Английская Википедия:December 1960

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Файл:USS Constellation (CV-64) off Perth, Australia, on 29 April 2003.jpg
December 19, 1960: Fire on the USS Constellation kills 46 workers while docked in Brooklyn Navy Yard
Файл:QH-50C DD-692 1969.jpg
December 7, 1960: A new weapon in war, the remote-controlled flying drone passes its first test

The following events occurred in December 1960:

December 1, 1960 (Thursday)

  • The Congolese Army arrested Patrice Lumumba, deposed premier of the Congo, while he was on his way to Stanleyville to meet his supporters.[1] Lumumba would be moved around the country and then shot to death on January 17, 1961.[2]
  • The Soviet Union launched Sputnik 6, a 5-ton satellite, into orbit with two dogs, Pchelka ("Little Bee") and Mushka ("Little Fly"), plus mice, insects and plants. The next day, the capsule was reported to have burned up on re-entry into the atmosphere at too steep an angle.[3] According to later reports, a self-destruct system had been built to destroy the satellite if it did not re-enter at the correct time, in order to prevent it from landing outside the Soviet Union.[4]

December 2, 1960 (Friday)

December 3, 1960 (Saturday)

Файл:Richard Burton Julie Andrews Guenevere and Arthur Camelot.JPG
Julie Andrews and Richard Burton in Camelot

December 4, 1960 (Sunday)

December 5, 1960 (Monday)

  • In the case of Boynton v. Virginia, the U.S. Supreme Court declared, by a 7 to 2 vote, that a law requiring permitting bus stations to exclude patrons on the basis of race, was unconstitutional under the Equal Protection Clause. The case had arisen when a law student at Howard University, Bruce Boynton, was fined for refusing to leave a "whites only" restaurant at the Trailways bus terminal in Richmond, Virginia.[12]
  • Born: Sarika, Indian film actress; as Sarika Thakur in New Delhi

December 6, 1960 (Tuesday)

December 7, 1960 (Wednesday)

  • The United Nations Security Council was called into session by the Soviet Union, to consider Soviet demands that the U.N. seek the immediate release of former Congolese Premier Patrice Lumumba.[15]
  • The QH-50 DASH (Drone Anti-Submarine Helicopter), a drone that could be guided by remote control, made its first successful unmanned landing, descending upon the USS Hazelwood.[16]
  • At the request of the government of Dade County, Florida, the U.S. government opened the first federal Cuban Refugee Center, located in Miami, with a staff of 14. By the end of 1961, the center had 300 employees.[17]
  • Died: Clara Haskil, 65, Romanian classical pianist

December 8, 1960 (Thursday)

December 9, 1960 (Friday)

  • The first episode of the long-running ITV soap opera Coronation Street aired in Britain. It was originally planned to be a 16-part series but became such a success that, running five times or more per week,[21] it continued past its 10,000th episode in its 60th anniversary year. William Roache who played Ken Barlow in the first episode would still be in the show to this day.
  • French President Charles de Gaulle's visit to French Algeria was marked by bloody European and Muslim mob riots in Algeria's largest cities, resulting in 127 deaths.[22][23]
  • Japan and the Philippines signed a treaty of amity, commerce and navigation, their first ever. Japanese military forces had invaded the Philippines in World War II and had occupied the islands until the end of the war.[24]
  • NASA's Spacecraft No. 7 was delivered to Cape Canaveral for the Mercury 3 mission intended to be the first to put an American astronaut into space. Shepard would be launched in Mercury 3 on May 5, 1961, on a suborbital, 15-minute flight, reaching an altitude of Шаблон:Convert.[8]
  • Entrepreneur Tom Monaghan and his brother James took over the operation of "DomiNick's Pizza" store at 301 West Cross Street in Ypsilanti, Michigan. In 1965, after the original owner declined to allow the use of his name for other locations, Tom Monaghan renamed his restaurant Domino's Pizza.[25]
  • Born: Jeff "Swampy" Marsh, American animator, producer, and voice actor known for creating the Disney Channel cartoons Phineas and Ferb and Milo Murphy's Law; in Santa Monica, California[26]
Файл:Hyperion (1930-1960).jpg
Hyperion
  • Died: Hyperion, 30, British thoroughbred racehorse who won the British Triple Crown (2,000 Guineas Stakes, Epsom Derby and St Leger Stakes) in 1943 and later a champion sire.

