March 1969

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March 7, 1969: Apollo 9 astronauts prove that the Apollo Lunar Module works
March 17, 1969: Golda Meir becomes new Prime Minister of Israel
March 2, 1969: Supersonic Concorde jet makes its first flight[1]
March 25, 1969: Pakistan's dictator Ayub Khan resigns[2]

The following events occurred in March 1969:

March 1, 1969 (Saturday)

Morrison
  • Jim Morrison, the lead singer for The Doors, performed a controversial rock concert (and other alleged acts) before 12,000 fans at the Dinner Key Auditorium in Miami.[3] Three days later, a Miami court would issue warrants for his arrest on a felony charge of indecent exposure and five misdemeanor charges,[4] although by that time, he was no longer in Miami. Morrison would return to Miami to be arraigned on the criminal charges on November 9 and remain free after posting bond.[5] Following 16 days of testimony, Morrison would be found guilty of the indecent exposure charge on September 20, 1970,[6] and would be sentenced to six months in jail and a $500 fine, but would post bail while the case was on appeal.[7] Morrison would die of heart failure on July 3, 1971, during the time that the appeal was in progress.[8]
  • Clay Shaw, the only person ever indicted for conspiracy in the assassination of John F. Kennedy, was acquitted of all charges by a jury in New Orleans. Rejecting the argument by district attorney Jim Garrison that a conviction would "restore justice and truth and freedom in this country", the jury deliberated for only 55 minutes and concluded that Garrison had not proven his case.[9]
  • Born: Javier Bardem, Spanish film actor and Academy Award winner; in Las Palmas, Canary Islands

March 2, 1969 (Sunday)

Zhenbao/Damansky Island[10]

March 3, 1969 (Monday)

March 3, 1969: Launch of Apollo 9
  • At 11:00 in the morning local time (1600 UTC), the United States launched Apollo 9, with astronauts James McDivitt, David Scott and Rusty Schweickart, in a test of the Apollo Lunar Module's ability to undock from, and then redock with, the lunar orbiter. Associated Press reporter Paul Recer described the mission as "a flight that will put America on the moon's threshold or slam the door indefinitely".[17]
  • Sirhan Sirhan took the witness stand to testify in his own defense at his trial for the murder of Bobby Kennedy, and, in questioning by defense attorney Grant Cooper, answer that he had shot Kennedy and that he recognized incriminating handwriting as his own, but denied that he remembered the shooting.[18]
  • The
    Naval Air Station Miramar.[19]
  • Died:

March 4, 1969 (Tuesday)

  • The formative event for the Union of Concerned Scientists took place at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), when scientists who were working on military projects conducted a work stoppage to protest "against misdirected scientific research and the abuse of scientific technology"; researchers at 30 other American universities soon conducted their own temporary strikes.[20] Physicist Kurt Gottfried wrote the UCS mission statement, "Beyond March 4", to be distributed to the MIT participants and then to scientists on other campuses, writing that "the Stone Age may return on the gleaming wings of Science, and what might now shower immeasurable material blessings upon mankind, may even bring about its total destruction. Beware, I say; time may be short."[21]
  • Between March 4 and 22, a series of
    scuba gear and pressurized space suits. The purpose of the tests was to evaluate the performance and procedures for moving film cassettes to the two ATM work stations and to perform some of the tasks required at these stations. Recommendations were made for the improvement of most of the features evaluated. As a result of the tests, equipment and procedures modifications were made.[22]
  • Born:
  • Died: Nicholas Schenck, 88, Russian-born American theater chain and film studio executive

March 5, 1969 (Wednesday)

