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1998 - Events

1998 - Events: Encyclopedia II - 1998 - Events

1998 - January. 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, during a broadcast.< ...

See also:

1998, 1998 - Events, 1998 - January, 1998 - February, 1998 - March, 1998 - April, 1998 - May, 1998 - June, 1998 - July, 1998 - August, 1998 - September, 1998 - October, 1998 - November, 1998 - December, 1998 - Unknown Dates, 1998 - Births, 1998 - Deaths, 1998 - January-February, 1998 - March-July, 1998 - August-December, 1998 - Unknown date, 1998 - Nobel Prizes, 1998 - Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel, 1998 - Fields Medalists, 1998 - Templeton Prize

1998, 1998 - April, 1998 - August, 1998 - August-December, 1998 - Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel, 1998 - Births, 1998 - Deaths, 1998 - December, 1998 - Events, 1998 - February, 1998 - Fields Medalists, 1998 - January, 1998 - January-February, 1998 - July, 1998 - June, 1998 - March, 1998 - March-July, 1998 - May, 1998 - Nobel Prizes, 1998 - November, 1998 - October, 1998 - September, 1998 - Templeton Prize, 1998 - Unknown Dates, 1998 - Unknown date

1998: Encyclopedia II - 1998 - Events



1998 - Events

1998 - January

  • 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, during a broadcast.
  • January 4 - Wilaya of Relizane massacres of 4 January 1998 in Algeria; over 170 killed in three remote villages.
  • January 6 - The Lunar Prospector spacecraft is launched into orbit around the Moon and later found evidence for frozen water in soil in permanently shadowed craters near the Moon's poles.
  • 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 11 - Sidi-Hamed massacre in Algeria; over 100 people killed.
  • January 12 - 19 European nations agree to forbid human cloning.
  • January 13 - A tourist visiting the White House sprays paint on to marble busts of Giuseppe Ceracchi
  • 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 20 - Nepalese police intercepts a shipment of 272 human skulls in Kathmandu
  • 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 26 - Monkeys attack people in Ito, Japan
  • January 27 - American First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton appears on the Today show calling the attacks against her husband 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.

1998 - February

  • 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 its weapons of mass destruction programs."
  • February 3 - Cavalese cable-car disaster: a United States Military pilot causes the death of 20 people near Trento, Italy when his low-flying plane severs the cable of a cable-car.
  • 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 - The French prefect Claude Erignac is assassinated in the streets of Ajaccio (Corse) by a commando of Corsican insurgents, among them Yvan Colonna (trial June 2).
  • February 7 - 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 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 15 - Dale Earnhardt wins the Daytona 500 in his 20th try after many unsucsessful attempts.
  • February 16 - China Airlines Flight 676 crashed into a residential area near by Chiang Kai-shek International Airport, killing 202 people, included all 196 on board and six on the ground.
  • 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 19 - Larry Wayne Harris of the Aryan Nations and William Leavitt are arrested in Henderson, New York for possession of military grade anthrax
  • 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 22 - Collapse of one third of the Tower block "Palace II" in Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
  • 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 24 - A man tries to hijack Turkish Airlines passenger plane claiming that he has a bomb in his teddy bear. Passengers disapprove and apprehend him
  • February 28 - Serbian police begin to wipe out so-called "terrorist gangs" in Kosovo.

1998 - March

  • 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 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 6 - The Imperial Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan is fined for burning a cross in his garden and infringing air regulations in California
  • 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 26 - Oued Bouaicha massacre in Algeria; 52 people killed with axes and knives, 32 of them babies under the age of 2.
  • 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.

1998 - April

  • April 1 - Ukrainian serial killer Anatoly Onoprienko is sentenced to death for 52 murders
  • 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, with the notable exception of the Democratic Unionist Party.
  • April 16 - A massive tornado occurred in Nashville, Tennessee. It is the first tornado in 11 years to make a direct hit on a major city. (see Nashville Tornado of 1998)
  • 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. [1]

1998 - May

  • May 2 - Japanese rock star hide (Hideto Matsumoto) mysteriously dies of asphyxiation.
  • May 7 - Apple Computer unveils the iMac.
  • May 9 - Dana International, a transexual singer from Israel, wins the 1998 Eurovision Song Contest in Birmingham,UK.
  • 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 14 - The popular American sitcom Seinfeld airs its final episode.
  • 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 - United States v. Microsoft: 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: In response to a series of Indian nuclear tests, Pakistan explodes six nuclear devices of its own in the Chaghai hills of Baluchistan, prompting the United States, Japan and other nations to impose economic sanctions.
  • May 28 - Wife of US comedian Phil Hartman kills him and commits suicide afterwards
  • May 30 - Nuclear testing: Pakistan conducts two more nuclear explosions following its first test.
  • May 30 - A 6.6 magnitude earthquake hits northern Afghanistan killing up to 5,000.
  • May 31 - Geri Halliwell, better known as "Ginger Spice", announced her departure from the biggest selling girl group of all time, the Spice Girls

