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September 1962

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The following events occurred in September 1962:

September 30, 1962: James Meredith escorted to the all-white University of Mississippi
September 12, 1962: U.S. President Kennedy speaks at Houston, pledges to land a man on the Moon by end of decade
September 17, 1962: The next group of American astronauts introduced

September 1, 1962 (Saturday) Edit

  • In a referendum in Singapore, voters overwhelmingly supported a proposition to merge with the Malayan Federation to become part of Malaysia, with limited autonomy. Out of 561,559 ballots cast, there were 397,626 in favor of making all Singapore residents Malaysian citizens, while allowing independence in matters of labor and education. Another 144,077 ballots were left blank as a protest.[1]
  • A 7.1 magnitude earthquake killed 12,225 people and destroyed 91 villages in northwest Iran. The epicenter was near Buin Zahra in the Qazvin Province.[2][3]
  • Typhoon Wanda killed 134 people and injured more than 200 after striking Hong Kong.[4]
  • Died: Hans-Jürgen von Arnim, 73, former German military leader

September 2, 1962 (Sunday) Edit

  • The Soviet Union announced an agreement on military and industrial assistance to Cuba, following an August meeting in Yalta between Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev and Cuban Economics Minister Che Guevara.[5]
  • All non-military air travel in the United States and Canada was grounded for five hours as part of "Exercise Sky Shield III".[6]
  • The United Kingdom approved the Malta Independence Act, providing that the British colony would become its own nation on September 21, 1964.[7]
  • The 1962 UCI Road World Championships took place in Salò, Italy.
  • Bishop Tord Godal consecrated Nerskogen Chapel in Rennebu, Norway.
  • The fourth Taça Brasil football competition began in Brazil.
  • Born: Prachya Pinkaew, Thai film director, producer and screenwriter; in Nakhon Ratchasima Province
  • Died: William R. Blair, Irish-born American physicist and inventor, most famous for the 1937 creation of the "Object Locating System" better known as radar. He was not allowed to apply for a patent until after World War II and was granted U.S. Patent No. 2,803,819 five years before his death.[8]

September 3, 1962 (Monday) Edit

September 4, 1962 (Tuesday) Edit

  • The closing ceremony of the 1962 Asian Games was held in Jakarta, Indonesia, following an attack on India's embassy by 1,000 rioters. Earlier, Asian Games Federation Vice-President G. D. Sondhi had announced that he was seeking to have the executive council declare that the competition was not part of the name "Asian Games", because AGF members Israel and Nationalist China (Taiwan) had had their teams excluded.[12]
  • The Beatles made their first recording of a song that would become a hit single, "Love Me Do". It would become their fourth #1 song in the United States, in 1964.[13]
  • The Gemini Project Office directed McDonnell Aircraft Corporation to provide Gemini spacecraft No. 3 with rendezvous radar capability and to provide a rendezvous evaluation pod as a requirement for missions 2 and 3. Four pods were required: one prototype, two flight articles, and one flight spare.[14]
  • Born:

September 5, 1962 (Wednesday) Edit

  • The U.S. National Park Service acquired "Cedar Hill", the home of Frederick Douglass, located at 1411 W Street S.E. in Washington, D.C., which became "the first black national historic site".[15] On the same date, the Park Service acquired "Glenmont", the home (and laboratory) of Thomas Edison in West Orange, New Jersey.[16]
  • The composition of the American penny was changed to 95% copper and 5% zinc, which remained until 1982, when pennies became 97.5% zinc and 2.5% copper.[17]
 
Plaque in Manitowoc marking the impact site[18]

September 6, 1962 (Thursday) Edit

  • Archaeologist Peter Marsden discovered the first of the "Blackfriars Ships" in London, buried in the mud of the Thames River and literally "under the shadow of Blackfriars Bridge". With a cofferdam to hold back the waters during low tide, and assistance from the London Fire Brigade, the oak craft was excavated. From pottery shards in the wreckage, Marsden estimated that the ship sank during the 2nd century AD, when the Roman Empire ruled Britain.[21]
  • McDonnell Aircraft completed redesign and testing of the Gemini capsule ejection seat. The major outstanding design task had been to determine the dynamic center of gravity of the seat-man combination under expected acceleration conditions.[14]

