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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

<< July 1980 >>
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
01 02 03 04 05
06 07 08 09 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31  
July 19, 1980: Summer Olympic Games open in Moscow [1]
July 24, 1980: Republic of Vanuatu granted independence
July 16, 1980: Former U.S. President Ford turns down offer to become U.S. vice president nominee

The following events happened in July 1980:

July 30, 1980: Israel's parliament votes for Jerusalem reunification and annexes former Jordanian territory in East Jerusalem (green) to Israel's West Jerusalem (blue) [2]

July 1, 1980 (Tuesday)

  • "O Canada" became the national anthem for Canada after the National Anthem Act received royal assent and took effect as part of the Dominion Day celebrations.[3][4]
  • In Ohio, The Columbus Dispatch became the first newspaper to provide an electronic edition for computer users, as part of a service from the electronic CompuServe Information Service.[5] In a precursor to newspaper websites on the Internet, the text of the Dispatch could be read on the home computers of CompuServe's 3,000 subscribers in Columbus. Initially the service was available from 6:00 in the evening to 5:00 in the morning on weekdays, and all day on weekends and holidays, and transmitted at a rate of 300 words per minute. The cost was an additional 8.33 cents per minute ($5.00 per hour, equivalent to $15.50 per hour in 2020). CompuServe unveiled similar deliveries for 10 other metropolitan newspapers, including The New York Times, the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times and the Chicago Sun-Times.[6]
  • The Los Angeles Unified School District became the largest school system in the United States to adopt a calendar of year-round school as part of easing congestion in 44 overcrowded schools, starting with ten units (four elementary schools, and six middle and junior high schools. On July 7, the plan started in 34 more elementaries.[7] Under the plan, one-fourth of the elementary students in a year-round school were on a 3-week vacation at any given time for every 9 weeks in school. In secondary schools, the rotation was 18 weeks of school with 6 week vacation breaks throughout the school year.
  • The deregulation of the American trucking industry began as U.S. President Jimmy Carter signed the Motor Carrier Act of 1980 into law.[8]
  • In Oslo, Steve Ovett broke the world record for fastest mile, running in 3 minutes, 48.8 seconds, 2/10ths of a second faster than the mark of 3:49.0 set by his fellow Briton, Sebastian Coe in 1979. Earlier in the day, Coe set a new record for running 1,000 meters, in 2 minutes, 13.40 seconds, besting Rick Wohlhuter's 1976 record of 2:13.90.[9]
  • The U.S. Congress authorized a site of two acres in Constitution Gardens near the Lincoln Memorial for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial.[10] With the $2.3 million cost for the memorial to paid for from private donations.
  • In Kansas City, Missouri, the 40-story tall Hyatt Regency Hotel opened to the public, featuring an atrium above the lobby that included three pedestrian bridges and a construction flaw caused by the alteration of the support for the second and fourth floor bridges.[11] Slightly more than a year later, on July 17, 1981, the decision to suspend the second floor bridge from the bridge above it, rather than from the ceiling, would result in the Hyatt Regency walkway collapse, killing 114 people and injuring 216.[12]
  • Born:
  • Died: C. P. Snow, 74, English novelist

July 2, 1980 (Wednesday)

  • The government of Poland announced that the price for consumer goods was being increased, after 14 years of prices being maintained at the same level with government subsidies. Two previous attempts to raise the price of meat— in December 1970 and June 1976— had been rescinded after rioting. Trybuna Ludu, the official newspaper of the ruling Polish United Workers Party, announced that increases were made because "there are now ways speedily to improve the market situation." The price of beef doubled from $1.50 per pound to $3.00 per pound, and raw bacon to $2.30 per pound.[13] The first reported reaction was that 6,000 employees of a tractor factory in the Warsaw suburb of Ursus walked off the job in a one-day strike. Two days later, thousands of Polish workers walked off the job on what would be the first of many labor strikes that would lead to the recognition of the Solidarity Movement in August.
  • U.S. President Jimmy Carter issued Presidential Proclamation 4771 and re-instated the requirement that young men register with the Selective Service System.[14] At that time it was required that all males, born on or after January 1, 1960, register with the Selective Service System. Those who were now in this category were male U.S. citizens and male immigrant non-citizens between the ages of 18 and 25; they were required to register within 30 days of their 18th birthday even if they were not actually eligible to join the military.
  • The government of Turkish Prime Minister Süleyman Demirel narrowly survived a vote of confidence in the lower house of parliament, with 214 supporting his removal and 227 opposed.[15] Turkish military leaders had planned for a coup d'état to take place on July 11, but called it off in the wake of the vote; the Supreme Military Council met again on August 26 and overthrew Demirel's government on September 12.[16]
  • A U.S. federal judge in Miami ordered a halt to deportation of more than 4,000 black Haitians. In a 180-page decision, James L. King wrote that people who fled Haiti were victims of prejudice by the United States government and had been denied due process by the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS).[17]
  • The comedy Airplane!, a parody of the popular disaster film genre, was released throughout the U.S. and Canada, and attracted generally favorable reviews. Janet Maslin of The New York Times wrote that "'Airplane!' has jokes— hilarious jokes— to spare. It's also clever and confident and furiously energetic."[18] and Charles Champlin of the Los Angeles Times called in "a thrillingly nutty send-up of the movies, with the redeeming and overdue social value of generous and innocent laughter."[19] However, Kathleen Carroll of the Daily News wrote that after the first hour, "'Airplane' loses its buoyancy. Jim Abrahams, David Zucker and Jerry Zucker... become so desperate for laughs that the jokes descend to a much cruder level. And 'Airplane' does an abrupt nosedive, turning into a hopelessly flat movie."[20]
  • Greenland's first national soccer football team played its first international match. The meeting, at Sauðárkrókur at the first annual Greenland Cup in Iceland, was against another Danish territory, the Faroe Islands. The new team lost its first game, 6–0.[21] The next day, Greenland hosted Iceland in Húsavík, losing 4–1, finishing third in the tournament.
  • Harborplace opened as a centerpiece of the revival of downtown Baltimore and the rebuilding of Baltimore's Inner Harbor.[22] The $20 million shopping center had 120 restaurants, specialty markets and shops shielded beneath two glass-enclosed pavilions.[23]

