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February 1961

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The following events occurred in February 1961:

February 1, 1961: U.S. launches first Minuteman ICBM
February 1, 1961: Touch-tone phone tested by Bell
February 14, 1961: New element created

February 1, 1961 (Wednesday) edit

February 2, 1961 (Thursday) edit

February 3, 1961 (Friday) edit

February 4, 1961 (Saturday) edit

  • The Portuguese Colonial War began in Angola with a co-ordinated attack by 180 MPLA guerillas in Luanda. In a morning raid, armed groups attacked the prison, the police barracks, a police patrol and the radio station. The attacks failed, and armed white Angolan residents exacted revenge on Luanda's black neighborhoods, but the battle inspired a 14-year-long campaign to liberate Portugal's colonies.[9][10]
  • Sputnik 7 was launched by the Soviet Union and placed into Earth orbit. Although reported as a success, in that it was the heaviest object (14,300 pounds (6,500 kg)) into orbit at that time, the Soviets did not mention that their intent had been to send the first Earth craft to the planet Venus, a detail revealed in 1962 by the American space agency, NASA.[11]
  • Died: Alphonse Picou, 82, American jazz clarinetist

February 5, 1961 (Sunday) edit

  • The Kachin Independence Organisation and its military wing, the Kachin Independence Army, were organized in the northernmost state of Burma, where the predominantly Christian Kachin people revolted against a proposal by Burmese Premier U Nu to make Buddhism the national religion. Led by the three Zau brothers (Zau Seng, Zau Tu and Zau Dan), the KIO and the KIA lead a rebellion that would last for 32 years, during which the Kachin state operated independently from the rest of Burma.[12][13]
  • A plebiscite was held on the south Pacific islands of Saipan and Tinian on the issue of the future political status of the two southern Pacific lands, both of which were administered by the U.S. Navy. Most (1,642 voters) favored rejoining the U.S. territory of Guam, 875 wanted to be a territory within the Northern Marianas, 27 wanted to continue under Navy administration, and eight were invalid.[14]
  • Movie actress Marilyn Monroe voluntarily checked herself into the Cornell University Medical Center (under the pseudonym "Faye Miller") after being driven there by her psychiatrist, Marianne Kris. Admitted on the premise that she would be treated for exhaustion, Monroe was instead taken to the Payne Whitney Psychiatric Clinic and found "the worst fear of her life come true", being locked inside a padded cell. After three days, she was permitted to make a phone call and reached her ex-husband, baseball star Joe DiMaggio, who flew to New York City and effected her release.[15]

February 6, 1961 (Monday) edit

  • General Ne Win of the Burmese Army purged his military command, announcing the forced resignations of Brigadier General (and future President) Maung Maung, his director of military training, and nine of his 18 field commanders.[16]
  • In the Congo, President Joseph Kasavubu named Joseph Ileo as the Prime Minister in an interim government. Ileo was unable to persuade major secessionist leaders to join his cabinet and would resign on August 1.[17]
  • In what the Associated Press described as "a rarity in anti-trust cases", seven corporate executives were sent to jail in Philadelphia for bid rigging in attempting to obtain government contracts. The jail sentences were in addition to fines against 29 different electrical firms, and another 19 officials were given probation and suspended sentences. The men who drew 30-day jail sentences were a vice-president and two former division managers of General Electric Company; a vice-president and a sales manager of Westinghouse Electric Company; a V.P. of Cutler-Hammer, Inc. (later part of Eaton Corporation) and a V.P. of Clark Controller Company. U.S. District Judge J. Cullen Ganey said, "What really is at stake here is a vast section of our economic system that we are offering to uncommitted sections of the world as an alternative to planned economies."[18][19]
  • KOPB-TV began operating in Portland, Oregon, under the name KOAP.
  • Born: Yury Onufriyenko, Russian cosmonaut, in Ryasne, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union

February 7, 1961 (Tuesday) edit

  • Black political leaders, including Joshua Nkomo and Ndabaningi Sithole, met with British colonial officials in Salisbury and signed their agreement to a referendum on a proposed constitution for independence for Southern Rhodesia, with a system providing for gradual rule by the black African majority. The document, which was to be submitted to black and white voters on July 26, had provisions for "a complicated, racially discriminatory voting system"[20] with an "A" roll for white African voters and candidates, and a "B" roll for black voters and candidates. "It is possible," an author would later write, "had Nkomo adhered to this commitment that he could have found himself in reasonable time the President of the independent state of Zimbabwe. If he had stood by his commitment, the armed struggle, to which he would commit himself shortly, and which would kill some 40,000 people in 1962-1980, would not have occurred. If he had stayed in the constitutional process and encouraged the Africans to qualify for the vote, they would have... by dint of their numbers, come to dominate in a lawful, peaceful manner."[21] Days after the initial agreement, Nkomo and Sithole withdrew their support and urged their supporters to boycott the referendum.
  • George Low, NASA's Chief of Manned Space Flight, and his task group submitted their report, A Plan for a Manned Lunar Landing, for consideration by U.S. President John F. Kennedy.[22]
  • Harold Johnson defeated Jess Bowdry in a boxing bout to win recognition by the National Boxing Association as world light heavyweight champion. All other boxing boards continued to recognize Archie Moore (who had beaten Johnson in four previous encounters) as the world champion, but the N.B.A. had vacated Moore's title for inactivity.[23]
  • Born: Prince François, Count of Clermont, dauphin of the Orleanist claimant to the French throne (d. 2017)

February 8, 1961 (Wednesday) edit

  • At a press conference to announce that Prime Minister John Diefenbaker of Canada would be coming to the United States on February 20, President Kennedy mispronounced the Canadian leader's name multiple times. Kennedy had asked Secretary of State Dean Rusk, who in turn had asked Assistant for European Affairs Foy D. Kohler, who suggested the German pronunciation "Dee-fen-bawk-er"; Diefenbaker's name was misspelled by various news sources as "Diffenbaker", "Diefenbacker", "Diefenbacon" and even (by UPI) "Fifenbaker".[24] Privately, the Prime Minister, whose name was pronounced "Dee-fen-bay-ker", was enraged at what he viewed as being mocked by the American president.[25]

February 9, 1961 (Thursday) edit

February 10, 1961 (Friday) edit

February 11, 1961 (Saturday) edit

  • Melbourne Cricket Ground had its largest ever crowd for a cricket match, 90,800 people, attending the test match between Australia and the West Indies.
  • A plebiscite was conducted in the north and south parts of the British Cameroons over whether to join the Federation of Nigeria or the Republic of Cameroon that had recently become independent of France. Residents of the Southern Cameroons voted 233,571 to 97,741 in favor of union with Cameroon, while in the Northern Cameroons, the result was 146,296 to 97,659 in favor of integration with Nigeria.[31]
  • Robert C. Weaver became the first African-American to lead a major U.S. government agency, becoming Administrator of the Housing and Home Finance Agency on appointment by President Kennedy. When the HHFA was raised to cabinet-level status on January 18, 1966, Weaver became the first African-American cabinet member, under President Lyndon Johnson, as the first U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development.[32]
  • Died: Kate Carew, 91, American caricaturist

February 12, 1961 (Sunday) edit

  • Eight days after launching the seven-ton Sputnik 5, the U.S.S.R. used the orbiting satellite as a launch platform from which to fire a rocket carrying the interplanetary space probe, Venera 1, towards the planet Venus. The U.S. had launched Pioneer V toward Venus in March.[33][34][35] Contact with the satellite was lost after it traveled 4,650,000 miles (7,480,000 km), but the probe came within 62,000 miles (100,000 km) of the second planet, and is believed to still be in orbit around the Sun.[36]
  • Born: David Graeber, American anthropologist and anarchism activist (d. 2020); in New York City[37]