December 10, 1960 (Saturday)

December 11, 1960 (Sunday)

  • Richard Paul Pavlick, a 73-year-old postal clerk from New Hampshire, loaded his car with dynamite and then parked outside the Kennedy family estate in Palm Beach, Florida, and prepared to kill President-elect John F. Kennedy, waiting for Kennedy to depart for Sunday mass. Pavlick changed his mind after seeing that Kennedy was accompanied by his wife and two small children.[28] Pavlick was arrested four days later by Palm Beach city police.[29]

December 12, 1960 (Monday)

  • The revision of the most commonly used Spanish-language version of the Holy Bible, the Reina-Valera, was released, and would soon outsell the o. The original version had been published in 1569. A more recent, but not as popular, revision would be released in 1995.[30]
  • Television came to the South American nation of Ecuador as Red Telesistema de Ecuador (RTS) began regular broadcasting at 5:00 in the afternoon on Channel 4 in Guayaquil. José Rosenbaum, a German-born radio station owner in Ecuador, had purchased three cameras and other TV equipment while visiting a trade fair in West Germany and then spent more than a year with engineers in setting up the station.[31]

December 13, 1960 (Tuesday)

December 14, 1960 (Wednesday)

  • The first "Tied Test" in the history of Test cricket took place at the end of the match in Brisbane between the West Indies and Australia. At the end of the First Innings on December 10, Australia had a 505–453 lead. In the Second Innings, however, the West Indies had outscored Australia 284 to 232. When Australia's last batter, Lindsay Kline, came up for the 7th and final ball, the score had closed to 737 to 737. Kline hit the ball bowled by Wes Hall, and Ian Meckiff dashed toward the wicket for what would have been the winning run, but Joe Solomon fielded the ball and hit the stumps for the last out. "Until today," Percy Beames wrote in Melbourne's newspaper The Age, "there had not been a tie in Test cricket."[36]
  • The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) was created by the signing of an international convention by 18 European nations and the United States and Canada.[37]
  • In Stanleyville, Congo, Antoine Gizenga proclaimed himself to be the successor to Patrice Lumumba. For four months, Gizenga's forces controlled the Orientale and Kivu provinces, called Free Republic of the Congo, but on April 17, he surrendered in return for a post as a vice premier in the central government.[38]
  • By a vote of 89–0, the UN General Assembly Resolution 1514, the "Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples" was adopted by the UN member nations. The United States, the United Kingdom, Australia, France, and five other nations abstained.[39]
  • The five-member electoral board of Illinois, with a majority of Republican members, unanimously certified the results of the November 6 popular balloting in the U.S. presidential election and awarded Democrat John F. Kennedy the state's 27 electoral votes. The board had considered Republican charges of voter fraud in Cook County and denied a request for a further election recount. Before the award of the Illinois block, Kennedy had 273, three more than the necessary 270 needed to win.[40]

December 15, 1960 (Thursday)

  • After a 19-month experiment in democracy, King Mahendra of Nepal deposed the elected government and restored the absolute monarchy.[41] based on the Panchayat system. Prime Minister B. P. Koirala, who had taken office on May 27, 1959 as the Himalayan kingdom's first elected head of government, was arrested on orders of King Mahendra, along with 11 other government ministers.[42]

Шаблон:Multiple image

December 16, 1960 (Friday)

