Zie: Wikipedia.
Gebeurtenissen:
Nederland, België, Luxemburg, Duitsland, Finland, Frankrijk, Ierland, Italië, Oostenrijk,
Portugal en Spanje slagen voor hun EMU-examen. Griekenland zit in de wachtkamer.
Verenigd Koninkrijk, Denemarken en Zweden doen niet mee.
Het bedrijf Google wordt opgericht door Larry Page en Sergey Brin.
De spanning tussen India en Pakistan, die elkaar de deelstaat Kashmir betwisten, loopt
verder op doordat beide landen kernproeven uitvoeren.
28 Maart - The Spice Girls, populairste meidengroep aller tijden, treedt op in de Gelredome
in Arnhem.
De voormalige Chileense president Augusto Pinochet treedt af als legerleider.
10 April - Het Goede Vrijdag-akkoord voor het oplossen van de problemen in
Noord-Ierland wordt getekend.
21 Mei - President Soeharto van Indonesië treedt af.
7 Juni - Bij het stadje Jasper, Texas, Verenigde Staten wordt de zwarte James Byrd jr. door
drie blanken met een ketting aan hun auto geknoopt en over drie mijl meegesleept en daardoor
vermoord. De daders, sympathisanten van de Aryan Brotherhood en de Ku Klux Clan,
worden later veroordeeld tot twee maal de doodstraf en een maal levenslang.
16 Juni - Het Woordenboek der Nederlandsche Taal (WNT) is klaar. Het grootste
woordenboek ter wereld beschrijft tussen de 350.000 en 400.000 woorden.
30 Juli - Frits Bolkestein draagt, na de afronding van de kabinetsformatie, de leiding van
de VVD-fractie over aan Hans Dijkstal.
7 Augustus - Bomaanslagen op de Amerikaanse ambassades in Nairobi en Dar es Salaam.
224 mensen komen om, meer dan 4500 raken gewond.
25 September - De orkaan Georges zaait dood en verderf in Midden-Amerika. Honderden
mensen komen om het leven, de schade wordt geschat op 1,5 miljard gulden.
Na 16 jaar regering van Helmut Kohl wint de SPD de verkiezingen in Duitsland. Gerhard
Schröder wordt de nieuwe premier.
29 Oktober - Door overvloedige regenval in het Noorden van Nederland stijgt het water in
een aantal vaarten en kanalen zodanig dat gevreesd wordt voor overstromingen. Om de nood
te keren wordt besloten rond 16.00 uur de dijk van het A.G. Wildervanckkanaal en van het
Meedenerdiep door te steken waardoor de Tussenklappenpolder onder water loopt.
Het Wye-akkoord voor een gedeeltelijke terugtrekking van het Israëlische leger uit de
Westelijke Jordaanoever wordt gesloten.
Voormalig Chileens dictator Augusto Pinochet wordt gearresteerd in Londen.
November - De eerste delen van het internationaal ruimtestation worden gelanceerd.
December - Het Amerikaanse Huis van Afgevaardigden stemt voor impeachment van
president Bill Clinton.

Geboren:
26 April - Samuël Maxim van den Houten.
9 Oktober - Lisa-Marie Werner.

Overleden:
1 Januari - Alfred Lagarde (49), Nederlands DJ.
5 Januari - Sonny Bono (62), Amerikaans zanger (Sonny en Cher).
13 Januari - Piet Vroon (58), Nederlands psycholoog.
21 Januari - Cornelia Johanna van der Vaate.
30 Januari - Jan van den Houten.
7 Februari - Falco (Hans Hölzel) (40), Oostenrijks zanger.
26 Februari - Jaap ter Haar (75), Nederlands schrijver (Saskia en Jeroen).
27 Februari - Annemarie Grewel (62), Nederlands politicus.
22 Maart - Anna Langstraten.
2 April - Rob Pilatus (32), gezicht van Milli Vanilli.
6 April - Tammy Wynette (55), Amerikaans countryzangeres.
17 April - Harry McGurk, Schots psycholoog.
17 April - Linda McCartney - Eastman (56), Brits popfotografe en muzikante, vrouw
van Paul McCartney.
