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1984: Events and Inventions

February 13, 1984. Konstantin Chernenko succeeds the late Yuri Andropov as General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.

February 26, 1984. United States Marines and other peacekeeping forces leave Beirut, Lebanon to be policed by local militias.

June 6, 1984. In response to militant Sikh extremists demanding their own state, Indian troops storm the Golden Temple at Amritsar, the Sikhs’ holiest shrine, killing an estimated 2,000 people.

August 21, 1984. Half a million people in Manila, the Philippines demonstrate against the regime of Ferdinand Marcos.

September, 1984. After two years of negotiations, agreement is reached for Great Britain to return Hong Kong to Chinese control in 1997.

October 23, 1984. The world learns from moving BBC News TV reports that a famine is plaguing Ethiopia, where thousands of people have already died of starvation and as many as 10,000,000 more lives are at risk.

October 31, 1984. Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi is ambushed and assassinated by two of her own Sikh bodyguards. Anti-Sikh riots break out. Rajiv Gandhi, Indira’s son, becomes prime minister of India

December 8, 1984. At least 2000 people die in the Indian city of Bhopal after the US-owned Union Carbide chemical plant there has a chemical leak, releasing a huge cloud of toxic methyl isocyanate gas. Thousands more are blinded or injured.

December 10, 1984. Bishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa wins the Nobel Peace Prize for his nonviolent struggle against apartheid. He says, “I have just got to believe God is around. If He is not, we in South Africa have had it.”

1983: Events and Inventions

March 23, 1983. President Ronald Reagan proposes, in a televised speech, a new missile defense system to protect the United Stats from Soviet attack. The media calls the new defense system, “Star Wars.”

April 4, 1983. First flight of the Space Shuttle Challenger, NASA’s second space shuttle. Columbia, launched in April, 1981, was the first space shuttle.

June, 1983. Thousands of people in Chile take part in nationwide protests against the rule of dictator General Augusto Pinochet.

June 9, 1983. Britain’s Conservative government, led by Margaret Thatcher, is re-elected by a landslide majority

July 23, 1983. Riots in Sri Lanka, known as Black July. These riots, in which Sri Lankan mobs attack Tamil rebels and other Tamil citizens, leave between 400 and 3,000 Tamils dead and millions of dollars worth of their property destroyed. The riots are the beginning of a deadly Sri Lankan civil war.

August 21, 1983. Benigno Aquino, Jr., Philippines opposition leader, is assassinated in Manila as he returns from exile in the U.S. His widow, Corazon Aquino, will be inspired by her husband’s life and death to run for President of the Philippines in 1986.

August 31, 1983. Korean Air Lines Flight 007 is shot down by a Soviet Union jet fighter near Moneron Island when the commercial aircraft enters Soviet airspace. All 269 passengers on board are killed, including U.S. Congressman Larry McDonald.

October 23, 1983. Suicide truck-bombings destroy both the French and the United States Marine Corps barracks in Beirut, killing 241 U.S. servicemen, 58 French paratroopers and 6 Lebanese civilians.

October 25, 1982. United States troops invade Grenada at the request of Eugenia Charles of Dominica, a member of the Organization of American States.

October 30, 1983. Argentina holds its first democratic elections after seven years of military rule. In December, Raul Alfonsin will be inaugurated as the democratically elected president of Argentina.

1982: Events and Inventions

February 2-3, 1982. The Hama massacre begins in Syria. Syrian president Hafez al-Assad orders the army to purge the city of Hama of the Muslim Brotherhood and other rebels. Ten to twenty thousand Syrians die in the ensuing massacre.

June 2, 1982. Forces under Israeli Defense Minister Ariel Sharon invade southern Lebanon in their “Operation Peace for the Galilee,” eventually reaching as far north as the capital Beirut. The United Nations Security Council votes to demand that Israel withdraw its troops from Lebanon.

June 14, 1982. Argentinian forces that had invaded the nearby Falkland Islands in April surrender to British forces after a fierce war over control of the islands. Although Argentina still claims the island group that it calls the Malvinas, Great Britain retains control of the government of the Falklands.

August, 1982. Israeli troops drive the Palestinian Liberation Organization out of its base in Beirut, Lebanon. Yassir Arafat and other Palestinian leaders evacuate to Tunisia.

