Trisha Shetty (Editor)

February 1960

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February 1960

The following events occurred in February 1960:

Contents

February 1, 1960 (Monday)

  • In Greensboro, North Carolina, four black students from North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University began a sit-in at the Woolworth's department store, at a lunch counter that, like many in the South, would not serve African-American customers except for take-out orders. After their classes, the four young men (Joseph McNeil, David Richmond, Franklin McCain and Ezell Blair, Jr.) entered Woolworth's, made some purchases, and at 4:30, took seats at the counter and politely placed orders for desserts and coffee. When the waitress told them they couldn't be served, they stayed until closing time. The next morning, at least 20 students came to Woolworth's and began taking up seats as they became available. By Wednesday, the sit-ins were national news, and the next week, spread to other cities. By summer, most chain stores ended their whites-only policy.
  • Viscount Dunrossil (William Shepherd Morrison) became the 14th Governor-General of Australia, succeeding William Slim, 1st Viscount Slim, who had served two terms before retiring.
  • February 2, 1960 (Tuesday)

  • At an exhibition at the Logan Billiard Academy in Brooklyn, Mike Eufemia set a record that has remained for half a century, for the longest "run", sinking 625 consecutive billiard balls without a miss.
  • Born:
  • Jari Porttila, Finnish sports journalist, in Helsinki
  • Fred D'Aguiar, British-Guyanan author, in London
  • Died: Jagadguru Swami Sri Bharati Krishna Tirthaji Maharaja, 75, Hindu teacher
  • February 3, 1960 (Wednesday)

  • Before a session of the Parliament of South Africa in Cape Town, Britain's Prime Minister Harold Macmillan made the "Wind of Change" speech, telling the all-white assembly that "The wind of change is blowing through this continent, and whether we like it or not, this growth of national consciousness is a political fact. We must all accept it as a fact, and our national policies must take account of it."
  • The Senate of France voted 226–39 to allow President Charles De Gaulle to rule by decree in order to dismantle the power of French settlers in Algeria. The National Assembly had approved the measure the day before, 441–75. "We almost saw a collapse of the state last week", Prime Minister Michel Debre told the Senators, in urging passage of the measure.
  • U.S. President Eisenhower announced at a news conference that the United States should be able to make nuclear weapons available to its allies. Eisenhower urged that the Atomic Energy Act be amended in order to permit the U.S. to transfer weapons to the arsenals of other nations.
  • Born: Joachim Löw, coach of German National Team in soccer football, in Schönau im Schwarzwald; and Kerry Von Erich, American professional wrestler, in Niagara Falls, New York (d. 1993)
  • Died: Fred Buscaglione, 38, Italian singer and actor, in an auto accident
  • February 4, 1960 (Thursday)

  • After a brief interview, France's President De Gaulle fired Jacques Soustelle from the post of Deputy Prime Minister for Algeria. Soustelle, the highest ranking French government official in the overseas Department, was the first of the European Algerians to be dismissed as part of De Gaulle's rule by decree.
  • The Soviet Union's support of Cuba as a Communist ally was forged as Soviet Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan was welcomed in Havana by Fidel Castro.
  • Jordan offered citizenship to any Palestinian (defined as a person who "used to have the Palestinian Nationality before May 1948, excluding Jews") living abroad.
  • February 5, 1960 (Friday)

  • All 59 persons on board a Lloyd Aéreo Boliviano DC-4 were killed when the plane crashed shortly after takeoff from Cochabamba, Bolivia.
  • Amon Ndoffou II, King of Sanwi, one of the leaders of the Anyi people of Côte d'Ivoire (Côte d'Ivoire), declared an independent kingdom, six months before the colony was scheduled to become independent from France. Ivorian troops arrested the King and his Prime Minister, Ehoumou Bile, and ended the secession attempt without bloodshed.
  • The CERN particle accelerator was inaugurated in Geneva, Switzerland.
  • February 6, 1960 (Saturday)