February 13, 1961 (Monday) edit

  • At Elisabethville, The Congo, Katangan Interior Minister Godefroid Munongo informed reporters, "I have called you together to announce the death of Patrice Lumumba and his accomplices," then went on to say that the group had been massacred the day before "by the inhabitants of a little village" days after escaping from prison. As it turned out, Lumumba had been executed by a Katangan firing squad a month earlier, on January 17. The confirmation of Lumumba's death stirred rioting in the Congo and around the world.[38][39]
  • NASA and McDonnell began discussions of an advanced Mercury spacecraft. McDonnell had been studying the concept of a maneuverable Mercury spacecraft since 1959. On February 1, Space Task Group (STG) Director Robert R. Gilruth assigned James A. Chamberlin, Chief, STG Engineering Division, to institute studies with McDonnell on improving Mercury for future programs. Work on several versions of the spacecraft, ranging from minor modifications to radical redesign, got underway immediately. Early in March, the prospect of conducting extravehicular operations prompted Maxime A. Faget of STG to query John F. Yardley of McDonnell about the possibility of a two-man version of the improved Mercury. Yardley raised the question with Walter F. Burke, a McDonnell vice president, who in turn ordered that a design drawing of a two-man Mercury be prepared.[40]
  • Hunting for geodes in the Coso Mountains near Olancha, California, rock collectors Wally Lane, Mike Mikesell and Virginia Maxey found a 500,000-year-old rock containing the "Coso artifact", a metal object that resembled, anachronistically, a spark plug. The rock and the ancient spark plug have not been seen since 1969.[41]

February 14, 1961 (Tuesday) edit

  • Element 103, Lawrencium, was first synthesized by a team of scientists at the University of California, Berkeley. Using the cyclotron at the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory, scientists Albert Ghiorso, Torbjorn Sikkeland, Almon E. Larsh and Robert M. Latimer bombarded Californium with Boron-10 and Boron-11 nuclei, combining the protons of the 98th and 5th elements to create a new element with 103 protons. After spending two months confirming their finding, the team made their announcement on April 13.[42]
  • A day after the news of Patrice Lumumba's death, thousands of protesters attacked Belgium's embassies worldwide. The embassy in Moscow was attacked by a mob of thousands of Russian, Asian and African students, while the one in Belgrade was ransacked following a protest by 30,000 people. African students in New Delhi wrecked furniture at the embassy there. The next day, a group of 24 protesters fought with guards at the United Nations Security Council[43] One reporter felt that the Moscow riots, with marchers from that city's People's Friendship University, "showed signs of careful planning" and that it had been orchestrated by the Soviet government.[44]
  • The Zuid-Afrikaanse Rand (ZAR) became the official currency of South Africa, replacing the South African pound at a 2:1 ratio.[45]
  • James E. Webb took office as administrator of NASA, serving until 1968.[46]

February 15, 1961 (Wednesday) edit

February 16, 1961 (Thursday) edit

February 17, 1961 (Friday) edit

  • Space Task Group engineers directing Project Mercury had selected the flight trajectory for the Mercury-Atlas 2 mission. This trajectory was designed to provide the most severe reentry heating conditions which could be encountered on an emergency abort during an orbital flight attempt. The reentry heating rate was estimated to be 30 percent higher than a normal Mercury orbital reentry, and temperatures were predicted to be about 25 percent higher at certain locations on the afterbody of the spacecraft. The deceleration g-load was calculated to be about twice that expected for a normal reentry from orbit.[50]
  • Egress hatch procedures for recovery force operations were discussed at a Mercury coordination meeting. One suggestion involved the installation of a pull-ring for activating the hatch explosive charge. Another proposal was made for a paint outline of an emergency outlet that could be cut through, if necessary.[50]
  • Born:
  • Died: Nita Naldi, 66, silent film star

February 18, 1961 (Saturday) edit

  • Led by British author and activist Bertrand Russell, the Committee of 100 and a crowd of 5,000 people staged a sit-down protest at the Ministry of Defence in Whitehall, London, demanding that the U.K. call off its agreement to bring nuclear missiles to the British Isles. As one author notes, "Somewhat to the distress of Russell ... police took no action on this occasion."[51]
  • After 22 years of publication, the British comic strip Radio Fun was merged into Buster.
  • Kwame Nkrumah laid the foundation stone of the Kwame Nkrumah Ideological Institute in Winneba, Ghana.
  • The remains of the former USS South Dakota, a U.S. Navy armored cruiser during World War One and later renamed the USS Huron before being sold for scrap in 1930, sank off the coast of the city of Powell River, British Columbia. A storm caused the stripped-down ship to go down in 80-foot (24 m) deep waters in the Salish Sea coastal waterway.[52]

February 19, 1961 (Sunday) edit

  • Belgium's King Baudouin dissolved Parliament and ordered new elections to be conducted on March 26.[53]
  • A seven-year-old boy in Arizona survived a 275-foot (84 m) fall into an irrigation well and was rescued after ranch employees tied together multiple ropes. Harry Stage had broken both legs and his pelvis after falling through the 16-inch (410 mm) pipe.[54]
  • Born: Justin Fashanu, English footballer, in Hackney, London (died 1998)

February 20, 1961 (Monday) edit

February 21, 1961 (Tuesday) edit

  • The African state of Gabon adopted a new constitution.[56] Léon M'ba became President, with significant additional powers.
  • United Nations Security Council Resolution 161 was adopted by a 9–0 vote, authorizing United Nation forces to take "all appropriate measures to prevent the occurrence of civil war in the Congo, including ... the use of force, if necessary, as a last resort".[57]
 
February 21, 1961: Launch of Mercury-Atlas 2
  • Mercury-Atlas 2 was launched from Cape Canaveral in a test to check maximum heating and its effects during the worst reentry design conditions. The flight closely matched the desired trajectory and attained a maximum altitude of 114.04 statute miles and a range of 1,431.6 statute miles. Inspection of the spacecraft aboard the recovery ship some 55 minutes after launch (actual flight time was 17.56 minutes) indicated that test objectives were met, since the structure and heat protection elements appeared to be in excellent condition. The flight control team obtained satisfactory data; and the complete launch computing and display system, operating for the first time in a flight, performed satisfactorily.[50]
  • Mercury astronauts John Glenn, Virgil Grissom, and Alan Shepard were selected by the Space Task Group to begin special training for the first crewed Mercury flight.[50]
  • Born:
  • Died: Frederick M. Jones, 68, African-American inventor specializing in refrigeration technology, co-founder of Thermo King Corporation

February 22, 1961 (Wednesday) edit

  • Come Blow Your Horn, the first play written by Neil Simon, made its debut at the Brooks Atkinson Theatre on Broadway. Running for 677 performances, the play was the first in a string of hits for Simon.[58]
  • Fans of the television soap opera The Edge of Night were horrified when Sara Lane Karr, the show's leading female character, died of injuries sustained on the Monday episode. After CBS received multiple calls from distressed viewers, the actress who played the role, Teal Ames, appeared as herself the next day to explain that she was alive, and that her character had been written out of the series at her own request.[59]
  • Born:
  • Died: Nick LaRocca, 71, jazz cornettist

February 23, 1961 (Thursday) edit

  • Duncan Carse was dropped off alone at the British Antarctic island of South Georgia, for an eighteen-month attempt to become a latter-day Robinson Crusoe. HMS Owen (K640) brought him to the uninhabited south side of the island with 12 tonnes (12 long tons; 13 short tons) of supplies and a prefabricated hut, at Ducloz Head. The hut and much of the supplies would be swept away by a wave on May 20, forcing Carse to survive on what he had been able to save. He would finally be able to signal a ship, the Petrel, on September 13.[60]
  • Geoffrey Charles Lawrence became acting Chief Minister of Zanzibar, which was still under British administration.
  • As of this date, the Space Task Group, Convair-Astronautics, Space Technology Laboratories, McDonnell, and the Marshall Space Flight Center had completed a number of extensive studies on the subject of the safe separation of the Mercury spacecraft from the launch vehicle during an emergency.[50]
  • Born: Trent Lehman, American child actor known for Nanny and the Professor, and whose death was an impetus for the founding of the child actor support group A Minor Consideration; in Los Angeles (committed suicide, 1982)[61]