23 April - Konstantinos Karamanlis, Grieks staatsman.
4 Mei - Tannetje van Vessem.
14 Mei - Frank Sinatra (82), Amerikaanse zanger.
14 Juni - Arend Arie (Arie) Dammers.
15 Juni - Anton van Wilderode, Belgisch dichter.
22 Juli - Alan Shepard (74), eerste Amerikaan in de ruimte.
11 Augustus - Leuntje van den Houten.
22 September - Florence Griffith-Joyner (Flo Jo) (38), Amerikaans atlete.
10 Oktober - Marianne van den Houten.
18 Oktober - Jan Cornelis Krello.
23 Oktober - Mary Servaes (79), alias Zangeres Zonder Naam, vertolkster van het
Nederlandstalige levenslied.
5 November - Bob Kane (83), Amerikaans striptekenaar Batman.
18 November - Kea Bouwman (94), Nederlands tennisster.
25 December - Rita Corita (81), Nederlands zangeres.


Naar mijn Homepage.
1998
See: Wikipedia.
Events:
January 1998 - A massive ice storm, caused by El Niño, strikes New England, southern
Ontario and Quebec, resulting in widespread power failures, severe damage to forests,
and a number of deaths.
January 1 - Smoking is banned in all California bars and restaurants.
January 2 - Russia begins to circulate new rubles to stem inflation and promote confidence.
January 2 - Gunman shoots Antario Teodoro Filho, Brazilian politician and radio presenter,
in a middle of his broadcast.
January 6 - The Lunar Prospector spacecraft is launched into orbit around the Moon and
later found evidence for frozen water on the moon's surface.
January 8 - Ramzi Yousef is sentenced to life in prison for planning the World Trade
Center bombing.
January 8 - Cosmologists announce that the expansion rate of the universe is increasing.
January 12 - 19 European nations agree to forbid human cloning.
January 14 - Researchers in Dallas, Texas present findings about an enzyme that slows
aging and cell death (apoptosis).
January 15 - The stalker of Howard Stern, Lance Carvin, is sentenced to 2 1/2 years for
threatening to kill Stern and his family.
January 16 - NASA announces that John Glenn will return to space when Space Shuttle
Discovery blasts off in October 1998.
January 17 - Paula Jones accuses President Bill Clinton of sexual harassment.
January 22 - Suspected "Unabomber" Theodore Kaczynski pleads guilty and accepts a
sentence of life without the possibility of parole.
January 26 - Lewinsky scandal: On American television, Bill Clinton denies he had "sexual
relations" with former White House intern Monica Lewinsky.
January 26 - Compaq buys Digital Equipment Corporation.
January 27 - American First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton appears on the Today show
calling the attacks against her husband were part of a "vast right-wing conspiracy."
January 28 - Ford Motor Company announces the buyout of Volvo Cars for $6.45 billion.
January 28 - Gunmen hold at least 400 children and teachers hostage for several hours at
an elementary school in Manila, Philippines.
January 29 - In Birmingham, Alabama a bomb explodes at an abortion clinic killing one and
severely wounding another. Serial bomber Eric Rudolph is suspected as the culprit.
February - Iraq disarmament crisis: The United States Senate passes resolution 71, which
urged President Bill Clinton to "take all necessary and appropriate actions to respond to
the threat posed by Iraq's refusal to end it's weapons of mass destruction programs."
February 1998 - Roger Nicholas Angleton committed suicide in a prison cell in Houston,
Texas by cutting himself with razor blades. He admitted to murdering socialite Doris
Angleton in her River Oaks home in his suicide note.
February 3 - A United States Military pilot causes the death of 20 skiers in Italy riding on
a lift suspended by a cable snapped by the low-flying plane. See Cavalese cable-car disaster.
February 3 - Karla Faye Tucker is executed in Texas becoming the first woman executed
in the United States since 1984.
February 4 - An earthquake measuring 6.1 on the Richter Scale in northeast Afghanistan
kills more than 5,000.
February 6 - Washington National Airport is renamed Ronald Reagan Washington
National Airport.
February 6 - Crown Prince Abdullah becomes the ruler of Jordan by decree of his
father, King Hussein.
February 10 - A college dropout becomes the first person to be convicted of a hate
crime committed in cyberspace.
February 10 - Voters in Maine repeal a gay rights law passed in 1997 becoming the
first U.S. state to abandon such a law.
