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May 1962

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The following events occurred in May 1962:

May 24, 1962: Astronaut Scott Carpenter orbits Earth, overshoots landing zone by 250 miles
May 31, 1962: Adolf Eichmann death sentence carried out by Israel

May 1, 1962 (Tuesday) edit

May 2, 1962 (Wednesday) edit

  • The value of the Canadian dollar was put at a fixed exchange rate at 92.5 United States cents (USD 0.925) after having had a fluctuating value since September 30, 1950. The Canadian Exchange Fund would purchase U.S. dollars in order to keep the Canadian dollar from going more than one percent above 92+12¢ American, until May 30, 1970.[4][5]
  • Benfica (of Lisbon), champion of Portugal's Primeira Divisão league, won the European Cup for the second time in a row, beating Real Madrid (champions of Spain's La Liga), 5 to 3, before a crowd of 61,257 at Amsterdam's Olympisch Stadion.
  • An OAS car bomb killed 96 people when it exploded at the docks of Algiers. The deaths of 14 other people and the injury of 147 overall made the occasion "the bloodiest single day in the modern history of Algeria's capital".[6]
  • Born:
  • Died: Clairvius Narcisse, 40, Haitian peasant who would attain media attention in 1980 as being the identity of a zombie after his death.[7][8]

May 3, 1962 (Thursday) edit

May 4, 1962 (Friday) edit

  • U.S. Ambassador to Canada Livingston Merchant, in his final month as envoy, made a final visit to Prime Minister John Diefenbaker in Ottawa. At the meeting Diefenbaker angrily brought out an American memorandum that had been left behind during President Kennedy's visit in May 1961.[10] The President's handwritten notes in the margin included the letters "OAS" (the Organization of American States), "but Diefenbaker read Kennedy's handwriting as 'SOB',"[11] and threatened to use the memo (and the suggestion that Kennedy thought that Diefenbaker was a "son of a bitch") in the upcoming June 18 elections. After conferring with his superiors, the ambassador later told Diefenbaker that he was personally reluctant to report "anything which could be construed as a threat" and that publication of the memo would "make difficult future relations". The memo was never used, but Kennedy and Diefenbaker never trusted each other again.
  • Dr. Masaki Watanabe of Japan performed the very first arthroscopic surgery to repair a meniscus tear, a common injury for athletes. The first patient to receive the procedure was a 17-year-old basketball player, who was returned to playing six weeks after the meniscectomy and resection of his right knee by Dr. Watanabe.[12]
  • During the El Carupanazo revolt against Venezuelan President Rómulo Betancourt, Venezuelan Air Force aircraft began a two-day attack on rebel positions at Carúpano.[13]
  • Scott Carpenter, designated as the primary pilot for the Mercury-Atlas 7 (MA-7) crewed orbital flight, completed a simulated MA-7 mission exercise.[3]

May 5, 1962 (Saturday) edit

May 6, 1962 (Sunday) edit

May 7, 1962 (Monday) edit

  • Three officials of the Central Intelligence Agency met with U.S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy and implored him to stop investigation of Mafia crime boss Sam Giancana. For the first time, the CIA revealed that it had offered $150,000 to several organized criminals to carry out a "hit" against Cuba's Prime Minister, Fidel Castro.[27] The secret meeting would become public in 1975, with the release of the Rockefeller Commission's report on an investigation of the CIA.[28]
  • The six-member township council of Centralia, Pennsylvania, voted in favor of improving the new landfill at the edge of town, in time for Memorial Day ceremonies. Every year, the contents of the city dump would be set afire, despite a state law prohibiting the practice, and the May 27 burning would prove to be the end of Centralia.[29]
  • Detroit became the first city in the United States to use traffic cameras and electronic signs to regulate the flow of traffic. The pilot program began with 14 television cameras along a 3.2-mile (5.1 km) stretch of the John C. Lodge Freeway, between the Davison Expressway and Interstate 94.[30]
  • NASA announced that the Mercury 7 flight would be delayed several days due to problems with the Atlas rocket.[3]
  • The 1962 Cannes Film Festival opened.

May 8, 1962 (Tuesday) edit

May 9, 1962 (Wednesday) edit

May 10, 1962 (Thursday) edit

  • John C. Fischer, Jr., an aerospace technologist at Lewis Research Center, put forward a plan for a two-phased approach for a U.S. space station program, and said that the first phase, launching a crewed and fully equipped station into orbit, would take at least four years. The second phase would require envisioned injection of an uncrewed inflatable structure into orbit which would then be occupied and resupplied by ferry vehicles. This more sophisticated approach included artificial gravity (eliminating many human and hardware-design problems of long periods of zero-g); gyroscopic stability of the platform (eliminating requirements for propellants to maintain the station's orientation in orbit); and supply vehicles designed for reentry and landing at selected airports (eliminating the expense of conventional recovery methods).[39]
  • On May 10 and 11, Gemini Project Office directed McDonnell to determine what special pressure suit features would be required to allow crew members to take a "walk in space" of up to 15 minutes outside the capsule. Manned Spacecraft Center's Life Systems Division proposed to measure seven parameters of crew condition during all Gemini flights. In order of priority these were blood pressure, with electrocardiogram phonocardiogram; electroencephalogram; respiration, galvanic skin response, and body temperature. The bioinstrumentation required would add 3.5 pounds (1.6 kg) per crewmember, with a total power consumption of about 2 watt-hours (7.2 kJ).[1] A postlanding survival kit weighing 24 pounds (11 kg) would be provided for each crew member.[1]
  • Pravda, the official newspaper for the Soviet Communist Party, printed the official response to pleas to prevent the continued tearing down of Moscow's monasteries and churches. The plea had been in an editorial in the magazine Moskva about the urban renewal decisions of the Architectural Planning Administration. The editorials were unsigned, but apparently approved by First Secretary Khrushchev. The day before, three of the journalists from Moskva were informed that the article was anti-Soviet.[40]
  • The Japanese monster film Mothra opened in the United States, after having premiered in Japan on July 30, 1961.[41]
  • Born: John Ngugi, Kenyan athlete and 1988 Olympic gold medalist in the 5000 metre race; in Nyahururu[42]

May 11, 1962 (Friday) edit

May 12, 1962 (Saturday) edit

 
 
The 1960 and 1962 Philippine postage stamps
  • The Philippines continued to distance itself from its past as an American protectorate, changing its name on postage and coinage to Pilipinas.[45]
  • James E. Webb, the new Administrator of NASA, found that Project Gemini cost estimates had exceeded the original $250,000,000 estimate and almost tripled to $747,000,000. Spacecraft cost rose from $240 to $391 million; Titan II GLV rockets from $113 to $162 million; Atlas-Agena targets from $88 to $106 million; and supporting development from $29 to $37 million. Estimated operations costs had declined from $59.0 to $47.8 million.[1]
  • Nine men on a fishing trip were killed by sharks after their boat sank off the coast of Newport Beach, California. Chester McMain of Norwalk was taking the Happy Jack on its first voyage when it ran into rough weather. Though the men were wearing life jackets, the sharks apparently pulled them underwater. Searchers on the fishing boat Mardic located six bodies the next day and found sharks swimming around the group.[46][47]
  • Archie Moore gave up his world light heavyweight boxing title to move up to heavyweight. His successor was Harold Johnson.
  • Born: Emilio Estevez, American actor, to then-TV actor Martin Sheen and Janet Templeton Sheen; in Staten Island, New York
  • Died: Frank Jenks, 59, American film comedian

May 13, 1962 (Sunday) edit

 
President Radhakrishnan

May 14, 1962 (Monday) edit

May 15, 1962 (Tuesday) edit

  • The last execution of an American for armed robbery, without homicide, took place in Huntsville, Texas as an African-American man, 20-year-old Herbert Lemuel Bradley of Dallas, was put to death in the electric chair. Bradley, who had shot an elderly grocer six times in the robbery, told reporters before he died, "I have no complaints. A man has to die sometime, but I don't think this has been fair," noting that he shared the prison with convicts serving terms of 5 to 25 years for armed robbery.[52][53] The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals had upheld the death sentence on February 28, noting that the victim was still in the hospital more than a year after being shot four times in the stomach during a gunfight.[54]
  • Born:
  • Died: Michael Dillon, 47, English physician, who, in 1946, became the first person to undergo female-to-male transsexual phalloplasty

