May 1977

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
<< May 1977 >>
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
01 02 03 04 05 06 07
08 09 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 31  
May 17, 1977: Menachem Begin (left) becomes new Prime Minister of Israel as Likud Party takes control of the Knesset, replaces Prime Minister Ariel Sharon (right)

The following events occurred in May 1977:

May 1, 1977 (Sunday)

  • In Istanbul, 34 people were killed and hundreds injured in the Taksim Square massacre as gunfighting began among some of the 150,000 marchers, followed by a riot that lasted two hours and injured 200 additional people.[1]
  • In one of the largest mass arrests in U.S. history, from the largest protest up to that time against the use of nuclear power in the United States for civilian energy needs, 1,414 anti-nuclear activists from the Clamshell Alliance were arrested at the Seabrook Station Nuclear Power Plant near Portsmouth, New Hampshire.[2] The prisoners were held in jails and in New Hampshire National Guard armories for up to 12 days, until the remaining 550 demonstrators were released without posting bail because of the cost of their imprisonment.
  • The Janata Party was organized in India by four non-Communist political parties that had joined in opposition to Prime Minister Indira Gandhi in the April elections.[3]
  • Died: Albert Plécy, 62, French photojournalist, committed suicide by shooting himself in the head.

May 2, 1977 (Monday)

May 3, 1977 (Tuesday)

May 4, 1977 (Wednesday)

  • U.S. Congressman Richard A. Tonry, a Democrat of Louisiana, resigned only four months after taking office, after having been indicted for receiving illegal campaign funds[7] Tonry declared that he would run as a candidate in a special election to regain his seat, but lost in the Democratic primary on June 25.[8] Tonry would later plead guilty and receive a six-month federal prison sentence[9] becoming known for being the U.S. Representative "who served more time in prison than he did in Congress."[10]
  • The first of five installments of the Nixon interviews, with British journalist David Frost asking questions of former U.S. President Richard Nixon, was shown on syndicated television, with 45,000,000 viewers hearing Nixon's answers to questions about the Watergate scandal that had led to Nixon's 1974 resignation. Nixon was paid $600,000 by Frost's production company for the interviews, plus a percentage of profits.[11] The first installment of interviews, shown on independent TV stations, set a record for most viewers of a political interview, with a 50% share of Los Angeles viewers and 47% in New York.[12]
  • Former President of Argentina
    Alejandro A. Lanusse, who had guided the transition from military rule to democracy, was arrested along with the two other members of his three-man junta. A court in Buenos Aires detained Lanusse for questioning about a 1971 contract that his junta had granted to a private firm for the manufacture of aluminum. Detained also were Admiral Pedro Gnavi and Air Force General Carlos Rey, who formed the junta with Army General Lanusse, and former Defense Minister Jose R. Caceres.[13]
  • Nikolai V. Podgorny, the Soviet Union's ceremonial head of state as President of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet, made his last appearance as a Soviet official, appearing at a state dinner for Ethiopia's President Mengistu Haile Mariam, where he declared that the Soviets would provide military and financial support for their new African ally.[14]
    Podgorny would be removed from the Communist Party Politburo on May 24 and dismissed from his government post on June 16.

May 5, 1977 (Thursday)

May 6, 1977 (Friday)

May 7, 1977 (Saturday)

May 8, 1977 (Sunday)

May 9, 1977 (Monday)

  • A hotel fire killed 33 people and injured 57 others in Amsterdam when the five story Hotel Polen broke out in an elevator shaft. Within 22 minutes, fire had engulfed the wooden building. All but one of the 33 dead were tourists, most of whom were from Sweden.
  • Jose Maria Bulto, the president and chairman of the board of the Spanish chemical company SA Cros, was assaulted by two militants of the Catalan terrorist group EPOCA (Exèrcit Popular Català or Catalan People's Army), who strapped a bomb to his chest and threatened to detonate it by remote control if he didn't pay them a ransom of 500 million Spanish pesetas within 24 hours. The EPOCA terrorists allowed him to leave so that he could raise the ransom money, Bulto, afraid to go to a police station, went to his home in the Pedralbes of Barcelona and died while trying to disarm the bomb by himself.[30]
  • Born:
    • Marek Jankulovski, Czech footballer and defender with 77 caps for the Czech Republic national team; in Ostrava, Czechoslovakia
    • James Riley, American fantasy novelist known for the Story Thieves series, the Revenge of Magic series and the Half Upon a Time trilogy
  • Died:

May 10, 1977 (Tuesday)

Joan Crawford
  • Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) helicopter, were killed when the aircraft fell from the sky and exploded during a training exercise near the Jewish settlement of Naaran on the West Bank. The IDF Chief of Staff, Lieutenant General Mordechai Gur, said that the Sikorsky CH-53 helicopter had not been attacked and that the cause of the crash had not been determined.[32] At a court-martial, the helicopter squadron leader (not identified publicly) in charge of the military exercise would later be charged with "flying his own helicopter below the altitude specified in standing orders and was reprimanded.[33]
  • 1235 BC
    , and his mummy had been in France for eight months.
  • All 20 crew on an Iranian fishing boat were killed when the vessel capsized in the Persian Gulf. Reportedly, the victims who didn't drown were eaten by sharks.[35]
  • Mauricio Borgonovo Pohl, the Foreign Minister of El Salvador, was found dead three weeks after he had been kidnapped. Salvadoran President Arturo Armando Molina had refused to negotiate with Borgonovo's kidnappers, who had demanded the release of 37 political prisoners. The Farabundo Marti Popular Liberation Front said in a statement that they had "executed" Borgonovo as part of their revolutionary war to establish socialism. His body was discovered along a road with three .22-caliber bullet holes in his head.[36]
  • Oklahoma became the first U.S. state to provide for execution of condemned criminals by lethal injection, as Governor David Boren signed legislation into law. The intravenous administering of poison to put a prisoner to death replaced the electric chair as the method for carrying out the death penalty.[37] The U.S. state of Texas followed suit the next day, as Governor Dolph Briscoe signed a similar bill into law.[38]
  • The new Israeli village of Elkana was founded on the occupied West Bank as the fourth community to be established on the formerly Palestinian land. Israel had confiscated 1.626 square kilometers (0.63 square miles) of land from the Palestinian village of Mas-ha to build settlements.
  • Died:

May 11, 1977 (Wednesday)

  • At least 23 underground coal miners were killed in Japan near the town of Ashibetsu on the island of Hokkaido, after blasting operations ignited methane 2,600 feet (790 m) underground.[42]
  • Television magnate Ted Turner, owner of the Atlanta Braves baseball team, appointed himself as the team's manager for a single game as the Braves lost, 2 to 1, to the Pittsburgh Pirates. Turner had suspended regular manager Dave Bristol, sending him on a 10-day scouting trip. After his sole game coaching the Braves, Turner was told by National League President Chub Feeney to never manage again, citing a Major League Baseball rule that prohibiting managers or players from owning stock in a major league team. After letting third-base coach Vern Benson to manage the team for one game the next day (which Benson won), Turner returned Bristol to manage for the remainder of the season.
  • Born:
    • Pietersburg
    • Janne Ahonen, Finnish ski jumper with 2 individual world championships (1997 and 2005); in Lahti

May 12, 1977 (Thursday)

May 13, 1977 (Friday)

May 14, 1977 (Saturday)

May 15, 1977 (Sunday)

picture1
picture 2
The cast in 1962 and in 1977
  • The cast of the popular 1950s American situation comedy Father Knows Best returned to television for the first time since its 203rd and last original episode on May 23, 1960. The Father Knows Best Reunion, lasting 90 minutes, was aired at 9:00 Eastern time on the NBC television network and brought back all five actors of the fictional Anderson family, with the parents Robert Young and Jane Wyatt (Jim and Margaret Anderson) and the three children, Elinor Donahue (Becky), Billy Gray (Bud) and Lauren Chapin (Kathy).[51]
  • Died:

May 16, 1977 (Monday)

President Keita
  • Five people were killed, and eight injured, by helicopter blades in New York City when a 21-passenger Sikorsky commuter helicopter operating as New York Airways Flight 972 toppled sideways while attempting a takeoff from the roof of the Pan Am Building.[53][54] The casualties were part of a group of 21 passengers boarding a helicopter to fly them from the city to the John F. Kennedy International Airport. At 5:35 in the afternoon, the helicopter's landing gear strut collapsed while the rotors were turning in preparation for takeoff. Four passengers on the roof were killed by the turning rotors, including movie director Michael Findlay. Another rotor fell from the 59-story Pan Am building onto a sidewalk at Madison Avenue near 43rd Street, where Anne Barnecott was walking on a sidewalk and was struck in her back by a falling blade.
  • In southern Africa, Zambia's President Kenneth Kaunda called a press conference that "I wish to tell all Zambians today that we are in a state of war with Rhodesia," and added, "We will fight and I have already directed my boys to shoot any Rhodesian planes on sight using Zambian airspace."[55]
  • Born:
  • Died:
    President of Mali
    , from the West African nation's independence in 1960 until his overthrow in 1968, died in prison after more than eight years of incarceration by his successors, President Moussa Traore.

