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February 1950

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The following events occurred in February 1950:

February 9, 1950: Senator McCarthy announces that he has a list of 205 names of Communist employees in the U.S. State Department
February 23, 1950: Asteroid 1950 DA discovered, 930 years before its possible impact with Earth
February 9, 1950: Element 98, first synthesized, dubbed Californium

February 1, 1950 (Wednesday)

  • U.S. President Harry S. Truman issued Executive Order 10104, adding another level of nondisclosure to United States government information. The first three levels ("restricted", "confidential" and "secret") were kept, but an even higher classification — "top secret" — was used for the first time.[1]
  • In Finland, Urho Kekkonen is elected President of the Council.
  • The United States Senate voted 64-27 in favor of a proposed amendment to the United States Constitution that would change the method of selecting the Electoral College. Under the proposal, which received the required 2/3rds majority, a state's electoral votes would be divided in proportion to the percentage of the popular vote that a presidential candidate received, rather than the winner in an individual receiving all of the electoral votes in that state.[2] The "Lodge-Gossett" bill failed a few months later to get approval in the U.S. House of Representatives.[3]

February 2, 1950 (Thursday)

February 3, 1950 (Friday)

February 4, 1950 (Saturday)

  • U.S. Army Lieutenant General Leslie R. Groves testified in a closed hearing before a joint congressional committee in Washington that, as a result of the secrets that Dr. Klaus Fuchs had provided to the U.S.S.R., the Soviet Union had not only begun development of an atomic bomb arsenal, but that the U.S. was in a race against the Soviets on the development of the hydrogen bomb.[7]
  • Died: Montagu Collet Norman, 78, British financier, Governor of the Bank of England 1920-1944, nicknamed "The Sphinx of Threadneedle Street".[8]

February 5, 1950 (Sunday)

  • The Soviet Union and the People's Republic of China signed a treaty in Moscow, for the return of the Port Arthur naval base territory to Chinese control. Located in Manchuria, Port Arthur had been under Russian control until 1905, when it was captured by Japan in the Russo-Japanese War and renamed Ryojun. The U.S.S.R. recaptured the port in 1945 during World War II, and it would finally be turned over to China in 1955.[9]
  • Totocalcio the football pool for betting on soccer football matches in Italy, had its first big winner, when a miner from Sardinia, Giovanni Mannu, won 77,000,000 Italian lire for predicting all 12 of that weekend's matches correctly. The amount, worth $123,000 American at the time, would be equivalent to $1.1 million (or €850,000) in 2010.[10]
  • Born: Kate Braverman, American novelist, in Philadelphia

February 6, 1950 (Monday)

  • The Air Force of the Republic of China, flying from the island of Taiwan made a successful bombing raid on the Communist Chinese mainland, striking the People's Republic's largest city, Shanghai; the 17 aircraft, including two B-29 bombers, targeted Shanghai's electrical power plants, shutting down the electricity in 90% of the city.[11] According to the PRC, 500 people were killed, 600 were injured and 50,000 were left homeless by the raid.[12]
  • Born: Natalie Cole, American singer, in Los Angeles (d. 2015)
  • Died: Georges Imbert, 65, German chemist

February 7, 1950 (Tuesday)

  • The United States gave diplomatic recognition to the newly established French-supported governments in Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia with the aim to help "the establishment of stable, non-Communist governments in areas adjacent to Communist China".[13]
  • Iceland is admitted to the Council of Europe.
  • In Chile After the General Strike of January 24,President Gabriel González Videla carried out a cabinet change, the National Concentration, created in July 1948, was dissolved, and the government ends with less than 19% popularity, the Radical Party being greatly affected.
  • Died: D. K. Broster, 72, British historical novelist

February 8, 1950 (Wednesday)

  • The credit card was used for the first time, after loan company executive Frank X. McNamara and lawyer Ralph E. Schneider persuaded 14 New York City restaurants to accept the Diners Club card rather than cash. The 200 Diners Club members who had cards would be billed each month by the Club, which would pay the participating restaurants for the debt incurred.[14] Journalist Matty Simmons accompanied McNamara and Schneider to what is called, in credit card histories, "The First Supper" (actually, lunch) at Major's Cabin Grill, adjacent to the Empire State Building. At the end of the mail, McNamara handed the waiter a piece of cardboard, Diners Club card #1,000 and charged the meal; Schneider carried #1,001 and Simmons #1,002.[15]
  • In East Germany, the Ministerium fur Staatssicherhetsdienst, a secret police organization more commonly known as the "Stasi" rather than the MfS, was established. For nearly 40 years, the Stasi would spy, and maintain files, on every resident of the German Democratic Republic.[16]
  • The comedy film Francis starring Donald O'Connor, Patricia Medina and the voice of Chill Wills premiered in New Orleans, launching the Francis the Talking Mule film series which would consist of seven films through 1956.

February 9, 1950 (Thursday)

  • In a speech to the Ohio County Republican Women's Club at the McClure Hotel in Wheeling, West Virginia, U.S. Senator Joseph McCarthy opened the era of "McCarthyism" as he told listeners that Communists had infiltrated the U.S. State Department. Underscoring his point, McCarthy held up a piece of paper and said, "While I cannot take the time to name all of the men in the State Department who have been named as members of the Communist Party and members of a spy ring, I have here in my hand a list of 205- a list of names that were known to the Secretary of State, and who, nevertheless, are still working and shaping the policy in the State Department."[17] The speech had been written by Ed Nellor of the Washington Times-Herald, whom McCarthy had approached to compose a short talk. Nellor had a list, obtained from Congressional staffer Robert Lee, of 57 State Department employees who were still being investigated by the House Appropriations Committee as possible security risks.[18][19]
  • Element 98 was created for the first time by a team of physicists at the University of California at Berkeley. Glenn T. Seaborg, Albert Ghiorso, Stanley G. Thompson and Kenneth Street, Jr., having named Element 97 berkelium, gave the name californium to the new element.[20]

February 10, 1950 (Friday)

February 11, 1950 (Saturday)

February 12, 1950 (Sunday)

February 13, 1950 (Monday)

February 14, 1950 (Tuesday)

February 15, 1950 (Wednesday)

