June 1978
Appearance
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The following events occurred in June 1978:
June 1, 1978 (Thursday)[edit]
- The 1978 FIFA World Cup started in Argentina with teams from 16 nations competing in four groups of four teams each, with each team playing the other members of their group once. Group 1 had the national teams of Argentina, France, Hungary and Italy; Group 2 had Mexico, Poland, Tunisia and West Germany; Group 3 had Austria, Brazil, Spain and Sweden; and Group 4 had Iran, the Netherlands, Peru and Scotland. Only one game was played on the first day, with Poland and West Germany kicking off at 3:00 before a crowd of 67,579 at the Estadio Monumental in Buenos Aires, ending in a 0 to 0 draw.[1]
June 2, 1978 (Friday)[edit]
- Deng Xiaopeng, Vice-Premier of the People's Republic of China, addressed a conference of leaders of the Chinese Communist Party and endorsed the reforms proposed by the Truth Criterion movement for modernization of agriculture, industry, defense and technology, and departing from the approach of the late Mao Zedong.[2] Deng's support would lead to a drastic change in Communist China's economic growth.
- The CyberVision 2001 home computer was introduced, appearing in select Montgomery Ward department stores, and billed as being "programmed to talk... play games, teach math, or help with your tax return."[3] The user-friendly computer was offered for sale at $399 (equivalent to $1,925 in 2024[4]).[5]
- President Ferdinand Marcos of the Philippines designated Manila and the surrounding suburbs as the National Capital Region by his Presidential Decree No. 1396.[6]
- Born:
- Nikki Cox, American TV actress known for Unhappily Ever After, Nikki and Las Vegas; in Los Angeles[7]
- Justin Long, American TV and film actor known for Ed and for Live Free or Die Hard; in Fairfield, Connecticut[8]
- Died: Santiago Bernabéu Yeste, 82, Spanish footballer, player and president of Real Madrid C.F. since 1943, known for building Real Madrid into one of the most valuable sports franchises in the world.[9]
June 3, 1978 (Saturday)[edit]
- The first direct presidential election in Bangladesh was held, with ten candidates running for office, including President Ziaur Rahman, who was seeking re-election. President Ziaur received more than 75 percent of the votes cast, with former Bangladesh Army commander-in-chief M. A. G. Osmani garnering almost 22 percent. None of the other candidates received more than one-half of one percent of the votes.[10][11]
- Born:
- Suthida Bajrasudhabimalalakshana, former flight attendant and royal bodyguard who has been the Queen consort of Thailand since her marriage to Vajiralongkorn (King Rama X) since 2019; in Songkhla[12]
- Lyfe Jennings (stage name for Chester Jermaine Jennings), American R&B singer known for the top selling albums The Phoenix, Lyfe Change and I Still Believe; in Toledo, Ohio
- Natalia Valevskaya, Russian fashion designer; in Moscow
- Died:
- Deborah Howe, 31, American children's writer known for Bunnicula: A Rabbit-Tale of Mystery, which inaugurated the Bunnicula series of books continued by her husband, James Howe, died of cancer.[13][14]
- So Phim, 47, Cambodian guerrilla leader, former governor of the East Zone of the Democratic Kampuchea and third ranking Communist Party of Kampuchea official, committed suicide rather than facing torture and execution, after refusing to carry out the Cambodian genocide program of Pol Pot.[15]
June 4, 1978 (Sunday)[edit]
- Julio César Turbay was elected to a 4-year term as President of Colombia, defeating Belisario Betancur.[16]
- Pakistan advanced its Project-706 two months after the April 4 breakthrough by nuclear physicist A. Q. Khan, as the Chaklala Air Force Base Centrifuge Laboratory succeeded at enriching uranium by electromagnetic isotope separation of 238U and 235U isotopes.[17]
- Piano Jazz, the longest-running cultural program on the U.S. National Public Radio (NPR) network, was broadcast for the first time.