1998 - June

  • 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
  • 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 8 - President Sani Abacha of Nigeria dies of apparent heart failure
  • 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 [2]
  • June 12 - 13-year old Christina Marie Williams was kidnapped in Seaside, California while taking her dog for a walk.
  • June 14 - The Chicago Bulls win their sixth NBA title in 8 years when they beat the Utah Jazz, 87-86 in Game Six. This is also Michael Jordan's last game as a Bull.
  • June 16 - The Detroit Red Wings sweep the Washington Capitals in 4 games in the 1998 Stanley Cup Finals.
  • 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.

1998 - July

  • July 5 - Japan launches a probe to Mars, and joins the United States and Russia as a space-exploring nation
  • July 6 - The new Hong Kong International Airport at Chek Lap Kok opens.
  • 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 12 - France defeats Brazil 3-0 to win the Football World Cup 1998
  • 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.
  • July 31 - UK import ban on landmines

1998 - August

  • August 7 - Yangtze River Floods: In China the Yangtze River breaks through the main bank, before this from August 1-5 periphery levees collapsed consecutively in Jiayu County Baizhou Bay. The death toll was more than 12,000 injuring many thousands more.
  • 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 Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and Nairobi, Kenya kills 224 people and injures over 4,500. The bombings were linked to Osama Bin Laden.
  • August 15 - The Real IRA detonate a car bomb in Omagh, County Tyrone, Ireland, killing 29 and injuring over 200 - the greatest loss of life in a single incident of The Troubles.
  • August 16 - Silk-Miller police murders: Australian police officers murdered in Moorabbin, Victoria.
  • 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
    • Russian financial crisis: Devaluation of the rouble. The ruble lost 70% of its value against US dollar in 6 months following August 1998. Several largest Russians banks collapsed, and millions of people lost their savings.
  • 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-Qaeda 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

1998 - September

  • 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 Peggys Cove, Nova Scotia after taking off from New York City en-route to Geneva. All 229 people on board were 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 3 - In Somalia, the southern port of Kismayo is declared the capital of independent Jubaland under Muhamed Said Hersi
  • September 6 - The world's first sprite comic, Neglected Mario Characters, is started.
  • September 7 - Google is founded.
  • September 7 or 8 - Pokémon is premiered the first time on Kids WB.
  • 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 9 - The United Nations General Assembly elects Didier Opertiri of Uruguay as president for its 53rd session
  • September 14 - GSPC formed in Algeria, splitting off from the GIA over its policy of massacring civilians.
  • September 15 - Telecommunications companies MCI Communications and WorldCom complete their $37 billion merger to form MCI WorldCom.
  • September 25 - 28 September -- Major creditors of Long-Term Capital Management, a Greenwich, Connecticut based hedge fund, after days of tough bargaining and some informal mediation by officials of the Federal Reserve agree on terms of a re-capitalization -- i.e. they create a consortium that takes over the fund's failing portfolio.
  • September 29 - Iraq disarmament crisis: The U.S. Congress passes the "Iraq Liberation Act", which states that the United States wants to remove Saddam Hussein from power and replace the government with a democratic institution.

1998 - October

  • October 3 — In Australia, John Howard's coalition government was re-elected for a second term.
  • October 4 - Leafie Mason is murdered in her Hughes Springs, 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 - U.S. 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 23 - Swatch Internet Time introduced
  • 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 - Hurricane Mitch makes landfall in Central America killing an estimated 18,000 people.
  • October 29 - In Freehold Borough, 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.

1998 - November

  • 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 7 - John Glenn returned to Earth aboard the space shuttle Discovery.
  • 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 regard to the 1998 U.S. embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania.
  • November 20 - Galina Starovoitova, Russian legislator and democracy advocate, is assassinated in St Petersburg, Russia
  • 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.

1998 - December

  • December 1 - Exxon announces a US$73.7 billion deal to buy Mobil, thus creating Exxon-Mobil, the second-largest company on the planet by revenue.
  • December 5 - D.C. United defeats Vasco da Gama 2 – 1 on aggregate to win the Interamerican Cup and is one of the greatest triumphs in the history of U.S. club soccer.
  • December 6 - Hugo Chávez Frías, Venezuelan military and politician, is elected President of Venezuela.
  • December 8 - Tadjena massacre in Algeria; 81 villagers killed.
  • 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 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.
  • December 31 - The first leap second since June 30, 1997.


