What events happened on the year you were born?

  1. Dr Mindbender
    January
    January - The subterranean Sarawak chamber is discovered in Borneo.
    January 1 - Greece enters the European Community, which later becomes the European Union.
    January 1 - Palau becomes self-governing.
    January 4 - Sheffield police arrest Peter Sutcliffe, a 34-year-old lorry driver, on suspicion of being the Yorkshire Ripper who has killed 13 women and attacked 7 others over the last 6 years.
    January 5 - Margaret Thatcher carries out a Cabinet reshuffle, sacking Norman St. John-Stevas.
    January 6 - The Brazilian double decker boat Novo Amapo capsizes in the Amazon River, Belem de Cajari, Macapa, Brazil; 230 are killed.
    January 16 - Protestant gunmen shoot and wound Bernadette Devlin McAliskey and her husband.
    January 17 - Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos lifts martial law.
    January 19 - United States and Iranian officials sign an agreement to release 52 American hostages after 14 months of captivity.
    January 20 - Ronald Reagan succeeds Jimmy Carter, as the 40th President of the United States. Minutes later, Iran releases the 52 Americans held for 444 days, ending the Iran hostage crisis.
    January 21 - The first De Lorean DMC-12 automobile, a stainless steel sports car with gull-wing doors, rolls off the production line in Dunmurry, Northern Ireland.
    January 22 - Fowzi Nejad, sole survivor of the terrorists from the Iranian Embassy siege in London, pleads guilty to manslaughter of 2 hostages and gets jailed for life.
    January 24 - The British Labour Party special conference at Wembley decides that leadership elections should be by electoral college.
    January 25 - Four former Labour cabinet ministers (Roy Jenkins, Shirley Williams, William Rodgers and David Owen) issue the Limehouse Declaration, leading to the formation of the Social Democratic Party.
    January 25 - Chiang Ching ('Madame Mao') is sentenced to death in the People's Republic of China.
    January 25 - Super Bowl XV: The Oakland Raiders defeat the Philadelphia Eagles 27-10 at the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans, Louisiana.
    January 27 - The Indonesian passenger ship Tamponas 2 catches fire and capsizes in the Java Sea, killing 580.

    February

    February 24: A powerful earthquake hits Athens.February 4 - Gro Harlem Brundtland becomes Prime Minister of Norway.
    February 8 - 19 fans of Olympiacos FC and 2 fans of AEK Athens die, and 54 are injured, after a stampede at the Karaiskaki Stadium in Pireus, possibly because Gate 7 does not open immediately after the end of the game.
    February 9 - Polish Prime Minister Józef Pinkowski resigns and is replaced by General Wojciech Jaruzelski.
    February 10 - A fire at the Las Vegas Hilton hotel-casino kills 8 and injures 198.
    February 13 - Rupert Murdoch buys The Times and The Sunday Times for £12 million.
    February 14 - Stardust fire: A fire at the Stardust nightclub in Artane, Dublin, Ireland in the early hours kills 48 and injures 214.
    February 14 - Australia withdraws recognition of the Pol Pot regime in Cambodia.
    February 23 - Antonio Tejero, with members of the Guardia Civil, enters the Spanish Congress of Deputies and stops the session where Leopoldo Calvo Sotelo is about to be named president of the government. The coup d'état fails thanks to King Juan Carlos.
    February 24 - A powerful, magnitude 6.7 earthquake hits Athens, killing 16 people, injuring thousands and destroying several buildings, mostly in Corinth and the nearby towns of Loutraki, Kiato and Xylokastro.

    March
    March 1 - Bobby Sands, a Provisional Irish Republican Army member, begins a hunger strike for political status in Long Kesh prison (he dies May 5, the first of 10 men).
    March 6 - After 19 years hosting the CBS Evening News, Walter Cronkite signs off for the last time.
    March 10 - Sir Geoffrey Howe announces the British budget, which raises taxes in the middle of a recession.
    March 11 - Chilean military dictator Augusto Pinochet is sworn in as President of Chile for another 8-year term.
    March 17 - In Italy the Propaganda Due Masonic Lodge is discovered.
    March 19 - Three workers are killed and 5 injured during a test of the Space Shuttle Columbia.
    March 26 - The British Social Democratic Party is launched at the Connaught Rooms in London.
    March 29 - The first London Marathon starts with 7,500 runners.
    March 30 - U.S. President Ronald Reagan is shot in the chest outside a Washington, D.C. hotel by John Hinckley, Jr.. Two police officers and Press Secretary James Brady are also wounded.
    March 31 - The 53rd Academy Awards, hosted by Johnny Carson, are held at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles. Robert Redford's directorial debut in Ordinary People wins Best Picture and Best Director.

