Newsround #1983/84

Newsround #1983/84

It is August 6th and my journey back to the 1983/84 football season is due to begin with the Charity Shield match between reigning champions Liverpool and FA Cup winners Manchester United on 20th August.

In preparation for my time travels, I will be whetting your appetite for this nine-month theme by sharing samples of popular culture from this era. Today I have published a news round up from 1983 with thanks to Wikipedia. 

***

Events

January

  • 1 January – The British Nationality Act 1981 comes into effect creating five classes of British nationality.
  • 3 January – Children’s ITV is launched as a new branding for the late afternoon programming block on the ITV network.
  • 6 January – Danish fishermen defy the British government’s prohibition on non-UK boats fishing in its coastal waters.
  • 14 January – Stephen Waldorf shooting: Armed policeman shoot and severely injure an innocent car passenger in London, believing him to be escaped prisoner David Martin.
  • 17 January – First British breakfast time television programme, Breakfast Time, broadcast on BBC1.
  • 19 January – The two policemen who wounded Stephen Waldorf are charged with attempted murder and released on bail; they are suspended from duty pending further investigation.
  • 23 January – The prohibition on non-British boats fishing in British waters is lifted as the European Economic Community‘s Common Fisheries Policy comes into effect.[1]
  • 25 January – The Infrared Astronomical Satellite, the first-ever space-based observatory to perform a survey of the entire sky at infrared wavelengths, is launched. The satellite is a joint project between the American space agency NASA, the Netherlands Agency for Aerospace Programmes and the UK’s Science and Engineering Research Council.[2]
  • 26 January – Red rain falls in the UK, caused by sand from the Sahara Desert in the droplets.
  • 28 January – Escaped prisoner David Martin is rearrested.
  • 31 January – Seatbelt use for drivers and front seat passengers becomes mandatory, 11 years after becoming compulsory equipment in new cars.[3]

February

  • February – Work begins on extending the Piccadilly line of London Underground at Heathrow Airport to serve the new Terminal 4.[4]
  • 1 February – TV-am broadcasts for the first time.[3]
  • 3 February: unemployment stands at a record high of 3,224,715 – though the previous high reached in the Great Depression of the early 1930s accounted for a higher percentage of the workforce.
  • 10 February – Dismembered sets of human remains are found at a block of flats in Muswell HillNorth London. 37-year-old civil servant Dennis Nilsen is arrested on suspicion of murder.
  • 11 February – Dennis Nilsen is charged with the murder of 20-year-old Stephen Sinclair, who was last seen alive in January. Police are working to identify the other sets of human remains found at Nilsen’s flat, in order to press further murder charges against Nilsen.
  • 15 February – The Austin Metro is now Britain’s best selling car, having outsold every other new car registered in the UK during January.
  • 24 February – Labour candidate Peter Tatchell loses the Bermondsey by-election to the Liberal Party’s Simon Hughes. The Official Monster Raving Loony Party first contests an election under this label.
  • 26 February – Patrick Jennings, 37-year-old Arsenal and Northern Ireland goalkeeper, becomes the first player in the English game to appear in 1,000 senior football matches.

March

April

  • April – Vauxhall launches the Nova supermini with a range of three-door hatchbacks and two-door saloons. It is the first Vauxhall to be built outside the United Kingdom, being assembled at the Zaragoza plant in Spain where it was launched seven months ago as the Opel Corsa, but plans to launch it on the British market had been attacked by trade unions who were angry at the fact that it would not be built in Britain. Its launch is expected to result in the end of Vauxhall Chevette production in Britain.[7]
  • 1 April
    • Thousands of protesters form a 14-mile human chain in reaction to the siting of American nuclear weapons in British military bases.[8]
    • The government expels three Russians named as KGB agents by a Soviet defector.
  • 4 April – The biggest cash haul in British history sees gunmen escape with £7 million from a Security Express van in London.
  • 11 April – Richard Attenborough‘s 1982 film Gandhi wins eight Academy Awards.[3]
  • 21 April – The one pound coin introduced in England and Wales.[3]

May

  • 9 May – Margaret Thatcher calls a general election for 9 June. Opinion polls show her on course for victory with the Tories 8–12 points ahead of Labour, and they are widely expected to form a significant overall majority due to the split in left-wing votes caused by the Alliance, who are now aiming to take Labour’s place in opposition.[9]
  • 16 May – Wheel clamps are first used to combat illegal parking in London.[10]
  • 21 May – Manchester United and Brighton & Hove Albion draw 2–2 in the FA Cup final at Wembley Stadium. The replay will be held in five days time.[11]
  • 26 May
    • Manchester United defeat Brighton & Hove Albion 4–0 in the FA Cup final replay at Wembley Stadium. Bryan Robson scores two of the goals, with the other two coming from Arnold Muhren and 18-year-old Norman Whiteside.[11]
    • Opinion polls suggest that the Conservatives are looking set to be re-elected with a landslide. A MORI poll puts them on 51%, 22 points ahead of Labour.[12]

June

July

  • 7 July – New chancellor Nigel Lawson announces public spending cuts of £500 million.
  • 13 July
  • 15 July – Much of the country embraces a heatwave as temperatures reach 33 °C in London.
  • 16 July – Twenty people are killed in the 1983 British Airways Sikorsky S-61 crash.
  • 19 July – A large new model of a flesh-eating dinosaur is erected at the Natural History Museum.[2]
  • 21 July – Former prime minister Harold Wilson is one of 17 life peerages announced today, having stood down from parliament last month after 38 years as MP for Huyton, near Liverpool.
  • 22 July – Production of the Ford Orion four-door saloon begins. The Orion is the saloon version of the Escort, but is also aimed at buyers of larger family saloon cars like the recently discontinued Cortina. It goes on sale this autumn, and is produced at the Halewood plant in Liverpool as well as the Valencia plant in Spain which also produces the smaller Fiesta.
  • 26 July – A Catholic mother of ten, Victoria Gillick, loses a case in the High Court of Justice against the DHSS. Her application sought to prevent the distribution of contraceptives to children under the age of 16 without parental consent. The case goes to the House of Lords in 1985 when it is decided that it is legal for doctors to prescribe contraceptives to under-16s without parental consent in exceptional circumstances (“Gillick competence“).[19]
  • 1 to 31 July – The two hundredth anniversary of the previous hottest month in the CET series sees a new record for heat with a monthly mean CET of 19.5 °C or 67.1 °F – 0.7 °C or 1.3 °F hotter than July 1783.[20]

August[edit]

  • 1 August – The new A-prefix car registration plates are launched, helping spur on the recovery in car sales following the slump at the start of the decade caused by the recession.
  • 5 August – 22 Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) members receive sentences totalling over 4,000 years from a Belfast Court.[3]
  • 19 August – Temperatures reach 30 °C in London, as hot weather embraces the United Kingdom.
  • 29 August – ITV launches Blockbusters, a gameshow hosted by Bob Holness and featuring sixth formers as its contestants.

September

October

November

December

  • 4 December – An SAS undercover operation ends in the shooting and killing of two IRA gunmen, a third is injured.[28]
  • 6 December – First heart and lung transplant carried out in Britain at Harefield.[29]
  • 8 December – The House of Lords votes to allow television broadcast of its proceedings.[30]
  • 10 December – William Golding wins the Nobel Prize in Literature “for his novels which, with the perspicuity of realistic narrative art and the diversity and universality of myth, illuminate the human condition in the world of today”.[31]
  • 17 December – Six people are killed in the Harrods bombing.
  • 25 December (Christmas Day) – a second IRA bomb explodes in Oxford Street, but this time nobody is injured.[17]

Undated

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