September 18, 1982. The Lebanese Christian Militia (the Phalange) kill thousands of Palestinians in refugee camps. The massacre is in retaliation for the assassination of pro-Israel president-elect, Bachir Gemayel, as well as several Palestinian massacres against Lebanese Christians.

October, 1982. Socialist Felipe Gonzales becomes prime minister of Spain.

November 12, 1982. Soviet premier Leonid Brezhnev dies of a heart attack and is succeeded by Premier Yuri Andropov.

November 14, 1982. The leader of Poland’s outlawed Solidarity movement, Lech Wałęsa, is released from 11 months of internment near the Soviet border.

December 2, 1982. The first operation to successfully implant an artificial heart in a human being is performed on retired dentist Barney Clark at the University of Utah Medical Center. The heart, the Jarvik-7, is named after its inventor, Robert Jarvik.

CD’s (compact discs) and CD players are first released to the public in 1982. The first album to be released on CD is Billy Joel’s 52nd Street.

1981: Events and Inventions

January 19, 1981. United States and Iranian officials sign an agreement to release 52 American hostages after 14 months of captivity.

March, 1981. Solidarity, the Polish national trade union, stages a national strike in Poland in protest against police treatment of union activists.

March 30, 1981. President Ronald Reagan is wounded in an assassination attempt in Washington, D.C.

May 10, 1981. Socialist candidate Francois Mitterand wins the presidential election in France, promising a program of nationalization, taxes on the wealthy, and end to unemployment. (I will not draw the obvious parallel between France in 1981 and the U.S. in 2008, but it is obvious–and ominous– to me.)

May 13, 1981. Pope John Paul II is wounded in an assassination attempt as he blesses a crowd in St. Peter’s Square in Rome.

June 5, 1981. AIDS pandemic is first reported and becomes known when the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports an unusual cluster of Pneumocystis pneumonia in five homosexual men in Los Angeles.

July 29, 1981. Charles, Prince of Wales, and Lady Diana Spencer marry in a publicly televised wedding at St Paul’s Cathedral in London.

August 12, 1981. IBM launches its new “Personal COmputer” (PC) for the home and office market. Because of the success of the IBM Personal Computer, the term PC will come to mean IBM’s personal computer and those computers that use IBM products.

October 6, 1981. President Anwar Sadat of Egypt is assassinated during a military parade in Cairo. Vice-President Hosni Mubarak acts swiftly to take control of the country. The assassination is the work of army members who belong to the Egyptian Islamic Jihad organization; they oppose his negotiations with Israel.

December 13, 1981. Wojciech Jaruzelski declares martial law in Poland, to prevent the dismantling of the communist system by Solidarity.

1980: Events and Inventions

January, 1980. Over 5000 gold-diggers arrive in the interior Amazon jungle of Brazil, having heard about the discovery of a gold nugget at a place called Serra Pelada.

January 22, 1980. Andrei Sakharov, a prominent Soviet physicist and dissident, is jailed and exiled by the Soviet government.

“Yet our state is similar to a cancer cell—with its messianism and expansionism, its totalitarian suppression of dissent, the authoritarian structure of power, with a total absence of public control in the most important decisions in domestic and foreign policy, a closed society that does not inform its citizens of anything substantial, closed to the outside world, without freedom of travel or the exchange of information.” ~Andrei Sakharov

'Mugabe' photo (c) 2011, neal young - license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/2.0/March 4, 1980. Robert Mugabe is elected prime minister of Zimbabwe. Mugabe continues to rule in Zimbabwe to this day, although 2008 elections forced him to share power with two other men.
I read Peter Godwin’s book, The Fear: Robert Mugabe and the Martyrdom of Zimbabwe, and was appalled by the tales of torture and suffering that make up a good part of that book.

April 12, 1980. Samuel Kanyon Doe takes over Liberia in a military coup, ending over 130 years of democratic presidential succession in that country. Doe and his associates kill President William R. Tolbert, Jr. and later execute a majority of Tolbert’s cabinet and other government officials. “President” Doe will rule Liberia for the next ten years until his assassination in 1990.

