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November 1971

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November 13, 1971: U.S. probe Mariner 9 becomes first Earth object to enter Mars Orbit, sends first detailed photos of terrain (pictured, Noctis Labyrinthus)
The dry river beds of Nirgal Vallis, seen from Mariner 9

The following events occurred in November 1971:

November 1, 1971 (Monday)

  • The planned launch of the World Hockey Association for the 1972-1973 professional hockey season, as a competitor to the National Hockey League, was announced in New York City by Dennis Murphy and Gary Davidson, who had created the American Basketball Association (ABA) as a rival to the NBA in 1967. [1] The initial lineup of 10 franchises was announced as being in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco, St. Paul (Minnesota) and Dayton (Ohio) in the U.S.; and Winnipeg, Edmonton and Calgary in Canada. [2]
The 1971 Eisenhower dollar

November 2, 1971 (Tuesday)

  • Professor Gerhard Herzberg of Canada was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his research into the structure of the molecule, and Professor Dennis Gabor, a Hungarian-born British scientist, won the Nobel Prize in Physics for his invention of holography. [9]
  • The People's Republic of China, recently approved as the representative of the Chinese people in the United Nations, named its nine-member delegation to the UN, headed by its chief delegate, Qiao Guanhua (Chiao Kuan-hua). [10]
  • Off-year elections were held for governors and state legislators in the United States, and included the election for Governor of Mississippi, the first in that state in which an African-American challenged a white nominee. Bill Waller, the Democratic nominee, was a prosecutor who had unsuccessfully sought to convict the accused murder of civil rights activist Medgar Evers, and his independent challenger, James Charles Evers, was the brother of Medgar and the incumbent mayor of the primarily-black municipality of Fayette, Mississippi. There was no Republican nominee. Waller won overwhelmingly with over 75% of the vote in a race that had an unprecedented large turnout of black voters and white voters. [11]

November 3, 1971 (Wednesday)

  • The first UNIX Programmer's Manual was published, originally to quickly bring in more users for the testing of the world's first portable programming system for the so-called Uniplexed Information and Computing Service ("unics") as an improvement on multics. [12]
  • Clint Eastwood's film Play Misty for Me premiered.
  • Born: Unai Emery, Spanish football manager and former player; in Hondarribia

November 4, 1971 (Thursday)

November 5, 1971 (Friday)

November 6, 1971 (Saturday)

November 7, 1971 (Sunday)

November 8, 1971 (Monday)

  • The fourth best selling record album of all time the untitled fourth studio album of Led Zeppelin, was released, making its debut in the United States four days before its November 12 release in the United Kingdom, and contained the band's most popular song, "Stairway to Heaven". [21]
  • Elections were held for the Philippine Senate,[22] and although the Nacionalista Party of President Ferdinand Marcos retained control of 16 of the 24 seats, the Liberal Party of Gerardo Roxas gained three to increase its share to eight seats. Jovito Salonga of the Liberals, who had been critically injured in the bombing of a Liberal Party rally on August 21, won 5.6 million votes, more than any other candidate.
  • Berkeley, California, became the first "sanctuary city" in the United States, with the passage of an ordinance that prohibited its city employees, including its police, from enforcing federal arrest warrants for non-violent offenses. The "sanctuary city" concept was later adopted in other politically liberal communities in the U.S. [23]
  • The U.S. House of Representatives considered, but failed to pass, a proposed amendment to the United States Constitution that would have permitted voluntary prayer in public schools. The response to the 1963 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Abington School District v. Schempp, which had barred state-sanctioned Bible reading and prayer in non-private schools, the proposed 27th Amendment received 240 votes in favor and 162 against, but constitutional amendments required a two-thirds majority (268 of the 402 votes cast) to pass. [24]
  • Died: Robert "Bobbie" Brown, Jr., 68, U.S. Medal of Honor recipient for his bravery in the 1944 Battle of Crucifix Hill in Aachen during World War II, committed suicide with a single gunshot wound to the chest. Brown had been suffering from PTSD and constant pain from his war injuries for more than 27 years. [25]