  • Gustav Heinemann was narrowly elected President of West Germany on the third round of balloting by the 1,023 members of the federal and state legislatures, conducted in West Berlin despite protests from the government of East Germany. The final round came down to Heinemann, the nation's Justice Minister, and Defense Minister Gerhard Schroeder, after no candidate had been able to get the absolute majority of votes on the first two rounds. When the number of candidates was reduced to two, Heinemann won the largely ceremonial head of state post by a margin of 512 to 506.[23]
  • Serial killer Tony Costa was arrested in Boston an hour after police discovered the dismembered bodies of two 23-year-old women who were last seen on January 24. The women had had the misfortune of renting a room at a boardinghouse in Provincetown, where Costa had also been staying, and had vanished minutes after the house proprietor had introduced them. At the time of Costa's arrest, police had found four bodies buried in the sand dunes of Cape Cod near Truro, Massachusetts.[24]
  • Saigon. Huong's car was attacked by four members of a Viet Cong assassination team, all of whom were wearing stolen uniforms of the ARVN Rangers; fortunately for Huong, the attempt took place in the presence of Saigon police and ARVN troops who opened fire and gave the driver time to accelerate and escape.[25]
  • Switzerland's President, Ludwig von Moos, announced to the lower house of parliament in Bern that the seven-man executive council planned to present a constitutional amendment to grant women full power to vote and to be elected to political office, breaking with one of the Alpine nation's oldest traditions.[26]
  • All 17 passengers and both crewmembers on
    St. Thomas, Virgin Islands.[27][28]

March 6, 1969 (Thursday)

Scheweickart testing the Moon suit

March 7, 1969 (Friday)

  • The Apollo 9 astronauts completed the most critical part of the mission, successfully testing the maneuvers needed for a crewed spacecraft to turn around, dock with the lunar module (LEM) carried from a separately orbiting section of the rocket, allow two members of the crew to safely climb into it, undock it (for a future descent to the Moon, and then to return, reconnect to the orbiter and transfer back.[35] After the docking, astronauts McDivitt and Schweickart climbed into the LEM (designated as Spider), fired rockets to ascend 10 miles (16 km) above the command module (Gumdrop, crewed by Scott) to an altitude of 156 miles (251 km) and, because of the longer time to make a circuit of the Earth, "gradually fell behind, reaching a maximum trailing distance" of 113 miles (182 km) from the command module.[36] At that point, "Spider" fired the descent engine, jettisoned the lower half of the LEM to its original altitude and then flew back. After locating Gumdrop and redocking with it, McDivitt and Schweickart crossed back into the command module, then jettisoned the LEM (part of which would orbit for 12 years).[37]
  • In
    People's Republic of China and, over the next three hours, broke more than 100 windows and pelted the walls with hurled ink bottles. The demonstrations were made in response to the killing of Soviet troops during the border clash less than a week earlier, and got out of hand despite coordination by the Soviet government.[38]
  • With a crew of three, a U.S. Army helicopter rescued 124 South Koreans from a fire in a 13-story tall apartment building in Seoul. The copter made nine trips, including one where a crewmember rescued a woman who was hanging from her 12th-floor apartment.[39]

March 8, 1969 (Saturday)

General Riad
  • General Abdul Munim Riad, Chief of Staff of the Egyptian Armed Forces, was fatally wounded while touring the front line during an exchange of artillery between the Egyptians and the Israelis at the Suez Canal. An artillery shell landed inside the trench near Ismailia where General Riad had been walking, killed by what would later be described as a "million-to-one shot". General Riad died the next day.[40]

March 9, 1969 (Sunday)

March 10, 1969 (Monday)

March 11, 1969 (Tuesday)

  • During an
    Manned Spacecraft Center (MSC), Deputy Director of Apollo Applications John H. Disher said "...we are in manned flight today, in a position roughly comparable to that in 1910 for airplanes... and in 1910, or in 1909, it was the well-known physicist of his day, Simon Newcomb, ...who said anyone who thinks that the airplane will sometime replace the train is out of his mind...."[22][a]
  • NASA had scheduled Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin to be the first person to walk on the Moon, according to a statement to reporters in Houston by Dr. John W. Small, Director of Lunar Surface Projects, who confirmed that "That's the present plan." Dr. Small added, however, that plans could still be changed and that another pilot on the Apollo 11 mission, Neil Armstrong, might be given the honor.[48]
  • Born:
  • Died: John Wyndham, 65, English science fiction writer known for The Day of the Triffids