May 17, 1977 (Tuesday)

Begin voting for Likud Party candidates
  • religious Zionist party, the Mafdal
    .
  • The first American tourists since 1961, to visit the Communist-governed island nation of Cuba, arrived at Havana on the cruise ship Daphne. U.S. President Jimmy Carter had lifted the ban on travel to Cuba in March.[57]
  • The West German company OTRAG (Orbital Transport-und Raketen-Aktiengesellschaft), founded by German engineer Lutz Kayser, made the first successful test of its own rocket, with the goal of creating the first corporate space program. The launch took place from the central African nation of Zaire on property leased by OTRAG near the Luvua River and the Kapani tone plateau. Kayser described his specific goal as creating a lower-cost means for other nations to launch communications satellites, rather than military use. The rocket reached an altitude of 7 miles (11 km) before descending to a spot 2.5 miles (4.0 km) from the launching pad.[58][59]
  • Died:
    • Claude Roger-Marx, 88, French playwright and writer
    • J. C. Anand, 54, Pakistani film producer and distributor
    • John Nardi (alias for Giovanni Narcchione), 61, American gangster and racketeer, was killed by a car bomb as he was approaching his own vehicle in Cleveland.

May 18, 1977 (Wednesday)

USS Sequoia on the Potomac River in 2003
  • The U.S. presidential yacht USS Sequoia, last used on June 9, 1976, was sold at an auction by the U.S. government in a symbolic gesture by the administration of President Jimmy Carter to reduce federal government expenses. Bidding took place at the La Coquille Club in Manalapan, Florida and the yacht was sold to businessman Thomas Malloy for $286,000.[60] The yacht would be bought in 1980 by the non-profit Presidential Yacht Trust, to be loaned to the White House on request.
  • The Environmental Modification Convention (ENMOD) (officially the Convention on the Prohibition of Military or Any Other Hostile Use of Environmental Modification Techniques) an international treaty to ban weather modification in warfare, was signed by representatives of 22 nations, including the U.S., the UK, the Soviet Union, Canada, East Germany and West Germany, and Italy. After ratification by 20 nations, it would become effective on October 5, 1978.
  • White voters in South-West Africa (now Namibia), a United Nations Trusteeship under the administration of South Africa, overwhelmingly approved a transition to black majority rule and independence in a referendum on the "Turnhalle Plan". The voting result (30,329 in favor of, 1,700 against the plan) was not binding on South Africa, which had no plans to grant independence to the area.[61]
  • The National State Assembly in the Asian island nation of Sri Lanka was dissolved by President William Gopallawa at the request of Prime Minister J. R. Jayewardene, and an election was scheduled for July 21.
  • The government of Sudan expelled all 90 of its Soviet military advisers from the northeast African nation, along with 57 members of their families.[62]
  • Police in Alexandria, Virginia arrested rapist Montie Ralph Rissell, an 18-year-old serial rapist who had murdered five women over the previous nine months. Rissell, whose last homicide had been on May 5, would confess to the five murders and be given five consecutive life sentences.[63] As of 2023, he remained in prison after having been denied parole annually since 1995.
  • Died:

May 19, 1977 (Thursday)

  • The government of Kenya banned big-game hunting within the central African nation, revoking the concessions to companies and individuals to shoot and kill endangered species, including elephants, rhinoceroses and leopards. Under the new regulations, which took effect immediately, all licenses for carrying hunting rifles were canceled and no visitor would be allowed to enter Kenya with firearms or hunting weapons. Safaris in wildlife refuges such as the two Tsavo National Parks were limited afterward to photography.[66]
  • The kidnapping of Colleen Stan, in which a young woman was held captive by a husband and wife and tortured for more than seven years, began near Red Bluff, California. She would not be freed until August 9, 1984.[67][68]
  • The final wishes of eccentric Beverly Hills millionaire Sandra West to have her burial carried out with her sitting behind the steering wheel of her 1964 Ferrari automobile "with the seat slanted comfortably", with her body dressed in her favorite lace nightgown. West was interred at a cemetery in
    San Antonio, Texas, with the car and her body loaded into a 20 feet (6.1 m) long crate, which was then lowered into a 9 feet (2.7 m) deep grave, where two truckloads of concrete were then poured.[69]