February 12 - The presidential line-item veto is declared unconstitutional by a
United States federal judge.
February 14 - Authorities in the United States announce that Eric Rudolph is a suspect
in an Alabama abortion clinic bombing.
February 18 - Two white separatists were arrested in Nevada and accused of plotting
a biological attack on New York City subways.
February 19 - 66-day blackout begins in Auckland, New Zealand.
February 20 - Iraq disarmament crisis: Iraqi President Saddam Hussein negotiates a
deal with U.N. secretary-general Kofi Annan, allowing weapons inspectors to return
to Baghdad, preventing military action by the U.S. and Britain.
February 23 - Tornadoes in central Florida destroy or damage 2,600 structures and
kill 42 (see Florida El Niño Outbreak).
February 23 - Osama bin Laden publishes fatwa declaring jihad against all Jews
and Crusaders.
February 24 - Hustler publisher Larry Flynt is acquitted of charges of defamation
of Jerry Falwell.
February 28 - Serbian police begin to wipe out so-called "terrorist gangs" in Kosovo.
March 1 - Attack Submarine USS-Sea Devil (now ex-Sea Devil (SSN-664)) starts to
be deactivated.
March 2 - Data sent from the Galileo probe indicates that Jupiter's moon Europa has a
liquid ocean under a thick crust of ice.
March 4 - Gay rights: The Supreme Court of the United States rules that federal laws
banning on-the-job sexual harassment also apply when both parties are the same sex.
March 5 - NASA announced that that the Clementine probe orbiting the Moon had found
enough water in polar craters to support a human colony and rocket fueling station.
March 5 - NASA announces the choice of United States Air Force Lt. Col. Eileen Collins
as commander of a future Space Shuttle Columbia mission to launch an X-ray
telescope making Collins the first woman commander of a space shuttle mission.
March 6 - Closure of the South Crofty tin mine.
March 10 - American troops stationed in the Persian Gulf begin to receive the first
vaccinations against anthrax.
March 11 - Danish parliamentary election held, unexpectedly returning Prime Minister
Poul Nyrup Rasmussen to power.
March 14 - An earthquake measuring 6.9 on the Richter scale hits southeastern Iran.
March 23 - At the Academy Awards ceremony Titanic wins 11 Oscars.
March 24 - In Jonesboro, Arkansas, two young boys (aged 11 and 13 years) fire upon
students at Westside Middle School while hidden in woodlands near the school.
Four students and one teacher are killed and 10 injured.
March 27 - The FDA approves Viagra for use as a treatment for male impotence,
becoming the first pill to be approved to treat this condition in the United States.
April 5 - In Japan, the Akashi-Kaikyo Bridge linking Shikoku with Honshu and costing
cost about US$3.8 billion, opens to traffic, becoming the largest suspension bridge
in the world.
April 6 - Pakistan tests medium-range missiles capable of hitting India.
April 7 - Citicorp and Travelers Group announce plans to merge creating the largest
financial-services conglomerate in the world, Citigroup.
April 8 - Iraq disarmament crisis: UNSCOM reports to the UN Security Council that
Iraq's declaration on its biological weapons program is incomplete and inadequate.
April 10 - Good Friday: 18 hours after the end of talks deadline the Belfast Agreement is
signed between the Irish and British governments and most Northern Ireland political parties.
April 16 - A massive tornado occurred in Nashville, Tennessee. It is the first tornado
in 20 years to make a direct hit on a major city.
April 25 - A waste reservoir at Los Frailes mine in Andalusia, Spain, ruptures, discharging
heavy metal waste into the Guadiamar River. The pollution threatens the sensitive
ecosystem and endangered species of Doñana National Park, Spain's largest nature
reserve, but is diverted into the Guadalquivir River. Up to 100 km² of farmland are
ruined by the spill.
May 7 - Apple Computer unveils the iMac.
May 7 - Mercedes-Benz buys Chrysler for US$40 billion and forms DaimlerChrysler in
the largest industrial merger in history.
May 11 - Nuclear testing: In the Rajasthan Desert, India conducts its second series of
underground nuclear tests (the first were in 1974) and inflaming its rival neighbor Pakistan
(who already has nuclear weapons).
May 13 - Following India's second round of nuclear tests the United States and
Japan impose economic sanctions on the nation.