March 12, 1969 (Wednesday)

March 13, 1969 (Thursday)

  • The U.S. Senate voted, 83 to 15, to ratify the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, which had been signed in Geneva on July 1, 1968, by the United States, the Soviet Union and the United Kingdom. The 15 U.S. Senators voting against the treaty were seven Southern Democrats and eight Republicans, while 49 Democrats and 34 Republicans voted in favor.[52]
  • All 15 crewmen aboard the Soviet fishing trawler NR-4553 died when their ship collided with a larger Panamanian-registered oil tanker and sank off of the coast of the United States. A search of the area, located 31 miles (50 km) northeast of Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, found no survivors.[53]
  • Apollo 9 splashed down in the Atlantic Ocean after its 10-day mission and was recovered by the USS Guadalcanal at 1:01 in the afternoon Atlantic Time (1601 UTC).[54]
  • Born: Susanna Mälkki, Finnish orchestra conductor; in Helsinki

March 14, 1969 (Friday)

  • U.S. President Nixon announced that he had approved the implementation of the
    Communist China is likely to be able to mount within the decade" and to protect against "the possibility of accidental attacks from any source." At the same time, the President announced the discontinuation of further work on the Sentinel program previously approved by former President Lyndon Johnson, and rejected a plan for deployment of missiles around American cities. "Although every instinct motivates me to provide the American people with complete protection against a major nuclear attack," Nixon said, "it is not now within our power to do so." He conceded that deployment of missiles to protect major cities "still could not prevent a catastrophic level of U.S. fatalities from a deliberate all-out Soviet attack" and added that it might appear to be "the prelude to an offensive strategy" against the USSR.[55][56]
  • Died: Ben Shahn, 70, Lithuanian-born artist in the social realism movement

March 15, 1969 (Saturday)

March 16, 1969 (Sunday)

March 17, 1969 (Monday)

  • Eight
    Orkney Islands were killed while responding to a distress call during a Force 9 gale. The men had set off into the Pentland Firth after the Liberian-registered freighter Irene sent out a mayday call.[67][68] The capsized boat was located the next day, with seven of the eight crew inside the water-filled cabin; the eighth had been swept overboard.[69]
  • Born: Alexander McQueen, British fashion designer; in Lewisham (committed suicide, 2010)

March 18, 1969 (Tuesday)

March 19, 1969 (Wednesday)

Anguilla republic flag
  • The brief (40 days) existence of the "Republic of Anguilla" came to a peaceful end as a force of 135 British paratroopers from the Red Devil parachute regiment, along with British Marines and Scotland Yard detectives landed on the Caribbean island. Ronald Webster, who had declared himself President of Anguilla when the island issued its declaration of independence following a referendum, appeared at the British command headquarters and arranged for a meeting the next morning, then left again. Diplomat Anthony Lee was then installed as the resident British Commissioner.[73]
  • The Chicago Seven (then known as the Chicago Eight) were indicted by a grand jury on the charge of causing the riots at the 1968 Democratic National Convention.
  • Born: Connor Trinneer, American TV actor best known for Star Trek: Enterprise and Stargate Atlantis; in Walla Walla, Washington

March 20, 1969 (Thursday)

March 21, 1969 (Friday)

  • "A sum total of 10 voyages to the surface of the Moon" was announced by NASA Administrator Thomas O. Paine, who told reporters that if the Apollo 11 mission came off as planned in July, it would be followed by nine more lunar landings, with Apollo 12, 13 and 14 set for leaving equipment to measure lunar disturbances, and the six later landings to be set up in "areas of the most significant interest" with the possibility of "overland exploration". "We're talking here really about man's conquest of the seventh continent," Paine noted.[78]

March 22, 1969 (Saturday)

