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May 1980

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May 8, 1980: Eradication of smallpox announced by World Health Organization
May 18, 1980: Mount St. Helens volcano erupts, kills 57 Americans
May 8, 1980: The world's leaders appear for Josip Broz Tito's funeral[1]

May 1, 1980 (Thursday) edit

  • The first U.S. government shutdown for lack of funding took place as the U.S. Federal Trade Commission ceased operations.[2] A total of 1,600 workers were furloughed, and meetings and court dates were canceled.[3] The shutdown ended that evening, with the House approving a $7.6 million extension of funding 284–96, and the Senate 71–10.[4] The shutdown was estimated to cost $700,000, of which $600,000 was for salaries.
  • "About that urban renaissance.... there'll be a slight delay", an article by journalist Dan Rottenberg in Chicago magazine, contained the first recorded use of the word "yuppie" to refer to a "young urban professional". Referring to the migration of renters and buyers to Chicago from its suburbs, Rottenberg wrote "Some 20,000 new dwelling units have been built within two miles of the Loop over the past ten years to accommodate the rising tide of “Yuppies"—young urban professionals rebelling against the stodgy suburban lifestyles of their parents."[5]
  • Pacific Southwest Airlines Flight 818 was hijacked shortly after taking off from Stockton, California for Los Angeles.[6] The hijacker, from Ceres scaled a fence at the Stockton Municipal Airport, then ran across the grounds to where stairs had been lowered for the outside boarding of the Boeing 727. He then held one hostage, PSA flight engineer Alan Romatowski, at gunpoint for six hours until Romatowski overpowered and disarmed him.[7] The hijacker's father said that his 25-year old son had written a screenplay about "a young man hijacking an airplane, kidnapping a senator, flying to Iran and kidnapping the Ayatollah in order to get the hostages back to the U.S. safely".[8] After being convicted in November by a jury that rejected his defense of temporary insanity, the hijacker was sentenced to 15 years imprisonment, with the provision that he would receive psychiatric treatment until federal parole officers determined that he could be released.[9]
  • "Pick Six" betting, the first large-jackpot wagering game in the United States, was introduced for horse race betting, based on the daily races at the Hollywood Park Racetrack in Inglewood, California.[10] Under a format similar to a long-operating program at Mexico's Agua Caliente Racetrack in Tijuana, a bettor could by a Pick Six betting card for two-dollars to choose the winners for six consecutive races (the third through eighth races at Hollypark), or pay $128 for picking two possibilities for the winners of six races, with all combinations priced under formula of $2 x n6, with n being the number of possibilities.[11] The people who picked the most winners out of six races would split 75% of the pool of Pick Six purchases. Seventeen bettors received $8,491 apiece for picking all six winners in the first day of Pick Six.[12]
  • Died: Henry Levin, 70, American film director, died of a heart attack while directing the television film, Scout's Honor.

May 2, 1980 (Friday) edit

  • A referendum on system of government was held in Nepal, the first voting in 22 years.[13] Voters decided to keep the panchayat political system that had prevailed since 1962,[14] when an indirectly elected legislature, the Rastriya Panchayat, was created to advise King Mahendra. Votes were made by stamping the ballot blue (for the restoration of political parties) or yellow (for retaining the panchayat system).
  • The U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals issued its decision in Amstar Corp. v. Domino's Pizza, Inc, 617 F.2d 295, reversing a lower court decision that had ruled that Domino's Pizza would have to change its name so as not to infringe the trademark of Domino Sugar.[15] While the suit was in progress, new franchises for the pizza restaurant carried the name "Pizza Dispatch".[16]
  • One-quarter of Sweden's workers went on strike, or were locked out by employers, after the 2,200,000 member Trade Unions Confederation (Landsorganisationen i Sverige or LO) was unable to reach an agreement with the Swedish Employers Association (Svenska Arbetsgivareföreningen) on wage increases.[17]

May 3, 1980 (Saturday) edit

May 4, 1980 (Sunday) edit

 
Josip Broz (Tito)

May 5, 1980 (Monday) edit

May 6, 1980 (Tuesday) edit

  • In a rare labor strike in the Soviet Union, 200,000 employees of AvtoVAZ auto and truck manufacturing plants in the city of Gorky (now Nizhny Novgorod) walked off of the job and refused to work for three days as a protest against inadequate supplies of food.[40] The employees returned to work on May 8 after fresh food was rushed to the two industrial complexes. Although no mention of a disturbance was made in the state-controlled Soviet press, reports reached the Moscow bureau of Financial Times, the London business daily newspaper, which published the information on June 14.[41] The plants, in co-operation with Italy's Fiat company, manufactured the Soviet Lada automobile and now have operations in the city of Tolyatti.
  • In the U.S., the NBC television network announced that it would not telecast the 1980 Summer Olympics from Moscow.[42] Edgar H. Griffiths, Chairman of NBC's parent company, RCA said at a meeting of RCA stockholders, "NBC will not be televising the Olympics because the U.S. team will not be participating, because this is not in accord with the policy of the president of the United States." NBC had spent US$70,000,000 for rights to and preparation for the broadcast. Even after insurance paid for most of the loss, the company still lost $22,000,000.
  • Faced with the impossibility of reconciling the various factions vying for power in the Chadian Civil War, French forces withdrew their last troops after three years of operations.
  • NASA announced the discovery of a previously-unknown 15th moon of the planet Jupiter, found by astronomer Stephen P. Synnott on an image transmitted by Voyager 1 on March 5, 1979 and on seven other photos.[43] Temporarily designated as "S/1979 J 3", the small moon is now called Metis.[44]
  • Born: Kasumi Takahashi, Japanese-born Australian gymnast and winner of five gold medals at the age of 14; in Tokyo
  • Died: Andrew Durant, 25, Australian musician for the country rock group Stars, died of cancer.

May 7, 1980 (Wednesday) edit

  • At the age of 86, Paul Geidel, convicted of second-degree murder in 1911, was released from the Fishkill Correctional Facility in Beacon, New York, after 68 years and 245 days, marking the longest-ever time served by an American inmate.[45] Geidel, a bellboy at the Iroquois Hotel in New York City, had been arrested on July 28, 1911, at the age of 17 after killing an elderly stockbroker and hotel guest, William Henry Jackson.[46] From 1926 to 1972, he had been confined at the Dannemora State Hospital for the Criminal Insane. Paroled in 1974, he elected to stay in prison for six more years. He died in a nursing home in 1987.
  • The appointment of U.S. Senator Edmund Muskie of Maine as the new U.S. Secretary of State was confirmed by his colleagues, 94 to 2.[47] The only votes against him were those of Senator Gordon J. Humphrey of New Hampshire and Jesse Helms of North Carolina. Muskie himself voted "present". He then resigned and was sworn into office as a cabinet secretary the next day.
  • Roberto D'Aubuisson, Salvadoran politician believed to have ordered the assassination of Archbishop Oscar Romero, was arrested on a farm and charged with planning a coup d'état to depose the ruling junta. He was soon released and resumed his campaign of terror.[48]

May 8, 1980 (Thursday) edit

 
Aquino
  • Former Philippine Senator Benigno Aquino Jr., the one-time opposition leader and a critic of President Ferdinand Marcos, was released from Manila's Fort Bonifacio prison, after being in detention since 1972.[53] Marcos had given his approval, and the Philippine Supreme Court concurred, in order for Aquino to travel to the United States for heart bypass surgery. Aquino departed the next day, pledging to return to jail within four weeks. He elected not to come back until 1983, and would be assassinated upon his return to Manila.
  • Died: Dr. Farrokhroo Parsa, 58, the first female Iranian cabinet minister and former Minister of Education of Iran, was executed by firing squad.[54]

May 9, 1980 (Friday) edit

  • At 7:38 a.m. in Florida, the Liberian freighter Summit Venture hit the Sunshine Skyway Bridge over Tampa Bay.[55] A 1,400-foot (430 m) section of the bridge collapsed, killing 35 people. Twenty-three of the dead had been the passengers and driver of a Greyhound bus that had just departed St. Petersburg, Florida as one of its stops on the way from Chicago to Miami.
  • Vijayalakshmi clinic opened by Dr.Seshagirirao at Nakka veedhi junction .. CB road ,Srikakulam ,India. To serve the poor people medically .
  • [56]
  • The second round of voting for Iran's parliament was conducted, with runoff elections for 124 of the 270 seats where no candidate had received a majority on March 14. On March 14, 98 seats had been filled by a clear majority. The radical Islamic Republican Party won a plurality of the seats. Voting was still postponed for 48 other seats in districts that were "experiencing anti-government unrest". With 222 of the seats decided, the Majlis could convene and pass legislation under the republic's constitution, which allowed parliament to be held with a two-thirds quorum (180 of 270 members present).[57]
  • The U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service transferred the first of thousands of Cuban refugees from Florida to Fort Chaffee, a U.S. Army base near Fort Smith, Arkansas, and expected that as many as 20,000 arrivals from the Mariel boatlift would be housed there.[58]
  • William J. Murray, the son of Madalyn Murray O'Hair and the plaintiff on whose behalf the Murray v. Curlett was decided by the U.S. Supreme Court issued its ruling against prayer in American public schools, issued a public apology for his role in the court decision. Murray wrote in a letter, "If it were within my personal power to help to return this nation to its rightful place by placing God back in the classroom, I would do so." O'Hair's response was "Pretty strange. I think what this is, he's after mother again. But don't ask me why."[59][60]
  • Died:

May 10, 1980 (Saturday) edit

  • Eight Cuban Air Force MiG fighter planes attacked and sank the patrol boat HMBS Flamingo, a patrol boat of the Royal Bahamas Defence Force, after Flamingo attempted to seize two Cuban fishing vessels, Ferrocem 165 and Ferrocem 54, which had entered Bahamian territorial waters near Ragged Island.[62][63] Four of the Bahamian Marines were killed, while the commander of Flamingo and the 15 remaining crew were picked up by the vessels.[64]
  • Lee Iacocca, Chairman of the Board of the Chrysler Corporation, received final approval from the three-member U.S. Chrysler Loan Guarantee Board for a federally-guaranteed $1.5 billion loan from the United States Treasury. The money, which was available to Chrysler starting May 27, was sufficient to rescue the company from bankruptcy. Treasury Secretary G. William Miller conceded that, without federal aid, "quite frankly, the resources of Chrysler would be exhausted this month."[65]
  • Greek Prime Minister Konstantinos Karamanlis was sworn in as the new President of Greece, succeeding Christos Sartzetakis. Georgios Rallis became the new Prime Minister of Greece.
  • For the first time in the history of the Statue of Liberty, the 94-year-old structure was scaled by climbers. Mountaineers Kevin Drummond and Stephen Rutherford had staged the event to protest the 1972 murder conviction of Black Panther leader Geronimo Pratt. In the process, they caused an estimated $80,000 in damage to the thin copper skin of the robe of Miss Liberty, before spending the night "on the gigantic foot of the statue."[66]

May 11, 1980 (Sunday) edit

  • After ten days, the worst labor crisis in the history of Sweden came to an end when the Svenska Arbetsgivareföreningen, the nation's federation of employers, agreed to a plan by a government arbitration panel to raise employee's wages by 7.3 percent.[67] Earlier in the day, Director Olof Lungren of the employer's federation announced the rejection of the plan, calling it "destructive for Sweden's economy." Prime Minister Thorbjörn Fälldin called an emergency meeting of the cabinet and successfully urged the employer's to reverse their stance in order to end the strike, which had idled 31,000 companies and idled 800,000 workers, and shut down television broadcasts, public transportation, air travel, and non-emergency medical services. One hour after Fälldin summoned Lungren to his office, the employer's federation announced that it would make the 7.3% increase, which had already been agreed to by the 2,200,000 member confederation of unions, the Landsorganisationen i Sverige (LO).[17]

May 12, 1980 (Monday) edit

May 13, 1980 (Tuesday) edit

 
An implanted ICD[72]
  • Inventors Michel Mirowski, Morton M. Mower, Alois A. Langer and Marlin S. Heilman were issued U.S. Patent 4,202,340 for the ICD, the first heart defibrillator that could be surgically implanted. Pending since February 15, 1978, the patent application was titled “Method and Apparatus for Monitoring Heart Activity, Detecting Abnormalities, and Cardioverting a Malfunctiong Heart.”[73]
  • The U.S. Imported Oil Fee was declared unconstitutional.