May 15 - Iraq disarmament crisis: UNSCOM learns that an Iraqi delegation has travelled to
Bucharest to meet with scientists who can provide the country with missile guidance systems.
May 18 - Microsoft antitrust case: The United States Department of Justice and 20 U.S.
states file an antitrust case against Microsoft.
May 21 - School shooting: At Thurston High School in Springfield, Oregon, Kipland Kinkel
(who was suspended for bringing a gun to school) shoots a semi-automatic rifle into a
room filled with students killing 2 wounding 25 others after killing his parents at home.
May 21 - Reproductive rights: In Miami, Florida, five abortion clinics are hit by
a butyric acid attacker.
May 21 - Suharto resigns, after 32 years as Indonesian President and 7th consecutive
re-election by the Indonesian Parliament (MPR). Suharto's hand-picked Vice President,
B. J. Habibie, became Indonesia's third president..
May 21 to September 30 - Expo '98 is held in Lisbon, Portugal, with the title "Oceans,
an Heritage for the Future". UNESCO had previously declared 1998 to be the
International Year of the Oceans due to the Expo. 12 million people attend the world fair.
May 22 - Lewinsky scandal: A federal judge rules that United States Secret Service agents
can be compelled to testify before a grand jury concerning the scandal.
May 27 - Oklahoma City bombing: Michael Fortier is sentenced to 12 years in prison
and fined $200,000 for failing to warn authorities about the terrorist plot.
May 28 - Nuclear testing: Pakistan responds to a series of Indian nuclear tests with six of
its own prompting the United States, Japan and other nations to impose economic sanctions.
May 30 - A 6.6 magnitude earthquake hits northern Afghanistan killing up to 5,000.
June 2 - The CIH virus is discovered in Taiwan.
June 2 - Voters in California approved California Proposition 227, abolishing that
state's bilingual education program.
June 3 - Eschede train disaster: an ICE high speed train derails, causing 101 deaths.
June 4 - Terry Nichols is sentenced to life in prison for his role in the Oklahoma City bombing.
July 5 - Japan launches a probe to Mars, and thus joins the United States and Russia
as a space exploring nation.
June 5 - A strike begins at the General Motors parts factory in Flint, Michigan that quickly
spreads to five other assembly plants (the strike lasted seven weeks).
June 8 - Charlton Heston assumes the presidency of the National Rifle Association.
June 12 - A jury in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, convicts 17-year-old Luke Woodham of
killing two students and wounding seven others at Pearl High School.
June 25 - In Clinton v. City of New York, the United States Supreme Court
decides that the Line Item Veto Act of 1996 is unconstitutional.
July 7 - US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania are bombed - 190 dead.
July 10 - The DNA-identified remains of United States Air Force 1st Lt. Michael Joseph
Blassie arrive home to his family in St. Louis, Missouri after being in the Tomb of the
Unknowns since 1984.
July 10 - Catholic priests' sex abuse scandal: The Diocese of Dallas agrees to pay $23.4
million to nine former altar boys who claimed they were sexually abused by former
priest Rudolph Kos.
July 17 - In St. Petersburg, Nicholas II of Russia and his family are buried in St. Catherine
Chapel 80 years after he and his family were killed by Bolsheviks.
July 17 - A tsunami triggered by an undersea earthquake destroys 10 villages in Papua
New Guinea killing an estimated 1,500, leaving 2,000 more unaccounted for and
thousands more homeless.
July 17 - Biologists report in the journal Science how they sequenced the genome
of the bacterium that causes syphilis, Treponema pallidum.
July 24 - Russel Eugene Weston Jr. bursts into the United States Capitol and opens
fire killing two police officers. He is later ruled to be incompetent to stand trial.
July 25 - The United States Navy commissions the aircraft carrier USS Harry S.
Truman and puts her into service.
July 25 - Wakayama Arsenic poison case - 63 poisoned and 4 dead by arsenic in a festival
in the town in Wakayama prefecture in Japan - Masumi Hayashi is arrested for murder.
July 28 - Monica Lewinsky scandal: Ex-White House intern, Monica Lewinsky receives
transactional immunity in exchange for her grand jury testimony concerning her relationship
with US President Bill Clinton.
August 5 - Iraq disarmament crisis: Iraq officially suspends all cooperation with UNSCOM teams.
