December 1977

The following events occurred in December 1977:

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December 6, 1977: White-ruled South Africa cedes unconnected pieces of territory to create "Republic of Bophuthatswana"
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December 25, 1977: Film comedian Charlie Chaplin dies at age 88
December 30, 1977: Spain offers autonomy to Basque Country in Álava, Biscay, and Gipuzkoa provinces [1]
December 31, 1977: Sheikh Jabar Al-Sabah becomes the new Emir of Kuwait

December 1, 1977 (Thursday)

December 2, 1977 (Friday)

  • A jet crash killed 59 of the 159 people aboard a Libyan Arab Airlines flight that was bringing Muslim pilgrims back home from Saudi Arabia.[4] The Tupolev Tu-154 ran out of fuel after having to alter its route to avoid Egyptian airspace, and the crew was attempting to find an alternate airport after its destination at Benghazi was hindered by a heavy fog.[5]
  • "World Series Cricket" (WSC), created by Australian TV network owner Kerry Packer after he was unable to secure rights to broadcast international network on his Nine Network, played its first match. Denied the right to use the trademark term "Test match" by the Marylebone Cricket Club, or to identify a national team as "Australia", Packer promoted the five-day international series as a "Supertest" and dubbed the team "WSC Australian XI". In that normal cricket venues in Australia were denied by Marylebone to rival competitors, WSC leased four alternate sites and hired John Maley to develop the "drop-in pitch".[6] In the inaugural match, WSC Australian XI faced off against WSC West Indies XI at the Australian rules football stadium at Adelaide, in South Australia, playing before only 2,847 spectators.[7][8] On the same day, a regular Test series began at Brisbane between Australia and India in front of 9,000 fans.[9]
  • Convicted murderers Erskine "Buck" Burrows and Larry Tacklyn were hanged at Casemates Prison in Bermuda,[10] becoming the last people to be executed under British rule anywhere in the world.[11] Burrows had been convicted of the 1973 assassination of Bermuda Governor Richard Sharples and four other murders, while Tacklyn was convicted of assisting Burrows on two murders. Rioting broke out the day before the execution of the two men, and at the request of Governor Peter Ramsbotham, the British Defence Ministry sent 150 troops to restore order.[12]

December 3, 1977 (Saturday)

  • Seamus Twomey, a member of the Provisional Irish Republican Army's ruling army council, was recaptured in Ballsbridge more than four years after his escape by helicopter from Dublin's Mountjoy Prison.[13] Police in the Republic of Ireland had spotted the fugitive near Dublin and arrested him after a high-speed car chase.
  • Fraye Arbeter Shtime, the oldest Yiddish language newspaper in the United States, published its final edition after 87 years of existence. The folding of the Stimme left only five Yiddish newspapers in the U.S., with the most popular one being the 80-year-old Jewish Daily Vorwarts.[14]
  • Died: Jack Beresford, 78, British rower gold medal winner in Olympic gold medals (1924, 1932 and 1936), and silver medals in 1920 and 1928

December 4, 1977 (Sunday)

  • All 100 passengers and crew on board Malaysian Airline System Flight 653 were killed in a crash after the plane was hijacked. MAS 653 had departed Penang toward Kuala Lumpur at 7:54 p.m. local time. Ten minutes later, the crew reported that a terrorist from the Japanese Red Army had entered the cockpit and demanded to be flown to Singapore.[15] The gunman then killed the pilot, the co-pilot and himself, and the autopilot was apparently disconnected, perhaps by another person attempting to fly the aircraft. The Boeing 737 crashed into a swamp near Tanjung Kupang on Johor.[16]
  • The coronation of Emperor Bokassa I took place in the Bangui, capital of the Central African Empire. According to reporters, the lavish ceremony at Bangui's indoor sports stadium was inspired by the 1804 coronation of Bokassa's idol, French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte. Bokassa, formerly President Jean-Bédel Bokassa, received "a 6-foot diamond-encrusted scepter of office and was then draped by aides in an ermine-trimmed red velvet cloak" that included a 24 feet (7.3 m) train. Emulating Napoleon, Bokassa placed a "diamond-encrusted imperial crown" upon his own head and then crowned his wife as the Empress Catherine, before sitting down on a specially-designed "two-ton gold-plated throne, shaped like a 15-foot high eagle with an 18-foot wingspan", designed by French sculptor Olivier Brice, who also designed the crown, the scepter and a ceremonial sword. The event, held in a nation where the average per capita income was only $155, cost US$30,000,000.[17]

