Английская Википедия:February 1959

Материал из Онлайн справочника
Перейти к навигацииПерейти к поиску

Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Events by month Шаблон:Calendar

Файл:Buddy Holly cropped.JPG
February 3, 1959, "The Day the Music Died": Buddy Holly...
Файл:Vanguard2.jpg
February 17, 1959: The first weather satellite, Vanguard 2, is launched by the U.S.
Файл:The Big Bopper.jpg
... and J.P. Richardson killed in plane crash, along with Ritchie Valens
Файл:2005 Penny Rev Unc D.png
February 12, 1959: New penny released on Lincoln's 150th birthday

The following events occurred in February 1959:

February 1, 1959 (Sunday)

  • Male voters in Switzerland voted overwhelmingly against allowing women the right to vote, by a margin of 654,924 to 323,306. It was not until 1971 that Swiss women were granted full suffrage. On the same day, however, Vaud became the first of the cantons of Switzerland to allow voting in provincial elections. The Canton of Neuchâtel followed on September 27.[1][2]
  • Between February 1 and 14, some 508 records were reviewed for prospective Project Mercury pilot candidates of which about 110 appeared to qualify. The special committee on Life Sciences decided to divide these into two groups and 69 prospective pilot candidates were briefed and interviewed in Washington, D.C. Out of this number, 53 volunteered for the Mercury program, and 32 of the 53 were selected for further testing. The committee agreed there was no further need to brief other individuals, because of the high qualities exhibited in the existing pool of candidates. These 32 were scheduled for physical examination at the Lovelace Clinic, Albuquerque, New Mexico.[3]
  • Died: Frank Shannon, 84, American actor who played (Dr. Zarkov) in the Flash Gordon serials

February 2, 1959 (Monday)

February 3, 1959 (Tuesday)

Файл:Tommy Allsup.jpg
Allsup loses coin flip
Файл:Waylon Jennings Promotional Picture cropped.JPG
Jennings gives up seat on plane

February 4, 1959 (Wednesday)

February 5, 1959 (Thursday)

  • The U.S. State Department released tapes that showed that Soviet jets had shot down an unarmed American C-130 transport plane on September 2, 1958. Transmissions between the two fighter planes, identified as "201" and "218", had been intercepted in Turkey. The Soviets denounced the tapes as a "clumsy fake". On the same day, Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev invited U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower to visit Moscow, adding that he could bring anyone, and go anywhere, he chose. In his speech, Khrushchev referred to the Secretary of State and said, "Mr. Dulles, if you so desire, then for the sake of ending the Cold War, we are even prepared to admit your victory in this war that is unwanted by the peoples. Regard yourselves, gentlemen, as victors in this war, but end it quickly."[16]
  • The title E-1 for U.S. Air Force personnel was revised from Basic Airman to Airman Basic.[17]

February 6, 1959 (Friday)

  • Jack Kilby, working for Texas Instruments, filed for a patent for the first integrated circuit, which was granted as U.S. Patent 3,138,743 on June 23, 1964.[18] Kilby had recorded his inspiration on July 24, 1958, writing "The following circuit elements could be made on single slice: resistors, capacitor, distributed capacitor, transistor" and put these on a silicon wafer.[19]
  • Following industry-wide competition, a formal contract for research and development of the Mercury spacecraft was negotiated with the McDonnell Aircraft Corporation. The contract called for design and construction of 12 Mercury spacecraft. Later, orders were placed with the company for eight additional spacecraft, two procedural trainers, an environmental trainer, and seven checkout trainers. McDonnell had been engaged in studying the development of a crewed spacecraft since the NACA presentation in mid-March 1958.[3]
  • Born: Ken Nelson, English record producer, in Liverpool

February 7, 1959 (Saturday)

  • Former SS Colonel Sepp Dietrich was released from prison in Munich after serving half of a sentence for assisting in the execution of high-ranking German officers in 1934.[20]
  • After spending a record 64 days, 22 hours and 21 minutes aloft, two fliers landed their Cessna 172 in Las Vegas. Pilot John Cook and businessman Bob Timm had taken off on December 4, 1958, and on January 23, had broken the previous record of 50 days. They refueled twice each day at Blythe, California, from a truck that would drive Шаблон:Convert beneath the plane.[21]
  • At the Lovelace Clinic, Albuquerque, New Mexico, the medical tests for the Mercury astronaut selection began.[3]
Файл:DFMalanPortret.jpg
Malan

February 8, 1959 (Sunday)

Файл:William Donovan.jpg
Donovan

February 9, 1959 (Monday)

