March 1980

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March 27, 1980: Alexander L. Kielland offshore platform (on the right),[1] before toppling and killing 123 employees
March 24, 1980: Archbishop of San Salvador Oscar Romero assassinated during Mass
March 23, 1980: Ixtoc I oil spill capped in Gulf of Mexico
March 28, 1980: Possible tomb of Jesus discovered

The following events happened in March 1980

March 1, 1980 (Saturday)

March 2, 1980 (Sunday)

March 3, 1980 (Monday)

March 4, 1980 (Tuesday)

March 5, 1980 (Wednesday)

  • Independent Sector, an American coalition of nonprofit organizations, foundations and corporate charities, was created by a merger of the Coalition of National Voluntary Organizations and the National Council of Philanthropy.[22]
  • After losing in the New Hampshire Primary, Tennessee U.S. Senator Howard Baker became the first candidate to withdraw from the Republican race for the presidential nomination.[23]
  • Beyond Westworld premiered on CBS but ran for only three episodes before being canceled.[24] In its final showing on March 19, it finished 69th out of 69 shows in the Nielsen ratings.[25] It was nominated for two Primetime Emmy Awards, for art direction and for makeup.[26]
  • Born: William Owens, U.S. Navy SEAL, in Peoria, Illinois (killed in action, 2017)
  • Died:

March 6, 1980 (Thursday)

March 7, 1980 (Friday)

March 8, 1980 (Saturday)

  • The
    Georgian SSR as the Soviet Union's first approved rock music festival and would run for nine consecutive days.[32][33][34]
  • Iran began the break off diplomatic relations with neighboring Iraq, recalling its ambassador from the Iraqi capital, Baghdad, and expelling Iraq'a ambassador from Tehran.[35] The next day, Iraq announced that Iran's ambassador in Baghdad, Mohammed Duaei, was persona non grata.[36] Both nations allowed relations to continue at the chargé d'affaires level. The two nations would go to war on September 22.
  • Jaime Roldós, the President of Ecuador, announced his National Development Plan to advance the nation's economy over a period of years.[37]
  • Busan Kyungsang College opened to students in Busan, South Korea. Its first graduation ceremony would be on February 13, 1982.[38]
  • A group of 50,000 Brazilians gathered at the village of Casimiro de Abreu after a local farmer had told a national TV audience that a flying saucer from Jupiter would land on his farm at dawn. The saucer did not arrive as scheduled, and the crowd dispersed peacefully.[39]
  • A plan to release the U.S. Embassy hostages in Iran was rejected by the Iranian students who were holding the diplomats hostage in Tehran.

March 9, 1980 (Sunday)

March 10, 1980 (Monday)

  • The Berber Spring, protests began against the government of Algeria by the Berber minority that makes up about one-fourth of Algeria's population, in their homeland, the Kabylia region on the northeast coast. The triggering event was the cancellation of a Kabyle language poetry reading by Mouloud Mammeri at the University of Tizi Ouzou.[46][47][48]
  • RTP-1), which had started TV broadcasting on March 7, 1957, introduced color television broadcasting to Portugal.
  • At Rancho Mirage, California, the National Football League held its annual meeting, where 22 of the NFL's 28 teams voted unanimously against allowing the Oakland Raiders to move to Los Angeles. The Raiders did not participate and the owners of five teams (Cincinnati, the Los Angeles Rams, Miami, Philadelphia and San Francisco) abstained.[49] Team owner Al Davis announced that he reserved the right to ignore the vote and to move the team anyway, a move which would take place in 1982 after his suit against the league. In the years that followed the Oakland Raiders moved to Los Angeles, then back to Oakland in 1995, then to Las Vegas in 2020. Six of the other teams in 1980 would relocate, and others would threaten to do so unless they received concessions from the cities where they operated.
  • Died: Dr. Herman Tarnower, 69, American cardiologist and dietician famous for the high-protein, low-fat Scarsdale diet, was murdered by his former lover, school executive Jean Harris, who claimed that the death was an accident during her own suicide attempt

