1983: Difference between revisions

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* The [[Interfaith Hospitality House]] was founded by [[Grace Episcopal Church]].
* The [[Interfaith Hospitality House]] was founded by [[Grace Episcopal Church]].


===Elections===
===Government===
* [[Richard Arrington]] was re-elected as [[Mayor of Birmingham]]. [[William Bell]], [[Jeff Germany]], [[David Herring]] and [[Russell Yarbrough]] were re-elected to four-year terms in the [[Birmingham City Council]]. [[Eddie Blankenship]] won the two-year seat. Herring succeeded [[John Katopodis]] as Council President. (See [[1983 Birmingham mayoral election]])
* [[Richard Arrington]] was re-elected as [[Mayor of Birmingham]]. [[William Bell]], [[Jeff Germany]], [[David Herring]] and [[Russell Yarbrough]] were re-elected to four-year terms in the [[Birmingham City Council]]. [[Eddie Blankenship]] won the two-year seat. Herring succeeded [[John Katopodis]] as Council President. (See [[1983 Birmingham mayoral election]])
* [[Ben Erdreich]] succeeded [[Albert L. Smith, Jr]] as Representative of the [[6th Congressional District of Alabama]].
* [[Ben Erdreich]] succeeded [[Albert L. Smith, Jr]] as Representative of the [[6th Congressional District of Alabama]].
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* [[George Wallace]] succeeded [[Fob James]] as [[List of Governors of Alabama|Governor of Alabama]].
* [[George Wallace]] succeeded [[Fob James]] as [[List of Governors of Alabama|Governor of Alabama]].
* [[Jim Bennett]] was elected to the [[Alabama State Senate]].
* [[Jim Bennett]] was elected to the [[Alabama State Senate]].
* A federal lawsuit was filed which eventually forced [[Bessemer]] to switch from a City Commission to Mayor-Council form of government.


===Business===
===Business===

Revision as of 10:27, 10 June 2012

1983 was the 112th year after the founding of the city of Birmingham.

Events

Government

Business

Sports

Works

  • "Swordfishtrombone", song by Tom Waits which mentions Birmingham
  • Kate Jackson starred in the television drama The Scarecrow and Mrs. King.
  • Alexandra, feature film produced by David F. Friedman.
  • "The Heaven That I Look For Up Above Had a Hole and I Fell Back to Earth" and "The Mystery of the White in Me", sculptures by Lonnie Holley
  • "Wendel", a gay-themed comic strip by Howard Cruse, debuted in the Advocate.
  • From the One That Cut You, novelty album featuring T. R. Reed.
  • Coming Out, jazz album by pianist Johnny O'Neal.
  • Love and Dance and Raw "Live Jazz" Featuring Miss Funky Lu albums by Cleveland Eaton
  • Blue Thunder and WarGames, feature films directed by John Badham
  • Shadow Waltz, feature film shot in Birmingham
  • White Shoes, album by Emmylou Harris

Books

Buildings

People

Awards

Graduations

Births

Deaths

See also: List of Birmingham homicides in 1983

Context

In 1983 Annie closed on Broadway after 2,377 performances. Kilauea began erupting on Hawai'i. Björn Borg retired from tennis. The Redskins beat the Dolphins 27-17 in Super Bowl XVII. Seatbelts became mandatory. Iran invaded southeastern Iraq. The first Swatch watches hit the market. President Reagan called the USSR an "evil empire". Michael Jackson performed his first moonwalk. Gandhi won the Best Picture Oscar. Tokyo Disneyland opened. Sally Ride broke the astronaut gender barrier. A Soviet jet shot down Korean Air Flight 007 over Soviet airspace. Tom Brokaw took over the NBC Nightly News anchor desk. Vanessa Williams won the Miss America pageant. The Baltimore Orioles won the World Series. The US Embassy and two Marine barracks were damaged by terrorists in Beirut, Lebanon. The United States invaded Grenada. Microsoft released its "Word" word-processor. Martin Luther King Day became a national holiday. Argentina returned to civilian rule. The Detroit Pistons won a record high-scoring game against the Denver Nuggets, 186-184. Brunei won its independence from the UK. The internet debuted with ARPANET's change to IP addressing.

Notable 1983 births include Kate Bosworth, Carrie Underwood, Jay Cutler, and Vince Young. Deaths in 1983 include those of Karen Carpenter, Tennessee Williams, Hergé, Gloria Swanson, Buckminster Fuller, David Niven, Ira Gershwin, Lépold III of Belgium, Slim Pickens, and Joan Miró. Lech Wałęsa won the Nobel Peace Prize. The top-grossing films of 1983 were The Return of the Jedi, Terms of Endearment, Flashdance, Trading Places, WarGames and Octopussy. Terms of Endearment dominated the Oscars. Notable books of 1983 included Jackie Collins' Hollywood Wives, Stephen King's Christine and Pet Sematary, and James Michener's Poland. Alice Walker's The Color Purple won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction.

1980s
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Births - Deaths - Establishments - Events - Works