September 1981


The following events occurred in September 1981:

[September 1], 1981 (Tuesday)

  • Typhoon Agnes struck South Korea, bringing with it the heaviest rainfall seen on the Korean peninsula in the 20th century, with as much as 28 inches falling over the next two days. The final toll was 120 people dead or missing.
  • David Dacko, who had recently been re-elected, quit as President of the Central African Republic, turned over control to army commander General Andre Kolingba. General Kolingba remained in power until 1993.
  • Roger Hargreaves' children’s book series, Little Miss characters|Little Miss], made its debut as the female counterpart to his popular Mr. Men series of books, with the publication of Little Miss Bossy.
  • Died:
  • *Albert Speer, 76, German Nazi architect and war minister
  • *Ann Harding, 79, American actress

[September 2], 1981 (Wednesday)

[September 3], 1981 (Thursday)

  • The United Nations Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, adopted by the UN General Assembly on December 18, 1979, went into effect by its own terms after being ratified by at least 20 nations.
  • In Egypt, a nationwide arrest of 1,536 people, most of them Islamist activists, was carried out on orders of President Anwar Sadat. One of those seized was Mohammed Islambouli, leader of the Islamic Association branch at Assiut University. His younger brother, Egyptian army Lt. Khalid Islambouli, a member of the group Jihad, was so outraged that he vowed to get revenge on Sadat. A few days later, Khalid was assigned to be part of a military parade scheduled for October 6 to commemorate the eighth anniversary of Egypt's attack on Israel in the Yom Kippur War, and used the opportunity to conspire with fellow members of Jihad to carry out an assassination.
  • Born: Fearne Cotton, British television presenter, as Fearne Wood in Northwood, London

[September 4], 1981 (Friday)

  • The United States Department of Agriculture proposed new regulations concerning nutritional requirements for the federally subsidized school lunch program. Both ketchup and pickle relish were classified as vegetables for purposes of defining a balanced meal. The USDA withdrew the proposal three weeks later after a reporter from the Washington Post called attention to the new rules.
  • An explosion at a mine in Záluží, Czechoslovakia, killed 65 people. Another 40 were rescued.
  • Louis Delamare, France's ambassador to Lebanon, was assassinated in Beirut. Delamare was being driven home when four gunmen pulled alongside his BMW and opened fire.
  • At 8:51 a.m. on the day of its bicentennial, Los Angeles got what was nicknamed "the birthday quake", a tremor of 5.8 magnitude, the strongest since the 1971 quake that had killed 65 people.
  • Sobhuza II celebrated his 60th anniversary as King of Swaziland, in a ceremony attended by Egypt's President Sadat and Britain's Princess Margaret. Sobhuza was the first monarch since Queen Victoria to observe a diamond jubilee.
  • Born: Beyoncé Knowles, American actress and R&B singer ; in Houston

[September 5], 1981 (Saturday)

  • Pope Shenuda III, head of the Coptic Christian Church of Egypt, was deposed from his job by President Anwar Sadat, who charged that Muslim and Christian extremists were conspiring to overthrow the government. Three years after Sadat's assassination, Shenuda, who had been exiled to the monastery of Saint Bishoi, was allowed by President Hosni Mubarak to return to Cairo.
  • John Barnes, who would become England's greatest black soccer football player, made his professional debut at age 17, playing for the last 15 minutes of Watford F.C.'s game against Oldham Athletic.
  • In the largest jailbreak within a Communist nation, 154 inmates escaped from a jail in Bydgoszcz, Poland. The mass breakout happened after a riot that began when a 17-year-old burglary suspect had been shot during an attempted escape.

[September 6], 1981 (Sunday)

  • Nawal El Saadawi was arrested as part of the roundup of Sadat's opponents, and stayed in the Barrage Prison until November 25. She later recounted the story in her book, ''"Mozakerati fi signel nissa"''

[September 7], 1981 (Monday)

[September 8], 1981 (Tuesday)

[September 9], 1981 (Wednesday)

[September 10], 1981 (Thursday)

  • Picasso's painting "Guernica" was returned to the Museo del Prado in Madrid after having been kept at New York's Museum of Modern Art since 1939. Transfer of the painting had been kept secret until its arrival.
  • In a hastily called referendum, voters in Egypt overwhelmingly endorsed Sadat's crackdown against religious and political opponents, with a reported 99.45% of nearly 11 million ballots in favor, and only 33,561 against.
  • John Carta, a 35-year-old unemployed stonemason from New Rochelle, New York, became the first person to parachute on to the World Trade Center. Carta jumped from a plane at an altitude of 10,000 feet, then guided himself to a landing on to the observation deck on Tower Two.