September 7, 1962 (Friday) Edit

September 8, 1962 (Saturday) Edit

  • In the Sino-Indian War, two companies of Communist Chinese troops crossed the McMahon Line that had marked the border between India and China, to confront soldiers at the recently established Indian Army border post at Dhola.[25]
  • The Cuban Missile Crisis began as the first consignment of Soviet R-12 (called SS-4 by NATO) offensive missiles arrived in Cuba, on board the freighter Omsk.[26] The medium range ballistic missiles, which could be fitted with nuclear warheads, could strike targets in the U.S. within 2,000 km or 1,300 miles of Cuba.[27]
  • Atlas rocket No. 113-D for Schirra's Mercury 8 flight was static-fired at Cape Canaveral to check modifications made to the booster for smoother engine combustion.[24]

September 9, 1962 (Sunday) Edit

  • While India's Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru was out of the country for the Commonwealth Prime Ministers' Conference in London, Defence Minister V. K. Krishna Menon gave the order for the Indian Army to "evict" Chinese troops from south of the McMahon Line, even though there were Indian troops north of the line in China. The decision proved to be a disaster.[28][29]
  • For the first time since Taiwan began U-2 overflights over Mainland China in January, one of the pilots of the Black Cat Squadron, the 35th Reconnaissance Squadron of the Republic of China Air Force, was shot down. Colonel Chen Huai-seng's U-2 plane was struck by an SA-2 Guideline missile near Nanchang, and Colonel Chen did not survive the crash. Another of the Black Cats, Major Wang Cheng-wen, was killed on the same day in an unrelated accidental crash of his U-2 plane.[30]
  • Pravda, the Soviet Communist Party newspaper, published the article "Plans, Profits, and Bonuses", by economics professor Evsei Liberman of the Kharkiv National University of Economics, as the Communist Party introduced discussion of new policies that would become a reality in the 1965 Soviet economic reform. Liberman's proposal was to depart from the Communist system, of measuring factory efficiency by whether a pre-set production quota had been met, and judging performance instead by the amount of the factories' profit, with the goal of increasing the quality and quantity of products.[31]
  • Jack Nicklaus won the first "World Series of Golf", a made-for-television exhibition organized by the NBC television network as a competition between the champions of the four major professional golf tournaments.[32] With a 138 on 36 holes, Nicklaus (winner of the U.S. Open) won the $50,000 first prize by finishing four strokes ahead of ahead of Masters and British Open champion Arnold Palmer and PGA Championship winner Gary Player, who tied at 139.
  • Born:
  • Died: Paavo Aaltonen, 42, Finnish gymnast and a winner of three gold medals in the 1948 Olympics

September 10, 1962 (Monday) Edit

  • The railroad line between Taunton and Chard Junction, within Somerset, became the first casualty of the "Beeching cuts" after the Chairman of British Railways, Richard Beeching, began shutting down unprofitable railroad lines. For the next 13 years, passenger service would be halted permanently at 29 separate rail routes, a process accelerated after the publishing of the "Beeching Report" on March 27, 1963. An author would note later that the closures would eliminate 4,500 miles (7,200 km) of routes, 2,500 stations, and 67,700 jobs.[33]
 
Rod Laver
  • Rod Laver of Australia became only the second person in history to win the "Grand Slam" of tennis, after taking the men's singles title in the U.S. Open, by defeating fellow Queenslander Roy Emerson, 6-2, 6-4, 5-7 and 6-4. Earlier in 1962, he won the Australian Open (January), the French Open (June) and Wimbledon (July).[34][35]
  • Speaking for the U.S. Supreme Court, Justice Hugo Black halted further stays against enforcement of a lower court decision and ordered the immediate admission of James Meredith as the first African-American student at the then-segregated University of Mississippi. Black wrote that the enrollment of Meredith as a student "can do no appreciable harm to the university".[36][37]
  • The Mercury 8 launch mission was postponed to September 28, 1962, to allow additional time for flight preparation.[24]
  • Born: Co Stompé, Dutch darts player and 2010 World Cup of Darts champion; in Amsterdam