May 20, 1977 (Friday)

May 21, 1977 (Saturday)

May 22, 1977 (Sunday)

  • A fire killed 15 people, mostly British tourists visiting Belgium, at the Duc de Brabant Hotel in Brussels, and injured 40 others, after breaking out in a snack bar on the hotel's first floor.[80]
  • The
    Torino F.C. (21 wins, 8 draws for 50 points). On May 2, when both teams had 43 points, Juventus had pulled a point ahead when it defeated Napoli, while Torino had played Lazio to a 0–0 tie.[81]
  • The 1976–77 season of Spain's top soccer football league, La Liga, ended with Atlético Madrid (19 wins, 8 draws, for 46 points) in first place over second place FC Barcelona (18 wins, 9 draws, for 45 points). Going into the final week, Atlético Madrid (19-8-6) had already clinched first place and FC Barcelona (17-9-7) had been eliminated.

May 23, 1977 (Monday)

May 24, 1977 (Tuesday)

May 25, 1977 (Wednesday)

May 26, 1977 (Thursday)

  • Four days after seizing an elementary school in the Netherlands, South Moluccan terrorists released the 106 schoolchildren held hostage at the school at Bovensmilde. Four of the children had been freed earlier after becoming ill from a stomach ailment, and after 46 more contracted the same infection, the terrorists relented. The principal and five teachers remained as hostages.[97]
  • The Geneva Convention on rules of war conduct was amended at an international conference of 95 nations as participants voted, 73 to 1, to give prisoner-of-war status to captured guerrillas, equal to those of national armies. Israel cast a "no" vote, citing the danger to civilians, and 21 nations abstained.[98]
  • The civil war in Zaire's Shaba province, between the government of Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of the Congo) and rebels crossing from Angola into Zaire, ended 79 days after it had started on March 8.
  • U.S. President Carter signed the 1967
    U.S. Virgin Islands or at the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base at Cuba.[99]
  • George Willig, who dubbed himself "The Human Fly", set a record for highest climb up the side of a building by scaling Tower 2 of the World Trade Center (WTC 2), ascending 1,350 feet (410 m) in three hours and 30 minutes. After reaching the roof, Willig "stepped onto the top to accept congratulatory handshakes and sign autographs for a squad of admiring cops who immediately took him into custody on an array of misdemeanor charges."[100] After the city of New York initially threatened a $250,000 civil lawsuit, Mayor Abraham Beame settled its complaint with a fine of $1.10, representing a penny for each of the 110 floors climbed. Beame said afterward, "I wanted to congratulate him for his courageous act and tell him we wanted to settle the suit out of court."[101]
  • The
    Avco Cup finals to win the championship of the World Hockey Association, rival to the National Hockey League. Winnipeg had forced a seventh game with their 12 to 3 win over Quebec on May 24.[102]
  • Born:
  • Died:

May 27, 1977 (Friday)

  • The crash of Aeroflot Flight 331 in Cuba killed 69 people.[106] The four-engine Il-62M turbojet had originated in Moscow, with stops in Frankfurt and Lisbon, with a final scheduled destination of Havana when it had an engine catch fire and was attempting an emergency landing in a thick fog.
  • An
    unsuccessful attempt to overthrow the government of Angola was crushed after former Interior Minister Nito Alves and former Angolan Army chief Jose Van Dunem led a coup d'état against President Agostinho Neto. After his troops regained control of Radio Luanda in the nation's capital, President Neto said in a broadcast that dissidents would be punished harshly, commenting, "we must react with a certain cruelty... we must drastically treat some persons who today tried to break the peace of our capital with the intention of giving to imperialism the possibilities for new attacks on our movement."[107] In the aftermath, thousands of Angolans would be killed by the government and by Cuban forces.[108]
  • The English punk rock group Sex Pistols released their most controversial song, "God Save the Queen", as single, ahead of their October release of the album Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols.
  • Britain's independent television network, ITV ended its nine-week experiment with a morning TV news show, after having started the trial of Good Morning Calendar on ITV Yorkshire and Good Morning North on ITV Tyne Tees, concluding that the United Kingdom was not yet ready for what would later be referred to in Britain as "breakfast television". The TV genre would not be tried again until more than five years later, with the launch of the BBC program Breakfast Time on January 17, 1983.
  • Born:
    Toyama prefecture