  • In the first elections in Burma since a 1958 military coup, former Prime Minister U Nu's party captured 150 of the 250 contested seats. He took office on April 4.
  • Died: Jesse Belvin, 27, African-American singer/songwriter, in an auto accident, four hours after performing a concert with Sam Cooke and Jackie Wilson.
  • February 7, 1960 (Sunday)

  • Democratic presidential candidate John F. Kennedy was introduced by Frank Sinatra to Judith Campbell Exner. JFK and Exner had their first sexual encounter on March 7 at Room 1651 of the Plaza Hotel in New York.
  • Twenty-five people were killed and 50 more injured in a railroad derailment near Sewell, Chile. The train was transporting employees of the Braden Copper Mining Company, and their families, on a Sunday outing.
  • Laurence Slattery and Lesley Wasley, both volunteers, permitted a team of Australian doctors at the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital in Sydney to administer curare to stop their breathing, in order to demonstrate the effectiveness of various forms of artificial respiration. Among the findings were that a drowning victim's head should be placed upright, rather than to the side, to aid breathing.
  • Born: James Spader, American TV actor, in Boston.
  • Died:
  • Igor Kurchatov, 57, Soviet nuclear physicist
  • Gilbert Vernam, 69, American cryptographer
  • February 8, 1960 (Monday)

  • The Hollywood Walk of Fame was dedicated, starting with 1,558 names placed on terrazzo stars along Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood, California, as an urban renewal program.
  • Queen Elizabeth II announced that her future descendants would bear her husband's name as well as her own, creating the surname Mountbatten-Windsor.
  • February 9, 1960 (Tuesday)

  • Adolph Coors III, chairman of the Coors Brewing Company, disappeared shortly after leaving his house near Morrison, Colorado, for a 9:00 am meeting with brewery executives at Golden. His truck was found later that morning, and his glasses were nearby. A demand for $500,000 was found the next day, but the kidnapper did not follow up. Coors's body was found on September 12. Joseph Corbett, Jr. was later convicted of the kidnapping and murder. Corbett would be paroled in 1978 and live until 2009.
  • Died:
  • Jaroslav Joseph Polivka, 73, Czech structural engineer
  • Ernő Dohnányi, 82, Hungarian conductor
  • February 10, 1960 (Wednesday)

  • Soviet leader Nikita S. Khrushchev began a 24-day tour of South Asia, traveling to India, Burma, Indonesia, and Afghanistan. While Khrushchev was abroad, U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower set off on February 22 for a 14-day tour of Latin America, going to Brazil, Argentina, Chile and Uruguay. Both men returned to their home nations in March.
  • At Johore Baru, in Malaya, the new Sultan of Johore was crowned.
  • Died: Alojzije Stepinac, 61, Archbishop of Zagreb, Roman Catholic Cardinal, and political prisoner who was detained in Yugoslavia for his opposition to the communist government.
  • February 11, 1960 (Thursday)

  • The bodies of five crewmembers of the B-24 Liberator Lady Be Good were located by exploration worker James Backhaus, in the Libyan desert, 16 years after the airplane had vanished on April 4, 1943, during the Second World War. The men had walked 85 miles in hopes of finding help, before running out of water.
  • Jack Paar quit his job as host of The Tonight Show on NBC, a day after the network had censored a joke in his monologue. Paar later returned, but in 1962, the show was turned over to Johnny Carson.
  • Lt.Gen. Arthur G. Trudeau, Chief of Research for the United States Army, inadvertently revealed classified information during a press conference, when he disclosed that an atomic explosion could neutralize a hydrogen bomb through the principle of neutron flux. General Trudeau said that it would be better to have "a small explosion a hundred miles over Hartford, Connecticut, than a large explosion in New York City."
  • February 12, 1960 (Friday)

  • Eleven days after the first "sit-in" took place in Greensboro, North Carolina, the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) implemented a plan for its members to participate in sit-ins across the South.
  • Laurens Hammond, who had created the first electric organ and a synchronous motor for the first accurate electric clock, retired from inventing.
  • February 13, 1960 (Saturday)