September 11, 1962 (Tuesday) Edit

  • Weeks before the discovery of nuclear missiles that would lead to the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Soviet Union publicly warned that a U.S. attack on Cuba, or on Soviet ships carrying supplies to the island, would mean war.[38] In a statement read at the Foreign Office in Moscow, the government declared, "One cannot now attack Cuba and expect that the aggressor will be free from punishment for this attack. If such an attack is made, this will be the beginning of unleashing war... which might plunge the world into the disaster of a universal world war with the use of thermonuclear weapons."[39]
  • Thurgood Marshall was confirmed by the U.S. Senate as a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, 353 days after he had been nominated, by a vote of 56-14.[40] Marshall, an African-American who had argued the landmark case of Brown v. Board of Education, and who would later be elevated to the U.S. Supreme Court, had been serving for eleven months after President Kennedy had made an appointment, subject to Senate approval, while Congress was not in session.[41]
  • Manned Spacecraft Center (MSC) aerospace technologists William G. Davis and Robert L. Turner compiled a description of instrumentation that would be required on a space station. Such equipment comprised three areas: (1) support and laboratory systems for crew safety and for scientific experiments; (2) scientific instrumentation for study of a true space environment and for advancement of scientific knowledge of space; and (3) the power system for a space station, a choice between 400-cycle AC or 28-volt DC sources.[42]
  • Big Sur, by Jack Kerouac, was first published.[43]
  • Died: Robert Soblen, 61, an American spy who had been awaiting extradition to the United States to begin a life sentence in prison on conviction of espionage for the Soviet Union, died five days after he lapsed into a coma from a barbiturate overdose. Minutes before he was to board Pan Am Flight 101 from London to New York, Soblen collapsed at the London Airport (now called Heathrow).[44][45] Although suicide was an obvious motive, investigators speculated that Soblen may have been poisoned by the Soviet KGB in order to prevent him from revealing the identities of other spies.[46]

September 12, 1962 (Wednesday) Edit

  • U.S. President John F. Kennedy, in a speech at the football stadium of Rice University in Houston, reaffirmed that the U.S. would put a man on the Moon by the end of the decade.[47] On hand were 40,000 people, mostly students.[48] Kennedy had declared, on May 25, 1961, his belief that the nation should commit to a crewed moon landing, which would be achieved on July 20, 1969.[49]
  • President Kennedy visited the Manned Spacecraft Center and was shown exhibits of the Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo spacecraft hardware.[24]
  • NASA announced it would launch a special satellite before the end of the year "to obtain information on possible effects of radiation on future satellites and to give the world's scientific community additional data on the artificial environment created by the radiation belt."[24]
  • The first "mystery" satellite in the history of space exploration was launched, according to British magazine Flight International. The object of unknown origin orbited at a height of 113 miles (182 km) and reentered the earth's atmosphere 12 days later. An unidentified spokesman speculated that the satellite belonged to the U.S. Air Force, but that this was a "scientific guess based on our assessment of previous satellite launchings." No official U.S. listing included such a satellite, nor a launch confirmation.[24]
  • The 1962 European Athletics Championships opened at the Partizan Stadium in Belgrade.

September 13, 1962 (Thursday) Edit

  • Governor of Mississippi Ross Barnett delivered a 20-minute address on statewide television and radio to urge state officials not to obey the federal court order to integrate the University of Mississippi, signing a legal document to implement the legal doctrine of interposition, whereby state law superseded a contrary federal government action. The Governor declared, "We will not drink from the cup of genocide. There is no case in history where the Caucasian race has survived integration." Barnett then made a proclamation, saying "I hereby direct each official to uphold and enforce the laws duly and legally enacted by the legislature of the State of Mississippi, regardless of this unwarranted, illegal and arbitrary usurpation of power," and added, "There is no cause which is more moral and just than the protection of the integrity of our races."[50]
  • In elections in Grenada for the 15-member Legislative Council of the British Crown Colony, Chief Minister Herbert Blaize's Grenada National Party won 6 of the 10 elected seats.[51]