    April
    April 12: First STS launch: Columbia.April 1 - Daylight saving time is introduced in the USSR.
    April 2 - Tony Benn announces that he will challenge Denis Healey for the Deputy Leadership of the British Labour Party.
    April 4 - The UK pop group Bucks Fizz wins the Eurovision Song Contest 1981 with the song, Making Your Mind Up.
    April 10 - IRA hunger-striker Bobby Sands wins the Fermanagh and South Tyrone by-election.
    April 11 - Brixton riot (1981): Rioters in South London throw petrol bombs, attack police and loot shops.
    April 12 - The Space Shuttle program: Space Shuttle Columbia (John Young, Robert Crippen) launches on the STS-1 mission, returning to Earth on April 14.
    April 15 - The Australian Foreign Minister Andrew Peacock resigns from the cabinet, accusing Prime Minister Fraser of gross disloyalty.
    April 18 - A Minor League Baseball game between the Rochester Red Wings and the Pawtucket Red Sox at McCoy Stadium in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, becomes the longest professional baseball game in history: 8 hours and 25 minutes/33 innings (the 33rd inning is not played until June 23).
    April 18 - The rock band Yes splits up (regrouping in 1983).
    April 24 - French presidential election: A first-round runoff results between Valéry Giscard d'Estaing and François Mitterrand.


    May
    May - Daniel K. Ludwig abandons the Jari project in the Amazon Basin.
    May 1 - The new Chilean pension system, based on private pension funds, begins.
    May 5 - Bobby Sands, Provisional Irish Republican Army volunteer and elected member of the House of Commons of the United Kingdom, dies aged 27 while on hunger strike in HM Prison Maze.
    May 6 - A jury of architects and sculptors unanimously selects Maya Lin's design for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial from 1,421 other entries.
    May 7 - The Greater London Council election results in a small Labour majority. On May 8, Ken Livingstone becomes Leader of the Council.
    May 10 - In the second round of the presidential elections in France, François Mitterrand beats Valéry Giscard d'Estaing.
    May 10 - In Italy a popular referendum rejects the abrogation of the law allowing abortion.
    May 13 - Pope John Paul II is shot and nearly killed by Mehmet Ali Ağca, a Turkish gunman, as he enters St. Peter's Square in Rome to address a general audience.
    May 15 - Donna Payant is murdered by serial killer Lemuel Smith, the first time a female prison officer has been killed on-duty in the United States.
    May 21 - In France, Socialist François Mitterrand becomes President.
    May 22 - Peter Sutcliffe is found guilty of being the Yorkshire Ripper. He is sentenced to life imprisonment on 13 counts of murder and 7 of attempted murder.
    May 25 - In Riyadh, the Gulf Cooperation Council is created between Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.
    May 26 - The Italian government resigns over its links to the fascist Masonic cell Propaganda Due.
    May 30 - Bangladesh President Ziaur Rahman is assassinated in Chittagong.

    June
    June 5 - The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report that 5 homosexual men in Los Angeles, California have a rare form of pneumonia seen only in patients with weakened immune systems (the first recognized cases of AIDS).
    June 6 - Bihar train disaster: Seven coaches of an overcrowded passenger train fall off the tracks into the River Kosi in Bihar, India; about 800 die.
    June 7 - The Israeli Air Force destroys Iraq's Osirak nuclear reactor.
    June 12 - Major League Baseball goes on strike, forcing the cancellation of 38 percent of the schedule.
    June 13 - At the Trooping the Colour ceremony in London, Marcus Sarjeant fires 6 blank shots at Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom.
    June 21 - Wayne Williams, a 23-year-old African American, is arrested and charged with the murders of 2 other African Americans. He is later accused of 28 others, in the Atlanta child murders.
    June 22 - Iranian president Abolhassan Banisadr is deposed.
    June 26 - Couples For Christ, a Christian charismatic organization, is established in the Philippines.
    June 29 - Morris Edwin Robert, armed with a machine gun, holds hostages in the FBI section at the Atlanta, Georgia Federal Building. After 3 hours the hostages are rescued and Robert is shot (dead?).