July 3, 1980 (Thursday)

July 4, 1980 (Friday)

July 5, 1980 (Saturday)

  • Björn Borg of Sweden defeated John McEnroe of the United States to win his fifth consecutive singles title at Wimbledon in what one reporter described as "the tennis match to end all tennis matches".[30] The finals match came down to a tiebreaker in the fifth game of the fifth set after McEnroe edged Borg, 7 games to 6 in a tie breaker to even the best-of-5 match, two sets to two.
  • Born: Fabián Ríos, Colombian TV actor, in Curití
  • Died: Hans Bayer, known by the pseudonym Thaddäus Troll, 66, German journalist and Swabian German dialect poet, by suicide.

July 6, 1980 (Sunday)

Mauritania
Shakespeare
  • The abolition of legal slavery was announced in the Islamic Republic of Mauritania by the ruling Military Committee for National Salvation, led by its chairman, Lt. Col. Mohamed Mahmoud Ould Louly.[31] A communique from the capital, Nouakchott, announced that the committee, after consultation with Islamic legal scholars (oulemas) "of the nation, on the question of slavery, which is considered by the regime to be anachronistic." The government said further that "The overwhelming majority of the oulemas recognized the justification of slavery under Islamic law", but that the scholars "had reservations as to its origins in Mauritania and the way the system is operated in our country."[32] The order had no immediate effect on the practice of wealthy, white and light-skinned Arab-Berber exercising ownership over impoverished black Haratin residents.[33]
  • The Observer, London's Sunday newspaper, broke the news that computer scientists had found confirmation that William Shakespeare was the likely author of The Booke of Sir Thomas Moore. The Edinburgh University team, led by Thomas Merriam, had used a stylistic analysis of the words of the play in comparison to Shakespeare's other works. "If the attribution is accepted, The Observer noted, "it will be the first new play to be added to the Shakespeare canon since Pericles was included in the third folio edition of 1664." [34]
  • Seventy-one people, most of them Cuban tourists who were passengers on a double-decker excursion boat on the Canimar River, were killed when the XX Aniversario was hijacked by rebels, and then shelled and sunk by the Cuban Armed Forces.[35][36][37]
  • Born:
    • Pau Gasol, Spanish pro basketball player, 2002 NBA Rookie of the Year, and six-time All-Star; in Barcelona
    • Sami Khan (stage name for Mansoor Aslam Khan Niazi), Pakistani film and TV actor; in Lahore
  • Died: Gail Patrick, 69, American actress and television producer who served as executive producer of the Perry Mason series

July 7, 1980 (Monday)

  • The massacre of 81 civilians occurred in Lebanon in the coastal town of Safra, after fighting between two rival Christian groups in the Lebanese Civil War. Safra, a stronghold of former Lebanese president Camille Chamoun's National Liberal Party was taken over by Bashir Gemayel's Phalangist militia. According to witnesses, the victims had spent the day on the beach while fighting went on in Safra, and were arrested and shot to death by Phalangist soldiers.[38]
  • The parliament of Syria passed a law making membership in the Muslim Brotherhood punishable by death.[39] President Hafez al-Assad announced the next day that members of the Muslim Brotherhood would be spared the death penalty if they surrendered before being confronted by law enforcement. The legislation provided legal authority for "shoot on sight" raids on suspected Brotherhood hideouts.[40]
  • Military leaders in Iraq were informed of a decision, made the day before by the ruling Ba'ath Party under the leadership of President Saddam Hussein, to prepare to launch a war against Iran. An invasion would take place in September.[41]
  • Iran's chief prosecutor, the Ayatollah Ali Ghoddusi, issued an order requiring all female government employees to wear the full-length chador and the traditional black head veil in accordance with the Ayatollah Khomeini's order for women to comply with the Islamic dress code or to be fired. In the first year of the Iranian Revolution, western-style clothing had been tolerated by the new regime.[42]
  • The final performance by Led Zeppelin of "Stairway to Heaven" was made at the closing concert of the band's Tour Over Europe 1980, at the Eissporthalle near Berlin in the suburb of Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf.[43] After the death of drummer John Bonham in September, the heavy metal group broke up on December 4.[44] The band would not do another full-length concert for more than 27 years until the reunion of Robert Plant, Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones December 10, 2007, in London.[45]
  • Born: Michelle Kwan, American figure-skater and five time World Championship ladies singles gold medalist; in Torrance, California
  • Died:
    • Dan White, 72, (March 25, 1908 – July 7, 1980), Award winning American actor in vaudeville, theater, radio, film and television
    • Isadore "Dore" Schary, 74, Oscar-winning American screenwriter, playwright and later President of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) Studios.
    • Cleveland Denny, 24, Guyanese boxer and former Canadian lightweight champion, died in Montreal 17 days after being knocked out in a June 20 bout with Gaetan Hart. Denny never regained consciousness after the match at Olympic Stadium.

