DC lead singer Bon Scott died in a parked car in South London, after a night of heavy drinking. Born as Ronald Belford Scott in Forfar, Scotland, he was only 33.[56] The car's driver, Alistair Kennear, had parked the vehicle in front of Kennear's house on Overhill Road in East Dulwich, after the friend had opted to let Scott get sober.[57]
  • A rumor of a breakthrough in the Iran-U.S. hostage crisis became public when U.S. Vice President Walter Mondale told an interviewer the hostage crisis was "nearing an end".[58] Negotiations failed, however, after the Ayatollah Khomeini said in a speech that the embassy seizure had been "a crushing blow" to the U.S. and that the fate of the hostages would wait until a new parliament could be elected. The hostages would remain for 11 more months in captivity.
  • Born:
    • Ma Lin, Chinese table tennis player, Olympic gold medalist in 2004 and 2008, and nine-time World Championship gold medalist; in Shenyang, Liaoning province
    • Mike Miller, American basketball player, 2001 NBA Rookie of the Year and 2006 NBA Sixth Man award winner; in Mitchell, South Dakota

February 20, 1980 (Wednesday)

  • The deadline for the Soviet Union to withdraw its troops from Afghanistan passed with no action from the Soviets, and led to the United States and other western nations deciding not to send athletes to the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow.[59] A spokesman for President Carter announced that the United States would boycott and the president expected the U.S. Olympic Committee and Olympic athletes to follow suit.[60]
Alice Roosevelt Longworth

February 21, 1980 (Thursday)

February 22, 1980 (Friday)

February 23, 1980 (Saturday)

  • Forty-six of the 47 people on board an Indian Air Force C-119 transport were killed when a bicyclist crossed the runway as the plane was taking off.[70] When the pilot attempted to miss the person on the runway, the "Flying Boxcar" plane's engines stalled and it came down "right wing low", setting the plane on fire. The accident happened at the Kheria Air Force Station in Agra in the Uttar Pradesh state. Thirty of the victims were paratroopers on a training mission, while 12 others were Indian Air Force officers.[71]
  • Former California Governor Ronald Reagan became the front runner for the Republican Party presidential nomination after paying for a debate between himself and the previous front runner, former CIA Director George H. W. Bush.
  • The Ayatollah Khomeini frustrated any American hopes that the fifty U.S. Embassy hostages in Iran would be released during the winter.[72] Khomeini told reporters that he would defer to Iran's Parliament, the Majlis, whose members were not scheduled to be elected until April, to decide the fate of the captives.
  • American speed skater Eric Heiden became the first person to win five individual gold medals at the Olympics, winning the 10,000 meter speed skating event in a world record time 14 minutes, 28.13 seconds. Heiden had also won medals in the 500m, 1000m, 1500m and 5000m races.[73] Although swimmer Mark Spitz had won seven Olympic gold medals in 1972, three of those wins had been as part of the U.S. team in relay events.
  • The College of Magic, the world's only educational institution to train professional magicians, opened in the Southfield section of Grassy Park, a suburb of Cape Town, South Africa. It is now located in the suburb of Claremont.[74]
  • Born: Dmitry Sholokhov, Belarusan-born American fashion designer; in Novopolotsk, Byelorussian SSR, Soviet Union

February 24, 1980 (Sunday)

  • Salim Lawzi, the wealthy editor and publisher of the world's largest Arab language weekly magazine, Al Hawadeth, was kidnapped as he was being driven to the Beirut airport to fly back to his home in London.[75] The other occupants of Lawzi's car were released by their captors at the town of Damour, but Lawzi's mutilated corpse was found on March 4 in a forest near Aramoun. Although no group claimed responsibility for the murder, Al Hawadeth had recently published articles critical of the regime of Syria's president Hafez al-Assad[76] and the abduction took place after the car had passed through several checkpoints manned by Syrian Army peacekeeping forces at the Raouché section of Beirut. A post mortem examination showed that Lawzi had been tortured, with "his writing hand... lacerated to the bone, from fingertips to elbow", and concluded that he had been shot about four days before his body was discovered.[77]
  • Born: Emma Johnson, Australian swimmer and 1997 World Champion in the women's 400m medley; in Sydney

