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Thread: Through the years 1985

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    Default Through the years 1985

    1985

    Link to 1985 Australian Front Page Friday July 5 1985



    Charles and Diana, the Prince and Princess of Wales, attending the Melbourne Cup at Flemington.

    The biggest news stories of 1985 revolved around politics and corruption. John Howard overthrew opposition leader Andrew Peacock in a political surprise described as “the biggest shock since Whitlam was sacked”. The leadership change led to an ongoing test of wills and instability.

    High Court judge Lionel Murphy was charged with attempting to pervert the course of justice by having a word on behalf of his “little mate”, Sydney solicitor Morgan Ryan. He was convicted but appealed and was acquitted.

    Norm Gallagher, the leader of the militant Builders Labourers Federation, was found guilty of corruption and went to jail, but also succeeded on appeal.

    Murray Farquhar, a former chief stipendiary magistrate in NSW, was jailed for perverting the course of justice. It was alleged he had interfered, at the behest of NSW premier Neville Wran, in proceedings against rugby league chief Kevin Humphries. Wran stood aside in 1983 while the allegations were probed and was cleared; Farquhar was sentenced to four years and served 2½.

    In other major news, Australia stepped into the world of satellite communications with the launch of Aussat 1; Mikhail Gorbachev took over in the USSR after the death of Konstantin Chernenko; US president Ronald Reagan was sworn in for a second term; Kevin Barlow and Brian Chambers were found guilty of heroin trafficking in Malaysia, and in 1986 were hanged ; and in the NT, the Mutitjulu people took back ownership of Ayers Rock, returning to its traditional name, Uluru.


    Barlow and Chambers

    On the warm night of February 17 the floodlights are first flicked on at the MCG – for a game of cricket between Australia and England, the first match of a World Championship of Cricket series. Batting in the first night daylight is Australia. Former captain Kim Hughes is out for a duck, but the Aussies win the day (night).

    Compact discs – remember them? After their introduction in the early 80s, CDs really hit their stride in 1985, when The Australian runs features on how to start a collection. During the year David Bowie releases his back catalogue on CD and Dire Straits sell over a million of their new album, Brothers in Arms. A new CD costs $30 or more.

    The Greenpeace protest ship, the Rainbow Warrior, is sunk in Auckland Harbour on July 10, killing one. It is the work of agents of the French secret service, the DGSE, upset by protests against French nuclear testing in the Pacific.

    With Bob Geldof at the helm, Live Aid concerts are held in London and Philadelphia to raise money ($70 million) to fight famine in Ethiopia

    President Reagan is sworn in for a second term on January 20.

    The US withdraws from joint exercises with New Zealand after NZ imposes a ban on nuclear-armed ships.

    Queensland declares a state of emergency to counter an electricity workers strike.

    Mikhail Gorbachev becomes Soviet party chief on the death of Konstantin Chernenko.

    Dr Geoffey Edelsten buys the Sydney Swans for $6.5 million — the first private owner of an Australian football team.



    High-profile actor Rock Hudson dies on October 2 of an AIDS-related illness. A screening test for the virus becomes available.

    Ten people die and 11 are wounded when gunmen open fire on Israeli airline El Al’s counters in Rome and Vienna on December 27.

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    1 February – AM stereo broadcasting starts in Australia.

    5 February – Australia cancels its involvement in U.S.-led MX missile tests.

    2 March – The ALP government of John Cain re elected in Victoria for a second consecutive term.



    18 March - The TV soap Neighbours is launched by Network Seven.

    28 April – The Nuclear Disarmament Party (NDP) splits.

    4 June – Melbourne celebrates its 150th anniversary

    5 September – John Howard replaces Andrew Peacock as federal Liberal leader & thus federal Leader of the Opposition.

    October - Network Seven drops Neighbours after seven months on air, only for it to be continued by Network Ten.

    25 November – A man wearing a chicken suit walks into the House of Representatives and sits on the government front bench. He is later removed.