August 7 - 1998 U.S. embassy bombings: Bombing of the United States embassies in
ar es Salaam, Tanzania, and Nairobi, Kenya kills 224 people and injures over 4,500.
August 15 - The Real IRA denoate a car bomb in Omagh, Northern Ireland, killing 29
and injuring over 200 - the greatest loss of life in a single incident of The Troubles.
August 17 - Monica Lewinsky scandal: US President Bill Clinton admits in taped
testimony that he had an "improper physical relationship" with White House intern
Monica Lewinsky. On the same day he admits before the nation that he "misled people"
about his relationship.
August 20 - The Supreme Court of Canada states Quebec can not legally secede from
Canada without the federal government's approval.
August 20 - 1998 U.S. embassy bombings: The United States military launches cruise
missile attacks against alleged al-Quaida camps in Afghanistan and a suspected
chemical plant in Sudan in retaliation for the August 7 bombings of American embassies
in Kenya and Tanzania. The al-Shifa pharmaceutical factory in Khartoum is
destroyed in the attack.
August 26 - Iraq disarmament crisis: Scott Ritter resigns from UNSCOM, sharply
criticized the Clinton administration and the U.N. Security Council for not being
vigorous enough about insisting that Iraq's weapons of mass destruction be destroyed.
Ritter told reporters that "Iraq is not disarming," "Iraq retains the capability to launch
a chemical strike."
August 31 - North Korea reportedly launches Kwangmyongsong, their first satellite.
Although North Korea reports that it reached stable orbit, NORAD was never able to
confirm this assertion.
September 2 - In Canada, pilots for Air Canada launch the first strike in company's history.
September 2 - A McDonnell Douglas MD-11 airliner carrying Swissair flight 111 crashes
near Peggy's Cove, Nova Scotia after taking off from New York City en-route to Geneva.
All 229 people on board are killed.
September 2 - A United Nations court finds Jean-Paul Akayesu, the former mayor of a
small town in Rwanda, guilty of nine counts of genocide, marking the first time that
the 1948 law banning genocide is enforced.
September 8 - St. Louis Cardinals first baseman Mark McGwire breaks baseball's
single season homerun record, formerly held by Roger Maris. McGwire hits #62
at Busch Stadium in the fourth inning off of Chicago Cubs pitcher Steve Trachsel.
September 29 - Iraq disarmament crisis: The United States Congress passes the
"Iraq Liberation Act", which states that the U.S. wants to remove Saddam Hussein from
power and replace the government with a democratic institution.
October 4 - Leafie Mason is murdered in her Hughes Spring, Texas house by Angel
Maturino Resendiz. She was his second victim in his second incident.
October 6 - Matthew Shepard, a Wyoming college student, is found tied to a fence,
the victim of a gay-bashing. He dies on Monday, October 12, becoming a symbol of
victims of gay-bashing and sparking public reflection on homophobia.
October 7 - Oslo Fornebu Airport closes.
October 7 - United States Congress passes, the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension
Act, which gives copyright holders 20 more years of copyright privilege on work
which they control the copyright. This effectively freezes the public domain to works
created before 1923 in the United States.
October 8 - Oslo Airport Gardermoen opens.
October 8 - Japan-Republic of Korea Joint Declaration A New Japan-Republic of Korea
Partnership towards the Twenty-first Century.
October 12 - United States Congress passes Digital Millennium Copyright Act.
October 14 - Eric Robert Rudolph is charged with 6 bombings including the 1996
Olympic bombing in Atlanta, Georgia.
October 16 - British police place General Augusto Pinochet into house arrest during
his medical treatment in Britain.
October 28 - An Air China jetliner is hijacked by disgruntled pilot Yuan Bin and flown
to Taiwan. After landing the plane safely, Yuan Bin was arrested.
October 29 - Apartheid: In South Africa, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission
presents its report, which condemns both sides for committing atrocities.
October 29 - Space Shuttle Discovery blasts-off with 77-year old John Glenn on board,
making him the oldest person to go into space. He became the first American to orbit
Earth on Tuesday, February 20, 1962.
October 29 - While en route from Adana to Ankara, a Turkish Airlines flight with a
crew of 6 and 33 passengers is hijacked by a Kurdish militant who orders the pilot to
fly to Switzerland. The plane instead lands in Ankara after the pilot tricked the hijacking
into thinking that he was landing in the Bulgarian capital of Sofia to refuel.