March 11, 1980 (Tuesday)

  • Thirty-six of the 43 crew on the Spanish oil tanker MV María Alejandra were killed when the ship broke apart after a natural gas explosion and sank within 40 seconds.[50] On its way from the Canary Islands to be filled with crude oil from the Persian Gulf, the ship went down 100 miles (160 km) west of Cap Blanc, Mauritania. With no time to put on life jackets, the seven survivors jumped into the ocean and hung on to floating debris, long enough to be rescued by a Greek-registered frigate Luehesand.[51]
Papua New Guinea

March 12, 1980 (Wednesday)

Gacy

March 13, 1980 (Thursday)

  • In State of Indiana v. Ford Motor Company, a jury in Winamac, Indiana acquitted the automaker in the first criminal trial in the U.S. of a corporation for homicide. Ford Motor Company was found not guilty of manslaughter in the deaths of three teenaged females from a product defect in its Ford Pinto economy cars.[59] On August 11, 1978, Judy Ulrich, her sister and her cousin had died in a fiery crash after her 1973 Ford Pinto economy car had been struck from behind by another car. Although a conviction would have carried a maximum penalty of a $10,000 fine for each count, the evidence developed in the trial established Ford's knowledge of the defect in the design and placement of its gasoline tanks.
  • Died:
    • Premier of the Bahamas
      after it was granted self-government by the British
    • Lillian Ngoyi, 68, South African black nationalist known as "the mother of black resistance"
    • Nettie Rosenstein, 90, American fashion designer who popularized the little black dress style

March 14, 1980 (Friday)

  • All 87 people on board
    LOT Polish Airlines Flight 7, including the 14-member U.S. amateur boxing team and 42 citizens of Poland, were killed when the flight from New York crashed short of the runway during an emergency landing attempt at Warsaw.[60] The Ilyushin Il-62 jet airliner had departed New York City the night before at 9:18.[61] A turbine disc on the jet had failed, from metal fatigue, in the number 2 engine of the Ilyushin Il-62, causing the engine to fall apart.[62] Debris then damaged the jet's rudder and its elevator control lines, causing it to dive into the ground 800 metres (2,600 ft) from the runway at 11:14 in the morning local time[63]
    The main part of the fuselage fell into a 14 foot (4.3 m) deep pond that had been frozen over.
  • The first round of voting for the Majlis, the 270-member Islamic Consultative Assembly that served as Iran's Parliament. A second round, for seats that had no candidate receiving 50% or more of the vote, took place on May 9.
  • The Grob G 109, manufactured by the West German Grob Aircraft Company as the first all-composite motor glider, flew for the first time.[64]
  • U.S. President Carter signed legislation abolishing three federal government agencies whose existence was no longer necessary. The 188-year-old United States Assay Commission, formed in 1792 to supervise the testing of gold and silver in U.S. Mint coins, had served no purpose after the passage of the Gold Reserve Act of 1934 and the Coinage Act of 1965, and as Carter noted, "the United States no longer produces gold or silver coins of equivalent value." The U.S. Marine Corps Memorial Commission had continued to exist even after it had completed its plan to create a plan for a memorial in Chicago's Grant Park, and the Low-Emission Vehicle Certification Board, created to certify low-emission federal government vehicles, had been superseded by the Electric and Hybrid Research & Development Demonstration Act of 1976.[65]
  • Died:

March 15, 1980 (Saturday)