May 14, 1980 (Wednesday) edit

 
 
 
HEW split into HHS and DOE
  • The United States Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) was renamed the United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) in advance of the inauguration of the new U.S. Department of Education.[75] HEW Secretary Patricia Roberts Harris, who remained after U.S. Department of Education was created on May 4, continued as HHS Secretary.[76]
  • In South Korea, at least 50,000 university students battled with police and army troops in six cities, demanding that President Chun Doo-hwan resign and martial law be lifted.[77] At Seoul, riot police fired tear gas to rout students as they approached the national capitol, and anti-government demonstrators stole three city buses to push back police barricades, while another 10,000 protested at Gwangju. Protests also broke out in Daegu, Jeonju, Suwon, and Incheon. After martial law was extended to the entire nation, the government arrested the leaders of the student movement and protests escalated, eventually to be shut down with mass killings.

May 15, 1980 (Thursday) edit

  • Libya's President Muammar Gadaffi announced a currency exchange program and the introduction of new Libyan dinar banknotes for the five and ten dinar denominations (worth, at the time, $16 and $32) and directed that citizens would be allowed one week to exchange their existing notes at the Central State Bank branches, after which only the old 5 and 10 dinar notes would be worthless.[78] People making the exchange, however, were informed that only 1,000 dinars worth of new notes would be allowed per customer, a move that "effectively wiped out the savings of the middle-class as well as the hoarded cash of the black marketeers" and that "brought a windfall of £1.5 billion to the cash-starved Treasury". After a public uproar, announced on June 11 that the seized money would not be confiscated or invested without full consultation with the 167 local "People's Congresses" in Libya.[79]
  • Cvijetin Mijatović became the new Yugoslavian head of state as Chairman of the Collective Presidency, which rotated annually among the heads of the six constituent republics and two autonomous provinces. Mijatović, the leader of the SR Bosnia-Herzegovina, succeeded Lazar Koliševski, who had assumed office 11 days earlier on the death of President Tito, and served exactly one year until May 15, 1981.[80]
  • West Germany's Olympic Committee joined the group of nations boycotting the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, after its delegates voted, 59 to 40, to punish the Soviet Union for its invasion of Afghanistan.[81]
  • U.S. Senator Edward M. Kennedy, trailing in the delegate count in his campaign against President Carter for the Democratic Party nomination, offered to drop out of the race if Carter would agree to a nationally televised debate. Carter declined the challenge.[82]

May 16, 1980 (Friday) edit

 
Prime Minister Ohira[83]
  • By a margin of 243 against him and only 187 in his favor, Japan's Prime Minister Masayoshi Ohira and his government lost a vote of confidence in the Shugiin, the lower house of Japan's bicameral parliament, the National Diet.[84] Ohira was reportedly stunned as members of his own Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) abstained rather than voting in his favor on a resolution that he had been expecting to win by a simple majority. The action marked the first time in 27 years that a ruling prime minister had lost a confidence vote. Given the choice between resigning or calling new elections, Ohira chose the latter and died a few weeks later during the campaign.
  • Rookie Earvin "Magic" Johnson scored 42 points to lead the Los Angeles Lakers to a 123–107 victory over the Philadelphia 76ers to clinch the National Basketball Association championship in Game 6 of the best-4-of-7 series for the Lakers.[85] The Lakers prevailed despite the absence of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, who had sprained his ankle two days earlier. Although the game was tied, 50 to 50, at halftime, the Lakers had an 83–73 lead after three quarters. High scorer for the Sixers was Julius "Dr. J" Erving, who had 27 points.[86]

May 17, 1980 (Saturday) edit

  • A U.S. federal court jury in Tampa, Florida, acquitted four members of the Miami-Dade Police Department of civil rights charges in the Miami killing of Arthur McDuffie, an African-American insurance executive. The decision that led to three days of rioting in Miami that killed 19 people and injured 350.[87] The 12 member jury, composed of all white men, returned its verdict at 2:36 in the afternoon after deliberating for three hours. Less than four hours after the verdict was reported, an estimated 5,000 outraged black Miamians surrounded Miami's Metro Justice Center building and violence began. Three people were dead by midnight in the predominantly black Liberty City neighborhood.[88] On December 17, McDuffie had been beaten by the four defendants, who had chased him after he had reportedly driven through a red traffic light on his motorcycle, and he died four days later. After their exoneration, the four police officers and another suspended policeman were restored to their jobs.[89]
  • In the worst accident since the Mariel boatlift had started, a yacht carrying 52 Cuban refugees capsized in the Caribbean Sea, 28 miles (45 km) north of Cuba. Ten people drowned and four others were missing. Two U.S. Coast Guard cutters, USCGC Courageous and USCGC Vigorous rescued 38 passengers, only half of whom had life jackets. The two member crew of the boat, the Olo Yumi, did not send a distress signal, and the rescue did not begin until a Coast Guard helicopter spotted it while on patrol.[90]
  • A high-profile national memorial ceremony was held for the last President of China, Liu Shaoqi,more than a decade after he had died in disgrace in 1969.[91] Liu's ashes were scattered into the sea at Qingdao in accordance with his last wishes.

May 18, 1980 (Sunday) edit

  • The Mount St. Helens volcano in Washington erupted at 8:32 in the morning.[92] Fifty-seven people were killed; 250 homes, 47 bridges, 15 miles (24 km) of railways, and 185 miles (298 km) of highway were destroyed. A massive debris avalanche, triggered by an earthquake of magnitude 5.1,[93] caused a lateral eruption that reduced the elevation of the mountain's summit from 9,677 ft (2,950 m) to 8,363 ft (2,549 m), leaving a 1-mile (1.6 km) wide horseshoe-shaped crater. The debris avalanche was up to 0.7 cubic miles (2.9 km3) in volume
 
Gossamer Penguin
  • Invented by engineer Paul MacCready, the Gossamer Penguin, the first solar-powered experimental aircraft, made its initial flight, using and airstrip at Minter Field, an airport serving Shafter, California.[94] The inventor's 13-year-old son, Marshall MacCready, piloted the plane, adding 80 pounds (36 kg) to the 62 lb (28 kg) Gossamer Penguin. While the solar plane, powered by banks of photovoltaic cells, was not able to lift off on its own, it was flown for 100 yards (91 m) at an altitude of 12 feet (3.7 m) and an average speed of 15 miles per hour (24 km/h).[94]
  • The People's Republic of China successfully tested its first intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM), the DF-5 (Dongfeng 5). The Xinhua News Agency then announced, "China achieved complete success this morning in launching its first carrier rocket to the destined area in the Pacific Ocean." Believed by western analysts to have been launched from the Xinjiang province, the missile traveled 6,200 miles (10,000 km) to a target in the South Pacific. A U.S. Associated Press report commented that "A missile with that range could carry a nuclear warhead to anywhere in the Soviet Union or to the west coast of the United States."[95]
 
The May 18th Minjung Struggle Memorial Tower, commemorating the Gwangju Uprising
  • The Gwangju Uprising began at Chonnam National University hours after a spokesman for South Korea's President Chun Doo-hwan announced that martial law would be extended across the entire nation of 38 million people and the Republic of Korea Army Chief of Staff, General Lee Hui Sung, closed all universities and schools and banning all political gatherings. The decree banned people from striking or failing to show up for work, required advance review and censorship of press reports, and provided that people violating the martial law order could be searched, arrested or detained without warrants.[96] Political opponents of President Chun were arrested, including former presidential candidate Kim Dae-jung and former Prime Minister Kim Jong-pil, the leader of South Korea's Democratic Republican Party (Minju Gonghwadang).
  • The first elections in Peru since 1963 was conducted to elect a President and for the 60 senators and 180 deputies of the Peruvian Congress. Former president Fernando Belaúnde Terry won 45% of the vote, ahead of Armando Villanueva and 13 other candidates. Under the constitution, the candidate with the largest number of votes had to have a minimum of 35% of the votes cast. Belaúnde had been the winner of the last election in 1963 before he was deposed in a coup d'état.[97]
  • Born: Kawee Tanjararak "Beam", Thai singer and member of the Thai boy band D2B, in Bangkok.
 
Blackburn's car after the Mount St. Helens eruption

May 19, 1980 (Monday) edit

 
Korean National Assembly
  • South Korea's military leaders ordered the shutdown of the nation's 300-member unicameral parliament, the National Assembly (Daehanminguk Gukhoe), one day before it was to begin its new session, and closed the headquarters of both major political parties, the Democratic Republican Party and the opposition New Democratic Party. The New Democrats had previously announced that they would introduce a resolution that would legally end martial law.[98]
  • William Voltz, the captain of American Airlines Flight 71 saved 261 people at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport, averting a collision with Braniff International flight 231 at the last moment during a landing. Both aircraft were Boeing 727 airliners. The American flight from Newark had 128 on board, and was cleared to land on O'Hare's Runway 9 Left, which intersected Runway 4 Left, where the Braniff jet (with 133 on board) was taxiing for takeoff to Kansas City. Voltz was able to lift his plane and missed the Braniff 727 by only 100 feet (30 m).[99]

May 20, 1980 (Tuesday) edit

  • Voters in Quebec rejected independence from Canada by a margin of 60% to 40%.[100] The question on the ballot was whether to give the Canadian province "exclusive power to make its laws, levy its taxes and establish relations abroad — in other words, sovereignty — and at the same time to maintain with Canada an economic association including a common currency."[101] (Québec d'acquérir le pouvoir exclusif de faire ses lois, de percevoir ses impôts et d’établir ses relations extérieures, ce qui est la souveraineté, et, en même temps, de maintenir avec le Canada une association économique comportant l’utilisation de la même monnaie)
  • A fire killed 157 elderly women residing at the Eventide Home for the Aged in Kingston, Jamaica.[102] The telephone wires to the home had been severed, and four men were seen running from the building shortly before the blaze started at 1:00 in the morning, but the arsonists were never located or identified.[103]
  • Shin Hyun-hwak resigned after five months as Prime Minister of South Korea, along with all 18 members of his cabinet, in protest over the installation of martial law.[104] As the protests in Gwangju developed into a civilian rebellion, South Korean Air Force Major General Park Choon-hoon was named the next day as the new Prime Minister, and many of Premier Shin's cabinet returned to their positions.[105]
  • The first test launch of the Kh-80 Meteorit Soviet cruise missile was made, but failed because the missile failed to emerge from its container on the mobile ground launcher and burned the mechanism instead.[106] Three other attempts were unsuccessful until December 16, 1981, when the missile launched successfully and flew 50 kilometres (31 mi). It had a maximum range of 5,000 kilometres (3,100 mi).
  • Henryk Jaskuła of Poland became the third man to circumnavigate the globe non-stop and single-handed, returning in yacht, Dar Przemyski, to the port of Gdynia, where he had departed on June 12, 1979. Jaskula would die, less than a week before the 40th anniversary of his cruise, at the age of 96.[107]

May 21, 1980 (Wednesday) edit

 
  • The Empire Strikes Back, the long-awaited sequel to the 1977 blockbuster Star Wars, premiered in 126 cities in the United States and Canada in advance of Memorial Day weekend[108] and would become the highest-grossing film of the year. It had been unveiled on May 17 at the Kennedy Center in Washington DC.
  • In Deadwood, South Dakota, a raid by county, state and federal agents closed the houses of prostitution that had been allowed to operate for more than a century since Deadwood's "Wild West" days of the 1870s. Deadwood's three remaining brothels — "The White Door", "Pam's Purple Door" and "Dixie's Green Door" — were closed down as the new local government did, as one reporter put it, "what Marshal Hickok never would have done," [109]
  • Eintracht Frankfurt won the 1980 UEFA Cup Final, 1 to 0 at home over Borussia Mönchengladbach, two weeks after its 2 to 3 loss at Mönchengladbach in the first of two games. Although the aggregate score of the two games was 3 to 3, Frankfurt won the Cup based on the higher number of away goals.[110] The final four of UEFA Cup teams were all West German, with Bayern Munich and Stuttgart having won their quarterfinals in March.