    7 December – The Labor government of John Bannon is re-elected for a second term in South Australia.

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    I remember AM stereo what a flop i could not pick the deference

    SS Dave
    Death smiles at everyone. Grumpy old men smile back.

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    January 1
    The Internet's Domain Name System is created.
    Greenland is withdrawn from the European Economic Community.

    January 10 – Kenya recognizes the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR).

    January 15 – Tancredo Neves is elected president of Brazil by the Congress, ending the 21-year military rule.

    January 17 – British Telecom announces it is going to phase out its famous red telephone boxes.



    January 20 – U.S. President Ronald Reagan is privately sworn in for a second term in office (publicly sworn in, January 21).

    January 27 – The Economic Cooperation Organization is (ECO) formed.

    January 28 – In Hollywood, California, the charity single "We Are the World" is recorded by USA for Africa.



    February 4 - The border between Gibraltar and Spain reopens since Francisco Franco closed it in 1969.

    February 5 – Australia cancels its involvement in U.S.-led MX missile tests.

    February 9 – U.S. drug agent Enrique Camarena is kidnapped and murdered in Mexico (his body is discovered March 5).

    February 10 – Nelson Mandela rejects an offer of freedom from the South African government.

    February 12 – Rafael Addiego Bruno is sworn in as interim President of Uruguay.

    February 14 – CNN reporter Jeremy Levin is freed from captivity in Lebanon.

    February 16 – Israel begins withdrawing troops from Lebanon.

    February 19
    William J. Schroeder becomes the first artificial heart patient to leave the hospital.
    China Airlines Flight 006 is involved in a mid-air incident; while there are 22 minor injuries and 2 serious injuries, no one is killed.
    The first episode of the long running British soap opera EastEnders is broadcast on BBC One.

    February 20 – Minolta releases the Maxxum 7000, the world's first autofocus single-lens reflex camera.



    February 28 – The Provisional Irish Republican Army carries out a mortar attack on the Royal Ulster Constabulary police station at Newry, killing 9 officers in the highest loss of life for the RUC on a single day.

    March – The GNU Manifesto, written by Richard Stallman, is first published.

    March 1 – After a 12-year-long dictatorship, Julio Marνa Sanguinetti is sworn in as the first democratically elected President of Uruguay.

    March 3 – An 8.0 on the Richter magnitude scale earthquake hits Santiago and Valparaνso, Chile, leaving 177 dead, 2,575 hurt, 142,489 destroyed houses and about a million people homeless.

    March 4 – The United States Food and Drug Administration approves a blood test for AIDS, used since then to screen all blood donations in the United States.

    March 8 – A Beirut car bomb, planted in an attempt to assassinate Islamic cleric Sayyed Mohammad Hussein Fadlallah, kills more than 80 people, injuring 200.

    March 11
    Mikhail Gorbachev becomes General Secretary of the Soviet Communist Party and de facto leader of the Soviet Union.
    Mohammed Al Fayed buys the London-based department store company Harrods.

    March 14 – Five lionesses at the Singapore Zoo are put on birth control after the lion population increases from 2 to 16.

    March 15 – Vice-President Jose Sarney, upon becoming vice president, assumes the duties of president of Brazil, as the new president Tancredo Neves had become severely ill, the day before. Sarney will become Brazil's first civilian president in 21 years, upon Neves' death on April 21.

    March 16 – Associated Press reporter Terry Anderson is taken hostage in Beirut (he is released on December 4, 1991).

    March 17 – Expo '85, a World's Fair, is held in Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan, until September 16.

    March 21 – Canadian paraplegic athlete and activist Rick Hansen sets out on his 40,000 km, 26 month Man in Motion tour which raises $26M for spinal cord research and quality of life initiatives.



    March 23 – OCAM is dissolved.

    March 24 – United States Army military intelligence officer Arthur D. Nicholson is shot by Soviet military sergeant Aleksandr Ryabtsev at a Soviet military base in Ludwigslust, East Germany.