[September 11], 1981 (Friday)

  • Iran's Ayatollah Mir Asadollah Madani, who became the Imam for Tabriz after the 1979 assassination of the Ayatollah Mohammad Ali Qazi Tabatabaei, was himself assassinated while conducting the Jumu'ah, the Muslim Friday prayer service. Madani was approached near the end of the service by a man who was carrying a grenade, and who then detonated it. In addition to Madani and the assassin, six worshipers were fatally injured.
  • A small plane crashed into the Swing Auditorium in San Bernardino, California, damaging the venue beyond repair. The crash happened at 4:40 in the afternoon and a -high hole was torn into the side of the auditorium when the Cessna 310 struck the building. The pilot, owner of a small chain of restaurants, was killed instantly along with his passenger. The venue had no casualty insurance and could not be rebuilt.
  • Born: Dylan Klebold, American mass murderer in the Columbine High School massacre; in Lakewood, Colorado
  • Died: Frank McHugh, 83, American film actor

[September 12], 1981 (Saturday)

[September 13], 1981 (Sunday)

  • Two days of elections began in Norway, and the Labor Party lost its majority in the 155 member Storting. Labor, led by Gro Harlem Brundtland, retained 67 seats, but the Conservatives, led by supply side economist Kare Willoch, claimed victory with 54 seats and a potential coalition of 79.

[September 14], 1981 (Monday)

  • Entertainment Tonight made its syndicated debut in various television markets.
  • Nikolai Glushkov, Chairman of the State Prices Commission in the Soviet Union, confirmed rumors that had caused a run on stores, announcing sharp price increases for the following day, doubling the price of gasoline from the equivalent of $1.06 a gallon to $2.12. Glushkov also increased prices on tobacco and liquor, saying that it was in response to requests from workers "to limit the demand for them". He also said that prices for synthetic fabrics, household appliances, medicines and some watches would be cut by up to 37%, and noted that meat, dairy and bread prices had been unchanged for nearly 20 years.

[September 15], 1981 (Tuesday)

[September 16], 1981 (Wednesday)

[September 17], 1981 (Thursday)

[September 18], 1981 (Friday)

[September 19], 1981 (Saturday)

[September 20], 1981 (Sunday)

  • For the first time, China launched three satellites into orbit, on a rocket from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center. The feat led some observers to speculate that China had gained the ability to launch multiple nuclear warheads or that it had set up an early warning system against missile attacks.
  • Karen Williams, a stewardess on board World Airways Flight 32, a DC-10, was crushed to death in the airplane's service elevator during a flight from Baltimore to London.

[September 21], 1981 (Monday)

[September 22], 1981 (Tuesday)

  • The initial public offering of stock in The Home Depot was made at $12.00 per share as the company was listed on the NASDAQ exchange. The stock was worth 20 times as much within two years, and with 13 successive stock splits over the next 18 years, the value of a 1981 share of stock was worth 370 times as much, so that initial investment of $5,000 in 1981 would have been worth $1.8 million in 1999. By 2010, the $5,000 investment would have been worth more than six million dollars.
  • Born: Alexei Ramírez, Cuban-born Major League Baseball player, in Pinar del Río
  • Died: Harry Warren, 87, American songwriter and three time Oscar winner

[September 23], 1981 (Wednesday)

[September 24], 1981 (Thursday)

[September 25], 1981 (Friday)

[September 26], 1981 (Saturday)

[September 27], 1981 (Sunday)

  • The first commercial run of the TGV high-speed rail service train began, traversing the 300-mile distance between Paris and Lyons. At 6:15 am, the Train a Grande Vitesse pulled out of the Gare de Lyon in Paris with 772 passengers, then accelerated along the high-speed line at Saint-Florentin at 156 miles per hour, arriving in Lyons at 9:05 am.
  • The hijacking of a Yugoslavian JAT Boeing 727 was thwarted after a fire alarm was sounded and the 101 passengers and 7 crew escaped unharmed. The plane had been seized the night before during a flight from Dubrovnik to Belgrade, flew to Athens for refueling, then landed at the Cypriot city of Larnaka, where the escape took place.
  • Died: Robert Montgomery, 77, American actor

[September 28], 1981 (Monday)

[September 29], 1981 (Tuesday)

  • President Reagan issued Executive Order 12324 to halt the flow of refugees from Haiti into the United States. Since 1978, almost 50,000 Haitian citizens fled the regime of Jean-Claude Duvalier and most were detained in South Florida. Reagan ordered the U.S. Coast Guard to intercept and board any refugee vessels and return them to their nation of origin.
  • U.S. Senator William Proxmire completed a filibuster at 10:27 a.m., yielding the floor after beginning a speech of more than 16 hours the day before. Proxmire, famous for his monthly "Golden Fleece Award" for wasteful government spending, had spoken out against U.S. Senate approval of a bill to raise the debt ceiling above one trillion dollars. The cost of his speech to taxpayers, most of it for printing in the Congressional Record, was estimated at $64,674.
  • A 17-year-old Mojahed assassin detonated a hand grenade, killing Iranian Shia cleric Abdolkarim Hasheminejad, the local Islamic Republican Party leader, along with himself after infiltrating the party headquarters in the city of Mashhad in Iran.
  • Died: Bill Shankly, 68, British football manager who won multiple championships for Liverpool F.C.

[September 30], 1981 (Wednesday)