February 10, 1959 (Tuesday)

February 11, 1959 (Wednesday)

  • Meeting in Switzerland at Zürich, Prime Minister Konstantinos Karamanlis of Greece and Prime Minister Adnan Menderes of Turkey signed the first of two agreements concerning the upcoming independence from the United Kingdom of the island of Cyprus, which had large populations of Greek and Turkish Cypriots. The two nations, after consulting with the leaders of their respective ethnic communities on Cyprus, agreed to a constitution that would provide for both groups to be represented in the Cypriot government, and temporarily abandoned their conflicting demands. Greece refrained from pursuing enosis, the incorporation of the entire island as Grecian territory, and Turkey refrained from pursuing a partition of the island between the Turks in the north and the Greeks in the south. The two sides would sign a second agreement, the Treaty of Guarantee, with the United Kingdom in London on February 19.[26]
  • The Royal Air Force made its first public launch of one of its 60 Thor missiles, at a press conference at RAF Feltwell base. The intermediate range missiles had a range of Шаблон:Convert.[27]
  • Space Task Group and Army Ballistic Missile Agency (ABMA) personnel met at Huntsville, Alabama, to discuss Redstone and Jupiter flight phases of Project Mercury. During the course of the meeting the following points became firm: (1) Space Task Group was the overall manager and technical director of this phase of the program, (2) ABMA was responsible for the launch vehicle until spacecraft separation, (3) ABMA was responsible for the Redstone launch vehicle recovery (this phase of the program was later eliminated since benefits from recovering the launch vehicle would have been insignificant), (4) Space Task Group was responsible for the spacecraft flight after separation, (5) McDonnell was responsible for the adapters for the Mercury-Redstone configuration, and (6) ABMA would build adapters for the Mercury-Jupiter configuration.[3]
  • After five seasons of being officially known as the Cincinnati Redlegs, baseball's Cincinnati Reds reverted to their former name as evidenced by the release of their 1959 spring training media guide to the nation's sportswriters. The club's general manager, Gabe Paul, who said in 1953 that he had made the change to "Redlegs" because "we wanted to be certain we wouldn't be confused with the Russian Reds" insisted to reporters that "We haven't changed a thing. Reds... Redlegs... Red Stockings... they're all part of our name. We just decided to use Reds a little more." The UPI pointed out that "virtually every piece of publicity from the club spoke of the team as the 'Redlegs' since 1953."[28]
  • Died: Marshall Teague, 36, American race car driver, was killed in an accident at the Daytona Speedway, 11 days before the start of the first Daytona 500

February 12, 1959 (Thursday)

Файл:Wheat Penny.jpg
Reverse side of the phased-out "wheat" penny
  • The new version of the Lincoln cent was introduced on Abraham Lincoln's 150th birthday. While the portrait of Lincoln was unchanged, the tails side had the Lincoln Memorial replacing the "wheat penny".
  • The last B-36 bomber was decommissioned.

February 13, 1959 (Friday)

February 14, 1959 (Saturday)

February 15, 1959 (Sunday)

  • In Guatemala, President Miguel Ydigoras Fuentes acted to put down an Indian uprising that had been organized by his opponent Raul Estuardo Lorenzana. Ydigoras would later write in his 1963 autobiography My War with Communism that the rebellion was the first of several Communist Cuban plots against his government.[31]
  • Police in New York City concluded what was, at the time, the second-largest drug bust in American history, arresting 27 people between 8:30 Saturday night and 5:00 Sunday morning, and seizing Шаблон:Convert of heroin with a "street value of $3,660,800". A January 1958 roundup in Elmont, New York, had netted Шаблон:Convert and 17 arrests.[32]
  • The medical examinations at the Wright Air Development Center for the final selection of the Mercury astronauts began.[3]
  • Nine people in a single car were killed when their vehicle was hit head-on by another vehicle on United States Highway 281 south of Alamo, Texas. The driver of the other vehicle, whose speedometer was frozen at Шаблон:Convert after the collision, also died.[33]
  • Died: Owen Willans Richardson, 79, 1928 Nobel Prize in Physics laureate

February 16, 1959 (Monday)

  • The French ocean liner SS Île de France was retired, sailing from Le Havre to Japan for use as scrap metal.
  • Born: John McEnroe, American tennis player who won the U.S. Open championship four times and the Wimbledon championships three times; at the U.S. Air Force base in Wiesbaden, West Germany

February 17, 1959 (Tuesday)