November 9, 1971 (Tuesday)

November 10, 1971 (Wednesday)

  • All 69 people onboard were killed in the crash of a Vickers Viscount turboprop airplane operated by Merpati Nusantara Airlines in Indonesia. [33] Carrying 62 passengers and seven crew, the airliner had taken off from Jakarta and was approaching its destination at Padang when it crashed into the sea. [34]
  • In Cambodia, Khmer Rouge forces attacked the Phnom Penh international airport, killing 44 people, mostly civilians who were members of families traveling with soldiers, wounding 30 others and damaging nine aircraft. [35]
  • Cuba's Premier, Fidel Castro, arrived to the only other Latin American nation where he was welcomed by the government, arriving in Santiago as the guest of Chile's Marxist President, Salvador Allende. [36] The relationship between Cuba and Chile fueled the belief by U.S. President Nixon that, if either regime continued, "you will have in Latin America a red sandwich. And eventually, it will be all red." [37]
  • The U.S. Senate voted, 84 to 6, to ratify the Okinawa Reversion Agreement, returning the island of Okinawa, and other Japanese territory captured in 1945 during World War II, to Japanese control. [38] The treaty, signed on June 17, provided that the United States would be able to maintain its military bases on Okinawa, but would not be able to launch military operations from the bases without consultation and approval by the Japanese government. [39]
  • Peru's military government, headed by General Juan Velasco Alvarado, issued the "General Telecommunications Law" by decree, requiring that the Republic of Peru be the owner of at least 51 percent of the shares of the South American nation's 19 television stations, and that the government have 25 percent ownership of its 222 radio stations. [40]
  • Born:
    • Big Pun (stage name for Christopher Lee Rios), American rapper, in New York City (d. 2000 of obesity-related causes)
    • Niki Karimi, Iranian actress and director, in Tehran

November 11, 1971 (Thursday)

November 12, 1971 (Friday)

November 13, 1971 (Saturday)

Mariner 9
  • The U.S. probe Mariner 9 became the first spacecraft to successfully enter the orbit of Mars. Previous American and Soviet probes had made close "fly-by" approaches. At 4:42 p.m. California time (00:42 UTC on 14 November), the technicians at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, made Mariner 9 the first object from Earth to be put into orbit around another planet. The elliptical orbit ranged between 800 miles (1,300 km) above the Martian surface and 10,700 miles (17,200 km) twice a day [47]
  • Greece and Albania restored full diplomatic relations and the Greek government dropped a 100-year-old claim it had had for what Greece called Northern Epirus and Albania called Toskëria. Incorporating 1,930 square miles (5,000 km2) of the Albanian counties of Vlorë (Avlona) and Gjirokastër (Argyrokastro), the area had been captured from Greece by the Ottoman Empire, from which Albania was formed after World War I. [48]
  • Duel, one of the most successful of made-for-TV films produced in the U.S. for the ABC Movie of the Weekend program, was seen for the first time. The horror film was the first to be directed by Steven Spielberg and featured Dennis Weaver as a car driver pursued by the never-visible driver of a large gasoline truck. The TV version had a running time of 74 minutes punctuated by 16 minutes of commercials between 8:30 and 10:00 p.m. [49]

November 14, 1971 (Sunday)

November 15, 1971 (Monday)

  • Intel released the world's first microprocessor, the Intel 4004.
  • The International Organization of Space Communications (Intersputnik) was founded by scientist delegates from the Soviet Union and from seven Soviet allies (Poland, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Mongolia, and Cuba) to cooperate on communications satellites, in the same manner as the western Intelsat organization. [55]
  • The People's Republic of China formally joined the United Nations after the October 25 vote in favor of its admission and the expulsion of Taiwan as the representative of the Chinese mainland.
  • Britain's Foreign Secretary Alec Douglas-Home arrived in Salisbury, capital of Rhodesia, to discuss proposals for a political settlement. [56] Salisbury, Rhodesia would later be renamed Harare, Zimbabwe, after the white minority government yielded to black majority rule.
  • Born: Corky Nemec (stage name for Joseph C. Nemec IV), American TV actor, producer and screenwriter; in Little Rock, Arkansas
  • Died: Rudolf Abel (William August Fisher), 68, English-born KGB spy for the Soviet Union who was convicted in the U.S. for smuggling American nuclear secrets to the Soviet government, and returned to the Soviets in 1962 in exchange for captured American pilot Francis Gary Powers. [57]