February 25, 1980 (Monday)

Sergeant Bouterse [78]
  • The "Sergeants Coup" in the South American nation of Suriname ousted the government of Prime Minister Henck Arron, after dissatisfaction over working conditions and pay. At 3:00 in the morning, officers of the 800-man Surinamese Army, began the revolt at Army headquarters in Paramaribo, and a rebel-controlled patrol boat began firing artillery shells at the city's police headquarters. Within eight hours, rebels had taken control of Paramaribo, its police stations, its media, and its communications links.[79] Surinamese Army Sergeant Dési Bouterse took control of the government as chairman of the 16-member National Military Council.
  • In the sparsely populated Chubut Province in the Patagonia region of southern Argentina, the National University of Patagonia San Juan Bosco was created in Comodoro Rivadavia by the merger of the private University of Patagonia San Juan Bosco and the public National University of Patagonia. It now has campuses in Puerto Madryn, Trelew and Esquel in Chubut Province, and Ushuaia in Tierra del Fuego.
  • Serial killer Christine Falling committed the first of six murders of people entrusted to her care, five of them small children and one elderly person. She would finally be caught after the 1982 murder of an infant. After confessing to the murders, Falling would be sentenced to life imprisonment with no possibility of parole for 25 years.[80]
  • Born:

February 26, 1980 (Tuesday)

February 27, 1980 (Wednesday)

  • A group of 30 M-19 guerrillas began the siege of Dominican Republic's Embassy in Bogotá, Colombia, holding 60 people hostage, including 14 ambassadors. The diplomats of the U.S., Mexico, Venezuela, and the Dominican Republic, who negotiated the release of 10 women, a 16-year-old boy, and three wounded men (including Paraguay's acting ambassador, Oscar Gostiaga.[84][85][86] The siege would last for 61 days, ending on April 27 with the 16 guerrillas being allowed to fly to Cuba, where they would release their last 12 hostages.
  • Under British supervision, parliamentary elections began in Rhodesia for the 80 seats of 100 seats reserved for black candidates, with balloting to continue for three days.[87] The 20 seats reserved for white candidates had been filled earlier in the month. The results of the 1979 election had been set aside after former guerrilla leaders were kept off the ballot, including Robert Mugabe, whose party won 55 of the 80 seats.[88]
Buddy Holly
  • More than 21 years after the death of Buddy Holly in a plane crash, "the most famous eyeglasses in rock and roll history" were found again, in the files of the county courthouse in Mason City, Iowa. The Sheriff of Cerro Gordo County, Jerry Allen, had been going through old court records to look for a file from an old murder case, and ran across an envelope marked "Charles Hardin Holly— recd. April 7, 1959", containing personal effects gathered at the crash site on February 3, 1959 and then misfiled. The envelope also contained the wristwatch of J.P. Richardson, known as "The Big Bopper". Sheriff Allen gave the glasses, which no longer had their lenses, to Buddy's brother, L.O. Holly, who lived in Lubbock, Texas.[89][90]
  • Born:
  • Died: George Tobias, 78, American stage, film and TV actor, best known for portraying Abner Kravitz on Bewitched

February 28, 1980 (Thursday)

  • A referendum on autonomy for the Spanish region of Andalusia failed to pass, even though voters favored it by a 55 to 45 percent margin. The conditions of the vote (on whether to allow Andalusians to set their own form of home rule without any approval by Spain's parliament), set by Article 151 of the Spanish Constitution made approval unlikely. Although 55.4 percent of the region's voters and a majority of voters in five of Andalusia's eight provinces approved autonomy, the measure had to receive a 51% majority in all eight provinces.[91] The provinces of Almería, Jaén and Málaga did not produce the required 51% yes vote, while Cádiz, Córdoba, Granada, Huelva, and Seville had been in favor.[92]
  • A Guatemalan Air Force C-47, carrying officers of the Guatemalan Army and their families to a vacation in Poptún, crashed after its departure from Guatemala City, killing all 31 people on board.[93][94]