February 24, 1961 (Friday) edit

  • Iranian Airways and Pars Airways merged to form a single national airline for the nation, Iran Air.[62]
  • The bodies of former Hungarian Prime Minister Imre Nagy, Colonel Pál Maléter and journalist Miklós Gimes - all of whom had been executed for treason on June 16, 1958, after the failure of the 1956 Hungarian revolution - were exhumed from the courtyard of the prison where they had been hanged, taken from their coffins, rolled up in tar paper, and buried in an unmarked grave in Budapest. Even their names were altered in cemetery records, with Nagy identified as a woman named Piroska Borbiro.[63] After the downfall of Communism in Hungary in 1989, the three bodies were exhumed, and buried with full honors on June 16, 1989, thirty-one years after their executions.[64]
  • Spacecraft No. 9 was delivered to Cape Canaveral for the Mercury-Atlas 5 orbital primate (Enos) mission.[50]

February 25, 1961 (Saturday) edit

  • The last public trams in Sydney, Australia, ceased operation, bringing to an end the Southern Hemisphere's largest tramway network.[65]
  • India's Orissa state was placed under president's rule after Chief Minister Harekrushna Mahatab resigned because of non-cooperation among the state's political parties. Direct rule continued for 14 months until new state legislature elections could be held.[66]
 
Mercury spacecraft impact attenuation

February 26, 1961 (Sunday) edit

  • Tyazhely Sputnik (literally "heavy satellite"), at seven tons the largest object to be launched into outer space when it went up on February 4, reentered the atmosphere over Siberia.[72] The failure of the mission was disguised as a test by Soviet authorities.[73]
  • Died: King Mohammed V of Morocco, 51, suffered a fatal heart attack after undergoing a minor operation at the clinic in his palace at Rabat. His son, Hassan II was proclaimed his successor.[74]

February 27, 1961 (Monday) edit

February 28, 1961 (Tuesday) edit

  • Under United States law, 38 U.S.C. §101 (29)(A), the Vietnam Era refers to "The period beginning on February 28, 1961, and ending on May 7, 1975, in the case of a veteran who served in the Republic of Vietnam during that period."[76]
  • East Germany abruptly ended its program of researching, designing and building aircraft, with the passage of a resolution by the Central Committee of the ruling SED Party. "Huge resources were wasted as a result of this about-face," noted one commentator.[77]
  • The Saarlouis electric tramway closed after nearly 48 years in operation.
  • Born: Mark Ferguson, New Zealand actor and TV presenter, in Sydney, Australia