  • Walt Disney released his 12th animated film, Cinderella, with a premiere in Boston, followed on February 22 in other major cities. The very successful film marked a "profitable return to the fairy tale" for Disney after the losing money on Fantasia and Bambi.[32]
  • The Italian-American neorealist film Stromboli premiered in American theaters, accompanied by a great deal of controversy surrounding an extramarital affair between director Roberto Rossellini and star Ingrid Bergman during the film's production.
  • Sardi's, a restaurant in the Theater District of Manhattan, began the tradition of hosting opening-night parties for plays premiering on Broadway, starting with a celebration for the cast and crew following Come Back, Little Sheba.[33]
  • Come Back, Little Sheba made its debut on Broadway, as the first play for William Inge. Actors Shirley Booth and Sidney Blackmer would both win Tony Awards for their performances in the play, which ran for 190 performances, and Booth would win an Academy Award two years later when she reprised her role as "Lola" in the film version of the play.[34]
  • Born: Tsui Hark (Tsui Man-kong), Hong Kong film director, in Haifeng, China

February 16, 1950 (Thursday)

  • Electoral reform was enacted by Turkey's Grand National Assembly, adopting for the first time the secret ballot, open counting of ballots, and oversight of the selection of election judges. In the next election three months later, the Republican People's Party would lose its majority in Parliament after 27 years.[35]
  • France requested American economic and military assistance to aid French efforts in Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia.[36]
  • in Argentina, after a controversial definition, Club Atlético Lanús descends for the first time to the second division of professional football.
  • Born:
    • Roman Tam, renowned Hong Kong singer nicknamed "Godfather of Cantopop", in Guiping, China (d. 2002)
    • Peter Hain, British cabinet minister, Leader of the House of Commons 2003 to 2005, in Nairobi, Kenya, British East Africa
  • Died:

February 17, 1950 (Friday)

  • In the worst railroad accident in the New York metropolitan area, 29 commuters were killed and 105 injured in the collision of two Long Island Railroad trains. At 10:38 pm, eastbound Train No. 192 ran through a red light signal and crashed head on into the westbound Train No. 175 at Rockville Centre, New York. Together, the two trains carried "about 1,000 passengers" and were ripped down the center of the cars.[37][38]
  • King Abdullah I of Jordan and Mossad Director Reuven Shiloah of Israel met at the King's winter palace at El Shuneh, where the King presented a seven-point treaty proposal.[39]
  • Mao Zedong, the leader of the Communist Party of the People's Republic of China, returned home from the Soviet Union after a stay of two months. Mao had arrived in Moscow on December 16, 1949, and remained there for nine weeks.[40]
  • Died: "Judy", 12, pointer dog for the British ship HMS Grasshopper, credited with saving the lives of its crew during World War II

February 18, 1950 (Saturday)

February 19, 1950 (Sunday)

  • The United States broke diplomatic relations with Bulgaria in the first American withdrawal of representatives from the Balkan nation since World War II. The move followed Bulgaria's refusal to drop espionage charges against American foreign officer Donald R. Heath. The 12 members of the Bulgarian mission in Washington were ordered to leave, and the 38 American diplomats in Sofia were directed to leave as soon as possible.[44]
  • The demotion of Soviet Communist Party Politburo member Andrey Andreyevich Andreyev began when an unsigned editorial appeared in the official Party newspaper, Pravda. Entitled "Against Distortions in the Organization of the Kolkhoz", the article criticized Andreyev for his attempt to change the format of collective farming by advocating smaller groups of laborers ("links") instead of the larger "brigades", making him the scapegoat for a policy that had been in place since 1939.[45]
  • The Parasites by Daphne du Maurier topped The New York Times Fiction Best Seller list.

February 20, 1950 (Monday)

  • U.S. Senator Joe McCarthy elaborated on his charges of Communism in the U.S. State Department, giving a five-hour speech on the floor of the Senate in Washington, D.C. In the speech read into the Congressional Record, McCarthy revised his charge of 205 or 57 Communists in the State Department, to 81.[46]
  • Born: Tony Wilson, English music producer, in Salford, Greater Manchester (d. 2007)
  • Died: Sarat Chandra Bose, 60, Indian independence fighter

February 21, 1950 (Tuesday)

February 22, 1950 (Wednesday)

  • Egypt and Israel signed a General Armistice Agreement at Auja al-Hafir, a town on the border between the two nations. The Agreement defined the boundaries of the Gaza Strip as a neutral zone between the Muslim and Jewish countries, which had fought a war less than two years earlier.[49]
  • The National Intercollegiate Recreational Sports Association was created by agreement of representatives from eleven historically black colleges (Albany State College, Arkansas A&M College, Bethune-Cookman College, Dillard University, North Carolina College, Southern University, Texas Southern University, Tillotson College, Tuskegee Institute, Wiley College, and Xavier University).[50]
  • Born:

February 23, 1950 (Thursday)

  • In elections for the United Kingdom's House of Commons, the Labour Party, led by Prime Minister Clement Attlee, retained its majority despite losing 78 seats. Labour went from having 393 of the 617 seats to a slim majority of 315 of 617. Winston Churchill's Conservative Party increased its share from 197 to 282.[51] Attlee was able to form a new government and continue as Prime Minister.
  • Asteroid 1950 DA was discovered by astronomers only five million miles from Earth, then tracked for 17 days as the distance increased. On December 31, 2000, the last day of the 20th century, it would be seen again and measured at 0.7 miles in diameter. The trajectory of 1950 DA was calculated by NASA's Near Earth Object Program from the two appearances, and the asteroid will make its closest approach to Earth on March 16, 2880, with a chance of 1 in 300 of a collision, the highest probability so far noted of any possible impact.[52]
  • The British thriller film Stage Fright directed by Alfred Hitchcock and starring Jane Wyman, Marlene Dietrich, Michael Wilding and Richard Todd was released.

February 24, 1950 (Friday)

  • The Regents of the University of California voted 12-6 to require all employees of the university system to sign a loyalty oath that included a statement specifically disavowing support of Communism, and to dismiss, by June 30, any faculty member or other employee who refused to agree.[53] The 31 professors who were dismissed would bring suit, and the oath would be overturned by the California Supreme Court on October 17, 1952, in the case of Tolman v. Underhill.[54]
  • China's Communist government issued the "Circular on Strict Prohibition of Opium and Drug Taking", outlawing the manufacture, transportation, trafficking and use of narcotics, as well as cigarettes. Users were required to register with the local authorities and to give up their addictions with a specified time, or face punishment. The punishment of drug dealers was, at first, lenient.[55]
  • Construction began on the "Beijing City Local Qinghe State Farm", promoted as a "model labor camp" that would house 5,000 inmates.[56]
  • Representatives of Israel and Jordan initialed a five-year peace treaty that provided for joint control of Jerusalem and commerce between the two nations, but the pact was not approved by either side.[57]
  • in Barcelona, the Francoist dictatorship executes the anarchist Manuel Sabater Llopart.