  • Vanguard 2, the first weather satellite, was launched at Шаблон:Nowrap from Cape Canaveral to measure cloud cover for the United States Navy.[34]
  • The first formal meeting of the Navy-NASA Committee on Project Mercury search and recovery operations was held. They decided that joint recovery exercises would be initiated as soon as possible. The committee members determined that the Navy, particularly the Atlantic Fleet, could support operations from Wallops Island; could perform search and recovery operations along the Atlantic Missile Range, using the selected Project Mercury vehicles; and that naval units could support operations in the escape area between Cape Canaveral and Bermuda.[3]
  • Adnan Menderes, the Prime Minister of Turkey, was among 20 people on board an airplane en route from Rome to London that crashed on its approach to Gatwick Airport. Menderes was scheduled to meet with Prime Ministers Macmillan of Britain and Karamanlis of Greece for an agreement concerning the island of Cyprus.[35] Menderes survived the crash but was deposed the following year and executed on September 17, 1961.

February 18, 1959 (Wednesday)

  • Elections were held in Nepal for the first time in its history, as voters chose candidates for 18 of the 109 lower house seats, with the remainder to be chosen on eight other days.[36]

February 19, 1959 (Thursday)

  • The National Assembly Building of Slovenia, designed by Vinko Glanz, was opened in Ljubljana, Yugoslavia, nearly five years after construction had started in 1954. A session of the Slovenian People's Assembly followed the ceremonies.[37]
  • In London, representatives of Greece, Turkey and the United Kingdom signed the Treaty of Guarantee, the second of two agreements regarding Cyprus, with all three nations being granted the right to intervene militarily, if necessary, to protect members of one ethnic community from the other, or to uphold the jointly-accepted constitution.[26]
  • In a speech, Dr. T. Keith Glennan estimated that Project Mercury would cost over $200 million. Glennan said the cost was high because a new area of technology was being explored with no precedents or experience from which to draw, and because the world-wide tracking network construction was a tremendous undertaking.[3]
  • Debbie Reynolds was granted a divorce from Eddie Fisher. "My husband became interested in another woman", she testified in a Los Angeles hearing. Reports added that she did so "never mentioning the name of Elizabeth Taylor".[38]
  • Died: Daniel A. Reed, 83, football coach at the University of Cincinnati (1899–1911) and U.S. Congressman for New York since 1919[39]

February 20, 1959 (Friday)

February 21, 1959 (Saturday)

  • The Douglas DC-8 30 Series, a longer-range version of the DC-8 passenger jet, made its first flight.[42]
  • The New Yorker published "On the Sidewalk", John Updike's parody of On the Road.[43]
  • The Ben Hecht Show, a live television program on New York's WABC-TV, was cancelled permanently after Hecht's guest, surrealist painter Salvador Dalí, used the word "orgasm" in an interview. Ben Hecht, a screenwriter whom Mike Wallace described as "a trifle profane" on the air, had already been in trouble with the station. Wallace would later describe the episode as "the 'Orgasm and Out!' show".[44]

February 22, 1959 (Sunday)

  • The very first Daytona 500, now NASCAR's preeminent stock car racing event, was held at Daytona Beach, Florida, with Johnny Beauchamp and Lee Petty crossing the finish line within fractions of a second of each other, and both faster than the existing NASCAR speed record. "NASCAR officials stationed at the finish line first gave Beauchamp the nod by 12 inches," one sportswriter would write the next day, but added "Petty insisted he had Beauchamp by two feet."[45] Although the race took 3 hours and 41 minutes to complete, it would take three days for the race to be won, and only after NASCAR officials reviewed photographic evidence.
Файл:USAF x15-29 072.jpg
Crossfield
Файл:X-15 in flight.jpg
The X-15

February 23, 1959 (Monday)

February 24, 1959 (Tuesday)

  • In San Luis, Mexico, seven children were killed, and 23 people injured, when a packed grandstand collapsed during a school festival.[48]

February 25, 1959 (Wednesday)

  • Three days after the race had been held, Lee Petty was declared the official winner of the first Daytona 500 and the man initially ruled to have crossed the finish line first, Johnny Beauchamp, a close second. Bill France, the president of NASCAR, announced the decision at a press conference in Daytona Beach, Florida, and said that films and photos taken at the finish line had shown that Petty crossed the line ahead of Beauchamp.[49]
  • Norway and Israel signed an agreement in Oslo, providing Israel for the first time with deuterium oxide, also known as "heavy water", a key step in Israel's atomic program.[50]

February 26, 1959 (Thursday)

February 27, 1959 (Friday)