  • At 0604 GMT, France became the world's fourth nuclear power, when it successfully exploded an atomic bomb near Reggane, at Algeria in the Sahara Desert. The test was codenamed Gerboise Bleue.
  • Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan of the Soviet Union and Cuba's Premier Fidel Castro signed an agreement that guaranteed the Castro government a $100,000,000 line of credit until 1972, and provided that the Soviets would buy one million tons of Cuban sugar per year for five years.
  • Born:
  • Pierluigi Collina, Italian FIFA (soccer football) referee, in Bologna
  • Gary Patterson, American college football coach, in Larned, Kansas
  • February 14, 1960 (Sunday)

  • Field Marshal Muhammad Ayub Khan of Pakistan was confirmed as its President through a limited referendum that he had called as a test of his theory of "basic democracy". The 80,000 village councilmen who had been elected locally were called upon to vote "yes" or "no" on Ayub's continuance in office, and 75,283 of them voted in the affirmative.
  • The United Kingdom signed a new treaty of protection with the Maldives, which had been a British protectorate since 1887. The Indian Ocean island group was granted independence in 1965.
  • Born: Jim Kelly, American pro football quarterback for the Buffalo Bills and the USFL Houston Gamblers, in Pittsburgh
  • February 15, 1960 (Monday)

  • War threatened to break out between Israel and the Egypt (at that time partners with Syria in the United Arab Republic), after the UAR's President Nasser received inaccurate information that Israeli troops were massing at Israel's border with Syria. Nasser then sent a major portion of the Egyptian army to Israel's border with Egypt, and Israel then began Operation Rottem. The two sides halted war preparations after discovering the misunderstanding, and both sides stood down on March 1.
  • Died: Cho Pyong-ok, 65, the leading opposition candidate in South Korea's upcoming presidential election, died while receiving medical treatment in the United States. With no opponent, President Syngman Rhee was re-elected for a fourth term as South Korea's president.
  • February 16, 1960 (Tuesday)

  • The nuclear submarine USS Triton submerged upon departure from New London, Connecticut, and, with 184 people on board, began an underwater trip around the world that ended 83 days later on May 10. The Triton was forced to broach its sail above the surface on March 5 in order to transfer a seriously ill sailor to another ship, then spent the rest of the circumnavigation entirely undersea.
  • February 17, 1960 (Wednesday)

  • The United Kingdom and the United States jointly announced that a missile warning system would be constructed at the North York Moors in Yorkshire. Britain's RAF Fylingdales would join stations at Thule AFB in Greenland, and Clear AFS in Alaska as the third and final station in BMEWS, the Ballistic Missile Early Warning System.
  • February 18, 1960 (Thursday)

  • The 1960 Winter Olympics were opened in Squaw Valley, California, by U.S. Vice-President Richard M. Nixon, despite severe winter weather that kept away most of the spectators. The Games attracted 740 athletes from 30 nations.
  • Pilot Charles Hayes and two passengers were killed when their twin engine plane crashed near the St. Gertrude School in the Indian Hill, Ohio, a suburb of Cincinnati. Hayes was credited posthumously with applying a final thrust to the engines to avoid crashing into the school.
  • February 19, 1960 (Friday)

  • The Chinese space program began its first step "in a long march toward outer space", with the launch of the liquid-propelled T-7 rocket. The missile, made entirely within the People's Republic, only reached an altitude of five miles, but was a successful sub-orbital flight. China first put a satellite into space in 1970, and put a man into orbit in 2003.
  • Physician Barbara Moulton resigned in protest from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, writing a letter to Commissioner George P. Larrick that included the accusation that the FDA had "failed utterly in its solemn task of enforcing those sections of the law dealing with the safety and misbranding of drugs"
  • The proposed eight team Continental League announced a definite opening day to begin play as baseball's third major league. CL founder Branch Rickey and Toronto owner Jack Kent Cooke said that on April 18, 1961, the teams in Denver, Dallas-Fort Worth, Houston and Atlanta would host the teams from Minneapolis-St. Paul, New York City, Toronto and Buffalo.
  • Born: Prince Andrew, Duke of York, third child of Britain's Queen Elizabeth II.
  • Died: Hans Christian Hansen, 53, Prime Minister of Denmark since 1955
  • February 20, 1960 (Saturday)