November 16, 1971 (Tuesday)

  • The British Government committee of inquiry, chaired by Lord Parker, the Lord Chief Justice of England and charged to look into the legal and moral aspects of the use of the five techniques of interrogation in Northern Ireland, released its 72-page report. Although the Commission noted that prisoners arrested on August 9 had been subjected to sleep deprivation, a "bread and water" diet, "continuous and monotonous noise" and "hooded isolation", it noted that "Where we have concluded that physical ill-treatment took place, we are not making a finding of brutality. We consider that brutality is an inhuman or savage form of curelty. We do not think that happened here." [58]
  • Born: Waqar Younis, bowler for and captain of the Pakistan Test Cricket team and cricketer, in Burewala, Punjab province. [59]
  • Died: Edie Sedgwick, 28, American actress, died of a barbiturate overdose

November 17, 1971 (Wednesday)

Kittikachorn
  • Thailand's Prime Minister Thanom Kittikachorn, a Field Marshal in the Royal Thai Air Force, staged a coup d'état against his own government, dissolving the national parliament and his cabinet, including longtime Foreign Minister Thanat Khoman. A five member "Revolutionary Council", headed by Kittikachorn, was created to replace the constitutional government, and the monarchy was maintained. [60]
  • Nine Irish Republican Army prisoners escaped the Crumlin Road Jail in Belfast, Northern Ireland, after rope ladders were thrown over the wall to them. Two Roman Catholic monks and several Belfast businessmen would later be charged with aiding the escape. Seven were able to flee across the border to Ireland, which allowed them to remain. [61]
  • Died:
    • Debaki Kumar Bose, 73, Indian film producer and director known for his innovations in Hindi and Bengali film [62]
    • Gladys Cooper, 82, English stage, film and television character actress known for My Fair Lady and Now, Voyager. [63]

November 18, 1971 (Thursday)

  • At a cafe in the town of Hestroff, the government of France began the first auction of the structures of the 40-year old Maginot Line that had been built in the 1930s along the border with Germany, finally disposing of what one journalist observed to be "an emblem of a false sense of security". "The Fortresses of the Maginot Line Fall to the Highest Bidders", The New York Times, November 18, 1971, p. 9</ref> The heavily fortified Maginot Line, designed to stop a German invasion, never saw battle after World War Two broke out in 1939. In 1940, the German Wehrmacht invaded France anyway, sweeping across the unfortified border with Belgium.
  • Born: Jun Tanaka, U.S.-born Japanese-British chef and TV celebrity; in New York City [64]
  • Died: Junior Parker, 39, blues musician, died during brain surgery

November 19, 1971 (Friday)

  • The Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) released its report of the November 6 nuclear detonation in Alaska of a five megaton thermonuclear weapon, and said that there was no radiation detected nor evidence of radioactive contamination to the environment of Amchitka Island. The AEC said that the explosive force of the $200 million test had created a conclusion that killed "hundreds of fish... as well as 18 sea otters, four seals and 16 birds." [65]

November 20, 1971 (Saturday)

  • In Brazil, 29 people were killed in the collapse of a bridge still under construction, the Elevado Engenheiro Freyssinet, when a 110 metres (360 ft) section of the structure fell on traffic at the intersection of Paulo de Frontin Avenue and Haddock Lobo, in Rio de Janeiro. According to authorities, at least two buses and ten cars were crushed under thousands of tons of debris. [66] [67][68]
  • The Cairngorm Plateau disaster, which ended in the deaths of five teenagers and an inexperienced adult guide during a mountain hike in Scotland, began with a weekend expedition into the mountains known as the Cairngorms, even with snow was predicted. [69] The teenagers, all 15 years old, were students at Ainslie Park School in Edinburgh
  • Women from all over the U.S. marched in support of abortion rights in events in Washington D.C. and San Francisco. The marches were organized by a new organization, WONAAC, which had been created in July. [70][71][72]
  • Born: Joel McHale, American comedian and TV actor known for Community; to American parents in Rome [73]