- AEK Athens F.C. defeated PAOK of Thessaloniki, 2 to 0, to win the Greek Football Cup, after the two teams had finished in first and second place in regular season play in the Alpha Ethniki league, the highest level of soccer football in Greece.[18]
- Died:
- Jorge de Sena, 58, Portuguese novelist and poet[19]
- Dominique Darel, 28, French-born Italian film actress, was killed in an automobile accident in Cannes.[20]
June 5, 1978 (Monday)[edit]
- The British television crime drama Strangers, starring Don Henderson, premiered on ITV and would run until 1982.
- Born:
- María Chivite, Spanish politician and president of the autonomous government of Navarre within Spain since 2019; in Cintruénigo, Navarre[21]
- Qasim al-Raymi, Yemeni militant and terrorist who served as the Emir of Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula from 2015 to his death (killed by airstrike, 2020)[22]
- Nick Kroll, American TV, stage and film comedian known for Kroll Show and the Broadway production of The Oh, Hello Show; in Rye, New York[23]
June 6, 1978 (Tuesday)[edit]
![](https://cdn.statically.io/img/upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/cb/Howard_Jarvis_after_California_Proposition_13_victory.jpg/200px-Howard_Jarvis_after_California_Proposition_13_victory.jpg)
- Voters in the U.S. state of California overwhelmingly approved "Proposition 13", an amendment to Article XIII of the state constitution passed in a citizens' initiative that had been placed on the ballot through the lobbying efforts of Howard Jarvis.[24] The measure, approved by more than 62% of 6.8 million voters through direct democracy, reversed a 1976 increase in property taxes on California landowners, and placed limits on future increases in taxes. Placement of the proposition on a state election ballot began a "tax revolt" across the United States.
![](https://cdn.statically.io/img/upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/69/Vienna_Convention_road_sign_B2b-V1.svg/100px-Vienna_Convention_road_sign_B2b-V1.svg.png)
- The Vienna Convention on Road Signs and Signals, a multilateral treaty to standardize traffic signs, went into effect after ratification by 15 nations, almost ten years after it had been signed on November 8, 1968.[25] The Convention, not signed in the U.S, Canada, Australia or China, applies to signs in almost all of Europe except for Ireland and Portugal.
- Born:
- Konstantīns Konstantinovs, Latvian powerlifter who held the world record in his weight class with a raw deadlift of 426 kg (939.2 lb), for 13 years, from 2009 until 2022; in Liepāja, Latvian SSR, Soviet Union (d. 2018)
- Judith Barsi, American child actress known for voicing the role of "Ducky" in the animated film The Land Before Time; in Los Angeles (murdered, 1988)[26]
- Died: Paul Lambert, 43, American college basketball coach for Southern Illinois University, was killed in a fire at the Airport Holiday Inn motel in Columbus, Georgia, two months after being hired to be the head coach of Auburn University's men's basketball team, and six months before the start of the 1978-1979 college basketball season.[27]
June 7, 1978 (Wednesday)[edit]
- British Rail unveiled its Advanced Passenger Train Prototype, capable of speeds of up to 162 miles per hour (261 km/h), and the most powerful domestic train to operate in Britain, but that would not be funded past 1983.[28]
- Born:
- Vijay Shekhar Sharma, Indian technology entrepreneur and founder of One97 Communications; in Aligarh, Uttar Pradesh[29]
- Bill Hader, American TV comedian, cast member of Saturday Night Live from 2005 to 2013 known primarily for portraying "Stefon" the nightclub reviewer on "Weekend Update", and for the title role in the HBO series Barry, winner of three Primetime Emmy Awards; in Tulsa, Oklahoma[30]
- Died:
- Ronald G.W. Norrish, 80, British chemist and 1967 Nobel Prize in Chemistry laureate, known for the Norrish reaction, a photochemical reaction taking place with ketones and aldehydes.[31]
- Joud el Bayeh, Lebanese banker and politician, director of Banque de la Méditerrannée and mayor of Kfardlakos, was assassinated by six armed men dispatched by Lebanese politician Antoine "Tony" Frangieh.[32]
June 8, 1978 (Thursday)[edit]
- Naomi James arrived in Dartmouth, Devon, 272 days after her departure on September 9, 1977, becoming the first woman to sail by herself around the world via Cape Horn,[33] and only the second to so overall.[34]
- A team of the French mountain police patrol located a sack of undelivered mail at the foot of the Bossons Glacier in the Alps, more than 27 years after it had been thrown clear of the November 3, 1950, crash of Air India Flight 245. All but eight of the 112 pieces of mail were forwarded to the addresses listed.[35]
- At the Stadio Olimpico in Rome, Internazionale of Milan defeated S.S.C. Napoli of Naples, 2 to 1, to win the Coppa Italia, Italy's highest level professional soccer football tournament.[36] Internazionale and Napoli had finished 5th and 6th in Serie A competition.