References edit

  1. ^ "Touch-Tone Telephone Tested In Greensburg". Warren Times Mirror. Warren, Pennsylvania. Associated Press. February 2, 1961. p. 10.
  2. ^ "The MINUTEMAN Ballistic Missile Test Program". Federation of American Scientists.
  3. ^ "US Minuteman Missile Lands on Ocean Target". Milwaukee Journal. February 1, 1961. p. 1.
  4. ^ Neil A. Hamilton and Ian C. Friedman, Presidents: A Biographical Dictionary (Infobase Publishing, 2009) p406
  5. ^ "Santa Maria Passengers Go Ashore", Milwaukee Journal, February 2, 1961, p1
  6. ^ Ranter, Harro. "ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C-47A-20-DK (DC-3) PK-GDY Madura Island". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
  7. ^ Stein, Kenneth J. (May 1994). "America's Top Secret Doomsday Plane". Popular Mechanics. pp. 38–41.
  8. ^ Abbott, James A.; Rice, Elaine M. (1997). Designing Camelot: The Kennedy White House Restoration. John Wiley and Sons. p. 68.
  9. ^ "Angola Crushes Armed Uprising". The New York Times. February 5, 1961. p. 1.
  10. ^ Shillington, Kevin, ed. (2005). "Angola: Revolts, 1961". Encyclopedia of African History. Vol. 1. CRC Press. p. 143.
  11. ^ "U.S. Reports Five Russian Space Failures". St. Petersburg Times. St. Petersburg, Florida. September 6, 1962. p. 1.
  12. ^ Bertil Lintner, Great Game East: India, China, and the Struggle for Asia's Most Volatile Frontier (Yale University Press, 2015) p260
  13. ^ Thant Myint-U, The River of Lost Footsteps: Histories of Burma (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2007) p288
  14. ^ Arnold H. Leibowitz, Defining Status: A Comprehensive Analysis of United States Territorial Relations (Martinus Nijhoff, 1989) p527
  15. ^ Richard Ben Cramer, Joe DiMaggio: The Hero's Life (Simon and Schuster, 2001) pp390-391
  16. ^ Callahan, Mary P. (2003). Making Enemies: War and State Building in Burma. Cornell University Press. pp. 198–200.
  17. ^ Kisangani, Emizet Francois; Bobb, Scott F. (2009). "Ileo, Joseph". Historical Dictionary of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Scarecrow Press. p. 228.
  18. ^ "Jail for 7 in Anti-Trust Suit". Chicago Daily Tribune. February 7, 1961. p. 1.
  19. ^ Geis, Gilbert (1968). "The Heavy Electrical Equipment Antitrust Cases of 1961". White-Collar Criminal: The Offender in Business And the Professions. Transaction Publishers. p. 103.
  20. ^ Tsvangirai, Morgan; Bango, T. William (2011). Morgan Tsvangirai: At the Deep End. Eye Books.
  21. ^ Wood, J.R.T. (2012). So Far and No Further!: Rhodesia's Bid for Independence During the Retreat from Empire 1959-1965. Trafford Publishing. pp. 74–75.
  22. ^ Orloff, Richard W.; Harland, David M. (2006). Apollo: The Definitive Sourcebook. Springer. p. 10.
  23. ^ Fleischer, Nat; Andre, Sam (2001). An Illustrated History of Boxing. Citadel Press. p. 205.
  24. ^ Sean M. Maloney, Learning to Love the Bomb: Canada's Nuclear Weapons During the Cold War (Potomac Books, 2007) p232
  25. ^ Arthur Slade, John Diefenbaker (Dundurn Press, 2001) p103
  26. ^ "Red Chief's Plane Fired On — French Jets 'Attack' off Africa Coast". Chicago Daily Tribune. February 10, 1961. p. 1.
  27. ^ "Plane Attack Shocks Moscow". Miami News. February 10, 1961. p. 1.
  28. ^ Medvedev, R.A. (1991). Personality and Epoch: Political Portrait of L.I. Brezhnev.
  29. ^ "French Try To Soothe Red Anger". Miami News. February 11, 1961. p. 1.
  30. ^ Dumych, Daniel M. (1998). Images of America, Volume 2: Niagara Falls, Volume 2. Arcadia Publishing. p. 128.
  31. ^ Rose Ngomba-Roth, The Challenges of Conflict Resolution in Africa: The Case of Cameroon-Nigerian Border Conflict (LIT Verlag Münster, 2008) p86
  32. ^ "Black Firsts: Politics, Entertainment, Sports and Other Fields", by Lerone Bennett Jr., Ebony Magazine (March 1982) p128
  33. ^ Silverberg, Robert (1961). First American Into Space. Monarch Books. pp. 36–37.
  34. ^ "7-Ton Sputnik Is Fired". Miami News. February 4, 1961. p. 1.
  35. ^ "RUSS FIRE VENUS SHOT-- Piggyback Space Station Rides Sputnik". Milwaukee Sentinel. February 13, 1961. p. 1.
  36. ^ Renfield, R. K.; Stinson, Richard K. (2004). Venus. Rosen Publishing Group. pp. 14–15.
  37. ^ Roos, Jerome (September 4, 2020). "The anarchist: How David Graeber became the left's most influential thinker". New Statesman. Retrieved 2021-02-11.
  38. ^ "Lumumba Dead; Reported Massacred By Villagers". Toledo Blade. February 13, 1961. p. 1.
  39. ^ Miller, Robert Hopkins (2002). Vietnam and Beyond: A Diplomat's Cold War Education. Texas Tech University Press. p. 43.
  40. ^   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain. Grimwood, James M.; Hacker, Barton C.; Vorzimmer, Peter J. "PART I (A) Concept and Design April 1959 through December 1961". Project Gemini Technology and Operations - A Chronology. NASA Special Publication-4002. NASA. Retrieved 18 February 2023.
  41. ^ Bishop, Greg; et al. (2006). Weird California. Sterling Publishing Company, Inc. p. 32.
  42. ^ "Isotope Found Of 'Dead' Element-- 4 Nuclear Scientists Make 'Lawrencium'", Toledo Blade, April 13, 1961, p2
  43. ^ "Students Riot in Moscow", Pittsburgh Press, February 14, 1961, p1; "Mob Battles Guards Over Congo Debate", February 15, 1961, p1
  44. ^ "Rigged Riots Blast West In Moscow", Milwaukee Sentinel, February 15, 1961, p1
  45. ^ John Allen, Apartheid South Africa: An Insider's Overview of the Origin and Effects of Separate Development (iUniverse, 2005) p350
  46. ^ Craig Nelson, Rocket Men: The Epic Story of the First Men on the Moon (Penguin, 2010)
  47. ^ "U.S. ICE TEAM KILLED IN CRASH". Pittsburgh Press. February 15, 1961. p. 1.
  48. ^ . John F. Kennedy Presidential Library & Museum. Archived from the original on 12 May 2006.
  49. ^
  50. ^ a b c d e f g   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain. Grimwood, James M. "PART II (B) Research and Development Phase of Project Mercury January 1960 through May 5, 1961". Project Mercury - A Chronology. NASA Special Publication-4001. NASA. Retrieved 8 February 2023.
  51. ^ Wittner, Lawrence S. (1997). Resisting the Bomb: A History of the World Nuclear Disarmament Movement, 1954-1970. The Struggle Against the Bomb. Vol. 2. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. p. 188.
  52. ^ . Archived from the original on 7 July 2011. Retrieved 2010-12-06.
  53. ^ "Parliament Dissolved By Belgian King". Toledo Blade. February 20, 1961. p. 2.
  54. ^ "Injured Boy In Well Minds Dad And Lives". Miami News. February 20, 1961. p. 1.
  55. ^ Jackson, Blair (2000). Garcia: An American Life. Penguin. p. 32.
  56. ^ Biteghe, Moïse N’Solé (1990), Echec aux militaires au Gabon en 1964 (in French), Paris: Chaka, p. 59, ISBN 2-907768-06-9, OCLC 29518659
  57. ^ Boulden, Jane (2001). Peace Enforcement: The United Nations Experience in Congo, Somalia, and Bosnia. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 29.
  58. ^ James Fisher, Historical Dictionary of Contemporary American Theater, 1930-2010 (Scarecrow Press, 2011) p170
  59. ^ "Actress Wants To Leave So TV Show Arranges "Death", Ocala (FL) Star-Banner, February 28, 1961, p6; Hal Erickson, Encyclopedia of Television Law Shows: Factual and Fictional Series About Judges, Lawyers and the Courtroom, 1948-2008 (McFarland, 2009) p95
  60. ^ Headland, Robert K. (1992). The Island of South Georgia. Cambridge University Press Archive. p. 103.
  61. ^ "Nannyandtheprofessor".
  62. ^ . Archived from the original on 7 April 2012. Retrieved 2012-04-07.
  63. ^ Lendvai, Paul (2008). One Day That Shook the Communist World: The 1956 Hungarian Uprising and Its Legacy. Princeton University Press. p. 224.
  64. ^ "Hungarian Who Led '56 Revolt Is Buried as a Hero". The New York Times. June 17, 1989.
  65. ^ Spearritt, Peter (1999). Sydney's Century: A History. UNSW Press. p. 141.
  66. ^ Srivastava, Meera (1980). Constitutional Crisis in the States in India. Concept Publishing Company. p. 50.
  67. ^ "Attempt on Gliding Altitude Record". Flying. October 1983.
  68. ^ Blackburn, Al (1999). Aces Wild: The Race for Mach 1. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 201.
  69. ^ |Fédération Aéronautique Internationale verified records (accessed April 6, 2012)
  70. ^ "Davey and Pal Make TV Bow". Hartford Courant. February 18, 1961. p. 11.
  71. ^ "The News of Television- Saturday Morning". Philadelphia Daily News. February 24, 1961. p. 32.
  72. ^ "Sputnik 7". NSSDC (NASA Goddard Spaceflight Center). Retrieved 28 July 2010.
  73. ^ Wesley T. Huntress, Jr. and Mikhail Ya. Marov, Soviet Robots in the Solar System: Mission Technologies and Discoveries (Springer, 2011) p98
  74. ^ "Morocco's King Dies; Led Freedom Fight; Country in Mourning", Schenectady (N.Y.) Gazette, February 27, 1961, p1
  75. ^ "Harvard Prof. Kissinger New Kennedy Consultant", Boston Globe, February 28, 1961, p8; "'Limited War' Expert Named Kennedy Aide", Oxnard (CA) Press-Courier, February 28, 1961, p2
  76. ^ Cornell University Law School
  77. ^ Dolores L. Augustine, Red Prometheus: Engineering and Dictatorship in East Germany, 1945-1990 (MIT Press, 2007) p119