February 25, 1950 (Saturday)

February 26, 1950 (Sunday)

February 27, 1950 (Monday)

February 28, 1950 (Tuesday)

  • U.S. Undersecretary of State John Peurifoy testified to a Senate subcommittee that most of the 91 U.S. State Department employees who had been dismissed as security risks, weren't barred because of Communist leanings, but because they were homosexual. The result was a wave of investigations and dismissals of gays and lesbians from federal government employment.[63]
  • Morris Fidanque de Castro was appointed as the first native-born Governor of the United States Virgin Islands, after the assembly of the U.S. territory passed a resolution asking U.S. President Truman to select "one of their own" to fill a vacancy in the office.[64]
  • Died: Dai Wangshu, 44, Chinese poet

References

  1. ^ Herbert N. Foerstel, Free Expression and Censorship in America: An Encyclopedia (Greenwood Publishing, 1997) p159
  2. ^ "Speedy Action on Electoral Change Seen", "Oakland Tribune", February 2, 1950, p1
  3. ^ "Electoral college reform plans", in Encyclopedia of American Political Parties and Elections (Infobase Publishing, 2009)) p137
  4. ^ Nicholas Tarling, 'The Cambridge History of Southeast Asia: From World War II to the Present, Volume 2 (Cambridge University Press, 2000) p39
  5. ^ "Tonight Ends Run of 'What's My Line' on TV— Its 17 Years on Air Is 2nd Only to Sullivan", Chicago Tribune, September 3, 1967, p3-16
  6. ^ "SCIENTIST HELD AS ATOM SPY", Pittsburgh Press, February 3, 1950, p1
  7. ^ "Spy Gave H-Bomb Secret To Reds, Probers Believe", "Miami Daily News", February 4, 1950, p1
  8. ^ "Lord Norman Dies At 78, Famous British Banker", "Miami Daily News", February 5, 1950, p3-A
  9. ^ "Port Arthur", in Encyclopedia of the United Nations and International Agreements: N to S, by Edmund Jan Osmańczyk and Anthony Mango (Taylor & Francis, 2003) p1823
  10. ^ Simon Martin, Sport Italia: The Italian Love Affair with Sport (I.B.Tauris, 2011) p130
  11. ^ Martin L. Lasater and Peter Kien-hong Yu, Taiwan's Security in the Post-Deng Xiaoping Era (Frank Cass Publishers, 2000) p177
  12. ^ Paul Pickowicz, Dilemmas of Victory: The Early Years of the People's Republic of China (Harvard University Press, 2007) p71
  13. ^ Michael J. Lacey, ed., The Truman Presidency (Cambridge University Press, 1991) p353
  14. ^ "A historical look at the origins of the credit card", by Brian Milner, Toronto Globe and Mail, August 22, 1950
  15. ^ Matty Simmons, Fat, Drunk, and Stupid: The Inside Story Behind the Making of Animal House (Macmillan, 2012) p10;
  16. ^ Jeffrey Herf, Divided Memory: The Nazi Past in the Two Germanys (Harvard University Press, 1997) p108
  17. ^ "State Department Run By Reds, Says Senator", Oakland Tribune, February 10, 1950, p2; Curt Gentry, J. Edgar Hoover: The Man and the Secrets (W. W. Norton & Company, 2001) p377
  18. ^ Arthur Herman, Joseph McCarthy: Reexamining the Life and Legacy of America's Most Hated Senator (Simon and Schuster, 1999) pp97-98
  19. ^ Edwin R. Bayley, Joe McCarthy and the Press (University of Wisconsin Press, 1981)
  20. ^ Glenn T. Seaborg, The Transuranium Elements (Taylor & Francis, 1958) p157
  21. ^ Tom Griffiths, Slicing the Silence: Voyaging to Antarctica (Harvard University Press, 2007) p100
  22. ^ Raymond P. Ojserkis, Beginnings of the Cold War Arms Race: The Truman Administration and the U.S. Arms Build-Up (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2003) p180
  23. ^ Jerome Klinkowitz, Vonnegut in Fact: The Public Spokesmanship of Personal Fiction (University of South Carolina Press, 1998) p2
  24. ^ "European Broadcasting Union", Encyclopedia of Television, Horace Newcomb, ed. (CRC Press, 2004) p820
  25. ^ "B36 DOWN OFF VANCOUVER", "Miami Daily News", February 14, 1950, p1
  26. ^ "Fat Man", in The A to Z of Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical Warfare, Benjamin C. Garrett and John Hart, eds. (Scarecrow Press, 2009) p74
  27. ^ "Clues Found To Location Of 5 Lost B-36 Airmen", "Miami Daily News", February 17, 1950, p1; Dirk Septer, Lost Nuke: The Last Flight of Bomber 075 (Heritage House Publishing, 2012)
  28. ^ "Thorpe Voted Best Athlete Of Five Decades", San Mateo Times, February 13, 1950, p11
  29. ^ "Babe Zaharias Wins Overwhelming Ballot as Greatest Woman Athlete", San Mateo Times, February 14, 1950, p18