October 29 - In Freehold, New Jersey, Melissa Drexler pleads guilty to aggravated
manslaughter for killing her baby moments after delivering him in the bathroom at her
senior prom, and is sentenced to 15 years imprisonment.
October 29 - In Göteborg, Sweden two arsonists burn down a disco of a local
Macedonian Society - 63 dead, over 200 injured, most of them children of refugees.
October 31 - Iraq disarmament crisis begins: Iraq announces it would no longer
cooperate with United Nations weapons inspectors.
November 1 - The European Court of Human Rights is instituted.
November 3 - Former professional wrestler, Jesse Ventura is elected Governor of Minnesota.
November 5 - Lewinsky scandal: As part of the impeachment inquiry, House Judiciary
Committee chairman Henry Hyde sends a list of 81 questions to US President Bill Clinton.
November 5 - The journal Nature publishes a genetic study showing compelling evidence
that Thomas Jefferson fathered his slave Sally Hemings' son Eston Hemings Jefferson.
November 9 - In the largest civil settlement in United States history, a federal judge
approves a US$1.03 billion settlement requiring dozens of brokerage houses
(including Merrill Lynch, Goldman Sachs, and Salomon Smith Barney) to pay investors
who claim they were cheated in a wide-spread price-fixing scheme on the NASDAQ.
November 12 - Daimler-Benz completes a merger with Chrysler to form Daimler-Chrysler.
November 13-14 - Iraq disarmament crisis: U.S. President Clinton orders airstrikes on
Iraq. Clinton then calls it off at the last minute when Iraq promises once again to
"unconditionally" cooperate with UNSCOM.
November 18 - Iraq disarmament crisis: UNSCOM inspectors return to Iraq.
November 19 - Lewinsky scandal: The United State House of Representatives' Judiciary
Committee begins impeachment hearings against US President Bill Clinton.
November 20 - A court in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan declares accused terrorist
Osama bin Laden "a man without a sin" in regards to the 1998 U.S. embassy bombings
in Kenya and Tanzania.
November 23-26 - Iraq disarmament crisis: According to UNSCOM, Iraq once again
ends cooperation with the U.N. inspectors, alternately intimidating and withholding
information from them.
November 24 - America Online announces it will acquire Netscape Communications in
a stock-for-stock transaction worth US$4.2 billion.
November 26 - Tony Blair becomes the first Prime Minister of the United Kingdom to
address the Republic of Ireland's parliament.
November 26 - Japan-China Joint Declaration On Building a Partnership of Friendship
and Cooperation for Peace and Development.
November 30 - Deutsche Bank announces a US$10 billion deal to buy Bankers Trust,
thus creating the largest financial institution in the world.
December 1 - Exxon announces a US$73.7 billion deal to buy Mobil, thus creating
Exxon-Mobil, the largest company on the planet.
December 11 - Iraq disarmament crisis: Iraq announces that U.N. weapons inspections
will no longer take place on Friday, the Muslim day of rest. Iraq also refuses to provide
test data from the production of missiles and engines.
December 6 - Hugo Chávez Frías, Venezuelan military and politician, is elected
President of Venezuela.
December 16-19 - Iraq disarmament crisis: U.S. President Clinton orders American and
British airstrikes on Iraq. UNSCOM withdraws all weapons inspectors from Iraq.
December 17 - Claudia Benton, of West University Place, Texas, is murdered in her house
by Angel Maturino Resendiz, She is his third victim in his third incident.
December 19 - Iraq disarmament crisis: Iraqi vice-president Taha Yassin Ramadan
announces that Iraq will no longer cooperate and declares that UNSCOM's
"mission is over."
December 21 - Iraq disarmament crisis: UN Security Council members France, Germany
and Russia call for sanctions to end against Iraq. The three Security Council members
also call for UNSCOM to either be disbanded or for its role to be recast. The U.S.
says it will veto any such proposal.
December 26 - Iraq disarmament crisis: Iraq announced its intention to fire upon US and
British warplanes that patrol the northern and southern "no-fly zones".
December 29 - Leaders of the Khmer Rouge apologize for the genocide in Cambodia
that claimed over 1 million in the 1970s.