  • The
    Boston Globe inadvertently ran one of the most famous headline mistakes in U.S. history, when an editorial on economic proposals by U.S. president Jimmy Carter, supposed to be titled "All Must Share the Burden", carried the headline "Mush from the Wimp" instead in its early edition. Globe editorial writer Kirk Scharfenberg, who would later become the deputy managing editor, took the blame for the mistake and would note later, "I meant it as an in-house joke and thought it would be removed before publication. It appeared in 161,000 copies of the Globe the next day." [66] The Globe corrected the blunder in the second print run of the day, and apologized three days later with a statement at the bottom of page 14 of its Tuesday editorial page, writing "The first editions of last Saturday's Globe carried a headline on the lead editorial that was inappropriate and not intended for publication. In later editions the editorial, which supported President Carter's new initiatives on the economy, was titled, 'All must share the burden.'" [67]
  • Former U.S. President
    Gerald R. Ford announced that he would not run for the Republican Party nomination for the 1980 U.S. presidential election,[68] reversing earlier comments that he didn't believe that front-runner Ronald Reagan would be able to defeat President Carter.[69]
  • The nuclear-powered aircraft carrier
  • The Circle K Sunkus chain of Japanese convenience stores began with the opening of the first "Circle K" store in Japan, located in the Tenpaku-ku ward of the city of Nagoya. Four months later, on July 23, the first "Sunkus" store opened at the Aoba-ku ward of Sendai. The chains would merge in 2004 as Circle K Sunkus and would be rebranded in 2016 as part of the FamilyMart chain.
  • Voters in the
    Penobscot Indian Nation voted, 234 to 113,[71] to accept a proposed settlement of $81,500,000 to drop further claims for 12,500,000 acres of land 19,531 square miles (50,590 km2), almost two-thirds of the 30,862 square miles (79,930 km2) of land in the U.S. state of Maine.[72]
  • In an upset victory,
    The Football League Cup championship. Nottingham Forest was the defending European Cup champion and was expected to easily win its third consecutive League Cup. Andy Gray scored the winning goal in the 67th minute, after Nottingham goalkeeper Peter Shilton collided with his teammate, David Needham.[73]
  • In the evening the last before abandonment.
  • Died: Abram Grushko, 61, Soviet Russian painter

March 16, 1980 (Sunday)

  • Masterpiece Theatre), with plans to increase to 10½ by July. The CBS network elected not to participate, arguing that the decoding equipment would soon become obsolete.[74]
  • Only seven days after taking office as the first woman Mayor of St. Albans, Vermont, Janet L. Smith was fatally wounded by a handyman who lived in the Smith house.[75] Smith, the only female mayor in the state of Vermont, died the next day after several hours of surgery.[76]
  • Died: Neville D'Souza, 47, India soccer football team striker in the 1956 Olympic Games; from a brain hemorrhage.

March 17, 1980 (Monday)

March 18, 1980 (Tuesday)

March 19, 1980 (Wednesday)

March 20, 1980 (Thursday)

March 21, 1980 (Friday)

  • The U.S. television show Dallas set up a mystery that would captivate TV audiences around the world with its final episode of the season, raising the question of "Who shot J.R.?".[93] The episode itself, which set a precedent for cliffhanger endings for a TV season, was called "A House Divided". For the next eight months, viewers debated (and placed bets on) the answer to the mystery of who shot the star character of Dallas, J. R. Ewing (portrayed by Larry Hagman. On November 21, 1980, an estimated 83,000,000 viewers in the U.S. would watch the 1980–81 season premiere to learn the answer, the largest audience up to that time for an episode of a television series.
  • Currency returned to the southeast Asian nation of
    Democratic Kampuchea revolution and required all residents to give and receive rice in payment for goods and services.[94][95] Heng Samrin, the Vietnamese-installed President of Cambodia announced that the Cambodian riel
    would be re-established as Cambodia's national currency on April 1, with a nominal exchange rate of four riels for a U.S. dollar.
  • Angelo Bruno, the 69-year old organized crime boss of the South Philadelphia mob since 1959, was murdered while sitting in a car in front of his house at 934 Snyder Avenue.[96] Bruno's bodyguard had driven Bruno home from Cous' Little Italy restaurant, and at 9:50 in the evening, a man stepped up to the passenger side window, placed a sawed-off shotgun behind Bruno's right ear and fired one shot.[97] The mob hit began a 4-year long war between rival gangs that would claim 28 lives between 1980 and 1985, including Bruno's successor, Philip Testa, in 1981.[98] The day before, Bruno had resumed answering questions before the New Jersey State Commission of Investigation.[99]
  • Born:
  • Died: Marcel Boussac, 91, French textile magnate and multimillionaire

