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Gregorian Year
1978 (MCMLXXVIII) was
a common year starting
on Sunday of the Gregorian calendar,
the 1978th year of the Common Era (CE)
and Anno Domini (AD)
designations, the 978th year of the 2nd millennium, the 78th year of
the 20th century,
and the 9th year of the 1970s decade. Contents · 1Events · 2Births · 3Deaths Events[edit] January[edit] ·
The Copyright Act of
1976 takes effect, making sweeping changes to United States
copyright law. ·
Air India Flight 855,
a Boeing 747 passenger jet, crashes into
the ocean near Bombay, killing 213.[1] ·
Edward M. Davis retires from the Los Angeles
Police Department after 30 years on the force and more than
eight years as its police chief. ·
January 2 – On the orders of Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq,
paramilitary forces opened fire on peaceful protesting workers in Multan, Pakistan, its known as 1978
massacre at Multan Colony Textile Mills. ·
January 4 – A referendum in Chile supports the policies of
dictator Augusto Pinochet (see Chilean
national consultation, 1978). ·
January 5 – Bülent Ecevit, of CHP forms
the new government of Turkey (42nd
government). ·
January 6 – The Holy Crown of
Hungary (also known as Stephen of Hungary Crown)
is returned to Hungary from the United States, where it was held since World War II. ·
January 10 – Pedro
Joaquín Chamorro Cardenal, a critic of the Nicaraguan government, is assassinated;
riots erupt against Somoza's
government. ·
January 16 – Robert F. Rock succeeds Edward M. Davis as LAPD's
interim chief. ·
January 18 – The European
Court of Human Rights finds the British government guilty of
mistreating prisoners in Northern Ireland, but not guilty of torture. ·
January 19 – Federal Appeals Court
Judge William H. Webster is
appointed FBI Director. ·
January 22 – Ethiopia declares the ambassador of
West Germany persona non grata. ·
Soviet satellite Kosmos 954 burns up in Earth's
atmosphere, scattering debris over Canada's Northwest Territories. ·
Rose Dugdale and Eddie Gallagher become
the first convicted prisoners to marry in prison since the establishment of
the Republic of Ireland. ·
January 25–27 – The Great Blizzard of
1978 strikes the Ohio Valley and Great Lakes, killing 70. ·
January 28 – Richard Chase, the "Vampire of
Sacramento", is arrested. February[edit] ·
February 1 – film director Roman Polanski skips bail and
flees to France, after pleading guilty to charges of engaging in sex with a 13-year-old girl. ·
February 5–7 – The Northeastern
United States blizzard of 1978 hits the New England region and the New York
metropolitan area, killing about 100 and causing over US$520
million in damage. ·
February 6 – King
Dragon operation in Arakan: Burmese General Ne Win targets Muslim minorities in the
village of Sakkipara. ·
February 8 – United States Senate proceedings
are broadcast on radio for the first
time.[2] ·
February 9 – The Budd Company unveils its first SPV-2000 self-propelled railcar
in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania.[3] ·
Pacific
Western Airlines Flight 314, a Boeing 737-200, crashes in Cranbrook,
British Columbia, killing 44 of the 50 people on board. ·
Somalia mobilizes its troops, due to an
apparent Ethiopian attack. ·
The
People's Republic of China lifts a ban on works by Aristotle, William Shakespeare and Charles Dickens.[citation needed] ·
February 13 – Sydney Hilton
Hotel bombing: A bomb explodes outside the Hilton Hotel in Sydney, Australia,
killing a policeman and two civilians, and injuring several other people. ·
Rhodesia, one of only two remaining
white-ruled African nations (the other being South Africa), announces that it
will accept multiracial democracy within 2 years. ·
Serial
killer Ted Bundy is
captured in Pensacola, Florida.[4] ·
The Hillside Strangler,
a serial killer prowling Los Angeles, claims a tenth and final
victim. ·
The
first computer bulletin board
system (CBBS) is created in
Chicago. ·
February 19 – Egyptian raid on Larnaca International Airport ·
February 21 – Electrical workers
in Mexico City find
the remains of the Great
Pyramid of Tenochtitlan in the middle of the city. ·
February 24 – Five men with mild
mental-health issues from Yuba City,
California disappear
in the snow on their way home from a basketball game. In
June, four of the bodies are discovered in the Sierra.
The fifth, Gary Mathias, is never found. The circumstances surrounding their
deaths remains a mystery. ·
February 25 – The first Legislative Assembly election is
held in Arunachal Pradesh. ·
February 27 – The first global
positioning satellite, the Rockwell
International-built Navstar 1, is launched by the United States.[5] March[edit] ·
March 1 – Charlie Chaplin's remains are stolen from
Cosier-sur-Vevey, Switzerland.[6] ·
March 2 – Soyuz 28 (Aleksei Gubarev, Vladimír Remek)
is launched on a rendezvous with Salyut 6, with the first cosmonaut from
a country other than the USA or USSR (Czechoslovakian Vladimír Remek). ·
March 3 ·
Ethiopia admits that its troops are
fighting with the aid of Cuban soldiers
against Somalian troops in the Ogaden. ·
The New York Post publishes an article
about David Rorvik's
book The Cloning of Man, about a supposed cloning of a human being. ·
March 5 – Wuthering
Heights, the debut single by Kate Bush, charts at #1 in the United
Kingdom, making her the first woman to have a self-penned number one single. ·
March 6 – American porn publisher Larry Flynt is shot and paralyzed
in Lawrenceville,
Georgia. ·
March 8 – The first radio episode
of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy,
by Douglas Adams,
is transmitted on BBC Radio 4. ·
March 11 – Coastal Road
massacre: Palestinian terrorists kill 34 Israelis. ·
March 14 – Operation Litani: Israeli forces invade Lebanon. ·
March 15 – Somalia and Ethiopia sign a truce to end the Ethio-Somali War. ·
March 16 – Former Italian Premier Aldo Moro is kidnapped by the Red Brigades; five bodyguards are killed. ·
March 17 – An oil tanker, Amoco Cadiz, runs aground on the coast
of Brittany. ·
March 18 ·
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, Prime Minister
of Pakistan, is sentenced to death by hanging for ordering the
assassination of a political opponent. ·
California Jam II is
held at the Ontario Motor
Speedway in Ontario, California,
attracting more than 300,000 fans. ·
March 22 – Karl Wallenda of The Flying Wallendas dies
after falling off a tight-rope between two hotels in San Juan, Puerto
Rico. ·
March 26 – The control tower and some other facilities
of New Tokyo
International Airport, which were scheduled to open on March 31,
are illegally occupied and damaged in a terrorist attack by New Left activists, forcing a
rescheduling of its opening date to May 20. ·
March 28 ·
San Francisco's city council signs the
United States's most comprehensive gay rights bill. ·
Stump v. Sparkman (435 U.S. 349): The Supreme
Court of the United States hands down a 5–3 decision in a