April 25, 1980. An American attempt to rescue the 53 hostages being held by the Iranians in the American embassy in Tehran fails when an American helicopter crashes in the Iranian desert. The rescue attempt had already been called off because of equipment failure, but the helicopter crash resulted in the deaths of eight American soldiers who were in the process of withdrawing from Iran when the crash occurred.

May 22, 1980. Pac-Man (the best-selling arcade game of all time) is released in Japan.

'PAC-MAN CE_screenshot7' photo (c) 2007, Gamerscore Blog - license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/

September, 1980. Polish workers win the right to organize trade unions and set up the central organization called Solidarity under the leadership of Lech Wałęsa. Solidarity is the first non-communist trade union in a Warsaw Pact country.

September 23, 1980. Iraqi troops attack western Iran. Iraqi president Saddam Hussein hopes to take advantage of the revolutionary chaos in Iran and and has his army attack without formal warning. The Abadan oil refinery is blazing after being bombarded by Iraqi artillery and bombs. The United States and the Soviet Union are both remaining neutral in the conflict.

November 4, 1980. Republican challenger and former Governor Ronald Reagan of California defeats incumbent Democratic President Jimmy Carter to become the 40th president of the United States of America.

November, 1980. The NASA space probe Voyager I makes its closest approach to Saturn, when it flies within 77,000 miles of the planet’s cloud-tops and sends the first high resolution images of the world back to scientists on Earth.

1979: Events and Inventions

January, 1979. Pol Pot’s Khmer Rouge government in Cambodia is overthrown by the invading Vietnamese.

'Money 094 iran 2007 Grand Ayatollah Sayyed Ruhollah Musavi Khomeini' photo (c) 2011, DAVID HOLT - license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/January 16, 1979. The Shah of Iran is sent into exile as Muslim fundamentalists take over the governing of Iran. Opposition to the Shah has been led by supporters of the Ayatollah Khomeini, a Muslim leader who has been living in exile himself in Paris.

March 26, 1979. Egypt and Israel sign a peace treaty at the White House in Washington, D.C. Palestinians and their Arab supporters in other countries see this agreement as a betrayal since the treaty does not settle the question of a Palestinian state or the future of Jerusalem, the Sinai Peninsula, or Israeli settlements on the West Bank.

May 4, 1979. Conservative Margaret Thatcher becomes prime minister of Great Britain, the first female to ever hold that position. She promises a complete transformation of the British economy along conservative lines.

June, 1979. US President Jimmy Carter and Soveit Premier Leonid Brezhnev sign the SALT II treaty limiting nuclear weapons.

'Sony Walkman WM A602' photo (c) 2009, FaceMePLS - license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/July 1, 1979. A revolutionary new portable stereo system, the Sony Walkman, is launched in Japan. With the help of lightweight plastic earphones the Walkman enables the listener to enjoy radio or music wherever he goes.

July 20, 1979. Sandinista rebels overthrow Nicaraguan dictator Anastasio Somoza. Somoza flees to the US, taking with an estimated $20 million from the Nicaraguan treasury.

November, 1979. THe US Embassy in Tehran, Iran is taken over by followers of the Ayatollah Khomeini, and nearly 100 embassy staff members and US marines are taken hostage.

November, 1979. Saudi Arabian troops storm the Great Mosque at Mecca, which had been occupied by Shiite Muslims.

December 27, 179. The USSR invades Afghanistan. The Russians say that they have been asked to provide “urgent political, moral, military, and economic assistance” to the Afghans. The Soviets install a puppet government in Kabul, the capital, but most of the country is controlled by the Mujahideen, Muslim fundamentalist guerillas who want to rule the country in accordance with their interpretation of Muslim law.

1978: Events and Inventions

March 14, 1978. Israeli troops attack Palestinian refugee camps in southern Lebanon in retaliation for attacks perpetrated by the Palestinians from those camps.

March 17, 1978. The oil tanker Amoco Cadiz runs aground on the coast of Brittany, resulting in the largest oil spill of its kind (4000 tons of fuel oil) in history to that date.

April 27-30, 1978. Afghanistan President Daoud Khan is killed during a military coup. The Democratic Republic of Afghanistan is proclaimed, under pro-communist leader Nur Mohammed Taraki.

May 9, 1978. Ex-prime minister Aldo Moro of Italy is kidnapped (in March) and murdered by members of the Red Brigade in Rome.