December 5, 1977 (Monday)

December 6, 1977 (Tuesday)

Flag of Bophuthatswana
  • South Africa granted nominal independence to Bophuthatswana, its newest Bantustan, although the nation was not recognized by any other country.[22] In the capital at Mafeking, Lucas Mangope was inaugurated as the first and only President of Bophuthatswana, serving until the area's reincorporation into a black-ruled South Africa in 1994.
  • Born: Andrew Flintoff, English cricketer for the England national team with 591 Test matches and 154 ODIs; in Preston, Lancashire

December 7, 1977 (Wednesday)

December 8, 1977 (Thursday)

  • In Paris, the Réseau Express Régional (RER), described by Reuters at the time as "the world's most advanced urban transport system", was inaugurated by France's President Valéry Giscard d'Estaing, who took the controls of the electric high-speed underground train and drove it at speeds up to 100 kilometres per hour (62 mph) on its 10 kilometer trip from the new Châtelet–Les Halles station beneath Paris to the Boissy-Saint-Léger station. The system opened to the public the next day, with free rides for its first three days.[25]
  • Portugal's Socialist Prime Minister Mario Soares and his government lost a vote of confidence in the National Assembly by a margin of 159 against and 100 in favor. Deputies of the Communist Party, Social Democrats and Center Democrats joined in their opposition to Soares.[26]
  • Off the coast of the U.S. state of Louisiana, 17 people were killed in the crash of a helicopter, carrying employees of the Pennzoil Producing Company to an offshore oil drilling rig. Only two people survived the accident as the Puma helicopter dropped from a height of 130 feet (40 m) while attempting to land at the rig in high winds. The men were preparing to start a seven-day shift at the Pennzoil rig, located in the Gulf of Mexico 90 miles (140 km) south of Morgan City, Louisiana.[27]
  • Born:

December 9, 1977 (Friday)

  • In one of the most violent games in the National Basketball Association (NBA) in the U.S., Rudy Tomjanovich of the Houston Rockets was seriously injured by a single punch by Kermit Washington of the Los Angeles Lakers.[28] Tomjanovich was struck so hard that besides fracturing his skull and having a broken jaw and bone, he leaked blood and spinal fluid while unconscious on the basketball court, and he was placed in the intensive care unit of the Centinela Hospital in Houston.[29]Washington was fined $10,000 and suspended from NBA play by Commissioner Larry O'Brien for at least 60 days (keeping him out for 26 games).[30] The incident would be the basis of a book by sportswriter John Feinstein, The Punch: One Night, Two Lives, and the Fight That Changed Basketball Forever.
  • The U.S. and Mexico made their first exchange of prisoners. At 9:07 in the morning, a chartered Texas International Airways DC-9 departed from San Diego, California with 36 Mexicans (11 from Texas state prisons and 25 from federal prisons). After landing in Mexico City, the DC-9 took aboard 61 Americans (35 men and 26 women) who had been in Mexican jails, along with an 18-month-old girl whose mother had given birth while incarcerated, and the aircraft landed in San Diego at 5:15 in the afternoon. Once in the U.S., the 61 Americans were transferred to other prisons. Most of the 235 American prisoners who qualified for a return to the U.S. had been convicted of drug trafficking or possession, but seven had been convicted of murder.[31]
  • Died:

December 10, 1977 (Saturday)

December 11, 1977 (Sunday)

Soviet 20-kopeck stamp of Soyuz 26

December 12, 1977 (Monday)

  • The African nation of Kenya banned the sale of skins and trophies of all endangered wildlife, following up on a May 1977 ban on all hunting.[38]
  • A civilian airliner from Israel was allowed for the first time to land in an Arab nation, as an Airline Arkia BAC-111 jet brought 64 journalists to Cairo on a flight from Tel Aviv to cover the December 14 opening of the Cairo peace talks.[39]
  • Born: Adam Saitiev, Russian Chechen freestyle wrestler, 1999 and 2002 world champion at 76 and 84 kg respectively, 2000 Olympic gold medalist at 85 kg; in Khasavyurt, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
  • Died:

December 13, 1977 (Tuesday)

December 14, 1977 (Wednesday)