November 21, 1971 (Sunday)

November 22, 1971 (Monday)

  • The U.S. and Honduras signed a treaty in the Honduran city of San Pedro Sula to return the U.S.-controlled and unihabited Swan Islands to Honduras after 108 years. [77] Located in the Gulf of Mexico about 100 miles (160 km) north of Honduras, the islands of Greater Swan and Lesser Swan, and a coral reef called the Bobby Cay, had been under U.S. sovereignty since 1863 and housed weather, navigation and communication stations. The islands, totaling 3 square miles (7.8 km2) in area, are now referred to by the Spanish word for a swan as Islas de Cisne. [78]
  • The long-running nightly Australian TV news show A Current Affair, still on stations of the Nine Network 49 years later, made its debut as a local feature of the Melbourne Channel 9 station, GTV-9, with Mike Willesee as the first host.
  • A clash in the Philippines between the Philippine Army and predominantly Muslim Moro insurgents took place on the day of a special election near the town of Magsaysay, Lanao del Norte. Thirty-seven Moros were killed and 43 wounded, while the two Philippine soldiers were wounded. Another battle occurred at the city of Nunungan where seven Moros were killed after stealing ballot boxes. [79]
  • Six climbers died while attempting to scale Cairn Gorm in Scotland.[80]
  • Died: József Zakariás, 47, Hungarian footballer

November 23, 1971 (Tuesday)

  • An agreement was signed in London between a deputy minister of the British Ministry for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Anthony Royle, and the Sultan of Brunei, Hassanal Bolkiah, providing for British recognition of Brunei's self-government regarding internal matters, and continuation of protectorate status in the matter of Brunei's foreign affairs and defence.
  • Pakistan's President Yahya Khan declared a national emergency in an address to his country and told Pakistanis to prepare for a war with India. [81] [82] The action came a day after Indian Army troops crossed into East Pakistan to aid an offensive by the Bangladesh guerrilla army." [83]
  • The People's Republic of China took the place of Taiwan as one of the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council, after the seating of the PRC delegation on November 15.

November 24, 1971 (Wednesday)

  • During a severe thunderstorm over Washington, a man calling himself D. B. Cooper parachuted from Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 305, a Boeing 727 that he had hijacked, with USD $200,000 in ransom money. [84] [85] He was never apprehended, and nearly 50 years later, the case would remain the only unsolved skyjacking in history. [86]
  • A Brussels court sentenced pretender Alexis Brimeyer, in absentia, to 18 months in jail for falsely using a title of Belgian nobility. Brimeyer had already fled to Greece.
  • Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith and British Foreign Secretary Alec Douglas-Home signed an agreement on proposals for a political settlement. Under the terms of the pact, the white minority government (in a nation with 250,000 white European and five million black African citizens) would retain its present power, but British economic sanctions would be lifted if the white government enacted legislation to outlaw racial discrimination, and the goal would be set for eventual black majority rule of Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe. [87]
  • Japan's parliament, the National Diet, ratified the terms of the 1971 Okinawa Reversion Agreement, signed on June 17. [88] [89]

November 25, 1971 (Thursday)

November 26, 1971 (Friday)