  • The UCLA Bruins defeated the Purdue Boilermakers, 92 to 72, to win their third consecutive NCAA basketball championship. UCLA's Lew Alcindor (who would later change his name to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar) scored 37 points in his final college game. The game was played at 2:00 in the afternoon at Freedom Hall in Louisville, Kentucky, and was only close for the first four minutes, when Purdue enjoyed a brief 4 to 2 lead. High scorer for Purdue, with 28 points, was Rick Mount.[79]
  • Born:

March 23, 1969 (Sunday)

  • murder everyone there. While Polanski would be away in Europe at the time, Tate and four other people would be killed. Confirmation that Manson had been at the house before the crime would be revealed at Manson's murder trial on October 21, 1970.[81]
  • In a reaction to the earlier controversy over Jim Morrison's conduct during the earlier concert by The Doors, a group of 30,000 people gathered at the Orange Bowl Stadium in Miami for a "Rally for Decency" organized by teenagers. Celebrity guests included Jackie Gleason, Anita Bryant and the pop rock group The Lettermen.[82]
  • The bottom half of the Apollo 9 lunar module Spider, jettisoned by the crew before they returned to Earth, re-entered the Earth's atmosphere and burned up over the Indian Ocean east of Africa; the top half of the first lunar module in space would not return until 12 years later, on October 23, 1981.[35]

March 24, 1969 (Monday)

March 25, 1969 (Tuesday)

  • Mohammed Ayub Khan announced his resignation in a nationwide TV and radio address. He departed after more than ten years of military rule, and in the wake of four months of strikes and riots that had killed more than 700 people. "This is the last time that I am addressing you as president of Pakistan," he told listeners. "The situation in the country is fast deteriorating... the economy of the country has been crippled, factories are closing down, and production is dwindling every day.... It is impossible for me to preside over the destruction of our country." Ayub Khan was succeeded by the commander of the Pakistan Army, General Agha Muhammad Yahya Khan, who declared martial law, banned all further strikes, demonstrations and political meetings, and provided for military courts to put any violators on trial.[87]
  • Died:
    • Max Eastman, 86, American political activist who co-founded the leftist periodical The Liberator, then changed views and published the book Reflections on the Failure of Socialism.
    • Alan Mowbray, 72, English-born film and TV actor and co-founder of the Screen Actors Guild
    • Billy Cotton, 69, English bandleader, race car driver and film actor

March 26, 1969 (Wednesday)

March 27, 1969 (Thursday)

  • Tommy Smothers continued to avoid network attempts to review advance videotapes of the episodes prior to broadcast. Wood, who would announce the show's cancellation eight days later, wrote "You are not free to use The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour as a device to 'push for new standards.' If you cannot comply with our standards— whether or not you approve of them— The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour cannot appear on CBS." A copy of the telegram would be released to the press in conjunction with the April 4 cancellation announcement.[91]
  • Cape Kennedy. The payload included two television cameras that had the highest resolution at that time, capable of capturing images as small as 900 feet (270 m) wide from an altitude of 2,000 miles (3,200 km). The flyby mission was scheduled to make its closest approach to the south pole of Mars on August 5.[92]
  • Born:

March 28, 1969 (Friday)

Eisenhower

March 29, 1969 (Saturday)

March 30, 1969 (Sunday)

  • The Allman Brothers Band, formed by brothers Duane Allman and Gregg Allman, along with Dickey Betts, Berry Oakley, Butch Trucks, and "Jaimoe" Johanson, played their very first concert, making their debut at the Jacksonville Armory in Florida.[100] Duane Allman would be killed in a motorcycle accident less than three years later, on October 29, 1971.[101]
  • Two days after his death, the body of former President Eisenhower was brought by caisson to the United States Capitol to lie in state in the Capitol Rotunda.