May 16, 1962 (Wednesday) edit

  • Representatives of McDonnell Aircraft and the Gemini Project Office decided to develop more powerful retrograde rocket motors for the Gemini spacecraft. The new motors had three times the thrust level and would permit retrorocket aborts at altitudes as low as 72,000 feet (22,000 m) to 75,000 feet (23,000 m). Development of the new motors was expected to cost $1,255,000.[1]
  • The first 1,800 United States Marines dispatched to Southeast Asia, troops of the 3rd Marine Expeditionary Brigade, arrived at Bangkok to guard Thailand's border with Laos. The Thai government had given permission for 5,000 American troops to stay.[55]

May 17, 1962 (Thursday) edit

  • African-American civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. delivered a proposed "Second Emancipation Proclamation" to U.S. President Kennedy along with a proposal that Kennedy sign an executive order with the proposed title "On Behalf of the Negro Citizenry of the United States of America in commemoration of the Centennial of the Proclamation of Emancipation". Kennedy declined to act on the request "and noticeably avoided all centennial celebrations" of the original Emancipation Proclamation (which had been signed by U.S. President Abraham Lincoln on September 22, 1862).[56]
  • Thalidomide was withdrawn from sale in Japan, bringing an end to the worldwide distribution of the morning sickness drug that had caused birth defects. Dainippon Pharmaceutical halted further shipments. About 1,200 "thalidomide babies" were born in Japan.[57]
  • Mercury 7 was postponed a second time because of necessary modifications to the altitude-sensing instrumentation in the parachute-deployment system.[3]
  • Born:
  • Died: E. Franklin Frazier, 67, American sociologist

May 18, 1962 (Friday) edit

  • British soldiers erected a barbed wire barricade along Hong Kong's 12-mile (19 km) border with the People's Republic of China. The purpose was to block refugees from fleeing China into Hong Kong. At the time, as many as 4,000 people were attempting to flee Communist China into the British colony.[58] The next day, British administrators imposed penalties on any Hong Kong resident attempting to assist a refugee's escape.[59]
  • McDonnell subcontracted the parachute landing system for Gemini to Northrop Ventura for $1,829,272. The Gemini Project Office had decided in April on using a system of one 84.2-foot (25.7 m) diameter ring-sail parachute, but now decided to add an 18-foot (5.5 m) ring-sail drogue parachute to the system. McDonnell proposed deploying the drogue at 10,000 feet (3,000 m).[1] NASA would concur on May 24.
  • The Panchen Lama, leader of the Tibetan people since the nation's conquest by Communist China, presented a 70,000-word petition to visiting Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai, pleading for relief for the suffering of Tibetans under Communist rule. Repression of Tibetan Buddhists eased to some extent after the Panchen Lama's bold move.[60]
  • Al Oerter became the first person to throw the discus more than 200 feet (61 m), setting a mark of 61.10 m (200'5") at Los Angeles.[61]
  • Born:

May 19, 1962 (Saturday) edit

 
May 19, 1962: Marilyn Monroe sings to President Kennedy
  • Marilyn Monroe made her last significant public appearance, singing "Happy Birthday, Mr. President" at a birthday party for President John F. Kennedy at Madison Square Garden. The event was part of a fundraiser to pay off the Democratic Party's four million-dollar debt remaining from Kennedy's 1960 presidential campaign.[63] Monroe was stitched into a $12,000 dress "made of nothing but beads" and wore nothing underneath as she appeared at the request of Peter Lawford; President Kennedy thanked her afterward, joking, "I can now retire from politics after having had 'Happy Birthday' sung to me in such a sweet, wholesome way."[64]
  • Mercury 7 was postponed a third time because of irregularities in the temperature control device on a heater in the Atlas flight control system.[3]
  • Died: Gabriele Münter, 85, German expressionist painter

May 20, 1962 (Sunday) edit

May 21, 1962 (Monday) edit

May 22, 1962 (Tuesday) edit

  • All 45 people on board Continental Airlines Flight 11 were killed when the Boeing 707 was destroyed by dynamite while at an altitude of 39,000 feet (12,000 m).[69] The airliner was flying from Chicago to Kansas City when the explosion occurred in the rear lavatory while the jet was over Centerville, Iowa near the border between the U.S. states of Iowa and Missouri. The fuselage came down 19 miles (31 km) from Centerville on a farm near Unionville, Missouri.[70] Contact was lost at 9:15 p.m. and the plane had disappeared from radar at 9:40 after leaving behind a 60-mile (97 km) line of debris, including a briefcase with the initials "T.G.D."; Thomas G. Doty, one of the passengers, had been on his way to Kansas City to face criminal charges for armed robbery. He had taken out a $300,000 life insurance policy payable to his wife and had bought sticks of dynamite at a hardware store before carrying out the murder-suicide.[71][72]
  • American composer Richard Rodgers became the first "EGOT" (the winner of a Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, and Tony for television, recorded music, film and stage, respectively) when he received the Emmy Award for Outstanding Original Music for Television, as composer of music for the ABC television show Winston Churchill: The Valiant Years. He had won an Oscar in 1945 for Best Original Song ("It Might as Well Be Spring"), his first Tony Award in 1950 (South Pacific), and his first Grammy Award in 1961 (The Sound of Music).[73]
  • Born:

May 23, 1962 (Wednesday) edit

  • Representatives from Avco Manufacturing Corporation made a presentation to MSC on a proposal for an orbiting space station, with a primary purpose of determining the effects of zero-g on the crew's ability to stand reentry. Avco's proposed station design comprised three separate tubes about 3 metres (9.8 ft) in diameter and 6 metres (20 ft) long, launched separately aboard Titan IIs and joined in a triangular shape in orbit. A standard Gemini spacecraft was to serve as ferry vehicle.[39]
  • The first successful reattachment (replantation) of a severed limb was accomplished by Dr. Ronald A. Malt at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. Everett Knowles, a 12-year-old boy, had had his right arm severed at the shoulder by a freight train. A year after the limb was saved, Everett could move all five fingers and bend his wrist, and by 1965, he was again playing baseball and tennis.[75][76]
  • Former French Army General Raoul Salan, founder of the French terrorist Organisation armée secrète, was sentenced to life imprisonment for treason, after initially being given a death sentence in absentia. General Salan would be pardoned by President Charles de Gaulle on June 15, 1968, after more than six years' incarceration at the prison in Tulle.[77]
  • U.S. President Kennedy signed a Presidential Directive waiving the quota against accepting immigrants from China. Since 1943, the quota for Chinese immigrants had been only 105 per year. Within three years, President Lyndon Johnson would put the quota for Asian nations at the same level as that for European nations.[78]
  • Drilling for the first subway in Montreal commenced at 8:00 a.m., as a crew began to bore a 1.2-mile (1.9 km) long tunnel under Berri Street, to run between Metropolitan Boulevard and Jean Talon Street.[79]
  • Ernst Krenek's opera What Price Confidence? premièred at Saarbrücken, seventeen years after its composition.
  • Ames Research Center began the first wind tunnel test of the Paraglider Development Program.[1]
  • Died: Rubén Jaramillo, 61, Mexican activist for land reform, along with his wife and three of his four children, after being arrested by Mexican soldiers at his home in Xochicalco.[80]