  • Two days of elections were held in Czechoslovakia for the 200 seats of the lower house of the Federal Assembly, the Chamber of the People (Sněmovna lidu Czech or Snemovňa ľudu Slovak). [92] Voters were limited to approving or disapproving the pre-approved slate of 200 candidates endorsed by the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia.
  • For the first time since the founding of the modern state of Israel in 1948, Muslim Israeli citizens were given permission to come to Mecca in Saudi Arabia for the Hajj, the pilgrimage to Islam's holiest city, held annually. The decision was announced in a letter from King Faisal II of Sauid Arabia to the Palestinian Mayor of Hebron in the West Bank, occupied by Israel since 1967. At the time, about 325,000 of Israel's three million citizens were Muslim. The decision affected the upcoming Hajj starting January 22, 1972, corresponding to the 8th day of the month of Dhu al-Hijjah, 1391 A.H. on the Muslim calendar. [93]
  • A ban against "caning" of students, used as a form of corporal punishment to enforce discipline in British schools since the early 19th century, was ordered by the Inner London Education Authority for the 880 primary schools in London, but was not scheduled to go into effect until January 1, 1973, 13 months in the future at the time. [94] The punishment typically was administered by a teacher, with a long stick made of rattan to an unruly student, generally hitting the recipient across the buttocks.
  • East Germany's parliament, the Volkskammer, unanimously re-elected former Communist Party Chairman Walter Ulbricht as the nation's nominal head of state, and Willi Stoph as the head of government. [95]
  • Died:

November 27, 1971 (Saturday)

Mars 2 and Mars 3, artist's rendition
  • The lander of the USSR's Mars 2 probe, became the first man-made object to reach the surface of Mars, but was destroyed on impact because its parachute failed to deploy due to a computer malfunction. [96] The orbiter, launched with the lander on May 19, would continue in Martian orbit and transmit data for eight months before being deactivated on August 22, 1972.

November 28, 1971 (Sunday)

  • 'Wasfi al-Tal, the Prime Minister of Jordan, was assassinated by members of the Palestinian terrorist group Black September while standing on the steps of the Sheraton Hotel in Cairo, while attending an Arab League summit meeting in Egypt. [97] Tal and Jordan's Foreign Minister Abdullah Salah were returning to their hotel after a meeting with the joint defense council of the Arab League, where the member nations had been discussing strategy against Israel, when three members of the Palestinian guerrilla group Black September ran toward them from the hotel lobby and began firing with revolvers. [98]
  • Thirty-four members of the U.S. Army's 101st Airborne Division were killed in the crash of a CH-47 Chinook helicopter in South Vietnam, when the aircraft impacted the western slope of Mum Kun Sac Mountain near Phu Loc. [99] [100]

The wreckage would not be discovered until December 2nd.

November 29, 1971 (Monday)

November 30, 1971 (Tuesday)

  • A gunbattle killed four policemen and three Iranian Marines in a fight between Iran and the United Arab Emirates over ownership of a set of islands in the Persian Gulf, Abu Musa, Greater Tunb and Lesser Tunb. [107] The fight came one day after Iran and one of the emirates, Sharjah, had signed an agreement to allow both nations to maintain a presence on the island. Iran has retained control of the islands ever since.
  • The Sandy's hamburger restaurant chain, with franchises in Illinois, Iowa and other U.S. Midwestern states and operating since 1956, was acquired by the Hardee's restaurant chain based in the South and founded in 1960. [108]
  • Pakistan's President Yahya Khan and the armed forces made the ultimately disastrous decision to launch Operation Chengiz Khan, an airstrike against India and its airbases near the border with East Pakistan, to take place on December 3. At the same time, India's Prime Minister Indira Gandhi publicly called on Yahya Khan to pull all Pakistani Army troops from East Pakistan as "a gesture for peace". [109]
  • The finance ministers and central bank governors of ten non-Communist nations began discussions at Rome to negotiate a realignment of the national currencies of all 10 states. The "Group of 10" sent representatives for the U.S., Canada, the U.K., Sweden, Japan, France, West Germany, Italy, Belgium and the Netherlands. U.S. Treasury Secretary John B. Connally appeared as the American finance minister. [110]