July 8, 1980 (Tuesday)

  • A wave of labor strikes at 91 factories in Poland began in the town of Świdnik, a suburb of the city of Lublin, starting with a walkout of workers at the Communication Equipment Factory (Wytwórnia Sprzętu Komunikacyjnego, WSK), a manufacturer of parts for the State Aviation Works (Państwowe Zakłady Lotnicze or PZL). As a historian noted later, "the whole thing began... with a pork chop" [46] when workers preparing to purchase the day's lunch found that the price of the pork chop dinner had increased from Zł 10.20 to Zł 18.10. At the time, the minimum monthly wage in Poland was Zł 5100 or $43 per month.
  • All 156 passengers and 10 crew on Aeroflot Flight 4225 were killed. The Tupolev Tu-154 took off from Alma-Ata (now Almaty) in the Kazakh SSR to Simferopol in the Ukrainian SSR. The aircraft had reached an altitude of no more than 500 feet when the airspeed suddenly dropped because of thermal currents it encountered during the climb out. This caused the airplane to stall less than 5 km (3.1 mi) from the airport, crash and catch fire, killing all 156 passengers and 10 crew on board. To date, it remains the deadliest aviation accident in Kazakhstan.[47] On July 14, news of a crash was published in a local newspaper, Kazakhstanskaya Pravda.[48]
  • Cathlyn Platt Wilkerson, a fugitive member of the terrorist Weather Underground, surrendered to prosecutors in New York City, after more than 10 years trying to avoid capture.[49] Wilkerson had been eluding capture since fleeing an explosion and fire that destroyed her parents' Greenwich Village townhouse as the Weather Underground was building explosives in an adjacent home. Tried on the 1970 charges and convicted of illegal possession of dynamite, Wilkerson would be released on probation after serving 11 months in prison.[50]
  • The largest jump of paratroopers in the U.S. in peacetime had almost 2,400 U.S. members of the U.S. Army's 82nd Airborne Division — one-third of the division — participating. The troops of the 82nd Airborne, stationed at Fort Bragg in North Carolina, were sent to Eglin Air Force Base in Florida on 25 C-141 Starlifter cargo planes, each carrying 120 paratroopers. Although one of the Starlifters had to abort the test without dropping its troops, the others landed successfully in a field of brush and trees at Eglin AFB.[51]
  • Born:
  • Died: Rudolf Creutz, 84, Austrian Nazi war criminal

July 9, 1980 (Wednesday)

July 10, 1980 (Thursday)

July 11, 1980 (Friday)

July 12, 1980 (Saturday)

  • The 12.895 km (8.013 mi) long Fréjus Road Tunnel under Col du Fréjus in the Cottian Alps opened between France and Italy.[66] At the time, it was the second longest road tunnel in the world (after the 16.918 km (10.512 mi) Arlberg Road Tunnel), before being superseded by the 16.918 km (10.512 mi) Gotthard Road Tunnel in September. It connects Modane in France and Bardonecchia in Italy.
  • QUBE, a cable-television system in Columbus, Ohio with an interactive media channel that allowed viewer participation, sponsored a football game where the viewers were given the opportunity to decide the plays. In the game, a semi-pro football exhibition between the visiting Racine Gladiators of Wisconsin and the Columbus Metros, viewers were offered five choices for offensive plays (rush up the middle, rush to one side, and short, medium and long passes) and three defensive plays (straight defense, blitz or team choice). Metros coach Hal Dyer was required to follow whichever option received the highest tabulated number of viewer responses [67] Roughly 5,000 of QUBE's 30,000 subscribers participated, and although the Metros took a 7 to 0 lead before the game was interrupted by a thunderstorm, they lost to the Gladiators, 10 to 7.[68]
  • Died: Pierre Satre, 71, French aviation engineer designer for the Sud-Aviation SE 210 Caravelle and later for the Concorde.

July 13, 1980 (Sunday)

July 14, 1980 (Monday)

  • In Canada, a fire on the top floor of the three-story Extendicare nursing home in Mississauga, Ontario, killed 21 residents and injured 35 others. All of the victims were either bedridden or confined to wheelchairs. The nursing home's policy was to keep the least ambulatory patients on the higher floors.[71]
  • Billy Carter, the brother of U.S. President Jimmy Carter, was forced to register with the U.S. Department of Justice as a foreign agent for Libya. Billy acknowledged that he had accepted $220,000 from the government of Muammar Gaddafi.[72]

July 15, 1980 (Tuesday)

The Minitel terminal [73]

July 16, 1980 (Wednesday)

  • Former U.S. President Gerald R. Ford considered, then rejected, a proposal to run for Vice President as the running mate of Republican presidential nominee Ronald Reagan. Ford, who had served as vice president for ten months until replacing Richard M. Nixon as president in 1974, decided not to be on the ticket and informed the Reagan staff at 11:45 p.m. in Detroit.[75][76] Ford said later that if he had had more time to negotiate what his role would have been as Reagan's vice president, he might have accepted, but that Reagan's advisers wanted a decision before midnight, saying "I felt that if we'd had a little more time, it might have worked out."[77][78] Reagan then chose former U.N. Ambassador George Bush, his opponent in the primary elections, as his running mate.
  • Before Ford declined to run, a number of American newspapers published early editions with the news of a Reagan-Ford presidential ticket, including the Chicago Sun-Times, with the headline "It's Reagan and Ford— Former president agrees to VP deal".[77] The Courier-Journal of Louisville had the headline "Ford reportedly accepts No. 2 spot on GOP ticket" [79]
  • Juan Antonio Samaranch was elected President of the International Olympic Committee at the IOC's session in Moscow in the first round of voting. After the close of the Moscow games, he succeeded Lord Killanin on August 3.
  • The two-day Liberty Bell Track and Field Classic opened in Philadelphia as an alternative to track and field athletics competition in the 1980 Summer Olympics. Athletes from the Olympic teams of 26 boycotting nations (and three others) competed in the U.S., three days before competition opened in Moscow. At the same time, other track stars (from boycotting and non-boycotting nations) were competing in the annual Bislett Games in Oslo. In all but two of the 19 men's events common to both games, and all of the 14 women's events, the athletes in Moscow fared better than those in Philadelphia. The exceptions were James Walker of the U.S. being faster in the 400m hurdles (48.6 seconds) than Volker Beck of East Germany (48.7) and Renaldo Nehemiah of the U.S. in the 100m hurdles (13.31 seconds) than Thomas Munkelt of East Germany (13.39).[80] Bob Coffman of the USA commented afterward, "This meet was someone's self-serving idea to humor the athletes. You don't come to Philadelphia when the competition is in Moscow."[81][82]
  • Born:

July 17, 1980 (Thursday)

Suzuki
Ronald and Nancy Reagan

July 18, 1980 (Friday)

July 19, 1980 (Saturday)

An Olympic emblem in Estonia [93]

July 20, 1980 (Sunday)

July 21, 1980 (Monday)

  • Draft registration began in the United States for the first time since 1975, with all American men born in 1960 to register, followed the next week by those born in 1961.[102]
  • The two major U.S. labor unions for actors and actresses went on strike as 90,000 members of the Screen Actors Guild (SAG) and the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (AFTRA) halted production in the major film and television studios, as well as the three American TV networks. The walkout began at 2:00 in the morning Pacific Time, halting production of movies and TV programs in Hollywood and in New York.[103]
  • West Germany was allowed to build a larger navy as the European Community and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) voted to lift restrictions against German rearmament that had been in place since the end of World War II.[104] The West German Navy was given clearance to build more submarines and larger warships, as well as nuclear-powered vessels.
  • Pharmaceutical manufacturer Eli Lilly & Co. announced in Indianapolis that it would begin human testing of biosynthetic insulin and, if testing was successful, would commence commercial production. The synthesis had been made with the use of recombinant DNA to direct bacteria to produce the hormone used to control diabetes.[105]
Eugenia Charles

July 22, 1980 (Tuesday)

  • By a vote of 197 to 82, the House of Delegates of the American Medical Association (AMA) approved a new code of ethics that cleared the way for physicians to advertise, eliminating a stipulation that said that doctors "should not solicit patients." The new AMA code, the first since 1957, also removed the prohibition that had prohibited physicians from working with chiropractors.[111]
  • The U.S. Federal Communications Commission voted, 4 to 3, to eliminate rules that had limited the number of cable television channels that a local cable provider could provide its customers. The FCC also revoked its rules of syndication exclusivity which prohibited a cable provider from showing a syndicated program if a local TV station was carrying the same program.[112]
  • The 24-member International Whaling Commission failed to pass a worldwide moratorium against the commercial killing of whales. Although 13 members voted in favor, 9 against and 2 abstentions, the moratorium required the approval of a 3/4ths majority or 18 nations.[113] The IWC members later voted unanimously to ban the hunting of killer whales in the waters surrounding Antarctica.[114]
  • At the Olympics in Moscow, Soviet swimmer Vladimir Salnikov became the first person ever to swim 1,500 meters in less than 15 minutes.[115]
  • Born:
    • Kate Ryan (stage name for Katrien Verbeeck), Belgian singer and songwriter and 2008 World Music Award winner; in Tessenderlo
    • Tablo (stage name for Daniel Armand Lee), South Korean-born Canadian hip hop artist; in Seoul
    • Dirk Kuyt, Dutch soccer football winger and Netherlands national team member; in Katwijk
  • Died:
    • Ali Akbar Tabatabaei, 49, a former aide to the Shah of Iran and a vocal opponent of the Ayatollah Khomeini, was shot and killed in front of his home in Bethesda, Maryland.[116] The killing was done by David Theodore Belfield, an African-American who had converted to Islam.[117][118]
    • Kemal Türkler, 54, Turkish trade union leader, was assassinated by three gunmen, shortly after driving away from his home in Bakirkoy, a suburb of Istanbul. Türkler had been president of the Confederation of Revolutionary Trade Unions, the nation's largest labor union for miners and metalworkers.[119]
    • Hans-Georg Bürger, 28, West German Formula II race car driver, died two days after crashing during warm-up laps hours before the European Championship Grand Prix was to start in Zandvoort near Amsterdam.[120]

July 23, 1980 (Wednesday)

Gorbatko and Pham
TMI-2

July 24, 1980 (Thursday)

  • A team of 200 French paratroopers and British Marines arrived on the island of Espiritu Santo in the New Hebrides chain in the South Pacific Ocean, bringing an end to a rebellion that had been started when Jimmy Stevens and other rebels had declared the island independent as the "Republic of Vemerana".[130] Rebel tribesmen laid down their bows and arrows and warmly greeted the invading troops, clearing the way for the island to rejoin the New Hebrides six days before the chain was granted independence as the Republic of Vanuatu, and rebel leader Jimmy Stevens and his followers fled into the jungle.[131]
  • Olga Rukavishnikova set a record for shortest-lived world record in the final event of the Women's pentathlon at the 1980 Summer Olympics. She crossed the finish line first in the 800 meter race for 4,937 decathlon points, beating the old record of 4,856 points. But 0.4 seconds later, Nadiya Tkachenko's second-place finish set a new record of 5,083 points.[132]
  • Johannesburg, South Africa’s largest and most industrialised city, faced the largest strike by migrant municipal workers. More than 10 000 African municipal workers participated in the walkout.[133]
  • Died:
    • Peter Sellers, 54, English film actor and comedian, two days after a heart attack
    • Uttam Kumar (stage name for Arun Kumar Chatterjee), 53, Indian film actor and director and the most popular star of Bengali cinema