    July
    July 2 - The Wonderland Gang is brutally murdered in a massacre involving Eddie Nash.
    July 3 - The Toxteth riots in Liverpool, UK start after a mob saves a youth from being arrested. Shortly afterward, the Chapeltown riots in Leeds start after increased racial tension.
    July 7 - President Ronald Reagan nominates the first woman, Sandra Day O'Connor, to the Supreme Court of the United States.
    July 8 - California Governor Jerry Brown, faced with a Mediterranean fruit fly infestation, chooses to delay the aerial spraying of malathion, in favor of continuing ground-based eradication efforts.
    July 8 - Irish Republican Joe McDonnell dies at the Long Kesh Internment Camp after a 61-day hunger strike.
    July 10 - Mahathir bin Mohamad becomes the 4th Prime Minister of Malaysia.
    July 17 - Hyatt Regency walkway collapse: Two skywalks filled with people at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Kansas City, Missouri collapse into a crowded atrium lobby, killing 114.
    July 17 - Israeli aircraft bomb Beirut, destroying multi-story apartment blocks containing the offices of PLO associated groups, killing approximately 300 civilians and resulting in worldwide condemnation and a U.S. embargo on the export of aircraft to Israel.[1]
    July 17 - In Bolivia, General Luis Gracia Meza leads a bloody coup d'état against the elected government of Lidia Gayler.
    July 19 - The 1981 Springbok Tour commences in New Zealand, amid controversy over the support of apartheid.
    July 21 - Tohui The Panda is born in Chapultepec Zoo in Mexico City, the first panda to ever be born and survive in captivity outside of China.
    July 27 - Adam Walsh, 6, is kidnapped from a Sears store in Hollywood, Florida.
    July 29 - Lady Diana Spencer marries Charles, Prince of Wales.

    August
    August 1 - MTV (Music Television) is launched on cable television in the United States.
    August 3 - The Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (PATCO) goes on strike.
    August 5 - Ronald Reagan fires 11,359 striking air-traffic controllers who ignored his order for them to return to work.
    August 7 - The Washington Star ceases publication after 128 years.
    August 9 - Major League Baseball resumes from the strike with the All-Star Game in Cleveland's Municipal Stadium.
    August 10 - Exactly 2 weeks after his disappearance, the severed head of 6-year-old Hollywood, Florida native Adam Walsh is found in a canal in Vero Beach, Florida; to this day the rest of the boy's body has never been recovered.
    August 12 - The original Model 5150 IBM PC (with a 4.77 MHz Intel 8088 processor) is released in the United States at a base price of $1,565.
    August 19 - Gulf of Sidra incident (1981): Libyan leader Muammar al-Gaddafi sends 2 Sukhoi Su-22 fighter jets to intercept 2 U.S. fighters over the Gulf of Sidra. The American jets destroy the Libyan fighters.
    August 19 - U.S. President Ronald Reagan appoints the first female U.S. Supreme Court Justice, Sandra Day O'Connor.
    August 24 - Mark David Chapman is sentenced to 20 years to life in prison, after being convicted of murdering John Lennon in Manhattan 8 months earlier.
    August 28 - South African troops invade Angola.
    August 31 - A bomb explodes at the U.S. Air Force base in Ramstein, West Germany, injuring 20 people.

    September
    September 4 - An explosion at a mine in ZálužÃ*, Czechoslovakia, kills 65 people.
    September 10 - Picasso's painting "Guernica" is moved from New York to Madrid.
    September 11 - A small plane crashes into the Swing Auditorium in San Bernardino, California, damaging the venue beyond repair.
    September 14 - Margaret Thatcher appoints Cecil Parkinson as Chairman of the Conservative Party.
    September 15 - The John Bull becomes the oldest operable steam locomotive in the world, at 150 years old, when it operates under its own power outside Washington, DC.
    September 16 - In Britain, the Liberal Party Assembly votes for an electoral pact with the new Social Democratic Party.
    September 18 - France abolishes capital punishment.
    September 19 - The second Wranslide occurs in New South Wales, with the Wran government re-elected for a third term with an increased majority, and reducing the Liberal Party of Australia to just 14 members in the Legislative Assembly.
    September 19 - Simon and Garfunkel perform The Concert in Central Park, a free concert in New York in front of approximately half a million people.
    September 20 - The Brazilian river boat Sobral Santos capsizes in the Amazon River, Óbidos, Brazil, killing at least 300.
    September 21 - Belize becomes independent.
    September 25 - Sandra Day O'Connor takes her seat as the first female justice of the U.S. Supreme Court.
    September 25 - The Rolling Stones begin their Tattoo You tour at JFK Stadium in Philadelphia.
    September 26 - The Boeing 767 airliner makes its first flight.
    September 27 - TGV high speed rail service between Paris and Lyon, France begins.
    September 27 - Denis Healey retains the post of Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, beating Tony Benn by 50.426% to 49.574%.