    March 25 – The 57th Academy Awards are held at in Los Angeles, California with Amadeus winning Best Picture.



    March 31 – WrestleMania debuts at Madison Square Garden.

    April 1
    Two Japanese government-owned corporations, Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Public Corporation, and Japan Tobacco and Salt Public Corporation, are privatized and change their names to Nippon Telegraph and Telephone, and Japan Tobacco.
    Eighth seeded Villanova defeats national powerhouse Georgetown 66–64 to win the first 64 team field NCAA Tournament in Lexington, Kentucky.

    April 11 – The USS Coral Sea collides with the Ecuadorian tanker ship Napo off the coast of Cuba.

    April 12 – El Descanso bombing: A terrorist bombing attributed to the Islamic Jihad Organization in the El Descanso restaurant near Madrid, Spain, mostly attended by U.S. personnel of the Torrejon Air Force Base, causes 18 dead (all Spaniards) and 82 injured.

    April 15 – South Africa ends its ban on interracial marriages.

    April 18 – The United Kingdom has its first ever national Glow-worm day.

    April 19 – The Soviet Union performs a nuclear test at Eastern Kazakhstan.

    April 21 – Brazilian President Tancredo Neves dies, he is succeeded by Vice President Jose Sarney. The Vice President post is left vacant until 1990.

    April 23 – Coca-Cola changes its formula and releases New Coke (the response is overwhelmingly negative, and the original formula is back on the market in less than 3 months).

    April 28 – The Australian Nuclear Disarmament Party (NDP) splits.

    May 4 – The 30th Eurovision Song Contest takes place in Gothenburg, Sweden. The winning song is La det swinge sung by Bobbysocks! (Norway).

    May 5 – U.S. President Ronald Reagan joins German Chancellor Helmut Kohl for a controversial funeral service at a cemetery in Bitburg, Germany, which includes the graves of 59 elite S.S. troops from World War II.

    May 11
    The FBI brings charges against the suspected heads of the 5 Mafia families in New York City.
    Fire engulfs a wooden stand at the Valley Parade stadium in Bradford, England, during a football match, killing 56.



    May 13
    Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Mayor Wilson Goode orders police to storm the radical group MOVE's headquarters to end a stand-off. The police drop an explosive device into the headquarters, killing 11 MOVE members and destroying the homes of 61 city residents in the resulting fire.
    The National Assembly of Kuwait grants women the right to vote. The right is revoked in 1999 and re-instated in 2005.

    May 15 – An explosive device sent by the Unabomber injures John Hauser at University of California, Berkeley.

    May 16 – Scientists of the British Antarctic Survey announce discovery of the ozone hole.

    May 19 – John Anthony Walker Jr. is arrested by the FBI for passing classified Naval communications to the Soviet Union.

    May 23 – Thomas Patrick Cavanaugh is sentenced to life in prison for attempting to sell stealth bomber secrets to the Soviet Union.

    May 25 – Bangladesh is hit by a tropical cyclone and storm surge, which kills approximately 10,000 people.

    May 29 – Heysel Disaster: 38 spectators are killed in rioting on the terraces during the European Cup final between Liverpool F.C. and Juventus at Heysel Stadium in Brussels, Belgium.

    May 31 – Forty-one tornadoes hit Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York State and Ontario, killing 77.

    June 6 – The remains of Josef Mengele, the physician notorious for Nazi human experimentation on inmates of Auschwitz concentration camp, buried in 1979 under the name of Wolfgang Gerhard, are exhumed in Embu das Artes, Brazil.



    June 13 – In Auburn, Washington, police defuse a Unabomber bomb sent to Boeing.

    June 14
    TWA Flight 847, carrying 153 passengers from Athens to Rome, is hijacked by a Hezbollah fringe group. One passenger, U.S. Navy Petty Officer Robert Stethem, is killed.
    The Schengen Agreement is signed between certain member states of the European Economic Community, creating the Schengen Area, a bloc of (at this time) 5 states with no internal border controls.