- Born:
- Maria Menounos, American actress, journalist, and television presenter; in Medford, Massachusetts[37]
- Eun Ji-won, South Korean rapper and singer; in Seoul[38]
- Died:
- Jenny Hasselquist, 83, Swedish prima ballerina[39]
- Valéria Dienes, 99, Hungarian choreographer and philosopher[40]
- Ruth Rose, 82, American screenwriter best known for co-writing the script for the 1939 film King Kong as well as for The Last Days of Pompeii and Mighty Joe Young
June 9, 1978 (Friday)[edit]
- Following a decision by Mormon Church President Spencer W. Kimball and his advisers on the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) announced the reversal of its 126-year old policy of not allowing black men to hold the priesthood. Kimball wrote in a letter that God "has heard our prayers, and by revelation has confirmed that the long-promised day has come when every faithful, worthy man in the church may receive thy priesthood."[41][42][43]
- The United Kingdom's first and only helicopter shuttle service, Airlink, began as a service of British Airways Helicopters, using a Sikorsky S-61 helicopter to transport passengers between Gatwick Airport and Heathrow Airport, a distance of 14 miles (23 km). The service would last until February 9, 1986.[44]
- Born:
- Miroslav Klose, Polish-born German footballer with 137 caps for the German national team from 2001 to 2014, holder of the record for most goals scored (16) in the FIFA World Cup, 2006 German footballer of the year; in Opole, Poland[45]
- Michaela Conlin, American TV actress known for Bones; in Allentown, Pennsylvania[46]
- Matt Bellamy, British musician and singer, lead vocalist for the Grammy Award winning rock band Muse; in Cambridge, Cambridgeshire
June 10, 1978 (Saturday)[edit]
- Affirmed held off Alydar to win the Belmont Stakes and would be the last horse to win the U.S. Triple Crown of Horse Racing (the Kentucky Derby, Preakness Stakes and Belmont Stakes) for 37 years, until 2015.
- A fire at the Borås City Hotel in Sweden killed 22 people and injured 55 others, mostly technical college students celebrating the end of the school year with a dance. The fire broke out in the lobby of the hotel and quickly spread to a restaurant on the second floor, and the hotel ballroom on the third floor, where 150 people were attending the dance.[47]
- Born:
- Subhash Khot, Indian-born American mathematician and computer scientist; in Ichalkaranji, Maharashtra state[48]
- DJ Qualls (Donald Joseph Qualls), American TV actor known for Legit, Z Nation and The Man in the High Castle; in Nashville, Tennessee[49][unreliable source?]
- Shane West (stage name for Shannon Snaith), American TV actor known for Nikita and for Salem; in Baton Rouge, Louisiana[50]
June 11, 1978 (Sunday)[edit]
- In Canada, 12 students of Saint John's School of Claremont, Ontario, all boys, died along with a staff member when four canoes capsized during a storm while they were boating on Lake Timiskaming. Some who avoided drowning died of hypothermia.[51] Another 15 boys and three adults survived.[52]
- Joseph Freeman Jr. was ordained as the first African-American elder in the Mormon priesthood.[53]
- Born: Joshua Jackson, Canadian TV actor known for Fringe and Dr. Death, and the film One Week; in Vancouver[54]
- Died: Akenzua II, 79, ceremonial monarch of the Edo people in the African nation of Nigeria as the Oba of Benin since 1933.[55] Akenzua was succeeded as Oba by his son, Prince Solomon, who would be crowned as the Oba Erediauwa on March 23, 1979. [56]
June 12, 1978 (Monday)[edit]
- David Berkowitz, also referred to as the "Son of Sam", received a 25-year prison sentence with the possibility of parole after he was found guilty of 6 counts of second degree murder and 7 counts of attempted second degree murder.[57]
- Died: Guo Moruo, 85, Chinese author, historian and archaeologist[58]
June 13, 1978 (Tuesday)[edit]
- The explosion of a gun turret on the Soviet navy cruiser Admiral Senyavin, during a test firing exercise, killed 37 of the ship's crew. The disaster occurred as shells were being fired from a 152 mm cannon. After eight were fired, a ninth shell became stuck in the gun turret and on the next firing, the tenth shell impacted the ninth, exploding both and sending smoke back into the bow tower, killing everyone inside. The incident would remain secret until after the end of the Soviet Union in 1992.