  30. ^ Dieter Heinzig, The Soviet Union and Communist China, 1945-1950: The Arduous Road to the Alliance (M.E. Sharpe, 2004) pp364-368
  31. ^ Bruce A. Elleman, Naval Power and Expeditionary Warfare: Peripheral Campaigns and New Theatres of Naval Warfare (Taylor & Francis, 2011) p144
  32. ^ Pat Williams, with Jim Denney, How to Be Like Walt: Capturing the Disney Magic Every Day of Your Life (HCI, 2004) p161; imdb.com
  33. ^ Ken Bloom, Broadway: An Encyclopedia (Taylor & Francis, 2003) p482
  34. ^ "Come Back, Little Sheba", in The Cambridge Guide to American Theatre by Don B. Wilmeth (Cambridge University Press, 2007) pp 177-178
  35. ^ Mehmet Merdan Hekimoglu, Constitutional Developments Of Turkey Since Ottoman Times To The Present State Of The Modern Turkish Republic (GRIN Verlag, Oct 15, 2010) p27
  36. ^ Kathryn C. Statler, Replacing France: The Origins of American Intervention in Vietnam (University Press of Kentucky, 2007)
  37. ^ "29 Dead In Long Island Wreck", "Miami Daily News", February 18, 1950, p1
  38. ^ Edgar A. Haine, Railroad Wrecks (Associated University Presses, 1993) pp123-124
  39. ^ Ilan Pappé, The Making of the Arab-Israeli Conflict, 1947-1951 (I.B.Tauris, 1994) pp259-260
  40. ^ Xiaoming Zhang, Red Wings over the Yalu: China, the Soviet Union, and the Air War in Korea (Texas A&M University Press, 2003) p80
  41. ^ "Voegeler Confesses 'Spying', Begs For Hungary's Mercy", "Miami Daily News", February 18, 1950, p1
  42. ^ "Hungary Sentences Vogeler To 15 Years", "Miami Daily News", February 21, 1950, p1
  43. ^ "America and Britain in the Dock", from Hugo Dewar, The Modern Inquisition (Allan Wingate Publishing, 1953), in marxists.org
  44. ^ "U.S. Breaks Ties With Bulgaria", Pittsburgh Press, February 21, 1950, p1
  45. ^ The Communist Party of the Soviet Union (Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1960) p529
  46. ^ Alan Axelrod, The Real History of the Cold War: A New Look at the Past (Sterling Publishing Company, 2009) p281; "McCarthy Bets Senate Seat on Red Charges", Milwaukee Sentinel, February 21, 1950, p1
  47. ^ Pam Grout, Kansas Curiosities, 3rd: Quirky Characters, Roadside Oddities & Other Offbeat Stuff (Globe Pequot, 2010) p258; Race website
  48. ^ L. Paul Saettler, The Evolution of American Educational Technology (International Age Publishing, 2004) p363
  49. ^ "International Boundary Study: Israel - Egypt Boundary" 2012-05-03 at the Wayback Machine, U.S. Department of State, April 1, 1965
  50. ^ NIRSA.org
  51. ^ Frank Conley, General Elections Today (Manchester University Press ND, 1994) pp19-22
  52. ^ R.M. Bonnet and Lodewyk Woltjer, Surviving 1000 Centuries: Can We Do It? (Springer, 2008) p. 77;
  53. ^ Ed Cray, Chief Justice: A Biography of Earl Warren (Simon and Schuster, 1997) p203
  54. ^ Wilson Smith and Thomas Bender, American Higher Education Transformed, 1940--2005: Documenting the National Discourse (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2008) p462
  55. ^ Sarah Biddulph, Legal Reform and Administrative Detention Powers in China (Cambridge University Press, 2007) p77
  56. ^ Klaus Mühlhahn, Criminal Justice in China: A History (Harvard University Press, 2009) p248
  57. ^ Peter L. Hahn, Caught in the Middle East: U.S. Policy toward the Arab-Israeli Conflict, 1945-1961 (University of North Carolina Press, 2006) p90
  58. ^ Karin Adir, The Great Clowns of American Television (McFarland, 2001) p70
  59. ^ "Strand Magazine Dies After 59 Historic Years", "Miami Sunday News", February 26, 1950, p1
  60. ^ Brian Clegg, Armageddon Science: The Science of Mass Destruction (Macmillan, 2010) p77
  61. ^ Richard Michael Gibson, The Secret Army: Chiang Kai-shek and the Drug Warlords of the Golden Triangle (John Wiley & Sons, 2011)
  62. ^ Bernard Seytre, The Death of a Disease: A History of the Eradication of Poliomyelitis (Rutgers University Press, 2005) p78
  63. ^ Robert J. Corber, In the Name of National Security: Hitchcock, Homophobia, and the Political Construction of Gender in Postwar America (Duke University Press, 1996)
  64. ^ Judah M. Cohen, Through the Sands of Time: A History of the Jewish Community of St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands (University Press of New England, 2012) p200