controversial case involving involuntary sterilization and judicial immunity. April[edit] ·
April 1 ·
New
Zealand National Airways Corporation (the domestic airline of
New Zealand) is merged with New Zealand's international airline, Air New Zealand. ·
Dick Smith of Dick Smith Foods tows a fake iceberg to Sydney Harbour. ·
The
Philippine College of Commerce, through a presidential decree, is converted
to the Polytechnic
University of the Philippines. ·
April 2 – Dallas debuted
on CBS and gave birth to the modern day
primetime soap opera. ·
April 3 – The 50th Academy Awards are
held at the Dorothy
Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles with Annie Hall winning Best
Picture. ·
April 7 – U.S. President Jimmy Carter decides to postpone
production of the neutron bomb, a
weapon that kills people with radiation but leaves buildings relatively
intact. ·
April 8 – Regular radio broadcasts
of British Parliament proceedings
start. ·
April 9 – Somali military officers stage
an unsuccessful coup against the government of Siad Barre; security forces thwart the
attempt within hours, and several conspirators are arrested. ·
April 10 – Volkswagen becomes the second
(after Rolls-Royce in
1921-1931) non-American automobile manufacturer to open a plant in the United
States, commencing production of the Rabbit, the North American version of
the Volkswagen Golf,
at the Volkswagen
Westmoreland Assembly Plant near New Stanton,
Pennsylvania with a unionized (UAW)
workforce (the plant closes in 1992). ·
April 14 – 1978 Tbilisi
Demonstrations: Thousands of Georgians demonstrate against an
attempt by Soviet authorities
to change the constitutional status of the Georgian language. ·
April 18 – The U.S. Senate votes 68–32
to turn the Panama Canal over
to Panamanian control on December
31, 1999. ·
April 20 – Soviet air defense shot
down Korean Air
Lines Flight 902. The plane made an emergency landing on a frozen
lake. ·
April 22 ·
Izhar
Cohen & the Alphabeta win the Eurovision
Song Contest 1978 for Israel with their song A-Ba-Ni-Bi. ·
The One Love Peace
Concert is held at National Heroes Stadium in Kingston, Jamaica. Bob Marley unites two opposing
political leaders at this concert, bringing peace to the civil war-ridden
streets of the city. ·
April 25 – St. Paul, Minnesota becomes
the second U.S. city to repeal its gay rights ordinance after Anita Bryant's successful 1977 anti-gay
campaign in Dade County, Florida. Afghanistan President Daoud Khan was assassinated by
the People's
Democratic Party of Afghanistanon April 25 ·
April 27 – Afghanistan's president Daoud Khan is killed and his family
murdered during a Marxist military coup d'état; Nur Muhammad Tarakisucceeds
him beginning the Afghan
Civil War which as of 2017 has
not yet ended.[7] ·
April 30 – The Marxist "Democratic
Republic of Afghanistan" is proclaimed under pro-communist
leader Nur Muhammad Taraki. May[edit] ·
May 4 ·
The Battle of Cassinga occurs
in southern Angola. ·
Communist activist Henri Curiel is murdered in Paris. ·
May 5 – Pete Rose of the Cincinnati Reds gets his 3,000th major
league hit. ·
May 8 ·
Norway
opens a natural gas field
in the Polar Sea. ·
Reinhold Messner (Italy) and Peter Habeler (Austria) make the first
ascent of Mount Everest without supplemental oxygen. ·
May 9 – In Rome, the corpse of former
Italian prime minister Aldo Moro is
found in a red Renault 4. ·
May 12 – In Zaire, rebels occupy the city of Kolwezi, the mining centre of the province of Shaba. The Zairean government asks the U.S.,
France and Belgium to restore order. ·
May 12–13 – A group of mercenaries led by Bob Denard oust Ali Soilih in the Comoros; ten local soldiers are killed.
Denard forms a new government. ·
May 15 ·
Australia's
longest serving prime minister Sir Robert Menzies dies. ·
Students
of the University of Tehran riot
in Tabriz; the army stops the riot. ·
May 17 – Charlie Chaplin's coffin is found some 15
kilometres (9.3 mi) from the cemetery from which it was stolen, near
Lake Geneva.[6] ·
May 18 ·
Soviet
dissident Yuri Orlov is
sentenced to seven years hard labor for distributing 'counterrevolutionary
material'. ·
Sarajevo is selected to host the 1984 Winter Olympics and
Los Angeles is selected to host the 1984 Summer Olympics. ·
May 18–19 – Belgian and French paratroopers
fly to Zaire to aid the fight against the rebels. ·
May 19–20 – French Foreign
Legion paratroopers land
in Kolwezi, Zaire, to rescue Europeans in the middle of
a civil war. ·
May 20 – Mavis Hutchinson, 53, becomes the first
woman to run across the U.S.; her trek took 69 days. ·
May 22 – Exiled leaders Ahmed Abdallah and Muhammad Ahmad return to the Comoros. ·
May 25 – A bomb explodes in the
security section of Northwestern
University, wounding a security guard (the first Unabomber attack). ·
May 26 – In Atlantic City,
New Jersey, Resorts International, the first legal casino in the eastern United States,
opens. ·
May 28 – Indianapolis 500: Al Unser wins his third race, and the
first for car owner Jim Hall. ·
May 29 – Ali Soilih is found dead in the Comoros, allegedly shot when trying to
escape. June[edit] ·
June 1 – The 1978 FIFA World Cup starts
in Argentina. ·
June 6 – California voters approve Proposition
13, which slashes property taxes nearly 60%. ·
June 9 – The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints extends
the priesthood and temple blessings to "all worthy males", ending a
general policy of excluding "Canaanites" from priesthood ordination
and temple ordinances. ·
June 10 – Affirmed holds off Alydar to win the Belmont Stakes and becomes the last
horse to win the U.S. Triple Crown of Horse Racing until 2015. ·
June 12 – Serial killer David Berkowitz, the "Son of Sam,"
is sentenced to 365 years in prison. ·
June 15 – King Hussein of Jordan marries
26-year-old Lisa Halaby, who takes the name Queen Noor. ·
June 16 – Grease, starring John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John is
released. ·
June 19 ·
Cricketer Ian Botham becomes the first man in the
history of the game to score a century and take eight wickets in one innings
of a Test match. ·
Garfield, which eventually becomes the world's most widely syndicated comic strip, makes its debut. ·
June 20 – The 6.2 Mw Thessaloniki
earthquake shakes Northern Greece with a maximum Mercalli
intensity of IX (Violent). Fifty people were killed. ·
June 21 ·
A
shootout between Provisional IRA members
and the British Army leaves one civilian and three IRA men dead. ·
1978
Iranian Chinook shootdown: Iranian helicopters stray into Soviet
airspace and are shot down. ·
June 22 – Charon, a satellite of Pluto, is discovered. ·
June 24 ·
Yemen Arab Republic President Ahmad al-Ghashmi is killed. ·
The
Gay & Lesbian Solidarity March is held in Sydney, Australia to mark the
10th Anniversary of the Stonewall riots (which later becomes
the annual Sydney
Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras; later incorporating a festival). ·