- The Ehden massacre took place in Lebanon as 1,200 members of the Kataeb Phalangists killed almost 40 people in an attack on the mansion of Antoine "Tony" Frangieh, a leader of the Marada Brigade. The attack, ordered by Bachir Gemayel and carried out by hundreds of guerrillas led by Samir Geagea and Elie Hobeika, was made in retaliation for the June 7 assassination of Joud el Bayeh.[59] Gemayel would be elected President of Lebanon in 1982, but assassinated before his inauguration.
- Born: Vishwananda (Mahadeosingh Komalram), Mauritiuan Hindu guru who founded Bhakti Marga; in Beau Bassin-Rose Hill[60]
June 14, 1978 (Wednesday)[edit]
- American mobster Anthony Provenzano, nicknamed "Tony Pro", suspected in the 1975 disappearance of Jimmy Hoffa, was convicted of the 1961 murder of Anthony Castellitto and sentenced to life in prison.[61] He would die ten years later at the Lompoc Federal Penitentiary at the age of 71.[62]
- The Cleveland Barons (NHL) of the National Hockey League went out of business, with the league merging the Barons' assets and debts with those of the Minnesota North Stars.[63] The Barons' failure was the first in more than 25 years, when the NFL's Dallas Texans folded after the 1952 NFL season, and would be the last in any of the four major North American sports leagues (MLB, NFL, NBA and NHL for 46 years until the folding of the NHL's Arizona Coyotes in 2024.
- Baseball player Pete Rose began what would become the longest streak in the National League of consecutive games with at least one hit, making a single in a game against the Chicago Cubs. The streak would reach 44 games in a row, making it the first challenge to Joe DiMaggio's 56-game hitting streak in 1941, before ending on August 1.
- Born:
- Diablo Cody (pen name for Brook Busey Maurio), American screenwriter, producer and director, Academy Award, BAFTA award and Tony Award winner; in Lemont, Illinois[64]
- Nikola Vujčić, Croatian basketball player and team manager of Maccabi Tel Aviv, EuroLeague all-star and 2007 Israeli League MVP; in Vrgorac, SR Croatia, Yugoslavia[65]
- Died:
- Robert Fabian, 77, English crime writer, retired Detective Superintendent and TV personality known for Fabian of the Yard[66]
- Dox (pen name for Jean Razakandraina), 65, Madagascar poet known for his work in poetry in the Malagasy and French launguages, was fatally injured after being accidentally knocked down a flight of stairs.[67]
June 15, 1978 (Thursday)[edit]
- King Hussein of Jordan married 26-year-old Lisa Halaby, who took the name Queen Noor.