february, 1950, 1950, january, february, march, april, june, july, august, september, october, november, december, 1112, 1819, 2526, following, events, occurred, february, 1950, senator, mccarthy, announces, that, list, names, communist, employees, state, depa. 1950 January February March April May June July August September October November December lt lt February 1950 gt gt Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa0 1 0 2 0 3 0 40 5 0 6 0 7 0 8 0 9 10 1112 13 14 15 16 17 1819 20 21 22 23 24 2526 27 28 The following events occurred in February 1950 February 9 1950 Senator McCarthy announces that he has a list of 205 names of Communist employees in the U S State Department February 23 1950 Asteroid 1950 DA discovered 930 years before its possible impact with Earth February 9 1950 Element 98 first synthesized dubbed Californium Contents 1 February 1 1950 Wednesday 2 February 2 1950 Thursday 3 February 3 1950 Friday 4 February 4 1950 Saturday 5 February 5 1950 Sunday 6 February 6 1950 Monday 7 February 7 1950 Tuesday 8 February 8 1950 Wednesday 9 February 9 1950 Thursday 10 February 10 1950 Friday 11 February 11 1950 Saturday 12 February 12 1950 Sunday 13 February 13 1950 Monday 14 February 14 1950 Tuesday 15 February 15 1950 Wednesday 16 February 16 1950 Thursday 17 February 17 1950 Friday 18 February 18 1950 Saturday 19 February 19 1950 Sunday 20 February 20 1950 Monday 21 February 21 1950 Tuesday 22 February 22 1950 Wednesday 23 February 23 1950 Thursday 24 February 24 1950 Friday 25 February 25 1950 Saturday 26 February 26 1950 Sunday 27 February 27 1950 Monday 28 February 28 1950 Tuesday 29 ReferencesFebruary 1 1950 Wednesday EditU S President Harry S Truman issued Executive Order 10104 adding another level of nondisclosure to United States government information The first three levels restricted confidential and secret were kept but an even higher classification top secret was used for the first time 1 In Finland Urho Kekkonen is elected President of the Council The United States Senate voted 64 27 in favor of a proposed amendment to the United States Constitution that would change the method of selecting the Electoral College Under the proposal which received the required 2 3rds majority a state s electoral votes would be divided in proportion to the percentage of the popular vote that a presidential candidate received rather than the winner in an individual receiving all of the electoral votes in that state 2 The Lodge Gossett bill failed a few months later to get approval in the U S House of Representatives 3 February 2 1950 Thursday EditThe French Assembly approved the Saigon Convention granting sovereignty and promising eventual independence to the State of Vietnam under the leadership of former Emperor Bao Dai 4 The game show What s My Line began a 17 year run on the CBS television network and would continue until September 3 1967 5 Died Constantin Caratheodory 74 Greek mathematicianFebruary 3 1950 Friday EditNuclear physicist Klaus Fuchs was arrested by agents of Scotland Yard and charged with having provided American atomic bomb secrets to the Soviet Union 6 Socialist ministers resign in France Born Morgan Fairchild American actress as Patsy Ann McClenny in Dallas Zaynab Alkali Nigerian novelist in Biu Died Sir Lionel Cripps 86 Rhodesian politician and the first Speaker of Rhodesia s colonial legislative assembly Sid Field 45 British comedian Emile Borel 85 French mathematicianFebruary 4 1950 Saturday EditU S Army Lieutenant General Leslie R Groves testified in a closed hearing before a joint congressional committee in Washington that as a result of the secrets that Dr Klaus Fuchs had provided to the U S S R the Soviet Union had not only begun development of an atomic bomb arsenal but that the U S was in a race against the Soviets on the development of the hydrogen bomb 7 Died Montagu Collet Norman 78 British financier Governor of the Bank of England 1920 1944 nicknamed The Sphinx of Threadneedle Street 8 February 5 1950 Sunday EditThe Soviet Union and the People s Republic of China signed a treaty in Moscow for the return of the Port Arthur naval base territory to Chinese control Located in Manchuria Port Arthur had been under Russian control until 1905 when it was captured by Japan in the Russo Japanese War and renamed Ryojun The U S S R recaptured the port in 1945 during World War II and it would finally be turned over to China in 1955 9 Totocalcio the football pool for betting on soccer football matches in Italy had its first big winner when a miner from Sardinia Giovanni Mannu won 77 000 000 Italian lire for predicting all 12 of that weekend s matches correctly The amount worth 123 000 American at the time would be equivalent to 1 1 million or 850 000 in 2010 10 Born Kate Braverman American novelist in PhiladelphiaFebruary 6 1950 Monday EditThe Air Force of the Republic of China flying from the island of Taiwan made a successful bombing raid on the Communist Chinese mainland striking the People s Republic s largest city Shanghai the 17 aircraft including two B 29 bombers targeted Shanghai s electrical power plants shutting down the electricity in 90 of the city 11 According to the PRC 500 people were killed 600 were injured and 50 000 were left homeless by the raid 12 Born Natalie Cole American singer in Los Angeles d 2015 Died Georges Imbert 65 German chemistFebruary 7 1950 Tuesday EditThe United States gave diplomatic recognition to the newly established French supported governments in Vietnam Laos and Cambodia with the aim to help the establishment of stable non Communist governments in areas adjacent to Communist China 13 Iceland is admitted to the Council of Europe In Chile After the General Strike of January 24 President Gabriel Gonzalez Videla carried out a cabinet change the National Concentration created in July 1948 was dissolved and the government ends with less than 19 popularity the Radical Party being greatly affected Died D K Broster 72 British historical novelistFebruary 8 1950 Wednesday EditThe credit card was used for the first time after loan company executive Frank X McNamara and lawyer Ralph E Schneider persuaded 14 New York City restaurants to accept the Diners Club card rather than cash The 200 Diners Club members who had cards would be billed each month by the Club which would pay the participating restaurants for the debt incurred 14 Journalist Matty Simmons accompanied McNamara and Schneider to what is called in credit card histories The First Supper actually lunch at Major s Cabin Grill adjacent to the Empire State Building At the end of the mail McNamara handed the waiter a piece of cardboard Diners Club card 1 000 and charged the meal Schneider carried 1 001 and Simmons 1 002 15 In East Germany the Ministerium fur Staatssicherhetsdienst a secret police organization more commonly known as the Stasi rather than the MfS was established For nearly 40 years the Stasi would spy and maintain files on every resident of the German Democratic Republic 16 The comedy film Francis starring Donald O Connor Patricia Medina and the voice of Chill Wills premiered in New Orleans launching the Francis the Talking Mule film series which would consist of seven films through 1956 February 9 1950 Thursday EditIn a speech to the Ohio County Republican Women s Club at the McClure Hotel in Wheeling West Virginia U S Senator Joseph McCarthy opened the era of McCarthyism as he told listeners that Communists had infiltrated the U S State Department Underscoring his point McCarthy held up a piece of paper and said While I cannot take the time to name all of the men in the State Department who have been named as members of the Communist