American Airlines Flight 191, a DC-10, crashed during takeoff at O’Hare Airport, killing all 271 on board and 2 people on the ground in the deadliest aviation accident in American history. Western Airlines Flight 2605 crashed upon landing at Mexico City International Airport, killing 72 occupants plus one on the ground. Air New Zealand Flight 901, a DC-10, crashed into Mount Erebus in Antarctica on a sightseeing trip, killing all 257 people on board. The French tanker Betelgeuse exploded at the Gulf Oil terminal at Bantry, Ireland, killing 50 people. A suspected gas explosion in a Warsaw bank killed 49 people. In China, a Hawker Siddeley Trident crashed into a factory near Beijing, killing 31 people on the ground and injuring 200. Ten miners died in a methane gas explosion at Golborne Colliery near Wigan, Greater Manchester, England. A Soviet biowarfare laboratory at Sverdlovsk accidentally released airborne anthrax spores, killing 66 plus an unknown amount of livestock. The Progressive Alliance of Liberia staged a protest, without a permit, but the police reported over 70 dead and over 500 injured. A tornado hit Wichita Falls, Texas, killing 42 people. A 6.9 Mw shock affected Montenegro and parts of Albania, causing extensive damage to coastal areas and taking 136 lives. The 8.2 Mw Tumaco earthquake shook Colombia and Ecuador killing 300–600 people, and generating a large tsunami. Schoolchildren in the Central African Republic were arrested and around 100 killed for protesting against compulsory school uniforms. Ten shoppers died in a fire at the Woolworth’ department store in Manchester city in England. A blowout at the Ixtoc I oil well in the southern Gulf of Mexico caused 176,400,000 gallons of oil to be spilled into the waters, the worst oil spill to date. A fire at a hotel in Zaragoza, Spain, left 72 dead, the worst hotel fire in Europe in decades. The Machchu-2 dam in Morbi, India, collapsed, killing between 1,800 and 25,000 people in one of the worst ever dam failures. A tsunami in Nice, France, killed 23 people. 13 U.S. Marines died in a fire at Camp Fuji, Japan as a result of Typhoon Tip. A 106-car Canadian Pacific freight train carrying explosive and poisonous chemicals from Windsor, Ontario, Canada derailed in Mississauga, just west of Toronto, causing a massive explosion and the largest peacetime evacuation in Canadian history. A group of 200 Juhayman al-Otaybi militants occupied Mecca’s Masjid al-Haram, the holiest place in Islam, but were driven out by Saudi military forces after bloody fighting that left 250 people dead and 600 wounded. Have you ever been in a disaster?
Important events in 1979
Of course, the big events in Iran dominated the end of 1979 and the beginning of 1980. At the same time, Iraq Vice President Saddam al-Tikriti, known as “Saddam Hussein,” took over Iraq in a Ba’ath Party Purge. The Sandinista National Liberation Front also concluded a successful revolutionary campaign against the Somoza dynasty and assumed power in Nicaragua. The 1979 United Kingdom general election for the House of Commons gave the Conservatives a majority, designating Margaret Thatcher the nation’s first woman prime minister. Joe Clark became Canada’s 16th and youngest Prime Minister. Jack Lynch resigned as Taoiseach of Ireland, succeeded by Charles Haughey. The first direct elections to the European Parliament began, citizens from all nine member states of the EU elected 410 members, the first international election in history. Jimmy Carter and Leonid Brezhnev signed the SALT II agreement in Vienna. The Soviet Union covertly launched its invasion of Afghanistan. Then President Jimmy Carter signed the first directive for secret aid to the opponents of the pro-Soviet regime in Afghanistan. There were plenty of wars, but not here in the USA, the Cambodian–Vietnamese War, The Sino-Vietnamese War, the Uganda–Tanzania War, the Zimbabwe-Rhodesia War, and the Salvadoran Civil War. 1979 was the International Year of the Child. The USA officially severed diplomatic ties with the Republic of China (Taiwan), as USA established full diplomatic relations with the People’s Republic of China. The last British soldier left the Maltese Islands, after 179 years, as Malta declared its freedom. The Federated States of Micronesia became self-governing. Saint Lucia, the Gilbert Islands, Saint Vincent, and the Grenadines also became independent of the UK. Queen Elizabeth II attended the millennium celebrations of the Isle of Man’s Parliament. Los Angeles passed its gay and lesbian civil rights bill. The National March for gay rights took place in Washington, D.C., involving tens of thousands of people. Pope John Paul II arrived in Mexico City for 1979’s Latin American Episcopal Conference at Puebla. Pope John Paul II also arrived in his native Poland on his first official, nine-day stay, becoming the first Pope to visit a Communist country. This visit brought about the solidarity of the Polish people against Communism, that led to the rise of the Solidarity movement. He also visited the United States in the fall. The Guardian Angels were formed in New York City as an unarmed organization of young crime fighters. The One-child policy was introduced in China. Worldwide per capita oil production reached a historic peak. There was a total solar eclipse over the USA. The U.S. Voyager 