- Born: Wilfred Bouma, Dutch footballer with 37 caps for the Netherlands national team; in Helmond[68]
June 16, 1978 (Friday)[edit]
- At a joint ceremony in Panama City, U.S. President Jimmy Carter and Panama's military leader, General Omar Torrijos, signed the instruments of ratification of the Panama Canal Treaty and the Panama Canal Neutrality Treaty, providing that Panama would have full control of the operations of the Panama Canal, to take effect at noon on December 31, 1999.[69]
- Grease, starring John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John, premiered, making its debut in U.S. theaters before being shown worldwide, and would go on to become the highest-grossing musical film of the year.[70]
- The GOES-3 (Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite) weather and communications satellite was launched from the U.S., and placed intogeostationary orbit the next day. Positioned over the U.S., it was used initially for weather forecasting as well as for communication. Ceasing to function as a weather satellite in 1989, it would continue until its deactivation on June 29, 2016 a communications satellite, operating for a total of 38 years.[71]
- Born:
- Daniel Brühl, Spanish-born German film and TV actor, star of Good Bye, Lenin! and Inglourious Basterds, three time European Film Awards and German Film Awards winner for Best Actor; in Barcelona[72]
- Fish Leong (stage name for Leong Chui Peng), popular Malaysian singer; in Bahau, Negeri Sembilan, Malaysia.[73]
- Died: Sven Halvar Löfgren, 68, Swedish pulmonologist known for identifying Löfgren syndrome, a form of sarcoidosis[74]
June 17, 1978 (Saturday)[edit]
- In the U.S., the capsizing of the showboat Whipporwill drowned 16 of the 58 people on board. The boat was traveling on Pomona Lake in Osage County, Kansas for a dinner cruise when the F1 tornado struck the boat and caused it to overturn.[75]
- Born: Isabelle Delobel, French competitive ice dancer and 2008 World Champion; in Clermont-Ferrand, Puy-de-Dôme département[76]
- Died:
- Ruth deForest Lamb, 81–82, American consumer rights activist
- Robert B. Williams, 73, American film and TV character actor
June 18, 1978 (Sunday)[edit]
- Voting was held in Peru for all 100 seats of the Asamblea Constituyente, an assembly convened by the South American nation's president, General Francisco Morales Bermudez, to create a new constitution as part of Peru's transition to democracy following 10 years of military rule.[77]
- Born:
- Ben Gleib (stage name for Ben Nathan Gleiberman), American comedian[78]
- Kathleen Aerts, Belgian singer and one of the three vocalists of the Belgian and Dutch "girl group" K3; in Geel
- Died:
- Peter Štefan, 37, Czechoslovakian mathematician, was killed in a mountain climbing accident while attempting to scale Tryfan in Wales.[79]
- Harry Clork (pen name for Harry Prince), 89, American screenwriter and playwright
- Leopold Anslinger, 87, German World War One flying ace with 10 confirmed kills.[80]
June 19, 1978 (Monday)[edit]
- The comic strip Garfield went into nationwide syndication.[81][82][83]
- England cricketer Ian Botham became the first man in the history of the game to score a century and take eight wickets in one innings of a Test match.
- Born:
- Dirk Nowitzki, German NBA basketball player, 2007 NBA Most Valuable Player, 2002 FIBA World Cup MVP, 2005 FIBA EuroBasket MVP, and 1999 German Bundesliga MVP; in Würzburg, West Germany[84]
- Zoe Saldaña (stage name for Saldaña Nazario), American film actress, star of Avatar and its sequel Avatar: The Way of Water; in Passaic, New Jersey[85]
June 20, 1978 (Tuesday)[edit]
- A 6.2 magnitude earthquake with a maximum Mercalli intensity of IX killed 49 people in northern Greece, 37 of whom were living in apartment buildings on the same city block in Thessaloniki.[86]
- Born: Frank Lampard, English footballer with 106 caps for the England national team; in Romford, London[87]
- Died: Mark Robson, 64, Canadian film director and producer known for Peyton Place, Valley of the Dolls and Earthquake[88]
June 21, 1978 (Wednesday)[edit]
- A shootout between Provisional IRA members and the British Army in Northern Ireland left one civilian and three IRA men dead.
- Two Iranian helicopters strayed into Soviet airspace and were shot down.
- Born:
- Erica Durance, Canadian TV actress known for Saving Hope and for Smallville; in Calgary[89]
- Jean-Pascal Lacoste, French singer (known for the song "L'Agitateur") and TV actor (known for Section de recherches); in Toulouse, Haute-Garonne département[90]
June 22, 1978 (Thursday)[edit]
- Charon, a satellite of Pluto, was discovered.