Party and members of a spy ring I have here in my hand a list of 205 a list of names that were known to the Secretary of State and who nevertheless are still working and shaping the policy in the State Department 17 The speech had been written by Ed Nellor of the Washington Times Herald whom McCarthy had approached to compose a short talk Nellor had a list obtained from Congressional staffer Robert Lee of 57 State Department employees who were still being investigated by the House Appropriations Committee as possible security risks 18 19 Element 98 was created for the first time by a team of physicists at the University of California at Berkeley Glenn T Seaborg Albert Ghiorso Stanley G Thompson and Kenneth Street Jr having named Element 97 berkelium gave the name californium to the new element 20 February 10 1950 Friday EditThe Maudheim Station was established by the Norwegian British Swedish Antarctic Expedition on a floating thick ice shelf at Queen Maud Land 21 The CIA sent a report to U S President Truman that concluded that the Soviet Union would have a stockpile of 100 atomic bombs by the end of 1953 and 200 by the end of 1955 The Joint Chiefs of Staff had estimated that the Soviets would have as many as 20 A bombs by the end of the year and between 70 and 135 by mid 1953 22 Born Mark Spitz American Olympic swimmer 7 time gold medalist in 1972 2 in 1968 in Modesto California Luis Donaldo Colosio Mexican presidential nominee in Magdalena de Kino assassinated in 1994 February 11 1950 Saturday EditAuthor Kurt Vonnegut was published for the first time as his story Report on the Barnhouse Effect appeared in Collier s magazine 23 Rag Mop by The Ames Brothers hit 1 on the Billboard Best Sellers in Stores chart Died Kiki Cuyler 51 American MLB baseball player and Hall of Fame enshrineeFebruary 12 1950 Sunday EditThe European Broadcasting Union was founded at a conference in the English coastal resort of Torquay by representatives of 23 Western European broadcasting stations In 1993 the EBU would incorporate OIRT the International Radio and Television Organization 24 Born Michael Ironside Canadian actor in Toronto Steve Hackett British songwriter and guitarist former member of rock group Genesis in the City of WestminsterFebruary 13 1950 Monday EditA U S Air Force B 36 bomber with a nuclear weapon crashed off of Canada s Pacific coast near Vancouver 25 According to reports declassified and released in 1977 the Mark 4 nuclear bomb casing contained no functional nuclear explosive and exploded on impact with the ocean 26 Twelve of the 17 crewmen were rescued by a fishing boat while the others were missing and presumed dead 27 Jim Thorpe was voted the greatest male athlete of the half century in a poll of American sportswriters and broadcasters by the Associated Press named in first place by 252 of 393 voters well ahead of Babe Ruth 86 and Jack Dempsey 67 28 The next day Babe Didrikson Zaharias was voted the greatest female athlete of the half century by the panel with 319 of 361 first place votes Tennis star Helen Wills Moody was a distant second 29 After Bulgaria Czechoslovakia Hungary and Poland Albania recognizes the democratic republic of Vietnam Born Peter Gabriel British rock musician Sledgehammer and former member of rock group Genesis in Chobham Surrey Died Rafael Sabatini 74 Italian novelistFebruary 14 1950 Tuesday EditThe Soviet Union and the People s Republic of China the two largest Communist nations on Earth signed a 30 year mutual defense treaty pledging to come to each other s aid in the event either nation was attacked 30 The treaty also contained a provision that it would renew for an additional five years if not cancelled one year prior to its expiration 31 Singer Frank Sinatra and his wife Nancy Barbato announce their separation February 15 1950 Wednesday EditWalt Disney released his 12th animated film Cinderella with a premiere in Boston followed on February 22 in other major cities The very successful film marked a profitable return to the fairy tale for Disney after the losing money on Fantasia and Bambi 32 The Italian American neorealist film Stromboli premiered in American theaters accompanied by a great deal of controversy surrounding an extramarital affair between director Roberto Rossellini and star Ingrid Bergman during the film s production Sardi s a restaurant in the Theater District of Manhattan began the tradition of hosting opening night parties for plays premiering on Broadway starting with a celebration for the cast and crew following Come Back Little Sheba 33 Come Back Little Sheba made its debut on Broadway as the first play for William Inge Actors Shirley Booth and Sidney Blackmer would both win Tony Awards for their performances in the play which ran for 190 performances and Booth would win an Academy Award two years later when she reprised her role as Lola in the film version of the play 34 Born Tsui Hark Tsui Man kong Hong Kong film director in Haifeng ChinaFebruary 16 1950 Thursday EditElectoral reform was enacted by Turkey s Grand National Assembly adopting for the first time the secret ballot open counting of ballots and oversight of the selection of election judges In the next election three months later the Republican People s Party would lose its majority in Parliament after 27 years 35 France requested American economic and military assistance to aid French efforts in Vietnam Laos and Cambodia 36 in Argentina after a controversial definition Club Atletico Lanus descends for the first time to the second division of professional football Born Roman Tam renowned Hong Kong singer nicknamed Godfather of Cantopop in Guiping China d 2002 Peter Hain British cabinet minister Leader of the House of Commons 2003 to 2005 in Nairobi Kenya British East Africa Died Charles Mile a Minute Murphy 79 American cyclist who was the first person in 1899 to ride a bicycle at more than 60 miles an hour S Otis Bland 67 U S Representative for Virginia since 1918February 17 1950 Friday EditIn the worst railroad accident in the New York metropolitan area 29 commuters were killed and 105 injured in the collision of two Long Island Railroad trains At 10 38 pm eastbound Train No 192 ran through a red light signal and crashed head on into the westbound Train No 175 at Rockville Centre New York Together the two trains carried about 1 000 passengers and were ripped down the center of the cars 37 38 King Abdullah I of Jordan and Mossad Director Reuven Shiloah of Israel met at the King s winter palace at El Shuneh where the King presented a seven point treaty proposal 39 Mao Zedong the leader of the Communist Party of the People s Republic of China returned home from the Soviet Union after a stay of two months Mao had arrived in Moscow on December 16 1949 and remained there for nine weeks 40 Died Judy 12 pointer dog for the British ship HMS Grasshopper credited with saving the lives of its crew during World War IIFebruary 18 1950 Saturday EditU S businessman Robert A Vogeler a telephone company executive in Hungary pleaded guilty to charges of espionage and told a Budapest court that he had tried to help atomic scientists escape from the Communist controlled nation 41 Three days later Voegeler who had asked the court for mercy was given a 15 year prison sentence 42 Vogeler was released on April 27 1951 after concessions were made by the United States and wrote a book with Leigh White about the experience I Was Stalin s Prisoner 43 Chattanoogie Shoe Shine Boy by Red Foley topped the Billboard Best Sellers in Stores chart Born John Hughes American film director producer and writer in Lansing Michigan d 2009 Cybill Shepherd American film and TV actress in Memphis