Шаблон:Multiple image

  • In the collision of two airliners over New York City, 136 people were killed, including eight people on the ground who were struck by falling debris. United Airlines Flight 826 from Chicago, with 77 passengers and seven crew, was outside its designated holding pattern for circling New York's Idlewild Airport, and collided with TWA Flight 266 Шаблон:Convert over Staten Island at 10:37am.[44] The United DC-8 jet crashed in Brooklyn at the intersection of 7th Avenue and Sterling Place. Stephen Baltz, 11, was pulled conscious from the wreckage, but died the next day. The TWA plane, a Lockheed Super-Constellation with 39 passengers and five crew, had been on its way from Columbus, Ohio, to New York's La Guardia airport, and crashed on a vacant area at the Miller Field U.S. Army base on Staten Island. In addition to the 128 passengers and crew on both planes, eight more people on the streets of Brooklyn were killed by the falling debris.[45][46]

December 17, 1960 (Saturday)

  • At 2:10 in the afternoon, a U.S. Air Force plane crashed into a crowded street in Munich, West Germany, killing 32 people on the ground and all 20 people on board the airplane. The plane, whose 13 passengers were American college students returning home, lost power after takeoff and clipped the steeple at the St. Paul's Church, then fell onto a streetcar on Martin Greif Straße, near the intersection with Bayerstraße.[47]
  • Died: Abebe Aregai, 57, Prime Minister of Ethiopia since 1957, was killed by machine-gun fire as the army stormed the Genetta Leul palace where he was being held hostage by rebels.

December 18, 1960 (Sunday)

December 19, 1960 (Monday)

  • A fire killed 46 people and injured 150 others as it swept through the Шаблон:USS, the largest U.S. aircraft carrier up to that time, while Constellation under construction at the Brooklyn Navy Yard.[49][50]
  • John F. Kennedy was elected as the 35th President of the United States, as the 534 people who had been selected (on November 8) to serve in the Electoral College, met in their respective states' capitals. Democratic candidate Kennedy received 300 votes, 31 more than the 269 needed to win, and Republican challenger Richard M. Nixon had 219. U.S. Senator Harry F. Byrd received 15 votes, from all 8 of Mississippi's slate of unpledged electors (a ticket which finished ahead of Kennedy and Nixon), six from Alabama pledged to Kennedy, and one from Oklahoma pledged to Nixon.[51] Hawaii's 3 electors had not been certified, pending a recount of the popular vote, but were awarded to Kennedy prior to the January 6, 1961, tabulation.
Файл:MR-1A liftoff.jpg
December 19, 1960: Launch of the first Project Mercury rocket in the U.S.

December 20, 1960 (Tuesday)

Файл:Richard Baer.jpg
Commandant Baer
Файл:FNL Flag.svg
The Viet Cong flag

December 21, 1960 (Wednesday)

  • Prince Faisal bin Abdulaziz Al Saud and his cabinet of ministers were dismissed from his job as Prime Minister of Saudi Arabia by his older brother, King Saud, who assumed the job as head of government in addition to his monarchial role as head of state.[55] Faisal retained his position as Crown Prince and would regain the position of Prime Minister on October 31, 1962, which he would continue during his reign as king upon Saud's death on November 2, 1964.
  • Eileen Derbyshire, 30, first played the role of Emily Bishop on the British soap opera Coronation Street. She would portray the character for more than fifty years.
  • In the Japanese city of Kumamoto, a fire on the third floor of a cabaret killed 14 people, nine of whom were hostesses, at a party to celebrate the end of the year. The fire spread to adjacent houses and left 100 people homeless.[56]
  • All nine crew on a U.S. Navy P2V Neptune patrol plane were killed when the aircraft plummeted into the Atlantic Ocean at a point Шаблон:Convert south of the Canadian town of Argentia, Newfoundland.[57]

December 22, 1960 (Thursday)

  • The Vostok-K rocket made its maiden flight, carrying a satellite with two dogs, Kometa and Shutka. An attempt to put the payload into orbit failed when the third stage failed seven minutes into launch, but the dogs survived the landing.[58]
  • The crash of Philippine Air Lines Flight 85 killed 28 of the 37 people aboard. The twin-engine DC-3 took off from Cebu City at the start of a scheduled flight to Davao on Mindanao Island when one of its engines failed.[59][60]
  • Massachusetts U.S. Senator John F. Kennedy resigned from his job in preparation for his January 20 inauguration as President of the United States.[61]
  • Born:
  • Died: Sir Ninian Comper, 96, Scottish architect