- Born: Dan Wheldon, English racing driver, winner of the Indianapolis 500 in 2005 and 2011, and 24 Hours of Daytona in 2006; in Emberton, Buckinghamshire (killed in racing accident, 2011)[91]
June 23, 1978 (Friday)[edit]
- The Vumba massacre took place in Rhodesia as guerrillas of the Zimbabwe African National Liberation Army attacked the civilian members of the Elim Pentecostal Mission, murdering eight British missionaries and four children.[92]
- Born: Frédéric Leclercq, French musician, songwriter and guitarist for the death metal group Sinsaenum and bassist for DragonForce; in Charleville-Mézières, Ardennes département
- Died: Richard "Toby" Tobias, 46, American stock car and sprint car racer known for his modification of stock cars by producing a chassis of tubular steel, was killed in a crash while competing in a USAC spring car race at the Flemington Speedway in New Jersey.[93] He was inducted into the Eastern Motorsports Press Association, the National Sprint Car and the Northeast Dirt Modified Halls of Fame.[94]
June 24, 1978 (Saturday)[edit]
- Ahmad al-Ghashmi, President of the Yemen Arab Republic since the October 11 assassination of his predecessor in office, was assassinated by an envoy from South Yemen, who had been sent by South Yemen President Salim Rubai Ali.[95] Both President al-Ghashmi and the South Yemen envoy were killed in the explosion of a bomb inside a briefcase. Salim Rubai Ali was assassinated in a coup three days later.[96]
- The Gay & Lesbian Solidarity March was held in Sydney, Australia, to mark the ninth anniversary of the Stonewall riots in the United States. The event would later become the annual Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras, and include a festival.
- Born:
- Shunsuke Nakamura, Japanese footballer with 98 caps for the Japan national team; in Yokohama
- Juan Román Riquelme, Argentine footballer with 51 caps for the Argentina national team; in San Fernando de la Buena Vista
June 25, 1978 (Sunday)[edit]
- Argentina defeated the Netherlands, 3 to 2, after extra time to win the 1978 FIFA World Cup.
- The rainbow flag of the LGBT movement was flown for the first time, in its original form, and made its debut at the San Francisco Gay Freedom Day Parade.
- Born:
- Aramis Ramírez, Dominican Republic MLB baseball player, winner of the 2011 Hank Aaron Award and the 2011 Silver Slugger Award; in Santo Domingo
- Aftab Shivdasani, Indian film actor and comedian; in Bombay (now Mumbai)
June 26, 1978 (Monday)[edit]
- Salim Rubai Ali, President of the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen (South Yemen) since 1969, was overthrown in a coup d'etat by Abdul Fattah Ismail and executed by firing squad the same day.[96]
- The Palace of Versailles in France was heavily damaged by a bomb planted by Breton nationalists.
- Born: Daniel Constantin, Deputy Prime Minister of Romania in 2014 and 2017; in Pitești
June 27, 1978 (Tuesday)[edit]
![](https://cdn.statically.io/img/upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Miroslaw_H.jpg/120px-Miroslaw_H.jpg)
- Soyuz 30 was launched from the Soviet Union with the first cosmonaut from Poland, Mirosław Hermaszewski, along with Belarusian Soviet cosmonaut Pyotr Klimuk, who was on his third mission.[97] Hermaszewski became only the space traveler who was a citizen of neither the Soviet Union nor the United States, and was trained and sent under the Soviet Interkosmos program.
- Seasat, the first orbiting satellite designed for remote sensing of the Earth's oceans, was launched by the U.S. from Cape Canaveral. The satellite's mission would last for less than four months, ending on October 10, 1978 when a short circuit in Seasat's electrical system caused it to shut down.[98]
- Born: Olukorede Yishau, Nigerian novelist known for In The Name Of Our Father (2018) and Vaults of Secrets (2020); in Somolu, Lagos State
- Died: Josette Day (stage name for Josette Dagory), 63, French film actress
June 28, 1978 (Wednesday)[edit]
- The landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision of Regents of the University of California v. Bakke, commonly called "the Bakke case", held that specific racial quotas, to redress prior discrimination against U.S. minorities, were unconstitutional. The Court upheld the validity of the policy of affirmative action.