February 29, 1980 (Friday)

President Liu
  • Liu Shaoqi (Liu Shao-chi), the former President of the People's Republic of China who had died in disgrace during the Cultural Revolution, had his reputation rehabilitated by a vote of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party.[95] Liu, who had at one time been designated by Communist Party Chairman Mao Zedong as a successor, fell into disfavor with Mao and died in 1969. Liu's rehabilitation had been pushed by China's de facto leader, Deng Xiaoping, who had himself been rehabilitated after being disgraced during the Cultural Revolution. At the same session, the Central Committee replaced four of the members of the Chinese Communist Party's ruling Politburo, promoting Hu Yaobang and Zhao Ziyang, and removing former Security Director Wang Dongxing and three others who had been staunch supporters of Chairman Mao.[96]
  • The Gannett Company launched "Project NN", Chairman Al Neuharth's plan to develop a national newspaper.[97] USA Today would be launched on September 15, 1982.
  • Born:
  • Died: Yigal Allon, 61, Israeli politician who served as labour minister and foreign minister at times between 1961 and 1977, and briefly governed as the interim prime minister.

References

  1. ^ "Gas Rationing Plan Readied For Emergency", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, February 2, 1980, p1
  2. ^ "Low ratings write finish to 'Love of Life'", Baltimore Evening Sun, January 28, 1980, pB6
  3. ^ "'Love of Life' Ran Out of Steam", Alexandria (LA) Town Talk, February 2, 1980
  4. ^ Christopher Schemering, The Soap Opera Encyclopedia (Ballantine Books, 1987) pp. 151–156
  5. ^ "'Caligula' as X-pected", Daily News (New York), February 2, 1980, p11
  6. ^ Haywood, Phaedra (February 1, 2020). "Devastating penitentiary riot of 1980 changed New Mexico and its prisons". Santa Fe New Mexican.
  7. ^ "32 Convicts Die as Uprising Ends". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. February 4, 1980.
  8. ^ "New Mexico Convicts Died in Ghastly Ways". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. February 5, 1980.
  9. ^ Bingaman, Jeff (June 1980). Report of the Attorney General on the February 2 and 3, 1980 Riot at the Penitentiary of New Mexico (PDF) (Report). New Mexico Office of the Attorney General.
  10. ^ "8 Congressmen Named In Corruption Probe", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, February 4, 1980, p1
  11. ^ "Expect jury to get FBI probe data soon", Daily News (New York), February 3, 1980, p3
  12. ^ "7 From Congress Guilty in Abascam", The New York Times, March 12, 1982, pB-2
  13. ^ Heart Failure: Device Management ed. by Arthur Feldman (Wiley, 2009) p. viii
  14. ^ "Termination of malignant ventricular arrhythmias with an implanted automatic defibrillator in human beings", by Michel Mirkowski, Morton Mower, Levi Watkins, et al., New England Journal of Medicine (August 7, 1980) p303, 322-324
  15. ^ "Khomeini swears in Bani-Sadr, who calls for export of revolution", Baltimore Sun, February 5, 1980, p2
  16. ^ "Bungled broadcast leads Iranian to quit top TV job", Baltimore Sun, February 6, 1980, p2
  17. ^ "Tripoli mob attacks French Embassy", Baltimore Evening Sun, February 4, 1980, p1
  18. ^ "Mock Execution of U.S. Hostages in Iran Reported, Los Angeles Times, July 24, 1980, p1
  19. ^ Mark Bowden, Guests of the Ayatollah: The Iran Hostage Crisis (Grove Press, 2006) pp346-350
  20. ^ attribution: Nobu Tamura
  21. ^ Monkeylike African Primate Called Common Ancestor of Man and Apes, by Bayard Webster, The New York Times, February 7, 1980, p14
  22. ^ "Eons-Old Ape-Human Link About The Size Of A Cat", St. Louis Post-Dispatch, February 7, 1980, p1
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  32. ^ "3 former Nazis get jail terms", Vancouver Sun, February 11, 1980, p1
  33. ^ "Citigroup to Sell 20% Stake in Samba Financial Group", Arab News, May 28, 2004