1 approached Jupiter. The largest Magnetar (Soft gamma repeater) event was recorded. The Albert Einstein Memorial was unveiled at the National Academy of Sciences in Washington, D.C. NASA’s first orbiting space station, Skylab, began falling back to earth as its orbit decayed after more than six years. Pluto moved inside Neptune’s orbit for the first time since either was known to science. The U.S. Pioneer 11 became the first spacecraft to visit Saturn. French carmaker Peugeot completed a takeover of American manufacturer Chrysler’s European operations. Philips publicly demonstrated a prototype of an optical digital compact audio disc. McDonald’s introduced the “Happy Meal.” The Sony Walkman went on sale for the first time in Japan. The eradication of the smallpox virus was announced by the World Health Organization. VisiCalc became the first commercial spreadsheet program. The first usenet experiments were conducted at Duke University. Mother Teresa won the Nobel Peace Prize. What do you remember about 1979?
Interesting people in the CBOE IBM trading pits
I met a lot of interesting people in the IBM pits. For instance, one day I met a young lady with ZZZ and she asked me if I knew Chris Smith. Of course, I knew her since she was part of our pinochle group. She said she was Chris’s sister. I never realized that Chris Smith’s sister and her husband were options traders. I met another guy who owned a seat and would come to the pits every month or so to see whether he wanted to be a trader or just let the seat appreciate and sell it later at a profit. Another fellow told me that he hated it there in the pits, but was looking for a job that could pay him $50,000 a year. Another guy was always on the phone to New York to find out what was going on there. People were always looking for inside information. Most of the traders were in their late twenties or early thirties. A couple of them had season tickets to Bulls games. They would stay downtown and go to the games after work. Katz and Scher also had a summer picnic for its traders and workers in September with donkey rides. It was way up north of Chicago, but Joy enjoyed riding the donkeys. I remember a couple of traders being excited about Governor Reagan going to run for president the next year of 1980. Have you met some interesting people in your life?
The end of my short Options Market Maker Career
All good things must come to an end. Even some bad things have to come to end also. During the summer of 1979, I considered it my-on-the-job training to be a market maker in the IBM options pit at the CBOE. The first thing I learned is that the reported prices of options in the various newspapers were always old news. I quickly realized that prices change quite abruptly in real time and it had nothing to do with the prices of yesterday or last week. You might think that a good price would be on paper, but by the time the pit opened, all the prices had changed in real time because there were humans trading in the pit with the same knowledge. That was a disappointment. Research would not help. I had to be nimble on my feet. Then there was the problem of whether a price change was real or an aberration. Even when it was clear that the stock was moving in one direction, I was too cautious to take it seriously. I would always hedge my bets. Then there was the waiting time on slow days. Finally, I realized that I could take a lunch and not miss much. The real problem that I saw was that I was not making any income. I was breaking even, gaining a small amount, or losing a small amount of money each day. I had hoped at the end of the day that there would be a big rally in my favor, but it never happened. I was the old guy at 40 years old, among these younger more nimble traders. I was simply too cautious and not willing to take risks. By September and October, I was disappointed that the summer days had become autumn days with the same meager results. Then one morning, when we were checking our out trades from the day before, I was short $100,000. That was a big surprise. It turned out to be a mistake and it was only $100, but it really shook me up. Then I saw the effect of the Iran hostage crisis. At first, it was crazy chaos, but then it slowed everything down. There was hardly any movement with the options, as people did not know what to do. Finally, I realized that I did not want to spend the rest of my life shouting in a trading pit. After Thanksgiving, I went to see Marshall Katz, to tell him that I would not continue renting the CBOE seat after the end of December. I would not do anything crazy, but I could not make a decent living doing this. Frankly, I did not have the bravado to do it. He said that it is was okay. I could still keep my account with them, but I said no. I was not going to do any more trading. I just wanted the money to sit in a bank, until I had a regular paycheck. There were no good-bye parties as I ended my six months as a Market Maker at the IBM pit on the Chicago Board of Options trading floor. For the first time, I felt that there was something that I was not good at. It reminded me of being 15 years old, and realizing that I would never be a major league baseball player. I had to be realistic. Not all dreams come true. I was not going to be a good options trader. Have you ever had a dream crushed?