June 25 – Argentina defeats the
Netherlands 3–1 after extra time to win the 1978 FIFA World Cup. ·
June 26 – A bombing by Breton nationalists causes
destruction in Palace of Versailles. ·
June 28 ·
The
U.S. scientific satellite Seasat is launched. ·
University
of California Regents v. Bakke: The Supreme
Court of the United States bars quota systems in college admissions but
affirms the constitutionality of programs which give advantages to
minorities. ·
The rainbow flag of
the LGBT movement flies for the first time
(in its original form) at the San Francisco Gay
Freedom Day Parade. ·
June 29 – Actor Bob Crane is found bludgeoned to death
in his Scottsdale, Arizona, apartment. The crime is never solved. ·
June 30 – Ethiopia begins a massive offensive
in Eritrea. July[edit] ·
July 3 – The Amazon
Co-operation Treaty (ACT) is signed. ·
July 7 – The Solomon Islands become independent from
the United Kingdom. ·
July 11 – More than 200 tourists die in
an explosion of a
tanker-truck at a campsite in Costa Daurada, Spain. ·
July 24 – In Acapulco, Mexico, Margaret
Gardiner of South Africa will crown Miss Universe. ·
July 25 ·
Cerro Maravilla
murders: Two Puerto Rican pro-independence activists are killed in
a police ambush. ·
Louise Brown, the world's first test tube baby, is born in Oldham, Greater Manchester,
UK.[8] ·
July 28 – Animal House was released in movie
theaters. August[edit] ·
August 6 – Pope Paul VI dies in Castel Gandolfo. ·
August 12 - The Treaty of Peace and Friendship between Japan and the
People's Republic of China is concluded ·
August 17 – Double Eagle II becomes the first
balloon to successfully cross the Atlantic Ocean, flying from Presque Isle, Maine,
to Miserey, France. ·
August 22 – Sandinistas seize the Nicaraguan
National Palace. ·
August 26 – Pope John Paul I succeeds Pope Paul VI
as the 263rd Pope. September[edit] September 6: Anwar Sadat, Jimmy Carter, and Menachem Begin meet on the Aspen Cabin
patio at Camp David. ·
September 5 – Camp David Accords: Menachem Begin and Anwar Sadat begin the peace process at
Camp David, Maryland. ·
September 7 – In London, England, a
poison-filled pellet, supposedly injected using an umbrella, fatally
poisons Bulgarian defector Georgi Markov; he dies four days later. ·
September 8 – Iranian Army troops open
fire on rioters in Tehran, killing 122,
wounding 4,000. ·
General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq officially
assumes the post of President of
Pakistan. ·
The
7.4 Mw Tabas earthquake affects
the city of Tabas, Iran with
a maximum Mercalli
intensity of IX (Violent). At least 15,000 people were
killed. ·
September 17 – The Camp David Accords are
signed between Israel and Egypt. ·
September 18 – WKRP in Cincinnati premieres
on CBS. ·
Police
in the West Midlands of
England launch a massive murder hunt, when 13-year-old newspaper boy Carl Bridgewater is shot dead after
disturbing a burglary. ·
The Solomon Islands join the United
Nations. ·
September 20 – General Rahimuddin Khan assumes the post
of Martial Law Governor
of Balochistan ·
PSA Flight 182, a Boeing 727, collides with
a small private airplane and crashes in San Diego, California; 144 are killed. ·
Giuseppe Verdi's opera Otello makes its first appearance
on Live from the Met,
in a complete production of the opera starring Jon Vickers. This is the first complete
television broadcast of the opera in the U.S. since the historic 1948 one. ·
September 27 – The last Forest Brother guerrilla movement
fighter is discovered and killed in Estonia. ·
September 28 – Pope John Paul I dies after only 33
days of papacy. ·
September
– The African
National Congress attempts to kill about 500 of its own
cadres by poisoning their food because an infiltrated enemy agent cannot be
identified.[9] October[edit] ·
Tuvalu becomes independent from the
United Kingdom. ·
October 7 – Wranslide in New South Wales: the Wran government is re-elected with an
increased majority. ·
October 8 – Australia's Ken Warby sets the current world water speed record of
317.6 mph (511.13 km/h) at Blowering Dam, Australia. ·
October 9 – P.W. Botha succeeds John Vorster as Prime
Minister of South Africa.[10][11] ·
Daniel arap Moi becomes president
of Kenya. ·
John Vorster becomes State
President of South Africa.[10] ·
A
massive short circuit in Seasat's electrical
system ends the satellite's scientific mission. ·
United
States President Jimmy Carter signs
a bill that authorizes the minting of the Susan B. Anthony
dollar. ·
October 13 – The Soviet Union launches a major Russification campaign throughout all
union republics. ·
October 14 – U.S. President Jimmy Carter signs a bill into law
which allows homebrewing of beer in the
United States. ·
October 16 – Pope John Paul II succeeds Pope John Paul I as the 264th pope,
resulting in the first Year of Three Popes since
1605. He is the first Polish pope in history, and the first non-Italian pope
since Pope Adrian VI (1522–1523). ·
October 18 – Thorbjörn Fälldin steps
down as Prime Minister of Sweden, and is succeeded by Ola Ullsten, the Leader of the liberal
People's Party ("Folkpartiet"). ·
October 20 – The first Sydney
Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras is held as a protest march and
commemoration of the Stonewall riots. ·
October 21 – Australian civilian pilot Frederick
Valentich vanishes in a Cessna 182 over the Bass Strait south of Melbourne, after reporting contact with an
unidentified aircraft. ·
October 27 – Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime
Minister Menachem Begin win
the Nobel Peace Prize for
their progress toward achieving a Middle East accord. ·
October 31 – The South African
Railways sets a still unbeaten world
rail speed record on Cape gauge.[12] November[edit] ·
November 2: 8:00 pm – The Republic of Ireland's
second television channel RTÉ 2 goes on air (renamed Network
2, 1988; RTÉ Network Two, 1995;
N2, 1997; and RTÉ Two in 2004). ·
November 3 – Dominica gains its independence from
the United Kingdom. ·
November 5 – Rioters sack the British
Embassy in Tehran. ·
Indira Gandhi is re-elected to the
Indian parliament. ·
California
voters defeat the Briggs Initiative,
which was intended to bar LGBT people from
working as school teachers. ·
November 18 – Jonestown incident: In Guyana, Jim Jones leads his Peoples Temple cult in a mass murder–suicide that
claims 918 lives in all, 909 of them at Jonestown itself, including over 270
children. Congressman Leo J. Ryan is
assassinated by members of Peoples Temple shortly beforehand. ·
November 19 – The first U.S. Take Back
the Night march occurs in San Francisco. ·
November 26 – Two British commercial divers, Michael Ward and Tony
Prangley, die of hypothermia and
drowning in the East Shetland Basin after
their diving bellplunges to
the seabed at a depth of over 100 metres (330 ft).[13][14] ·
November 27 – In San Francisco, Mayor George Moscone and City
Supervisor Harvey Milk are assassinated by