July 25, 1980 (Friday)

  • As Honduras made its transition from military rule by a junta to civilian rule by an elected president, the Honduran Assembly voted to select the junta leader, General Policarpo Paz García, as the civilian government president, until the newly elected Constituent Assembly could approve a new constitution for the Central American republic. The 71-member unicameral parliament, with 35 Liberal Party, 33 Nationalist Party, and three from the Innovation Party, was unanimous in keeping General Paz.[134][135]
  • Born: Cha Du-ri, German and South Korean pro soccer football striker for the Bundesliga and for the South Korean national team; in Frankfurt
  • Died:
    • Juliane Plambeck and Wolfgang Beer, West German terrorists, were killed in a traffic accident near Bietigheim-Bissingen. Plambeck was driving near Stuttgart when her car collided head-on with a large truck coming from the other direction. Police found two sub-machine guns, three large caliber handguns and several forged passports in the wreckage of her Volkswagen Golf car. Plambeck had been sought by police for five years after the murder of West Berlin judge Gunter von Drenkmann.[136]
    • Vladimir Vysotsky, 42, Soviet singer and songwriter; from a heart attack
    • Erich Fuchs, 78, convicted German war criminal who served four years in prison for being an accessory to the murder of 79,000 Jewish prisoners at the Sobibor extermination camp.

July 26, 1980 (Saturday)

July 27, 1980 (Sunday)

The Shah in 1973
  • Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, 60, deposed Shah of Iran, died in Cairo from complications of lymphatic cancer. The former absolute monarch, "hailed by some as a tough but progressive leader of a backward country and reviled by many as one of the worst tyrants of modern times" [138] had been living at the Kubbeh Palace with his family since March 24 as the guest of Egypt's President Anwar Sadat, and succumbed at the Maadi Military Hospital. Los Angeles Times reporter said of the Shah, "In the end, he was an almost pathetic figure, despised by most of his former subjects, shunned by many world leaders with whom he had hobnobbed and, despite a huge fortune, essentially powerless to choose his place of exile.[138] Echoing what most Iranians felt about their former monarch, Tehran Radio interrupted its regular programming and announced "Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, the bloodsucker of the century, has died at last." [139]
  • A Palestinian terrorist killed a 17-year-old boy and injured 20 other people by throwing grenades at a group of 40 Jewish teenagers in Antwerp in Belgium. The group of students from Austria, the Netherlands, Britain and France, was standing in front of the Agoudath Israel cultural center in Antwerp and was waiting to board a bus for the camp at the Ardennes Hills.[140]
  • A vote to impeach Italy's Prime Minister Francesco Cossiga, on charges of using his office to prevent the son of a political ally from being arrested for terrorism, failed in a joint vote of the 630-member Chamber of Deputies and the 321-member Senate of the Republic. Only 370 were in favor and 535 were against the resolution, which would have been tried by the criminal division of Italy's highest court, the Corte Suprema di Cassazione.[141]
  • Born:

July 28, 1980 (Monday)

July 29, 1980 (Tuesday)

Flag of Iran
the former flag

July 30, 1980 (Wednesday)

July 31, 1980 (Thursday)

  • The Iranian government executed 24 men at Evin Prison in Tehran, including ten former members of the Iranian armed forces and a civilian who had been convicted on Tuesday of an attempted coup d'état.[151] The other 13 included a former chief of the SAVAK secret police; a Jewish hotel administrator of Tehran's Royal Garden Hotel, who was convicted of "spying for Israel"; and three heroin dealers. All 24 were shot at dawn by a firing squad in the prison.
  • Italy's Prime Minister Francesco Cossiga and his government easily won a vote of confidence in Parliament, with 325 supporting him and 270 against. Cossiga himself called the vote after his judicial reforms were called into question by the Communist-led coalition.[152]
  • Died:

References

  1. ^ Attribution: RIA Novosti archive, image #104486 / Valeriy Shustov / CC-BY-SA 3.0
  2. ^ map by Adam Adom
  3. ^ "First official anthem highlights festivities", Calgary Herald, July 2, 1980, pA1
  4. ^ "Canadians Sing New Anthem", Pittsburgh Press, July 2, 1980, p1
  5. ^ "Newspapers enter age of electronics", Dayton (O.) Daily News, July 24, 1980, p4
  6. ^ "Eleven newspapers chosen for electronic delivery test", Boston Globe, June 27, 1980, p21
  7. ^ "Year-Round Classes at 34 Schools Start", Los Angeles Times, July 8, 1980, p3
  8. ^ "Mixed results expected from trucking deregulation act", The Capital Times (Madison WI), July 5, 1980, p19
  9. ^ "3:48.8 Takes Away Bitter Rival's Mile Record", Los Angeles Times, July 2, 1980, p III-1
  10. ^ '"Vietnam War Memorial Authorized", St. Louis Post-Dispatch, July 2, 1980, p3
  11. ^ "Root Cause Analysis of the Hyatt Regency Disaster — Cautionary Tale About Assumptions", ThinkReliability.com website
  12. ^ "Pulitzer Winner Recalls Hyatt Skywalk Collapse", by Mica Marriott, The Gardner (MA) News, January 5, 2014
  13. ^ "Polish workers protest doubling of meat prices", AP report in Dayton (O.) Daily News, July 3, 1980, p1
  14. ^ "Carter Orders Young Men to Sign for Draft", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, July 3, 1980, p3
  15. ^ "Turkish minority government survives a no-confidence vote", Baltimore Sun, July 3, 1980, p2
  16. ^ Feroz Ahmad, Turkey: The Quest for Identity (Simon & Schuster Oneworld Publications, 2014)
  17. ^ "Judge Halts Deportations of Haitians, Criticizes U.S.", Los Angeles Times, July 3, 1980, p1
  18. ^ "'Airplane!,' Disaster-Film Spoof", The New York Times, July 2, 1980, pC17
  19. ^ "'Airplane!' Sends Up a Comic Boom", Los Angeles Times, July 2, 1980, pVI-1
  20. ^ "'Airplane' loses altitude fast", Daily News (New York), July 2, 1980, p75
  21. ^ Greenland Cup results, RecSportSoccerStatisticsFoundation (RSSSF)
  22. ^ "Today, Harborplace and city are one", Baltimore Sun, July 2, 1980, p1
  23. ^ "Baltimore: Will Harborplace become model for decaying center cities?", Dayton (O.) Journal Herald, July 3, 1980, p111
  24. ^ "20 Flee From Romania in Biplane", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, July 4, 1980, p9
  25. ^ "Soviet gynast injures neck in training", Louisville Courier-Journal, July 14, 1980, pD-5
  26. ^ "Jordan premier Sharaf dies of heart attack at 41", UPI report in Boston Globe, July 4, 1980, p. 8
  27. ^ "Goolagong Wins Wimbledon Women's Title", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, July 5, 1980, p1
  28. ^ "Aliens Robbed, Abandoned in Desert; 13 Die— Salvadorans Left in 110-Degree Arizona Heat by Smugglers", Los Angeles Times, July 7, 1980, p1
  29. ^ "10 Aliens May Have Died Because Survivors Told Lie", Los Angeles Times, July 8, 1980, p1
  30. ^ "McEnroe Breaks the Tie, but He Can't Break Borg— The Swede Wins the Fifth Set... and His Fifth Title in a Row", by Ted Green, Los Angeles Times, July 6, 1980, pIII-1
  31. ^ "Slavery banned", Baltimore Sun, July 7, 1980, p2
  32. ^ "Mauritanians abolish slavery", Boston Globe, July 7, 1980, p6
  33. ^ "City of Moors and Blacks Fights Old Evil: Slavery", The New York Times, September 10, 1980, p2A
  34. ^ "Computer finds 'new' play by Shakespeare", by Nigel Hawkes, The Observer, July 6, 1980, p1
  35. ^ "Radio Marti: Castro hid 1980 'massacre'", Miami Herald, September 7, 1980, p3A
  36. ^ "Cuba: The July 6, 1980 Canimar River Massacre"— 71 killed for attempting to flee Cuba"
  37. ^ Néstor T. Carbonell, Why Cuba Matters: New Threats in America’s Backyard (Archway Publishing, 2020)
  38. ^ "Phalangists accused of beach massacre", by James MacManus, The Guardian (London), July 11, 1980, p6
  39. ^ "Syria 'massacre'", The Guardian (London), July 8, 1980, p6
  40. ^ "Syrian forces kill leader of outlawed Muslim Sect", Baltimore Sun, August 18, 1980, p2
  41. ^ Kevin M. Woods, et al., Saddam's War: An Iraqi Military Perspective of the Iran-Iraq War (National Defense University, 2009) p32
  42. ^ "Iran Gives Women Deadline on Dress", Los Angeles Times, July 8, 1980, p18
  43. ^ Nigel Williamson, The Rough Guide to Led Zeppelin (Rough Guides, 2007) p220
  44. ^ "Led Zeppelin disbands, citing death of Bonham", Des Moines (IA) Register, December 5, 1980, p4
  45. ^ "Led Zeppelin returns to stage", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, December 11, 2007, pC-8
  46. ^ Lubelski Lipec '80 (Lublin July '80, Polish language, translation available), Grodzka Gate – NN Theatre website
  47. ^ Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident Tupolev Tu-154B-2 CCCP-85355 Alma-Ata Airport (ALA)". aviation-safety.net.
  48. ^ "The World", Los Angeles Times, July 15, 1980, p2
  49. ^ "Hunted 10-Years, Bomb Figure Turns Herself In", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, July 9, 1980, p2
  50. ^ "The House On West 11th Street", by Mel Gussow, The New York Times, March 5, 2000
