February 1981


The following events occurred in February 1981:

[February 1], 1981 (Sunday)

[February 2], 1981 (Monday)

[February 3], 1981 (Tuesday)

[February 4], 1981 (Wednesday)

[February 5], 1981 (Thursday)

[February 6], 1981 (Friday)

[February 7], 1981 (Saturday)

[February 8], 1981 (Sunday)

  • Twenty-one people were killed and 54 seriously injured at a soccer football match at Piraeus in Greece. Olympiacos had defeated visiting AEK Athens, 6–0, and fans rushing to a blocked stadium exit were trampled. This still stands as the worst tragedy in the history of Greek sport.
  • The decapitated body of 29-year-old Leroy Carter, Jr., was found in Golden Gate Park in San Francisco, the apparent victim of a ritual killing. Carter had apparently been sleeping near the park's Alvord Lake when he was attacked. Reportedly, the head had been removed "with precision style" and the mutilated bodies of several chickens were located fifty yards away. Carter's severed head was located near the lake six weeks later, but the murder remains unsolved.

[February 9], 1981 (Monday)

[February 10], 1981 (Tuesday)

  • Eight people died and 350 were injured at a fire that broke out at 8:00 pm on the 8th floor of the Las Vegas Hilton hotel, and then spread upward to the 22 stories above. Philip Bruce Cline, a 23-year-old busboy who had at first been praised for alerting guests to the blaze, was later convicted of arson and murder, and received eight life sentences in prison.
  • Born: Holly Willoughby, English television presenter, in Brighton, East Sussex

[February 11], 1981 (Wednesday)

[February 12], 1981 (Thursday)

  • The discovery, of a previously unknown symphony by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, was announced in Munich by Dr. Robert Münster, a spokesman for the Bavarian State Library. Written 216 years earlier, in 1765, when Mozart was nine years old, Symphony in F major, K. Anh. 223 was purchased by the library from an unidentified seller who had found it "among some private papers in Bavaria last fall".

[February 13], 1981 (Friday)

  • Australian press baron Rupert Murdoch purchased the venerable London newspaper, The Times, and its companion publication, The Sunday Times, after three weeks of negotiation with union leaders. The papers' owner, the Thomson Organization, had announced it would cease publication of both newspapers on Saturday, March 14, if a buyer could not be found.

[February 14], 1981 (Saturday)

  • Stardust fire: Forty-eight young people were killed and 214 injured in a fire at the Stardust Cabaret discothèque in Dublin. More than 700 people were present for a Valentine's Day party when flames were observed at 2:00 a.m. Although a 1982 investigation concluded that the fire was intentionally set, a reopened inquiry ruled out arson in 2009, but in 2024 an inquest declared the deaths to be unlawful killings.

[February 15], 1981 (Sunday)

[February 16], 1981 (Monday)

  • Twenty minutes before Pope John Paul II arrived to celebrate mass with 70,000 people at Pakistan's National Stadium in Karachi, a hand grenade exploded in a stairway behind the VIP grandstand, killing the man who had been carrying it. The Pope was on the first stop of a 12-day tour of Asia, after departing Rome earlier that day. After delivering the mass, he flew on to Manila.

[February 17], 1981 (Tuesday)

[February 18], 1981 (Wednesday)

[February 19], 1981 (Thursday)

  • Entertainer Frank Sinatra was cleared of longstanding rumors that he had ties to organized crime, 18 years after the Nevada Gaming Commission had revoked his license to operate a casino. In 1963, mobster Sam Giancana had visited Sinatra's Cal-Neva Lodge in Lake Tahoe, and the license had been suspended. A factor in the commission's 4–1 vote in favor of Sinatra was a statement of support from U.S. President Ronald Reagan, with an attorney authorized to say that Reagan "considers him an honorable person — completely honest and loyal".

[February 20], 1981 (Friday)

[February 21], 1981 (Saturday)

  • In a broadcast made from Radio Veritas in Manila, Pope John Paul II made what was described as "the most far-reaching call for interfaith dialogue ever made by a pontiff", proposing to meet with representatives of the world's major religions. "The church of Jesus Christ in this age experiences a profound need to enter into contact and dialogue with all these religions", said the Pope, and that Christians must commit to discussions "so that mutual understanding and collaboration may grow, so that moral values may be strengthened, so that God may be praised in all creation".

[February 22], 1981 (Sunday)

  • Amateur pilot Charles Newton and his wife Judy were flying in a small engine plane when he suffered a fatal heart attack. Mrs. Newton, who did not know how to fly and was unsure of her location, was saved after a flight instructor in Statesville, North Carolina, Phillip Hazel, took to the air in a plane of his own. After locating her, Hazel then gave Mrs. Newton step-by-step instructions on airplane flight and guided her to a safe landing at the Statesville airport.
  • Died: Joe Smith, 97, American comedian who teamed with Charlie Dale as the comic duo Smith & Dale.

[February 23], 1981 (Monday)

  • The 23-F coup attempt began at 6:25 pm in Madrid when Spain's Congress of Deputies was taken over by 200 members of the Guardia Civil. A disgruntled Spanish Army officer, Lieutenant Colonel Antonio Tejero Molina led the seizure of the Cortes building and took 347 legislators hostage. The Deputies were voting on whether to approve Leopoldo Calvo Sotelo as the new Prime Minister. The attempted coup failed seven hours later after King Juan Carlos refused to cooperate with the plotters, and then received the support of the rest of the military. The King appeared on television at 1:24 the next morning and announced the end of the crisis. Lt. Col. Tejero, Lt. Gen. Jaime Milans del Bosch, and the King's aide, General Alfonso Armada, were later arrested.
  • Died: Shep Fields, 70, American band leader

[February 24], 1981 (Tuesday)

[February 25], 1981 (Wednesday)

[February 26], 1981 (Thursday)

  • Joey Coyle, an unemployed longshoreman in Philadelphia, was driving behind an armored car when its doors opened and two bags of money fell out. Coyle retrieved the bags and found that he was in possession of more than $1,200,000 in cash. Over the next six days, he spent or gave away an estimated $196,000 before being caught by the FBI. He was later acquitted of theft, and his story was the basis for the 1993 film Money for Nothing.
  • A new record for penalty minutes in a National Hockey League game was set when the Boston Bruins hosted the Minnesota North Stars. The first fight, between Boston's Steve Kasper and the Stars' Greg Smith, broke out seven seconds into the game. Eventually seven Minnesota and five Boston players were ejected, Stars' coach Glen Sonmor fought with a fan, and 406 minutes were assessed. The Bruins won, 5–1. The record would stand for 23 years until broken on March 5, 2004, in the Philadelphia Flyers 5–3 win over the Ottawa Senators, with 419 minutes assessed.

[February 27], 1981 (Friday)

  • A daring prison escape was carried out in France when a pair of men forced helicopter pilot Claude Fourcade to fly to Fleury-Mérogis Prison, where armed robbers Gerard Dupre and Daniel Beaumont were incarcerated. At gunpoint, Fourcade landed at a soccer field on prison grounds, took off again with Dupre and Beaumont on board, eluded a chase by police helicopters, and landed at a Paris athletic field where the gang escaped in a waiting car. Dupre was recaptured in Paris on March 6 while Beaumont was arrested in Spain four months later on July 9.
  • Born: Josh Groban, American singer, in Los Angeles

[February 28], 1981 (Saturday)