May 24, 1962 (Thursday) edit

 
Carpenter
  • Scott Carpenter orbited the Earth three times in the Aurora 7 space capsule, then splashed down 250 miles (400 km) off course in the Atlantic Ocean. He was located and rescued by the aircraft carrier USS Intrepid (CV-11). The Mercury 7 mission lifted off from Cape Canaveral at 7:45 a.m. (1245 UTC) local time, went around the Earth three times, then began its return at 1:30 p.m. (1830 UTC). Instead of being tilted 34° toward the horizon, the capsule was inclined at 25° and overshot its mark, landing at 1:41 p.m.[3][81] The mission achieved all objectives. Only one critical component malfunction occurred, a random failure of the pitch horizon scanner, which provided a reference point to the attitude gyroscopes. To compensate, the spacecraft was allowed to drift for 77 additional minutes and the flight lasted 4 hours and 56 minutes. Splashdown happened 125 miles (201 km) northeast of Puerto Rico. The overshoot was traced to a 25° yaw error when the retrograde rockets were fired, about three seconds late, which caused 20 miles (32 km) of the overshoot. Carpenter, who had deployed a rubber raft, floated for 2 hours and 59 minutes before being rescued by helicopter.[3]
  • The string quartet piece ST/10=1, 080262, the first classical music composed using a computer, was premiered. Greek composer Iannis Xenakis had created the work with the aid of an IBM 7090 computer.[82]
  • The U.S. Embassy in Moscow renewed the passport of Lee Harvey Oswald and approved the entry of his wife and daughter into the United States.[34]
  • North American Aviation began testing the emergency parachute system for the Gemini flight test vehicle.[1]

May 25, 1962 (Friday) edit

  • The new Coventry Cathedral, also known as St Michael's Cathedral, was consecrated in Coventry, West Midlands, for the Church of England, more than 20 years after the November 14, 1940 destruction of the 500-year-old Cathedral by German Luftwaffe bombers during World War II. The new cathedral, symbolic of forgiveness and rebirth, stands next to the ruins of the old one.[83]
  • A group of students at Haigazian University in Beirut launched the first rocket in what would become the Lebanese space program, sending the HCRS-7 Cedar rocket to an altitude of 11,500 metres (37,700 ft) under the supervision and protection of the Lebanese Army, which arranged for the clearing of airspace around the launch area.[84]
  • Died:
    • David Ogle, 40, English automobile designer who had founded his own sports car company, was killed while driving his Ogle Mini GT sports to a race circuit where he was going to demonstrate the vehicle. He was on the A1 highway at Digswell, Hertfordshire and traveling at 85 miles per hour (137 km/h) when he collided with a van and the car burst into flame.[85][86]
    • Simone Tanner Chaumet, 45, French humanitarian honored for her role in saving hundreds of Jewish children in France during World War II, and later a peace activist in Algeria, was murdered in the Algiers suburb of Bouzaréah.

May 26, 1962 (Saturday) edit

May 27, 1962 (Sunday) edit

May 28, 1962 (Monday) edit

  • Flight and ground tests disclosed that retrorocket heater blankets were unnecessary to the Mercury spacecraft, and this item was removed.[3] The Manned Spacecraft Center shipped Mercury mission survival kits to the U.S. Navy and to the U.S. Air Force for its X-20 Dyna Soar development program.[3]
  • The Soviet Union launched the Kosmos 5 scientific research and technology demonstration satellite, becoming the last satellite in the Kosmos programme to reach orbit successfully.
  • Born: Brandon Cruz, American TV actor and punk rock musician who co-starred as a child with Bill Bixby in The Courtship of Eddie's Father, and was lead vocalist as an adult for Dead Kennedys; in Bakersfield, California
  • Died: Assar Gabrielsson, 70, Swedish industrialist and co-founder of the Volvo automobile company