References

  1. ^ "World Hockey Association Sees Action Next October— 10 Franchsies in Canada, U.S.", Spokane (WA) Spokesman-Review , November 2, 1971, p. 15
  2. ^ "New Hockey League Bars Reserve Clause", by Gerald Eskenazi, The New York Times, November 2, 1971, p. 29
  3. ^ "When dealing with Eisenhower Dollars, grade is everything", by Charles Morgan, CoinWeek, March 21, 2012
  4. ^ "Johannesburg Dean Gets 5-Year Term on Plot Charge", The New York Times, November 2, 1971, p. 1
  5. ^ Bob Clarke, Anglicans against apartheid, 1936-1996 (Cluster Publications, 2008)
  6. ^ "From 1971: When the Toronto Sun rose after the Telegram fell". CBC News. November 1, 2018. Retrieved August 7, 2019.
  7. ^ Aleksandr Mikhaĭlovich Prokhorov (1973). Great Soviet Encyclopedia. Macmillan. p. 268.
  8. ^ The New York Times Biographical Service. New York Times & Arno Press. November 1971. p. 3981.
  9. ^ "Briton, Canadian Win Nobel Prizes— Awards Are Announced for Physics and Chemistry", The New York Times, November 2, 1971, p. 1
  10. ^ "China Names U.N. Delegates, Due Soon", by Henry Tanner, The New York Times, November 2, 1971, p. 1
  11. ^ "Evers Is Defeated In Large Turnout In Mississippi Vote", The New York Times, November 2, 1971, p. 1
  12. ^ "A Research UNIX Reader: Annotated Excerpts from the Programmer’s Manual, 1971-1986", by M. Douglas McIlroy, Dartmouth University Department of Computer Science website
  13. ^ The Guardian article on Emma Groves Archived 2 February 2011 at WebCite
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  15. ^ "Ba Than", Who's who in Health and Medicine in Myanmar (Myanmar Ministry of Health, 2005)
  16. ^ "Rites for Ann Pennington", The New York Times, November 6, 1971, p. 34
  17. ^ Brian Harvey, Europe's Space Programme: To Ariane and Beyond (Springer, 2003) p.48
  18. ^ "Aleutians Site Is Prepared for Blast Today", by Wallace Turner, The New York Times, November 6, 1971, p. 1
  19. ^ "High Court, 4 to 3, Bars Delay in Amchitka Blast", The New York Times, November 7, 1971, p. 1
  20. ^ "Extremists Gain in Belgian Vote— But Coalition Still Dominant as Returns Are Counted", The New York Times, November 8, 1971, p. 13
  21. ^ Jon Bream, Whole Lotta Led Zeppelin (Voyageur Press, 2008) p. 271
  22. ^ "Marcos-Backed Candidates Trail in Off-Year Vote", The New York Times, November 9, 1971, p. 2
  23. ^ "Berkeley Is The Original Sanctuary City", East Bay Express (Berkeley CA), February 14, 2017
  24. ^ "School Prayers Blocked by House by 28-vote Margin— 240-162 Ballot Turns Down Proposed Amendment for 'Voluntary' Worship", The New York Times, November 9, 1971, p. 1
  25. ^ "Bobbie E. Brown, Medal of Honor Winner, Is Dead", by Murray Illson, The New York Times, November 11, 1971
  26. ^ "RAF Plane crashes in Italy, killing 52", by Peter Nichols, The Times (London), November 10, 1971, p. 1
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  28. ^ "Westfielder sought in slaying of 5", The Courier-News (Bridgewater, NJ), December 8, 1971, p. 1
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  32. ^ John E. List, 82, Killer of 5 Family Members, Dies", by David Stout, The New York Times, March 25, 2008
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  35. ^ "Cambodia Airport Shelled by Enemy", The New York Times, November 10, 1971, p. 10
  36. ^ "Castro Arrives in Santiago To Enthusiastic Welcome", by Juan de Onis, The New York Times, November 11, 1971, p. 1
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  48. ^ "Greece, Diplomatic Rift Healed, Drops Claim to Part of Albania", The New York Times, November 14, 1971, p. 2
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  57. ^ "Abel, Red Spy, Dies; Freed in 1962 Swap", The New York Times, November 17, 1971, p. 1