    October

    October 6 - Egyptian president Anwar Sadat is assassinated during a parade by army members who belong to the Egyptian Islamic Jihad organization; they opposed his negotiations with Israel.
    October 10 - The Ministry for Education of Japan issues the jōyō kanji.
    October 10 - A Provisional IRA bomb at Chelsea Barracks in London kills a woman pensioner.
    October 13 - James Tobin wins the Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel.
    October 14 - Vice President Hosni Mubarak is elected President of Egypt 1 week after Anwar Sadat's assassination.
    October 15 - The heavy metal band Metallica forms.
    October 16 - Gas explosions at a coal mine at Hokutan, Yūbari, Hokkaidō, Japan kill 93.
    October 21 - Andreas Papandreou becomes Prime Minister of Greece.
    October 22 - The founding congress of the Nepal Workers and Peasants Organization faction led by Hareram Sharma and D.P. Singh begins.
    October 22 - Liberal candidate Bill Pitt wins the Croydon North West by-election, the first election win by the Liberal-S.D.P. Alliance.
    October 26 - An IRA bomb in a Wimpy Bar in Oxford Street, London, kills a bomb disposal expert.
    October 27 - A Soviet submarine runs aground outside the Karlskrona, Sweden military base.

    November
    November 1: Flag of Antigua & Barbuda.November 1 - Antigua and Barbuda gain independence from the United Kingdom.
    November 9 - Edict No. 81-234 abolishes slavery in Mauritania.
    November 12 - STS-2: Space Shuttle Columbia (Joe Engle, Richard Truly) lifts off for its second mission.
    November 12 - The Church of England General Synod votes to admit women to holy orders.
    November 13 - The first Friday the 13th motorcycle event is held in Port Dover, Ontario, Canada.
    November 16 - Luke and Laura marry on the U.S. soap opera General Hospital; it is the highest-rated hour in daytime television history.
    November 18 - COMDEX Fall, IBM introduces the IBM PC. Scientific Solutions announces the first PC add-in cards.
    November 23 - Iran-Contra scandal: Ronald Reagan signs the top secret National Security Decision Directive 17 (NSDD-17), authorizing the Central Intelligence Agency to recruit and support Contra rebels in Nicaragua.
    November 25–26 - A group of mercenaries led by Mike Hoare take over Mahe airport in the Seychelles in a coup attempt. Most of the mercenaries escape by a commandeered Air India passenger jet; 6 are later arrested.
    November 26 - Former cabinet minister Shirley Williams wins the Crosby by-election, becoming the first elected S.D.P. MP.
    November 30 - Cold War: In Geneva, representatives from the United States and the Soviet Union begin negotiating intermediate-range nuclear weapon reductions in Europe (the meetings end inconclusively on Thursday, December 17).


    December

    December 1 - A Yugoslavian McDonnell Douglas DC-9 crashes into a mountain while approaching Ajaccio Airport in Corsica, killing 178.
    December 4 - South Africa grants "homeland" Ciskei independence (not recognized outside South Africa).
    December 5 - American general James Lee Dozier is kidnapped in Verona by the Italian Red Brigades.
    December 8 - The No. 21 Mine explosion in Whitwell, Tennessee kills 13.
    December 8 - Arthur Scargill becomes President-elect of the National Union of Mineworkers.
    December 10 - During the Ministerial Session of the North Atlantic Council in Brussels, Spain signes the Protocol of Accession to NATO.
    December 11 - Boxing: Muhammad Ali loses to Trevor Berbick; this proved to be Ali's last-ever fight.
    December 11 - El Mozote massacre: In El Salvador, army units kill 900 civilians.
    December 13 - Wojciech Jaruzelski declares martial law in Poland, to prevent the dismantling of the communist system by Solidarity.
    December 15 - A car bomb destroys the Iraqi Embassy in Beirut, Lebanon, killing 61 people; Syrian intelligence is blamed.
    December 20 - The Penlee lifeboat disaster occurs off the coast of South-West Cornwall.
    December 28 - The first American test-tube baby, Elizabeth Jordan Carr, is born in Norfolk, Virginia.
    December 31 - A coup d'état in Ghana removes President Hilla Limann's PNP government and replaces it with the PNDC led by Flight Lieutenant Jerry Rawlings
  2. rednordman
    rednordman
    Aston Villa where still European Champions....for one week.
  3. Die Neue Zeit
    Die Neue Zeit
    The only major event of the year was that South Korean plane being shot down by the Soviets.
  4. rednordman
    rednordman
    @Jacob. Wasnt it shot down by the North Koreans?
  5. Dr Mindbender
    hint.