  • Following a month-long conference in Brussels, Belgium, the date of June 30 was set for granting independence to its African colony of the Belgian Congo. Under an agreement between the Belgian government and Congolese leaders, elections would be held on May 16 for provincial legislatures and a 137-member national Chamber of Representatives, and the provinces would then select a Senate.
  • Died:Leonard Woolley, 79, British archaeologist and excavator of Ur ruins
  • February 21, 1960 (Sunday)

  • Sunday became a regular work day in all of Sudan, after the Muslim government in Khartoum decreed that Friday was the uniform day of rest for the entire nation. Previously, provinces in southern Sudan (which had a large Christian minority and a stronger British influence under the rule of Anglo-Egyptian Sudan) had Sunday as the day off, while northern Sudan had switched to Friday upon independence in 1956.
  • André Previn made the first of 51 appearances at Carnegie Hall, playing George Gershwin's Piano Concerto in F.
  • Voters in a referendum in Cameroon approved a constitution by a vote of 797,498 to 531,075.
  • Died:
  • Jacques Becker, 54, French director
  • Edwina Mountbatten, Countess Mountbatten of Burma, 58, wife of last Vicereine of British India
  • February 22, 1960 (Monday)

  • An explosion at the Karl Marx coal mine in Zwickau, East Germany, killed 49 miners.
  • Theme From A Summer Place, by Percy Faith's orchestra, hit No. 1 and stayed there for nine weeks, making it the most popular song of 1960.
  • In Richard Condon's 1974 bestselling mystery, Winter Kills, February 22, 1960, is the date of the assassination of fictional U.S. President "Tim Kegan" in a Philadelphia motorcade, in a novel based loosely upon John F. Kennedy's 1963 murder.
  • February 23, 1960 (Tuesday)

  • Demolition began at Brooklyn's Ebbets Field, home of baseball's Dodgers until their move to Los Angeles in 1958. A crowd of 200 fans and former Brooklyn players watched as Lucy Monroe sang the National Anthem at Ebbets for the last time, and a band played Auld Lang Syne. The wrecking ball, painted white and painted to resemble a giant baseball, began its work with the destruction of the visitors' dugout.
  • Born: Naruhito, grandson of Japan's Emperor Hirohito, and son of future Emperor Akihito and the future Empress Michiko, in Tokyo. Crown Prince of Japan since 1989, Naruhito is in line to become the 126th Emperor of Japan.
  • February 24, 1960 (Wednesday)

  • The first American intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) was given its first test. Launched from Cape Canaveral, the Titan missile traveled 5,000 miles and ejected a data capsule before crashing into the South Atlantic.
  • Final approval was given by Pakistan's President Ayub Khan for the construction of a new capital city on the site of the villages of Saidpur and Nurpur. The new city would be called Islamabad.
  • The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved the prescription use of the tranquilizer chlordiazepoxide, developed by Hoffmann-La Roche and marketed under the tradename Librium.
  • Argentina called off its search for an "unidentified submerged object" in Golfo Nuevo. Since January 30, when a sonar picked up evidence of a trapped foreign submarine, the Argentine Navy had been searching the gulf. At one point, it appeared that there were two subs below the surface, but after more than three weeks, the Buenos Aires government concluded that if there had been a foreign sub, it had escaped.
  • Four people were killed and five others injured by a pipeline worker turned sniper. Dan Raymond, who lived near Ohiopyle, Pennsylvania, shot two county workers who were spreading cinders, then fired from his home at other vehicles until police killed him nine hours later.
  • Born: Alex Masterley, fictional protagonist of the British comic strip Alex.
  • February 25, 1960 (Thursday)