December 23, 1960 (Friday)

  • After the news came out that Israel was building a nuclear reactor, with assistance from France, Egypt's President Gamal Abdel Nasser warned in a nationwide speech that the United Arab Republic would go to war "if we become sure that Israel is building an atom bomb". Nasser added "We shall take every step in order to preserve our country and to destroy our enemy."[64] Nasser later pledged to send Egypts army to destroy the Dimona Nuclear Centre.[65]
  • Born: Miyuki Miyabe, Japanese author; in Tokyo

December 24, 1960 (Saturday)

December 25, 1960 (Sunday)

December 26, 1960 (Monday)

  • The Philadelphia Eagles defeated the Green Bay Packers, 17–13, to win the 1960 NFL championship.[71] The AFL title game, between the Houston Oilers and the Los Angeles Chargers, would not take place until New Year's Day 1961.
  • Eleven days after ending an experiment with an elected government, Nepal's absolute monarch, King Mahendra Bir Birkam installed a new government with himself as Prime Minister and nine people as cabinet ministers, including Nepal's Ambassador to the U.S., Rishikesh Shah, and former Foreign Minister Tulsi Giri.[72]
  • In the Soviet Union, all 17 people aboard an Aeroflot Ilyushin Il-18 turboprop were killed when the flight was preparing to land at Ulyanovsk after its departure from Kuybyshev.[73]
  • Born: Andrew Graham-Dixon, English art historian; in London
  • Died: Tetsuro Watsuji, 71, Japanese philosopher

December 27, 1960 (Tuesday)

  • After being forced to leave West Germany, The Beatles made a triumphant return to Liverpool, playing at the ballroom at the Litherland Town Hall. Author Hunter Davies, who wrote the authorized biography of the band, commented that "If it is possible to say that any date was the watershed, this was it. All their development, all their new sounds and new songs, suddenly hit Liverpool that evening. From then on, as far as a devoted fanatical following was concerned, they never looked back."[74]

December 28, 1960 (Wednesday)

  • Rebels in the Congo attacked a train that was transporting 300 passengers from Elisabethville to their homes in Katanga Province, many of them schoolchildren and their mothers. Although the train was guarded by UN soldiers from Sweden, it was besieged by hundreds of Baluba tribesmen at Luena, then again at Bukima. At least 20 passengers were killed, and others raped and kidnapped.[75]
  • Yakov Zarobyan became first secretary of the Communist Party of Armenia.
  • Born:

December 29, 1960 (Thursday)

  • A former U.S. Defense Department employee was arrested by the FBI after taking almost 200 classified documents from the Weapons Systems Evaluation Group division at the Pentagon.[77] Arthur Rogers Roddey, a mathematician who had top secret clearance, was sentenced to eight years in prison on March 22, 1961.[78]
  • Born:

December 30, 1960 (Friday)

  • In the Mexican city of Chilpancingo in the state of Guerrero, government troops fired into a crowd of anti-government demonstrators, killing 13 people and wounding 37 others. The protest began after a Mexican Army officer shot and killed a man who was tacking up a poster criticizing the Governor of Guerrero.[79]
  • The Third Test match of the series between India and Pakistan began at Eden Gardens, Calcutta.[80]
  • Died: Angelo Donati, 75, Italian banker, philanthropist and diplomat known for saving thousands of French Jews from extermination during World War II.