    June 15 – Studio Ghibli, an animation studio, is founded in Tokyo.

    June 17 – John Hendricks launches the Discovery Channel in the United States.

    June 23 – Air India Flight 182, a Boeing 747, is blown up by a terrorist bomb 31,000 feet (9,500 m) above the Atlantic Ocean, south of Ireland, on a Montreal–London–Delhi flight, killing all 329 aboard.

    June 24 – STS-51-G: Space Shuttle Discovery completes its mission, best remembered for having Sultan bin Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, the first Arab and first Muslim in space, as a payload specialist.

    June 25 – Irish police foil a Provisional Irish Republican Army–sponsored 'mainland bombing campaign' which targeted luxury vacation resorts.7\-

    June 27 – U.S. Route 66 is officially decommissioned.

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    July 1 – The Convention on the Transfer of Sentenced Persons enters into force.

    July 3 – Back to the Future opens in American theatres and ends up being the highest grossing film of 1985 in the United States and the first film in the successful franchise.



    July 4 – Ruth Lawrence, 13, achieves a first in mathematics at Oxford University, becoming the youngest British person ever to earn a first-class degree and the youngest known graduate of Oxford University.

    July 10 – The Greenpeace vessel Rainbow Warrior is bombed and sunk in Auckland Harbour by French DGSE agents.



    July 13
    Live Aid pop concerts in London and Philadelphia raise over £50 million for famine relief in Ethiopia.



    U.S. Vice President George H.W. Bush serves as Acting President for 8 hours, while President Ronald W. Reagan undergoes colon cancer surgery.

    July 19
    U.S. Vice President George H.W. Bush announces that New Hampshire teacher Christa McAuliffe will become the first schoolteacher to ride aboard the Space Shuttle Challenger.
    The Val di Stava Dam in Italy collapses.

    July 20 – State President of South Africa, P. W. Botha, declares a state of emergency in 36 magisterial districts of South Africa amid growing civil unrest in black townships.

    July 23 – Commodore launches the Amiga personal computer at the Lincoln Center in New York.



    July 24 – The Black Cauldron, the first Disney movie ever to receive a PG rating, makes its theatrical debut.

    July 31 – Liberia recognizes the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR).

    August 2 – Delta Air Lines Flight 191 crashes near Dallas, Texas, killing 137 people.

    August 6 – In Hiroshima, tens of thousands mark the 40th anniversary of the atomic bombing of the city.

    August 7 – Takao Doi, Mamoru Mohri and Chiaki Mukai are chosen to be Japan's first astronauts.

    August 12 – Japan Airlines Flight 123 crashes in Japan, killing 520 people (the worst single-aircraft disaster in history).

    August 14 – The Accomarca massacre takes place in Ayacucho, Peru.

    August 15 – Three miners die in an accident at a coal mine in southeastern Kentucky.

    August 20 - Iran–Contra affair: The first arms, 96 BGM-71 TOWs, are sent to Iran in exchange for hostages in Lebanon and profits for the Nicaraguan Contras. The public does not know about the arms sale.

    August 22 – British Airtours Flight 28M: The 737's left engine catches fire while on its take off roll, 55 people are killed while trying to evacuate the aircraft.

    August 25 – Samantha Smith, 13, "Goodwill Ambassador" between the Soviet Union and the United States for writing a letter to Yuri Andropov about nuclear war, and eventually visiting the Soviet Union at Andropov's request, dies in the Bar Harbor Airlines Flight 1808 plane crash.

    August 28 - The first smoking ban banning smoking in restaurants in the United States is passed in Aspen, Colorado.

    August 30 – Ιva Risztov, Hungarian Olympic Champion swimmer

    August 31 – Richard Ramirez, the serial killer known as the Night Stalker, is captured in Los Angeles.