May 22, 1980 (Thursday) edit

May 23, 1980 (Friday) edit

  • Relocation began of the 710 families of the Love Canal neighborhood of the city of Niagara Falls, New York, almost two years after a state of emergency had been declared by the New York State Health Commission of the land's contamination by dioxin and other hazardous chemicals dumped by the Hooker Chemical Company.[115] Initially, the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) proposed only to pay the costs of relocating the families for only one year, but the U.S. and New York governments would eventually purchase the contaminated property and work for decades on an environmental cleanup.[116]
  • A mid-season strike by Major League Baseball players was averted a few hours before it would have canceled its first game.[117] The strike deadline had passed at 12:01 in the morning, but representatives of the 26 National League and American League owners had continued discussions in New York with the Major League Baseball Players Association (MLBPA) union and reached an agreement at 5:00 in the morning Eastern time. The first game that would have been called off, the Los Angeles Dodgers' at the Chicago Cubs, began as scheduled at 1:30, with the Cubs winning, 2 to 0.
  • The Shining, Stanley Kubrick's classic horror film, adapted from Stephen King's novel, was released in theaters nationwide. While the movie was popular, critics were generally unfavorable, with one noting that the film "takes two and a half hours to go nowhere"[118] and another commenting that "the film is too grandiose to be the jolter that horror pictures are expected to be."[119]
  • Died:
    • Terry Furlow, 25, American NBA basketball guard for the Utah Jazz, was killed in a car wreck, less than two months after the end of the season.[120]
    • Munir Sarhadi, 48, Pakistani musician who played the sarangi, a Hindustani string instrument.

May 24, 1980 (Saturday) edit

May 25, 1980 (Sunday) edit

  • The Republic of Vemerana was declared on the island of Espiritu Santo in the New Hebrides (now Vanuatu), with Jimmy Stevens as its Prime Minister. Sources with the colonial government said that the separatists had been funded by an American group of businessmen, the Phoenix Foundation, of Carson City, Nevada, with the objective of establishing "an independent country, free of taxes and government restrictions".[126] After the New Hebrides was granted independence in July as Vanuatu, the Vemerana rebellion was ended in August.
  • Johnny Rutherford won a third Indianapolis 500 while driving Jim Hall's revolutionary ground effect Chaparral car, designed by John Bernard and fabricated by Bob Sparshot. The race was the slowest in 18 years, with the winner driving at an average speed of less than 143 miles per hour (230 km/h)[127]
  • Boxer James Scott, a contender for the world light heavyweight title despite having to conduct his bouts at the Rahway State Prison in New Jersey, had his first professional loss, in an upset by Jerry "Bull" Martin.[128] Scott, convicted of the murder of Everett Russ,[129] would get a reversal of his conviction and a new trial, but would be found guilty in January and sentenced to life in prison. Martin's loss and his subsequent conviction ended his aspiration for a world title.

May 26, 1980 (Monday) edit

  • Bertalan Farkas, the first cosmonaut from Hungary, was launched on Soyuz 36 to the Salyut 6 space station along with Valeri Kubasov at 9:21 p.m. Moscow time (1821 UTC) from Baikonur Cosmodrome in the Kazakh SSR.[130] Farkas and Kubasov returned to Earth on July 31.
  • Former U.N. Ambassador and Congressman George Bush, Ronald Reagan's remaining opponent for the Republican nomination, conceded defeat and urged his supporters to back Reagan. Speaking from his campaign headquarters in Houston, Bush said "I see the world not as I wish it were, but as it is." Six days earlier, Bush had seen the biggest victory of his campaign, a 2 to 1 win over Reagan in the Michigan primary, but Reagan had reached the number of delegates necessary for nomination in other primary results that evening.[131] As Reagan's running mate, Bush would be elected Vice President of the United States in November and would be elected the 41st President of the United States in 1988.
  • In Bloomington, California, serial killer Stephen Wayne Anderson burglarized the house of 81-year-old Elizabeth Lyman, murdered her, robbed her house, and then prepared himself a meal in her kitchen. As Anderson, who had escaped from the Utah State Prison on November 12, was eating and watching television, San Bernardino County Sheriff's deputies responded to a neighbor's call and arrested him.[132] Anderson admitted to the murder of Lyman and eight other people, and would be executed by lethal injection at California's San Quentin State Prison on January 29, 2002.[133]

May 27, 1980 (Tuesday) edit

  • Hundreds of protesters were killed in Gwangju by Republic of Korea Army troops, bringing an end to a rebellion that had started on May 18 at Chonnam University.[134] After rebels had taken control of the city of 800,000 from local police days earlier, an ultimatum was delivered to the rebels at 2:00 in the morning to lay down their weapons. Ninety minutes later, tanks and troops moved in and took control of the city by dawn, followed by house-to-house searches for insurgents.[135] Official figures released by the Martial Law Command put the death toll at 144 civilians, 22 troops and four police killed, but the actual death toll may have been as high as the 2,000 range.[136]
  • Haiti's President, Jean-Claude Duvalier married Michèle Bennett Pasquet in a wedding that cost the nation three million U.S. dollars.[137] The extravagance of the couple's wedding did not lack local critics, though The Christian Science Monitor reported that the event was "enthusiastically received by a majority of Haitians."[138]
  • Prime Minister Hua Guofeng flew to Tokyo to make the first state visit by a Chinese leader to Japan in almost 2,000 years.[139] Hua remained in Japan for six days after being greeted at Haneda Airport by Japan's ailing Prime Minister Ohira, and then made a courtesy call to the Emperor Hirohito.
  • Died:
    • Ted DeVita, 17, nicknamed the "Bubble Boy" because he spent the final years of his life in a protective environment in order to protect him from his lack of immunity to disease. DeVita had developed aplastic anemia in 1972 and resided at a sterile isolation room at the National Institutes of Health facility in Bethesda, Maryland, though he was sometimes allowed to make short excursions from the hospital in a protective space suit that he eventually outgrew. The frequent blood transfusions that had protected him had gradually caused him heart trouble from a buildup of iron in his blood.[140]
    • Gün Sazak, 48, Turkish nationalist politician and former government minister, was assassinated in a drive-by shooting.[141] Sazak, deputy chairman of the right-wing Action Party, had been outside his home in the Kavaklıdere neighborhood of Ankara and was loading luggage in his car when he was shot in the head and in the stomach by two gunmen.

May 28, 1980 (Wednesday) edit

 
 
The old and new flag of Newfoundland
  • The Flag of Newfoundland (now Newfoundland and Labrador) was approved by the House of Assembly of the province of Newfoundland by a vote of 22 to 10. The geometrical design by Chris Pratt, of "six triangles and an arrow" had been unveiled on April 29 and eliminated any use of the former British flag, the Union Jack, which had been adopted as Newfoundland's official provincial flag in 1952.
  • Died: Walter Tobagi, 33, Italian journalist and writer, was killed in a terrorist attack by the Brigade XXVIII March, a left-wing terrorist group.

May 29, 1980 (Thursday) edit

 
Jordan
  • American civil rights leader Vernon Jordan, the president of the National Urban League, was shot and critically injured by a sniper as he stepped out of his car in Fort Wayne, Indiana.[147] Jordan had addressed 450 people at a dinner for the Urban League at the Marriott Inn the night before, and was at the hotel parking lot at 2:05 in the morning. The assassination attempt, made from a car that had stopped on an exit ramp on Interstate Highway 69 in sight of the hotel, was later charged to Joseph Paul Franklin.
  • The U.S. Federal Communications Commission voted to limit the protection for the nation's 25 clear-channel stations to a 750-mile (1,207 km) radius around the transmitter.[148] Stations on those AM radio frequencies outside the area of protection were no longer required to sign off or power down after sundown.

May 30, 1980 (Friday) edit

  • Pope John Paul II became the first pontiff in more than 175 years to visit France, arriving at Orly Airport near Paris, where he was greeted by France's Prime Minister Raymond Barre. The Pope and his retinue then flew by helicopter to a meeting with President Valery Giscard d'Estaing. The last papal visit had been by Pius VII, who had presided at the December 2, 1804, Coronation of Napoleon I.
  • The first of six women to die in the Tynong North and Frankston Murders in Australia, Allison Rooke, disappeared after experiencing trouble with her car. Rooke, a 66 year old resident of Frankston, Victoria, had told neighbors she was preparing to take a bus to do grocery shopping at the Frankston Shopping Centre and to see a realtor. Her decomposed body was found on July 5.[149]
  • A federal court ruled, in the case of Fricke v. Lynch, that a gay high school student could bring a same-sex date to a high school dance.[150] The Court held that the free speech provisions of the First Amendment protected the rights of gay and lesbian students to attend their high school events with a date of their choice. Amid heavy security, Aaron Fricke appeared that evening at the senior prom for Cumberland High School with a male companion, Paul Guilbert. The dance itself took place at the Pleasant Valley Country Club at Sutton, Massachusetts rather than at Rhode Island high school. Since the Fricke ruling, American public high schools increasingly allowed gay and lesbian students to attend school functions with their same-sex partners.

May 31, 1980 (Saturday) edit

  • Japan's Prime Minister Masayoshi Ohira was hospitalized for exhaustion the day after campaigning opened for the June 22 general election. Ohira had complained of tiredness for several days before making speeches in Tokyo on the first day of the campaign, and was taken by ambulance to the Toranomon Hospital in Tokyo after becoming ill at home.[151] Doctors diagnosed him with angina pectoris and recommended that he remain in the hospital and Ohira turned the campaign for the Liberal Democratic Party to the LDP vice chairman, Eiichi Nishimura, on June 6. While in the hospital, Ohira suffered a heart attack and died on June 12.