    1. Wikipedia.

    2. Cut n' paste.
  6. sanpal
    sanpal
    On that year one boy was born. His name was Vova. And it was a small event in comparing with testing of the first hydrogen bomb by USA in that year too. This boy was lucky and he made a great career - he became the second president of Russia.
  7. Lynx
    Lynx
    Born 105 years to the day after the death of Arch Stanton
  8. Philosophical Materialist
    Philosophical Materialist
    The Falklands War happened, and Italy won the football World Cup.
  9. proudcomrade
    proudcomrade
    Not much happened on the precise day of my birthday. However, just a couple of days later, Carter & Brezhnev made the SALT II agreements. My birth year was an eventful time in Iran.

    I was born in 1979, probably making me one of the most elderly members of this site. That's okay; I have a lot of firsthand memories of the Cold War that I am able to share with younger comrades.
  10. A.J.
    A.J.
    The Falklands War happened, and Italy won the football World Cup.
    ^This
  11. Bitter Ashes
    Bitter Ashes
    I know the Miners' strike ended the week before i was born.
  12. RedAnarchist
    RedAnarchist
    January
    January 1
    Spain and Portugal enter the European Community, which later becomes the European Union.
    Aruba gains increased autonomy from the Netherlands and is separated from the Netherlands Antilles.[clarification needed]
    The Province of Flevoland is established in the Netherlands.
    UNIDO becomes a specialized agency of the United Nations.
    January 9 – After losing a patent battle with Polaroid, Kodak leaves the instant camera business.
    January 12 – STS-61-C: Space Shuttle Columbia is launched with the first Hispanic-American astronaut, Dr. Franklin Chang-Diaz.