May 29, 1962 (Tuesday) edit

May 30, 1962 (Wednesday) edit

May 31, 1962 (Thursday) edit

References edit

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  2. ^ Epting, Chris (2009). The Birthplace Book: A Guide to Birth Sites of Famous People, Places, and Things. Stackpole Books. p. 179.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain. Grimwood, James M. "PART III (A) Operational Phase of Project Mercury May 5, 1961 through May 1962". Project Mercury - A Chronology. NASA Special Publication-4001. NASA. Retrieved 11 February 2023.
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  6. ^ "Algerian Carnage Takes Lives Of 110". Sarasota Herald-Tribune. May 3, 1962. p. 1.
  7. ^ "Zombies: Do They Exist?". TIME. October 17, 1983.
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  66. ^ "$10 Million AFL Suit Ruled Out". The Milwaukee Sentinel. May 22, 1962. p. 2–3.
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  74. ^ "John P. Sarbanes, U.S. Representative (Maryland)".
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1962, 1962, january, february, march, april, june, july, august, september, october, november, december, following, events, occurred, 1962, astronaut, scott, carpenter, orbits, earth, overshoots, landing, zone, miles, 1962, adolf, eichmann, death, sentence, ca. 1962 January February March April May June July August September October November December lt lt May 1962 gt gt Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa 0 1 0 2 0 3 0 4 0 5 0 6 0 7 0 8 0 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 The following events occurred in May 1962 May 24 1962 Astronaut Scott Carpenter orbits Earth overshoots landing zone by 250 miles May 31 1962 Adolf Eichmann death sentence carried out by Israel Contents 1 May 1 1962 Tuesday 2 May 2 1962 Wednesday 3 May 3 1962 Thursday 4 May 4 1962 Friday 5 May 5 1962 Saturday 6 May 6 1962 Sunday 7 May 7 1962 Monday 8 May 8 1962 Tuesday 9 May 9 1962 Wednesday 10 May 10 1962 Thursday 11 May 11 1962 Friday 12 May 12 1962 Saturday 13 May 13 1962 Sunday 14 May 14 1962 Monday 15 May 15 1962 Tuesday 16 May 16 1962 Wednesday 17 May 17 1962 Thursday 18 May 18 1962 Friday 19 May 19 1962 Saturday 20 May 20 1962 Sunday 21 May 21 1962 Monday 22 May 22 1962 Tuesday 23 May 23 1962 Wednesday 24 May 24 1962 Thursday 25 May 25 1962 Friday 26 May 26 1962 Saturday 27 May 27 1962 Sunday 28 May 28 1962 Monday 29 May 29 1962 Tuesday 30 May 30 1962 Wednesday 31 May 31 1962 Thursday 32 ReferencesMay 1 1962 Tuesday editThe Air Force Space Systems Division SSD awarded a contract to Lockheed for eight Gemini Agena target vehicles GATV Mission requirements were to 1 establish a specified circular orbit 2 provide a stable target and dock for rendezvous 3 respond to commands from ground stations or spacecraft 4 perform complex series of orbital maneuvers and 5 provide an active orbit life of at least five days 1 NASA and Lockheed agreed on a full pulse code modulation PCM for the Gemini program Ten sites were selected for the installation of PCM equipment 1 The Dayton Hudson Corporation opened the first of its Target discount stores The store now a SuperTarget is located at 1515 West County Road B in Roseville Minnesota a suburb of Minneapolis Saint Paul 2 Norwich City F C won the English Football League Cup beating Rochdale F C 1 to 0 in the second leg of the two game final after having defeated them 3 to 0 at Rochdale on April 26 for an aggregate score of 4 to 0 A gas analysis laboratory was installed in Hanger S at Cape Canaveral to analyze gases used in the Mercury spacecraft 3 Died Sir Sydney Cockerell 94 English curator and art collectorMay 2 1962 Wednesday editThe value of the Canadian dollar was put at a fixed exchange rate at 92 5 United States cents USD 0 925 after having had a fluctuating value since September 30 1950 The Canadian Exchange Fund would purchase U S dollars in order to keep the Canadian dollar from going more than one percent above 92 1 2 American until May 30 1970 4 5 Benfica of Lisbon champion of Portugal s Primeira Divisao league won the European Cup for the second time in a row beating Real Madrid champions of Spain s La Liga 5 to 3 before a crowd of 61 257 at Amsterdam s Olympisch Stadion An OAS car bomb killed 96 people when it exploded at the docks of Algiers The deaths of 14 other people and the injury of 147 overall made the occasion the bloodiest single day in the modern history of Algeria s capital 6 Born Ty Herndon American country music singer in Meridian Mississippi Elizabeth Berridge American actress in New Rochelle New York Jimmy Whirlwind White English snooker player in Tooting London Died Clairvius Narcisse 40 Haitian peasant who would attain media attention in 1980 as being the identity of a zombie after his death 7 8 May 3 1962 Thursday editA railway crash involving three separate trains killed 160 people in Japan near the Mikawashima Station at Arkawawa a ward of Tokyo Engineer Norifumi Minakami drove a freight train through a red signal and sideswiped a commuter train As surviving passengers climbed out of that train a third train ran through them then plunged over an embankment 9 British supermarket executive Alan Sainsbury CEO of the Sainsbury s Supermarkets chain of grocery stores was created a life peer in the House of Lords with the title Baron Sainsbury May 4 1962 Friday editU S Ambassador to Canada Livingston Merchant in his final month as envoy made a final visit to Prime Minister John Diefenbaker in Ottawa At the meeting Diefenbaker angrily brought out an American memorandum that had been left behind during President Kennedy s visit in May 1961 10 The President s handwritten notes in the margin included the letters OAS the Organization of American States but Diefenbaker read Kennedy s handwriting as SOB 11 and threatened to use the memo and the suggestion that Kennedy thought that Diefenbaker was a son of a bitch in the upcoming June 18 elections After conferring with his superiors the ambassador later told Diefenbaker that he was personally reluctant to report anything which could be construed as a threat and that publication of the memo would make difficult future relations The memo was never used but Kennedy and Diefenbaker never trusted each other again Dr Masaki Watanabe of Japan performed the very first arthroscopic surgery to repair a meniscus tear a common injury for athletes The first patient to receive the procedure was a 17 year old basketball player who was returned to playing six weeks after the meniscectomy and resection of his right knee by Dr Watanabe 12 During the El Carupanazo revolt against Venezuelan President Romulo Betancourt Venezuelan Air Force aircraft began a two day attack on rebel positions at Carupano 13 Scott Carpenter designated as the primary pilot for the Mercury Atlas 7 MA 7 crewed orbital flight completed a simulated MA 7 mission exercise 3 May 5 1962 Saturday editSeattle businessman Stanley McDonald inaugurated a cruise ship service that would eventually become Princess Cruises starting with the departure of the Canadian steamer SS Yarmouth from San Francisco for the first of 17 ten day cruises to the 1962 Seattle World s Fair and back 14 15 After a successful six month lease of the Yarmouth McDonald would spend more than three years in making plans for the Princess Cruise line which would be made famous by The Love Boat television series on a regular series of winter tours from Los Angeles to Acapulco starting at the end of 1965 16 Tottenham Hotspur F C retained the FA Cup with a 3 1 win over Burnley F C in front of 100 000 fans including Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip at Wembley Stadium and became only the second team in Football League history to win the Cup two years in a row 17 18 Goals were scored for the Spurs by Jimmy Greaves Bobby Smith and captain Danny Blanchflower with the Clarets sole score coming from Jimmy Robson May 6 1962 Sunday editAntonio Segni was elected President of the Italian Republic on the ninth round of balloting by the combined houses of Italian Parliament and after four days of voting In the first round Segni of the Democrazia Cristiana DC party was pitted against three other candidates Giuseppe Saragat Partito Socialista Democratico Italiano PSDI Umberto Terracini of the Italian Communist Party P C I and Sandro Pertini of the Partito Socialista Italiano PSI with no candidate receiving at least two thirds of the vote in on the first three ballots After Terracini and Pertini dropped out and a 50 percent rather than two thirds majority determined the choice Segni defeated Saragat 443 votes to 334 19 The first nuclear explosion to be caused by an American ballistic missile rather than by a bomb dropped from an aircraft or at a fixed site was accomplished at Christmas Island 1 200 miles 1 900 km from its launch site Previous ICBM tests had been done without a nuclear warhead The USS Ethan Allen fired the armed Polaris A 2 missile from underwater to its target 20 21 Martin de Porres 1579 1639 of Peru was canonized as the first mixed race Roman Catholic saint 125 years after his beatification The son of a Spanish nobleman father and a freed slave mother of African and Indian descent Porres was designated as the patron saint of mixed race individuals barbers innkeepers and public health workers 22 The National Bowling League rolled its last game with the Detroit Thunderbirds defeating the Twin Cities Skippers 27 15 to sweep the best 3 of five World Series of Bowling for the first and only NBL championship 23 24 25 Born N J Burkett American correspondent for WABC TV since 1989 best known for his coverage on the 9 11 terrorist attacks in Orange New Jersey 26 Died Thomas Gilcrease 72 American philanthropist and collector of indigenous artifacts of the AmericasMay 7 1962 Monday editThree officials of the Central