The Oil Crisis and inflation in 1979
This Iran crisis had an impact on oil prices. This oil shock in Iran was associated with events in the Middle East, but it was also driven by strong global oil demand. The formation of OPEC, the oil producing countries, in the late 1960s led to the first gas price shock. OPEC restructured the global system of oil production in favor of oil-producing states and away from an oligopoly of dominant Anglo-American oil firms. In the 1970s, restrictions in oil production led to a dramatic rise in oil prices with long-lasting and far-reaching consequences for the global economy. The Iranian Revolution began when the royal reign of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi collapsed and Sheikh Khomeini took control as grand ayatollah of the Islamic Republic in 1979. Iranian oil output declined by 4.8 million barrels per day, 7% of the world production at that time. The Iranian disruption may have prompted a fear of further disruptions and spurred widespread speculative hoarding. Oil prices began to rise rapidly in mid-1979, more than doubling between April 1979 and April 1980. Surging oil demand, coming both from a booming global economy and a sharp increase in precautionary demand, was responsible for much of the increase in the cost of oil during the crisis. Through early 1978, the Federal Reserve had maintained a highly accommodative stance on monetary policy, hoping to combat rising unemployment. However, the policies showed little success in stifling the deterioration in the unemployment rate and likely fostered an environment that allowed the rising energy prices to be transmitted into more general inflation. Consumer inflation, which had already begun to accelerate in the United States, continued to rise, from below 5% in early 1976 to nearly 7% in 1979. Despite increasing concern among the public about the declining value of the dollar and the rising pace of inflation, the Fed committee remained hesitant to raise interest rates too aggressively, fearful of stifling fragile economic growth. Nevertheless, the Fed raised the federal funds rate from 6.9 % in April, 1978, to 10% by the end of the year. The increase was a clear move to try to curb rising inflation. However, the increases were timid and insufficient to stem a surge in inflationary pressure, which had already become entrenched in the American psyche and economy. The twelve-month consumer price index inflation rose to 9% by the end of 1979. The Carter administration’s decision to appoint Paul Volcker as Fed chairman in August 1979 was a strong endorsement of using more aggressive monetary policy to try to break inflation’s stranglehold on the US economy. As the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Volcker had been an outspoken proponent of using monetary policy to combat rising inflation. Volcker and the policy-setting Fed made taming inflation their top priority, even if it came at the detriment of short-term employment. The policies ultimately proved successful in breaking the cycle of stagflation in the United States. Volcker guided the Fed in raising the federal funds rate from 11% at the time he took office to a peak of 19% in 1981. These policy moves successfully lowered the rate of twelve-month inflation from a peak of nearly 15% to 4% by the end of 1982. Though the Fed’s resolve under Volcker was effective in reducing inflation, the monetary contraction, combined with the impact from the oil price shock, pushed the economy into the most severe recession since the Great Depression and spurred strong popular opposition. Eventually, slowing economic activity in industrial countries and investments in additional energy production and energy conservation technologies helped to saturate the market with oil and brought an end to the oil crisis. Beginning in mid-1980, real oil prices began to subside, igniting a decline that would last for much of the next twenty years. What do you know about oil, inflation, and interest rates?