february, 1961, 1961, january, february, march, april, june, july, august, september, october, november, december, 1112, 1819, 2526, following, events, occurred, february, 1961, launches, first, minuteman, icbmfebruary, 1961, touch, tone, phone, tested, bellfe. 1961 January February March April May June July August September October November December lt lt February 1961 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 1961 February 1 1961 U S launches first Minuteman ICBMFebruary 1 1961 Touch tone phone tested by BellFebruary 14 1961 New element created Contents 1 February 1 1961 Wednesday 2 February 2 1961 Thursday 3 February 3 1961 Friday 4 February 4 1961 Saturday 5 February 5 1961 Sunday 6 February 6 1961 Monday 7 February 7 1961 Tuesday 8 February 8 1961 Wednesday 9 February 9 1961 Thursday 10 February 10 1961 Friday 11 February 11 1961 Saturday 12 February 12 1961 Sunday 13 February 13 1961 Monday 14 February 14 1961 Tuesday 15 February 15 1961 Wednesday 16 February 16 1961 Thursday 17 February 17 1961 Friday 18 February 18 1961 Saturday 19 February 19 1961 Sunday 20 February 20 1961 Monday 21 February 21 1961 Tuesday 22 February 22 1961 Wednesday 23 February 23 1961 Thursday 24 February 24 1961 Friday 25 February 25 1961 Saturday 26 February 26 1961 Sunday 27 February 27 1961 Monday 28 February 28 1961 Tuesday 29 ReferencesFebruary 1 1961 Wednesday editThe push button telephone was put into public service for the first time as Bell Telephone test marketed its Touch Tone service for its customers in the cities of Carnegie Pennsylvania and Findlay Ohio 1 The United States launched its first test of the Minuteman I intercontinental ballistic missile The rocket lifted off from Cape Canaveral at 11 00 am and traveled 4 000 miles 6 400 km in less than 15 minutes to a target in the Atlantic Ocean 2 3 Moore Air Base became inactive along with the 78th Fighter Group of the US Air Force The Misfits directed by John Huston was released to theaters in the U S The film would end up being the last for its two leading stars Clark Gable and Marilyn Monroe February 2 1961 Thursday editAt Wailuku Hawaii Stanley Ann Dunham an 18 year old student at the University of Hawaii married Barack Obama Sr a 25 year old graduate student from Kenya Six months later their son Barack Obama who would become the 44th President of the United States was born in Honolulu 4 Santa Maria hijacking After ten days of being held captive on an ocean liner nearly 600 passengers from the cruise ship Santa Maria were freed and were taken ashore by various boats to the Brazilian port of Recife 5 Betty Curtis won the Sanremo Music Festival with the song Al di la Born Michael Kay American sports broadcaster in New York City Erna Solberg Prime Minister of Norway 2013 2021 in Bergen Died Victor Danielsen 66 Faroese translator and missionaryFebruary 3 1961 Friday editGaruda Indonesian Airways Flight 542 and its 26 occupants disappeared while flying from Surabaya on the island of Java to Balikpapan on the island of Borneo The Douglas DC 3 plane plunged into the Java Sea after having last been seen over Madura Island 6 Operation Looking Glass began as the first of a series of Boeing EC 135 jets went into the air on orders of the Strategic Air Command For more than 30 years an EC 135 was always in the air with the capability of taking direct control of the United States bombers and missiles in the event of the destruction of the SAC s command post near Omaha As one jet Doomsday Plane was preparing to land another was already aloft The program continued with E4A jets later replacing the EC 135s until the fall of the Soviet Union 7 French interior designer Stephane Boudin made his first visit to the White House to plan the refurnishing of the U S President s residence at the request of the new First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy 8 Died William Morrison 1st Viscount Dunrossil 67 Governor General of Australia since 1960 former Speaker of the House of Commons in the United Kingdom 1951 1959 and former British governmental minister Anna May Wong 56 Chinese American movie starFebruary 4 1961 Saturday editThe Portuguese Colonial War began in Angola with a co ordinated attack by 180 MPLA guerillas in Luanda In a morning raid armed groups attacked the prison the police barracks a police patrol and the radio station The attacks failed and armed white Angolan residents exacted revenge on Luanda s black neighborhoods but the battle inspired a 14 year long campaign to liberate Portugal s colonies 9 10 Sputnik 7 was launched by the Soviet Union and placed into Earth orbit Although reported as a success in that it was the heaviest object 14 300 pounds 6 500 kg into orbit at that time the Soviets did not mention that their intent had been to send the first Earth craft to the planet Venus a detail revealed in 1962 by the American space agency NASA 11 Died Alphonse Picou 82 American jazz clarinetistFebruary 5 1961 Sunday editThe Kachin Independence Organisation and its military wing the Kachin Independence Army were organized in the northernmost state of Burma where the predominantly Christian Kachin people revolted against a proposal by Burmese Premier U Nu to make Buddhism the national religion Led by the three Zau brothers Zau Seng Zau Tu and Zau Dan the KIO and the KIA lead a rebellion that would last for 32 years during which the Kachin state operated independently from the rest of Burma 12 13 A plebiscite was held on the south Pacific islands of Saipan and Tinian on the issue of the future political status of the two southern Pacific lands both of which were administered by the U S Navy Most 1 642 voters favored rejoining the U S territory of Guam 875 wanted to be a territory within the Northern Marianas 27 wanted to continue under Navy administration and eight were invalid 14 Movie actress Marilyn Monroe voluntarily checked herself into the Cornell University Medical Center under the pseudonym Faye Miller after being driven there by her psychiatrist Marianne Kris Admitted on the premise that she would be treated for exhaustion Monroe was instead taken to the Payne Whitney Psychiatric Clinic and found the worst fear of her life come true being locked inside a padded cell After three days she was permitted to make a phone call and reached her ex husband baseball star Joe DiMaggio who flew to New York City and effected her release 15 February 6 1961 Monday editGeneral Ne Win of the Burmese Army purged his military command announcing the forced resignations of Brigadier General and future President Maung Maung his director of military training and nine of his 18 field commanders 16 In the Congo President Joseph Kasavubu named Joseph Ileo as the Prime Minister in an interim government Ileo was unable to persuade major secessionist leaders to join his cabinet and would resign on August 1 17 In what the Associated Press described as a rarity in anti trust cases seven corporate executives were sent to jail in Philadelphia for bid rigging in attempting to obtain government contracts The jail sentences were in addition to fines against 29 different electrical firms and another 19 officials were given probation and suspended sentences The men who drew 30 day jail sentences were a vice president and two former division managers of General Electric Company a vice president and a sales manager of Westinghouse Electric Company a V P of Cutler Hammer Inc later part of Eaton Corporation and a V P of Clark Controller Company U S District Judge J Cullen Ganey said What really is at stake here is a vast section of our economic system that we are offering to uncommitted sections of the world as an alternative to planned economies 18 19 KOPB TV began operating in Portland Oregon under the name KOAP Born Yury Onufriyenko Russian cosmonaut in Ryasne Ukrainian SSR Soviet UnionFebruary 7 1961 Tuesday editBlack political leaders including Joshua Nkomo and Ndabaningi Sithole met with British colonial officials in Salisbury and signed their agreement to a referendum on a proposed constitution for independence for Southern Rhodesia with a system providing for gradual rule by the black African majority The document which was to be submitted to black and white voters on July 26 had provisions for a complicated racially discriminatory voting system 20 with an A roll for white African voters and candidates and a B roll for black voters and candidates It is possible an author would later write had Nkomo adhered to this commitment that he could have found himself in reasonable time the President of the independent state of Zimbabwe If he had stood by his commitment the armed struggle to which he would commit himself shortly and which would kill some 40 000 people in 1962 1980 would not have occurred If he had stayed in the constitutional process and encouraged the Africans to qualify for the vote they would have by dint of their numbers come to dominate in a lawful peaceful manner 21 Days after the initial agreement Nkomo and Sithole withdrew their support and urged their supporters to boycott the referendum George Low NASA s Chief of Manned Space Flight and his task group submitted their report A Plan for a Manned Lunar