  • After having fled to Syria, Saddam Hussein was sentenced to death in absentia by a court in Iraq, for his role in conspiring to kill Prime Minister Abdul Karim Qassim. Saddam returned to Iraq after Qassim's assassination in 1963, and did not face a death sentence again until his execution on December 30, 2006.
  • Lillian Hellman's play Toys in the Attic began a 464 performance run on Broadway.
  • In Rio de Janeiro, a U.S. Navy R6D collided with a Brazilian Real Aéreas airliner, killing 61 people on both airplanes. There were only 3 survivors, all on the American plane, which had been transporting a U.S. Navy band to perform during President Eisenhower's visit to Brazil.
  • February 26, 1960 (Friday)

  • A New York bound Alitalia airliner crashed into a cemetery at Shannon, Ireland, shortly after takeoff, killing 34 of the 52 persons on board.
  • Britain's Princess Margaret, younger sister of Queen Elizabeth II, made the surprise announcement of her engagement to a commoner, photographer Antony Armstrong Jones.
  • February 27, 1960 (Saturday)

  • At the 1960 Winter Olympics, Hjallis Andersen's eight year old world record for the men's 10,000 meter speed skating event (16:32.6) was bested by five different skaters on the same day. Kjell Bäckman of Sweden set a new world's record of 16:14.2 and qualified for the bronze. Minutes later, Knut Johannesen of Norway broke Bäckman's record with a time of 15:46.6, more than 45 seconds faster than the 1952 mark, and won the gold medal. A few minutes after that, Viktor Kosichkin of the USSR finished at 15:49.2, within 2.7 seconds of beating Johannesen, winning the silver medal. The fourth and fifth place finishers (Ivar Nilsson of Sweden at 16:26.0 and Terence Monaghan of the UK at 16:31.6) also beat Andersen's mark.
  • Born: Andrés Gómez, Ecuadorian tennis player, winner, French Open, 1990; in Guayaquil
  • Died: Adriano Olivetti, 58, Italian entrepreneur who built the Olivetti company into a leading manufacturer of office machines
  • February 28, 1960 (Sunday)

  • A tip from a Soviet player helped the United States ice hockey team win the gold medal in the 1960 Winter Olympics. Exhausted from a 3–2 victory over the Soviet Union's team the day before, the Americans were losing to Czechoslovakia, 4–3, with one period left. Nikolai Sologubov suggested whiffs of bottled oxygen for quick energy, and the U.S. responded with six goals, winning 9–4.
  • Born: Dorothy Stratten, Canadian Playboy magazine model who was murdered in 1980; in Vancouver
  • Died: Dr. Tom Douglas Spies, 57, nutritionist who reduced cases of pellagra
  • February 29, 1960 (Monday)

  • At 11:47 p.m., the city of Agadir in Morocco was shaken for 15 seconds by an earthquake measuring 5.7 on the Richter scale, followed by another tremor an hour later. At least 12,000 people were killed in the collapse of unreinforced stone buildings.
  • The Family Circus made its debut. Initially syndicated by the Des Moines Register and Tribune, the comic panel was created by Bil Keane, whose TV-themed Channel Chuckles was already a newspaper feature. On the first day's strip, the three children had placed a sled on top of their sleeping father, and "Billy"'s line was "Guess what it's doing out."
  • St. Louis radio station KMOX revolutionized radio with the debut of a live call-in program called At Your Service.
  • Born:
  • Richard Ramirez, American serial killer known as "The Night Stalker", in El Paso, Texas
  • Cheb Khaled, Algerian musician nicknamed "King of Raï", in Oran
  • Died:
  • Melvin Purvis, 56, former FBI agent who had killed John Dillinger died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound
  • Walter Yust, 65, editor-in-chief of the Encyclopædia Britannica since 1938
  • References

    February 1960 Wikipedia