  • The 591 residents of the town of Lark, Utah were given notice by Kennecott Copper Company that they would be evicted from their homes. The meeting of company officials and townspeople took place at the chapel of the town's Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints".[46] Lark had been a company town for the U.S. Smelting and Refining Company, until U.S. Smelting sold the property to Kennecott. Most of the residents were relocated to the nearby town of Copperton. Lark became a ghost town as well as the dumping ground for Kennecott to store large quantities of overburden from nearby Bingham Canyon Mine.[47]
  • Born:

December 15, 1977 (Thursday)

  • Kim Il Sung was unanimously re-elected President of North Korea by the Supreme People's Assembly of the Asian nation. Kim, leader of the nation's Communist Party since 1945, and chaired the provisional government in 1945 and had been the first, and only, president since the 1948 proclamation of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.[48]
  • Less than six months after becoming an independent nation, the northeast African nation of Djibouti began its transition to a dictatorship, with 17 opponents of President Hassan Gouled Aptidon being arrested for being members of the Mouvement populaire de libération, and charged with killing five people in a grenade attack on a restaurant.[49]

December 16, 1977 (Friday)

  • Saturday Night Fever was released in theaters[50] and would become the biggest most successful dance movie of all time. Made on a budget of $3.5 million, it would earn more than 65 times that much, with box office receipts of $237.1 million. The movie launched the film career of its star, John Travolta, and catapulted the Bee Gees — who performed several songs on the soundtrack — to newfound success.
  • The unincorporated U.S. town of Vulcan, West Virginia, received a pledge from the West Virginia State Highway Commission that a bridge would be replaced, but only after a journalist from the Soviet Union had arrived in the town to meet with a community leader who had written a request for help to the Soviet Embassy.[51]
  • A serious disaster was averted in the collision of two supertankers in the Indian Ocean, roughly 20 miles (32 km) from the coast of South Africa and resorts at Port Elizabeth, when the empty tanker MV Venpet struck its fully-loaded sister ship, MV Venoil. Although two of the 84-member crew of the Venoil were killed, the Venpet missed hitting the oil storage tanks directly, averting an explosion that would have killed most of the people on both ships.[52]
  • Born: René Redzepi, Danish chef and restaurateur, owner of the Copenhagen's award-winning Noma restaurant; in Copenhagen
  • Died:

December 17, 1977 (Saturday)

  • Two days of voting were completed in a referendum in the Philippines on whether President and Prime Minister Ferdinand E. Marcos should continue in office after the organization in 1978 of a new national legislature, the Interim Batasang Pambansa.[53] Official returns showed Marcos winning more than 89% of the vote.[54]
  • A the age of 80, Miskel Spillman became the oldest person to host the U.S. comedy variety show Saturday Night Live, being two months older than actress Ruth Gordon, who had been 80 when she hosted on January 22. Mrs. Spillman, who won the program's one-time "Anybody Can Host" contest, had been selected after writing "I am 80 years old and I want one more cheap thrill as my doctor just told me I only have 25 years to live."[55] Mrs. Spillman, who lived 24 more years after being the only non-celebrity to host the show, would hold the record until 2010, when 88-year-old comedian Betty White was the host.
  • Born: Oxana Fedorova, Russian model, 2002 Miss Universe winner who was the first ever to be dethroned, later a television host; in Pskov, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union

December 18, 1977 (Sunday)

December 19, 1977 (Monday)

  • The government of Indonesia released more than 10,000 political prisoners, many of whom had been held for 12 years without trial on suspicion of being part of the 30 September Movement that had attempted to overthrow the government in 1965.[61]
  • Dries van Agt was sworn in as the new Prime Minister of the Netherlands, succeeding Joop den Uyl, who had resigned eight months earlier on March 22. Van Agt had previously served as the Minister of Justice and the Vice Premier. The new government was formed from a coalition of the Christian Democrats and the Liberal Party, which combined for 77 of the 150 seats in the Second Chamber, a majority of only two.[62]
  • Died:

December 20, 1977 (Tuesday)