Landing for consideration by U S President John F Kennedy 22 Harold Johnson defeated Jess Bowdry in a boxing bout to win recognition by the National Boxing Association as world light heavyweight champion All other boxing boards continued to recognize Archie Moore who had beaten Johnson in four previous encounters as the world champion but the N B A had vacated Moore s title for inactivity 23 Born Prince Francois Count of Clermont dauphin of the Orleanist claimant to the French throne d 2017 February 8 1961 Wednesday editAt a press conference to announce that Prime Minister John Diefenbaker of Canada would be coming to the United States on February 20 President Kennedy mispronounced the Canadian leader s name multiple times Kennedy had asked Secretary of State Dean Rusk who in turn had asked Assistant for European Affairs Foy D Kohler who suggested the German pronunciation Dee fen bawk er Diefenbaker s name was misspelled by various news sources as Diffenbaker Diefenbacker Diefenbacon and even by UPI Fifenbaker 24 Privately the Prime Minister whose name was pronounced Dee fen bay ker was enraged at what he viewed as being mocked by the American president 25 February 9 1961 Thursday editThree Vautour fighter jets of the French Air Force attacked an Il 18 plane that was carrying Leonid Brezhnev who at the time was the ceremonial head of state of the Soviet Union and was on his way to the Republic of Guinea for a state visit When Brezhnev s plane strayed into the airspace of French Algeria it was intercepted by the three fighters one of which fired bursts of tracer bullets and forced Brezhnev s plane to make an emergency landing in Morocco 26 27 28 The French Foreign Ministry apologized the next day 29 The Beatles at The Cavern Club At lunchtime The Beatles performed under this name at The Cavern Club for the first time following their return to Liverpool from Hamburg George Harrison s first appearance at the venue Born John Kruk American baseball player in Charleston West Virginia Died Millard Tydings 70 American politicianFebruary 10 1961 Friday editArtist Oskar Kokoschka was made an honorary citizen of Vienna The Robert Moses Niagara Hydroelectric Power Station went online completing a project to use Niagara Falls to generate electricity from what was at the time the largest hydroelectric power plant in the world generating 2 400 000 million kilowatts or 2 4 gigawatts of electricity per hour 30 Born George Stephanopoulos American presidential adviser and television journalist in Fall River MassachusettsFebruary 11 1961 Saturday editMelbourne Cricket Ground had its largest ever crowd for a cricket match 90 800 people attending the test match between Australia and the West Indies A plebiscite was conducted in the north and south parts of the British Cameroons over whether to join the Federation of Nigeria or the Republic of Cameroon that had recently become independent of France Residents of the Southern Cameroons voted 233 571 to 97 741 in favor of union with Cameroon while in the Northern Cameroons the result was 146 296 to 97 659 in favor of integration with Nigeria 31 Robert C Weaver became the first African American to lead a major U S government agency becoming Administrator of the Housing and Home Finance Agency on appointment by President Kennedy When the HHFA was raised to cabinet level status on January 18 1966 Weaver became the first African American cabinet member under President Lyndon Johnson as the first U S Secretary of Housing and Urban Development 32 Died Kate Carew 91 American caricaturistFebruary 12 1961 Sunday editEight days after launching the seven ton Sputnik 5 the U S S R used the orbiting satellite as a launch platform from which to fire a rocket carrying the interplanetary space probe Venera 1 towards the planet Venus The U S had launched Pioneer V toward Venus in March 33 34 35 Contact with the satellite was lost after it traveled 4 650 000 miles 7 480 000 km but the probe came within 62 000 miles 100 000 km of the second planet and is believed to still be in orbit around the Sun 36 Born David Graeber American anthropologist and anarchism activist d 2020 in New York City 37 February 13 1961 Monday editAt Elisabethville The Congo Katangan Interior Minister Godefroid Munongo informed reporters I have called you together to announce the death of Patrice Lumumba and his accomplices then went on to say that the group had been massacred the day before by the inhabitants of a little village days after escaping from prison As it turned out Lumumba had been executed by a Katangan firing squad a month earlier on January 17 The confirmation of Lumumba s death stirred rioting in the Congo and around the world 38 39 NASA and McDonnell began discussions of an advanced Mercury spacecraft McDonnell had been studying the concept of a maneuverable Mercury spacecraft since 1959 On February 1 Space Task Group STG Director Robert R Gilruth assigned James A Chamberlin Chief STG Engineering Division to institute studies with McDonnell on improving Mercury for future programs Work on several versions of the spacecraft ranging from minor modifications to radical redesign got underway immediately Early in March the prospect of conducting extravehicular operations prompted Maxime A Faget of STG to query John F Yardley of McDonnell about the possibility of a two man version of the improved Mercury Yardley raised the question with Walter F Burke a McDonnell vice president who in turn ordered that a design drawing of a two man Mercury be prepared 40 Hunting for geodes in the Coso Mountains near Olancha California rock collectors Wally Lane Mike Mikesell and Virginia Maxey found a 500 000 year old rock containing the Coso artifact a metal object that resembled anachronistically a spark plug The rock and the ancient spark plug have not been seen since 1969 41 February 14 1961 Tuesday editElement 103 Lawrencium was first synthesized by a team of scientists at the University of California Berkeley Using the cyclotron at the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory scientists Albert Ghiorso Torbjorn Sikkeland Almon E Larsh and Robert M Latimer bombarded Californium with Boron 10 and Boron 11 nuclei combining the protons of the 98th and 5th elements to create a new element with 103 protons After spending two months confirming their finding the team made their announcement on April 13 42 A day after the news of Patrice Lumumba s death thousands of protesters attacked Belgium s embassies worldwide The embassy in Moscow was attacked by a mob of thousands of Russian Asian and African students while the one in Belgrade was ransacked following a protest by 30 000 people African students in New Delhi wrecked furniture at the embassy there The next day a group of 24 protesters fought with guards at the United Nations Security Council 43 One reporter felt that the Moscow riots with marchers from that city s People s Friendship University showed signs of careful planning and that it had been orchestrated by the Soviet government 44 The Zuid Afrikaanse Rand ZAR became the official currency of South Africa replacing the South African pound at a 2 1 ratio 45 James E Webb took office as administrator of NASA serving until 1968 46 February 15 1961 Wednesday editSabena Flight 548 crashed as it was approaching Brussels on a flight from New York City killing all 72 people on board including all of the United States figure skating team and its coaches It was the first fatal crash of a Boeing 707 passenger jet 47 A total solar eclipse was visible in parts of the Northern Hemisphere from France to the Soviet Union with the Black Sea port of Rostov on Don being the midpoint of greatest eclipse President John F Kennedy warned the Soviet Union to avoid interfering with the United Nations pacification of the Congo 48 Died in the crash of Sabena Flight 548 Dona Lee Carrier 20 and her ice dance partner Roger Campbell 19 Patricia Dineen 25 and her husband and ice dance partner Robert Dineen 25 Ray Hadley Jr 17 and his sister Ila Ray Hadley 18 ice dance competitors Harold Hartshorne 69 skating judge and former ice dancer Laurie Hickox 15 and her brother and pairs partner William Hickox 19 Gregory Kelley 16 U S junior men s singles champion Edward LeMaire skating judge and his 14 year old son Bradley Lord 21 U S men s singles champion Rhode Lee Michelson 17 ladies singles competitor Laurence Owen 16 U S national ladies singles champion Maribel Owen 20 and Dudley Richards 29 U S national pairs champions Douglas Ramsay 16 men s singles competitor Edi Scholdan Austrian figure skater and coach and his 13 year old son Diane Sherbloom 18 and her ice dance partner Larry Pierce 24 Maribel Vinson 49 nine time U S national figure skating champion and her two daughters Stephanie Westerfeld 17 ladies singles competitor Died William F Norrell 64 U S Representative from Arkansas who had been sworn in for his 11th term six weeks earlier two days after having a stroke while sitting in his office at the U S Capitol 49 February 16 1961 Thursday editCyprus s first nationality law was enacted The Sunday Lake mine at Wakefield Michigan closed The Congress of Confederation Africaine de Football delegates