Intelligence Agency met with U S Attorney General Robert F Kennedy and implored him to stop investigation of Mafia crime boss Sam Giancana For the first time the CIA revealed that it had offered 150 000 to several organized criminals to carry out a hit against Cuba s Prime Minister Fidel Castro 27 The secret meeting would become public in 1975 with the release of the Rockefeller Commission s report on an investigation of the CIA 28 The six member township council of Centralia Pennsylvania voted in favor of improving the new landfill at the edge of town in time for Memorial Day ceremonies Every year the contents of the city dump would be set afire despite a state law prohibiting the practice and the May 27 burning would prove to be the end of Centralia 29 Detroit became the first city in the United States to use traffic cameras and electronic signs to regulate the flow of traffic The pilot program began with 14 television cameras along a 3 2 mile 5 1 km stretch of the John C Lodge Freeway between the Davison Expressway and Interstate 94 30 NASA announced that the Mercury 7 flight would be delayed several days due to problems with the Atlas rocket 3 The 1962 Cannes Film Festival opened May 8 1962 Tuesday editThe Broadway musical A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum with music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim had the first of 964 performances Set in ancient Rome and inspired by the comedies of Titus Maccius Plautus 254 BC 184 BC it would close on August 29 1964 and be adapted as a film as well 31 J Paul Austin became the new President of The Coca Cola Company During his 19 year tenure Coca Cola s annual worldwide sales would grow ten fold from 567 million to 5 9 billion 32 Brian Epstein visited the HMV EMI store at 363 Oxford Street London to have The Beatles Decca audition tape transferred to 78 rpm acetates Francisco Orlich Bolmarcich was inaugurated for a four year term as the 36th President of Costa Rica succeeding Mario Echandi Jimenez 33 Died Alfred Madsen 74 Norwegian engineer newspaper editor trade unionist and politicianMay 9 1962 Wednesday editAt the request of the U S Department of State the Immigration and Naturalization Service agreed to issue a United States visa to Marina Prusakova Oswald so that she could accompany her husband Lee Harvey Oswald on his return to the United States 34 The lunar crater Albategnius became the first area of the moon to be illuminated by a laser beam from Earth Scientists Louis Smullin and Giorgio Fiocco of MIT aimed the beam and then observed it 35 The Beatles signed their first recording contract with Parlophone after Brian Epstein persuaded George Martin to sign them sight unseen 36 The Sikorsky S 64 Skycrane helicopter capable of lifting 20 000 pounds over 9 000 kg made its first flight 37 Princess Marie Christine of Belgium was confirmed by Bishop Fulton Sheen 38 Born Dave Gahan English singer songwriter and lead singer of electronic band Depeche Mode in North Weald EssexMay 10 1962 Thursday editJohn C Fischer Jr an aerospace technologist at Lewis Research Center put forward a plan for a two phased approach for a U S space station program and said that the first phase launching a crewed and fully equipped station into orbit would take at least four years The second phase would require envisioned injection of an uncrewed inflatable structure into orbit which would then be occupied and resupplied by ferry vehicles This more sophisticated approach included artificial gravity eliminating many human and hardware design problems of long periods of zero g gyroscopic stability of the platform eliminating requirements for propellants to maintain the station s orientation in orbit and supply vehicles designed for reentry and landing at selected airports eliminating the expense of conventional recovery methods 39 On May 10 and 11 Gemini Project Office directed McDonnell to determine what special pressure suit features would be required to allow crew members to take a walk in space of up to 15 minutes outside the capsule Manned Spacecraft Center s Life Systems Division proposed to measure seven parameters of crew condition during all Gemini flights In order of priority these were blood pressure with electrocardiogram phonocardiogram electroencephalogram respiration galvanic skin response and body temperature The bioinstrumentation required would add 3 5 pounds 1 6 kg per crewmember with a total power consumption of about 2 watt hours 7 2 kJ 1 A postlanding survival kit weighing 24 pounds 11 kg would be provided for each crew member 1 Pravda the official newspaper for the Soviet Communist Party printed the official response to pleas to prevent the continued tearing down of Moscow s monasteries and churches The plea had been in an editorial in the magazine Moskva about the urban renewal decisions of the Architectural Planning Administration The editorials were unsigned but apparently approved by First Secretary Khrushchev The day before three of the journalists from Moskva were informed that the article was anti Soviet 40 The Japanese monster film Mothra opened in the United States after having premiered in Japan on July 30 1961 41 Born John Ngugi Kenyan athlete and 1988 Olympic gold medalist in the 5000 metre race in Nyahururu 42 May 11 1962 Friday editStudents at Orange County State College later California State University Fullerton staged what was billed as The First Intercollegiate Elephant Race in Human History with 15 elephants raced through different events in Fullerton California Winners in various weight ranges included Kinney of Long Beach State College and Captain Hook of Orange Coast College 43 In accepting the Sylvanus Thayer Award retired General Douglas MacArthur delivered his memorable Duty Honor Country speech to West Point cadets The 82 year old MacArthur delivered the 30 minute address from memory and without notes and a recording of the remarks would be released as a record album later 44 Died Hans Luther 83 Chancellor of Germany from 1925 to 1926May 12 1962 Saturday edit nbsp nbsp The 1960 and 1962 Philippine postage stamps The Philippines continued to distance itself from its past as an American protectorate changing its name on postage and coinage to Pilipinas 45 James E Webb the new Administrator of NASA found that Project Gemini cost estimates had exceeded the original 250 000 000 estimate and almost tripled to 747 000 000 Spacecraft cost rose from 240 to 391 million Titan II GLV rockets from 113 to 162 million Atlas Agena targets from 88 to 106 million and supporting development from 29 to 37 million Estimated operations costs had declined from 59 0 to 47 8 million 1 Nine men on a fishing trip were killed by sharks after their boat sank off the coast of Newport Beach California Chester McMain of Norwalk was taking the Happy Jack on its first voyage when it ran into rough weather Though the men were wearing life jackets the sharks apparently pulled them underwater Searchers on the fishing boat Mardic located six bodies the next day and found sharks swimming around the group 46 47 Archie Moore gave up his world light heavyweight boxing title to move up to heavyweight His successor was Harold Johnson Born Emilio Estevez American actor to then TV actor Martin Sheen and Janet Templeton Sheen in Staten Island New York Died Frank Jenks 59 American film comedianMay 13 1962 Sunday edit nbsp President Radhakrishnan Vice President Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan was sworn in as the second President of India succeeding Rajendra Prasad 48 He would serve a full four year term 49 Born Paul McDermott Australian comedian and television presenter in AdelaideMay 14 1962 Monday editPrince Juan Carlos of Spain grandson of Spain s last monarch up that time King Alfonso XIII married Princess Sophie of Greece daughter of King Paul at a ceremony in Athens 50 The two would become King and Queen when the monarchy was restored in Spain in 1975 51 Died Silpa Bhirasri 69 Thai sculptor and founder of Silpakorn University who had been born in Italy as Corrado FerociMay 15 1962 Tuesday editThe last execution of an American for armed robbery without homicide took place in Huntsville Texas as an African American man 20 year old Herbert Lemuel Bradley of Dallas was put to death in the electric chair Bradley who had shot an elderly grocer six times in the robbery told reporters before he died I have no complaints A man has to die sometime but I don t think this has been fair noting that he shared the prison with convicts serving terms of 5 to 25 years for armed robbery 52 53 The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals had upheld the death sentence on February 28 noting that the victim was still in the hospital more than a year after being shot four times in the stomach during a gunfight 54 Born Julie Otsuka American author in Palo Alto California Amit Chaudhuri Indian author in Calcutta now Kolkata Died Michael Dillon 47 English physician who in 1946 became the first person to undergo female to male transsexual phalloplastyMay 16 1962 Wednesday editRepresentatives of McDonnell Aircraft and the Gemini Project Office decided to develop more powerful retrograde rocket motors for the Gemini spacecraft The new motors had three times the thrust level and would permit retrorocket aborts at altitudes as low as 72 000 feet 22 000 m to 75 000 feet 23 000 m Development of the new motors was expected to cost 1 255 000 1 The first 1 800 United States Marines dispatched to Southeast Asia troops of the 3rd Marine Expeditionary Brigade arrived at Bangkok to guard Thailand s border with Laos The Thai government had given permission for 5 000 American troops to stay 55 May 17 1962 Thursday editAfrican American civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr delivered a proposed Second Emancipation