July 26, 1978. The world’s first “test-tube baby”, Louise Brown, is delivered by Caesarean section at Oldham Hospital in Great Britain. The baby was conceived by means of in-vitro fertilization where the the mother’s egg was fertilized by sperm in a test tube, and then the embryo was implanted into the mother’s womb to grow there until birth.

'Anwar Sadat and Menachem Begin shake hands as Jimmy Anwar Sadat and Menachem Begin greet each for their first meeting at the Camp David Summit as Jimmy Carter and Rosalynn Carter watch., 09/07/1978' photo (c) 1978, The U.S. National Archives - license: http://www.flickr.com/commons/usage/September 17, 1978. Menachem Begin of Israel and Anwar Sadat of Egypt meet at Camp David in Maryland to work out a peace agreement between the two countries. Following thirteen days of secret negotiations, the Camp David Accords are signed between Israel and Egypt. The Camp David Accords are the result of 18 months of intense diplomatic efforts by Egypt, Israel, and the United States that began after Jimmy Carter became President. Sadat and Begin will winthe 1978 Nobel Peace Prize for their progress toward achieving a Middle East accord.

October 16, 1978. The Year of Three Popes: The Vatican announces Polish archbishop Karol Wojtyla is to be the successor to Pope John Paul I, who died of a heart attack just 34 days after his inauguration as pope and successor to Pope Paul VI. Pope John Paul II (Wojtyla) will be the first non-Italian pope to be elevated to head the Catholic Church in over 400 years.

November 29, 1978. Mass suicide at Jonestown, Guyana. More than 900 members of the People’s Temple, a religious cult group with its headquarters in San Francisco, commit suicide and/or murder at the behest of their leader, Jim Jones, who leads them to drink fruit juice laced with cyanide and administer the poison to their children. The Jonestown tragedy becomes the largest single loss of American civilian life in a non-natural disaster until the events of September 11, 2001. I hope sometime soon to read A Thousand Lives: The Untold Story of Hope, Deception, and Survival at Jonestown by Julia Scheeres, published in 2011, to get a more detailed perspective on this horribly tragic story of misplaced faith.

December, 1978. Mass protests in Iran call for the abdication of the Shah and the end of military rule in that country.

December 25, 1978. Vietnam launches a full-scale invasion of Kampuchea (Cambodia) and subsequently occupies the country after the Khmer Rouge is removed from power.

1977: Events and Inventions

Throughout 1977 and the rest of the decade. Thousands of desperate refugees flee South Vietnam in the wake of the communist takeover of that country (1975). In Vietnam, the new communist government has sent many people who supported the old government in the South to “re-education camps”, and others to “new economic zones.” An estimated 1 million people have been imprisoned with no formal charges or trials. These “boat people” take to the sea in small, unsafe craft, hoping to reach a country that will allow them to live freely or emigrate to the U.S. or another Western country.

'Commodore PET' photo (c) 2010, Soupmeister - license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/January, 1977. The world’s first personal all-in-one computer, the Commodore PET, is demonstrated at the Consumer Electronics Show in Chicago.

May 17, 1977. The Likud Party, led by Menachem Begin, wins the elections in Israel. In the 1940’s before Israel became a nation, Begin was the leader of the Zionist militant group Irgun which killed British military who were occupying Palestine.

June 15, 1977. Spain has its first democratic elections, after 41 years under the Franco regime.

August, 1977. Space probes Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 are launched on journeys to Jupiter and Saturn.

August 12, 1977. The NASA Space Shuttle Enterprise makes its first test free-flight from the back of a Boeing 747 Shuttle Carrier Aircraft.

'panama canal' photo (c) 2005, dsasso - license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/September 7, 1977. The U.S. signs a treaty with Panama agreeing to transfer control of the Panama Canal to Panama at the end of the 20th century.

October 26, 1977. The last natural smallpox case is discovered in Somalia. Authorities in the health field consider this date the anniversary of the eradication of smallpox, the most spectacular success of any vaccination program to date.

November 19, 1977. Egyptian President Anwar Sadat becomes the first Arab leader to make an official visit to Israel, where he meets with Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin, seeking a permanent peace settlement.

December 4, 1977. Jean-Bédel Bokassa, president of the Central African Republic, crowns himself Emperor.