took place in Cairo February 17 1961 Friday editSpace Task Group engineers directing Project Mercury had selected the flight trajectory for the Mercury Atlas 2 mission This trajectory was designed to provide the most severe reentry heating conditions which could be encountered on an emergency abort during an orbital flight attempt The reentry heating rate was estimated to be 30 percent higher than a normal Mercury orbital reentry and temperatures were predicted to be about 25 percent higher at certain locations on the afterbody of the spacecraft The deceleration g load was calculated to be about twice that expected for a normal reentry from orbit 50 Egress hatch procedures for recovery force operations were discussed at a Mercury coordination meeting One suggestion involved the installation of a pull ring for activating the hatch explosive charge Another proposal was made for a paint outline of an emergency outlet that could be cut through if necessary 50 Born Angela Eagle and Maria Eagle British members of the House of Commons and officials within the Shadow Cabinet that advises the Leader of the Opposition in Bridlington Meir Kessler Israeli rabbi in Bnei Brak Died Nita Naldi 66 silent film starFebruary 18 1961 Saturday editLed by British author and activist Bertrand Russell the Committee of 100 and a crowd of 5 000 people staged a sit down protest at the Ministry of Defence in Whitehall London demanding that the U K call off its agreement to bring nuclear missiles to the British Isles As one author notes Somewhat to the distress of Russell police took no action on this occasion 51 After 22 years of publication the British comic strip Radio Fun was merged into Buster Kwame Nkrumah laid the foundation stone of the Kwame Nkrumah Ideological Institute in Winneba Ghana The remains of the former USS South Dakota a U S Navy armored cruiser during World War One and later renamed the USS Huron before being sold for scrap in 1930 sank off the coast of the city of Powell River British Columbia A storm caused the stripped down ship to go down in 80 foot 24 m deep waters in the Salish Sea coastal waterway 52 February 19 1961 Sunday editBelgium s King Baudouin dissolved Parliament and ordered new elections to be conducted on March 26 53 A seven year old boy in Arizona survived a 275 foot 84 m fall into an irrigation well and was rescued after ranch employees tied together multiple ropes Harry Stage had broken both legs and his pelvis after falling through the 16 inch 410 mm pipe 54 Born Justin Fashanu English footballer in Hackney London died 1998 February 20 1961 Monday editJerry Garcia an 18 year old drifter who had been discharged from the U S Army survived a car accident in Palo Alto California He would later describe the event as the slingshot for the rest of my life Before then I was always living at less than capacity he would write later Then I got serious Garcia would go on to found the Grateful Dead 55 Born Imogen Stubbs British actress in Newcastle upon Tyne Died Percy Grainger 78 Australian composer Romany Marie 75 American restaurateur and bohemian personalityFebruary 21 1961 Tuesday editThe African state of Gabon adopted a new constitution 56 Leon M ba became President with significant additional powers United Nations Security Council Resolution 161 was adopted by a 9 0 vote authorizing United Nation forces to take all appropriate measures to prevent the occurrence of civil war in the Congo including the use of force if necessary as a last resort 57 nbsp February 21 1961 Launch of Mercury Atlas 2Mercury Atlas 2 was launched from Cape Canaveral in a test to check maximum heating and its effects during the worst reentry design conditions The flight closely matched the desired trajectory and attained a maximum altitude of 114 04 statute miles and a range of 1 431 6 statute miles Inspection of the spacecraft aboard the recovery ship some 55 minutes after launch actual flight time was 17 56 minutes indicated that test objectives were met since the structure and heat protection elements appeared to be in excellent condition The flight control team obtained satisfactory data and the complete launch computing and display system operating for the first time in a flight performed satisfactorily 50 Mercury astronauts John Glenn Virgil Grissom and Alan Shepard were selected by the Space Task Group to begin special training for the first crewed Mercury flight 50 Born Tadeusz Madziarczyk Polish politician in Prudnik Poland Ranking Roger English ska vocalist as Roger Charlery in Birmingham d 2019 Rhonda Sing Canadian wrestler in Calgary died of a heart attack 2001 Died Frederick M Jones 68 African American inventor specializing in refrigeration technology co founder of Thermo King CorporationFebruary 22 1961 Wednesday editCome Blow Your Horn the first play written by Neil Simon made its debut at the Brooks Atkinson Theatre on Broadway Running for 677 performances the play was the first in a string of hits for Simon 58 Fans of the television soap opera The Edge of Night were horrified when Sara Lane Karr the show s leading female character died of injuries sustained on the Monday episode After CBS received multiple calls from distressed viewers the actress who played the role Teal Ames appeared as herself the next day to explain that she was alive and that her character had been written out of the series at her own request 59 Born Clifford Meth American writer in Queens New York Jean Christophe Novelli French celebrity chef in Arras Died Nick LaRocca 71 jazz cornettistFebruary 23 1961 Thursday editDuncan Carse was dropped off alone at the British Antarctic island of South Georgia for an eighteen month attempt to become a latter day Robinson Crusoe HMS Owen K640 brought him to the uninhabited south side of the island with 12 tonnes 12 long tons 13 short tons of supplies and a prefabricated hut at Ducloz Head The hut and much of the supplies would be swept away by a wave on May 20 forcing Carse to survive on what he had been able to save He would finally be able to signal a ship the Petrel on September 13 60 Geoffrey Charles Lawrence became acting Chief Minister of Zanzibar which was still under British administration As of this date the Space Task Group Convair Astronautics Space Technology Laboratories McDonnell and the Marshall Space Flight Center had completed a number of extensive studies on the subject of the safe separation of the Mercury spacecraft from the launch vehicle during an emergency 50 Born Trent Lehman American child actor known for Nanny and the Professor and whose death was an impetus for the founding of the child actor support group A Minor Consideration in Los Angeles committed suicide 1982 61 February 24 1961 Friday editIranian Airways and Pars Airways merged to form a single national airline for the nation Iran Air 62 The bodies of former Hungarian Prime Minister Imre Nagy Colonel Pal Maleter and journalist Miklos Gimes all of whom had been executed for treason on June 16 1958 after the failure of the 1956 Hungarian revolution were exhumed from the courtyard of the prison where they had been hanged taken from their coffins rolled up in tar paper and buried in an unmarked grave in Budapest Even their names were altered in cemetery records with Nagy identified as a woman named Piroska Borbiro 63 After the downfall of Communism in Hungary in 1989 the three bodies were exhumed and buried with full honors on June 16 1989 thirty one years after their executions 64 Spacecraft No 9 was delivered to Cape Canaveral for the Mercury Atlas 5 orbital primate Enos mission 50 February 25 1961 Saturday editThe last public trams in Sydney Australia ceased operation bringing to an end the Southern Hemisphere s largest tramway network 65 India s Orissa state was placed under president s rule after Chief Minister Harekrushna Mahatab resigned because of non cooperation among the state s political parties Direct rule continued for 14 months until new state legislature elections could be held 66 nbsp Mercury spacecraft impact attenuationMcDonnell conducted a successful drop test using a boilerplate Mercury spacecraft fitted with impact skirt straps and cables and a beryllium heat shield During the tests the stainless steel straps were successfully stretched to design limits 50 Paul Bikle set a record for altitude for a sailplane reaching 46 266 feet 14 102 meters after catching a Sierra Wave in the skies near California s Mount Whitney 67 68 The record would remain unbroken more than 50 years later 69 The syndicated claymation television show Davey and Goliath a project of the United Lutheran Church in America was first broadcast in the United States 70 71 Born Davey Allison American NASCAR driver in Hollywood Florida killed in helicopter crash 1993 February 26 1961 Sunday editTyazhely Sputnik literally heavy satellite at seven tons the largest object to be launched into outer space when it went up on February 4 reentered the atmosphere over Siberia 72 The failure of the mission was disguised as a test by Soviet authorities 73 Died King Mohammed V of Morocco 51 suffered a fatal heart attack after undergoing a minor operation at the clinic in his palace at Rabat His son Hassan