May 28, 1977 (Saturday)

  • A fire killed 165 people at the
    busboy learned of a fire in one of the section of the club, the Zebra Room, and helped save lives of many of the 600 customers in another section, the Cabaret Room by calmly telling people to leave and pointing out the fire exits, as well as leading groups of panicked customers outside. "The worst thing of all," Walter Bailey commented afterward, "is that most of the people didn't believe there was a fire."[111]
  • President of Djibouti, 30 days in advance of its independence from France, in a vote by the 65-member National Assembly
    .
  • The Soviet Union's 39-member Presidium approved a new constitution, with a preamble stating that "The aims of the dictatorship of the proletariat having been fulfilled, the Soviet state has become the state of the whole people," to replace the 1936 Constitution of the Soviet Union, and ordered a June 4 publication date.[112] The new document would become official on October 7, and remain in effect until the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991.

May 29, 1977 (Sunday)

May 30, 1977 (Monday)

May 31, 1977 (Tuesday)

  • A team of mountain climbers from the Army of India became the first persons to ascend the northeast side of Kangchenjunga, third-highest mountain in the world, a feat that had eluded mountaineers since the first attempt made 45 years earlier in 1932. Colonel Narendra Kumar led the group of 18 people (16 climbers and two doctors), and two climbers, Major Prem Chand and the Sherpa Naik Nima Dorje reached the summit.[118]
  • Born: Domenico Fioravanti, Italian swimmer and Olympic gold medalist; in Novara
  • Died: William Castle (stage name for William Schloss Jr.), 63, American film producer and director known for the 1968 production of Rosemary's Baby, died of a heart attack.