  • A 5.9 magnitude earthquake struck Iran at 4:34 in the morning Iran Standard Time (23:34 on 19 December UTC) and killed 584 people while injuring more than 1,000 others.[63][64][65]
  • In Argentina, the bodies of five women washed ashore on the coastline of Santa Teresita in the Province of Buenos Aires. Almost 30 years later, the bodies would be identified as those of five people suspected of having become "desaparecidos", last seen on December 10 after the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo group had published an advertisement listening the names of their adult children who had been kidnapped and never seen again. Based on the condition of the bodies, which had indicated "impact on hard objects from a great height", investigators would conclude that the victims had their corpses dropped into the sea as part of a "death flight" ("vuelo de la muerte"). DNA evidence showed that the five dead were all organizers of the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo, Azucena Villaflor, Esther Ballestrino, María Ponce de Bianco, Ángela Auad, and Léonie Duquet.[66]
  • After decades of the denial of United Nations membership to both North Vietnam and South Vietnam, the Socialist Republic of Vietnam — the union of both countries following South Vietnam's conquest by the north in 1975— was admitted to the UN. The newly independent Republic of Djibouti was admitted on the same day.
  • Jesse Walter Bishop of Nevada, who in 1979 would become the first person to be executed in the gas chamber since the reinstatement of the death penalty in the U.S. (and the second American legally executed overall) committed the killing that would lead to his death sentence. Bishop had walked into a casino in Las Vegas and shot David Ballard, a customer at the El Morocco Casino who had gotten married earlier in the day. Thompson died of his injuries 10 days later.[67]

December 21, 1977 (Wednesday)

December 22, 1977 (Thursday)

  • In the U.S., a grain elevator exploded in Westwego, Louisiana, killing 36 people. The blast happened at 9:10 in the morning local time when a Norwegian ship, MV Vesteroy, was being loaded with grain from one of the silos at Continental Grain Company. A chain reaction from the first events set off similar explosions in 45 storage units.[70][71][72]
  • In the U.S., an artist from Hawaii tried to kill himself by leaping from the 86th floor of the Empire State Building in New York City. After he jumped, a 30 miles per hour (48 km/h) wind blew him back against the building and he landed on a 3 feet (0.91 m) wide ledge on the 85th floor. According to an Associated Press report, "Helms lay stunned on the ledge about half an hour before he could open a window to the NBC television transmitter room on the 85th floor and crawl inside about 7:15 p.m., police said."[73]
  • Died: Karl John, 72, German film actor

December 23, 1977 (Friday)

December 24, 1977 (Saturday)

  • Colombian serial killer Daniel Camargo Barbosa was incarcerated at the "inescapable" prison on Gorgona Island, 17 miles (27 km) off of the coast of Colombia, after having killed more than 80 young girls. He would remain on the island for almost seven years before escaping in November 1984, and would be presumed dead until less than a month later, when he would travel to Ecuador and resume killing at least 72 more girls over 14 months before being arrested again.[75] He would be stabbed to death in 1994 by the nephew of one of his victims.November 15, 1994
  • Died:

December 25, 1977 (Sunday)

  • Menachem Begin became the first Prime Minister of Israel to visit an Arab republic as he and a delegation that included Defense Minister Moshe Dayan landed at the Abu Sweir air base and then flew to Ismailia as the guest of Egypt's President Anwar Sadat. From the airport, the Israeli delegation was chauffeured "in what must rank as one of the world's briefest motorcades", traveling in six limousines 100 yards (91 m) to Sadat's home. On the flight from Tel Aviv, Begin told reporters, "Moses made the same trip.. only faster and in the opposite direction."[77]
  • Born: Uhm Ji-won, South Korean film and TV actress; in Daegu
  • Died: Charlie Chaplin, 88, English comedian, silent film actor, and filmmaker, died at his mansion in Switzerland, Le Manoir de Ban, near Lake Geneva and the village of Vevey.[78]

December 26, 1977 (Monday)

December 27, 1977 (Tuesday)

  • Star Wars made its debut in the United Kingdom, seven months after its world premiere in the United States.[83]
  • A grain elevator explosion in the U.S. in less than a week killed 18 people at the Farmer's Export Company in Galveston, Texas.[84] The disaster happened five days after a similar accident in killed 34 people in Westwego, Louisiana

December 28, 1977 (Wednesday)

December 29, 1977 (Thursday)