  51. ^ "2,400 Paratroopers Join Mass Jump in Mobility Test"], Los Angeles Times, July 9, 1980, p11
  52. ^ "Iran Arrests 200 in Plot to Kill Khomeini", Salt Lake (UT) Tribune, July 13, 1980, p1
  53. ^ "3 Trampled to Death in Brazil Trying to View Pope John Paul", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, July 10, 1980, p2
  54. ^ "Weather Reports, Forecasts", Los Angeles Times, July 10, 1980, pIV-3
  55. ^ "The Nation", Los Angeles Times, July 10, 1980, p2
  56. ^ "Heat wave emergency in Missouri", Akron (O.) Beacon Journal, July 14, 1980, p1
  57. ^ Morris B. Abram, et al., Protecting Human Subjects: The Adequacy and Uniformity of Federal Rules and Policies, and their Implementation, for the Protection of Human Subjects in Biomedical and Behavioral Research (President's Commission for the Study of Ethical Problems in Medicine and Biomedical and Behavioral Research, 1981) p.182, n17
  58. ^ "Pioneer Genetic Implants Revealed"], Dr. Martin J. Cline, Los Angeles Times, October 8, 1980, p. 1
  59. ^ "Only electing king installed in Malaysia", San Bernardino County (CA) News, July 11, 1980, p2
  60. ^ "Willie Is a Man With Many Degrees", Los Angeles Times, July 25, 1980, p2
  61. ^ "Atlantan Survives Heatstroke At 120 Degrees", Atlanta Constitution, July 24, 1980, p1-C
  62. ^ "New FM station is set to rock 'n roll", by John Teerds, The Age (Melbourne), July 10, 1980, p1
  63. ^ What Does It Mean? FM Commercial Radio", in "Stereo Topics", "The Age Green Guide" section, by Alex Encel, in The Age (Melbourne), July 10, 1980, p35
  64. ^ "FM with ads", The Age (Melbourne), July 11, 1980, p5
  65. ^ "Ailing U.S. Hostage Released by Iran", Los Angeles Times, July 11, 1980, p1
  66. ^ "Europe's longest tunnel links Italy and France", Louisville (KY) Courier-Journal, July 13, 1980, p3
  67. ^ "Name the Play: TV Makes Arm-Chair Quarterbacks Into Coaches", Miami Herald, July 11, 1980, pF-1
  68. ^ "5,000 coaches— Armchair quarterbacks call 'em through computer in Columbus", by Sheldon Oeker, Akron (O.) Beacon Journal, July 14, 1980, pA-1
  69. ^ "Dad plans return to Ukraine, but son, 12, fights to stay here", by Monica Langley, Chicago Tribune, July 19, 1980, p1
  70. ^ "Whatever Became of the that Soviet Kid Who Sued His Folks to Stay Here?", by Charles Leroux, Chicago Tribune, July 2, 1999
  71. ^ a b "World News", Los Angeles Times, July 16, 1980, p1
  72. ^ "Carter's Brother Forced to Register as Agent for Libya", Los Angeles Times, July 15, 1980, p1
  73. ^ attribution: Bernard Marti
  74. ^ Le monde du Minitel se paye Le Monde (The world of Minitel pays for 'Le Monde'), by Michel Puech, Mediapart, June 20, 2010
  75. ^ "Reagan Picks Bush as Running Mate— Fails in Day-Long Effort to Persuade Ford to Run", Los Angeles Times, July 17, 1980, p1
  76. ^ "Reagan-Ford Bush!", Ocala (FL) Star-Banner, July 17, 1980, p1
  77. ^ a b "Almost took VP spot, but time ran out: Ford", by Douglas Frantz, Chicago Tribune, July 19, 1980, p1
  78. ^ "A Unique Idea— and How it Failed", by Richard Bergholz, Los Angeles Times, July 18, 1980, p1
  79. ^ Courier-Journal (Louisville KY), July 17, 1980, p1
  80. ^ "Olympic Boycott Games" GBathletics.com
  81. ^ "Bell Meet Champs Sound Off", Philadelphia Daily News, July 18, 1980, p90
  82. ^ "It's just not the Olympics", by Frank Dolson, Philadelphia Inquirer, July 18, 1980, pC-1
  83. ^ "Suzuki, Japanese Premier, Names Cabinet", Los Angeles Times, July 18, 1980, p7
  84. ^ "General Sworn In as Bolivian Leader; U.S. Recalls Envoy, Los Angeles Times, July 19, 1980, p3
  85. ^ "Reagan, GOP begin 'crusade to make America great again'", Baltimore Evening Sun, July 18, 1980, p1
  86. ^ "The Nation", Los Angeles Times, July 18, 1980, p2
  87. ^ "Titanic— Oh, they'll be glad when the great ship is found", Baltimore Evening Sun, July 18, 1980, p9
  88. ^ "Houvion Makes Mark, 18-11 3/4 in Pole Vault", Los Angeles Times, July 18, 1980, pIII-1
  89. ^ "India is 6th to join space club", Arizona Republic (Phoenix), July 19, 1980, p8
  90. ^ "New Botswana chief accepted", Boston Globe, July 19, 1980, p4
  91. ^ "Gunmen in Paris Try to Kill Iran's Deposed Premier, Los Angeles Times, July 19, 1980, p1
  92. ^ "July 18, 1980: Assassination attempt on Bakhtiar fails", Gulf News, July 17, 2015
  93. ^ attribution: Marcin Szala
  94. ^ "Moscow Olympic Games Open— 103,000 See Pageant, Parade of 81 Nations Taking Part in Events", Los Angeles Times, July 20, 1980, p1
  95. ^ "Committee President Blasts Puerto Rico", Salisbury (MD) Daily Times, July 20, 1980, pC3
  96. ^ "The World", Los Angeles Times, July 20, 1980, p2
  97. ^ "Gagne wins wrestling title", Minneapolis Star-Tribune, July 20, 1980, p6C
  98. ^ http://worldcat.org/identities/lccn-no2010104993 [bare URL]
  99. ^ a b "World News", Los Angeles Times, July 21, 1980, p2
  100. ^ "Iran Parliament Opens, Split by Faction Feuds", Los Angeles Times, July 21, 1980, p1
  101. ^ "Soviets Expel Three Feminists", Los Angeles Times, July 21, 1980, p2