1998 - Unknown Dates

  • The third World Parliament of Religions is held in Cape Town on 1 - 8 December 1999.
  • The fourth generation of VW's Passat automobile goes on sale in North America.
  • Ibrahim Hanna, the last native speaker of Mlahsö, dies in Qamishli, Syria, making the language effectively extinct. In that same year, the last native speaker of related Bijil Neo-Aramaic dies in Jerusalem.
  • Karolyn Nunnallee elected president of Mothers Against Drunk Driving.

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12 years, 14, 15 years, 1893, 19, 1902, 1903, 1905, 1906, 1907, 1908, 1909, 1910, 1911, 1913, 1914, 1915, 1916, 1917, 1918, 1920, 1921, 1922, 1923, 1924, 1925, 1926, 1927, 1929, 1930, 1932, 1933, 1934, 1935, 1936, 1937, 1941, 1942, 1943, 1944, 1946, 1948, 1949, 1952, 1953, 1957, 1959, 1962, 1970s, 1974, 1976, 1984, 1985, 1991, 1996 Olympic bombing, 1997, 1998 Stanley Cup Finals, 1998 U.S. embassy bombings, 26, 28 September, 32 years, 80 years, Academy Awards, Adana, Afghanistan, Air Canada, Air China, Ajaccio, Akashi-Kaikyo Bridge, Akira Kurosawa, Al-Qaeda, Alabama, Alan Lloyd Hodgkin, Alfred Schnittke, Algeria, Alice Faye, Allan McLeod Cormack, Amartya Sen, America Online, American, Anatoly Onoprienko, Andalusia, André Weil, Angel Maturino Resendiz, Ankara, Annette Strauss, Apartheid, Apple Computer, April 1, April 10, April 15, April 16, April 19, April 23, April 25, April 5, April 6, April 7, April 8, April 9, Aryan Nations, Atlanta, Georgia, Attack Submarine, Auckland, August 15, August 16, August 17, August 20, August 24, August 26, August 3, August 31, August 4, August 5, August 6, August 7, Augusto Pinochet, Australia, Australian, B. J. Habibie, Baghdad, Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel, Bankers Trust, Barry M. Goldwater, Beatrice Wood, Belfast Agreement, Bella Abzug, Benjamin Spock, Bijil Neo-Aramaic, Bill Clinton, Bill Reid, Birger Ruud, Birmingham, Alabama, Bolsheviks, Brazil, Brendon Baerg, Brian Stonehouse, Britain, British, Bulgarian, Busch Stadium, CIH virus, California, Cambodia, Canada, Cape Town, Carl Perkins, Carl Wilson, Catherine Cookson, Catholic priests' sex abuse scandal, Cavalese cable-car disaster, Charlton Heston, Chek Lap Kok, Chemistry, Chiang Kai-shek International Airport, Chicago Bulls, Chicago Cubs, China, China Airlines Flight 676, Christina Marie Williams, Chrysler, Citicorp, Citigroup, Claudia Benton, Clementine, Clinton, Clinton v. City of New York, Compaq, Constantine Caramanlis, Corse, Cosmologists, County Tyrone, Crusaders, Curtis T. McMullen, D.C. United, DNA, Daimler-Benz, Daimler-Chrysler, Dale Earnhardt, Dallas, Texas, Dan Quisenberry, Daniel Chee Tsui, Danielle Bunten Berry, Danish parliamentary election, Dar es Salaam, Darwin Joston, David Trimble, Daytona 500, December 1, December 11, December 14, December 16, December 17, December 18, December 19, December 20, December 21, December 26, December 29, December 31, December 5, December 6, December 7, December 8, Democratic Unionist Party, Derek Harold Richard Barton, Dermot Morgan, Detroit Red Wings, Deutsche Bank, Digital Equipment Corporation, Digital Millennium Copyright Act, Discordianism, Discovery, Doris Angleton, Doñana National Park, E.G. Marshall, Earl Manigault, Earth, Eddie Rabbitt, Eileen Collins, El Niño, Eldridge Cleaver, Elle Fanning, Elmer Valo, Eric Robert Rudolph, Eric Rudolph, Eschede train disaster, Europa, European, European Court of Human Rights, Expo '98, Exxon, Exxon-Mobil, FDA, Falco, February, February 10, February 12, February 14, February 15, February 16, February 18, February 19, February 20, February 22, February 23, February 24, February 25, February 26, February 27, February 28, February 3, February 4, February 6, February 7, February 8, Federal Reserve, Ferid Murad, Fields Medalists, Flint, Michigan, Florence "Flo-Jo" Griffith-Joyner, Florida, Florida El Niño Outbreak, Football World Cup 1998, Ford Motor Company, Fornebu, France, Frank Sinatra, Frankie Yankovic, Frederick Reines, Freehold