  58. ^ "British Commission Denies Brutality in Ulster Prisons", by Bernard Weinraub, The New York Times, November 17, 1971, p. 3
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  62. ^ "Debaki Bose — The first internationally honoured Indian filmmaker", Cinestaan.com, November 17, 2016
  63. ^ "Gladys Cooper, British Actress, Dies", The New York Times, November 18, 1971, p. 50
  64. ^ Jun Tanaka, Simple to Sensational (Simon and Schuster, 2009)
  65. ^ "A-Test Site Held Radiation-Free— A.E.C. Finds No Seepage in Amchitka Environment", by Richard D. Lyons, The New York Times, November 20, 1971, p. 11
  66. ^ "Viaduct Collapse in Rio Kills at Least 10 Persons, The New York Times, November 21, 1971, p. 2
  67. ^ "24 known killed in span collapse", Baltimore Sun, November 22, 1971, p. 2
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  78. ^ "Swan Islands Visited by Columbus, Pirates and Birds", by Richard Severo, The New York Times, November 23, 1971, p. 3
  79. ^ "44 Philippine Muslims Killed By Army in Election Incidents", The New York Times, November 24, 1971, p. 2
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  84. ^ "Hijacker Flees, Taking $200,000", The New York Times, November 25, 1971, p. 1
  85. ^ "Hijacker Collects Ransom of $200,000; Parchutes From Jet and Disappears", by Earl Caldwell, The New York Times, November 26, 1971, p. 1
  86. ^ "The D.B. Cooper case has baffled the FBI for 45 years. Now it may never be solved.", by Peter Holley, Washington Post, July 13, 2016
  87. ^ "Dispute Nears End As Rhodesia Signs Pact With Britain", by Anthony Lewis, The New York Times, November 25, 1971, p. 1
  88. ^ "Agreement Between the United States of America and Japan Concerning the Ryukyu Islands and the Daito Islands"
  89. ^ "Lower House in Japan Votes Okinawa Pact With U.S.", by Richard Halloran, The New York Times, November 25, 1971, p. 4
  90. ^ "Nebraska, on Late Rally, Stops Oklahoma for 21st in Row, 35-31", by Neil Amdur, The New York Times, November 26, 1971, p. 45
  91. ^ "Faulkner Rejects Wilson Plan for United Ireland", The New York Times, November 27, 1971, p. 2
  92. ^ "Prague Is Uneasy on Election's Eve", by James Feron, The New York Times, November 26, 1971, p. 20
  93. ^ "Faisal Will Let Moslems From Israel Visit Mecca", by Peter Grose, The New York Times, November 27, 1971, p. 1
  94. ^ "London Orders End of Caning of Pupils", by Bernard Weinraub, The New York Times, November 27, 1971, p. 1
  95. ^ "Ulbricht and Stoph Re-elected to Posts", The New York Times, November 27, 1971, p. 4
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  97. ^ "Premier Tal Of Jordan Slain By Assassins", Tampa Bay Times, November 29, 1971, p. 4
  98. ^ "Jordan's Premier is Slain in Cairo; 3 Gunmen Seized", by Raymond H. Anderson, The New York Times, November 29, 1971, p. 1
  99. ^ Aviation Safety Network
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  101. ^ "Voter Turnout in Uruguay Sets a Record", by Joseph Novitski, The New York Times, November 29, 1971, p. 3
  102. ^ "Eleccion_nacional_1971.htm", Corte Electoral de Uruguay
  103. ^ "Indian Town's Inhabitants Flee Shelling by Pakistan", by Kasturi Bangan, The New York Times, November 29, 1971, p. 1
  104. ^ Clement 2009, p. 75
  105. ^ "First Women Seated In Swiss Parliament", The New York Times, November 30, 1971, p. 8
  106. ^ "Evolution to Computerized Criminal History Records", in An Assessment of Alternatives for a National Computerized Criminal History System (U.S. Congress Office of Technology Assessment, 1982) p.3-30
  107. ^ "Iranian Troops Occupy Three Strategic Islands in Persian Gulf, and a Sheikdom Protests", The New York Times, December 1, 1971, p. 13
  108. ^ "Sandy's Chain Plans to Merge Into Hardee's", Chicago Tribune, December 1, 1971. p. G7
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