1979: Difference between revisions

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* [[Aubie]] made his debut at [[Auburn Tigers football|Auburn]]'s home opener against Kansas State.
* [[Aubie]] made his debut at [[Auburn Tigers football|Auburn]]'s home opener against Kansas State.
* Catcher [[Mike O'Berry]] made his Major League debut with the Boston Red Sox.
* Catcher [[Mike O'Berry]] made his Major League debut with the Boston Red Sox.
==Works==
* ''The Nibblers'', feature film produced by [[David F. Friedman]]
* ''-- and, as I was saying...'', record album by [[Ezra Sims]]
* ""Get Off"/"I'm Lonely Tonight", jazz single by [[Cleveland Eaton]]
* ''Dracula'', feature film directed by [[John Badham]]
===Books===
* ''The Lasko Tangent'', novel by [[Richard North Patterson]]
* ''On Knowing Reality: The Tattvartha Chapter of Asanga's Bodhisattvabhumi,'' by [[Jan Willis]]
* ''Intelligence Agents'' by [[Timothy Leary]]
===Buildings===
* Expansion of the east wing of the [[Birmingham Museum of Art]]
* [[Newton DeBardeleben Operations Center]] ([[AmSouth Bank]])
* Sidewalks and landscaping at the [[Dupuy Administrative Building|Anna Dupuy Elementary School]]
* New building for the [[Lynnwood Church of God]]
* [[Center Point Fire Station No. 4]] in [[Clay]]
* The [[Molton Hotel]] and adjacent [[Retail Block]] was demolished.
* The [[Powderly Library]] was constructed in [[Wiggins Park]].
* The [[McAdory Building]] was added to the [[National Register of Historic Places in Birmingham|National Register of Historic Places]].


==Individuals==
==Individuals==
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:''See also: [[List of Birmingham homicides in 1979]]''
:''See also: [[List of Birmingham homicides in 1979]]''
==Works==
* ''The Nibblers'', feature film produced by [[David F. Friedman]]
* ''-- and, as I was saying...'', record album by [[Ezra Sims]]
* ""Get Off"/"I'm Lonely Tonight", jazz single by [[Cleveland Eaton]]
* ''Dracula'', feature film directed by [[John Badham]]
===Books===
* ''The Lasko Tangent'', novel by [[Richard North Patterson]]
* ''On Knowing Reality: The Tattvartha Chapter of Asanga's Bodhisattvabhumi,'' by [[Jan Willis]]
* ''Intelligence Agents'' by [[Timothy Leary]]
===Buildings===
* [[December 14]]: The [[McAdory Building]] was added to the [[National Register of Historic Places in Birmingham|National Register of Historic Places]].
* Sidewalks and landscaping at the [[Dupuy Administrative Building|Anna Dupuy Elementary School]]
* Expansion of the east wing of the [[Birmingham Museum of Art]]
* The [[Molton Hotel]] and adjacent [[Retail Block]] was demolished.
====Completed====
* [[Newton DeBardeleben Operations Center]] ([[AmSouth Bank]])
* New building for the [[Lynnwood Church of God]]
* [[Center Point Fire Station No. 4]] in [[Clay]]
* The [[Powderly Library]] was constructed in [[Wiggins Park]].


==Context==
==Context==

Revision as of 12:10, 30 December 2013

1979 was the 108th year after the founding of the city of Birmingham.

Events

Richard Arrington, Jr became Birmingham's first African-American mayor in 1979
See also 1979 Birmingham municipal election.

Business

Sports

Individuals

Births

Babec, born in 1979

Awards

Graduations

Deaths

See also: List of Birmingham homicides in 1979

Works

Books

Buildings

Completed

Context

In 1979 the United States was experiencing an energy crisis. The US established diplomatic relations with China. The Khmer Rouge was overthrown in Cambodia. Ayatollah Khomeini took over Iran after the Shah fled the country. Isreal and Egypt signed a peace treaty. The nuclear plant at Three Mile Island leaked radiation. Malta won its freedom. Margaret Thatcher became prime minister of the United Kingdom. A jetliner crash at O'Hare airport kills 273 people. The Susan B. Anthony dollar was introduced. ESPN debuted. Hurricane Frederic hit Mobile. The USSR invaded Afghanistan. Notable 1979 births include singer Norah Jones, actresses Claire Danes, Rosario Dawson and Kate Hudson, and football players LaDainian Tomlinson, Carson Palmer and Jamal Lewis. Deaths in 1979 included Charles Mingus, Nelson Rockefeller, Sid Vicious, Mr Ed, Mary Pickford, Vivian Vance, Mamie Eisenhower, Peggy Guggenheim and Zeppo Marx. Mother Teresa won the Nobel Peace Prize. Top grossing films were Kramer vs Kramer, Rocky II, Alien, Star Trek: The Motion Picture, and The Muppet Movie.

1970s
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Births - Deaths - Establishments - Events - Works