October 1981

<<October 1981>>
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The following events occurred in October 1981:

October 6, 1981: Egypt's President Anwar Sadat assassinated

October 1, 1981 (Thursday)

October 2, 1981 (Friday)

  • The Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was elected president of Iran with 16,007,972 votes out of 16,846,996 cast. Education minister Ali-Akbar Parvaresh placed second.[6]
  • U.S. president Ronald Reagan announced his plans to resurrect the B-1 bomber program that had been scrapped by President Carter, with 100 of the planes to be built by 1987, and another plan to deploy 100 MX missiles.[7]
  • Died:

October 3, 1981 (Saturday)

October 4, 1981 (Sunday)

  • The body in Lee Harvey Oswald's grave was exhumed at the Rose Hill Cemetery in Fort Worth, Texas to determine whether the corpse was indeed Oswald's. Michael Eddowes, author of the 1977 book The Oswald File, paid the $250,000 expense for the body removal and its examination at the Baylor University Medical Center. Oswald's dental records were examined and confirmed that his was indeed the body in the grave.[10] The examining team wrote a detailed account of the examination two years later.[11]

October 5, 1981 (Monday)

  • The last model of the Triumph Motor Company's sports cars, a 1982 Triumph TR7, rolled off of the assembly line at Solihull, West Midlands, England.[12]
  • In the Washington Post gossip column "The Ear", Diana McLellan outraged former President Jimmy Carter and his wife Rosalynn by writing that "word's around Rosalynn's close pals about exactly why the Carters were so sure" that incoming First Lady Nancy Reagan wanted them out prior to the expiration of Carter's term: "They're saying that Blair House, where Nancy was lodging... was bugged. And at least one tattler in the Carter tribe has described listening in to the tape itself... Ear is absolutely appalled. Stay tuned, uh, whoever's listening." Three days later, the Carters announced plans to sue the Post, and, on October 23, the newspaper printed publisher Donald Graham's apology, which was accepted.[13]
  • Raoul Wallenberg, the Swedish diplomat who saved thousands of Jews during World War II and vanished after being arrested by the Soviet Union, was made an honorary American citizen in a resolution signed by President Reagan.[14]
  • The first eight-team playoff in Major League Baseball history began as the Kansas City Royals lost to the Oakland A's in the first game of a series to decide the American League West title. Each of baseball's four divisions were decided by matching up the winners of the first and second halves of the strike-torn season. The Cincinnati Reds, with the best overall record in the 1981 season (66-42) did not qualify for the playoffs because they failed to win the NL West in either half of the season.[15] MLB returned to the four-team playoff system for the next 12 seasons, then realigned, with eight teams in the playoffs in 1995, after the 1994 strike season.
  • The Reverend Sun Myung Moon, leader of the Unification Church, was indicted for U.S. federal income tax evasion.[16] He was convicted and served an 18-month prison sentence.
  • Born: Enrico Fabris, Italian speed skater; Olympic gold medalist 2006; in Asiago
  • Died:

October 6, 1981 (Tuesday)

  • Egypt's President Anwar Sadat was assassinated at Nasr City while watching the annual Armed Forces Day parade. As a squadron of jets flew overhead in formation at 12:40 p.m., a military vehicle halted in front of the reviewing stand, and six of the men jumped out, hurling stun grenades and firing machine guns. Sadat was hit by two bullets and died at a hospital two hours later.[17] Seven other people, including two of the gunmen, were killed.[18] The four surviving assassins, ringleader Lt. Khaledi Islambouli, Sgt. Hussein Abbas, reserve Air Force officer Atta Hemeida and shop owner Abdel-Hamid Abdel-Aal, as well as mastermind Mohammed Abdel-Salam Farag, were executed on April 15, 1982.[19]

October 7, 1981 (Wednesday)

October 8, 1981 (Thursday)

  • For the first and only time in history, three former presidents of the United States flew together on the same airplane. Richard M. Nixon, Gerald R. Ford and Jimmy Carter, the 37th, 38th and 39th holders of the office, were greeted at the White House by the 40th, current president Ronald Reagan, before flying by helicopter to Andrews Air Force Base, where they departed at 7:45 p.m. for the funeral of Egypt's assassinated president, Anwar Sadat.[21][22]
  • Bobby Unser was again declared the winner of the Indianapolis 500 after 4+12 months. He had crossed the finish line first on May 24, but was disqualified the next day for having passed during a yellow caution flag, with Mario Andretti declared the winner. Unser took his case to the United States Auto Club appeals panel, which voted 2–1 to declare him the official winner. He was fined $40,000 but was not penalized the lap.[23][24] Andretti continued appealing, finally abandoning the case on March 4, 1982.[25]
  • OSO I, the first of the Orbiting Solar Observatory satellite series, re-entered the Earth's atmosphere more than 18 years after its launch on March 7, 1962, and burned up on re-entry.[26]
  • 23-year-old Maria Cecilia Alfaro of Miramar, Puerto Rico, a Fred Harvey Company desk clerk at Yavapai Lodge, fell 400 feet (120 m) to her death while watching the sunset from the Rim Trail in Grand Canyon National Park.[27]
  • Cagney & Lacey was first telecast as a made-for-TV movie, and attracted a Nielsen rating of 42.[28]
  • Ted Kaczynski, later exposed as the Unabomber, planted his fifth bomb. The device he left at the University of Utah's Bennion Hall was detected and defused before it could explode.[29][30][31][32]
  • Died: Armando Bo, 66, Argentine film director