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  35. ^ Basket Three: Implementation of the Helsinki Accords. U.S. Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe. 1981. p. 71.
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  42. ^ Peter J. Hempenstall and Noel Rutherford, Protest and Dissent in the Colonial Pacific (Institute of Pacific Studies of the University of the South Pacific, 1984) p13
  43. ^ Rocque, Melony (February 6, 2017). "Getting out of a jam". Smart Cities World.
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  49. ^ William Shawcross, The Shah's Last Ride (Touchstone, 1989) pp351-352
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  56. ^ "Rock Singer, Left in Car 'to Sober Up,' Found Dead", Los Angeles Times, February 20, 1980
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  62. ^ "Wired and Inspired", by Mike Pramik, Columbus (OH) Dispatch, November 12, 2000
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  67. ^ " Six Days That Shook Kabul: The ‘3 Hut uprising’, first urban protest against the Soviet occupation"
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  70. ^ Aviation Safety Network
  71. ^ "India Crash Fatal to 46", Spokane (WA) Chronicle, February 23, 1980, p1
  72. ^ "Hopes Dashed; Release Of U.S. Hostages Impossible Before April, Khomeini Says", Indianapolis Star, February 24, 1980, p1
  73. ^ "5 of a kind makes Heiden pure gold", Chicago Tribune, February 24, 1980, p4-1
  74. ^ "About Us: Background", College of Magic website
  75. ^ "Lebanon Publisher Abducted; 6 Reported Killed in Clashes", St. Louis Post-Dispatch, February 25, 1980, p9A
  76. ^ "Publisher's death chills Lebanese newsmen", Baltimore Sun, March 6, 1980, p4
  77. ^ "Murdered editor had been tortured", The Guardian (London), March 6, 1980, p6
  78. ^ attribution: We El
  79. ^ "Angered Sergeants Take Over Control of Surinam", Los Angeles Times, February 25, 1980, p6
  80. ^ "Falling, Christine Laverne Slaughter", in The Encyclopedia of Serial Killers, by Michael Newton (Facts on File, 2006) p72-73
  81. ^ "Egypt, Israel Exchange Envoys As Arab Fores Of Accord Protest", Pittsburgh Press, February 26, 1980, p8
  82. ^ "N.H.: Drubs Bush; Carter Wins", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, February 27, 1980, p1
  83. ^ "Voters Accept W. Valley by Slim Count", Salt Lake Tribune (Utah), February 27, 1980, pB-1
  84. ^ "U.S. Envoy, 59 Others Seized In Colombia", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, February 28, 1980, p1
  85. ^ "Secuestrados 17 embajadores" ("17 Ambassadors held hostage"), El Tiempo (Bogota, Colombia), February 28, 1980, p1
  86. ^ "Colombian Leftists Free 14 Embassy Hostages", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, February 29, 1980, p1
  87. ^ "Rhodesia Calm as Blacks Begin Vote", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, February 28, 1980, p6
  88. ^ "Mugabe Apparent Winner In Rhodesia", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 4, 1980, p1
  89. ^ "Buddy Holly's Trademark", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, February 29, 1980, p1
  90. ^ "Buddy Holly's glasses found after 20 years", Des Moines (IA) Register, February 29, 1980, p28
  91. ^ "Andalusia referendum fails", Baltimore Sun, March 1, 1980, p2
  92. ^ "Andalusian Leftists Fail on Home Rule", Miami Herald, March 1, 1980, p5-A
  93. ^ Aviation Safety Network
  94. ^ "Plane crash claims 32", Regina (SK) Leader-Post, February 29, 1980, p1
  95. ^ "China Breaks From Mao By Honoring Dead Rival", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 1, 1980, p7
  96. ^ "Appointments and ousters solidify Chinese leadership", by Michael Parks, Baltimore Sun, March 1, 1980, p1
  97. ^ William M. Pride and O. C. Ferrell, Marketing: Concepts and Strategies (Houghton Mifflin, 1995) p747