References

  1. ^ "39 Turks Die in Gun Battle at May Day Rally", Los Angeles Times, May 2, 1977, p.I-1
  2. ^ "Hundreds Arrested in New Hampshire Atom Protest", by John Kifner, The New York Times, May 2, 1977, p.1
  3. ^ "4 Parties Join India's Janata", Los Angeles Times, May 2, 1977, p.I-2
  4. ^ "Home Brew Kills 46 in Bombay Slum", Los Angeles Times, May 7, 1977, p.I-3
  5. ^ "Ex-GM President Dies in Air Crash", Los Angeles Times, May 3, 1977, p.I-20
  6. ^ One Man's Search for Buried Treasure" by Jean-Marc Mojon, in The Jakarta Globe, December 14, 2009
  7. ^ . Tonry had won the Louisiana Democratic primary by 184 votes (48,789 to 48,605) on October 2, 1976, over his opponent, James Moreau, and was sworn in on January 4. On April 21, however, 20 polling commissioner's pleaded guilty to listing 432 fraudulent votes for Tonry. "Rep. Tonry Quits Amid Fraud Charges", by Ellen Hume, Los Angeles Times, May 5, 1977, p.I-16
  8. ^ "Louisiana Voters Reject Ex-Rep. Tonry", Los Angeles Times, June 26, 1977, p.I-2
  9. ^ "Ex-Rep. Tonry Given Prison Term, Fined in Vote Fraud", Los Angeles Times, July 29, 1977, p.I-5
  10. ^ "Former Rep. Richard Tonry of Louisiana Dead at 77", , by Emily Cahn, Roll Call, July 6, 2012
  11. ^ "Failed to Enforce the Law, Lied to Nation, Nixon Says— Denies Crime, Admits Letting America Down", by Jack Nelson, Los Angeles Times, May 5, 1977, p.I-1
  12. ^ "Nixon Interview Easily Wins the Ratings Battle", Los Angeles Times, May 5, 1977, p.I-9
  13. ^ "Argentina Arrests a Former President", by David F. Belnap, Los Angeles Times, May 5, 1977, p.I-5
  14. ^ "Addis Ababa Now Looking to Moscow", Sydney Morning Herald, May 8, 1977, p.4
  15. ^ "5 Houston Police Officers Suspended in Beating, Drowning of Mexican-American", by Nicholas C. Chriss, Los Angeles Times, May 13, 1977, p.I-8
  16. ^ "Two Ex-Policemen Given Probation in Man's Death", Los Angeles Times, October 8, 1977, p.I-13
  17. ^ "4 Ex-Policemen Indicted in Prisoner Death", Los Angeles Times, October 21, 1977, p.I-4
  18. ^ " "The "Misdemeanor Murder" of Joe Campos Torres", in The Valley of the Fallen and Other Places, by Donald Katz (Random House, 2001) pp.174-199
  19. ^ "West Germany's Erhard Dies at 80; Former Chancellor Led Postwar Recovery", Los Angeles Times, May 5, 1977, p.I-1
  20. ^ "Walter, (William) Grey (1910–1977), neurophysiologist", in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 2004)
  21. ^ "Argentine Official Shot in Attack by Terrorists", by David Belnap, Los Angeles Times, May 8, 1977, p.III-14
  22. ^ "Seattle Slew Wins After Giving Them a Start", Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles Times, May 8, 1977, p.III-1
  23. ^ "Spain Legalizes Union", Los Angeles Times, May 8, 1977, p.I-8
  24. ^ "USC Defeats Ohio State for 1st Volleyball Title", Los Angeles Times, May 8, 1977, p.III-13
  25. ^ "Prince Xavier Dies; Spanish Pretender", Los Angeles Times, May 8, 1977, p.III-14
  26. ^ "The World", Los Angeles Times, May 9, 1977, p.I-2
  27. ^ "Last European Colony in Africa to Vote on Independence Today", Los Angeles Times, May 8, 1977, p.I-9
  28. ^ Dieter Nohlen, Michael Krennerich and Bernhard Thibaut, Elections in Africa: A Data Handbook (Nomos Publishing, 1999) p.322
  29. ^ "Romania Grants Wide Amnesty", Los Angeles Times, May 9, 1977, p.I-2
  30. ^ "The World", Los Angeles Times, May 10, 1977, p.I-2
  31. ^ "James Jones, Novelist, Dies— 'From Here to Eternity' Brought Riches, Fame", Los Angeles Times, May 10, 1977, p.I-1
  32. ^ "Israeli Helicopter Crashes; 54 Dead", Los Angeles Times, May 12, 1977, p.I-1
  33. ^ "Squadron Leader in Israeli Copter Crash Reprimanded", The Los Angeles Times, September 6, 1977, p. I-19
  34. ^ "'Cleaned-up Mummy Flown Home to Egypt", Los Angeles Times, May 11, 1977, p.I-20
  35. ^ "Fishermen Believed Lost", Los Angeles Times, May 12, 1977, p.I-8
  36. ^ "El Salvador Foreign Minister 'Executed' by Leftist Group", Los Angeles Times, May 12, 1977, p.I-25
  37. ^ "Oklahoma OKs Drug Executions", UPI report in Fort Lauderdale (FL) News, May 11, 1977, p.8