Tennessee Bebe Moore Campbell American novelist in Philadelphia d 2006 February 19 1950 Sunday EditThe United States broke diplomatic relations with Bulgaria in the first American withdrawal of representatives from the Balkan nation since World War II The move followed Bulgaria s refusal to drop espionage charges against American foreign officer Donald R Heath The 12 members of the Bulgarian mission in Washington were ordered to leave and the 38 American diplomats in Sofia were directed to leave as soon as possible 44 The demotion of Soviet Communist Party Politburo member Andrey Andreyevich Andreyev began when an unsigned editorial appeared in the official Party newspaper Pravda Entitled Against Distortions in the Organization of the Kolkhoz the article criticized Andreyev for his attempt to change the format of collective farming by advocating smaller groups of laborers links instead of the larger brigades making him the scapegoat for a policy that had been in place since 1939 45 The Parasites by Daphne du Maurier topped The New York Times Fiction Best Seller list February 20 1950 Monday EditU S Senator Joe McCarthy elaborated on his charges of Communism in the U S State Department giving a five hour speech on the floor of the Senate in Washington D C In the speech read into the Congressional Record McCarthy revised his charge of 205 or 57 Communists in the State Department to 81 46 Born Tony Wilson English music producer in Salford Greater Manchester d 2007 Died Sarat Chandra Bose 60 Indian independence fighterFebruary 21 1950 Tuesday EditThe first International Pancake Race was staged between competitors at Olney Buckinghamshire which had started the tradition in 1445 in England and in Liberal Kansas in the United States The President of the Jaycees service club in Liberal had read about the race and had written to the vicar of St Peter s and St Paul s Church in Olney with the housewives in both towns trying to make the best time in the race The two towns have competed on every Shrove Tuesday since then 47 WOI TV began broadcasting from studios at Iowa State University in Ames becoming the first regular broadcaster of educational television As the first TV station to cover most of Iowa WOI also carried some programming from commercial networks the first fully noncommercial educational TV station would be KUHT of the University of Houston which signed on May 25 1953 48 Born Angel Maria Villar Former Spanish association football player mainly Athletic Bilbao 1969 1981 and former president of Royal Spanish Football Federation 1988 2017 in Bilbao Biscay Province Spain citation needed February 22 1950 Wednesday EditEgypt and Israel signed a General Armistice Agreement at Auja al Hafir a town on the border between the two nations The Agreement defined the boundaries of the Gaza Strip as a neutral zone between the Muslim and Jewish countries which had fought a war less than two years earlier 49 The National Intercollegiate Recreational Sports Association was created by agreement of representatives from eleven historically black colleges Albany State College Arkansas A amp M College Bethune Cookman College Dillard University North Carolina College Southern University Texas Southern University Tillotson College Tuskegee Institute Wiley College and Xavier University 50 Born Julius Erving American pro basketball player nicknamed Dr J as a star in the ABA and the NBA in Roosevelt New York Awn Shawkat Al Khasawneh Prime Minister of Jordan 2011 2012 in Amman Julie Walters English stage actress in Smethwick Miou Miou Sylvette Herry French actress in ParisFebruary 23 1950 Thursday EditIn elections for the United Kingdom s House of Commons the Labour Party led by Prime Minister Clement Attlee retained its majority despite losing 78 seats Labour went from having 393 of the 617 seats to a slim majority of 315 of 617 Winston Churchill s Conservative Party increased its share from 197 to 282 51 Attlee was able to form a new government and continue as Prime Minister Asteroid 1950 DA was discovered by astronomers only five million miles from Earth then tracked for 17 days as the distance increased On December 31 2000 the last day of the 20th century it would be seen again and measured at 0 7 miles in diameter The trajectory of 1950 DA was calculated by NASA s Near Earth Object Program from the two appearances and the asteroid will make its closest approach to Earth on March 16 2880 with a chance of 1 in 300 of a collision the highest probability so far noted of any possible impact 52 The British thriller film Stage Fright directed by Alfred Hitchcock and starring Jane Wyman Marlene Dietrich Michael Wilding and Richard Todd was released February 24 1950 Friday EditThe Regents of the University of California voted 12 6 to require all employees of the university system to sign a loyalty oath that included a statement specifically disavowing support of Communism and to dismiss by June 30 any faculty member or other employee who refused to agree 53 The 31 professors who were dismissed would bring suit and the oath would be overturned by the California Supreme Court on October 17 1952 in the case of Tolman v Underhill 54 China s Communist government issued the Circular on Strict Prohibition of Opium and Drug Taking outlawing the manufacture transportation trafficking and use of narcotics as well as cigarettes Users were required to register with the local authorities and to give up their addictions with a specified time or face punishment The punishment of drug dealers was at first lenient 55 Construction began on the Beijing City Local Qinghe State Farm promoted as a model labor camp that would house 5 000 inmates 56 Representatives of Israel and Jordan initialed a five year peace treaty that provided for joint control of Jerusalem and commerce between the two nations but the pact was not approved by either side 57 in Barcelona the Francoist dictatorship executes the anarchist Manuel Sabater Llopart February 25 1950 Saturday EditNBC premiered a 90 minute comedy variety show that was telecast live every Saturday night with a different guest host each week and a regular cast of comedians The program originally called Saturday Night Revue was soon called Your Show of Shows 58 The final issue of Great Britain s The Strand Magazine reached newsstands after publishing monthly since 1894 The Strand had introduced the Sherlock Holmes stories of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle as well as the H G Wells novel The First Men in the Moon 59 Born Neil Jordan Irish film director writer and producer The Crying Game in Sligo Nestor Kirchner 51st President of Argentina 2003 2007 in Rio Gallegos d 2010 Died George Minot 64 American physician 1934 Nobel Prize laureate Nikolai Luzin 66 Soviet mathematicianFebruary 26 1950 Sunday EditHungarian American nuclear physicist Leo Szilard appeared with other atomic scientists on the NBC Radio program University of Chicago Round Table and first described the cobalt bomb whose radioactive cobalt 60 fallout cloud could spread across the world and destroy all life on Earth 60 Yunnan Province the last Nationalist Chinese stronghold in Mainland China as Communist Chinese troops marched into the provincial capital Kunming 61 Born Helen Clark 37th Prime Minister of New Zealand 1999 2008 in Hamilton Died Harry Lauder 79 Scottish entertainerFebruary 27 1950 Monday EditAn unidentified 8 year old boy from the Letchworth Village institution near Otisville New York became the first test subject for the prototype of the oral polio vaccine developed by Dr Hilary Koprowski After the boy showed no signs of side effects Dr Koprowski expanded the experiment to another 