References edit

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  82. ^ "Kennedy: If Carter debates, then beats me June 3, I'll quit", St. Petersburg (FL) Times, May 16, 1980, p1
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  85. ^ "It's MAGIC! The New Starting Center Puts Lakers Over the Top, 123-107", Los Angeles Times, May 17, 1980, pIII-1
  86. ^ "'Magic' makes Sixers vanish— Johnson scores 42 as Lakers win title", Philadelphia Inquirer, May 17, 1980, pC-1
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1980, 1011, 1718, 2425, 311980, january, february, march, april, june, july, august, september, october, november, december, 1980, eradication, smallpox, announced, world, health, organizationmay, 1980, mount, helens, volcano, erupts, kills, americansmay, 1980. lt lt May 1980 gt gt Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa0 1 0 2 0 30 4 0 5 0 6 0 7 0 8 0 9 1011 12 13 14 15 16 1718 19 20 21 22 23 2425 26 27 28 29 30 311980 January February March April May June July August September October November December May 8 1980 Eradication of smallpox announced by World Health OrganizationMay 18 1980 Mount St Helens volcano erupts kills 57 AmericansMay 8 1980 The world s leaders appear for Josip Broz Tito s funeral 1 Contents 1 May 1 1980 Thursday 2 May 2 1980 Friday 3 May 3 1980 Saturday 4 May 4 1980 Sunday 5 May 5 1980 Monday 6 May 6 1980 Tuesday 7 May 7 1980 Wednesday 8 May 8 1980 Thursday 9 May 9 1980 Friday 10 May 10 1980 Saturday 11 May 11 1980 Sunday 12 May 12 1980 Monday 13 May 13 1980 Tuesday 14 May 14 1980 Wednesday 15 May 15 1980 Thursday 16 May 16 1980 Friday 17 May 17 1980 Saturday 18 May 18 1980 Sunday 19 May 19 1980 Monday 20 May 20 1980 Tuesday 21 May 21 1980 Wednesday 22 May 22 1980 Thursday 23 May 23 1980 Friday 24 May 24 1980 Saturday 25 May 25 1980 Sunday 26 May 26 1980 Monday 27 May 27 1980 Tuesday 28 May 28 1980 Wednesday 29 May 29 1980 Thursday 30 May 30 1980 Friday 31 May 31 1980 Saturday 32 ReferencesMay 1 1980 Thursday editThe first U S government shutdown for lack of funding took place as the U S Federal Trade Commission ceased operations 2 A total of 1 600 workers were furloughed and meetings and court dates were canceled 3 The shutdown ended that evening with the House approving a 7 6 million extension of funding 284 96 and the Senate 71 10 4 The shutdown was estimated to cost 700 000 of which 600 000 was for salaries About that urban renaissance there ll be a slight delay an article by journalist Dan Rottenberg in Chicago magazine contained the first recorded use of the word yuppie to refer to a young urban professional Referring to the migration of renters and buyers to Chicago from its suburbs Rottenberg wrote Some 20 000 new dwelling units have been built within two miles of the Loop over the past ten years to accommodate the rising tide of Yuppies young urban professionals rebelling against the stodgy suburban lifestyles of their parents 5 Pacific Southwest Airlines Flight 818 was hijacked shortly after taking off from Stockton California for Los Angeles 6 The hijacker from Ceres scaled a fence at the Stockton Municipal Airport then ran across the grounds to where stairs had been lowered for the outside boarding of the Boeing 727 He then held one hostage PSA flight engineer Alan Romatowski at gunpoint for six hours until Romatowski overpowered and disarmed him 7 The hijacker s father said that his 25 year old son had written a screenplay about a young man hijacking an airplane kidnapping a senator flying to Iran and kidnapping the Ayatollah in order to get the hostages back to the U S safely 8 After being convicted in November by a jury that rejected his defense of temporary insanity the hijacker was sentenced to 15 years imprisonment with the provision that he would receive psychiatric treatment until federal parole officers determined that he could be released 9 Pick Six betting the first large jackpot wagering game in the United States was introduced for horse race betting based on the daily races at the Hollywood Park Racetrack in Inglewood California 10 Under a format similar to a long operating program at Mexico s Agua Caliente Racetrack in Tijuana a bettor could by a Pick Six betting card for two dollars to choose the winners for six consecutive races the third through eighth races at Hollypark or pay 128 for picking two possibilities for the winners of six races with all combinations priced under formula of 2 x n6 with n being the number of possibilities 11 The people who picked the most winners out of six races would split 75 of the pool of Pick Six purchases Seventeen bettors received 8 491 apiece for picking all six winners in the first day of Pick Six 12 Died Henry Levin 70 American film director died of a heart attack while directing the television film Scout s Honor May 2 1980 Friday editA referendum on system of government was held in Nepal the first voting in 22 years 13 Voters decided to keep the panchayat political system that had prevailed since 1962 14 when an indirectly elected legislature the Rastriya Panchayat was created to advise King Mahendra Votes were made by stamping the ballot blue for the restoration of political parties or yellow for retaining the panchayat system The U S Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals issued its decision in Amstar Corp v Domino s Pizza Inc 617 F 2d 295 reversing a lower court decision that had ruled that Domino s Pizza would have to change its name so as not to infringe the trademark of Domino Sugar 15 While the suit was in progress new franchises for the pizza restaurant carried the name Pizza Dispatch 16 One quarter of Sweden s workers went on strike or were locked out by employers after the 2 200 000 member Trade Unions Confederation Landsorganisationen i Sverige or LO was unable to reach an agreement with the Swedish Employers Association Svenska Arbetsgivareforeningen on wage increases 17 May 3 1980 Saturday editGenuine Risk became the second female winner in the history of the Kentucky Derby and the first since Regret won in 1915 as the filly finished in first place against a field of 12 colts 18 An explosion at a fireworks factory killed at least 40 of the workers mostly women and children and severely injured 11 more at the city of Mandir Hasod in the Madhya Pradesh state of India 19 Cari Lightner a 13 year old girl was killed by a drunken driver while walking in a bike lane along Sunset Boulevard and New York Avenues in Fair Oaks California 20 The driver was soon released leading her mother to found Mothers Against Drunk Driving The 46 year old driver who had recently been arrested for another DUI hit and run left Cari s body at the scene Cari s mother Candace Candy Lightner organized Mothers Against Drunk Driving and subsequently served as its founding president 21 A 1983 television movie about Lightner garnered publicity for the group which grew rapidly The Irving Texas based organization was founded on September 5 1980 The Helsinki Convention on the Protection of the Marine Environment of the Baltic Sea Area signed in 1974 entered into force after having been signed by East Germany Poland Finland Denmark Sweden with an agreement not to allow pollution of the Baltic 22 Annie Wu Suk ching established Beijing Air Catering Ltd the first joint venture company to be set up in the People s Republic of China since 1954 23 A group of 3 000 protesters set up a camp at Gorleben in Luchow Dannenberg Wendland in the Lower Saxony state of West Germany to protest against the establishment of a nuclear waste dump 24 and declared the occupied area as the Free Republic of Wendland Freie Republik Wendland The Free Republic lasted for 32 days until police moved in on June 4 to evict the protesters 25 26 Died George P Elliott 61 American poet and novelistMay 4 1980 Sunday edit nbsp Josip Broz Tito Yugoslav President Josip Broz Tito died at 3 05 in the afternoon at the University of Ljubljana Medical Center 27 Vice President Lazar Kolisevski the Communist leader of the Yugoslavian state of Macedonia temporarily became president until the scheduled expiration of his one year vice presidency on May 15 Pope John Paul II issued a decree barring Roman Catholic priests from serving in political offices Among those affected by the ruling was U S Representative Robert F Drinan of Massachusetts a Jesuit priest and the only Roman Catholic cleric in Congress Drinan a Democrat was running for a sixth term of office and withdrew from the race in accordance with the papal order 28 In a rush to see the Pope during his visit to Zaire nine people were killed in Kinshasa and 72 others injured when the gates were opened to the grounds of the People s Palace 29 The United States Department of Education began operations in Washington DC after separating from the U S Department of Health Education and Welfare 30 Shirley Hufstedler took office as the first cabinet level Secretary of Education May 5 1980 Monday editCommandos from Britain s 22nd Special Air Service SAS rescued the 19 of the remaining 21 hostages in the siege of the Iranian Embassy in London The attack was ordered after the occupying terrorists executed two of the hostages following Iran s refusal to release political prisoners Three of the five terrorists were killed and the other two were captured 31 The bodies of the eight U S servicemen who had been killed during the Desert One attempt to rescue the American hostages at the U S Embassy were flown out of Iran from the Mehrabad International Airport to Zurich 32 A U S Air Force C 130 then transported the nine caskets which included the remains of another person whom the Iranian government insisted was one of the American raiders to Dover Air Force Base in Delaware the next day 33 On Sunday Iranian government had allowed the remains to be removed from the city morgue in Tehran after an agreement was signed with Syrian Catholic Archbishop Hilarion Capucci Roman Catholic nuncio Annibale Bugnini and Switzerland s Ambassador to Iran Erik Lang 34 Konstantinos Karamanlis was elected as the new President of Greece after the Parliament voted 183 to 117 for him to succeed President Konstantinos Tsatsos in June Karmanalis had served as Prime Minister since 1974 35 The Petition of Fifty Petisi 50 was signed by 50 prominent Indonesians including former prime ministers Burhanuddin Harahap and Mohammad Natsir to protest President Suharto s use of the state policy of Pancasila against political opponents 36 Freelance U S journalist Cynthia Dwyer was taken prisoner in Tehran where she had been reporting on the U S Embassy hostage crisis Iranian guards went to Dwyer s room at the Hilton Hotel in Tehran and charge her with being a spy for the U S Central Intelligence Agency 37 She would be held captive until February 10 1981 when she was expelled from the country Born Hank Green American Internet personality author and entrepreneur in Birmingham Alabama Died Emanuele Basile 30 Italian police captain the chief of the Carabinieri s district in Sicily after being shot the night before as he was walking into his home town of Monreale 38 The killing prompted the issuance of 55 arrest warrants the next day against the Cosa Nostra drug traffickers 39 May 6 1980 Tuesday editIn a rare labor strike in the Soviet Union 200 000 employees of AvtoVAZ auto and truck manufacturing plants in the city of Gorky now Nizhny Novgorod walked off of the job and refused to work for three days as a protest against inadequate supplies of food 40 The employees returned to work on May 8 after fresh food was rushed to the two industrial complexes Although no mention of a disturbance was made in the state controlled Soviet press reports reached the Moscow bureau of Financial Times the London business daily newspaper which published the information on June 14 41 The plants in co operation with Italy s Fiat company manufactured the Soviet Lada automobile and now have operations in the city of Tolyatti In the U S the NBC television network announced that it would not telecast the 1980 Summer Olympics from Moscow 42 Edgar H Griffiths Chairman of NBC s parent company RCA said at a meeting of RCA stockholders NBC will not be televising the Olympics because the U S team will not be participating because this is not in accord with the policy of the president of the United States NBC had spent US 70 000 000 for rights to and preparation for the broadcast Even after insurance paid for most of the loss the company still lost 22 000 000 Faced with the impossibility of reconciling the various factions vying for power in the Chadian Civil War French forces withdrew their last troops after three years of operations NASA announced the discovery of a previously unknown 15th