March 31, 1969 (Monday)

Notes

  1. ^ Newcomb's most famous comments about flying machines appeared in the October 22, 1903, issue of The Independent.[46][47]

References

  1. ^ attribution André Cros
  2. ^ attribution: Dutch National Archives
  3. Miami News
    . March 3, 1969. p. 1.
  4. Cincinnati Enquirer
    . March 7, 1969. p. 2.
  5. ^ "Jim Morrison pleads innocent here". Miami News. November 10, 1969. p. 1.
  6. Palm Beach Post. Palm Beach, Florida
    . September 21, 1970. p. D-10.
  7. . October 30, 1970. p. 15.
  8. ^ Davis, Stephen (2005). Jim Morrison: Life, Death, Legend. Penguin.
  9. Tampa Tribune
    . March 2, 1969. p. 1.
  10. ^ Attribution: Tower Card
  11. ^ "Soviets, Chinese Clash at Border; Deaths Reported", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 3, 1969, p1
  12. ^ "Zhenbao Island Clash (March 2, 1969)", in Dictionary of Contemporary Chinese Military History, ed. by Larry M. Wortzel and Robin D. S. Higham (ABC-CLIO, 1999) p304
  13. ^ "6 Soviets Killed In New Fight", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 18, 1969, p2
  14. ^ "'Murph the Surf' Gets Life Imprisonment", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 3, 1969, p2
  15. ^ "11 Dead, Scores Injured as Car Hits Drag Stands", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 3, 1969, p1
  16. ^ "Super Jet's First Flight Goes Well", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 3, 1969, p2
  17. ^ "First Apollo 9 Maneuvers Okay". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. March 4, 1969. p. 1.
  18. ^ "Sirhan Admits Shooting RFK". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. March 4, 1969. p. 6.
  19. Simon and Schuster
    . p. 201.
  20. ^ Goodman, Paul (2010). New Reformation: Notes of a Neolithic Conservative. PM Press. p. 37.
  21. ^ Gottfried, Kurt. "Founding Document: Beyond March 4". Union of Concerned Scientists.
  22. ^ a b Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain. Brooks, Courtney G.; Ertel, Ivan D.; Newkirk, Roland W. "PART II: Apollo Application Program -January 1969 to February 1970.". SKYLAB: A CHRONOLOGY. NASA Special Publication-4011. NASA. pp. 153–154. Retrieved 12 May 2023.
  23. ^ "Heinemann Elected By Germans", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 6, 1969, p2
  24. ^ "Three Women's Bodies Found", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 7, 1969, p2
  25. ^ "S. Viet Premier Escapes Killers", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 5, 1969, p1
  26. ^ "Swiss Campaigning For Women's Vote", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 6, 1969, p1
  27. ^ "19 Missing on Plane Flying Over Caribbean", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 6, 1969, p1
  28. ^ "Plane, Dead Found In Puerto Rico", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 7, 1969, p1
  29. ^ "Apollo Spacewalker Hails 'Porch' View", Pittsburgh Press, March 6, 1969, p1
  30. ^ "Deserter Given 4-Year Sentence", Baltimore Sun, March 7, 1969, p1
  31. ^ "53,357 Desertions Stir Call For Harsher U.S. Penalties", Baltimore Sun, March 7, 1969, p1
  32. ^ "VIET DEATHS NEAR KOREA'S", Des Moines (IA) Register, March 7, 1969, p1
  33. ^ "The Coffelt Database of Vietnam casualties". www.coffeltdatabase.org.
  34. ^ Andrew Schelling, The Wisdom Anthology of North American Buddhist Poetry (Simon and Schuster, 2005) p41
  35. ^ a b "'We Were at War': 45 Years Since Apollo 9", Space Safety magazine, March 4, 2014
  36. ^ "Reunite or Die— Moon Cab Flies Alone in Space", by Howard Benedict, AP report in Minneapolis Star, March 7, 1969
  37. ^ "Moon Landing Test Is Flawless— Solo 'Spider' Links Up With Mother Ship", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 8, 1969, p1