    Disintegration of the Space Shuttle Challenger.
    January 19 – The first PC virus, Brain, starts to spread.
    January 20
    The United Kingdom and France announce plans to construct the Channel Tunnel.
    January 24 – The Voyager 2 space probe makes its first encounter with Uranus.
    January 25 – Yoweri Museveni's National Resistance Army Rebel group takes over Uganda after leading a successful 5-year guerrilla war in which up to half a million people are believed to have been killed. They will later use January 26 as the official date to avoid a coincidence of dates with Dictator Idi Amin's 1971 coup.
    January 28 – STS-51-L: Space Shuttle Challenger disintegrates 73 seconds after launch, killing the crew of 7 astronauts, including schoolteacher Christa McAuliffe (see Space Shuttle Challenger disaster).
    January 29 – Yoweri Museveni is sworn in as President of Uganda after leading a successful 5-year guerrilla war.
    [edit]February
    February 2 – One of Australia's worst crimes, the Anita Cobby murder, occurs.
    February 3 – Pixar Animation Studios is opened.
    February 7 – President Jean-Claude Duvalier ("Baby Doc") flees Haiti, ending 28 years of family rule.
    February 9 – Halley's Comet reaches its perihelion, the closest point to the Sun, during its second visit to the solar system in the 20th Century.
    February 11 – Human rights activist Anatoly Shcharansky is released by the Soviet Union and leaves the country.
    February 15 – The Beechcraft Starship makes its maiden flight.
    February 16
    The Soviet liner Mikhail Lermontov sinks in the Marlborough Sounds, New Zealand.
    The French Air Force raids the Libyan Ouadi Doum airbase in northern Chad.
    February 17 – The Single European Act is signed.
    February 19
    The Soviet Union launches the Mir space station.
    After waiting 37 years, the United States Senate approves a treaty outlawing genocide.
    February 21 – Shigechiyo Izumi, the oldest man in the world and the last living person with an 1860s birthdate, dies in his native Japan at the age of 120.
    February 25
    People Power Revolution: President Ferdinand Marcos of the Philippines goes into exile in Hawaii after 20 years of rule; Corazon Aquino becomes the first Filipino woman president, first as an interim president. Salvador Laurel becomes her Vice President.
    Egyptian military police, protesting against bad salaries, enter 4 luxury hotels near the pyramids, set fire to them and loot them.
    February 26 – People Power Revolution in the Philippines.
    February 27 – The United States Senate allows its debates to be televised on a trial basis.
    February 28 – Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme is assassinated on his way home from the cinema.
    [edit]March
    March 3 – The first paper is published describing the Atomic force microscope, invented the previous year by Gerd Binnig, Calvin Quate and Christopher Berger.[1]
    March 4 – The Today national tabloid newspaper is launched in the United Kingdom, pioneering the use of computer photosetting and full-colour offset printing, at a time when British national newspapers still use Linotype machines and letterpress.
    March 8 – The Japanese Suisei probe flies by Halley's Comet, studying its UV hydrogen corona and solar wind.
    March 9 – United States Navy divers find the largely intact but heavily damaged crew compartment of the Space Shuttle Challenger; the bodies of all seven astronauts are still inside.
    March 25 – The 58th Academy Awards are held in Los Angeles, California, with Out of Africa winning Best Picture.
    March 26 – An article in the New York Times charges that Kurt Waldheim, former United Nations Secretary General and candidate for president of Austria, may have been involved in Nazi war crimes during World War II.
    March 27 – A car bomb explodes at Russell Street Police HQ in Melbourne, killing a police officer.
    March 31
    A fire devastates Hampton Court Palace in Surrey, England.
    A Mexicana Boeing 727 jetliner crashes at Maravatio, Mexico, killing 173.[2]
    [edit]April
    April 2 – A bomb explodes on a Trans World Airlines flight from Rome to Athens, killing 4 people.
    April 5 Р1986 Berlin discotheque bombing: The West Berlin discoth̬que, a known hangout for United States soldiers, is bombed, killing 3 and injuring 230; Libya is held responsible.
    April 13 – Pope John Paul II officially visits the Synagogue of Rome, the first time a modern Pope has visited a synagogue.
    April 14 – Hailstones weighing 2.2 lb (1 kg) fall on the Gopalganj district of Bangladesh, killing 92.
    April 15 – Operation El Dorado Canyon: At least 15 people die after United States planes bomb targets in the Libyan capital, Tripoli, and the Benghazi region
    April 17
    British journalist John McCarthy is kidnapped in Beirut (released in August 1991) – 3 others are found dead; Revolutionary Cells (RZ) claims responsibility in retaliation for the U.S. bombing of Libya.
    A treaty ends the Three Hundred and Thirty Five Years' War between the Netherlands and the Isles of Scilly.
    The Hindawi Affair begins when an Irishwoman is found unknowingly carrying explosives onto an El Al flight from London to Tel Aviv.
    April 21 – Geraldo Rivera opens Al Capone's secret vault on The Mystery of Al Capone's Vault, discovering only a bottle of moonshine.
    April 26 – The Chernobyl disaster: A mishandled safety test at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant in Pripyat, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union "killed at least 4056 people and damaged almost $7 billion of property".[3] Radioactive fallout from the accident concentrated near Belarus, Ukraine and Russia and at least 350,000 people were forcibly resettled away from these areas. After the accident, "traces of radioactive deposits unique to Chernobyl were found in nearly every country in the northern hemisphere".[3]