  102. ^ "Registration for Draft Off to a Quiet Start", Los Angeles Times, July 22, 1980, p1
  103. ^ "Actors' Strike Shuts Down TV and Movie Productions", Los Angeles Times, July 22, 1980, p1
  104. ^ "German Warship Curbs Lifted", Los Angeles Times, July 22, 1980, p2
  105. ^ "Eli Lilly to Test Synthetic Insulin on Humans", Los Angeles Times, July 22, 1980, pIV-1
  106. ^ "The World", Los Angeles Times, July 23, 1980, p2
  107. ^ "The Nation", Los Angeles Times, July 21, 1980, p2
  108. ^ "Heat Invades Northeast; Big Cities Conserve Water", Los Angeles Times, July 22, 1980, p1
  109. ^ "Nadia Is Right on Beam With Perfect '10'", Los Angeles Times, July 22, 1980, pIII-1
  110. ^ "Former Premier of Syria Slain in Paris", Los Angeles Times, July 22, 1980, p9
  111. ^ "AMA's New Ethics Code Allows Doctors to Advertise, Work With Chiropractors", Los Angeles Times, July 23, 1980, p4
  112. ^ "Decision by FCC Could Increase Cable TV Shows", Los Angeles Times, July 23, 1980, p1
  113. ^ "U.S. Fails to Win Ban on Commercial Whale Killing", Los Angeles Times, July 23, 1980, p6
  114. ^ "Hunting of Killer Whales Partly Banned", Los Angeles Times, July 26, 1980, p3
  115. ^ "Soviet Swimmer Breaks Barrier in 1,500 Meters", Los Angeles Times, July 23, 1980, pIII-1
  116. ^ "Khomeini Opponent Assassinated in U.S.—Ex-Embassy Aide Shot at Suburban Washington Home", Los Angeles Times, July 23, 1980, p1
  117. ^ "Postal Worker, 2nd Man Held in Iranian's Slaying, Los Angeles Times, July 24, 1980, p1
  118. ^ "D.C. Man Sought in Assassination of Iranian Exile", The Washington Post, July 24, 1980
  119. ^ "Turkish union leader killed by gunmen", The Guardian, July 23, 1980, p6
  120. ^ "Race car driver dies after crash", Montreal Gazette, July 23, 1980, p44
  121. ^ "World News", Los Angeles Times, July 25, 1980, p2
  122. ^ "Engineers Enter Reactor Building", The New York Times, August 16, 1980, pA1
  123. ^ "Technicians Find Control Device Intact in Damaged Nuclear Plant", The New York Times, August 16, 1980, pA6
  124. ^ "IRA Leader Ends Hunger Strike", Los Angeles Times, July 24, 1980, p2
  125. ^ "World News", Los Angeles Times, July 28, 1980, p2
  126. ^ "'Grateful Dead' pianist dies of car carsh injuries", San Francisco Examiner, July 24, 1980, pB9
  127. ^ "Women Violinist Slain at New York's Met— Body Discovered in Opera House Shaft After 12-Hour Search", Los Angeles Times, July 25, 1980, p4
  128. ^ "Stagehand, 21, Seized in Murder of Violinist At the Met on July 23", The New York Times, August 31, 1980, p1
  129. ^ "Confession Details Given As Opera Murder Trial Starts", by E. R. Shipp, The New York Times, April 28, 1981
  130. ^ "Rebel Island Greets Troops", Los Angeles Times, July 25, 1980, p1
  131. ^ "Pacific Isle's Rebel Chief Seen Defying Occupation", Los Angeles Times, July 26, 1980, p5
  132. ^ "Olympic History: Don't blink", Sacramento (CA) Bee, July 18, 2000, pD2
  133. ^ "Johannesburg municipal workers strike | South African History Online". www.sahistory.org.za. Retrieved 2023-09-26.
  134. ^ "Honduras Constituent Assembly Receives Control of Government", Miami Herald, July 22, 1980, p2
  135. ^ "Honduras ruler gets 'president' title', Chicago Tribune, July 27, 1980, p8
  136. ^ "Top German terrorist dies in road accident", by Siegfried Buschschuler in The Guardian (London), July 26, 1980, p1
  137. ^ "23 Boarding House Residents Die in Fire", Los Angeles Times, July 28, 1980, p4
  138. ^ a b "Shah of Iran Dies in Exile; Hostage Fate Still Clouded", by Don A. Schanche, Los Angeles Times, July 28, 1980, p1
  139. ^ "Iran reaction: 'The bloodsucker of the century has died at last'", Tampa Bay Times (St. Petersburg FL), July 28, 1980, p1
  140. ^ "Jewish Youth Killed in Attack by Arab", Los Angeles Times, July 28, 1980, p19
  141. ^ "Italian Impeachment Bid Fails", Los Angeles Times, July 27, 1980, p2
  142. ^ "Peru Ends 12 Years Of Military Rule", St. Louis Post-Dispatch, July 29, 1980, p2
  143. ^ "Trial may put don at scene of another crime", by David J. Krajicek, Daily News (New York), August 17, 1986, p3
  144. ^ "The World", Los Angeles Times, July 27, 1980, p2
  145. ^ Alfred Znamierowski, The World Encyclopedia of Flags: The Definitive Guide to International Flags, Banners, Standards and Ensigns (Hermes House, 2001) p167
  146. ^ "New Hebrides a New Nation", Los Angeles Times, July 30, 1980, p2
  147. ^ "Israel Enacts a Law Making All of Jerusalem the Capital", by Christopher S. Wren, The New York Times, July 31, 1980, p1
  148. ^ "World News", Los Angeles Times, July 30, 1980, p2
  149. ^ "An Upper-Case Pole Pole Vaults 18-11½— Kozakiewicz Breaks the World Record", Los Angeles Times, July 31, 1980, pIII-1
  150. ^ "Doctors Say J.R. Richard Suffered a Stroke", Los Angeles Times, August 1, 1980, pIII-1
  151. ^ "Iran Shoots 24 for Plot, Drugs and Other Offenses", The New York Times, August 1, 1980, pA5
  152. ^ "Prime Minister of Italy Wins Vote of Confidence", The New York Times, August 1, 1980, pA7
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