Proclamation to U S President Kennedy along with a proposal that Kennedy sign an executive order with the proposed title On Behalf of the Negro Citizenry of the United States of America in commemoration of the Centennial of the Proclamation of Emancipation Kennedy declined to act on the request and noticeably avoided all centennial celebrations of the original Emancipation Proclamation which had been signed by U S President Abraham Lincoln on September 22 1862 56 Thalidomide was withdrawn from sale in Japan bringing an end to the worldwide distribution of the morning sickness drug that had caused birth defects Dainippon Pharmaceutical halted further shipments About 1 200 thalidomide babies were born in Japan 57 Mercury 7 was postponed a second time because of necessary modifications to the altitude sensing instrumentation in the parachute deployment system 3 Born Craig Ferguson Scottish American comedian best known for hosting his late night talk show The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson in Glasgow Arturo Peniche Mexican telenovela actor in Mexico City Died E Franklin Frazier 67 American sociologistMay 18 1962 Friday editBritish soldiers erected a barbed wire barricade along Hong Kong s 12 mile 19 km border with the People s Republic of China The purpose was to block refugees from fleeing China into Hong Kong At the time as many as 4 000 people were attempting to flee Communist China into the British colony 58 The next day British administrators imposed penalties on any Hong Kong resident attempting to assist a refugee s escape 59 McDonnell subcontracted the parachute landing system for Gemini to Northrop Ventura for 1 829 272 The Gemini Project Office had decided in April on using a system of one 84 2 foot 25 7 m diameter ring sail parachute but now decided to add an 18 foot 5 5 m ring sail drogue parachute to the system McDonnell proposed deploying the drogue at 10 000 feet 3 000 m 1 NASA would concur on May 24 The Panchen Lama leader of the Tibetan people since the nation s conquest by Communist China presented a 70 000 word petition to visiting Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai pleading for relief for the suffering of Tibetans under Communist rule Repression of Tibetan Buddhists eased to some extent after the Panchen Lama s bold move 60 Al Oerter became the first person to throw the discus more than 200 feet 61 m setting a mark of 61 10 m 200 5 at Los Angeles 61 Born Sandra stage name for Sandra Ann Lauer German pop singer who achieved international fame in the 1980s and 1990s in Saarbrucken West Germany 62 Karel Roden Czech actor in Ceske BudejoviceMay 19 1962 Saturday edit nbsp May 19 1962 Marilyn Monroe sings to President Kennedy Marilyn Monroe made her last significant public appearance singing Happy Birthday Mr President at a birthday party for President John F Kennedy at Madison Square Garden The event was part of a fundraiser to pay off the Democratic Party s four million dollar debt remaining from Kennedy s 1960 presidential campaign 63 Monroe was stitched into a 12 000 dress made of nothing but beads and wore nothing underneath as she appeared at the request of Peter Lawford President Kennedy thanked her afterward joking I can now retire from politics after having had Happy Birthday sung to me in such a sweet wholesome way 64 Mercury 7 was postponed a third time because of irregularities in the temperature control device on a heater in the Atlas flight control system 3 Died Gabriele Munter 85 German expressionist painterMay 20 1962 Sunday editThe Conseil national de la Resistance a terrorist organization with a goal of assassinating France s president Charles de Gaulle was founded in Rome by former French Army Lieutenant Colonel Antoine Argoud who had escaped arrest for his membership in the rebel Organisation armee secrete that sought to stop France from granting independence to Algeria The first specifically built coronary care unit in the world opened at the Bethany Hospital in Kansas City Missouri under the planning of cardiologist Dr Hughes Day Other CCUs followed in Toronto Sydney New York and Philadelphia and by 1970 most major hospitals had units designed to treat heart attacks 65 The 1962 Dutch Grand Prix at Circuit Park Zandvoort opened the Formula One Championship season It was won by Graham Hill The non championship 1962 Naples Grand Prix took place on the same day at the Posillipo Circuit and was won by Willy Mairesse Born Aleksandr Dedyushko Belarusian television actor in Volkovysk Byelorussian SSR Soviet Union now Vawkavysk Belarus died in car accident 2007 Christiane F Vera Christiane Felscherinow German heroin addict who wrote a memoir of her drug abuse in HamburgMay 21 1962 Monday editMcDonnell awarded an 8 million subcontract to Electro Mechanical Research Inc for the data transmission system for the Gemini spacecraft 1 Another contract assigned 2 609 000 to convert pad 19 at Cape Canaveral for Gemini flights Construction began in September 1962 and would be completed by October 17 1963 1 In Baltimore federal district judge Roszel C Thomsen dismissed the antitrust lawsuit by the American Football League against the National Football League The suit arose from the NFL s action of placing franchises in Dallas and Minneapolis after the AFL had been founded with teams there 66 Egypt s President Gamel Abdel Nasser unveiled his National Charter of the Arab Socialist Union proclaiming that the Arab Revolution would win its battle of destiny by enlightened thought free movement and clear perception of the revolution s objectives 67 Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev accepted the recommendation from his Defense Council to place nuclear missiles in Cuba an act which would lead to the Cuban Missile Crisis and the threat of a nuclear war between the U S and the USSR in October 68 Born Tina Landau American playwright and theatre director in New York City Hege Storhaug Norwegian journalist and activist in ArendalMay 22 1962 Tuesday editAll 45 people on board Continental Airlines Flight 11 were killed when the Boeing 707 was destroyed by dynamite while at an altitude of 39 000 feet 12 000 m 69 The airliner was flying from Chicago to Kansas City when the explosion occurred in the rear lavatory while the jet was over Centerville Iowa near the border between the U S states of Iowa and Missouri The fuselage came down 19 miles 31 km from Centerville on a farm near Unionville Missouri 70 Contact was lost at 9 15 p m and the plane had disappeared from radar at 9 40 after leaving behind a 60 mile 97 km line of debris including a briefcase with the initials T G D Thomas G Doty one of the passengers had been on his way to Kansas City to face criminal charges for armed robbery He had taken out a 300 000 life insurance policy payable to his wife and had bought sticks of dynamite at a hardware store before carrying out the murder suicide 71 72 American composer Richard Rodgers became the first EGOT the winner of a Emmy Grammy Oscar and Tony for television recorded music film and stage respectively when he received the Emmy Award for Outstanding Original Music for Television as composer of music for the ABC television show Winston Churchill The Valiant Years He had won an Oscar in 1945 for Best Original Song It Might as Well Be Spring his first Tony Award in 1950 South Pacific and his first Grammy Award in 1961 The Sound of Music 73 Born Brian Pillman American football player and professional Wrestler who worked for WCW and the WWF now WWE in Cincinnati died from heart disease 1997 John Sarbanes American politician and U S Representative for Maryland s 3rd district since 2007 son of longtime Congressman and Senator Paul Sarbanes in Baltimore 74 May 23 1962 Wednesday editRepresentatives from Avco Manufacturing Corporation made a presentation to MSC on a proposal for an orbiting space station with a primary purpose of determining the effects of zero g on the crew s ability to stand reentry Avco s proposed station design comprised three separate tubes about 3 metres 9 8 ft in diameter and 6 metres 20 ft long launched separately aboard Titan IIs and joined in a triangular shape in orbit A standard Gemini spacecraft was to serve as ferry vehicle 39 The first successful reattachment replantation of a severed limb was accomplished by Dr Ronald A Malt at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston Everett Knowles a 12 year old boy had had his right arm severed at the shoulder by a freight train A year after the limb was saved Everett could move all five fingers and bend his wrist and by 1965 he was again playing baseball and tennis 75 76 Former French Army General Raoul Salan founder of the French terrorist Organisation armee secrete was sentenced to life imprisonment for treason after initially being given a death sentence in absentia General Salan would be pardoned by President Charles de Gaulle on June 15 1968 after more than six years incarceration at the prison in Tulle 77 U S President Kennedy signed a Presidential Directive waiving the quota against accepting immigrants from China Since 1943 the quota for Chinese immigrants had been only 105 per year Within three years President Lyndon Johnson would put the quota for Asian nations at the same level as that for European nations 78 Drilling for the first subway in Montreal commenced at 8 00 a m as a crew began to bore a 1 2 mile 1 9 km long tunnel under Berri Street to run between Metropolitan Boulevard and Jean Talon Street 79 Ernst Krenek s opera What Price Confidence premiered at Saarbrucken seventeen years after its composition Ames Research Center began the first wind tunnel test of the Paraglider Development Program 1 Died Ruben Jaramillo 61 Mexican activist for land reform along with his wife and three of his four children after being arrested by Mexican