    September 1 – The wreck of the RMS Titanic (1912) in the North Atlantic is located by a joint American-French expedition led by Dr. Robert Ballard (WHOI) and Jean-Louis Michel (Ifremer) using side-scan sonar from RV Knorr.



    September 6 – Midwest Express Airlines Flight 105, a Douglas DC-9, crashes just after takeoff from Milwaukee, Wisconsin, killing 31.

    September 11 – Pete Rose becomes the all-time hit leader in Major League Baseball, with his 4,192nd hit at Riverfront Stadium in Cincinnati.

    September 13
    Super Mario Bros. is released for the Nintendo Entertainment System.



    Steve Jobs resigns from Apple Computer in order to found NeXT.

    September 19 – An 8.1 Richter scale earthquake strikes Mexico City. Around 10,000 people are killed, 30,000 injured, and 95,000 left homeless.

    September 20 – The capital gains tax is introduced to Australia.

    September 22 – The Plaza Accord is signed by 5 nations.

    September 23 – Italian crime reporter Giancarlo Siani is killed by Camorra.

    September 28 – Brixton race riots are sparked with the shooting of Dorothy 'Cherry' Groce by the Metropolitan Police in Brixton, an area of South London, England.

    October 1 – The Israeli air force bombs PLO Headquarters near Tunis.

    October 3 – The Space Shuttle Atlantis makes its maiden flight.



    October 4 – The Free Software Foundation is founded in Massachusetts, USA.

    October 7 – The cruise ship Achille Lauro is hijacked in the Mediterranean Sea by 4 heavily armed Palestinian terrorists. One passenger, American Leon Klinghoffer, is killed.



    October 18 – The first Nintendo home video game console in United States is released as the Nintendo Entertainment System.



    November 5 – Mark Kaylor defeats Errol Christie to become the middleweight boxing champion, after the two brawl in front of the cameras at the weigh-in.

    November 12 – A total solar eclipse occurs over Antarctica at 1422 UTC.

    November 13 – The Nevado del Ruiz volcano erupts, killing an estimated 23,000 people, including 21,000 killed by lahars in the town of Armero, Colombia.

    November 18 – The comic strip Calvin and Hobbes debuts in 35 newspapers.

    November 19 – Cold War: In Geneva, U.S. President Ronald Reagan and Soviet Union leader Mikhail Gorbachev meet for the first time.

    November 20 – Microsoft Corporation releases the first version of Windows, Windows 1.0.



    November 23 – EgyptAir Flight 648 is hijacked by the Abu Nidal group and flown to Malta, where Egyptian commandos storm the plane; 60 are killed by gunfire and explosions.

    November 25 – An "Aeroflot" Antonov An-12 cargo airplane, en route from Cuito Cuanavale to Luanda, is shot down by South African Special Forces, and crashes approximately 43 km of Menongue, the provincial center of the Cuando Cubango province, Angola, killing 8 crew members and 13 passengers on board.

    November 26 – U.S. President Ronald Reagan sells the rights to his autobiography to Random House for a record US$3 million.

    November 29 – Gιrard Hoarau, exiled political leader from the Seychelles, is assassinated in London.

    December 1
    The Ibero-American States Organization for Education, Science and Culture (Organizaciσn de Estados Iberoamericanos para la Educaciσn la Ciencia y la Cultura) (OEI) is created.
    The Ford Taurus and Mercury Sable are released for sale to the public.

    December 8 – The South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) is established.

    December 12 – Arrow Air Flight 1285, a Douglas DC-8, crashes after takeoff in Gander, Newfoundland, killing 256, 248 of whom were U.S. servicemen returning to Fort Campbell, Kentucky from overseeing a peacekeeping force in Sinai.

    December 16 – In New York City, Mafia bosses Paul Castellano and Thomas Bilotti are shot dead in front of Spark's Steak House, making hit organizer John Gotti the leader of the powerful Gambino organized crime family.

    December 20 - Pope John Paul II announces the instituting of World Youth Day for Catholic youths.