December 31, 1960 (Saturday)

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:Events by month links Шаблон:Authority control

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  10. "Africans Demand U.N. Admit Nation", Daytona Beach Morning News, December 19, 1960, p5
  11. UN website Шаблон:Webarchive UN website Шаблон:Webarchive
  12. "Negroes Win Right to Eat in Bus Depots", Chicago Daily Tribune, December 6, 1960, p10
  13. "Arctic Refuge's 50th Anniversary", U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
  14. Шаблон:Cite web
  15. "Appeal of Soviet to Aid Lumumba Up in U.N. Today", New York Times, December 7, 1960, p1
  16. "The DASH Weapon System", GyrodyneHelicopters.com
  17. Roger Daniels, Guarding the golden door: American immigration policy and immigrants since 1882 (Macmillan, 2005) p195
  18. Шаблон:Cite news
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  20. NDSU History Шаблон:Webarchive
  21. Шаблон:Cite news
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  25. Шаблон:Cite book
  26. Шаблон:Cite web
  27. Шаблон:Cite web
  28. "JFK: the assassin who failed", by Philip Kerr, New Statesman, November 27, 2000
  29. "Man Accused of Plotting to Assassinate Kennedy", Spartanburg (SC) Herald-Journal, December 17, 1960, p1
  30. Calvin George, The History of the Reina-Valera 1960 Spanish Bible (Literatura Bautista, 2004) p35
  31. " "RTS: 50 años Sintonia" (RTS: 50 Years of Broadcasting), El Universio (Guayaquil), December 5, 2010
  32. "Texas Recount is Denied; 24 Kennedy Electors OK'd", San Antonio Express, December 13, 1960, p1
  33. Saheed A. Adejumobi, The History of Ethiopia (Greenwood Press, 2006) p102
  34. SICA History
  35. and breaking the former mark in 1957 of Шаблон:Convert by over Шаблон:Convert. HistoryCentral.com Шаблон:Webarchive
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  40. Шаблон:Cite news
  41. U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights
  42. "King Takes Over in Nepal, Orders Cabinet Seized", St. Louis Post-Dispatch, December 15, 1960, p.2
  43. Шаблон:Cite news
  44. Aviation Safety Database.
  45. "WORST AIR CRASH KILLS 133; 19 FROM CHICAGO AREA DIE— O'Hare Jet Collides with Liner Over N.Y.", Chicago Daily Tribune, December 17, 1960, p1
  46. "On This Day in History" Шаблон:Webarchive, Brooklyn Daily Eagle online
  47. Шаблон:Cite news
  48. National Museum, New Delhi History Шаблон:Webarchive
  49. "Blazing Ship Traps Dozens", Pasadena Star-News, December 19, 1960, p1; "Carrier Death Toll 46", December 20, 1960, p1
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  58. "Soyuz Chronology" Шаблон:Webarchive, Astronautix.com
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  60. Aviation Safety Database
  61. "Kennedy Resigns His Senate Seat", New York Times, December 23, 1960, p1
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  63. Шаблон:Cite newsШаблон:Subscription required
  64. "Nasser Threatens Israel on A-Bomb", New York Times, December 24, 1960, p1
  65. Maria Rost Rublee, Nonproliferation Norms: Why States Choose Nuclear Restraint (University of Georgia Press, 2009) p109
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  70. Шаблон:Cite book
  71. "EAGLES WIN NFL TITLE: Clock Stops Packers in 17 to 13 Tilt", Milwaukee Sentinel, December 27, 1960, p1
  72. "Cabinet Installed By Nepalese King", Washington Star, December 26, 1960, p.6
  73. Aviation Safety Database
  74. Hunter Davies, The Beatles (1968, W. W. Norton & Company, 1996) p92
  75. "Rebel Tribesmen in Congo Massacre 20 Aboard Train", San Antonio Express, December 29, 1960, p1
  76. Шаблон:Cite web
  77. "200 Secret Papers Stolen From Pentagon", San Antonio Express, December 30, 1960, p1
  78. "Ex-Pentagon Aide Sentenced to 8 Years for Document Theft", New York Times, March 23, 1961, p1
  79. "Mexican Troops Fire on Crowd, Killing 13", Los Angeles Times, December 31, 1960, p.I-3
  80. Шаблон:Cite web
  81. [1] "The last recruits report for their National Service duty", ThisIsExeter.co.uk, July 12, 2008
  82. "Andorra— Heads of State", in Heads of States and Governments Since 1945, by Harris M. Lentz (Routledge, 2014) p31