moon of the planet Jupiter found by astronomer Stephen P Synnott on an image transmitted by Voyager 1 on March 5 1979 and on seven other photos 43 Temporarily designated as S 1979 J 3 the small moon is now called Metis 44 Born Kasumi Takahashi Japanese born Australian gymnast and winner of five gold medals at the age of 14 in Tokyo Died Andrew Durant 25 Australian musician for the country rock group Stars died of cancer May 7 1980 Wednesday editAt the age of 86 Paul Geidel convicted of second degree murder in 1911 was released from the Fishkill Correctional Facility in Beacon New York after 68 years and 245 days marking the longest ever time served by an American inmate 45 Geidel a bellboy at the Iroquois Hotel in New York City had been arrested on July 28 1911 at the age of 17 after killing an elderly stockbroker and hotel guest William Henry Jackson 46 From 1926 to 1972 he had been confined at the Dannemora State Hospital for the Criminal Insane Paroled in 1974 he elected to stay in prison for six more years He died in a nursing home in 1987 The appointment of U S Senator Edmund Muskie of Maine as the new U S Secretary of State was confirmed by his colleagues 94 to 2 47 The only votes against him were those of Senator Gordon J Humphrey of New Hampshire and Jesse Helms of North Carolina Muskie himself voted present He then resigned and was sworn into office as a cabinet secretary the next day Roberto D Aubuisson Salvadoran politician believed to have ordered the assassination of Archbishop Oscar Romero was arrested on a farm and charged with planning a coup d etat to depose the ruling junta He was soon released and resumed his campaign of terror 48 May 8 1980 Thursday editFrank Fenner announced the global eradication of smallpox on behalf of the World Health Organization WHO 49 50 51 The largest state funeral in history was held as world leaders from 128 of the 154 United Nations members appeared for the services for the late Yugoslavian President Josip Broz Tito 52 nbsp AquinoFormer Philippine Senator Benigno Aquino Jr the one time opposition leader and a critic of President Ferdinand Marcos was released from Manila s Fort Bonifacio prison after being in detention since 1972 53 Marcos had given his approval and the Philippine Supreme Court concurred in order for Aquino to travel to the United States for heart bypass surgery Aquino departed the next day pledging to return to jail within four weeks He elected not to come back until 1983 and would be assassinated upon his return to Manila Died Dr Farrokhroo Parsa 58 the first female Iranian cabinet minister and former Minister of Education of Iran was executed by firing squad 54 May 9 1980 Friday editAt 7 38 a m in Florida the Liberian freighter Summit Venture hit the Sunshine Skyway Bridge over Tampa Bay 55 A 1 400 foot 430 m section of the bridge collapsed killing 35 people Twenty three of the dead had been the passengers and driver of a Greyhound bus that had just departed St Petersburg Florida as one of its stops on the way from Chicago to Miami Vijayalakshmi clinic opened by Dr Seshagirirao at Nakka veedhi junction CB road Srikakulam India To serve the poor people medically 56 The second round of voting for Iran s parliament was conducted with runoff elections for 124 of the 270 seats where no candidate had received a majority on March 14 On March 14 98 seats had been filled by a clear majority The radical Islamic Republican Party won a plurality of the seats Voting was still postponed for 48 other seats in districts that were experiencing anti government unrest With 222 of the seats decided the Majlis could convene and pass legislation under the republic s constitution which allowed parliament to be held with a two thirds quorum 180 of 270 members present 57 The U S Immigration and Naturalization Service transferred the first of thousands of Cuban refugees from Florida to Fort Chaffee a U S Army base near Fort Smith Arkansas and expected that as many as 20 000 arrivals from the Mariel boatlift would be housed there 58 William J Murray the son of Madalyn Murray O Hair and the plaintiff on whose behalf the Murray v Curlett was decided by the U S Supreme Court issued its ruling against prayer in American public schools issued a public apology for his role in the court decision Murray wrote in a letter If it were within my personal power to help to return this nation to its rightful place by placing God back in the classroom I would do so O Hair s response was Pretty strange I think what this is he s after mother again But don t ask me why 59 60 Died James Alexander George Smith Jags McCartney 34 Chief Minister of the Turks and Caicos Islands since 1976 was killed in the crash of a twin engine Cessna 411 private plane after departing from Washington D C to Atlantic City 61 After an apparent engine malfunction the plane went down in a wooded area in Vineland New Jersey at about 3 00 p m killing all four people aboard McCartney was identified from dental records after his passport and other documents were found in the wreckage Kate Molale 52 South African political activist died six days after an auto accident in Morogoro Tanzania May 10 1980 Saturday editEight Cuban Air Force MiG fighter planes attacked and sank the patrol boat HMBS Flamingo a patrol boat of the Royal Bahamas Defence Force after Flamingo attempted to seize two Cuban fishing vessels Ferrocem 165 and Ferrocem 54 which had entered Bahamian territorial waters near Ragged Island 62 63 Four of the Bahamian Marines were killed while the commander of Flamingo and the 15 remaining crew were picked up by the vessels 64 Lee Iacocca Chairman of the Board of the Chrysler Corporation received final approval from the three member U S Chrysler Loan Guarantee Board for a federally guaranteed 1 5 billion loan from the United States Treasury The money which was available to Chrysler starting May 27 was sufficient to rescue the company from bankruptcy Treasury Secretary G William Miller conceded that without federal aid quite frankly the resources of Chrysler would be exhausted this month 65 Greek Prime Minister Konstantinos Karamanlis was sworn in as the new President of Greece succeeding Christos Sartzetakis Georgios Rallis became the new Prime Minister of Greece For the first time in the history of the Statue of Liberty the 94 year old structure was scaled by climbers Mountaineers Kevin Drummond and Stephen Rutherford had staged the event to protest the 1972 murder conviction of Black Panther leader Geronimo Pratt In the process they caused an estimated 80 000 in damage to the thin copper skin of the robe of Miss Liberty before spending the night on the gigantic foot of the statue 66 May 11 1980 Sunday editAfter ten days the worst labor crisis in the history of Sweden came to an end when the Svenska Arbetsgivareforeningen the nation s federation of employers agreed to a plan by a government arbitration panel to raise employee s wages by 7 3 percent 67 Earlier in the day Director Olof Lungren of the employer s federation announced the rejection of the plan calling it destructive for Sweden s economy Prime Minister Thorbjorn Falldin called an emergency meeting of the cabinet and successfully urged the employer s to reverse their stance in order to end the strike which had idled 31 000 companies and idled 800 000 workers and shut down television broadcasts public transportation air travel and non emergency medical services One hour after Falldin summoned Lungren to his office the employer s federation announced that it would make the 7 3 increase which had already been agreed to by the 2 200 000 member confederation of unions the Landsorganisationen i Sverige LO 17 May 12 1980 Monday editThe first crossing of North America by balloon was successfully completed by Maxie Anderson and his son Kristian Anderson as the Kitty Hawk landed near the village of Grosses Roches 68 Quebec The balloon landed at 7 30 in the morning four days after departing Fort Baker California 69 Anderson was killed on June 27 1983 near Bad Kissingen West Germany Colonel Jaime Abdul Gutierrez became the new Chairman of the Revolutionary Government Junta of El Salvador after Adolfo Arnoldo Majano left 70 Born Rishi Sunak British Indian politician Prime Minister of the United Kingdom 71 May 13 1980 Tuesday edit nbsp An implanted ICD 72 Inventors Michel Mirowski Morton M Mower Alois A Langer and Marlin S Heilman were issued U S Patent 4 202 340 for the ICD the first heart defibrillator that could be surgically implanted Pending since February 15 1978 the patent application was titled Method and Apparatus for Monitoring Heart Activity Detecting Abnormalities and Cardioverting a Malfunctiong Heart 73 The U S Imported Oil Fee was declared unconstitutional May 14 1980 Wednesday editThe Sumpul River massacre occurred in Chalatenango in El Salvador as the Salvadoran Army killed more than 300 refugees who were trying to flee into neighboring Honduras during the government s campaign against the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front FMLN guerrilla group 74 nbsp nbsp nbsp HEW split into HHS and DOE The United States Department of Health Education and Welfare HEW was renamed the United States Department of Health and Human Services HHS in advance of the inauguration of the new U S Department of Education 75 HEW Secretary Patricia Roberts Harris who remained after U S Department of Education was created on May 4 continued as HHS Secretary 76 In South Korea at least 50 000 university students battled with police and army troops in six cities demanding that President Chun Doo hwan resign and martial law be lifted 77 At Seoul riot police fired tear gas to rout students as they approached the national capitol and anti government demonstrators stole three city buses to push back police barricades while another 10 000 protested at Gwangju Protests also broke out in Daegu Jeonju Suwon and Incheon After martial law was extended to the entire nation the government arrested the leaders of the student movement and protests escalated eventually to be shut down with mass killings May 15 1980 Thursday editLibya s President Muammar Gadaffi announced a currency exchange program and the introduction of new Libyan dinar banknotes for the five and ten dinar denominations worth at the time 16 and 32 and directed that citizens would be allowed one week to exchange their existing notes at the Central State Bank branches after which only the old 5 and 10 dinar notes would be worthless 78 People making the exchange however were informed that only 1 000 dinars worth of new notes would be allowed per customer a move that effectively wiped out the savings of the middle class as well as the hoarded cash of the black marketeers and that brought a windfall of 1 5 billion to the cash starved Treasury After a public uproar announced on June 11 that the seized money would not be confiscated or invested without full consultation with the 167 local People s Congresses in Libya 79 Cvijetin Mijatovic became the new Yugoslavian head of state as Chairman of the Collective Presidency which rotated annually among the heads of the six constituent republics and two autonomous provinces Mijatovic the leader of the SR Bosnia Herzegovina succeeded Lazar Kolisevski who had assumed office 11 days earlier on the death of President Tito and served exactly one year until May 15 1981 80 West Germany s Olympic Committee joined the group of nations boycotting the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow after its delegates voted 59 to 40 to punish the Soviet Union for its invasion of Afghanistan 81 U S Senator Edward M Kennedy trailing in the delegate count in his campaign against President Carter for the Democratic Party nomination offered to drop out of the race if Carter would agree to a nationally televised debate Carter declined the challenge 82 May 16 1980 Friday edit nbsp Prime Minister Ohira 83 By a margin of 243 against him and only 187 in his favor Japan s Prime Minister Masayoshi Ohira and his government lost a vote of confidence in the Shugiin the lower house of Japan s bicameral parliament the National Diet 84 Ohira was reportedly stunned as members of his own Liberal Democratic Party LDP abstained rather than voting in his favor on a resolution that he had been expecting to win by a simple majority The action marked the first time in 27 years that a ruling prime minister had lost a confidence vote Given the choice between resigning or calling new elections Ohira chose the latter and died a few weeks later during the campaign Rookie Earvin Magic Johnson scored 42 points to lead the Los Angeles Lakers to a 123 107 victory over the Philadelphia 76ers to clinch the National