former Supervisor Dan White. ·
November 30 – Publication of The Times is suspended due to labor
problems until November 13, 1979. December[edit] ·
December 4 – Dianne Feinstein succeeds the
murdered George Moscone,
to become the first woman mayor of San Francisco and remains in office
until January 8, 1988. ·
December 6 – The Spanish
Constitution officially restores the country's democratic
government. ·
Lufthansa heist: Six men rob a Lufthansa
cargo facility in New York City's John
F. Kennedy International Airport. ·
Two
million demonstrate against the Shah in Iran. ·
December 13 – The first Susan B. Anthony
dollars were struck at the Philadelphia Mint. ·
Cleveland, Ohio becomes the first major
American city to go into default since the Great Depression, under Democrat Mayor Dennis Kucinich. ·
Superman is released in theaters in the United
States. ·
Train
87 from Nanjing to Xining collides with train 368
from Xi'an to Xuzhou near Yangzhuang railway station
in China, killing 106, injuring 218. ·
The Mystery of Mamo is released in cinemas in Japan. ·
December 19 – Former Prime Minister of
India Indira Gandhi is
arrested and jailed for a week for breach of privilege and contempt of
parliament. ·
The
pivotal Third Plenum of the 11th National Congress of the Communist Party
of China is held in Beijing, with Deng Xiaoping reversing
Mao-era policies to pursue a program for Chinese economic
reform. ·
Chicago
serial killer John Wayne Gacy,
who was subsequently convicted of the murder of 33 young men and boys
committed between 1972 and 1978, is arrested. ·
Argentina begins Operation Soberanía against Chile. ·
December 25 – Vietnam launches a major offensive
against the Khmer Rouge of Cambodia. ·
December 27 – The Constitution
of Spain is approved in a referendum, officially ending 40
years of military dictatorship. Date unknown[edit] ·
Artificial insulin is invented. ·
David Rorvik claims he has participated
in a creation of a human clone in
his book In His Image. ·
Abortion is legalized in Italy for the
first time. ·
In Seoul, South Korea, construction begins
on Seoul Subway Line 2. ·
Ford initiates
a recall for the Pinto because
of a public outcry resulting from deaths associated with gas tank explosions. ·
The New
York International Bible Society's New
International Version of the complete Bible translated into modern American English is published. ·
The Soviet Union nuclear weapons stockpile exceeds the
United States nuclear weapons stockpile. ·
The Space Invaders arcade video game is
released by Taito Corporation. Births[edit]
January[edit] ·
January 1 – Philip Mulryne, Northern Irish footballer ·
Megumi Toyoguchi, Japanese voice actress ·
Karina Smirnoff, Ukrainian-American dancer ·
Liya Kebede, Ethiopian model, clothing
designer and actress ·
Park Sol-mi, South Korean actress ·
January 4 – Karine Ruby, French snowboarder (d. 2009) ·
Franck Montagny, French Formula One driver ·
January Jones, American actress ·
January 7 – Emilio Palma, Argentine citizen, first human
born in Antarctica ·
Chad Ocho Cinco, American football player ·
AJ McLean, American singer ·
Gennaro Gattuso, Italian football player ·
January 10 – Kanako Mitsuhashi,
Japanese voice actress ·
January 11 – Emile Heskey, English footballer ·
January 12 – Jeremy Camp, American singer and songwriter ·
Nate Silver, American statistician,
psephologist, and writer ·
Ashmit Patel, Indian actor ·
January 14 – Shawn Crawford, American runner ·
Eddie Cahill, American actor ·
Franco Pellizotti,
Italian cyclist ·
Thor Hushovd, Norwegian cyclist ·
Katja Kipping, German politician ·
January 20 – Omar Sy, French actor and comedian ·
January 23 – Josh Thompson,
American singer ·
Mark Hildreth,
Canadian actor and voice actor ·
Nami Miyahara, Japanese voice actress and
singer ·
Kristen Schaal, American actress ·
January 25 – Gordie Dwyer, American hockey player and
coach ·
January 26 – Kelly Stables, American actress ·
Gianluigi Buffon, Italian footballer ·
Jamie Carragher, English footballer ·
January 29 – Joice Hasselmann, Brazilian journalist,
writer, activist and conservative political commentator February[edit] ·
Nelson Chamisa, Zimbabwean politician ·
Barry Ferguson, Scottish footballer ·
Guido Kaczka, Argentine television show host
and actor ·
Adrian R'Mante, American actor ·
Eliza Schneider, American actress ·
Kelly Sullivan,
American actress ·
February 4 – Aleksey Rozin, Russian actor ·
Brian Russell, American football player ·
Samuel Sánchez,
Spanish road bicycle racer ·
Ashton Kutcher, American actor ·
Omotola Jalade
Ekeinde, Nigerian actress, singer, philanthropist and former model ·
Gethin Jones, Welsh television presenter ·
Silver Meikar, Estonian politician ·
February 13 – Niklas Bäckström,
Finnish hockey player ·
Richard
Hamilton, American basketball player ·
Danai Gurira, American actress and
playwright ·
Darius Songaila, Lithuanian basketball
player ·
February 15 – Gil Seong-joon, Korean hip-hop musician ·
John Tartaglia, American actor ·
Tia Hellebaut, Belgian athlete ·
February 18 – Oliver Pocher, German actor, stand-up
comedian and television host ·
Kenyatta Wright, American football player ·
Immortal Technique,
Peruvian-American rapper ·
Julia Jentsch, German actress ·
Ken Takeuchi, Japanese voice actor ·
Kim Ha-neul, South Korean actress ·
Kumail Nanjiani, Pakistani-American actor
and comedian ·
Miki Sakai, Japanese actress ·
February 22 – Jenny Frost, English singer ·
February 23 – Dan Snyder,
Canadian hockey player (d. 2003) ·
Leon Constantine, British footballer ·
Gary, South Korean musician, entertainer ·
February 27 – Kakha Kaladze, Georgian footballer ·
Jeanne Cherhal, French singer-songwriter ·
Yasir Hameed, Pakistani cricketer ·
Benjamin Raich, Austrian skier March[edit] ·
March 1 ·
Jensen Ackles, American actor ·
Donovan Patton, Guamanian television star ·
Sakura Nogawa, Japanese voice actress ·
March 2 ·
Tomáš Kaberle,
Czech hockey player ·
Sebastian Janikowski,
American football player ·
March 4 – Denis Dallan, Italian rugby union footballer ·
March 6 ·
Sage Rosenfels, American football player ·
Mike
Jackson, American politician ·
March 7 – Jaqueline Jesus, Brazilian psychologist and
activist ·
March 10 – Benjamin Burnley, American musician ·
March 11 ·
Didier Drogba, Ivorian footballer ·
Ha Jung-woo, South Korean actor and director ·
March 12 ·
Neal Obermeyer, American editorial
cartoonist ·
Claudio Sanchez, American writer and
musician ·
March 13 ·
Tom Danielson, American cyclist ·
Kenny Watson, American football player ·
March 14 ·
Pieter van den
Hoogenband, Dutch swimmer ·
Carl Johan Bergman,
Swedish biathlete ·
Moon Hee-joon, Korean singer ·
March 15 – Flavio Furtado, Cape Verdean boxer ·
March 16 – Brooke Burns, American fashion model and
actress ·
March 17 ·
Jason M. Burns, American writer ·
Patrick Seitz, American voice actor ·
March 18 – Fernandão, Brazilian footballer and manager
(d. 2014) ·
March 21 ·
Rani Mukerji, Indian actress ·