soldiers at his home in Xochicalco 80 May 24 1962 Thursday edit nbsp Carpenter Scott Carpenter orbited the Earth three times in the Aurora 7 space capsule then splashed down 250 miles 400 km off course in the Atlantic Ocean He was located and rescued by the aircraft carrier USS Intrepid CV 11 The Mercury 7 mission lifted off from Cape Canaveral at 7 45 a m 1245 UTC local time went around the Earth three times then began its return at 1 30 p m 1830 UTC Instead of being tilted 34 toward the horizon the capsule was inclined at 25 and overshot its mark landing at 1 41 p m 3 81 The mission achieved all objectives Only one critical component malfunction occurred a random failure of the pitch horizon scanner which provided a reference point to the attitude gyroscopes To compensate the spacecraft was allowed to drift for 77 additional minutes and the flight lasted 4 hours and 56 minutes Splashdown happened 125 miles 201 km northeast of Puerto Rico The overshoot was traced to a 25 yaw error when the retrograde rockets were fired about three seconds late which caused 20 miles 32 km of the overshoot Carpenter who had deployed a rubber raft floated for 2 hours and 59 minutes before being rescued by helicopter 3 The string quartet piece ST 10 1 080262 the first classical music composed using a computer was premiered Greek composer Iannis Xenakis had created the work with the aid of an IBM 7090 computer 82 The U S Embassy in Moscow renewed the passport of Lee Harvey Oswald and approved the entry of his wife and daughter into the United States 34 North American Aviation began testing the emergency parachute system for the Gemini flight test vehicle 1 May 25 1962 Friday editThe new Coventry Cathedral also known as St Michael s Cathedral was consecrated in Coventry West Midlands for the Church of England more than 20 years after the November 14 1940 destruction of the 500 year old Cathedral by German Luftwaffe bombers during World War II The new cathedral symbolic of forgiveness and rebirth stands next to the ruins of the old one 83 A group of students at Haigazian University in Beirut launched the first rocket in what would become the Lebanese space program sending the HCRS 7 Cedar rocket to an altitude of 11 500 metres 37 700 ft under the supervision and protection of the Lebanese Army which arranged for the clearing of airspace around the launch area 84 Died David Ogle 40 English automobile designer who had founded his own sports car company was killed while driving his Ogle Mini GT sports to a race circuit where he was going to demonstrate the vehicle He was on the A1 highway at Digswell Hertfordshire and traveling at 85 miles per hour 137 km h when he collided with a van and the car burst into flame 85 86 Simone Tanner Chaumet 45 French humanitarian honored for her role in saving hundreds of Jewish children in France during World War II and later a peace activist in Algeria was murdered in the Algiers suburb of Bouzareah May 26 1962 Saturday editAcker Bilk s Stranger On The Shore became the first British recording to reach number one in the U S Billboard Hot 100 setting a background for the British Invasion that would follow with The Tornados later in the year and with The Beatles Peter and Gordon The Animals and Manfred Mann with nine 1 hits between them in 1964 Born Anthony Joyner American serial killer and rapist convicted for at least six homicides and suspected in 12 others of elderly women at a nursing home where he was employed in Philadelphia Bobcat Goldthwait stage name for Robert Francis Goldwait American comedian on film and TV in Syracuse New YorkMay 27 1962 Sunday editPursuant to the township council resolution of May 7 the contents of the new landfill in Centralia Pennsylvania a town with 1 435 residents were burned as part of a cleanup on the day before Memorial Day As had been done in the past the volunteer fire department then extinguished the blaze The new landfill however had been placed above an abandoned coal mine and the fire continued to burn underground ultimately reducing Centralia to a ghost town 29 Born Scott Perry American politician and retired U S Army National Guard brigadier general who is the U S representative for Pennsylvania s 10th congressional district in San Diego 87 Ravi Shastri Indian cricketer who was captain of the Indian national team in the 1980s and later the team s coach in Bombay now Mumbai Died Egon Petri 81 Dutch pianistMay 28 1962 Monday editFlight and ground tests disclosed that retrorocket heater blankets were unnecessary to the Mercury spacecraft and this item was removed 3 The Manned Spacecraft Center shipped Mercury mission survival kits to the U S Navy and to the U S Air Force for its X 20 Dyna Soar development program 3 The Soviet Union launched the Kosmos 5 scientific research and technology demonstration satellite becoming the last satellite in the Kosmos programme to reach orbit successfully Born Brandon Cruz American TV actor and punk rock musician who co starred as a child with Bill Bixby in The Courtship of Eddie s Father and was lead vocalist as an adult for Dead Kennedys in Bakersfield California Died Assar Gabrielsson 70 Swedish industrialist and co founder of the Volvo automobile companyMay 29 1962 Tuesday editNegotiations began between the European French Algerian paramilitary rebels of the OAS Organisation armee secrete and the Arab Algerian independence fighters of the FLN Front de liberation nationale with a goal toward reaching a ceasefire between the two armies in the Algerian War Fighting would finally cease on June 17 1962 and Algeria would become an independent nation ruled by its Arab Algerian majority population on July 5 Representatives of McDonnell Weber Aircraft the Gemini Project Office and the U S Navy s China Lake Naval Ordnance Test Station concluded plans for development testing of the Gemini spacecraft ejection seat 1 In a runoff in the primary election for the Democratic Party nominee for Governor of Alabama segregationist and circuit judge George C Wallace defeated state senator Ryan DeGraffenried Sr 88 89 Stock prices fell worldwide in the largest one day decline since the Great Depression Heavy sales were registered in New York London Tokyo Paris Frankfurt and Zurich 90 91 Four window cleaners were killed when a scaffold fell from the 19th floor of the Equitable Building in Manhattan 92 93 94 May 30 1962 Wednesday editThe 1962 FIFA World Cup began in Chile with 16 nations qualifying for the competition to reach the final with four groups of four teams each On the first day with games all starting at 3 00 in the afternoon Uruguay beat Colombia 2 1 Group 1 at Arica Chile beat Switzerland 3 1 Group 2 at Santiago Brazil beat Mexico 2 0 Group 3 at Vina del Mar and Argentina beat Bulgaria 1 0 Group 4 at Rancagua On the same day in the Philippines 30 people were killed and 10 injured when a bus carrying students on a holiday outing fell off of a wooden bridge and was swept away by the Alalum Falls near the town of Sumilao in the Bukidnon province on southern Mindanao 95 Seventy people were killed in the deadliest road accident up to that time when an overloaded Gujarat State Road Transport Corporation bus in India crashed through a bridge railing near Kapadvanj and sank in the Mahi River Only 18 people survived 96 97 Benjamin Britten s War Requiem was performed for the first time in the arts festival held to celebrate the reconsecration of Coventry Cathedral Born Kevin Eastman American comic book artist and writer best known for co creating the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles in Portland Maine 98 Timo Soini 31st Deputy Prime Minister of Finland from 2015 to 2017 and Foreign Affairs Minister from 2015 to 2019 in Rauma Died Pierre Gilliard 85 Swiss academic former tutor to the Russian royal familyMay 31 1962 Thursday editThe hanging of Adolf Eichmann 56 German Nazi and SS Obersturmbannfuhrer Lieutenant Colonel and one of the major organizers of the Holocaust was carried out at 11 58 p m local time on an improvised scaffold in a third story storeroom at the Ayalon Prison in Ramla near Tel Aviv Eichmann who had been captured by agents of Israel s Mossad spy agency on March 21 1960 and then taken from Argentina to Israel for his role in the extermination of 6 000 000 European Jews would become the first person to be legally executed in the history of modern Israel The body was cremated soon afterward and Eichmann s ashes scattered over the Mediterranean Sea 99 The Northern Ireland general election produced a large majority for the Ulster Unionist Party which won 34 out of 51 seats The Nationalist Party gained 2 seats to give it a total of nine A speeding freight train killed 62 people who were at the back of a passenger train near Voghera in Italy Most of the dead were vacationers on their way to the French Riviera 100 Born Dina Boluarte Peruvian politician civil servant and lawyer currently serving as the 64th President of Peru since 2022 in Chalhuanca 101 Sebastian Koch German film actor The Lives of Others Bridge of Spies in Karlsruhe West Germany Yōko Sōmi Japanese voice actress in Niigata PrefectureReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k l 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 B Concept and Design January 1962 through December 1962 Project Gemini Technology and Operations A Chronology NASA Special Publication 4002 NASA Retrieved 19 February 2023 Epting Chris 2009 The Birthplace Book A Guide to Birth Sites of Famous People Places and Things Stackpole Books p 179 a b c d e f g h i nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Grimwood James M PART III A Operational Phase of Project Mercury May 5 1961 through May 1962 Project Mercury A Chronology NASA Special Publication 4001 NASA Retrieved 11 February 2023 A History of the Canadian Dollar PDF Bank of Canada