Basketball Association championship in Game 6 of the best 4 of 7 series for the Lakers 85 The Lakers prevailed despite the absence of Kareem Abdul Jabbar who had sprained his ankle two days earlier Although the game was tied 50 to 50 at halftime the Lakers had an 83 73 lead after three quarters High scorer for the Sixers was Julius Dr J Erving who had 27 points 86 May 17 1980 Saturday editA U S federal court jury in Tampa Florida acquitted four members of the Miami Dade Police Department of civil rights charges in the Miami killing of Arthur McDuffie an African American insurance executive The decision that led to three days of rioting in Miami that killed 19 people and injured 350 87 The 12 member jury composed of all white men returned its verdict at 2 36 in the afternoon after deliberating for three hours Less than four hours after the verdict was reported an estimated 5 000 outraged black Miamians surrounded Miami s Metro Justice Center building and violence began Three people were dead by midnight in the predominantly black Liberty City neighborhood 88 On December 17 McDuffie had been beaten by the four defendants who had chased him after he had reportedly driven through a red traffic light on his motorcycle and he died four days later After their exoneration the four police officers and another suspended policeman were restored to their jobs 89 In the worst accident since the Mariel boatlift had started a yacht carrying 52 Cuban refugees capsized in the Caribbean Sea 28 miles 45 km north of Cuba Ten people drowned and four others were missing Two U S Coast Guard cutters USCGC Courageous and USCGC Vigorous rescued 38 passengers only half of whom had life jackets The two member crew of the boat the Olo Yumi did not send a distress signal and the rescue did not begin until a Coast Guard helicopter spotted it while on patrol 90 A high profile national memorial ceremony was held for the last President of China Liu Shaoqi more than a decade after he had died in disgrace in 1969 91 Liu s ashes were scattered into the sea at Qingdao in accordance with his last wishes May 18 1980 Sunday editThe Mount St Helens volcano in Washington erupted at 8 32 in the morning 92 Fifty seven people were killed 250 homes 47 bridges 15 miles 24 km of railways and 185 miles 298 km of highway were destroyed A massive debris avalanche triggered by an earthquake of magnitude 5 1 93 caused a lateral eruption that reduced the elevation of the mountain s summit from 9 677 ft 2 950 m to 8 363 ft 2 549 m leaving a 1 mile 1 6 km wide horseshoe shaped crater The debris avalanche was up to 0 7 cubic miles 2 9 km3 in volume nbsp Gossamer PenguinInvented by engineer Paul MacCready the Gossamer Penguin the first solar powered experimental aircraft made its initial flight using and airstrip at Minter Field an airport serving Shafter California 94 The inventor s 13 year old son Marshall MacCready piloted the plane adding 80 pounds 36 kg to the 62 lb 28 kg Gossamer Penguin While the solar plane powered by banks of photovoltaic cells was not able to lift off on its own it was flown for 100 yards 91 m at an altitude of 12 feet 3 7 m and an average speed of 15 miles per hour 24 km h 94 The People s Republic of China successfully tested its first intercontinental ballistic missile ICBM the DF 5 Dongfeng 5 The Xinhua News Agency then announced China achieved complete success this morning in launching its first carrier rocket to the destined area in the Pacific Ocean Believed by western analysts to have been launched from the Xinjiang province the missile traveled 6 200 miles 10 000 km to a target in the South Pacific A U S Associated Press report commented that A missile with that range could carry a nuclear warhead to anywhere in the Soviet Union or to the west coast of the United States 95 nbsp The May 18th Minjung Struggle Memorial Tower commemorating the Gwangju UprisingThe Gwangju Uprising began at Chonnam National University hours after a spokesman for South Korea s President Chun Doo hwan announced that martial law would be extended across the entire nation of 38 million people and the Republic of Korea Army Chief of Staff General Lee Hui Sung closed all universities and schools and banning all political gatherings The decree banned people from striking or failing to show up for work required advance review and censorship of press reports and provided that people violating the martial law order could be searched arrested or detained without warrants 96 Political opponents of President Chun were arrested including former presidential candidate Kim Dae jung and former Prime Minister Kim Jong pil the leader of South Korea s Democratic Republican Party Minju Gonghwadang The first elections in Peru since 1963 was conducted to elect a President and for the 60 senators and 180 deputies of the Peruvian Congress Former president Fernando Belaunde Terry won 45 of the vote ahead of Armando Villanueva and 13 other candidates Under the constitution the candidate with the largest number of votes had to have a minimum of 35 of the votes cast Belaunde had been the winner of the last election in 1963 before he was deposed in a coup d etat 97 Born Kawee Tanjararak Beam Thai singer and member of the Thai boy band D2B in Bangkok nbsp Blackburn s car after the Mount St Helens eruptionDied Persons killed in the eruption of Mount St Helens eruption included Reid Blackburn 27 photographer for the Vancouver Washington newspaper The Columbian Robert Landsburg 48 a freelance photographer at the scene David A Johnston 30 a volcanologist for the United States Geological Survey Harry R Truman 83 a retired businessman bootlegger and prospector who told reporters that he would refuse to leave his home Died Ian Curtis 23 singer songwriter of acclaimed English post punk band Joy Division in Macclesfield hanged himself May 19 1980 Monday edit nbsp Korean National AssemblySouth Korea s military leaders ordered the shutdown of the nation s 300 member unicameral parliament the National Assembly Daehanminguk Gukhoe one day before it was to begin its new session and closed the headquarters of both major political parties the Democratic Republican Party and the opposition New Democratic Party The New Democrats had previously announced that they would introduce a resolution that would legally end martial law 98 William Voltz the captain of American Airlines Flight 71 saved 261 people at Chicago s O Hare International Airport averting a collision with Braniff International flight 231 at the last moment during a landing Both aircraft were Boeing 727 airliners The American flight from Newark had 128 on board and was cleared to land on O Hare s Runway 9 Left which intersected Runway 4 Left where the Braniff jet with 133 on board was taxiing for takeoff to Kansas City Voltz was able to lift his plane and missed the Braniff 727 by only 100 feet 30 m 99 May 20 1980 Tuesday editVoters in Quebec rejected independence from Canada by a margin of 60 to 40 100 The question on the ballot was whether to give the Canadian province exclusive power to make its laws levy its taxes and establish relations abroad in other words sovereignty and at the same time to maintain with Canada an economic association including a common currency 101 Quebec d acquerir le pouvoir exclusif de faire ses lois de percevoir ses impots et d etablir ses relations exterieures ce qui est la souverainete et en meme temps de maintenir avec le Canada une association economique comportant l utilisation de la meme monnaie A fire killed 157 elderly women residing at the Eventide Home for the Aged in Kingston Jamaica 102 The telephone wires to the home had been severed and four men were seen running from the building shortly before the blaze started at 1 00 in the morning but the arsonists were never located or identified 103 Shin Hyun hwak resigned after five months as Prime Minister of South Korea along with all 18 members of his cabinet in protest over the installation of martial law 104 As the protests in Gwangju developed into a civilian rebellion South Korean Air Force Major General Park Choon hoon was named the next day as the new Prime Minister and many of Premier Shin s cabinet returned to their positions 105 The first test launch of the Kh 80 Meteorit Soviet cruise missile was made but failed because the missile failed to emerge from its container on the mobile ground launcher and burned the mechanism instead 106 Three other attempts were unsuccessful until December 16 1981 when the missile launched successfully and flew 50 kilometres 31 mi It had a maximum range of 5 000 kilometres 3 100 mi Henryk Jaskula of Poland became the third man to circumnavigate the globe non stop and single handed returning in yacht Dar Przemyski to the port of Gdynia where he had departed on June 12 1979 Jaskula would die less than a week before the 40th anniversary of his cruise at the age of 96 107 May 21 1980 Wednesday edit nbsp The Empire Strikes Back the long awaited sequel to the 1977 blockbuster Star Wars premiered in 126 cities in the United States and Canada in advance of Memorial Day weekend 108 and would become the highest grossing film of the year It had been unveiled on May 17 at the Kennedy Center in Washington DC In Deadwood South Dakota a raid by county state and federal agents closed the houses of prostitution that had been allowed to operate for more than a century since Deadwood s Wild West days of the 1870s Deadwood s three remaining brothels The White Door Pam s Purple Door and Dixie s Green Door were closed down as the new local government did as one reporter put it what Marshal Hickok never would have done 109 Eintracht Frankfurt won the 1980 UEFA Cup Final 1 to 0 at home over Borussia Monchengladbach two weeks after its 2 to 3 loss at Monchengladbach in the first of two games Although the aggregate score of the two games was 3 to 3 Frankfurt won the Cup based on the higher number of away goals 110 The final four of UEFA Cup teams were all West German with Bayern Munich and Stuttgart having won their quarterfinals in March May 22 1980 Thursday editPac Man the highest grossing arcade game of all time was test marketed by Namco in Japan at locations in the Shibuya section of Tokyo 111 It had been invented by a team headed by Toru Iwatani and was originally branded as Puck Man when it was distributed in Japan in July Voters in Egypt approved six constitutional amendments including the creation of a Shura Council as a second chamber for the formerly unicameral Parliament of Egypt requiring Islamic principles as the basis of new legislation and creating a multiparty system of elections Another amendment removed the requirement that a president be limited to two six year terms in office making President Anwar Sadat eligible to run for a third term in 1982 which would open the way for Anwar Sadat to remain president for life 112 Sadat would serve as president for the rest of his life assassinated 17 months later on October 6 1981 His successor Hosni Mubarak was elected for four consecutive terms before being removed from office in 2011 Gustav Husak was elected to another term as President of Czechoslovakia by a 343 to 0 vote in the Communist nation s Federal Assembly Federalni shromazdeni Czech or Federalne zhromazdenie Slovak 113 Husak the Chairman of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia KSC was the only candidate considered by the 150 member House of the Nations the Snemovna narodu which consisted of 75 Czech and 75 Slovak deputies and the 200 member House of the People Snemovna lidu Popular talk show host Phil Donahue and television actress Marlo Thomas married 114 May 23 1980 Friday editRelocation began of the 710 families of the Love Canal neighborhood of the city of Niagara Falls New York almost two years after a state of emergency had been declared by the New York State Health Commission of the land s contamination by dioxin and other hazardous chemicals dumped by the Hooker Chemical Company 115 Initially the United States Environmental Protection Agency EPA proposed only to pay the costs of relocating the families for only one year but the U S and New York governments would eventually purchase the contaminated property and work for decades on an environmental cleanup 116 A mid season strike by Major League Baseball players was averted a few hours before it would have canceled its first game 117 The strike deadline had passed at 12 01 in the morning but representatives of the 26 National League and American League owners had continued discussions in New York with the Major League Baseball Players Association MLBPA union and reached an agreement at 5 00 in the morning Eastern time The first game that would have been