Mohammad Rezaei, Iranian wrestler ·
March 22 – Josh Heupel, American football player ·
March 23 ·
Simon Gärdenfors,
Swedish cartoonist and radio host ·
Nicholle Tom, American actress ·
March 29 – Igor
Rakočević, Serbian basketball player ·
March 30 ·
Simon Webbe, English singer ·
March 31 ·
Stephen Clemence, English footballer ·
Jérôme Rothen,
French footballer April[edit] ·
April 1 ·
Vitor Belfort, Brazilian martial artist ·
Antonio de Nigris,
Mexican footballer (d. 2009) ·
April 2 – Nick Berg, American businessman (d. 2004) ·
April 3 ·
Matthew Goode, English actor ·
John Smit, South African rugby union player ·
April 4 ·
Jason Ellison, American baseball player ·
Sam Moran, Australian singer ·
April 5 – Franziska van
Almsick, German swimmer ·
April 6 ·
Tim Hasselbeck, American football player ·
April 7 – Duncan James, English singer ·
April 9 ·
Jorge Andrade, Portuguese footballer ·
Takashi Ohara, Japanese voice actor ·
Rachel Stevens, English singer ·
April 12 ·
Guy Berryman, Scottish musician ·
Cheeming Boey, Malaysian artist ·
April 13 – Kyle Howard, American television and movie
actor ·
April 15 – Luis Fonsi, Puerto Rican singer and
songwriter ·
April 16 ·
Lara Dutta, Indian actress and beauty queen ·
Matthew Lloyd, Australian rules footballer ·
April 17 ·
Juan Guillermo
Castillo, Uruguayan goalkeeper ·
Jason White,
Scottish rugby union player ·
April 19 – James Franco, American actor ·
April 20 – Matt Austin,
Canadian actor ·
April 21 – Jukka Nevalainen, Finnish drummer ·
April 22 – Manu Intiraymi, American actor ·
April 23 – Tamara
Czartoryski-Borbon, Spanish athlete ·
April 25 – Duncan Kibet, Kenyan long-distance runner ·
April 26 ·
Stana Katic, Canadian-American actress ·
Shinnosuke Tachibana,
Japanese voice actor ·
April 28 – Robert Oliveri, American former actor ·
April 29 ·
Bob and Mike Bryan,
American doubles tennis team ·
Tyler Labine, Canadian actor May[edit] ·
May 1 – James Badge Dale, American actor ·
May 3 – Lawrence Tynes, American football player ·
May 4 ·
Erin Andrews, American television host and
personality ·
Daisuke Ono, Japanese voice actor ·
May 6 – Aleksandr
Fyodorov, Russian bodybuilder ·
May 7 ·
Brian Clevinger, American author ·
Shawn Marion, American basketball player ·
May 8 – Matthew Davis, American actor ·
May 9 – Daniel Franzese, American actor ·
May 10 ·
Kenan Thompson, American actor and comedian ·
Marcelo Moretto, Brazilian footballer ·
May 11 ·
Laetitia Casta, French supermodel and
actress ·
Judy Ann Santos, Filipino actress ·
May 12 ·
Hossein Rezazadeh,
Iranian weightlifter ·
Jason Biggs, American actor ·
Aya Ishiguro, Japanese singer, writer, and
fashion designer ·
Malin Åkerman, Swedish-Canadian Actress ·
May 13 ·
Mike Bibby, American basketball player ·
Barry Zito, American baseball player ·
May 15 ·
Dwayne De Rosario,
Canadian footballer ·
Caroline Dhavernas,
French-Canadian actress ·
Krzysztof Ignaczak,
Polish volleyball player ·
David Krumholtz, American actor ·
May 17 – Kat Foster, American actress ·
May 18 – Ricardo Carvalho, Portuguese footballer ·
May 19 – Marcus Bent, English footballer ·
May 21 ·
Adam Gontier, Canadian singer ·
Briana Banks, German-American porn star ·
May 22 ·
Katie Price (Jordan), English model and
television personality ·
Ginnifer Goodwin, American actress ·
May 23 ·
Scott Raynor, American drummer ·
Carolyn Moos, American model and basketball
player ·
May 24 – Bryan Greenberg, American actor ·
May 25 – Brian Urlacher, American football player ·
May 26 – Benji Gregory, American actor ·
May 28 ·
Jake Johnson, American actor and comedian ·
Tomohiko Ito,
Japanese footballer ·
May 29 ·
Pelle Almqvist, Swedish singer-songwriter ·
Lorenzo
Odone, American adrenoleukodystrophy patient
(d. 2008) June[edit] ·
June 1 ·
Antonietta Di
Martino, Italian high-jumper ·
Link Neal, American musician, comedian and
internet personality ·
June 2 ·
Nikki Cox, American actress ·
Justin Long, American actor ·
June 4 ·
Simone Maludrottu,
Italian boxer ·
Robin Lord Taylor,
American actor ·
June 5 – Nick Kroll, American actor and comedian ·
June 6 ·
Konstantīns
Konstantinovs, Latvian powerlifter (d. 2018) ·
Carl Barât, English musician ·
Nadia Nascimento, Canadian actress ·
Mariana Popova, Bulgarian singer ·
June 7 ·
Jesse Ball, American novelist and poet ·
Bill Hader, American actor and comedian ·
June 8 – Maria Menounos, American actress,
journalist, and television presenter ·
June 9 ·
Michaela Conlin, American actress ·
Shandi Finnessey, American beauty queen and
actress ·
Miroslav Klose, German footballer ·
Matthew Bellamy, British musician and singer ·
June 10 ·
Han Hee-won, South Korean golfer ·
Karl Scully, Irish tenor ·
Shane West, American actor ·
June 11 – Joshua Jackson, Canadian actor ·
June 12 ·
Shiloh Strong, American actor ·
Timothy Simons, American actor ·
Jeremy Rowley, American character actor and
comedian ·
June 13 – Faizal Yusof, Malaysian actor (d. 2011) ·
June 15 ·
Wilfred Bouma, Dutch footballer ·
Anna Torv, Australian actress ·
June 16 – Daniel Brühl, German actor ·
June 18 – Tara Platt, American voice actress and
actress ·
June 19 ·
Mía Maestro, Argentine actress ·
Dirk Nowitzki, German basketball player ·
Zoe Saldana, American actress ·
June 20 ·
Mike Birbiglia, American actor, comedian,
and writer ·
Quinton Jackson, American mixed martial arts
fighter ·
Frank Lampard, English footballer ·
June 21 ·
Erica Durance, Canadian actress ·
Jean-Pascal Lacoste,
French singer, actor and television host ·
Tom Lister, English actor ·
June 22 ·
Champ Bailey, American football player ·
Tim Driesen, Belgian actor and
singer-songwriter ·
Dan Wheldon, English race car driver
(d. 2011) ·
June 23 ·
Gladys Reyes, Filipino actress ·
Leandro Firmino, Brazilian actor ·
Jeremy Horn,
American musician and songwriter ·
June 24 ·
Garamond Pink, American musician ·
Emppu Vuorinen, Finnish musician ·
Juan Román Riquelme,
Argentine footballer ·
Shunsuke Nakamura,
Japanese footballer ·
June 25 ·
Aramis Ramírez,
Dominican baseball player ·
Aftab Shivdasani, Indian actor ·
Marcus Stroud, American football player ·
June 27 – Anna Kumble, English pop singer and
television presenter ·
June 28 – Ha Ji-won, South Korean actress and singer ·
June 29 ·
Luke Kirby, Canadian actor ·
Nicole Scherzinger,
American singer ·
June 30 ·
Ben Cousins, Australian rules footballer ·
Pat Dennis, American football player ·
Jason Schimmel, American musician and
producer ·
Nate Winkel, American soccer player July[edit] ·
July 1 ·
Hillary Tuck, American actress ·
Aleki Lutui, Tongan rugby player ·
Liu Kwok Man, Chinese footballer ·
July 2 ·
Paul Danan, British actor ·
Ganesh, Indian actor and television
presenter ·
Diana Gurtskaya, Georgian singer ·
Jüri Ratas, Estonian politician and
18th Prime Minister
of Estonia ·
Owain Yeoman, Welsh actor ·
July 3 ·
Ian Anthony Dale, American actor ·
Mizuki Noguchi, Japanese long-distance
runner ·
July 4 ·
Becki Newton, American actress ·
Marcos Daniel, Brazilian tennis player ·
July 5 ·