March 22, 1980 (Saturday)

March 23, 1980 (Sunday)

March 24, 1980 (Monday)

March 25, 1980 (Tuesday)

March 26, 1980 (Wednesday)

  • An attempt by the three Hunt brothers to own most of the world's silver failed after Texas billionaire Nelson Bunker Hunt announced in Paris that he and four investors planned to issue bonds for sale, backed by their combined holdings of 200 million ounces of silver.[119] Hunt's partners in the venture were introduced as Prince Faysal Ben Abdallah al-Saud, Sheik Mohammed al Amoudi and Mahmoud Fustok of Saudi Arabia, and Naji Nahas of Brazil. The next day, the price of silver (which had reached a record of $53 per ounce in January before sliding to $17.50) dropped steeply when the London Commodities Exchange opened, and fell to $10.50 at the New York Comex.[120]
  • Born: Sammy Flex (stage name for Samuel Atuobi Baah), Ghanaian journalist, newspaper editor and TV show host.
  • Died: Roland Barthes, 64, French semiotics pioneer

March 27, 1980 (Thursday)

March 28, 1980 (Friday)

March 29, 1980 (Saturday)

March 30, 1980 (Sunday)

  • The
    Tony Award winning play Children of a Lesser God, the first major theatrical production to feature a deaf actor in the leading role, began a successful run on Broadway. Critics' reactions were mixed. Walter Kerr of the New York Times called the play "the season's unexpected find"[138] while Douglas Watt of New York's Daily News said of author Mark Medoff's approach to the problems of the deaf, "His concern and understanding are clear, but he hasn't bothered to present their story in any but the most elementary dramatic terms. Instead, he has relied on our obvious sympathies and the novelty of his subject to carry the evening..."[139]
  • Delegates of the Canadian Olympic Committee voted to send a team to the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, declining to joining the boycott of the games.
current Syrian flag
  • Syrian Arab Republic
    's banner for more than 40 years.
  • For the first time, West Germany and East Germany simultaneously set their clocks ahead one hour in the spring to observe for Central European Summer Time (similar to the advancement of clocks in North America for daylight saving time). West Germany's government had voted in 1978 to reintroduce summer time, but had waited until an agreement could be reached with East Germany on simultaneous implementation.
Ton Duc Thang

March 31, 1980 (Monday)

  • U.S. President Carter signed the
    NOW Account, an account that could pay interest on deposits but would still allow unlimited withdrawal of the deposits through the use of a Negotiable Order of Withdrawal.[140][141]
  • TKO to Leroy Jones in the 8th round.[142]
  • The bankrupt Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad, commonly called "The Rock Island", operated its final train, bearing freight that was unloaded at Denver. Its assets, including tracks, cars and equipment, and land, were liquidated by being sold to other railroad companies, raising more than $500,000,000 to pay off creditors at full value along with interest.[143]
  • The
    U.S. Air Force
    was permanently deactivated, after its functions and equipment had been transferred to four other USAF commands.
  • Born:
  • Died:

References

  1. ^ attribution: Norsk Oljemuseum
  2. ^ "2 Kidnaped Boys Found; 1 Was Missing 7 Years", Los Angeles Times, March 3, 1980, p1
  3. ^ Vast Hunt on For Missing Merced Boy", Oakland Tribune, December 8, 1972, p30
  4. ^ "U.N. Security Council resolution asks Israel to call off settlements", Philadelphia Inquirer, March 2, 1980, p5-A
  5. ^ "Carter Stirs Furor With UN Vote Against Israel, Reversal— Vance Accepts Blame for Snafu", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 5, 1980, p1
  6. ^ "Swiss voters reject state-church split", Minneapolis Star Tribune, March 3, 1980, p7B
  7. ^ "Thai Prime Minister Elected", Los Angeles Times, March 3, 1980, p1
  8. ^ Stephen Tromans, "Nuclear Law: The Law Applying to Nuclear Installations and Radioactive Substances in Its Historic Context" (Bloomsbury, 2010) p282
  9. ^ "Trudeau sworn in as PM", Honolulu Advertiser, March 4, 1980, p1
  10. ^ "Iran Says Panel, Hostages Can Meet", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 4, 1980, p1
  11. ^ "Khomeini Says Panel, Hostages Can Now Meet", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 5, 1980, p1
  12. ^ "Salvadoran quits the junta", San Francisco Examiner, March 5, 1980, p18
  13. ^ host, just. "Welcome retrocaricons.com –Justhost.com". www.RetroCarIcons.com. Retrieved January 8, 2018.
  14. ^ "What's 'Incredible' is this: ABC copycats took so long", by Sherry Stern, Arizona Daily Star (Tucson), March 3, 1980, p6C
  15. ^ "That's not incredible, that's stupid", The Home News (New Brunwsick, NJ), March 10, 1980, p12
  16. ^ "McEnroe Gets Top Ranking, More Money", Miami Herald, March 4, 1980, p11F
  17. ^ "'Coup crushed' in Pakistan", Vancouver Sun, March 11, 1980, p1
  18. ^ Anne Manuel and Gretta Siebentritt, Human Rights in Guatemala During President de León Carpio's First Year (Human Rights Watch, 1994) p99
  19. ^ "Justice delayed 30 years in Guatemala", by Lauren Carasik and Grahame Russell, Al-Jazeera, January 4, 2012
  20. ^ "This Day in Disney History"
  21. ^ "Anderson Does Well in Vt. and Mass.", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 5, 1980, p1
  22. ^ Olivier Zunz, Philanthropy in America: A History (Princeton University Press, 2014) p242
  23. ^ "Baker First To Drop Out On GOP Side", Sacramento (CA) Bee, March 6, 1980, p1
  24. ^ "Series bites dust in three weeks", Akron (O.) Beacon Journal, March 30, 1980, p27
  25. ^ "CBS gaining ground on ABC in ratings", Austin (TX) American-Statesman, March 30, 1980, p29
  26. ^ "'Lou Grant', 'MASH', Emmy Nominees", August 8, 1980, pVI-16
  27. ^ "Land quits a top post; still Polaroid chairman", Boston Globe, March 7, 1980, p1
  28. ^ "Militants to Transfer Control of Hostages To Iranian Council", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 7, 1980, p1
  29. ^ "Militants Make New Hostage Demands", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 8, 1980, p1
  30. ^ "Bogota Terrorists Release Austrian In Embassy Siege", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 7, 1980, p1
  31. ^ "Paper Lists Dozens of Alleged CIA Agents Abroad", Los Angeles Times, March 8, 1980, p19
  32. ^ Nicholas Anderson, NOC Twice: More UK Non-Official Cover Operations (MIURA!, 2019) p123
  33. ^ Leslie Woodhead, How the Beatles Rocked the Kremlin: The Untold Story of a Noisy Revolution (A&C Black, 2013) pp85-86