  38. ^ "Briscoe OKs drug injection for execution", Fort Worth Star-Telegram, May 11, 1977, p.1
  39. ^ "Joan Crawford, One of Last True Film Queens, Dies", by Penelope McMillan, Los Angeles Times, May 11, 1977, p.I-1
  40. ^ "Two Women Slay Doctor Who Claimed Six Wives— Admitted Polygamist Shot in His Utah Office, Was Believed to Be the Father of 40 Children", Los Angeles Times, May 11, 1977, p.I-5
  41. ^ "Five Arrested in Assassinations of U.S., Mexico Polygamist Leaders", Los Angeles Times, September 24, 1977, p.I-13
  42. ^ "The World", Los Angeles Times, May 12, 1977, p.I-2
  43. ^ "The Nation", Los Angeles Times, May 13, 1977, p.I-2
  44. ^ "U.S. Satellite is 10,000th Object Sent Into Space", Los Angeles Times, May 15, 1977, p.I-10
  45. ^ "Embattled Bhutto Calls Referendum— Foes Denounce Offer as 'Dictatorship' Ploy", Los Angeles Times, May 14, 1977, p.I-16
  46. ^ "'La Pasionaria' Quietly Returns to Spain", by Stanley Meisler, Los Angeles Times, May 14, 1977, p.I-16
  47. ^ "Canadiens sweep Cup, top Bruins in OT, 2-1", Boston Globe, May 15, 1977, p.87
  48. ^ "Direct Taxation Abolished by Guinea Government in Africa", Los Angeles Times, May 15, 1977, p.I-12
  49. ^ "Carlos' Father Drops Claim to Throne", Los Angeles Times, May 15, 1977, p.I-9
  50. ^ "Obituary: Don Juan de Borbon", The Independent (London), April 1, 1993
  51. ^ "17 Years Later: Things Father Didn't Know", by Lee Marguiles, Los Angeles Times, May 13, 1977, p.IV-1
  52. ^ "Educator Robert Hutchins, Think Tank Founders, Dies", by Al Martinez, Los Angeles Times, May 16, 1977, p.I-1
  53. ^ "5 Die as Copter Falls Over Atop N.Y. Skyscraper", by John J. Goldman, Los Angeles Times, May 17, 1977, p.I-1
  54. ^ NTSB Report of October 13, 1977
  55. ^ "Zambia Declares 'State of War'; Rhodesia May Launch Raids, President Says", Los Angeles Times, May 17, 1977, p.I-1
  56. ^ "Israeli Voters Deal Labor Stunning Loss— Right-Wing Likud Party Wins, Is Likely to Take Hard Line in Any Peace Talks", by Dial Torgerson, Los Angeles Times, May 18, 1977, p. I-1
  57. ^ "The World", Los Angeles Times, May 18, 1977, p. I-2
  58. ^ "German Tests Cut-Rate Rocket in Zaire— Privately Funded Enterprise Aims at Space Satellite Business", by George Vine, Los Angeles Times, December 14, 1977, p. I-A-7
  59. ^ "SpaceX Was Not The First Private Rocket Company", by Jason Torchinsky, Jalopnik.com, May 29, 2012
  60. ^ "Firm, with $286,000 Bid, Buys Presidential Yacht", Los Angeles Times, May 19, 1977, p. I-19
  61. ^ "The World", Los Angeles Times, May 20, 1977, p. I-2
  62. ^ "Sudan Expels Soviet Experts", Los Angeles Times, May 19, 1977, p. I-2
  63. ^ The Encyclopedia of Serial Killers, ed. by Michael Newton, (Infobase Publishing, 2006)
  64. ^ "The Kurdistan Workers Party and a New Left in Turkey: Analysis of the revolutionary movement in Turkey through the PKK’s memorial text on Haki Karer", by Joost Jongerden and Ahmet Hamdi Akkaya in European Journal of Turkish Studies (2012)
  65. ^ "Scarboro Player Dies", Daily Mail (Hull), May 18, 1977, p. 1
  66. ^ "Kenya, Land of Safaris, Bans Big-Game Hunting", Los Angeles Times, May 20, 1977, p. I-1
  67. ^ Carla Norton and Christine McGuire, Perfect Victim (Dell Publishing, 1989)
  68. ^ "The Case of the Seven-Year Sex Slave", by Katherine Ramsland, CrimeLibrary.com
  69. ^ "Woman Goes to Final Rest in Her Ferrari", by Nicholas C. Chriss, Los Angeles Times, May 20, 1977, p.I-3
  70. ^ "Felipe González Márquez – former president of the Government of Spain". Transatlantic Dialogues. Archived from the original on 6 June 2014. Retrieved 3 June 2014.
  71. ^ "Prominent Basque Industrialist Kidnaped", Los Angeles Times, May 21, 1977, p. I-2
  72. ^ "Police Find Body of Basque Industrialist Kidnaped by Extremists One Month Ago", by Stanley Meisler, Los Angeles Times, May 21, 1977, p. I-14
  73. ^ "Gen. Hershey, Draft Chief in Three Wars, Dies at 83", Los Angeles Times, May 21, 1977, p. I-1
  74. ^ "Australians' Song Election Jilts 'Matilda'", Los Angeles Times, May 23, 1977, p. I-23
  75. ^ Australia Through Time (Random House Australia, 1997) pp. 56–57, 439, 446, 451, 479