called off the Los Angeles Dodgers at the Chicago Cubs began as scheduled at 1 30 with the Cubs winning 2 to 0 The Shining Stanley Kubrick s classic horror film adapted from Stephen King s novel was released in theaters nationwide While the movie was popular critics were generally unfavorable with one noting that the film takes two and a half hours to go nowhere 118 and another commenting that the film is too grandiose to be the jolter that horror pictures are expected to be 119 Died Terry Furlow 25 American NBA basketball guard for the Utah Jazz was killed in a car wreck less than two months after the end of the season 120 Munir Sarhadi 48 Pakistani musician who played the sarangi a Hindustani string instrument May 24 1980 Saturday editIn its decision in United States v Iran the International Court of Justice ruled that the militants holding 50 U S Embassy personnel hostage were agents of the Iranian Government and ordered the Iranian government to release of embassy captives and to pay reparations 121 Iran did not comply with the World Court s decision 122 and the hostages would not be released until January 20 1981 Five of the seven conspirators in the October 26 assassination of Park Chung hee President of South Korea were executed by hanging 123 Kim Jae gyu the former director of the Korean Central Intelligence Agency who had shot Park in the head after the two had argued at a dinner party went to the gallows at the Seoul prison at 7 30 in the morning along with four of the co conspirators The New York Islanders won their first Stanley Cup after Game 6 of the Stanley Cup went into sudden death overtime 124 Bobby Nystrom made the goal for the 4 3 win over the Philadelphia Flyers after 7 minutes and 11 seconds of extra play before 14 495 fans in Uniondale New York to win the Stanley Cup for the first time in team history In their first season the team placed on suburban New York s Long Island only two years earlier the Islanders had filed for bankruptcy before reversing their fortunes 125 May 25 1980 Sunday editThe Republic of Vemerana was declared on the island of Espiritu Santo in the New Hebrides now Vanuatu with Jimmy Stevens as its Prime Minister Sources with the colonial government said that the separatists had been funded by an American group of businessmen the Phoenix Foundation of Carson City Nevada with the objective of establishing an independent country free of taxes and government restrictions 126 After the New Hebrides was granted independence in July as Vanuatu the Vemerana rebellion was ended in August Johnny Rutherford won a third Indianapolis 500 while driving Jim Hall s revolutionary ground effect Chaparral car designed by John Bernard and fabricated by Bob Sparshot The race was the slowest in 18 years with the winner driving at an average speed of less than 143 miles per hour 230 km h 127 Boxer James Scott a contender for the world light heavyweight title despite having to conduct his bouts at the Rahway State Prison in New Jersey had his first professional loss in an upset by Jerry Bull Martin 128 Scott convicted of the murder of Everett Russ 129 would get a reversal of his conviction and a new trial but would be found guilty in January and sentenced to life in prison Martin s loss and his subsequent conviction ended his aspiration for a world title May 26 1980 Monday editBertalan Farkas the first cosmonaut from Hungary was launched on Soyuz 36 to the Salyut 6 space station along with Valeri Kubasov at 9 21 p m Moscow time 1821 UTC from Baikonur Cosmodrome in the Kazakh SSR 130 Farkas and Kubasov returned to Earth on July 31 Former U N Ambassador and Congressman George Bush Ronald Reagan s remaining opponent for the Republican nomination conceded defeat and urged his supporters to back Reagan Speaking from his campaign headquarters in Houston Bush said I see the world not as I wish it were but as it is Six days earlier Bush had seen the biggest victory of his campaign a 2 to 1 win over Reagan in the Michigan primary but Reagan had reached the number of delegates necessary for nomination in other primary results that evening 131 As Reagan s running mate Bush would be elected Vice President of the United States in November and would be elected the 41st President of the United States in 1988 In Bloomington California serial killer Stephen Wayne Anderson burglarized the house of 81 year old Elizabeth Lyman murdered her robbed her house and then prepared himself a meal in her kitchen As Anderson who had escaped from the Utah State Prison on November 12 was eating and watching television San Bernardino County Sheriff s deputies responded to a neighbor s call and arrested him 132 Anderson admitted to the murder of Lyman and eight other people and would be executed by lethal injection at California s San Quentin State Prison on January 29 2002 133 May 27 1980 Tuesday editHundreds of protesters were killed in Gwangju by Republic of Korea Army troops bringing an end to a rebellion that had started on May 18 at Chonnam University 134 After rebels had taken control of the city of 800 000 from local police days earlier an ultimatum was delivered to the rebels at 2 00 in the morning to lay down their weapons Ninety minutes later tanks and troops moved in and took control of the city by dawn followed by house to house searches for insurgents 135 Official figures released by the Martial Law Command put the death toll at 144 civilians 22 troops and four police killed but the actual death toll may have been as high as the 2 000 range 136 Haiti s President Jean Claude Duvalier married Michele Bennett Pasquet in a wedding that cost the nation three million U S dollars 137 The extravagance of the couple s wedding did not lack local critics though The Christian Science Monitor reported that the event was enthusiastically received by a majority of Haitians 138 Prime Minister Hua Guofeng flew to Tokyo to make the first state visit by a Chinese leader to Japan in almost 2 000 years 139 Hua remained in Japan for six days after being greeted at Haneda Airport by Japan s ailing Prime Minister Ohira and then made a courtesy call to the Emperor Hirohito Died Ted DeVita 17 nicknamed the Bubble Boy because he spent the final years of his life in a protective environment in order to protect him from his lack of immunity to disease DeVita had developed aplastic anemia in 1972 and resided at a sterile isolation room at the National Institutes of Health facility in Bethesda Maryland though he was sometimes allowed to make short excursions from the hospital in a protective space suit that he eventually outgrew The frequent blood transfusions that had protected him had gradually caused him heart trouble from a buildup of iron in his blood 140 Gun Sazak 48 Turkish nationalist politician and former government minister was assassinated in a drive by shooting 141 Sazak deputy chairman of the right wing Action Party had been outside his home in the Kavaklidere neighborhood of Ankara and was loading luggage in his car when he was shot in the head and in the stomach by two gunmen May 28 1980 Wednesday editFor the first time women graduated as officers from the three major United States service academies with 61 from the United States Military Academy at West Point New York 55 from the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis Maryland and 97 from the United States Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs Colorado 142 The top ranking female cadets were Andrea Hollen 8th in her class of 870 at West Point Kathleen Conley 8th from the Air Force Academy class of 887 and Elizabeth Belzer 30th in the Annapolis class of 938 Jean M Butler was first in her class at the United States Coast Guard Academy at New London Connecticut Twenty three workmen for the Canadian Pacific Railway were killed and 11 injured in a horrific bus crash near the small village of Webb Saskatchewan 143 144 The Nixon White House tapes tape recordings made at the Oval Office during the administration of U S President Richard M Nixon were made available for the general public to listen to at the U S National Archives 145 On the first day the National Archives played 31 historic recordings 30 of which had been listened to by the Watergate grand jury in 1974 Isao Harimoto of the Lotte Orions became the first and only Japanese baseball player to have 3 000 hits in his career 146 Born in Hiroshima to Korean parents five years before the dropping of the atomic bomb Harimoto had played in the Pacific League since 1959 Harimoto s 3 000th hit a home run came in an 11 to 4 win over the visiting Hankyu Braves at Kawasaki Ichiro Suzuki of Japan surpassed 3 000 hits in U S Major League Baseball after getting 1 278 in Japan s Pacific League nbsp nbsp The old and new flag of Newfoundland The Flag of Newfoundland now Newfoundland and Labrador was approved by the House of Assembly of the province of Newfoundland by a vote of 22 to 10 The geometrical design by Chris Pratt of six triangles and an arrow had been unveiled on April 29 and eliminated any use of the former British flag the Union Jack which had been adopted as Newfoundland s official provincial flag in 1952 Died Walter Tobagi 33 Italian journalist and writer was killed in a terrorist attack by the Brigade XXVIII March a left wing terrorist group May 29 1980 Thursday edit nbsp JordanAmerican civil rights leader Vernon Jordan the president of the National Urban League was shot and critically injured by a sniper as he stepped out of his car in Fort Wayne Indiana 147 Jordan had addressed 450 people at a dinner for the Urban League at the Marriott Inn the night before and was at the hotel parking lot at 2 05 in the morning The assassination attempt made from a car that had stopped on an exit ramp on Interstate Highway 69 in sight of the hotel was later charged to Joseph Paul Franklin The U S Federal Communications Commission voted to limit the protection for the nation s 25 clear channel stations to a 750 mile 1 207 km radius around the transmitter 148 Stations on those AM radio frequencies outside the area of protection were no longer required to sign off or power down after sundown May 30 1980 Friday editPope John Paul II became the first pontiff in more than 175 years to visit France arriving at Orly Airport near Paris where he was greeted by France s Prime Minister Raymond Barre The Pope and his retinue then flew by helicopter to a meeting with President Valery Giscard d Estaing The last papal visit had been by Pius VII who had presided at the December 2 1804 Coronation of Napoleon I The first of six women to die in the Tynong North and Frankston Murders in Australia Allison Rooke disappeared after experiencing trouble with her car Rooke a 66 year old resident of Frankston Victoria had told neighbors she was preparing to take a bus to do grocery shopping at the Frankston Shopping Centre and to see a realtor Her decomposed body was found on July 5 149 A federal court ruled in the case of Fricke v Lynch that a gay high school student could bring a same sex date to a high school dance 150 The Court held that the free speech provisions of the First Amendment protected the rights of gay and lesbian students to attend their high school events with a date of their choice Amid heavy security Aaron Fricke appeared that evening at the senior prom for Cumberland High School with a male companion Paul Guilbert The dance itself took place at the Pleasant Valley Country Club at Sutton Massachusetts rather than at Rhode Island high school Since the Fricke ruling American public high schools increasingly allowed gay and lesbian students to attend school functions with their same sex partners May 31 1980 Saturday editJapan s Prime Minister Masayoshi Ohira was hospitalized for exhaustion the day after campaigning opened for the June 22 general election Ohira had complained of tiredness for several days before making speeches in Tokyo on the first day of the campaign and was taken by ambulance to the Toranomon Hospital in Tokyo after becoming ill at home 151 Doctors diagnosed him with angina pectoris and recommended that he remain in the hospital and Ohira turned the campaign for the Liberal Democratic Party to the LDP vice chairman Eiichi Nishimura on June 6 While in the hospital Ohira suffered a heart attack and died on June 12 References edit attribution Museum of Yugoslavia Shutdown Rattles FTC Workers Agency Grinds to Halt Closure May Only Last a Day Los Angeles Times May 2 1980 pIV 1 A Complete Guide To Every Government Shutdown In History by Connie Cass Business Insider September 30 2013 Congress Revives FTC With an Injection of Funds Washington Post May 2 1980 About That Urban Renaissance ChicagoMag com Retrieved January 