pp 61 62 71 Hart Michael 2003 A Trading Nation Canadian Trade Policy from Colonialism to Globalization UBC Press p 222 Algerian Carnage Takes Lives Of 110 Sarasota Herald Tribune May 3 1962 p 1 Zombies Do They Exist TIME October 17 1983 Louis Andre J 2007 Voodoo in Haiti Catholicism Protestantism amp A Model of Effective Ministry in the Context of Voodoo In Haiti Tate Publishing p 166 Engineer Arrested After Train Crash Kills 163 In Japan Nashua NH Telegraph May 4 1962 p1 Glazov Jamie 2003 Canadian Policy toward Khrushchev s Soviet Union McGill Queens University Press p 147 Mahant Edelgard Mount Graeme S 1999 Invisible and Inaudible in Washington American Policies Toward Canada University of British Columbia Press p 48 Miller Mark D Cole Brian J 2004 Textbook of Arthroscopy Elsevier Health Sciences pp 4 5 Scheina Robert L 1987 Latin America A Naval History 1810 1987 Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press p 225 ISBN 0 87021 295 8 Cruise Ship to Make Fair Runs The Daily Chronicle Centralia WA April 18 1962 p7 Just Announced Fabulous 10 day Seattle World s Fair Cruise from just 195 round trip advertisement Los Angeles Times April 18 1962 p25 Peter Plowman The SITMAR Liners Past and Present Rosenberg Publishing 2004 pp189 190 Super Spurs turn Cup Final into a Soccer Classic The Observer London May 6 1962 p20 Tottenham English Soccer King Again Miami News May 6 1962 p1C Segni Wins Presidency After Melee Spokane Spokesman Review May 7 1962 p1 Donald A MacKenzie Inventing Accuracy A Historical Sociology of Nuclear Missile Guidance MIT Press 1993 pp342 343 Sub Fires Nuclear Warhead Youngstown OH Vindicator May 6 1962 p 1 Michael J Walsh ed Butler s Lives of the Saints HarperCollins 1991 p 361 Detroit Wins Title In U S Pin Loop May 7 1962 p19 Thunderbirds Sweep Bowling World Series Lansing MI State Journal May 7 1962 C 1 For the Record Sports Illustrated May 21 1962 p 117 Mason Draffen Carrie via Newsday What s in a name At work an initial reaction Pittsburgh Post Gazette February 11 2008 Accessed January 23 2015 Newton Jones Burkett III a correspondent for New York s WABC TV news station became N J Burkett in a sort of Hollywood moment almost 19 years ago Mr Burkett who did grow up in Elizabeth N J said he looked at the person dumbfounded and said That s right my mother named her son New Jersey Thomas Evan 2002 Robert Kennedy His Life Simon and Schuster p 171 Crain Andrew Downer 200 The Ford Presidency A History McFarland p 123 a b DeKok David 2009 Fire Underground The Ongoing Tragedy of the Centralia Mine Fire Globe Pequot Stolberg Mary M 2002 Bridging the River of Hatred The Pioneering Efforts of Detroit Police Commissioner George Edwards Wayne State University Press p 177 Amanda Vaill Somewhere The Life of Jerome Robbins Random House Digital 2008 p 344 Harold H Martin Atlanta and Environs A Chronicle of Its People and Events Years of Change and Challenge 1940 1976 University of Georgia Press 1987 p 349 350 Theodore S Creedman Historical Dictionary of Costa Rica Scarecrow Press 1991 p 222 a b The Warren Commission Report Report of the President s Commission on the Assassination of President John F Kennedy Associated Press 1964 Tammy Plotner and Terry Mann The Night Sky Companion A Yearly Guide to Sky Watching Springer 2007 p435 Vincent P Benitez The Words and Music of Paul McCartney The Solo Years ABC CLIO 2010 p6 Donald M Pattillo Pushing the Envelope The American Aircraft Industry University of Michigan Press 2001 p209 Archbishop Fulton J Sheen MP3 Audio Library and Catholic Resources Archived from the original on 2011 07 11 Retrieved 2011 05 24 a b nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Brooks Courtney G Ertel Ivan D Newkirk Roland W PART I Early Space Station Activities 1923 to December 1962 SKYLAB A CHRONOLOGY NASA Special Publication 4011 NASA pp 17 18 Retrieved 8 March 2023 Bittner Stephen V 2008 The Many Lives of Khrushchev s Thaw Experience and Memory in Moscow s Arbat Cornell University Press p 157 Ragone August 2007 Eiji Tsuburaya Master of Monsters Chronicle Books p 63 John Ngugi Olympedia OlyMADMen Retrieved 19 February 2023 First Elephant Race Puts College on Map Youngstown Vindicator May 12 1962 p 1 Yockelson Mitchell 2011 MacArthur Defiant Soldier Thomas Nelson Inc pp 213 214 MacDonald Charles J H 2000 Old Ties and New Solidarities Studies on Philippine Communities Ateneo de Manila University Press p 276 Sharks Eat Sea Victims Pittsburgh Post Gazette May 14 1962 p 1 Shark Mangled Bodies Found At Sea Toledo Blade May 14 1962 p 2 New India President In Plea for Unity Pittsburgh Post Gazette May 14 1962 p2 Robert N Minor Radhakrishnan A Religious Biography SUNY Press 1987 Royal Houses of Spain and Greece Joined Lewiston Daily Sun Lewiston Maine May 15 1962 p 1 Smith Angel 2009 Historical Dictionary of Spain Scarecrow Press p 368 Negro Bandit Dies in Chair Holding Bible Fort Worth Star Telegram Fort Worth Texas May 16 1962 p 2 7 Marquart James W et al 1998 The Rope The Chair and the Needle Capital Punishment in Texas 1923 1990 University of Texas Press p 116 Texans Under Death Decree Lose Appeals Tyler Morning Telegraph Tyler Texas January 11 1962 p 4 7 U S Jets Land In Thailand Miami News May 16 1962 p 1 Blight David W Scharfstein Allison May 16 2012 King s Forgotten Manifesto The New York Times Goto Kunio 2006 A Social History of Science and Technology in Contemporary Japan Trans Pacific Press pp 489 490 Barbed Wire Curtain Halts Flight To Hong Kong Miami News May 18 1962 p 1 Hong Kong Refugee Aid Is Banned Miami News May 19 1962 p 1 Shakya Tsering 1999 The Dragon in the Land of Snows A History of Modern Tibet Since 1947 Columbia University Press pp 271 273 Matthews Peter 2012 Historical Dictionary of Track and Field Scarecrow Press p 64 Spahr Wolfgang 18 November 1995 The Force Behind the Hits Germany s Top Tunesmiths Billboard Vol 107 no 46 p 78 ISSN 0006 2510 1 000 000 Raised for Party at JFK Birthday Salute St Joseph News Press St Joseph Missouri May 20 1962 p 1 Mahoney Richard D 1999 Sons amp Brothers The Days of Jack and Bobby Kennedy Arcade Publishing p 161 Nigel I Jowett et al Comprehensive Coronary Care Elsevier Health Sciences 2007 p 16 Resuscitating a Circulation Abstract to Celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the Coronary Care Unit Concept by W Bruce Fye M D Circulation magazine May 1 1962 pp1886 93 10 Million AFL Suit Ruled Out The Milwaukee Sentinel May 22 1962 p 2 3 Goldschmidt Arthur 2008 A Brief History of Egypt Infobase Publishing p 174 Polmar Norman 2001 Spyplane The U 2 History Declassified Zenith Imprint p 182 Aviation Safety Network O HARE JET CRASH IN IOWA 44 on Flight Bound for Kansas City Chicago Daily Tribune The New York Times May 23 1962 p 1 Brief Case Clue To Jet Crash Studied By FBI Miami News May 29 1962 p 2 Death Plane Passengers Had Bought Dynamite Miami News June 17 1962 p 1 Grein Paul May 16 2019 In 1962 Richard Rodgers Became the First EGOT Before That Was Even a Thing Billboard John P Sarbanes U S Representative Maryland He Takes a Grip on Life A boy who made medical history puts his sewed on arm to work LIFE August 2 1963 pp 31 34 Casey Wilson 2009 Firsts Origins of Everyday Things That Changed the World Penguin Shepard Todd 2008 The Invention of Decolonization The Algerian War and the Remaking of France Cornell University Press p 131 Nee Victor De Bary Nee Brett 1986 Longtime Californ A Documentary Study of an American Chinatown Stanford University Press p 254 Subway Started New Tenders Set Montreal Gazette May 24 1962 p 3 Hodges Donald C Gandy Ross 2002 Mexico the End of the Revolution Greenwood Publishing Group pp 102 103 CARPENTER LIFTED SAFELY FROM SEA Overshot Target By 250 Miles In 3 Orbital Flight Pittsburgh Post Gazette May 25 1962 p 1 Manning Peter 2004 Electronic and Computer Music Oxford University Press p 203 Alfred F Havighurst Britain in Transition The Twentieth Century University of Chicago Press 1985 p643 HU produced the 1st rockets shot in the Arab world Haigazian University website Car Chief Dies in Horror Scente on A1 Sunday Pictorial London May 27 1963 p 3 Warning on Mini Cars by Coroner The Daily Telegraph London May 30 1962 p 19 Scott Gordon Perry The Washington Times Associated Press Archived from the original on July 22 2014 Retrieved December 15 2015 Alabama Chooses Foe Of Integration Miami News May 30 1962 p 10A Racist Wins Alabama Bid for Primary Chicago Tribune May 31 1962 p 11 1929 Stock Market Big Question 1962 Miami News May 30 1962 p 1 World Exchanges Suffer Heavy Blows Miami News May 30 1962 p 1 Four Window Washers Die As Work Platform Plunges Down 43 Story Building Lewiston Evening Journal May 29 1962 p 1 Retrieved March 17 2015 via Google News Use of Powered Scaffolds for Window Cleaning and Building Maintenance Suspended The Building Industry 26 27 Building Industry Employers of New York State 24 1962 Higginbotham Adam February 4 2013 Life at the Top The New Yorker Retrieved March 17 2015 Philippine Bus Crash Kills 30 Santa Rosa CA Press Democrat May 31 1962 p1 Bus Crash In India Kills 69 Out of 90 El Paso TX Herald Post May 31 1962 p5 Gujarat Bus Mishap Toll 70 Indian Express June 1 1962 p7 Mcdermott Deborah December 8 2012 Ninja Turtles artist shares mind blowing story Seacoast Online Archived from the original on December 13 2012 Retrieved February 24 2013 Eichmann Hanged Stays Defiant to End Milwaukee Journal June 1 1962 p 1 Italian Rail Crash Kills 62 Vacationers Miami News May 31 1962 p 1 Peru s President Pedro Castillo replaced by Dina Boluarte after impeachment BBC News 7 December 2022 Archived from the original on 8 December 2022 Retrieved 8 December 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title May 1962 amp oldid 1218814342, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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