  76. ^ "Carter Removes General Who Opposed Korea Policy— President Takes Swift Action Against Singlaub for His Criticism of Plans to Withdraw Ground Troops", by Jack Nelson, Los Angeles Times, May 22, 1977, p. I-1
  77. ^ "Singlaub Named to New Army Post", by Harold Logan, Los Angeles Times, May 28, 1977, p. I-1
  78. ^ "To a Reporter, Gen. Singlaub Is, Well...", by John Saar, Los Angeles Times, June 8, 1977, p. II-7
  79. ^ "The World", Los Angeles Times, May 22, 1977, p. I-2
  80. ^ "Brussels Hotel Fire Toll Reaches 15", Miami Herald, May 24, 1977, p.5-B
  81. ^ RSSSF.org
  82. ^ "Terrorists Seize 160 Hostages in Netherlands", by Murray Seeger, Los Angeles Times, May 24, 1977, p. I-1
  83. ^ "Insulin-Producing Gene Transplanted", Los Angeles Times, May 24, 1977, p. I-1
  84. ^ "Concentrated Sunshine Burns Hole in Quarter-Inch Steel Plate", Los Angeles Times, May 24, 1977, p. I-9
  85. ^ "Pentagon Says Russia Apparently Failed in Test of Killer Satellite Last Week", Los Angeles Times, June 1, 1977, p. I-4
  86. Olympedia
    . OlyMADMen. Retrieved 28 April 2023.
  87. ^ "Seat on Soviet Politburo Lost by Podgorny— Change in Key Post May Allow Brezhnev to Appoint His Heir", Los Angeles Times, May 25, 1977, p. I-1
  88. ^ "Buenos Aires Raid Kills 16", Los Angeles Times, May 25, 1977, p. I-2
  89. ^ "Star Wars' B.O. Hits Wow $2.5 Mil", Variety, June 1, 1977, p.1
  90. ^ "STAR WARS: The Year's Best Movie", TIME, May 30, 1977
  91. ^ "'Star Wars' Hails the Once and Future Space Western", by Charles Champlin, Los Angeles Times, May 22, 1977
  92. ^ "'Star Wars' flashes with space wizardry", by Gene Siskel, Chicago Tribune, May 27, 1977, p.23
  93. ^ "'Star Wars' twinkles for TV-cartoon set only'", by Scott Hamen, Courier-Journal (Louisville KY), May 26, 1977, p.C-5
  94. ^ "'Star Wars' the new box office champ", Modesto (CA) Bee, December 1, 1977, p. C-12.
  95. ^ "Ireland Calls June 16 election", Los Angeles Times, May 26, 1977, p.I-2
  96. ^ "The World", Los Angeles Times, May 26, 1977, p.I-2
  97. ^ "All 106 Dutch Children Freed by Terrorists— 50 Reportedly Suffer Stomach Ailment; 6 Teachers Still Held", by Murray Seeger, Los Angeles Times, May 27, 1977, p. I-1
  98. ^ "The World", Los Angeles Times, May 27, 1977, p. I-2
  99. ^ "Caribbean Nuclear Treaty Signed", Los Angeles Times, May 27, 1977, p. I-8
  100. ^ "'It's There,' So Daredevil Scales 110-Story Tower", by Charles T. Powers, Los Angeles Times, May 27, 1977, p. I-1
  101. ^ "'Human Fly' Let Off Hook in N.Y.", Los Angeles Times, May 28, 1977, p. I-3
  102. ^ "Nordiques Win WHA Title", Los Angeles Times, May 27, 1977, p. III-2
  103. ^ "Title Hopeful Shot, Killed", Associated Press report in Victoria (TX) Advocate, May 27, 1977, p. 4B
  104. ^ "The Nation", Los Angeles Times, May 27, 1977, p. I-2
  105. ^ "Dade Aviation Pioneer Chalk Dies", Miami Herald, May 27, 1977, p. C-1
  106. ^ "66 Die in Soviet Plane Crash in Havana", Los Angeles Times, May 28, 1977, p. I-2
  107. ^ "Revolt in Capital Crushed, Angola President Says", Los Angeles Times, May 28, 1977, p. I-1
  108. .
  109. ^ "Nightclub Blaze Kills Over 120— More Bodies Uncounted in Kentucky Fire", Los Angeles Times, May 29, 1977, p. I-1
  110. ^ "Death Toll in Nightclub Fire Rises to 160", Los Angeles Times, May 30, 1977, p. I-1
  111. ^ "Busboy Sounded Alert, Helped Diners Flee Fire", Los Angeles Times, May 30, 1977, p. I-1
  112. ^ "The World", Los Angeles Times, May 29, 1977, p. I-2
  113. ^ "Alone Above Crowd at Indy— A.J. Wins Record 4th 500 in Dramatic Fashion", by Shav Glick, Los Angeles Times, May 30, 1977, p. III-1
  114. ^ "Monuments' Pro Softball Debut A Booming Success", Baltimore Evening Sun, May 30, 1977, p.C-4
  115. ^ "Gassoff Is Killed In Cycle Crash", St. Louis Post-Dispatch, May 3, 1977, p.C-4
  116. ^ "The World", Los Angeles Times, May 31, 1977, p. I-2
  117. ^ "Wells Twombly, Prize‐Winning Sports Columnist", The New York Times, May 31, 1977, p.24
  118. ^ "Kangchenjunga from the East", by Narendra Kumar, in American Alpine Club 1977 Yearbook (1978)