8 2018 Gunman takes over PSA jetliner Tampa Bay Times May 2 1980 p1 Hostage Thwarts Hijack Attempt Cincinnati Enquirer May 3 1980 p4 PSA Hijack Suspect Acts Our Iranian Hostage Script Sacramento CA Bee May 3 1980 p4 Dropout Gets Jail Santa Clarita CA Signal November 5 1980 p17 Hollypark Pick Six Betting Is Approved Los Angeles Times April 26 1980 pIII 8 Track to offer Pick Six betting South Bend IN Tribune April 27 1980 p72 Hollypark s Pick Six Proves Easy Pickings for 17 Bettors by Shelia Moran Los Angeles Times May 2 1980 pIII 1 Nepal voting on government form Miami News May 2 1980 p2 Nepal Votes To Keep Absolute Monarchy St Louis Post Dispatch May 14 1980 p7 Amstar Corp v Domino s Pizza Inc 617 F 2d 295 5th Cir 1980 in CourtListener com Domino s opens second pizza outlet Richmond IN Palladium Item May 20 1980 p14 a b Strike and Lockout Begin in Sweden One Out of Four Workers Affected Paralysis of Economy Anticipated by Harry Trimborn Los Angeles Times May 2 1980 p5 It s Ladies Day at the Derby Genuine Risk is first filly to triumph in 65 years Tampa Bay Times May 4 1980 pC 1 Blast At Fireworks Factory Kills At Least 40 Sacramento CA Bee May 4 1980 p2 5 Killed in Traffic Accidents 1 Sought After Bridge Plunge Sacramento Bee May 4 1980 pA32 Mothers Group Assails Drunken Drivers Liberty Sacramento Bee August 27 1980 pA21 The New Helsinki Convention and the Joint Comprehensive Environmental Action Programme by Dagmara Berbalk in The Baltic Sea New Developments in National Policies and International Cooperation ed by Renate Platzoder and Philomene Verlaan Martinus Nijhoff 1996 p330 Annie Wu Suk ching Originator of China s First Joint Venture by Zhao Chenxi Women of China March 14 2011 3000 protest N dump site test Boston Sunday Globe May 4 1980 p74 Ullrich Kockel Re Visioning Europe Frontiers Place Identities and Journeys in Debatable Lands Palgrave Macmillan 2010 p172 German Police Break Up Nuclear Protest Cincinnati Enquirer June 5 1980 pC 12 Tito Dies Last World War II Leader Los Angeles Times May 5 1980 p1 Priests Ordered Out of Politics Rep Drinan Agrees to Accept Pope s Edict Los Angeles Times May 5 1980 p1 9 Trampled to Death in Rush to See Pope Los Angeles Times May 5 1980 p1 Education Department Begins Operation Los Angeles Times May 5 1980 p2 Commandos Storm London Embassy Rescue Hostages 3 Iranian Terrorists Killed 19 Captives Safe 2 Die Los Angeles Times May 6 1980 p1 U S Dead Start Journey Home From Tehran Los Angeles Times May 6 1980 p1 American Dead Returned to U S From Tehran Los Angeles Times May 7 1980 p1 Iran Turns Over 8 Americans Bodies to Bishop Los Angeles Times May 5 1980 p1 Greek Elevated to Presidency Los Angeles Times May 6 1980 p2 Karel Steenbrink Catholics in Independent Indonesia 1945 2010 BRILL 2015 p290 NY woman held Iranian says Miami News May 8 1980 Police chief in Italy slain Mafia blamed Spokane WA Spokesman Review May 5 1980 p2 pp47 50 clarification needed Massive Walkouts Reported at 2 Main Soviet Auto Plants Washington Post June 14 1980 p1 70 000 Soviet Workers Said to Strike at Automobile Factory on Volga Arrest of Strikers Reported by Anthony Austin The New York Times June 14 1980 p3 NBC won t televise Olympics Tucson AZ Citizen May 6 1980 p1 By Jupiter another moon Daily News New York May 7 1980 p4 Some background about satellites by Joseph A Burns Satellites University of Arizona Press 1986 p28 Man goes free after 68 years 7 months in jail AP report in St Cloud MN Daily Times May 9 1980 p1 Young Cigarette Fiend Murderer of Rich Broker Akron O Beacon Journal July 28 1911 p1 Make Policy 94 Senators Tell Muskie Miami Herald May 8 1980 p1 Rod Nordland How 2 rose to vie for El Salvador s presidency Philadelphia Inquirer March 23 1984 A1 Smallpox eradicated Sydney Morning Herald May 8 1980 p1 Eradication of Smallpox To Be Announced Today The New York Times May 8 1980 pA 21 The Intensified Smallpox Eradication Programme 1967 1980 by Frank Fenner et al in Smallpox and Its Eradication World Health Organization 1988 Tito hailed buried amid pageantry Baltimore Evening Sun May 8 1980 p1 Aquino flies to US for heart operation Sydney Morning Herald May 8 1980 p4 Shah s First Woman Minister Executed Los Angeles Times May 8 1980 p2 Freighter rams Skyway span falls into sea at least 30 die St Petersburg Times St Petersburg Florida May 10 1980 p 1 Freighter Rams Florida Bridge 32 Known Dead Los Angeles Times May 10 1980 p 1 Islamic party wins in Iran Louisville Courier Journal Louisville Kentucky May 12 1980 p A 2 Cuban refugees are shipped to military base in Arkansas Louisville Courier Journal Louisville Kentucky May 12 1980 p A 8 Atheist O Hair s son rues part in school prayer ban Arizona Daily Star Flagstaff Arizona May 10 1980 p 1 William Murray has rethought views since his school prayer case Baltimore Sun May 10 1980 p 1 Turks Caicos Minister Killed in Plane Crash Miami Herald May 11 1980 p D 1 Bahamas seethes over patrol boat sinking Stephen Webbe The Christian Science Monitor May 19 1980 Cuban MiGs sink gunboat 4 killed in attack on Bahamas craft Chicago Tribune May 12 1980 p1 Prime Minister says country remains indebted to marines of HMBS Flamingo by Matt Maura The Freeport News May 13 2011 Chrysler Swings U S Aid Deal Detroit Free Press May 11 1980 p1 Climbers Cause 80 000 Damage To Miss Liberty Pittsburgh Press May 11 1980 p1 Sweden s crippling work halt is over Boston Globe May 12 1980 p3 Riding shotgun to a storm by Robert Cooke Boston Globe May 13 1980 p19 Touchdown Odyssey ends in Quebec Boston Globe May 13 1980 p1 Salvador Military Leadership Given to Gutierrez Miami Herald May 14 1980 p9 The coronavirus chancellor How Rishi Sunak took centre stage Financial Times 2 April 2020 Archived from the original on 2022 12 24 attribution Gregory Marcus MD U S Patent 4 202 340 Google Patents The massacre of the Sumpul 1980 HEW is now HHS Tampa Times May 14 1980 p1 HEW drops E for education is now Health and Human Services Jackson MS Clarion Ledger May 14 1980 pE 1 50 000 students riot police clash in South Korea Dayton O Daily News May 15 1980 p1 Libya Writhing Under Qaddafi s Social Revolution The New York Times August 22 1980 pA2 Gadafy bows to critics The Guardian London June 13 1980 p8 Yugoslavs get 3d chief since the death of Tito Baltimore Sun May 16 1980 p5 West Germans Boycott Moscow Olympic Games Pittsburgh Post Gazette May 16 1980 p1 Kennedy If Carter debates then beats me June 3 I ll quit St Petersburg FL Times May 16 1980 p1 Attribution 首相官邸ホームページ Japanese leader stunned Ohira government beaten on non confidence ballot Vancouver Sun May 16 1980 p1 It s MAGIC The New Starting Center Puts Lakers Over the Top 123 107 Los Angeles Times May 17 1980 pIII 1 Magic makes Sixers vanish Johnson scores 42 as Lakers win title Philadelphia Inquirer May 17 1980 pC 1 Cops Freed in McDuffie Case 3 Hour Deliberation Clears All 13 Charges Miami Herald May 18 1980 p1 3 killed in Miami as verdicts spark widespread riots Louisville KY Courier Journal May 18 1980 p1 Miami Furor 5 Police Suspended in Riot Reinstated Pittsburgh Post Gazette May 24 1980 p1 Grossly overloaded refugee boat sinks 10 die 4 missing Fort Lauderdale FL News May 18 1980 p1 China to Mourn Leader Once Reviled as Traitor Los Angeles Times May 17 1980 p5 Volcano explodes Spokane WA Spokesman Review May 19 1980 p1 Stephen L Harris Fire Mountains of the West The Cascade and Mono Lake Volcanoes Mountain Press Publishing 1988 p 205 a b McGarry told reports in June 1980 The first solar powered flight ever made took place on May 18 quoted from Plane flies on sun power by Terrance W McGarry United Press International report in the Spokane WA Chronicle June 5 1980 p12 Chinese report launch of ICBM to South Pacific Arizona Republic Phoenix May 18 1980 p1 Military Given Sweeping Authority in South Korea Army Bans Political Activity Begins Roundup of Opposition Leaders as Martial Law Is Expanded Los Angeles Times May 18 1980 p1 Belaunde Elected Peru s President By Wide Margin Miami Herald May 20 1980 p9 Korean parliament shut down Detroit Free Press May 20 1980 p4 Landing 727 nearly hits 2d jet on O Hare runway Chicago Tribune May 20 1980 p1 NO 58 YES 42 Montreal Gazette May 21 1980 p1 A Message to the People of Quebec Montreal Gazette May 19 1980 p50 157 elderly women die in Jamaican fire Tampa Bay Times May 21 1980 p1 Eventide fire remembered Torrington Park marks anniversary with demand for an end to political rivalry by Corey Robinson Jamaica Observer May 23 2011 Korea Cabinet Quits More Protests Flare Miami Herald May 21 1980 p4 Protest Becomes Rebellion in S Korean City 11 Die 150 000 Civilians Raid Arsenals Seize Weapons Fire on Troops in Kwangju New Cabinet Named Los Angeles Times May 22 1980 p1 Missilery info in Russian translatable Zmarl Henryk Jaskula Henryk Jaskula dies Polskie Radio Rzeszow May 15 2020 Empire Strikes Back opens after 3 year wait Arizona Daily Star Tucson AZ May 22 1980 p24 Reformers Stir Up an Old West Town by William C Rempel Los Angeles Times July 20 1980 p4 Eintracht takes UEFA Cup Victoria BC Times Colonist May 22 1980 p19 Q amp A Pac Man Creator Reflects on 30 Years of Dot Eating by Chris Kohler Wired magazine May 21 2010 Egyptians Give Sadat A Chance To Serve For Life Sacramento CA Bee May 23 1980 p7 Husak Is Reelected As Czech President Miami Herald May 23 1980 p29 A Phil Donahue and that girl tie the knot Oregon Statesman Salem OR May 23 1980 p88 They d Love to see permanent relocation Daily News New York May 24 1980 p3 Richard S Newman Love Canal A Toxic History from Colonial Times to the Present Oxford University Press 2016 Baseball accord averts strike for this season Baltimore Sun May 24 1980 p1 The Shining a no glow show by Ernest Leogrande Daily News New York May 23 1980 p91 Kubrick s Shining a Freudian s Picnic by Kevin Thomas Los Angeles Times May 23 1980 pVI 1 Crash Kills Furlow Daytona Beach Morning Journal May 24 1980 p4B World Court tells Iran to pay U S release hostages Baltimore Evening Sun May 24 1980 p1 Iran Rejects Order From World Court St Louis Post Dispatch May 25 1980 p1 Korea executes 5 unrest continues Charlotte NC News May 24 1980 p1 Islanders win Cup in overtime Nystrom goal tops flyers Philadelphia Inquirer May 25 1980 pE 1 A Rugged Climb to the Top GM Bill Torrey kept pushing despite rockpile of obstacles Daily News New York May 25 1980 special section p8 Revolt in the New Hebrides Separatists capture island town San Francisco Examiner May 30 1980 p2 Rutherford Wins Third 500 Indianapolis Star May 26 1980 p1 Boxer James Scott suffers first defeat Johnson City TN Press May 26 1980 p9 Locked In Tuned Up And Fighting Back by Bill Lyon Today The Inquirer Magazine Philadelphia Inquirer May 18 1980 p26 Soyuz 36 Carries Russian Hungarian Pair Into Space Indianapolis Star May 27 1980 p1 Bush quits GOP campaign pledges support to Reagan Louisville KY Courier Journal May 27 1980 p1 Escapee held in death of 81 year old San Bernardino CA Sun May 27 1980 pB 1 Stephen Wayne Anderson a murderous creep with an IQ of 136 earned admiration and awards from the literary community while writing on death row by Mara Bovsun Daily News New York August 22 2015 S Korean Troops Crush Rebellion Los Angeles Times May 27 1980 p1 S Korean Forces Patrol Streets of Stunned Kwangju Los Angeles Times May 28 1980 p1 Flashback The Kwangju massacre BBC News May 17 2000 They say I Du valier Baby Doc marries his Port au Princess Daily News New York May 28 1980 p4 Haitians wonder which advisers will have Duvalier s ear Christian Science Monitor July 15 1980 Hua 1st Chinese Leader to Visit Japan in 2 000 Years Los Angeles Times May 27 1980 p2 Boy who lived 8 years in germ free room dies Chicago Tribune May 30 1980 p5 5 Ex cabinet official killed AP report in Reno NV Gazette Journal May 28 1980 p2 Service academy officers bars go to 214 women Tampa Bay Times St Petersburg FL May 29 1980 p1 25 feared dead in Saskatechewan bus inferno Montreal Gazette May 29 1980 p1 The Telegram www TheTelegram com Archived from the original on September 5 2018 Retrieved January 8 2018 Nixon tapes go public Boston Globe May 29 1980 p1 Harimoto Hits Record 3 000th Cincinnati Enquirer May 29 1980 pD 4 Vernon Jordan Shot Wounded Indianapolis News May 29 1980 p1 Long Range Radio Stations Face Curbs by Penny Girard Los Angeles Times May 30 1980 p1 Police seeking murder victim s friend The Age Melbourne July 11 1980 p5 Gay student escorts male date to prom Akron O Beacon Journal May 31 1980 p1 Japanese Leader Hospitalized Los Angeles Times May 31 1980 p3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title May 1980 amp oldid 1174954004, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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