    December 24 – Right-wing extremist David Lewis Rice murders civil rights attorney Charles Goldmark as well as Goldmark's wife and two children in Seattle. Rice suspects the family of being Jewish and Communist and claims his dedication to the Christian Identity movement drove him to the crime.

    December 27
    Rome and Vienna airport attacks: Abu Nidal terrorists open fire in the airports of Rome and Vienna, leaving 18 dead and 120 injured.
    American naturalist Dian Fossey is found murdered in Rwanda.

    December 31 - American singer, songwriter and actor Ricky Nelson dies in a plane crash in De Kalb, Texas.

    Date unknown

    The Australian state of Victoria celebrates its 150th anniversary.

    Harold Kroto, Robert Curl and Richard Smalley discover C60, soon followed by their discovery of fullerenes.

    Western Sahara is admitted to the Organization of African Unity; Morocco, which claims Western Sahara, leaves in protest.

    Solarquest, the space age real estate game, is first published by Golden.

    Norma Phillips Thornworth is elected president of Mothers Against Drunk Driving.

    ATI Technologies is founded.

    The Tommy Hilfiger brand is established.

    DNA is first used in a criminal case.

    Multiple cases of espionage in the United States prompt the media to label this "The Year of the Spy".

    Africa has a population growth of 3.2 percent per year.

    The Asian tiger mosquito, an invasive species, is first found in Houston, Texas.

    The Famine in Ethiopia continues; USA for Africa ("We Are the World") and Live Aid raise funds for famine relief.

    The Fall of Communism begins with resistance gaining victory in the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan. Over the next six years, other countries begin renouncing communism, ending with the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.

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    List of Top 25 singles for 1985 in Australia

    1. "We Are the World" USA for Africa



    2. "Angel" / "Into the Groove" Madonna



    3. "Crazy For You" Madonna



    4. "Live it Up" Mental As Anything



    5. "I Want to Know What Love Is" Foreigner



    6. "Out of Mind, Out of Sight" Models



    7. "Money for Nothing" Dire Straits



    8. "I Got You Babe" UB40 with Chrissie Hynde



    9. "I Should Have Known Better" Jim Diamond



    10. "Would I Lie To You?" Eurythmics



    11. "Dancing in the Street" David Bowie & Mick Jagger



    12. "Take on Me" a-ha


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    13. "You Spin Me Round (Like a Record)" Dead or Alive



    14. "Shout" Tears For Fears



    15. "One Night in Bangkok" Murray Head



    16. "Born in the USA" Bruce Springsteen



    17. "Neutron Dance" Pointer Sisters



    18. "What You Need" INXS



    19. "Do They Know It's Christmas" Band Aid



    20. "We Don't Need Another Hero" Tina Turner



    21. "Walking on Sunshine" Katrina and the Waves



    22. "The Heat Is On" Glenn Frey



    23. "The Power of Love" Jennifer Rush



    24. "The Power of Love" Huey Lewis and the News



    25. "Like a Virgin" Madonna


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    Enjoy and discuss - what were you doing in 1985 ? As always, a click on the thanks button would be appreciated.

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    29 years since they hanged Barlow and Chambers for Drug smuggling and it still goes on and on...........

    I was really interested like most in AM stereo but from what I read at the time, there were (I thought) 3 incompatible systems (wikipedia says FIVE).
    I never understood if that meant if you had an incompatible radio you received nothing or just the station in Mono.
    That along with nobody seemed to sell any receivers which didnt help either.
    The local radio station was going through a major upgrade around then and I am sure I read that part of the upgrade would include Stereo broadcasting but it never happened.
    The only station I ever saw advertising it was broadcasting stereo was 2BS Bathurst NSW but I never heard it if it ever did and I doubt today it would as I have never seen an AM stereo receiver.

    According to Wikipedia, no Melbourne Metro station has broadcast in Stereo since 2008 and I doubt anyone does today.
    Last edited by gordon_s1942; 06-09-14 at 03:48 PM.
    I stand unequivicably behind everything I say , I just dont ever remember saying it !!