Andreas Baum, German politician ·
Nandamuri Kalyan Ram,
Indian actor and film producer ·
July 6 ·
Daphne Iking, Malaysian television
personality and actress ·
Danil Khalimov, Kazakh Greco-Roman wrestler ·
Tia and Tamera Mowry, African-American actresses ·
Kevin Senio, New Zealand rugby union
footballer ·
July 7 ·
DJ Manian, German music producer and DJ ·
Marino Franchitti,
British racing driver ·
Benjamin
Mitchell, New Zealand actor ·
Mark Sloan,
British professional wrestler ·
July 8 ·
Rachael Lillis, American actress ·
Erin Morgenstern, American artist and author ·
Garth Mulroy, South African golfer ·
July 9 ·
Kyle Davis,
American actor ·
Dmitri Dyuzhev, Russian actor and singer ·
Mark Medlock, German singer ·
Linda Park, Korean-born actress ·
July 10 – Jesse Lacey, American singer-songwriter ·
July 11 – Kim Kang-woo, South Korean actor ·
July 12 ·
Bradley Eustace, Australian composer ·
Topher Grace, American actor ·
Michelle Rodriguez,
American actress ·
July 15 ·
Matt Mitrione, American mixed martial artist ·
Greg Sestero, French-American actor and
model ·
July 16 – Ahmede Hussain, Bangladeshi writer ·
July 17 ·
Ricardo Arona, Brazilian mixed martial
artist ·
Panda Bear,
American musician ·
Justine Triet, French actress ·
July 18 ·
Shane Horgan, Irish rugby player ·
Crystal Mangum, American murderer
responsible for making false rape allegations in the Duke lacrosse case ·
Virginia Raggi, Italian lawyer, politician ·
Joo Sang-wook, South Korean actor ·
Ben Sheets, American baseball player ·
Vladimir Tintor,
Serbian film actor ·
July 19 – Atsushi Harada, Japanese actor ·
July 20 ·
André Bankoff, Brazilian actor ·
Pavel Datsyuk, Russian ice hockey player ·
Tamsyn Manou, Australian athlete ·
Chris Sligh, American singer-songwriter and
producer ·
Will Solomon, American basketball player ·
Elliott Yamin, American singer ·
July 21 ·
Justin Bartha, American actor ·
Josh Hartnett, American actor ·
Brandon Heath, American singer and
songwriter ·
Kyoko Iwasaki, Japanese swimmer ·
July 22 ·
A. J. Cook, Canadian actress ·
Ryan Eigenmann, Filipino actor ·
Kyōko Hasegawa,
Japanese model and actress ·
Candace Kroslak, American actress ·
July 23 ·
Stuart
Elliott, Northern Irish footballer ·
Stefanie Sun, Singapore singer ·
July 25 ·
Louise Brown, British citizen, first human
born through in vitro
fertilisation ·
Gerard Warren, American football player ·
July 26 ·
Jehad Muntasser, Libyan footballer ·
Eve Myles, Welsh actress ·
July 28 – Hitomi Yaida, Japanese singer ·
July 31 ·
Will Champion, English musician ·
Justin
Wilson, English racing driver (d. 2015) ·
July
– Caucher Birkar,
born Fereydoun Derakhshani, Kurdish-born mathematician August[edit] ·
August 3 ·
Mariusz Jop, Polish footballer ·
Shanelle Workman, American actress ·
August 4 – Kurt Busch, American race car driver ·
August 5 – Carolina Duer, Argentine boxer ·
August 6 ·
Marisa Miller, American supermodel ·
Freeway, American rapper ·
Peng Cheng-min, Taiwanese baseball player ·
August 7 ·
Alexandre Aja, French director ·
Vanness Wu, Taiwanese singer ·
August 8 ·
Countess Vaughn, American actress ·
Natsuko Kuwatani, Japanese voice actress ·
August 9 – Daniela Denby-Ashe,
English actress ·
Vibeke Stene, Norwegian rock singer ·
Jelena Karleuša,
Serbian pop singer ·
August 18 – Andy Samberg, American actor and comedian ·
Chris Capuano, American baseball player ·
Qais Al Khonji, Omani entrepreneur ·
August 20 – Noah Bean, American actor ·
Reuben Droughns, American football player ·
Alan Lee,
Irish footballer ·
Vitaliy Balytskyi,
Ukrainian football player and manager (d. 2018) ·
James Corden, British comedian and
television personality ·
August 23 – Kobe Bryant, American basketball player ·
August 24 – Rafael Furcal, Dominican baseball player ·
August 25 – Kel Mitchell, American actor ·
August 26 – Amanda Schull, American actress ·
August 27 – Suranne Jones, English actress ·
Kelly Overton,
American actress ·
Rachel Kimsey, American actress ·
Sam Wills, New Zealand comic ·
August 29 – Danielle Hampton, Canadian actress ·
August 30 – Swizz Beatz, American record producer and
rapper ·
August 31 – Ido Pariente, Israeli mixed martial artist September[edit] ·
September 3 – Tinkara Kovač, Slovenian singer and
musician ·
Wes Bentley, American actor ·
Frederik Veuchelen,
Belgian cyclist ·
Mathew Horne, English actor ·
Homare Sawa, Japanese footballer ·
September 7 – Devon Sawa, Canadian actor ·
September 9 – Gina Gogean, Romania artistic gymnast ·
Ed Reed, American football player ·
Ben Lee, Australian singer ·
Else-Marthe
Sørlie Lybekk, Norwegian handball player ·
Ruben Studdard, American singer ·
Ben McKenzie, American actor ·
September 13 – Megan Henning, American actress ·
Ben Cohen,
English rugby union player ·
Carmen Kass, Estonian supermodel ·
Eiður Guðjohnsen,
Icelandic football player ·
David Sneddon, Scottish singer-songwriter ·
September 18 – Billy Eichner, American actor and comedian ·
Jason Bay, Canadian baseball player ·
Patrizio Buanne, Italian singer ·
Sarit Hadad, Israeli pop singer ·
Doug Howlett, New Zealand rugby union player ·
Josh Thomson, American mixed martial artist ·
September 22 – Harry Kewell, Australian footballer ·
Anthony Mackie, American actor ·
Worm Miller, American screenwriter, director
and actor ·
Keri Lynn Pratt, American actress ·
September 24 – Wietse van Alten, Dutch archer ·
Jodie Kidd, English model ·
Ani Lorak, Ukrainian singer ·
Rossif Sutherland,
Canadian actor ·
September 28 – Pastora Soler, Spanish singer ·
September 29 – Kurt Nilsen, Norwegian singer ·
September 30 – Candice Michelle, American professional
wrestler and model October[edit] ·
October 1 – Katie Aselton, American actress ·
October 2 – Ayumi Hamasaki, Japanese singer ·
Claudio Pizarro, Peruvian footballer ·
Gerald Asamoah, German footballer ·
Ricardo
Rocha, Portuguese footballer ·
Christian Coulson,
English actor ·
Shannyn Sossamon, American actress ·
Dana Davis, American actress ·
Mark Day, Canadian actor ·
Phillip Glasser, American actor and producer ·
Kei Horie, Japanese actor ·
Shane Ryan,
Irish Gaelic footballer ·
James
Valentine, American musician ·
Morgan Webb, television personality ·
October 7 – Omar Benson Miller,
American actor ·
October 9 – Nicky Byrne, Irish musician ·
Paul Hunter,
English snooker player (d. 2006) ·
Usher, American singer and actor ·
October 17 – Pablo Iglesias
Turrión, Spanish politician ·
October 18 – Wesley Jonathan, American actor ·
Kira,
German singer ·
Virender Sehwag, Indian cricketer ·
Tomohiko Ito,
Japanese anime director ·
October 21 – Joey Harrington, American football player ·
October 23 – John Lackey, American baseball player ·
October 24 – Carlos Edwards, Trinidadian footballer ·
Russell Anderson, Scottish footballer ·
Zachary Knighton, American actor ·
David T. Little, American composer and
drummer ·
CM Punk, American professional wrestler ·
Antonio Pierce, American football player ·
David Walton,
American actor ·
Vanessa-Mae, Singaporean violinist ·