  38. ^ "Russian Mob Protests Killings In China Clash", Miami News, March 7, 1969, p1
  39. ^ "U.S. Copter Crew Saves 124 Koreans", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 8, 1969, p1
  40. ^ "Israeli Shell Kills Egyptian Army's Chief of Staff Riad", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 10, 1969, p1
  41. ^ Peter S. Cleaves, Bureaucratic Politics and Administration in Chile (University of California Press, 1974) pp296-298
  42. ^ "The Shaggs, The World’s Worst Rock Band, Inspires Original Musical", by David Moye, HuffingtonPost.com, June 6, 2011
  43. ^ "Good-Bye Dog Sleds". Hartford Courant. March 7, 1969. p. 10.
  44. ^ "Ray Guilty, Sentenced To 99 Years". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. March 11, 1969. p. 1.
  45. ^ "Trio of Best-Sellers?", Books Happening column by Gene Shalit, Los Angeles Times, February 23, 1969, "Calendar" section, p46
  46. ^ Newcomb, Simon (22 October 1903). "The Outlook for the Flying Machine". The Independent. Vol. LV, no. 2864. pp. 2509–2510. Retrieved 10 October 2021 – via Google Books.
  47. ^ "What Did Newcomb Say?". The Independent. Vol. 103, no. 3738. 25 September 1920. p. 374. Retrieved 10 October 2021 – via Google Books.
  48. ^ "Aldrin May Be First American on Moon". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. March 12, 1969. p. 1.
  49. ^ Sweet Home Cook County (PDF). Cook County Clerk. p. 10. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 May 2016. Retrieved 31 May 2023.
  50. ^ "Beatle McCartney Marries Divorcee", Honolulu Advertiser, March 13, 1969, p2
  51. ^ "Beatle charged", The Guardian (London), March 13, 1969, p1
  52. ^ "Nuclear Treaty Is Ratified In Senate, 83-15", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 14, 1969, p1
  53. ^ "22 on Soviet Boat Missing Off U.S.", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 14, 1969, p1
  54. ^ "Trio Ends 10-Day Perfect Flight— Apollo 9's Success Takes U.S. Much Closer to Moon", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 14, 1969, p1
  55. ^ "Nixon Okays Modified ABM— 'Safeguard' To Protect U.S. Deterrent Power", Pittsburgh Press, March 14, 1969, p1
  56. ^ "Statement on Deployment of the Antiballistic Missile System", March 14, 1969, UCSB American Presidency Project
  57. ^ "The Shadow War in Cambodia", by John T. Correll, Air Force Magazine (January 2018)
  58. ^ "NY Times Exposes Secret Bombing of Cambodia; Nixon Administration Begins Wiretapping, the First Step on the Road to Watergate", "Today in Civil Liberties History"
  59. ^ "A Strategic Assessment of PLA Theatre Missile and ASAT Capabilities", by Martin Andrew, Air Power Australia Analyses, December 2, 2010
  60. ^ "CHINESE, RUSS CLASH ON BORDER; BOTH CLAIM 'ARMED PROVOCATION'— Battle 'Continuing And Expanding,' Peking Asserts", The Evening Sun (Baltimore), March 15, 1969, p1
  61. ^ "Chinese, Russian Warfare Erupts On Siberian Border", Cincinnati Enquirer, March 16, 1969, p1
  62. ^ "12. Uruguay (1911-present)". uca.edu.
  63. ^ "State Of Emergency Is Ended In Uruguay", Fort Lauderdale (FL) News, March 16, 1969, p16A
  64. ^ "DU Icers Nip Cornell, 4-3, for Title", Colorado Springs Gazette-Telegraph, March 16, 1969, p1-B
  65. ^ "150 Killed in Air Disaster— 47 Americans Die In Miami-Bound Jet From Venezuela", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 17, 1969, p1
  66. ^ "Air Crash Toll Rises To 155 in Venezuela", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 18, 1969, p1
  67. ^ "Cargo ship goes aground in gale off Orkney", Glasgow Herald, March 18, 1969, p1
  68. ^ "Seven in Lifeboat Missing Off Scotland", Boston Globe, March 18, 1969, p17
  69. ^ "SEVEN FOUND DEAD IN CAPSIZED LIFEBOAT — Seaman joined crew at last minute", Glasgow Herald, March 19, 1969, p1