  • All 24 people aboard a SAN Ecuador airliner were killed when the Vickers 764D Viscount crashed into a hillside while en route from Guayaquil to Cuenca.[86]
  • U.S. President Carter arrived in the Communist nation of Poland, coming to Warsaw as the first stop in a 9-day tour of six nations. He was greeted by the de facto leader, Polish Workers Party chairman Edward Gierek.[87] The translator for the U.S. Department of State offended Carter's hosts when he rendered Carter's remark about a "desire for peace" by using the word for a sexual desire for the Polish people. Another statement by Carter, about his departure on the trip from the U.S., used a word referring to abandonment. Carter's press secretary, Jody Powell, told reporters that the translator had been "relieved of his duties" and added, "There will be a new translator tomorrow," while a State Department official made an official apology to the Polish government.[88]
  • Pakistan's President Zia ul-Haq announced the release of 11,109 political prisoners who had been detained by Prime Minister Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, who had been overthrown in July.[89]

December 30, 1977 (Friday)

December 31, 1977 (Saturday)

References

  1. required attribution:Luis Miguel Bugallo Sánchez
  2. "Cable TV Experiment Launched— QUBE Comes to Columbus", Los Angeles Times, December 21, 1977, p. IV-1
  3. "Anti-Sadat Arabs Gather at Summit", by Joe Alex Morris Jr., Los Angeles Times, December 2, 1977, p. I-1
  4. "Plane With Moslem Pilgrims From Mecca Crashes; 56 Die", Los Angeles Times, December 3, 1977, p. I-14
  5. Aviation Safety Network
  6. "World Series gone, but can't be forgotten", The Age (Melbourne), May 31, 2003
  7. "Pascoe Puts Teams Level— WSC West Indians 2-47 v WSC Australians 256", by Brian Mossop, Sydney Morning Herald, December 3, 1977, p. 50
  8. "Packer cricket circus flops", Cambridge Evening News, December 2, 1977, p. 1
  9. "Toohey, 82, shines but spin routs Australia— India 1-13 v Australia 166", by Bill O'Reilly, Sydney Morning Herald, December 3, 1977, p. 50
  10. "Bermuda Hangs 2 Convicted Killers", Los Angeles Times, December 3, 1977, p. I-2
  11. "Death penalty abolished on all British territory", by Anthony Browne, The Times (London), October 23, 2002
  12. "Bermuda Calls for British Troops to Quell Riots", Los Angeles Times, December 4, 1977, p. I-1
  13. "Police in Dublin Capture Fugitive IRA Commander", Los Angeles Times, December 4, 1977, p. I-23
  14. "Oldest Yiddish Paper in U.S. Dies", Los Angeles Times, December 5, 1977, p. I-19
  15. "Hijacked Airliner Crashes; 100 Die— Malaysia Jet Seized by Red Army, Sources Say", Los Angeles Times, December 5, 1977, p. I-1
  16. Aviation Safety Network
  17. "Emperor Crowns Himself in Poverty-Stricken Land", Los Angeles Times, December 5, 1977, p. I-1
  18. Jerry Langton, Showdown: How the Outlaws, Hells Angels and Cops Fought for Control of the Streets (John Wiley, 2010) p. 56
  19. "How the Hells Angels Conquered Canada", by Patrick Lejtenyi, VICE Canada
  20. "Bruce, Adviser to 6 Presidents, Dies— Served in 3 Top Posts, Was Envoy to Peking", Los Angeles Times, December 6, 1977, p. I-1
  21. "A. N. Vasilevsky, Favorite Stalin Strategist, Dies", Los Angeles Times, December 7, 1977, p. I-8
  22. "101-Gun Salute Heralds Newest Black Republic", by Jack Foisie, Los Angeles Times, December 6, 1977, p. I-21
  23. "Sweden Will Outlaw Slot Machines", Los Angeles Times, December 8, 1977, p. I-4
  24. "The World", Los Angeles Times, December 11, 1977, p. I-2
  25. "Giscard Takes Controls to Open Paris Subway", Los Angeles Times, December 9, 1977, p. I-5
  26. "Portugal's Socialist Government Falls", Los Angeles Times, December 8, 1977, p. I-4