    April 27 – "Captain Midnight" interrupts the HBO satellite feed.
    April 29 – Diamond Jubilee of Emperor Showa is held at the Kokugikan in Tokyo
    [edit]May
    May 2 – The 1986 World Exposition opens in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
    May 8 – Óscar Arias is inaugurated into his first term as President of Costa Rica.
    May 16 – The Seville Statement on Violence is adopted by an international meeting of scientists, convened by the Spanish National Commission for UNESCO, in Seville, Spain.
    May 25
    Hands Across America: At least 5,000,000 people form a human chain from New York City to Long Beach, California, to raise money to fight hunger and homelessness.
    The Bangladeshi double decked ferry Shamia capsizes in the Meghna River, southern Barisal, Bangladesh, killing at least 600.
    May 31 – The 1986 FIFA World Cup begins in Mexico.
    [edit]June
    June 4 – Jonathan Pollard pleads guilty to espionage for selling top secret United States military intelligence to Israel.
    June 8 – Former United Nations Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim is elected president of Austria.
    June 9 – The Rogers Commission releases its report on the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster.
    June 19 – American college basketball player Len Bias suffers a fatal cardiac arrhythmia from a cocaine overdose less than 48 hours after being selected 2nd overall by the Boston Celtics in the 1986 NBA Draft.
    June 23 – Eric Thomas develops LISTSERV, the first email list management software.[4]
    June 29 – Argentina defeats West Germany 3–2 to win the 1986 FIFA World Cup.
    [edit]July
    July 1 – CSX Transportation is established.
    July 5 – The Statue of Liberty is reopened to the public after an extensive refurbishment.
    July 5–July 20 – The Goodwill Games are held in Moscow.
    July 7 – Australian drug smugglers Kevin Barlow and Brian Chambers executed in Malaysia.
    July 23 – In London, Prince Andrew, Duke of York marries Sarah Ferguson at Westminster Abbey.
    July 27 – Greg LeMond wins the Tour de France.
    July 28 – Estate agent Suzy Lamplugh vanishes after a meeting in London.
    [edit]August
    August 6
    A low-pressure system moving from South Australia and redeveloping off the New South Wales coast dumps a record 328 millimetres (12.9 in) of rain in a day on Sydney.
    In Louisville, Kentucky, William J. Schroeder, the second artificial heart recipient, dies after 620 days.
    Australian Democrats leader Don Chipp retires from federal parliament and is succeeded by Janine Haines, the first woman to lead a political party in Australia.
    August 19 – Two weeks after it was stolen, the Picasso painting Weeping Woman is found in a locker at the Spencer Street Station in Melbourne, Australia.
    August 20 – In Edmond, Oklahoma, United States Postal Service employee Patrick Sherrill guns down 14 of his co-workers before committing suicide.
    August 21 – The Lake Nyos disaster occurs in Cameroon, killing nearly 2,000 people.
    August 31
    The Soviet passenger liner Admiral Nakhimov collides with the bulk carrier Pyotr Vasev in the Black Sea and sinks almost immediately, killing 398.
    Aeroméxico Flight 498, a Douglas DC-9, collides with a Piper PA-28 over Cerritos, California, killing 67 on both aircraft and 15 on the ground.
    The cargo ship Khian Sea departs from the docks of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, carrying 14,000 tons of toxic waste. It wanders the seas for the next 16 months trying to find a place to dump its cargo.
    [edit]September
    September 1 – Establishment of Jordan University of Science and Technology in Jordan.
    September 4 – Eusko Alkartasuna, the Basque Social Democratic Party, is created in Vitoria-Gasteiz.
    September 5 – Pan Am Flight 73, with 358 people on board, is hijacked at Karachi International Airport by 4 Abu Nidal terrorists.
    September 6 – In Istanbul, 2 Abu Nidal terrorists kill 22 and wound 6 inside the Neve Shalom synagogue during Sabbath services.
    September 7
    Desmond Tutu becomes the first black Anglican Church bishop in South Africa.
    Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet survives an assassination attempt by the FPMR; 5 of his bodyguards are killed.
    September 13 – A magnitude 6.0 earthquake rocks the city of Kalamata in southern Greece, killing 20 people, injuring 80 and completely destroying 1/5 of the city.
    [edit]October
    October 1 – U.S. President Ronald Reagan signs the Goldwater–Nichols Act into law, making official the largest reorganization of the United States Department of Defense since the Air Force was made a separate branch of service in 1947.
    October 3 – TASCC, a superconducting cyclotron, officially opens at Chalk River Laboratories.
    October 9
    United States District Court Judge Harry E. Claiborne becomes the fifth federal official to be removed from office through impeachment.
    News Corporation completes its acquisition of the Metromedia group of companies, thereby launching the Fox Broadcasting Company.
    The Phantom of the Opera, the longest running Broadway show in history, opens at Her Majesty's Theatre in London.
    October 10 – An earthquake measuring 7.5 on the Richter Scale strikes San Salvador, El Salvador, killing an estimated 1,500 people.
    October 11 – Cold War: Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev meet in ReykjavÃ*k, Iceland, to continue discussions about scaling back their intermediate missile arsenals in Europe (the talks break down in failure).
    October 12 – Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh visit the People's Republic of China.