  70. ^ "Golda Meir Sworn In After Confidence Vote", Daily Herald (Provo UT), March 17, 1969, p1
  71. PMID 5438496
    .
  72. .
  73. ^ "British Invade Island, Install Commissioner", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 20, 1969, p1
  74. ^ "FAA Introduces 'Hijack Nabber'", Tallahassee (FL) Democrat, March 20, 1969, p14
  75. ^ "Detection of Skyjackers Now Improving Rapidly", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, June 25, 1969, p4
  76. ^ "96 Killed in Crash Of Cairo Plane", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 21, 1969, p1
  77. ^ "Beatle Lennon, Bride Stay In Bed For Peace", Miami News, March 25, 1969, p1
  78. ^ "9 Moon Trips to Follow First Success in Landing", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 22, 1969, p3
  79. ^ "It's Tic, Tac, Toe— 3 in a Row for UCLA!", Courier-Journal & Times (Louisville, KY), March 23, 1969, pC-1
  80. .
  81. ^ Caldwell, Earl (October 22, 1970). "Manson Put at Tate Home 5 Months Before Killings". The New York Times.
  82. ^ "Rally Backs Decent Entertainment". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. March 24, 1969. p. 1 – via Google News.
  83. ^ "NASA Rejects Plan to Hasten Moon Landing" Baltimore Sun, March 25, 1969, p1
  84. ^ "Apollo 10 Won't Land on Moon", Des Moines (IA) Register, March 25, 1969, p11
  85. ^ "'Somewhere Important to Go': The Need for Apollo 10", by Ben Evans, AmericaSpace.com, May 16, 2014
  86. ^ "Hussein Picks New Premier", Baltimore Sun, March 25, 1969, p1
  87. ^ "Ayub Khan Resigns; Army Controls Pakistan", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 26, 1969, p2
  88. ^ "Book succeeds 11 years after author's death", Green Bay (WI) Press-Gazette, August 31, 1980, pB-11
  89. ^ "Man who committed suicide wins Pulitzer", Hattiesburg (MS) American, April 14, 1981, p5
  90. ^ "Son of the South", by Will Hodgkinson, The Guardian Weekend magazine, December 5, 1998, pp36-41
  91. ^ "Brothers Smothered By CBS-TV— Network Charges Dick and Tommy Didn't Cooperate", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, April 5, 1969, p3
  92. ^ "Photographic Craft Zooms Toward Mars", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 28, 1969, p4
  93. ^ "Bishops Wright And Dearden Are Named Cardinals— Pope Paul's Selections Are Regarded As Shift in Power to the Grass Roots; 4 Americans Among 33 Appointed", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 29, 1969, p1
  94. ^ "Ex-President Eisenhower Dies", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 29, 1969, p1
  95. ^ William Thomas Allison, My Lai: An American Atrocity in the Vietnam War (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2012) p xlvii
  96. ^ "Communist Party of the Philippines–New People's Army", Stanford University Mapping Militant Organizations project
  97. EBU
    . Retrieved 16 June 2012.
  98. ^ RTVE.es (2019-03-29). "50 años de Eurovisión 1969 | La final de Eurovisión 1969: por primera vez a todo color y con los comentarios de Uribarri". RTVE.es (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-05-23.
  99. ^ "Toledo Blade - Google News Archive Search". news.google.com.
  100. ^ Alan Paul, One Way Out: The Inside History of the Allman Brothers Band (Macmillan, 2015) p29
  101. ^ "Flashback: Duane Allman killed in motorcycle crash", Real Rock News, October 29, 2015, KSHE 95 FM
  102. ^ "Mine Explosions Trap Up to 400". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. April 1, 1969. p. 1.
  103. ^ "Hope Slim for 145 In Mexico Mine". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. April 2, 1969. p. 1.
  104. ^ "Kurt Vonnegut's 'Slaughterhouse-Five' at 50: One of the most imaginative novels about war ever written". The Independent. March 31, 2019.