  27. "17 Die, 2 Survive as Copter Crashes on Offshore Oil Rig", Los Angeles Times, December 9, 1977, p. I-20
  28. "The Lakers Go Down Fighting— 116-105; Washington Breaks Tomjanovich's Nose, Decks Kunnert but Can't KO Houston", by Ted Green, Los Angeles Times, December 10, 1977, p. III-1
  29. "Tomjanovich Is in Intensive Care After Laker Punchout", Los Angeles Times, December 11, 1977, p. III-1
  30. "O'Brien Hits Washington With $53,560 Haymaker— Laker Forward Fined, Suspended 60 Days for Tomajanovich Punch", by Ted Green, Los Angeles Times, December 13, 1977, p. III-1
  31. "U.S. and Mexico Exchange First Group of Prisoners— 61 Americans Welcomed Like Heroes in San Diego; 36 Mexicans Returned to Jails in Their Country", by Frank del Olmo and Leonard Greenwood, Los Angeles Times, December 10, 1977, p. II-1
  32. Sanjit Narwekar, Eena Meena Deeka: The Story of Hindi Film Comedy (Rupa & Company, 2005) p. 196
  33. "Conservative Reelected in Australia", by George McArthur, Los Angeles Times, December 11, 1977, p. I-26
  34. "The World", Los Angeles Times, December 22, 1977, p. I-2
  35. "The World", Los Angeles Times, December 11, 1977, p. I-2
  36. "Adolph Rupp, Famed Kentucky Coach Dies", Los Angeles Times, December 11, 1977, p. III-1
  37. "Russians Link Up Space Ferry and Orbiting Craft", Los Angeles Times, December 12, 1977, p. I-1
  38. "The World", Los Angeles Times, December 13, 1977, p. I-2
  39. "First Israeli Jet Arrives in Cairo— 'Wheels Down'", Los Angeles Times, December 13, 1977, p. I-1
  40. "Churchill's Widow Dies in Her London Home at 92", Los Angeles Times, December 13, 1977, p. I-1
  41. Aviation Safety Network
  42. "University Basketball Team Plane Crashes; 30 of 31 Die— Evansville, Ind., Students Killed After Takeoff in Fog, Rain on Flight to Game in Tennessee", Los Angeles Times, December 14, 1977, p. I-1
  43. "Aces must develop courage, Watson Says", by Anne Harter, Evansville (IN) Press, December 12, 1977
  44. "Player Not on Team's Fatal Flight Dies in Auto Crash", Los Angeles Times, December 29, 1977, p.I-6
  45. "7 Women Killed in Dormitory Fire at R.I. College", Los Angeles Times, December 14, 1977, p. I-1
  46. "Get Out of Town, Copper Firm Tells 591 Residents", by David Johnston, Los Angeles Times, December 18, 1977, p. I-1
  47. Carr, Stephen L. (1986). The Historical Guide to Utah Ghost Towns (3rd ed.). Salt Lake City, Utah: Western Epics. p. 159. ISBN 0-914740-30-X.
  48. "Kim Reelected as N. Korea President", Los Angeles Times, December 16, 1977, p. I-9
  49. "Djibouti (the Republic of)", in Amnesty International Annual Report 1979 (Amnesty International Publications, 1979) pp. 16–17
  50. "Travolta's Best Foot Forward for Disco Role", by Kevin Thomas, Los Angeles Times, December 16, 1977, p. IV-1
  51. "State Surrenders When It Hears Russ Are Coming", Los Angeles Times, December 17, 1977, p. I-1
  52. "Tanker Collision Could Have Been Disastrous— Explosive Cargo Just Missed", Los Angeles Times, December 18, 1977, p. I-4
  53. "Early Returns Show Marcos Winning Big Endorsement in Philippine Referendum", Los Angeles Times, December 18, 1977, p. I-14
  54. "The World", Los Angeles Times, December 25, 1977, p.I-2
  55. "Granny to Get a Cheap Thrill on TV", Los Angeles Times, December 15, 1977, p.I-2
  56. Aviation Safety Network
  57. "Swiss Jet Crashes in Sea; At Least 19 Die", Los Angeles Times, December 19, 1977, p. I-5
  58. "Stage, Film and TV Actor Cyril Ritchard Dies at Age 80", Los Angeles Times, December 19, 1977, p. I-22
  59. "Louis Untermeyer, Poet, Editor, Critic, Dies at 92", Los Angeles Times, December 20, 1977, p. I-18
  60. "Marriner Eccles Dies at 87; New Deal Architect", Los Angeles Times, December 20, 1977, p. I-18
  61. "The World", Los Angeles Times, December 20, 1977, p.I-2