  34. ^ "Rockin' down the Mainline: Rock Music during the Construction of the Baikal-Amur Mainline Railway (BAM), 1974-1984", by Christopher J. Ward, in Youth and Rock in the Soviet Bloc: Youth Cultures, Music, and the State in Russia and Eastern Europe, by William Jay Risch (Lexington Books, 2014) p260
  35. ^ "The World", Los Angeles Times, March 9, 1980, p2
  36. ^ "'Persona non grata'", Wilmington (DE) Morning News, March 10, 1980, p2
  37. ^ "Ecuador", in Collier's Encyclopedia 1981 Yearbook (Crowell-Collier, 1980) p225
  38. ^ "Brief History of Busan Kyungsang College"
  39. ^ "UFOs Flying down to Rio", Philadelphia Inquirer, March 2, 1980, p5-A
  40. ^ "Liver Transplantation with Use of Cyclosporin a and Prednisone", by Thomas E. Starzl, Göran B. G. Klintmalm, M.D., et al., New England Journal of Medicine, July 30, 1981, pp266-269
  41. ^ Patrick Seale, Asad of Syria: The Struggle for the Middle East (University of California Press, 1990) p.327
  42. ^ James A. Paul, Human rights in Syria (Middle East Watch, 1990) pp16-17
  43. ^ Paul Simpson, The Serial Killer Files (Little, Brown & Co., 2017)
  44. ^ "Confession Leads Police To 28 Dead", Miami Herald, March 24, 1980, p15-A
  45. ^ "Basque winners in first election rebuff Spain's governing party", Vancouver Sun, March 10, 1980, p7
  46. ^ James McDougall, A History of Algeria (Cambridge University Press, 2017) p276
  47. ^ "Algeria: 35 years on, 'Berber Spring' still an open wound", Agenzia Nazionale Stampa Associata- Mediterraneo (ANSAMed) news service, April 3, 2015
  48. ^ "Algeria’s repression of the Berber uprising", The Middle East Monitor, April 20, 2017
  49. ^ "NFL Disapproves Move by Raiders; Davis Is Defiant", Los Angeles Times, March 10, 1980, p1
  50. ^ "Big tanker meets swift end", Victoria (BC) Times Colonist, March 13, 1980, p1
  51. ^ "No hay esperanzas de encontrar más supervivientes del 'María Alejandra'" ("No hope of finding more survivors of 'María Alejandra'"), El Pais (Madrid), March 13, 1980
  52. ^ "Somare out after no-confidence vote", Sydney Morning Herald, March 12, 1980, p1
  53. ^ Kwandiwe Kondlo, In the Twilight of the Revolution: The Pan Africanist Congress of Azania (South Africa) 1959-1994 (Basler Afrika Bibliographien, 2009) p212
  54. ^ "Gacy Convicted in 33 Sex Killings", Los Angeles Times, March 13, 1980, p1
  55. ^ "Gacy sentenced to death", Chicago Tribune, March 14, 1980, p1
  56. ^ "All appeals fail; Gacy is executed", Chicago Tribune, May 10, 1994, p1
  57. ^ "A Brief Background of the Fuschl Conversations", by Alexander Laszio, in Systems: from science to practice: Proceedings of the Nineteenth IFSR Conversation 2018 (IFSR, 2019) p10
  58. ^ "SNH: A development catalyst for Cameroon", SNH website
  59. ^ "Ford found innocent in Pinto deaths", Baltimore Sun, March 14, 1980, p1
  60. ^ "22 U.S. Athletes Killed— Boxing Team Among 87 Victims in Polish Jet Crash", Los Angeles Times, March 14, 1980, p1
  61. ^ "Warsaw air crash kills 87, including U.S. boxing team", Ottawa Journal, March 15, 1980, p1
  62. ^ "Engine defect caused plane crash", AP report in El Paso (TX) Times, May 24, 1980, p2
  63. ^ Aviation Safety Network
  64. ^ Michael Hardy, Gliders and Sailplanes of the World (Ian Allan Co., 1982) p155