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    Commodore came with an AM Stereo radio by Eurovox in the VK Calais

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    Another great year for music, remember all those & heaps more.

    Remember everyone of those news items as the place I worked at had the news radio going constantly. There should be a law against it.

    Still in Sydney, moved closer to where I grew up, Lane Cove, closer to work.

    Last year of my 2 year apprenticeship, did the 2 day practical exam, yippee, now qualified to work like a slave & earn more money for it.

    Having fun riding my Honda VF750 & driving my/our HG Holden Monaro (with highly modified 327 Chevy transplant), 25/6 years old & bullet proof,

    Life starts to get much better for me after this year.
    Cheers, Tiny
    "You can lead a person to knowledge, but you can't make them think? If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the problem.
    The information is out there; you just have to let it in."

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    Has there ever been a year with more civilian aircraft disasters?

    The MS Achille Lauro was the ship that took me away from Australia when I was a child(not 1985), which was luckily an uneventful voyage when you read all the incidents about her in Wikipedia, although for a young kid it was the most exciting experience ever.
    She will be one last time in the chronicles again when we get to 1994.

    I never understood why anybody wanted AM stereo, as FM stereo had been around for decades, apart from the ability to transmit further distances which may have been useful for rural areas, although I have not experienced many audiophile farmers.
    Did ABC classic even ever use it?
    From the technology it sounds interesting but I unfortunately never had the opportunity to appreciate it. Supposed to have double the bandwidth of normal AM, which I find amazing, if not questionable.
    One thing that always bothered me with FM stereo was the background hiss especially on head phones, which may have not been so significant with AM if I understand the technology correctly.

    Back to the Future, I must have seen it 50 times, but not all in 1985

    Otherwise we where toying around with the Amiga because of it's genlock abilities, which we then used and sold with additional hardware to make automated TV info channels for hospitals and hotels.
    Update: A deletion of features that work well and ain't broke but are deemed outdated in order to add things that are up to date and broken.
    Compatibility: A word soon to be deleted from our dictionaries as it is outdated.
    Humans: Entities that are not only outdated but broken... AI-self-learning-update-error...terminate...terminate...

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    1985. I was 35 that year and got fired from my position in Tasmania as a State Sales Manager.
    Packed my hankies and my family and moved to France (my Mother was French) Avignon to be exact
    Then spent 5 glorious years travelling through Europe til we ran out of money.
    In hindsight I should have posted my Facebook status as: "I've blown the head gasket on my 1997 XR3i" rather than "I've just buggered a 14 year old escort".
    The police still haven't seen the funny side, my lap top's been confiscated and the wife has gone off to her mum's.

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    Back to the Future! I even had all three movies recorded back to back on VHS with no credits in between. Used to love that franchise, still enjoy it now.

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    Quote Originally Posted by gordon_s1942 View Post
    I was really interested like most in AM stereo but from what I read at the time, there were (I thought) 3 incompatible systems (wikipedia says FIVE)
    Yes, there were multiple / incompatible systems. I think Australia only adopted one (C-QUAM), but the commercial receivers could decode multiple standards anyway. I had a Sony AM Stereo receiver in my car for many years - and still have it. The main advantage to me was that the AM Stereo receiver had a much wider audio bandwidth than a regular AM receiver and sounded much better simply because it had a bit of "top end". The receiver had a switch to change to narrow (9khz) bandwidth at night, when interstate stations on nearby frequencies would start causing interference. The receiver used to exhibit some really weird and disturbing stereo effects when I drove under high tension power lines. At the height of the AM Stereo hype, Electronics Australia had a project for an add-on AM Stereo decoder board. I built a couple of them, but the audio quality wasn't nearly as good as that from a commercial AM Stereo receiver.

    The local AM station quietly turned off AM Stereo in the late 2000s. I was probably the only person to notice, since I was still using my old car receiver in my workshop.

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