1976: Events and Inventions

The Lebanese Civil War, which began in 1975, continues to see fighting between Palestinians (Palestinian Liberation Organization), the Lebanese government, and Phalangists (supported by Maronite Christians). In June, Syria intervenes in the civil war, sending in troops to keep the peace, support the government and establish SYrian control over the northern half of Lebanon.

January 5, 1976. The Khmer Republic (Cambodia) is officially renamed Democratic Kampuchea as a new constitution is proclaimed by the Pol Pot regime.

'Concorde' photo (c) 2008, mroach - license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/January 21, 1976. The Air France supersonic turbojet Concorde makes its first commercial flight from Paris to Rio de Janeiro. The new faster-than-the-speed-of-sound jet can cross the Atlantic in just three hours.

February 4, 1976. In Guatemala and Honduras an earthquake kills more than 22,000 people.

April 1, 1976. Apple Computer Company is formed by Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak in Cupertino, California. The new company begins assembling its first personal computer kits for sale later in the year in the U.S.

June, 1976. Rioters and police clash in Soweto, a township just outside Johannesburg, South Africa where black students and adults are protesting the segregated and unjust educational system in the country. At least fifty people are killed, and hundreds more are wounded, when police open fire on a protest march by schoolchildren.

'Hector Pieterson' photo (c) 2007, Robert Cutts - license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/July 4, 1976. Entebbe Raid: Israeli airborne commandos free 103 hostages being held by Palestinian hijackers of an Air France plane at Uganda’s Entebbe Airport; 1 Israeli soldier and several Ugandan soldiers are killed in the raid.

July 20, 1976. The Viking 1 lander successfully lands on Mars and sends back to Earth the first close-up pictures of the planet’s surface.

August 14, 1976. Ten thousand Protestant and Catholic women demonstrate for peace in Northern Ireland.

September 9, 1976. Chairman Mao Zedong, leader of the People’s Republic of China since 1949, dies at the age of 82, after suffering a series of strokes. The Chinese Communist Party has already split into at least two groups, radical Maoists led by Mao’s widow Chiang Chin and the more moderate communists led by Deng Xiaoping. In October Chiang Chin is arrested for plotting to overthrow the government.

1967-68: Movies

Pictures at a Revolution: Five Movies and the Birth of the New Hollywood by Mark Harris, reviewed by Lazygal, is a nonfiction history of the five movies that were nominated for Best Picture Oscars in 1968: Dr. Doolittle, The Graduate, Guess Who’s Coming for Dinner, In the Heat of the Night and Bonnie and Clyde. I haven’t read the book, but I have it on hold at the library.

I’ve seen four of the five movies; I may have seen In the Heat of the Night. I did see a few episodes of the TV show that came after the movie. If I did see the movie, I don’t remember much about it. The Academy found it much more memorable: In the Heat of the Night won the Oscar for Best Picture in 1968.

The Graduate was the top-grossing film of 1967, and Bonnie and Clyde was probably the most violent and disturbing film of the year. I didn’t see either of those two when they first came out, since I would have been too young for the content of either. I did see them later on, but by that time The Graduate was already history, somewhat passé. And Bonnie and Clyde was, well, violent and disturbing.

Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner was OK, a Sidney Poitier vehicle about racism and interracial marriage, but Poitier’s better film of the year was To Sir With Love, which starred the popular black actor as a schoolteacher in an inner city high school in London.

Dr. Dolittle was silly, with Rex Harrison as the doctor who could speak to the animals. He certainly couldn’t sing, and I don’t know why he ever tried. It didn’t matter so much in My Fair Lady, since Professor Higgins was such a pretender anyway. It made sense that he would only pretend to sing.

The film version of Camelot also came out in 1967, and it won three Academy Awards, but it was not even nominated for any the biggies: Best Picture, Best Actor, Best Actress, Best Director. If I were choosing the best film of 1967, I’d certainly choose Camelot over any of the above nominees for Best Picture. Richard Harris and Vanessa Redgrave were amazing and memorable as King Arthur and Guinevere, and the “messages” of the movie about temptation, pride, sin and imperfection are spot-on. The screen-play is based on T.H. White’s version of the King Arthur story, Once and Future King, published in 1958.