  65. ^ "Federal Agency Reorganization— Statement on Signing", in Public Papers of the Presidents: Jimmy Carter, January 1 to May 23, 1980 (U.S. Government Printing Office, 1981) p483
  66. ^ Obituary, "Kirk Scharfenberg, 48; Editor on Boston Globe", The New York Times, July 29, 1992, p. D19
  67. ^ "An apology," Boston Globe, March 18, 1980, p. 14
  68. ^ "Ford Gives Up '80 Presidential Primary Hopes", Pittsburgh Press, March 16, 1980, p1
  69. ^ "Will Join GOP Race If Asked, Ford Says", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 3, 1980, p1
  70. ^ "Shipyard Launches 4th Nuclear Carrier", Newport News (VA) Daily Press, March 16, 1980, p1
  71. ^ "Penobscots approve Maine land settlement", Boston Sunday Globe, March 16, 1980, p25
  72. ^ "Tribe Votes On Plan To End Its Claim To Most Of Maine", Sacramento Bee, March 16, 1980, p2
  73. ^ "Day of the Gray wolf", by Ronald Atkin, The Observer (London), March 16, 1980, p32
  74. ^ "3 networks start captioned TV for the deaf", Chicago Tribune, March 16, 1980, p2
  75. ^ "St. Albans Mayor shot; Handyman Is Arrested", Burlington (VT) Free Press, March 17, 1980, p1
  76. ^ "New Woman Mayor in Vermont After Attack by Gunman", Miami Herald, March 18, 1980, p3
  77. ^ "53 die in El Salvador; Toll mounts as leftists battle junta in capital", Miami News, March 18, 1980, p1
  78. ^ "315 MPs vote for Olympic boycott", The Guardian (London), March 18, 1980, p1
  79. ^ "Plunge to freedom: How one got away in Bogota", Montreal Gazette, March 18, 1980, p1
  80. ^ John W. R. Taylor, Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1982–83, (Jane's Yearbooks, 1982) p180
  81. ^ "1980 Soviet Rocket Accident Killed 50", The New York Times, September 28, 1989
  82. ^ "Soviet rocket blast left 48 dead", BBC News, April 8, 2000
  83. ^ "Life for $229 crimes upheld as non 'cruel", San Francisco Examiner, March 18, 1980, p1
  84. ^ "Carter invites Begin, Sadat to D.C.", Daily News (New York), March 20, 1980, p2
  85. ^ "'Tough Guys' To Brawl", Pittsburgh Press, March 20, 1980, pC-2
  86. ^ "MMA roots were planted in New Kensington", by Sam Werner, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, June 24, 2011
  87. ^ "MMA's Forgotten Forefathers", by Richard Cartey, Fighters Only magazine (February 2015)
  88. ^ "Mild quake in mountain wilderness", San Francisco Examiner, March 21, 1980, p13
  89. ^ "Mount St. Helens to Spout?", Spokane (WA) Chronicle, March 24, 1980, p6
  90. ^ Aviation Safety Network
  91. ^ "Catalans may force Suarez into election", The Guardian (London), March 21, 1980, p6
  92. ^ "Pirate Radio Ship Sinks Off England; '60s Rock Pioneer", Los Angeles Times, March 20, 1980, p7
  93. ^ "'Who shot J.R.?' to shake 'Dallas' fanatics", Montreal Gazette, March 21, 1980, p56
  94. ^ "New Cambodia Money Replaces Rice Tender", Pittsburgh Press, March 23, 1980, p18
  95. ^ "Money back in Cambodia", Port Clinton (O.) News Herald, March 22, 1980, p2
  96. ^ "Angelo Bruno Killed— Mob chieftain is shotgunned outside home", Philadelphia Inquirer, March 22, 1980, p1
  97. ^ Martin Short, The Rise of the Mafia: The Definitive Story of Organized Crime (John Blake Publishing, 2009)
  98. ^ "Organized Crime: History and Historiography", by Alan A. Block, in Handbook of Organized Crime in the United States, ed. by Robert J. Kelly, et al. (Greenwood Press, 1994) p47
  99. ^ "Reputed crime boss Bruno in 2-hour session with SCI", Philadelphia Inquirer, March 21, 1980, p2