19 children 62 February 28 1950 Tuesday EditU S Undersecretary of State John Peurifoy testified to a Senate subcommittee that most of the 91 U S State Department employees who had been dismissed as security risks weren t barred because of Communist leanings but because they were homosexual The result was a wave of investigations and dismissals of gays and lesbians from federal government employment 63 Morris Fidanque de Castro was appointed as the first native born Governor of the United States Virgin Islands after the assembly of the U S territory passed a resolution asking U S President Truman to select one of their own to fill a vacancy in the office 64 Died Dai Wangshu 44 Chinese poetReferences Edit Herbert N Foerstel Free Expression and Censorship in America An Encyclopedia Greenwood Publishing 1997 p159 Speedy Action on Electoral Change Seen Oakland Tribune February 2 1950 p1 Electoral college reform plans in Encyclopedia of American Political Parties and Elections Infobase Publishing 2009 p137 Nicholas Tarling The Cambridge History of Southeast Asia From World War II to the Present Volume 2 Cambridge University Press 2000 p39 Tonight Ends Run of What s My Line on TV Its 17 Years on Air Is 2nd Only to Sullivan Chicago Tribune September 3 1967 p3 16 SCIENTIST HELD AS ATOM SPY Pittsburgh Press February 3 1950 p1 Spy Gave H Bomb Secret To Reds Probers Believe Miami Daily News February 4 1950 p1 Lord Norman Dies At 78 Famous British Banker Miami Daily News February 5 1950 p3 A Port Arthur in Encyclopedia of the United Nations and International Agreements N to S by Edmund Jan Osmanczyk and Anthony Mango Taylor amp Francis 2003 p1823 Simon Martin Sport Italia The Italian Love Affair with Sport I B Tauris 2011 p130 Martin L Lasater and Peter Kien hong Yu Taiwan s Security in the Post Deng Xiaoping Era Frank Cass Publishers 2000 p177 Paul Pickowicz Dilemmas of Victory The Early Years of the People s Republic of China Harvard University Press 2007 p71 Michael J Lacey ed The Truman Presidency Cambridge University Press 1991 p353 A historical look at the origins of the credit card by Brian Milner Toronto Globe and Mail August 22 1950 Matty Simmons Fat Drunk and Stupid The Inside Story Behind the Making of Animal House Macmillan 2012 p10 Jeffrey Herf Divided Memory The Nazi Past in the Two Germanys Harvard University Press 1997 p108 State Department Run By Reds Says Senator Oakland Tribune February 10 1950 p2 Curt Gentry J Edgar Hoover The Man and the Secrets W W Norton amp Company 2001 p377 Arthur Herman Joseph McCarthy Reexamining the Life and Legacy of America s Most Hated Senator Simon and Schuster 1999 pp97 98 Edwin R Bayley Joe McCarthy and the Press University of Wisconsin Press 1981 Glenn T Seaborg The Transuranium Elements Taylor amp Francis 1958 p157 Tom Griffiths Slicing the Silence Voyaging to Antarctica Harvard University Press 2007 p100 Raymond P Ojserkis Beginnings of the Cold War Arms Race The Truman Administration and the U S Arms Build Up Greenwood Publishing Group 2003 p180 Jerome Klinkowitz Vonnegut in Fact The Public Spokesmanship of Personal Fiction University of South Carolina Press 1998 p2 European Broadcasting Union Encyclopedia of Television Horace Newcomb ed CRC Press 2004 p820 B36 DOWN OFF VANCOUVER Miami Daily News February 14 1950 p1 Fat Man in The A to Z of Nuclear Biological and Chemical Warfare Benjamin C Garrett and John Hart eds Scarecrow Press 2009 p74 Clues Found To Location Of 5 Lost B 36 Airmen Miami Daily News February 17 1950 p1 Dirk Septer Lost Nuke The Last Flight of Bomber 075 Heritage House Publishing 2012 Thorpe Voted Best Athlete Of Five Decades San Mateo Times February 13 1950 p11 Babe Zaharias Wins Overwhelming Ballot as Greatest Woman Athlete San Mateo Times February 14 1950 p18 Dieter Heinzig The Soviet Union and Communist China 1945 1950 The Arduous Road to the Alliance M E Sharpe 2004 pp364 368 Bruce A Elleman Naval Power and Expeditionary Warfare Peripheral Campaigns and New Theatres of Naval Warfare Taylor amp Francis 2011 p144 Pat Williams with Jim Denney How to Be Like Walt Capturing the Disney Magic Every Day of Your Life HCI 2004 p161 imdb com Ken Bloom Broadway An Encyclopedia Taylor amp Francis 2003 p482 Come Back Little Sheba in The Cambridge Guide to American Theatre by Don B Wilmeth Cambridge University Press 2007 pp 177 178 Mehmet Merdan Hekimoglu Constitutional Developments Of Turkey Since Ottoman Times To The Present State Of The Modern Turkish Republic GRIN Verlag Oct 15 2010 p27 Kathryn C Statler Replacing France The Origins of American Intervention in Vietnam University Press of Kentucky 2007 29 Dead In Long Island Wreck Miami Daily News February 18 1950 p1 Edgar A Haine Railroad Wrecks Associated University Presses 1993 pp123 124 Ilan Pappe The Making of the Arab Israeli Conflict 1947 1951 I B Tauris 1994 pp259 260 Xiaoming Zhang Red Wings over the Yalu China the Soviet Union and the Air War in Korea Texas A amp M University Press 2003 p80 Voegeler Confesses Spying Begs For Hungary s Mercy Miami Daily News February 18 1950 p1 Hungary Sentences Vogeler To 15 Years Miami Daily News February 21 1950 p1 America and Britain in the Dock from Hugo Dewar The Modern Inquisition Allan Wingate Publishing 1953 in marxists org U S Breaks Ties With Bulgaria Pittsburgh Press February 21 1950 p1 The Communist Party of the Soviet Union Eyre amp Spottiswoode 1960 p529 Alan Axelrod The Real History of the Cold War A New Look at the Past Sterling Publishing Company 2009 p281 McCarthy Bets Senate Seat on Red Charges Milwaukee Sentinel February 21 1950 p1 Pam Grout Kansas Curiosities 3rd Quirky Characters Roadside Oddities amp Other Offbeat Stuff Globe Pequot 2010 p258 Race website L Paul Saettler The Evolution of American Educational Technology International Age Publishing 2004 p363 International Boundary Study Israel Egypt Boundary Archived 2012 05 03 at the Wayback Machine U S Department of State April 1 1965 NIRSA org Frank Conley General Elections Today Manchester University Press ND 1994 pp19 22 R M Bonnet and Lodewyk Woltjer Surviving 1000 Centuries Can We Do It Springer 2008 p 77 Asteroid 1950 DA Ed Cray Chief Justice A Biography of Earl Warren Simon and Schuster 1997 p203 Wilson Smith and Thomas Bender American Higher Education Transformed 1940 2005 Documenting the National Discourse Johns Hopkins University Press 2008 p462 Sarah Biddulph Legal Reform and Administrative Detention Powers in China Cambridge University Press 2007 p77 Klaus Muhlhahn Criminal Justice in China A History Harvard University Press 2009 p248 Peter L Hahn Caught in the Middle East U S Policy toward the Arab Israeli Conflict 1945 1961 University of North Carolina Press 2006 p90 Karin Adir The Great Clowns of American Television McFarland 2001 p70 Strand Magazine Dies After 59 Historic Years Miami Sunday News February 26 1950 p1 Brian Clegg Armageddon Science The Science of Mass Destruction Macmillan 2010 p77 Richard Michael Gibson The Secret Army Chiang Kai shek and the Drug Warlords of the Golden Triangle John Wiley amp Sons 2011 Bernard Seytre The Death of a Disease A History of the Eradication of Poliomyelitis Rutgers University Press 2005 p78 Robert J Corber In the Name of National Security Hitchcock Homophobia and the Political Construction of Gender in Postwar America Duke University Press 1996 Judah M Cohen Through the Sands of Time A History of the Jewish Community of St Thomas U S Virgin Islands University Press of New England 2012 p200 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title February 1950 amp oldid 1121270837, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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