Ted Koppel and “Nightline”
Because of this crisis in Iran, a new show began on ABC after the local news in November, 1979, since they did not have any entertainment show at 11:30 PM Eastern time. The program originated as a series of special reports about the Iran hostage crisis, during which Iranian militants held 53 Americans captive. At first, the program was called “The Iran Crisis: America Held Hostage,” hosted by Frank Reynolds. Ted Koppel eventually joined Reynolds as co-anchor. In March 1980, this program evolved into “Nightline,” with Koppel as its host. Ted Koppel spent twenty-five years anchoring this program, before leaving ABC and Nightline in late November 2005. Ted Koppel (1940-) is a British-born American broadcast journalist. Before “Nightline,” he spent 20 years as a broadcast journalist and news anchor for ABC. After becoming host of “Nightline,” he was regarded as one of the outstanding serious-minded interviewers on American television. Five years after its 1980 debut, the show had a nightly audience of about 7.5 million viewers. Since 2016, Koppel has served as a special contributor to CBS News Sunday Morning. His career as a foreign and diplomatic correspondent earned him numerous awards, including nine Overseas Press Club awards and 25 Emmy Awards. Edward James Martin Koppel was an only child, born in England. His parents were German Jews who fled Germany after the rise of Adolf Hitler and Nazism. In 1953 when he was 13, the family immigrated to the United States. Koppel attended Syracuse University, graduating with a Bachelor of Science degree. Koppel then went to Stanford University, where he earned a Master of Arts degree in mass-communications research and political science. While at Stanford, he met his future wife, Grace Anne Dorney. In June 1963, he became the youngest correspondent ever hired by ABC Radio News. His coverage of the Kennedy assassination in 1963 with Charles Osgood caused the national news audience to take notice. In 1964, he covered his first of many presidential nominating conventions. He also began covering the civil rights movement in Selma, Alabama. In 1966, he became the ABC News correspondent for the Vietnam War, moving from radio broadcasting to national television. By 1975, he was anchoring the ABC Evening News on Saturdays, and he continued to file reports for ABC Radio. Thus, the crisis in Iran made Ted Koppel a star with his nightly reporting on one subject, the Americans held in Tehran. He made that show last twenty-five years. He became the expert on this crisis as it lasted more than a year, 444 days. Have you ever watched “Nightline”?
November 4, 1979, the seizing of the American Embassy in Iran
All this information about Iran would have been interesting but not important to most Americans if it had not been for the events of November 4, 1979. After the USA refused the extradition of the Shaq Pahlavi, Iranian students seized the American embassy in Tehran, and took 53 Americans hostage. President Jimmy Carter’s administration attempted to negotiate their release, and to rescue them. However, it was not until Carter’s final day in office, that the last hostages were set free under the Algiers Accords. The USA and Iran severed diplomatic relations in April, 1980, and have had no formal diplomatic relationship since then, as this crisis was a pivotal episode in Iran–United States relations. In late October 1979, the exiled and dying Shah was admitted into the United States for cancer treatment. In Iran there was an immediate outcry, and both Khomeini and other groups demanded the Shah’s return to Iran for trial and execution. Thus, on November 4, 1979, youthful Islamists, calling themselves Muslim Student Followers of the Imam’s Line, invaded the US embassy compound in Tehran and seized its staff. These revolutionaries were angry because of how the Shah had left Iran, which spawned rumors of another US–backed coup in Iran that would re-install him. The occupation was also intended as leverage to demand the return of the Shah to stand trial in exchange for the hostages, They believed that Prime Minister Mehdi Bazargan was plotting to normalize relations with the USA. These students held 53 American diplomats hostage for 444 days, which played a role in helping to pass the constitution, suppressing moderates, and otherwise radicalizing the revolution. Holding the hostages was very popular in Iran, and continued even after the death of the Shah. With great publicity, the students released documents from the American embassy, which they labeled a “den of spies,” showing that moderate Iranian leaders had met with USA officials. The prestige of Khomeini and the hostage taking was further enhanced with the failure of a hostage rescue attempt, widely credited to divine intervention. The hostage crisis ended with the signing of the Algiers Accords in Algeria on January 19, 1981. The hostages were formally released to American custody the following day, just minutes after Ronald Reagan was sworn in as the new American president. In the non-Muslim world, this hostage taking changed the image of Islam, generating much interest in Islam, both sympathetic and hostile. The Islamic Republic positioned itself as a revolutionary beacon under the slogan “neither East nor West, only an Islamic Republic.” They called for the overthrow of capitalism, American influence, and social injustice in the Middle East and the rest of the world. Revolutionary leaders in Iran gave and sought support from non-Muslim activists such as the Sandinistas in Nicaragua, the IRA in Ireland, and the anti-apartheid struggle in South Africa. The revolution itself was supported by the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). The conflicts that originated from the Iranian Revolution continued to define geo-politics for the last three decades, even up to the present. Following the death of the IRA Bobby Sands, a street name in Tehran was renamed from “Winston Churchill Street” to “Bobby Sands Street.” The British United Kingdom supported Iraq and Saddam Hussein in the Iran-Iraq war. Since the revolution, Iran’s GDP has grown from $114 billion in 1980 to $858 billion in 2010. GDP per capita (PPP) has grown from $4,295 in 1980 to $11,396 in 2010. What do you remember about the Iranian hostage crisis?