October 9, 1981 (Friday)

October 10, 1981 (Saturday)

  • In the largest protest march in Germany since the end of World War II, at least 150,000 people gathered in Bonn, West Germany to demonstrate against the further deployment of American nuclear missiles in Europe.[38]

October 11, 1981 (Sunday)

  • The Super Chicken III, piloted by John Shoecroft and Fred Gorrell, became the first balloon to cross the United States without stopping. The 2,515-mile journey from Costa Mesa, California to Blackbeard Island in Georgia took 55 hours and 25 minutes to complete.[39]
  • Minnesota Vikings quarterback Tommy Kramer passes for 444 yards and 4 touchdowns as the Vikings edge the San Diego Chargers 33-31.
  • Died: Brooks Hays, 83, former U.S. Congressman from Arkansas who was voted out of office in 1958 after taking a stand against segregation in schools

October 12, 1981 (Monday)

  • CBS Cable, the first venture into cable television by the broadcast CBS Television Network, went on the air in several markets with a series of programs dedicated to the classical arts, with telecasts of symphonies, dance, theater, and operas.[40] The venture was unsuccessful, and CBS Cable was shut down at 4:00 a.m. on December 17, 1982.[41]
  • Born: Paul Givan, First Minister of Northern Ireland, in Lisburn[42]

October 13, 1981 (Tuesday)

October 14, 1981 (Wednesday)

October 15, 1981 (Thursday)

October 16, 1981 (Friday)

  • In Japan's worst mining disaster, methane gas explosions at the Hokkaido Steamship and Colliery operation at Yūbari, Hokkaidō killed 93 coal miners. The blast occurred while the men were 1,900 feet underground.[52]
  • Died: Moshe Dayan, 66, Israeli general, defense minister 1967–74, foreign minister 1977-79

October 17, 1981 (Saturday)

October 18, 1981 (Sunday)

October 19, 1981 (Monday)

  • The Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that home videotaping of programs constituted copyright violation, reversing a 1979 decision.[57] The U.S. Supreme Court reversed the appeals court's ruling on January 17, 1984.[58]

October 20, 1981 (Tuesday)

October 21, 1981 (Wednesday)

  • U.S. Patent #4,296,282 was granted to Joseph T. O'Neil, Thomas M. Quinn and Tse Lin Wang for "Incoming Call Identification Arrangement", more commonly known as Caller ID.[64]
  • Born: Nemanja Vidić, Serbian footballer, in Titovo Uzice

October 22, 1981 (Thursday)

October 23, 1981 (Friday)

  • Egyptian surgeon Ayman al-Zawahiri was arrested during a roundup of dissidents following the assassination of Anwar Sadat. Zawahiri spent three years in prison, where he was tortured. "The torture broke Zawahiri," noted one author later, "and transformed him as well into an embittered fanatic, determined to inflict deadly harm on Egypt's secular authorities and its Western friends."[66]
  • The Spider, the first lunar module to be tested in outer space for docking with a lunar orbiter, fell out of orbit and burned up in the Earth's atmosphere. During the Apollo 9 mission, on March 7, 1969, the craft had been operated by astronauts Jim McDivitt and Rusty Schweickart, a mission that confirmed that a module could carry out the necessary docking and undocking maneuvers needed for a lunar landing.[67][68]
  • Born: Michael Fishman, American child actor (D.J. Conner on Roseanne), in Los Angeles
  • Died: Reg Butler, 69, English sculptor

October 24, 1981 (Saturday)

  • A weekend of anti-nuclear protests began in cities throughout Europe, as 200,000 marched in Rome and another 150,000 in London to protest the deployment of American Pershing II missiles at bases in five European nations. On Sunday, a crowd of 200,000 turned out in Brussels for the largest demonstration since World War II, and smaller crowds marched in Paris, Berlin and Oslo.[69]
  • Born: Tila Tequila, Vietnamese American model and singer, as Tila Nguyen, in Singapore
  • Died: Edith Head, 84, American costume designer and eight-time Oscar winner

October 25, 1981 (Sunday)

October 26, 1981 (Monday)

  • In the worst accident since refugees from Caribbean nations began sailing to the United States, a leaky sailboat with 67 Haitians broke apart in rough seas, half a mile from the beach in Florida. Thirty-four survivors were able to swim to safety, while the bodies of 33 drowning victims washed ashore at Hillsboro Beach, Florida.[71]
  • The longest-serving president of Finland, Urho Kekkonen, resigned because of ill health after nearly 26 years in office.[72]
  • Born: Guy Sebastian, Australian singer, in Klang, Malaysia

October 27, 1981 (Tuesday)

October 28, 1981 (Wednesday)

October 29, 1981 (Thursday)

October 30, 1981 (Friday)

  • Thirty-eight years after he disappeared while flying a dive bomber, the body of U.S. Navy Lt. Lorne Parker Pelzer and his airplane were discovered in a remote canyon near California's Mount Shasta. Pelzer had been alone in Douglas SBD Dauntless on March 13, 1943 when the airplane vanished in a blizzard.[81]
  • Venera 13 was launched by the Soviet Union, followed five days later by Venera 14. The twin satellite explorers traveled to the surface of Venus, with Venera 13 landing first on March 1, 1982, and transmitting the first color pictures of the reddish brown soil on the second planet.[82]
  • Born:
  • Died: Lew Jenkins, 64, former world lightweight boxing champion

October 31, 1981 (Saturday)

References