Borough, New Jersey, Friday, GIA, GSPC, Galileo probe, Galina Starovoitova, Gay rights, Gene Autry, General Motors, Geneva, George H. Hitchings, Geri Halliwell, Germany, Goldman Sachs, Good Friday, Google, Governor of Minnesota, Greenwich, Connecticut, Gregorian calendar, Guadalquivir River, Göteborg, Hal Newhouser, Halldór Laxness, Hammond Innes, Harry Caray, Hattiesburg, Mississippi, Helen Wills Moody, Henderson, New York, Henny Youngman, Henry Hyde, Hermann Prey, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Hong Kong International Airport, Honshu, Horst L. Störmer, Houston, Howard Stern, Hughes Springs, Texas, Hugo Chávez Frías, Hurricane Mitch, Hustler, ICE, India, Indian, Indonesian President, Interamerican Cup, Iran, Iraq, Iraq disarmament crisis, Iraqi, Ireland, Irene Hervey, Italy, Ito, J.T. Walsh, Jack Lord, Jackie Blanchflower, January 1, January 11, January 12, January 13, January 14, January 15, January 16, January 17, January 19, January 1998, January 2, January 20, January 21, January 22, January 26, January 27, January 28, January 29, January 4, January 5, January 6, January 7, January 8, January 9, Japan, Japan-China Joint Declaration On Building a Partnership of Friendship and Cooperation for Peace and Development, Japan-Republic of Korea Joint Declaration A New Japan-Republic of Korea Partnership towards the Twenty-first Century, Jean-Paul Akayesu, Jerry Falwell, Jerusalem, Jesse Ventura, Jews, John A. Pople, John Glenn, John Howard, John Hume, Johnny Adams, Jonesboro, Arkansas, José Saramago, Jubaland, Julian Lincoln Simon, July 10, July 12, July 17, July 19, July 22, July 24, July 25, July 28, July 3, July 31, July 5, July 6, June 1, June 10, June 11, June 12, June 13, June 14, June 16, June 2, June 25, June 3, June 30, June 4, June 5, June 8, Junior Wells, Jupiter, Karla Faye Tucker, Karolyn Nunnallee, Kathmandu, Kenichi Fukui, Kenya, Kerry Thornley, Kevin Lloyd, Khartoum, Khmer Rouge, Kipland Kinkel, Kismayo, Klaus Tennstedt, Kofi Annan, Kosovo, Ku Klux Klan, Kurdish, Kwangmyongsong, Larry Flynt, Lawrence Sanders, Leafie Mason, Lev Demin, Lewinsky scandal, Lisbon, Literature, Lloyd Bridges, Long-Term Capital Management, Lorenzo Brino, Louis J. Ignarro, Luke Woodham, Lunar Prospector, MCI Communications, MCI WorldCom, Mae Questel, Maine, Major League Baseball, Manila, March 1, March 10, March 11, March 12, March 13, March 14, March 15, March 16, March 2, March 23, March 24, March 26, March 27, March 31, March 4, March 5, March 6, March 8, Mark Belanger, Mark McGwire, Mars, Martin Rodbell, Masumi Hayashi, Matthew Shepard, Maxim Kontsevich, May 1, May 11, May 13, May 14, May 15, May 18, May 19, May 2, May 21, May 22, May 27, May 28, May 29, May 30, May 31, May 7, May 9, McDonnell Douglas MD-11, Medicine, Melissa Drexler, Merrill Lynch, Miami, Florida, Michael Craze, Michael Fortier, Michael Jordan, Michael Tippett, Microsoft, Mlahsö, Mobil, Monday, Monica Lewinsky, Monica Lewinsky scandal, Monkeys, Moon, Moorabbin, Victoria, Mothers Against Drunk Driving, Myrinda Brino, NASA, NASDAQ, NBA, NORAD, Nairobi, Narita Bryan, Nashville Tornado of 1998, Nashville, Tennessee, National Rifle Association, Nature, Neglected Mario Characters, Nepalese, Netscape Communications, Nevada, New England, New York City, New Zealand, Nicholas II of Russia, Nigeria, Nikolas Brino, Nobel Prize, Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, North America, North Korea, Northern Ireland, November 1, November 10, November 12, November 13, November 18, November 19, November 20, November 23, November 24, November 26, November 28, November 3, November 30, November 5, November 7, November 9, Nuclear testing, Octavio Paz, October 12, October 14, October 16, October 2, October 23, October 28, October 29, October 3, October 31, October 4, October 6, October 7, October 8, Oklahoma City bombing, Olivier Gendebien, Omagh, Ontario, Osama Bin Laden, Osama bin Laden, Oslo Airport, Oued Bouaicha massacre, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, Passat, Paula