  100. ^ "Lack of candidates delays presidential vote in Turkey", Arizona Republic (Phoenix), March 22, 1980, p23
  101. ^ Dominic Sandbrook, Mad as Hell: The Crisis of the 1970s and the Rise of the Populist Right (Anchor Books, 2012) pp368-369
  102. ^ "Chad Fighting Breaks Out Again", Arizona Daily Sun (Flagstaff AZ), March 23, 1980, p1
  103. ^ Jeffrey S. Dixon and Meredith Reid Sarkees, Intra-state Wars: An Examination of Civil, Regional, and Intercommunal Wars, 1816-2014 (SAGE, 2015) p633
  104. ^ Mario Azevedo, Chad: A Nation In Search Of Its Future (Taylor & Francis, 2019)
  105. ^ "Mysterious granite monument unveiled", Greenville (SC) News, March 23, 1980, p2
  106. ^ "Georgia Guidestones", in New Georgia Encyclopedia
  107. ^ "Ixtoc I well finally plugged", Fort Worth (TX) Star-Telegram, March 24, 1980, p1
  108. ^ "Runaway oil well is capped", Tampa Bay Times, March 25, 1980, p1
  109. ^ "12 Arrests In Soccer Scandal", Sacramento (CA) Bee, March 24, 1980, pC6
  110. ^ "Nuclear Forces Win in Sweden— Voters Reject Quick Phaseout of Reactors", by Harry Trimborn, Los Angeles Times, March 24, 1980, p1
  111. ^ "Ailing shah flies to Egypt", Chicago Tribune, March 24, 1980, p1
  112. ^ "Poles Vote As Dissidents Protest; No Surprises Forseen", Indianapolis Star, March 24, 1980, p3
  113. ^ "Old Dominion wins AIAW title", Philadelphia Inquirer, March 24, 1980, p19
  114. ^ "Archbishop is assassinated during Mass in San Salvador", Arizona Republic (Phoenix), March 25, 1980, p1
  115. ^ "ABC's late-news program to break journalistic ground", Arizona Daily Star (Tucson AZ), March 24, 1980, pC-6
  116. ^ "Louisville Captures Its First NCAA Title", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 25, 1980, p13
  117. ^ "N.Y. goes big for Kennedy— Conn. makes it a double", Boston Globe, March 26, 1980, p1
  118. ^ "Soviet Soyuz T's success may herald manned flight", Windsor (ON) Star, March 26, 1980, p2
  119. ^ "Bond venture is billionaire's silver lining", Louisville (KY) Courier-Journal, March 27, 1980, p1
  120. ^ "Silver Plunges at Word of Texan's Bond Issue Plan", Los Angeles Times, March 27, 1980, p1
  121. ^ "Slide kills 60 in Turkey". Santa Rosa Democrat. Santa Rosa, California. March 28, 1980. p. 4.
  122. Cedar Rapids Gazette. Cedar Rapids, Iowa
    . March 30, 1980. p. 15.
  123. ^ "Mine Elevator Falls Mile; 23 Die". Los Angeles Times. March 27, 1980. p. 1.
  124. ^ "Toll rises to 31 in gold mine accident". Daily News. New York. March 29, 1980. p. 10.
  125. ^ "North Sea oil field platform capsizes; 102 of more than 200 aboard rescued". Baltimore Sun. March 28, 1980. p. 1.
  126. ^ "Loss of North Sea Rig Is Traced to Mysterious Crack". The New York Times. August 6, 1980. p. A4.
  127. ^ "Silver plunges; Hunt blamed". San Francisco Examiner. March 27, 1980. p. 70.
  128. Binghamton Press. Binghamton, New York
    . March 28, 1980. p. 12-A.
  129. ^ Simcha Jacobovici and Charles Pellegrino, The Jesus Family Tomb: The Discovery, the Investigation, and the Evidence That Could Change History (Harper Collins, 2007) pp3-12
  130. ^ "Ancient tomb may contain Jesus' family", The Today Show (NBC News), February 25, 2007
  131. ^ "Bus crashes to asylum", Victoria (BC) Times Colonist, March 29, 1980, p5
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