The importance of Iran
The importance of Iran cannot be over-estimated. Iran was also known as Persia by the West, due to Greek historians who referred to all of Iran as Persia, meaning “the land of the Persians,” that was just a province in the southwest part of Iran. Iran borders Turkey to the northwest and Iraq to the west. Azerbaijan, Armenia, the Caspian Sea, and Turkmenistan are to the north. Afghanistan is to the east, while Pakistan is to the southeast. The Gulf of Oman and the Persian Gulf are south. There are 90 million Persian-ethnic people in this country. Iran ranks seventeenth globally in both geographic size and population, the sixth-largest country entirely in Asia and one of the world’s most mountainous countries. Tehran is the nation’s capital, its largest city, and its financial center. Persia or Iran was at the cradle of civilization, and reached its territorial height in the sixth century BCE, when Cyrus the Great founded the Achaemenid Empire, one of the largest in ancient history. However, Alexander the Great conquered this empire in the fourth century BCE. An Iranian rebellion established the Parthian Empire in the third century BCE, while the Sasanian Empire followed that in the third century CE. Ancient Iran saw some of the earliest developments of writing, agriculture, urbanization, religion, and central government. Muslims conquered the region in the seventh century CE, leading to Iran’s Islamization. The blossoming literature, philosophy, mathematics, medicine, astronomy, and art became major elements for Iranian civilization during the Islamic Golden Age, the tenth and eleventh centuries, when western Europe was in its so-called dark ages. A series of Iranian Muslim dynasties ended Arab rule, revived the Persian language, and ruled the country until the Seljuk and Mongol conquests of the eleventh to fourteenth centuries. In the sixteenth century, the native Safavids re-established a unified Iranian state with Twelver Shi’ism as the official religion. During the Afsharid Empire in the eighteenth century, Iran was a leading world power, though by the nineteenth century, it had lost significant territory through conflicts with the Russian Empire. The early twentieth century saw the Persian Constitutional Revolution and the establishment of the Pahlavi dynasty. Attempts by Mohammad Mosaddegh to nationalize the oil industry led to an Anglo-American coup in 1953. After the Iranian Revolution in 1979, the Islamic Republic of Iran was established by Ruhollah Khomeini, who became the country’s first Supreme Leader. The Iraq forces of Saddam Hussein invaded Iran in 1980, initiating the 8-year-long Iran-Iraq War. Today, Iran is officially governed as a unitary Islamic Republic with a Presidential system, with ultimate authority vested in a Supreme Leader. The government is authoritarian and has attracted widespread criticism for its significant violations of human rights and civil liberties. Yet Iran is a major regional power, due to its large reserves of fossil fuels, including the world’s second largest natural gas supply and third largest proven oil reserves. It has a geopolitically significant location, with military capabilities, cultural hegemony, and regional influence, as the world’s focal point of Shia Islam. The Iranian economy is the world’s nineteenth largest. Iran is an active and founding member of the United Nations, and home to 27 UNESCO World Heritage Sites. In 2019, Iran was the world’s third fastest-growing tourism destination. What do you know about Iran?