- The Qaa massacre took place in Lebanon as a retaliation by the Zgharta Liberation Army against members of the Kataeb Regulatory Forces for the June 13 Ehden massacre, which had been carried out by the Kateeb in retaliation for the June 7 assassination of Joud el Bayeh. The Zgharta forces shot 34 people, 34 of whom were in the town of Qaa and then killed six more in the village of Ras Baalbek.[99]
- Born:
- S. Ryan Smith, American businessman , billionaire and sports team owner; in Eugene, Oregon[100]
- Ha Ji-won, South Korean film actress; in Seoul
- Died: Clifford Dupont, 72, the first President of Rhodesia from 1970 to 1975[101]
June 29, 1978 (Thursday)[edit]
- Born:
- Luke Kirby, Canadian actor and Primetime Emmy Award winner; in Hamilton, Ontario
- Nicole Scherzinger, American singer and actress, 2024 Laurence Olivier Award winner; in Honolulu
- Died: Bob Crane, 50, American actor known as the star of the TV series Hogan's Heroes, was beaten to death at his apartment in Scottsdale, Arizona[102]
June 30, 1978 (Friday)[edit]
References[edit]
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- ^ Spring & Summer 1978 Catalog. Montgomery Ward. 1978. pp. 2–3.
- ^ "CPI Inflation Calculator".
- ^ Powers, Matt (May 4, 2014). "The History of a Forgotten Computer : Part 2". Game Developer. Retrieved March 23, 2023.
- ^ Presidential Decree No. 1396 (1978-06-02), Creating the Department of Human Settlements and the Human Settlements Development Corporation, Appropriating Funds Therefor, and Accordingly Amending Certain Presidential Decrees, Supreme Court E-Library, archived from the original on 10 July 2023, retrieved 10 July 2023
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- ^ "Don Santiago Bernabeu fallecio ayer" [Don Santiago Bernabeu passed away yesterday]. La Vanguardia (in Spanish). Madrid. June 3, 1978. p. 49.
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- ^ Howe, James (1999). "Writing Bunnicula: The Story Behind the Story". Bunnicula. Atheneum Books.
- ^ "Obituary: Deborah Smith Howe". The Boston Globe. 6 June 1978. p. 34. Retrieved 20 September 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
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- ^ Irisarri, Andoni. ""Si es con mi programa, me da igual quién me haga presidenta;no se pueden rechazar los votos"". Noticias de Gipuzkoa. Archived from the original on 2019-10-01. Retrieved 2019-06-10.
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- ^ "Nick Kroll". TVGuide.com. Archived from the original on 23 June 2013. Retrieved 23 September 2015.
- ^ Turner, Wallace (June 7, 1978). "California Voters Approve a Plan To Cut Property Tax $7 Billion". The New York Times. p. 1.
- ^ Protocol on Road Signs and Signals (PDF). United Nations Conference on Road and Motor Transport. United Nations Treaty Series (in English and French). Vol. 182. Geneva, Switzerland. 19 September 1949 – via United Nations Treaty Collection.
- ^ Phillips, Deidre C. (August 10, 1988). "Child actress Barsi, mother buried". Los Angeles Daily News. Los Angeles, California: Southern California News Group.
- ^ Cox, Paul (June 5, 1978). "AU Basketball Coach Dies In Columbus Motel Blaze". Opelika-Auburn News. Opelika, Alabama. p. A-1.
- ^ Coxon, Dave. "The Class 370 APT-P". Testing Times. Retrieved 10 February 2023.
- ^ "Vijay Shekhar Sharma Biography: Birth, Age, Family, Education, Career, Net Worth, Awards and More". Jagranjosh.
- ^ "Bill Hader | Biography and Filmography | 1978". Hollywood.com. Archived from the original on May 27, 2017. Retrieved May 5, 2017.
- ^ "Ronald G.W. Norrish – Biographical". NobelPrize.org. Nobel Prize Outreach AB. 2024. Retrieved 11 July 2024.
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