  62. "The World", Los Angeles Times, December 20, 1977, p.I-2
  63. National Geophysical Data Center / World Data Service (NGDC/WDS) (1972), Significant Earthquake Database (Data Set), National Geophysical Data Center, NOAA, doi:10.7289/V5TD9V7K
  64. "80 Dead as Quake Strikes 3 Iran Villages— Toll May Reach 300; Thousands Homeless in Freezing Weather", Los Angeles Times, December 21, 1977, p. I-4
  65. "Deaths in Iranian Quake Hit 500", Los Angeles Times, December 22, 1977, p. I-6
  66. "Por primera vez hallan cuerpos de 'vuelos de la muerte': Identifican restos de la fundadora de las Madres" (For the first time, bodies of 'flights of death' are found and identified as the remains of the founders of the Mothers"), Rio Negro (Patagonia, Argentina), July 9, 2005
  67. "Remember the victim", "Passaic (NJ) Herald-News, October 28, 1979, p.11
  68. Ayres, B. Drummond (December 22, 1977). "I-75 Link Opens First Full Interstate Route". The New York Times. p. 14. Retrieved December 4, 2021.
  69. "Ceremonies Open 1,564-Mile I-75", AP report in Columbus (GA) Ledger, December 21, 1977
  70. "24 Feared Dead in Louisiana Grain Elevator Blast", Los Angeles Times, December 23, 1977, p. I-6
  71. "Death Toll Rises to 32 in Grain Elevator Blast in Louisiana; 4 More Feared Trapped", Los Angeles Times, December 24, 1977, p.I-1
  72. "40 years ago today: Continental Grain elevator explosion", by Dominic Massa, WWL-TV, December 22, 2017
  73. "Man Jumps From Skyscraper but High Winds Save His Life", Los Angeles Times, December 24, 1977, p.I-2
  74. "Massawa Battles (1977-1978 and 1990", in Historical Dictionary of Eritrea, by Dan Connell (Rowman & Littlefield, 2019) p. 358
  75. "El sádico del Chanquito" ("The Sadist of Chanquito"), by Jose Comas, El Pais (Madrid), February 6, 1988
  76. "Velasco, Ex-President of Peru, Dies at 67", Los Angeles Times, December 25, 1977, p.I-20
  77. "Moses Did It, Begin Says, and His is the Return Trip", Los Angeles Times, December 26, 1977, p.I-10
  78. "Charlie Chaplin, 88, the 'Little Tramp,' Dies in Sleep", by Penelope McMillan, Los Angeles Times, December 26, 1977, p.I-1
  79. Madhu Dandavate , Dialogue with Life (Allied Publishers, 2005) p.103
  80. Oliver Hensengerth, Regionalism in China-Vietnam Relations: Institution-Building in the Greater Mekong Subregion (Taylor & Francis, 2009) pp.54-55
  81. "Film maker Howard Hawks dies", by Henry Miller, Daily Telegraph (London), December 27, 1977, p.13
  82. "Champion of Press Freedoms Dies at 78— Gainza Paz Published World-Renowned La Prensa of Buenos Aires", by David F. Belnap, Los Angeles Times, December 27, 1977, p.I-5
  83. "Star Wars in the UK: 1977, the First Star Wars Christmas", by Mark Newbold, StarWars.com, December 16, 2013
  84. "The Nation", Los Angeles Times, December 29, 1977, p.I-2
  85. "Burns Replaced as Chairman of the Federal Reserve", by Norman Kempster, Los Angeles Times, December 29, 1977, p.I-1
  86. Aviation Safety Network
  87. "Carter, Polish Leader Stress Friendship", by Jack Nelson, Los Angeles Times, December 30, 1977, p.I-1
  88. "Mistranslation Insults Poles— U.S. Apologizes", Los Angeles Times, December 30, 1977, p.I-1
  89. "The World", Los Angeles Times, December 30, 1977, p.I-2
  90. "Spanish Government Grants Home Rule to Basque Provinces", Los Angeles Times, December 31, 1977, p.I-7
  91. "Sheik Who Ruled Kuwait for 12 Years Dies at 62", Los Angeles Times, January 1, 1978, p.I-5
  92. "Turkish Government Fails; Premier Demirel Resigns", Los Angeles Times, January 1, 1978, p.I-A-2
  93. "Will Use Force if Quebec Secedes Illegally— Trudeau", Los Angeles Times, January 1, 1978, p.I-1
  94. "Shah Spreads Rich Table for Carters", Los Angeles Times, January 1, 1978, p.I-4
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