Hi Don;
 What happened when you ran the jumper is that you back-feed the 
circuit. So, that means  there is an open  in the circuit between the 
coil and the switch. And since the starter won't turn either, there are 
other opens. I'd  check  the Bulkhead connecter. That is the big black 
plug with lots of wires that is on the firewall below the master 
cylinder. This is the "pass-thru" which all the engine compartment 
wires that have to go inside the car cabin are connected. This is an 
overlooked place and it's often corroded. There is a bolt in the middle 
which holds the inside half  to the outside half. Unbolt it and wiggle 
it apart. Clean both sides good and fill it with Die-electric grease to 
keep it from corroding later and reinstall it. I think this will solve 
your problem.
 One  other possibility is the connections on the back  of the Amp 
gauge. Almost  all  elec current goes thru these gauge connections. You 
can jump over that (Post to post) and see if it  is your problem.
Good Luck, Ray
On Jun 16, 2007, at 3:37 PM, mrdonr@xxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
 
 The first time this happend, I thought it was the battery or a bad 
ignition switch so I proceeded to hot wire it with a jumper from the 
coil to the battery. As soon as I connected the jumper, the entire 
ignition came back on since the key was still in the 'on' position. I 
was able to start the car with the key once a jumper wire was attached.
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