Jones, Peace, Peggys Cove, Nova Scotia, Persian Gulf, Phil Hartman, Philippines, Physics, Pokémon, Pol Pot, Portugal, Poul Bundgaard, Poul Nyrup Rasmussen, President, Prime Minister of Japan, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Qamishli, Quebec, Rajasthan Desert, Ramzi Yousef, Ray Nitschke, Real IRA, Reproductive rights, Republic of Ireland, Richard Ewen Borcherds, Richter Scale, Richter scale, Rio de Janeiro, Risen Star, River Oaks, Robert B. Laughlin, Robert F. Furchgott, Roger Maris, Roger Nicholas Angleton, Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, Rose Maddox, Roy Rogers, Russel Eugene Weston Jr., Russia, Russian, Russian financial crisis, Rwanda, Saddam Hussein, Sally Hemings, Salomon Smith Barney, Sani Abacha, School shooting, Science, Seaside, Seinfeld, September 14, September 15, September 2, September 21, September 25, September 27, September 29, September 3, September 30, September 6, September 7, September 8, September 9, Serbian, Shikoku, Sidi-Hamed massacre, Sierra Marcoux, Silk-Miller police murders, Sofia, Somalia, Sonny Bono, Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act, Sosuke Uno, South Africa, Space Shuttle Columbia, Space Shuttle Discovery, Spain, Spice Girls, Springfield, Oregon, St Petersburg, St. Louis Cardinals, St. Louis, Missouri, St. Petersburg, Stern, Steve Trachsel, Sudan, Suharto, Supreme Court of Canada, Supreme Court of the United States, Swatch Internet Time, Sweden, Swissair flight 111, Switzerland, Syria, Tadjena massacre, Taha Yassin Ramadan, Taiwan, Taliban, Tammy Wynette, Tanzania, Ted Hughes, Templeton Prize, Terry Nichols, Texas, The Troubles, Theodore Kaczynski, Theodore Schultz, Thomas Jefferson, Titanic, Today show, Tomb of the Unknowns, Tony Blair, Tornadoes, Tower block, Travelers Group, Trento, Treponema pallidum, Truth and Reconciliation Commission, Tuesday, Turkish Airlines, U.N., U.S., U.S. Congress, U.S. President, U.S. state, U.S. states, UK, UNESCO, UNSCOM, US, US President, USS Harry S. Truman, USS Sea Devil, Ukrainian, Unabomber, United Nations, United Nations General Assembly, United State House of Representatives, United States, United States Air Force, United States Capitol, United States Department of Justice, United States Military, United States Navy, United States Secret Service, United States Senate, United States Supreme Court, United States military, United States v. Microsoft, Uruguay, Utah Jazz, VW, Vasco da Gama, Venezuela, Viagra, Vladimir Prelog, Volvo Cars, Wakayama Prefecture, Walter Kohn, Washington Capitals, West University Place, White House, Wilaya of Relizane massacres of 4 January 1998, William Timothy Gowers, World Parliament of Religions, World Trade Center bombing, WorldCom, Wyoming, X-ray, Yangtze River, Yuri Artyukhin, Zachary Brino, Zhang Chongren, abortion, abortion clinics, al-Shifa pharmaceutical factory, anthrax, antitrust, apoptosis, arsenic, automobile, bacterium, biological attack, blackout, bomb, butyric acid, car bomb, college, common year starting on Thursday, cruise missile, cyberspace, deactivated, earthquake, economic sanctions, elected, enzyme, fatwa, fourth generation, gay rights, gay-bashing, genocide, genome, grand jury, gun, hate crime, hedge fund, hide, high speed train, hijack, homophobia, house arrest, human cloning, iMac, ice, ice storm, impeachment, impotence, inflation, jihad, landmines, leap second, line-item veto, manslaughter, nuclear tests, nuclear weapons, ocean, portfolio, professional wrestler, prom, public domain, rocket, rubles, semi-automatic rifle, serial killer, sexual harassment, sexually abused, sitcom, skulls, space, space shuttle, sprite comic, strike, subways, suicide, suspension bridge, syphilis, teddy bear, terrorist, tin, transactional immunity, tsunami, unconstitutional, universe, vaccinations, white separatists



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Events", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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