    October 16 – The International Olympic Committee chooses Albertville, France to be the host city of the 1992 Winter Olympics and Barcelona, Spain to be the host city of the 1992 Summer Olympics.
    October 19 – Mozambican president Samora Machel's plane crashes in South Africa.
    October 21 – The Marshall Islands become an associated state under the Compact of Free Association.
    October 22 – In New York City WNBC Radio's traffic helicopter crashes into the Hudson River, killing traffic reporter Jane Dornacker. The last words heard on-the-air were Dornacker's screams of terror, "Hit the water! Hit the water! Hit the water!"
    October 26 – Bus deregulation goes into effect in the United Kingdom, except Greater London and Northern Ireland.
    October 27
    The International World Day of Prayer is held in Assisi, Italy.
    World Series: The New York Mets defeat the Boston Red Sox in 7 games. This is the second world series title in the Mets franchise. It is also remembered for Game 6, when Bill Buckner lets an easy ground ball hit by Mookie Wilson roll through his legs, letting the Mets win and pull even with the Red Sox in the series.
    The Big Bang in the London Stock Exchange abolishes fixed commission charges, paving the way for electronic trading.
    October 28
    The centennial of the Statue of Liberty's dedication is celebrated in New York Harbor.
    In London, Jeremy Bamber is found guilty of the murder of his parents, sister and twin nephews, and sentenced to life imprisonment, with a recommendation by the trial judge that he should serve at least 25 years before being considered for parole.
    [edit]November
    November 1 – Queensland, Australia: Joh Bjelke-Petersen wins his final election as Premier of Queensland with 38.6% of the vote. He resigns on December 1, 1987 following revelations of his involvement with corruption released in the Fitzgerald Inquiry.
    November 3 – Iran–Contra affair: The Lebanese magazine Ash-Shiraa reports that the United States has been selling weapons to Iran in secret, in order to secure the release of 7 American hostages held by pro-Iranian groups in Lebanon.
    November 4 – Democrats regain control of the United States Senate for the first time in 6 years. In California, Chief Justice Rose Bird and two colleagues are removed by voters from the Supreme Court of California for opposing capital punishment.
    November 6 – Sumburgh disaster: A British International Helicopters Boeing 234LR Chinook crashes 2.5 miles east of Sumburgh Airport, killing 45 people (the deadliest civilian helicopter crash on record).
    November 11 – Sperry Rand and Burroughs merge to form Unisys, becoming the second largest computer company.
    November 12 – Australian singer John Farnham releases the album Whispering Jack, which becomes the highest selling album in Australia's history.
    November 18 – Greater Manchester Police announce that they are to search for the bodies of 2 missing children (who both vanished more than 20 years ago) after the Moors Murderers Ian Brady and Myra Hindley confess to 2 more murders.
    November 21 – Iran-Contra Affair: National Security Council member Oliver North and his secretary, Fawn Hall, start shredding documents implicating them in selling weapons to Iran and channeling the proceeds to help fund the Contra rebels in Nicaragua.
    November 22 – Mike Tyson wins his first world boxing title by defeating Trevor Berbick in Las Vegas.
    November 25 – Iran-Contra Affair: U.S. Attorney General Edwin Meese announces that profits from covert weapons sales to Iran were illegally diverted to the anti-communist Contra rebels in Nicaragua.
    November 26 – Iran-Contra Affair: U.S. President Ronald Reagan announces that as of December 1 former Senator John Tower, former Secretary of State Edmund Muskie, and former National Security Adviser Brent Scowcroft will serve as members of the Special Review Board looking into the scandal (they became known as the Tower Commission). Reagan denies involvement in the scandal.
    [edit]December
    December 7 – A 5.7 Richter scale earthquake destroys most of the Bulgarian town of Strajica, killing 2 people.
    December 14 – Rutan Voyager, an experimental aircraft designed by Burt Rutan and piloted by Dick Rutan and Jeana Yeager, begins its flight around the world.
    December 19 – Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov is permitted to return to Moscow after years of internal exile.
    December 20 – Three African Americans are assaulted by a group of white teens in the Howard Beach neighborhood of Queens, New York. One of the victims, Michael Griffith, is run over and killed by a motorist while attempting to flee the attackers.
    December 22 – British Liberal Party Member of Parliament David Penhaligon, 42, is killed in a car crash near Truro in Cornwall, England.
    December 23 – Voyager completes the first nonstop circumnavigation of the earth by air without refueling in 9 days, 3 minutes and 44 seconds.
    December 26 – After 35 years on the airwaves and holding the title of longest-running non-news program on network television, NBC airs the final episode of daytime drama Search for Tomorrow.
    December 31 – A fire at the Dupont Plaza Hotel in San Juan, Puerto Rico, kills 97 and injures 140.
    [edit]Undated
    The National park passport stamps program begins.
    The Council on Competitiveness was founded
    Average per capita income in Japan exceeds that in the USA.
    Dragon Quest (Dragon Warrior in North America) was released in Japan.
  13. Shropshire Socialist
    Shropshire Socialist
    I was born in 1969 and the only things I know about that year were that The Beatles performed their last ever public gig (30th January, day after I was born), Judy Garland committed suicide, man walked on the moon, and Nixon became President of the USA.
  14. Thelonious
    Thelonious
    January 22, 1973

    Roe vs. Wade decision by the supreme court of usa