The overthrow of the Shaq of Iran, 1979
In 1979 there was an Iranian Islamic Revolution that led to the overthrow of the Pahlavi dynasty, as the Imperial State of Iran became the present-day Islamic Republic of Iran. Some might say what is the big deal? Revolutions are taking place all over the world. However, this was the end of the monarchical government of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi (1919-1980) who was superseded by the theocratic Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini (1900-1989), a religious cleric who had headed one of the rebel factions. Despite Iran’s neutrality during World War I, the Ottoman, Russian, and British Empires occupied west Iran and fought the Persian campaign before withdrawing in 1921. There was a British-directed 1921 Persian coup d’état, so that the military officer Reza Pahlavi took power in 1925, becoming Prime Minister, monarch, and establishing the Pahlavi dynasty. During World War II, Pahlavi went into exile replaced by his son, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. Iran became a major conduit for British and American aid to the Soviet Union and through which over 120,000 Polish refugees and Polish Armed Forces fled. At the 1943 Tehran Conference, the Allies issued the Tehran Declaration to guarantee the independence and boundaries of Iran. In 1951, Mohammad Mosaddegh was democratically elected Prime Minister of Iran. Mosaddegh became popular after he nationalized the oil industry, which had been controlled by foreign interests. He worked to weaken the monarchy until he was removed in the 1953 Iran coup, an Anglo-American covert operation. President Truman had refused to help in 1952, but the new President Eisenhower helped the British. After the coup, Pahlavi aligned Iran with the Western Bloc and cultivated a close relationship with the United States to consolidate his power as an authoritarian ruler, relying heavily on American support in the Cold War between the Soviet Union and the USA. The Grand Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini first came to political prominence in 1963, when he led opposition to Mohammad Reza Pahlavi with his White Revolution. In November 1964, Khomeini was arrested and sent into exile, where he remained for 15 years. Due to the 1973 oil crisis, the Iran economy was flooded with foreign currency, causing inflation. By 1976, a recession increased unemployment, especially among youths who had migrated to the cities for construction jobs during the boom years of the early 1970s. By the late 1970s, many protested the Pahlavi regime. The Shah was taken completely by surprise by these protests. After a year of strikes and demonstrations, in January 1979, Pahlavi fled to the USA. Khomeini returned in February, forming a new government. Millions of people gathered to greet him as he landed in the capital city Tehran. Following the March 1979 referendum, in which 98% of voters approved the shift to an Islamic republic, the government began to draft a new constitution. Ayatollah Khomeini emerged as the Supreme Leader of Iran in December 1979. He became Time magazine’s Man of the Year in 1979 for his international influence. He became the virtual face of Shia Islam in Western popular culture, as Khomeini became a semi-divine figure. After the revolution, Khomeini credited much of the success of the movement to women, even commending the women for mobilizing men. Do you remember the Shaq and the Ayatollah?
Pope John Paul II came to Chicago in 1979
When Pope John Paul II visited Chicago in October 4-6, 1979, he did not come as a stranger. He had come to this most Polish of American cities twice as Archbishop of Krakow, once on his own, as part of a tour of the United States in 1969, and once three years earlier as part of a delegation of Polish bishops. But this fall whirlwind visit of 37 hours was the only time John Paul II visited Chicago as pope. More than a million people turned out to watch his motorcade make its way from O’Hare Airport to Holy Name Cathedral on the evening of October 4. There he was greeted by Luciano Pavarotti singing “Ave Maria,” and reflected briefly on the name of the cathedral. John Paul II had left Rome five days earlier, traveling first to Ireland for two days. From there, he flew to Boston and celebrated Mass on October 1 in Boston Commons. The next day, he went to New York, where he addressed the United Nations and celebrated an evening Mass at Yankee Stadium. On October 3, he left for Philadelphia, where he again celebrated Mass. Before arriving in Chicago, he traveled from Philadelphia to Des Moines, Iowa, and then from Des Moines to O’Hare. Even after that grueling schedule and the opportunity to pray at Holy Name Cathedral, the pope did not stop. Instead, after dinner with Cardinal John Cody at his residence, which is right across the street from where I now live, he made his way to St. Peter’s in the Chicago Loop to address more than a thousand religious brothers. The next morning, he was up and away from the cardinal’s residence, traveling to Providence of God Church in Pilsen, a primarily Mexican neighborhood where about 75,000 people stood in the early-morning chill to greet the pope. From there, the motorcade continued through the South Side to Five Holy Martyrs Parish, where the pope celebrated an 8 AM outdoor Mass in his native language for Polish Catholics. The pope continued his journey through the neighborhoods of Chicago, arriving at Quigley Preparatory Seminary South, now the site of St. Rita High School. There, he met with 350 American bishops and prayed with them. He also stepped out to the parking lot to meet with the 1,192 young men who were in the archdiocesan seminary system at that time. He greeted thousands more Catholics who congregated on the school’s front lawn before taking off by helicopter to go back to the cardinal’s residence. The centerpiece of his visit to Chicago was the afternoon 3 PM Mass in Grant Park, where an estimated 1.2 million gathered to worship with him. Margaret had some of her students there from St. Lawrence O’Toole. There, Pope John Paul II emphasized the themes of evangelization and unity. He spoke about the different waves of immigration that formed American society, especially in Chicago. Thus, the church also must grow in unity. The best way to evangelize was with love. He capped off that day by attending a concert at Holy Name Cathedral, performed by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Sir Georg Solti, before leaving Chicago for the last leg of his trip, a two-day stop in Washington, D.C., where he met President Jimmy Carter, before returning to Rome. Do you remember the pope in Chicago?