  • The wreckage of the American B-24 bomber Lady Be Good was found nearly 16 years after the plane had crashed in the Libyan desert. The Lady Be Good and its crew of nine had become lost on April 4, 1943, while returning from a bombing raid during World War II, and then had to ditch in the desert sands. The men had died of thirst and exposure within a few days, and the bodies would be located a year later, on February 11, 1960.[53] The discovery of the Lady Be Good would inspire Rod Serling to write "King Nine Will Not Return", the first episode of the second season of The Twilight Zone.[54]
  • In Boston, the Celtics beat the Lakers (at that time a Minneapolis team) 173 to 139 for the highest score by a team in a regulation NBA game; and, at the time, the highest ever for a losing team. NBA President Maurice Podoloff said that he would ask officials of both teams whether the players were faithfully defending, or just "goofing off".[55] The record was tied on November 10, 1990, by Phoenix Suns (173–145 vs. Denver) for highest number of points in a regulation game. The record, set in overtime on December 13, 1983, is Detroit 186, Denver 184.

February 28, 1959 (Saturday)

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:Events by month links

  1. Шаблон:Cite news
  2. Шаблон:Cite book
  3. 3,0 3,1 3,2 3,3 3,4 3,5 3,6 3,7 3,8 Шаблон:Source attribution Шаблон:Cite book
  4. Шаблон:Cite book
  5. Шаблон:Cite news
  6. Шаблон:Cite book
  7. Шаблон:Cite book
  8. Шаблон:Cite news
  9. Шаблон:Cite news A photograph of Holly included the caption, "Buddy Holly, twice a guest on The Ed Sullivan Show, will be appearing with his group at the Surf Ballroom Monday evening. Holly's vocal recordings of 'Peggy Sue', 'Early in the Morning', 'Heartbeat' and others have made him a popular in-person attraction."
  10. Шаблон:Cite web
  11. Шаблон:Cite book
  12. Шаблон:Cite news
  13. Шаблон:Cite news
  14. Шаблон:Cite news
  15. Vol V King Papers Project stanford.edu, pl
  16. Шаблон:Cite news
  17. TSgt Spink, Barry L. (1992-02-19). "A Chronology of the Enlisted Rank Chevron of the United States Air Force"
  18. In the Matter of Certain Portable Calculators, 337-TA-198 (USITC Publication 1732, July 1985), pp167–168
  19. Шаблон:Cite book
  20. Шаблон:Cite news
  21. Шаблон:Cite news
  22. Reinbard Scbulze, A Modern History of the Islamic World (I.B.Tauris, 2002) p158
  23. Simon Marinker, Assassination, Preparations and Consequences: Preparations & Consequences (Trafford Publishing, 2002), pp104-105
  24. Ron Owens, Medal of Honor: Historical Facts & Figures (Turner Publishing Company, 2004), p96
  25. Шаблон:Cite news
  26. 26,0 26,1 Шаблон:Cite book
  27. Шаблон:Cite book
  28. Шаблон:Cite news
  29. "Fidel Castro In Power as Cuba Premier", Oakland Tribune, February 14, 1959, p1
  30. Шаблон:Cite news
  31. Шаблон:Cite book
  32. Шаблон:Cite news
  33. Шаблон:Cite news
  34. Шаблон:Cite news
  35. Шаблон:Cite news
  36. "Nepal Casts Vote For First Time", Oakland Tribune, February 18, 1959, p2
  37. Шаблон:Cite web
  38. Шаблон:Cite news
  39. Шаблон:Cite web
  40. Шаблон:Cite news
  41. Шаблон:Source attribution Шаблон:Cite book
  42. Шаблон:Cite book
  43. Шаблон:Cite book
  44. Шаблон:Cite book
  45. Шаблон:Cite news
  46. Шаблон:Cite news
  47. Gerland Home, Black and Red: W. E. B. Du Bois and the Afro-American Response to the Cold War, 1944–1963 (SUNY Press, 1986), pp324–25
  48. Шаблон:Cite news
  49. Шаблон:Cite news
  50. Шаблон:Cite book
  51. Шаблон:Cite news
  52. Шаблон:Cite news
  53. Шаблон:Cite book
  54. Шаблон:Cite book
  55. Шаблон:Cite news
  56. Clayton K. S. Chun, Thunder Over the Horizon: From V-2 Rockets to Ballistic Missiles (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2006), pp74–75
  57. David L. Hancock, Corona: America's First Satellite Program, By CIA Cold War Records, (Morgan James Publishing, LLC, 2005), p16