Unknown Dates:
The third World Parliament of Religions is held in Cape Town.

Year in topic:
1998 in film:
Shakespeare in Love.
Saving Private Ryan starring Tom Hanks.
1998 in literature:
Building Western Civilization: From the Advent of Writing to the Age of Steam - Alan I. Marcus
1998 in sports:
September 8 - At Busch Stadium in St. Louis, Missouri, Mark McGwire breaks Roger
Maris' 1961 record 61 home runs hit in a single season.
1998 in television:
Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? premieres in the U.K.. A year later, Regis Philbin would
host an American version.
The Price is Right, airs his 5,000th episode on CBS.

Born:
April 26 - Samuël Maxim van den Houten.
October 9 - Lisa-Marie Werner.

Deaths:
January 1 - Helen Wills Moody, tennis player, first women's champion at Wimbledon.
January 4 - Mae Questel, actress.
January 5 - Sonny Bono, singer, actor, United States Representative.
January 8 - Michael Tippett, composer.
January 15 - Junior Wells, musician.
January 19 - Carl Perkins, guitarist.
January 21 - Cornelia Johanna van der Vaate.
January 21 - Jack Lord, actor.
January 30 - Jan van den Houten.
February - Roger Nicholas Angleton, admitted to murdering Doris Angleton on his
suicide note.
February 6 - Carl Wilson, musician ("The Beach Boys").
February 6 - Falco, singer.
February 7 - Lawrence Sanders, author.
February 8 - Halldór Laxness, author.
February 8 - Julian Simon, economist, author.
February 18 - Harry Caray, TV and radio broadcaster for three Major League
Baseball teams (b. 1917).
February 22 - Anna Langstraten
February 24 - Henny Youngman, comedian (b. 1906).
February 27 - J.T. Walsh, actor.
March 8 - Ray Nitschke, American football star.
March 10 - Lloyd Bridges, actor.
March 12 - Beatrice Wood, artist/ceramist.
March 13 - Bill Reid, Canadian artist.
March 13 - Risen Star, race horse (b. 1985).
March 15 - Benjamin Spock, pediatrician, writer, Olympics gold medalist.
March 31 - Bella Abzug, American politician.
April 6 - Tammy Wynette, country musician.
April 15 - Pol Pot, Cambodian dictator.
April 23 - Constantine Caramanlis, Greek politician.
May 4 - Tannetje van Vessem.
May 9 - Alice Faye, actress.
May 14 - Frank Sinatra, singer, actor.
May 15 - Earl Manigault, basketball player.
May 19 - Uno Sosuke, Japanese prime minister.
May 28 - Phil Hartman, Canadian graphic artist, writer, actor and comedian.
May 29 - Barry M. Goldwater, Arizona Senator.
June 10 - Hammond Innes, 83, English adventure author.
June 11 - Catherine Cookson, author.
June 14 - Arend Arie (Arie) Dammers.
July 3 - Danielle Bunten Berry, a.k.a. Dan Bunten, software developer.
August 3 - Alfred Schnittke, Russian classical composer.
August 4 - Yuri Artyukhin, cosmonaut.
August 11 - Leuntje van den Houten.
August 24 - E.G. Marshall, American actor (b. 1910).
August 26 - Frederick Reines, physicist (1995 Nobel Prize).
September 6 - Akira Kurosawa, Japanese film director.
September 21 - Florence "Flo-Jo" Griffith-Joyner track and field sprinter (b. 1959).
September 30 - Dan Quisenberry, baseball pitcher (b. 1953).
October 2 - Olivier Gendebien, Belgian race car driver.
October 6 - Mark Belanger, former major league baseball player, died of lung cancer.
October 10 - Marianne van den Houten.
October 18 - Jan Cornelis Krello.
November 10 - Hal Newhouser, Baseball Hall of Famer (b. 1921).
December 14 - Annette Strauss, philanthropist, former mayor of Dallas, Texas.
December 17 - Claudia Benton, Child Psychologist.
December 18 - Lev Demin, cosmonaut.
December 20 - Irene Hervey, actress (b. 1910).
December - Brian Stonehouse, painter, SOE agent in WW II.

Unknown dates:
Zhang Chongren, Chinese artist.


To my Homepage.
1998

English version

Nederlandse versie