II was proclaimed his successor 74 February 27 1961 Monday editProfessor Henry Kissinger of Harvard University was appointed by President Kennedy as a consultant to the National Security Agency The 37 year old Kissinger who would later serve as U S Secretary of State for two Republican Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford had been the author of the 1958 book Nuclear Weapons and Foreign Policy 75 The Roman Catholic Diocese of Tula was created The first congress of the Spanish Trade Union Organisation OSE opened February 28 1961 Tuesday editUnder United States law 38 U S C 101 29 A the Vietnam Era refers to The period beginning on February 28 1961 and ending on May 7 1975 in the case of a veteran who served in the Republic of Vietnam during that period 76 East Germany abruptly ended its program of researching designing and building aircraft with the passage of a resolution by the Central Committee of the ruling SED Party Huge resources were wasted as a result of this about face noted one commentator 77 The Saarlouis electric tramway closed after nearly 48 years in operation Born Mark Ferguson New Zealand actor and TV presenter in Sydney AustraliaReferences edit Touch Tone Telephone Tested In Greensburg Warren Times Mirror Warren Pennsylvania Associated Press February 2 1961 p 10 The MINUTEMAN Ballistic Missile Test Program Federation of American Scientists US Minuteman Missile Lands on Ocean Target Milwaukee Journal February 1 1961 p 1 Neil A Hamilton and Ian C Friedman Presidents A Biographical Dictionary Infobase Publishing 2009 p406 Santa Maria Passengers Go Ashore Milwaukee Journal February 2 1961 p1 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C 47A 20 DK DC 3 PK GDY Madura Island aviation safety net Retrieved 31 December 2021 Stein Kenneth J May 1994 America s Top Secret Doomsday Plane Popular Mechanics pp 38 41 Abbott James A Rice Elaine M 1997 Designing Camelot The Kennedy White House Restoration John Wiley and Sons p 68 Angola Crushes Armed Uprising The New York Times February 5 1961 p 1 Shillington Kevin ed 2005 Angola Revolts 1961 Encyclopedia of African History Vol 1 CRC Press p 143 U S Reports Five Russian Space Failures St Petersburg Times St Petersburg Florida September 6 1962 p 1 Bertil Lintner Great Game East India China and the Struggle for Asia s Most Volatile Frontier Yale University Press 2015 p260 Thant Myint U The River of Lost Footsteps Histories of Burma Farrar Straus and Giroux 2007 p288 Arnold H Leibowitz Defining Status A Comprehensive Analysis of United States Territorial Relations Martinus Nijhoff 1989 p527 Richard Ben Cramer Joe DiMaggio The Hero s Life Simon and Schuster 2001 pp390 391 Callahan Mary P 2003 Making Enemies War and State Building in Burma Cornell University Press pp 198 200 Kisangani Emizet Francois Bobb Scott F 2009 Ileo Joseph Historical Dictionary of the Democratic Republic of the Congo Scarecrow Press p 228 Jail for 7 in Anti Trust Suit Chicago Daily Tribune February 7 1961 p 1 Geis Gilbert 1968 The Heavy Electrical Equipment Antitrust Cases of 1961 White Collar Criminal The Offender in Business And the Professions Transaction Publishers p 103 Tsvangirai Morgan Bango T William 2011 Morgan Tsvangirai At the Deep End Eye Books Wood J R T 2012 So Far and No Further Rhodesia s Bid for Independence During the Retreat from Empire 1959 1965 Trafford Publishing pp 74 75 Orloff Richard W Harland David M 2006 Apollo The Definitive Sourcebook Springer p 10 Fleischer Nat Andre Sam 2001 An Illustrated History of Boxing Citadel Press p 205 Sean M Maloney Learning to Love the Bomb Canada s Nuclear Weapons During the Cold War Potomac Books 2007 p232 Arthur Slade John Diefenbaker Dundurn Press 2001 p103 Red Chief s Plane Fired On French Jets Attack off Africa Coast Chicago Daily Tribune February 10 1961 p 1 Plane Attack Shocks Moscow Miami News February 10 1961 p 1 Medvedev R A 1991 Personality and Epoch Political Portrait of L I Brezhnev French Try To Soothe Red Anger Miami News February 11 1961 p 1 Dumych Daniel M 1998 Images of America Volume 2 Niagara Falls Volume 2 Arcadia Publishing p 128 Rose Ngomba Roth The Challenges of Conflict Resolution in Africa The Case of Cameroon Nigerian Border Conflict LIT Verlag Munster 2008 p86 Black Firsts Politics Entertainment Sports and Other Fields by Lerone Bennett Jr Ebony Magazine March 1982 p128 Silverberg Robert 1961 First American Into Space Monarch Books pp 36 37 7 Ton Sputnik Is Fired Miami News February 4 1961 p 1 RUSS FIRE VENUS SHOT Piggyback Space Station Rides Sputnik Milwaukee Sentinel February 13 1961 p 1 Renfield R K Stinson Richard K 2004 Venus Rosen Publishing Group pp 14 15 Roos Jerome September 4 2020 The anarchist How David Graeber became the left s most influential thinker New Statesman Retrieved 2021 02 11 Lumumba Dead Reported Massacred By Villagers Toledo Blade February 13 1961 p 1 Miller Robert Hopkins 2002 Vietnam and Beyond A Diplomat s Cold War Education Texas Tech University Press p 43 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Grimwood James M Hacker Barton C Vorzimmer Peter J PART I A Concept and Design April 1959 through December 1961 Project Gemini Technology and Operations A Chronology NASA Special Publication 4002 NASA Retrieved 18 February 2023 Bishop Greg et al 2006 Weird California Sterling Publishing Company Inc p 32 Isotope Found Of Dead Element 4 Nuclear Scientists Make Lawrencium Toledo Blade April 13 1961 p2 Students Riot in Moscow Pittsburgh Press February 14 1961 p1 Mob Battles Guards Over Congo Debate February 15 1961 p1 Rigged Riots Blast West In Moscow Milwaukee Sentinel February 15 1961 p1 John Allen Apartheid South Africa An Insider s Overview of the Origin and Effects of Separate Development iUniverse 2005 p350 Craig Nelson Rocket Men The Epic Story of the First Men on the Moon Penguin 2010 U S ICE TEAM KILLED IN CRASH Pittsburgh Press February 15 1961 p 1 Selected Milestones in the Presidency of John F Kennedy John F Kennedy Presidential Library amp Museum Archived from the original on 12 May 2006 United States Congress February 1961 id N000137 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress a b c d e f g nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Grimwood James M PART II B Research and Development Phase of Project Mercury January 1960 through May 5 1961 Project Mercury A Chronology NASA Special Publication 4001 NASA Retrieved 8 February 2023 Wittner Lawrence S 1997 Resisting the Bomb A History of the World Nuclear Disarmament Movement 1954 1970 The Struggle Against the Bomb Vol 2 Stanford California Stanford University Press p 188 USS South Dakota USS Huron Archived from the original on 7 July 2011 Retrieved 2010 12 06 Parliament Dissolved By Belgian King Toledo Blade February 20 1961 p 2 Injured Boy In Well Minds Dad And Lives Miami News February 20 1961 p 1 Jackson Blair 2000 Garcia An American Life Penguin p 32 Biteghe Moise N Sole 1990 Echec aux militaires au Gabon en 1964 in French Paris Chaka p 59 ISBN 2 907768 06 9 OCLC 29518659 Boulden Jane 2001 Peace Enforcement The United Nations Experience in Congo Somalia and Bosnia Greenwood Publishing Group p 29 James Fisher Historical Dictionary of Contemporary American Theater 1930 2010 Scarecrow Press 2011 p170 Actress Wants To Leave So TV Show Arranges Death Ocala FL Star Banner February 28 1961 p6 Hal Erickson Encyclopedia of Television Law Shows Factual and Fictional Series About Judges Lawyers and the Courtroom 1948 2008 McFarland 2009 p95 Headland Robert K 1992 The Island of South Georgia Cambridge University Press Archive p 103 Nannyandtheprofessor About IranAir Archived from the original on 7 April 2012 Retrieved 2012 04 07 Lendvai Paul 2008 One Day That Shook the Communist World The 1956 Hungarian Uprising and Its Legacy Princeton University Press p 224 Hungarian Who Led 56 Revolt Is Buried as a Hero The New York Times June 17 1989 Spearritt Peter 1999 Sydney s Century A History UNSW Press p 141 Srivastava Meera 1980 Constitutional Crisis in the States in India Concept Publishing Company p 50 Attempt on Gliding Altitude Record Flying October 1983 Blackburn Al 1999 Aces Wild The Race for Mach 1 Rowman amp Littlefield p 201 Federation Aeronautique Internationale verified records accessed April 6 2012 Davey and Pal Make TV Bow Hartford Courant February 18 1961 p 11 The News of Television Saturday Morning Philadelphia Daily News February 24 1961 p 32 Sputnik 7 NSSDC NASA Goddard Spaceflight Center Retrieved 28 July 2010 Wesley T Huntress Jr and Mikhail Ya Marov Soviet Robots in the Solar System Mission Technologies and Discoveries Springer 2011 p98 Morocco s King Dies Led Freedom Fight Country in Mourning Schenectady N Y Gazette February 27 1961 p1 Harvard Prof Kissinger New Kennedy Consultant Boston Globe February 28 1961 p8 Limited War Expert Named Kennedy Aide Oxnard CA Press Courier February 28 1961 p2 Cornell University Law School Dolores L Augustine Red Prometheus Engineering and Dictatorship in East Germany 1945 1990 MIT Press 2007 p119 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to February 1961 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w 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