Justin Guarini, American singer ·
Gwendoline Christie,
English actress and model ·
Travis Henry, American football player ·
Matt Fleckenstein,
American television writer and executive producer ·
October 30 – Matthew Morrison, American actor and singer November[edit] ·
Jessica Valenti, American blogger and writer ·
Manju Warrier, Indian actress ·
Mary Kate
Schellhardt, American actress ·
November 3 – Tim McIlrath, American singer ·
Bubba Watson, American golfer ·
Xavier Tondo, Spanish cyclist (d. 2011) ·
Taryn Manning, American actress ·
Sandrine Blancke, Belgian actress ·
Zaheer Khan, Indian cricketer ·
Mark Read,
English singer ·
November 8 – Ali Karimi, Iranian football player ·
Sisqó, American actor and singer ·
Irwin Daayán, Mexican voice actor ·
Nadine Angerer, German footballer ·
Kyla Cole, Czech model ·
Diplo, American DJ and music producer ·
Eve, African-American rapper ·
Akemi Kanda, Japanese voice actress ·
Drew McConnell, English musician ·
November 12 – Sharmeen
Obaid-Chinoy, Pakistani journalist, activist and filmmaker ·
November 13 – Hsu Wei Lun, Taiwanese actress (d. 2007) ·
Bobby Allen, American ice hockey player ·
Xavier Nady, American baseball player ·
Rachel McAdams, Canadian actress ·
Reggie Wayne, American football player ·
Daniel Chong,
American animator ·
Damien Johnson, Northern Irish footballer ·
Aldo
Montano, Italian fencer ·
November 19 – Matt Dusk, Canadian musician and singer ·
November 21 – Annie,
Norwegian singer ·
November 24 – Katherine Heigl, American actress ·
November 25 – Shiina Ringo, Japanese singer and musician ·
November 26 – Jun Fukuyama, Japanese voice actor ·
November 27 – Mike Skinner,
English musician ·
November 28 – Aimee Garcia, American actress ·
November 29 – Lauren German, American actress ·
Clay Aiken, American singer-songwriter and
author ·
Gael García Bernal,
Mexican actor December[edit] ·
Mat Kearney, American singer-songwriter and
musician ·
Stefan
Kapičić, Serbian actor ·
Nelly Furtado, Portuguese-Canadian singer
and songwriter ·
Alo Kõrve, Estonian actor ·
Christopher
Wolstenholme, British musician ·
December 4 – Lars Bystøl, Norwegian ski jumper ·
Neil Druckmann, American video game writer
and programmer ·
Olli Jokinen, Finnish ice hockey player ·
Shiri Appleby, American actress ·
Suzannah Lipscomb,
English historian ·
Ian Somerhalder, American actor ·
Vernon Wells, American baseball player ·
Gastón Gaudio, Argentine tennis player ·
Jesse Metcalfe, American actor ·
December 10 – Summer Phoenix, American actress ·
December 12 – Monica
Bîrlădeanu, Romanian actress ·
December 13 – Cameron Douglas, American actor ·
December 15 – Jerome McDougle, American football player ·
December 16 – Joe Absolom, British actor ·
Manny Pacquiao, Filipino boxer and
politician ·
Chase Utley, American baseball player ·
Daniel Cleary, Canadian ice hockey player ·
Josh Dallas, American actor ·
Katie Holmes, American actress ·
December 19 – Patrick Casey,
American screenwriter and actor ·
Geremi, Cameroon footballer ·
Jacqueline Saburido,
Venezuelan-American social activist ·
December 21 – Shaun Morgan, South African musician and
singer-songwriter ·
Edo Maajka, Bosnian rapper ·
Joanne Kelly, Canadian actress ·
Andra Davis, American football player ·
Jodie Marsh, British model ·
Víctor
Martínez, Venezuelan baseball player ·
Estella Warren, Canadian swimmer, model, and
actress ·
December 24 – Yıldıray
Baştürk, Turkish footballer ·
December 25 – Paula Seling, Romanian singer and radio DJ ·
December 26 – Kaoru Sugayama, Japanese volleyball player ·
December 28 – John Legend, American singer-songwriter,
pianist, and actor ·
December 29 – Alexis Amore, Peruvian actress, dancer, and
model ·
Tyrese Gibson, African-American actor and
singer ·
Inferno,
Polish musician ·
Yulia Barsukova, Russian rhythmic gymnast ·
Craig Wayne Boyd, American country music
singer Date unknown[edit] ·
Raghda Khateb, Syrian voice actress[15] Deaths[edit]
January[edit] ·
January 4 – Billy Gray,
American actor (b. 1904) ·
Wyatt Emory Cooper,
American screenwriter and author (b. 1927) ·
Sally Eilers, American actress (b. 1908) ·
January 6 – John D. MacArthur,
American philanthropist (b. 1897) ·
Hubert Humphrey, American politician, 38th Vice
President of the United States and Senator (b. 1911) ·
Joe McCarthy,
American baseball manager of the MLB Hall of Fame (b. 1887) ·
Bijon Bhattacharya,
Bengali actor (b. 1915) ·
Józef Smoleński,
Polish general (b. 1894) ·
Živko
Stojsavljević, Yugoslav painter (b. 1900) ·
Stefan Czmil, Soviet Eastern Catholic bishop and reverend
(b. 1914) ·
Herbert Sutcliffe,
English cricketer (b. 1894) ·
January 25 – Fred Ferris,
British actor (b. 1905) ·
Clarence Norman
Brunsdale, 24th Governor of
North Dakota (b. 1891) ·
Marguerite Canal, French conductor (b. 1890) ·
January 28 – Nadezhda Fedutenko,
Soviet red army officer (b. 1915) ·
January 29 – Adhemar Gonzaga, Brazilian actor,
screenwriter, producer and director (b. 1901) ·
January 30 – Marie-Louise Damien,
French actress (b. 1889) February[edit] ·
February 1 – Alexander Cañedo,
Mexican artist (b. 1902) ·
February 5 – Yoshihide Hayashi,
Japanese general (b. 1891) ·
Angela Greene, American actress (b. 1924) ·
Warren King,
American cartoonist (b. 1916) ·
Daniel Reed,
American actor, playwright and screenwriter (b. 1892) ·
February 10 – Redento Maria Gauci,
Maltese Carmelite bishop
(b. 1920) ·
February 17 – Artemiy Artsikhovsky,
Soviet archaeologist and historian (b. 1902) ·
February 18 – Maggie McNamara, American actress (b. 1928) ·
February 19 – Pankaj Mullick, Bengali composer and singer
(b. 1904) ·
February 28 – Philip Ahn, Korean-born American actor
(b. 1905) March[edit] ·
March 1 ·
Léon Azéma, French architect (b. 1888) ·
Kiyoshi Oka, Japanese mathematician
(b. 1901) ·
Paul Scott, English writer (b. 1920) ·
March 4 – Élie Bloncourt,
French politician (b. 1896) ·
March 6 – Taha El Sherif
Ben Amer, Libyan engineer and politician (b. 1936) ·
March 16 – Florencio Durán,
Chilean physician, lawyer and politician (b. 1893) ·
March 17 ·
Eddie Aikau, American lifeguard and surfer
(b. 1946) ·
Giacomo Violardo, Italian Roman Catholic cardinal (b. 1898) ·
March 19 – Gaston Julia, French mathematician (b. 1893) ·
March 21 – Cearbhall Ó Dálaigh (Carroll
Daly), Irish barrister, judge and politician, 5th President of Ireland (b. 1911) ·
March 24 ·
André Lallemand,
French astronomer (b. 1904) ·
Park Mok-wol, South Korean poet (b. 1916) ·
March 25 – Ego Brønnum-Jacobsen,
Danish actor (b. 1904) ·
March 29 – Eugène Schaus, Luxembourgish politician
(b. 1901) ·
March 30 – Sultan Hamid II (b. 1913) April[edit] ·
April 2 – Gloria Dawn,
Australian actress (b. 1929) ·
April 8 ·
Ford Frick, 3rd commissioner of Major League
Baseball (b. 1894) ·
Lon L. Fuller, American legal philosopher
(b. 1902) ·
April 13 – Wojciech
Łukaszewski, Polish composer (b. 1897) ·
April 16 ·
Thomas Cahill,
Australian Roman Catholic bishop
(b. 1913) ·
Lucius D. Clay, American military governor
of Germany after World War II (b. 1897) ·
Philibert Tsiranana,
Malagasy leader and politician, 1st President of
Madagascar (b. 1912) ·
April 18 ·
Alex Brinchmann, Norwegian physician and
pediatrician (b. 1888) ·
Katherine Schmidt,
American artist (b. 1899) ·
April 19 – Jack Titus, Australian footballer (b. 1908) ·
April 21 – Sandy Denny, British singer-songwriter
(b. 1947) May[edit] ·
May 8 – Duncan Grant, Scottish painter (b. 1885) ·
May 9 – Aldo Moro, Italian Christian Democratic
politician and statesman, 38th Prime Minister of
Italy (assassinated) (b. 1916) ·
May 15 – Robert Menzies, 12th Prime
Minister of Australia (b. 1894) ·
May 26 - Tamara Karsavina, Soviet ballerina (b. 1885) ·
May 27 – Jorge Icyaza,
Ecuadorean novelist (b. 1906) ·
May 30 – Giuseppe Di Cristina,
Italian gangster (b. 1923) ·
May 31 ·
József Bozsik, Hungarian Olympic Gold Medal
football player (b. 1925) ·
José Gonzalvo, Spanish footballer and
manager (b. 1920) June[edit] ·
June 2 – Santiago Bernabéu,
Spanish footballer, player and president of Real Madrid C.F. (b. 1906) ·
June 4 – Mark R. Shaw, American
temperance movement leader and Prohibition Party candidate
for vice-president in 1964, (b. 1889) ·
June 7 – Ronald
George Wreyford Norrish, British chemist, Nobel Prize laureate
(b. 1897) ·
June 16 ·
Tadaoto Kainosho, Japanese actor and
designer (b. 1894) ·
Felicia Montealegre,
Chilean actress (b. 1922) ·
June 17 – Robert Williams,
American actor (b. 1904) ·
June 18 – Peter Štefan, Czechoslovakian mathematician
(b. 1941) ·
June 19 – Maria Boniecka, Polish author (b. 1910) ·
June 20 – Mark Robson, Canadian film director
(b. 1913) ·
June 21 ·
Vladimir
Aleksi-Meskhishvili, Soviet architect (b. 1915) ·
Stephen Ferrando, Italian Roman catholic
bishop and missionary (b. 1895) ·
June 27 – Josette Day, French actress (b. 1914) ·
June 28 ·
Bob Crane, American actor (b. 1928) ·
Iuliu Hirțea, Romanian Eastern Catholic bishop and venerable
(b. 1914) July[edit] Prince
Rostislav Alexandrovich of Russia ·
July 1 – Kurt Student, Luftwaffe general and
commander of the German airborne forces during World War II. (b. 1890) ·
July 3 – Edouard Kutter,
Luxembourg photographer (b. 1887) ·
July 4 – Ladislav Boháč,
Czechoslovakian actor (b. 1907) ·
July 6 – Lucy Drake Marlow,
American artist (b. 1890) ·
July 7 – Francisco Mendes, Guinea-Bissau politician,
1st Prime
Minister of Guinea-Bissau (b. 1939) ·
July 8 – Aagot Nissen, Norwegian actress (b. 1882) ·
July 14 – Gaston Ragueneau, French athlete (b. 1881) ·
July 16 – Howard Estabrook, American actor (b. 1884) ·
July 17 – Susana Calandrelli,
Argentine writer (b. 1901) ·
July 24 ·
Jorge Juan
Crespo de la Serna, Mexican artist and historian (b. 1887) ·
Michele Riccardini,
Italian actress (b. 1910) ·
July 25 – Helen Corke, English writer (b. 1882) August[edit] ·
August 1 – W. E. Butler, British occultist (b. 1898) ·
August 6 ·
Pope Paul VI (b. 1897) ·
Edward Durell Stone,
American architect (b. 1902) ·
August 19 – Emilio Núñez
Portuondo, Cuban diplomat and politician, 13th Prime Minister of
Cuba (b. 1898) ·
August 22 – Jomo Kenyatta, Kenyan activist, politician
and statesman, 1st Prime Minister of
Kenya and 1st President of Kenya (b. 1894) ·
August 23 – Agustín Isunza,
Mexican actor (b. 1900) ·
August 24 – Louis Prima, Italian-born American singer
and actor (b. 1910) ·
Olivier Hussenot, French actor (b. 1913) ·
George E. Jonas, American philanthropist
(b. 1897) ·
Charles Boyer, French actor (b. 1899) ·
José Manuel Moreno,
Argentine football player (b. 1916) ·
Kofi Abrefa Busia,
Ghanese nationalist leader, 2nd Prime Minister of
Ghana (b. 1913) ·
Robert Shaw,
British actor (b. 1927) September[edit] ·
September 3 – Karin Molander, Swedish actress (b. 1906) ·
September 4 – Leonora Cohen, British suffragette and trade
unionist (b. 1873) ·
September 6 – Harry Wilson,
British actor (b. 1897) ·
September 7 – Keith Moon, English rock drummer (The Who) (b. 1946) ·
Maria Conesa, Spanish-born Mexican actress
(b. 1892) ·
Hugh MacDiarmid, Scottish poet (b. 1892) ·
Jack L. Warner, Canadian film producer
(b. 1892) ·
Mike Gazella, American baseball player
(b. 1895) ·
Valerian Gracias, Indian Roman Catholic archbishop and cardinal
(b. 1911) ·
Georgi Markov, Bulgarian playwright and
writer (b. 1929) ·
Ronnie Peterson, Swedish Formula One driver
(b. 1944) ·
September 12 – Frank Ferguson, American actor (b. 1899) ·
September 27 – Sergei Aslamazyan,
Soviet composer (b. 1897) ·
September 28 – Pope John Paul I (b. 1912) ·
Edgar Bergen, American actor and
ventriloquist (b. 1903) ·
Lavrentis Dianellos,
Greek actor (b. 1911) October[edit] Prince
Roman Petrovich of Russia ·
October 1 – Alfredo Obviar, Filipino Roman Catholic bishop and Servant of
God (b. 1889) ·
October 10 – Ralph Metcalfe, American Olympic athlete
(b. 1910) ·
October 19 – Gig Young, American actor (b. 1913) ·
October 23 – Prince
Roman Petrovich of Russia (b. 1896) ·
Francisco Luis
Bernárdez, Argentine poet (b. 1900) ·
Gloria Castillo, American actress (b. 1933) ·
Rúaidhrí de Valera,
Irish archaeologists (b. 1916) ·
Geoffrey Unsworth,
British cinematographer (b. 1914) ·
October 29 – Nicolas Hayer, French cinematographer
(b. 1898) November[edit] ·
November 4 – Arshad al-Umari, 15th Prime Minister of
Iraq (b. 1888) ·
November 5 – Ionel Gherea, Romanian philosopher (b. 1895) ·
November 10 – Theo Lingen, German actor (b. 1903) ·
November 15 – Margaret Mead, American anthropologist
(b. 1901) ·
Jim Jones, American cult leader (b. 1931) ·
Leo Ryan, American politician (b. 1925) ·
Robert Alan Aurthur,
American screenwriter (b. 1922) ·
Giorgio de Chirico,
Italian painter (b. 1888) ·
November 22 – Milo
Petrović-Njegoš, Prince of Montenegro (b. 1889) ·
November 24 - Warren Weaver, American scientist and
mathematician (b. 1894) ·
November 25 – Carmela Carabelli,
Italian spiritual daughter and mystic (b. 1910) ·
Harvey Milk, American politician and
activist (b. 1930) ·
George Moscone, Mayor of San Francisco (b. 1929) December[edit] ·
December 1 – David Nixon,
British magician (b. 1919) ·
December 2 – Edwin Dickinson, American painter (b. 1891) ·
December 3 – Ljubinka Bobić,
Yugoslav actress (b. 1897) ·
Ferruccio Ferrazzi,
Italian painter and sculptor (b. 1891) ·
Golda Meir, Israeli teacher, politician and
stateswoman, 4th Prime Minister
of Israel (b. 1898) ·
Chris Bell,
American guitarist, singer and songwriter (b. 1951) ·
Houari Boumédiènne,
2nd President of Algeria (b. 1932) ·
December 30 – Merekotia Amohau, New Zealand composer
(b. 1898) Date unknown[edit] ·
I. K. Taimni, Indian chemist (b. 1898) Nobel Prizes[edit] ·
Physics – Pyotr
Leonidovich Kapitsa, Arno Allan Penzias, Robert Woodrow
Wilson ·
Chemistry – Peter D. Mitchell ·
Medicine – Werner Arber, Daniel Nathans, Hamilton O. Smith ·
Literature – Isaac Bashevis
Singer ·
Peace – Mohamed Anwar Al-Sadat and Menachem Begin ·
Economics – Herbert A. Simon References |
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TR Welling |
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