September 14, 1962 (Friday) Edit

  • Teledu Cymru (now Wales West and North Television) began broadcasting to the North and West Wales region of Britain, extending the ITV Network to the whole of the United Kingdom.[52] Transmitters were located at Pembroke, Caernarvon and Flint.[53]
  • Frederick S. Modise, a minister of South Africa's Zion Christian Church, was inspired to form a separate Christian denomination while in the Coronation Hospital in Johannesburg for what was diagnosed as an incurable illness. Modise, who would found the International Pentecost Holiness Church of South Africa, would say later that a voice had told him that he would be healed and would be able to return home on October 3. For the remainder of his life, Reverend Modise would minister to other ill patients.[54]
  • An interagency coordination meeting defined the uncrewed first Gemini mission as a spacecraft maximum-heating-rate test. As many spacecraft systems as possible were to be tested, to allow the second flight to carry astronauts. Another meeting on September 18 set ground rules for the first mission. The trajectory was to be ballistic with a range of about 2,200 miles (3,500 km). The primary objective was to obtain thermodynamics and structures data, and the secondary objective was partial qualification of spacecraft systems.[14]
  • Died: William Lindsay Gresham, 53, American novelist and non-fiction author, took an overdose of sleeping pills after having been diagnosed with incurable cancer

September 15, 1962 (Saturday) Edit

September 16, 1962 (Sunday) Edit

September 17, 1962 (Monday) Edit

 
A Mil Mi-8

September 18, 1962 (Tuesday) Edit

September 19, 1962 (Wednesday) Edit

 
The last Imam of Yemen
  • Prince Saif Al-Islam Muhammad al-Badr became the new Imam of Yemen, following the death of his 71-year-old father, Imam Ahmad bin Yahya, who was described at his death as "despotic", "the perennial target of assassins", and a man "said to have died from natural causes hastened by old wounds". The following day, al-Badr was proclaimed at the Imam Al-Mansoor Billah.[65] His reign would last for a week before he was overthrown.[66]
  • A full-scale mockup of the Boeing X-20 Dyna-Soar spaceplane was unveiled for reporters in Las Vegas, where the Air Force Association was holding its annual convention, and the six pilots who would be the first to fly the X-20 were introduced. "Technical men familiar with sketches and photographs of the X-20 were startled by the vicious ugliness" of the plane, the Associated Press reported, noting that "With its upturned wingtips and long snout, the X-20 looks like its designer had somehow managed to cross a manta ray with a shark."[67] The Dyna-Soar project, scheduled for a 1965 launch, would be cancelled after cost overruns, and none were ever built.
  • The United States Intelligence Board reviewed all available data on arms shipments to Cuba and reported to President Kennedy (erroneously) that there was no basis for speculation that nuclear missiles would be placed on the Caribbean island.[68]
  • ACF Electronics delivered an engineering prototype radar beacon to McDonnell for Project Gemini. An engineering prototype C-band beacon had operated at ACF Electronics under simulated reentry conditions with no degradation in performance.[14]
  • MSC's Life Systems Division reported that continuing studies were underway for extravehicular operations during Gemini missions. These included evaluation of a superinsulation coverall to be worn over the pressure suit for thermal protection; ventilation system requirements and hardware; and methods of maneuvering in proximity to the spacecraft.[14]
 
"Vicious ugliness'- the Dyna-Soar
  • The first episode of The Virginian, starring James Drury in the title role (the character's real name was never revealed), was shown on NBC as the first 90-minute weekly TV series. It would run nine seasons, ending in 1971.[69]
  • Died: Nikolai Pogodin, 61, Soviet playwright

September 20, 1962 (Thursday) Edit

 
The MGB

September 21, 1962 (Friday) Edit

  • Composer Igor Stravinsky returned to Russia after an absence of 48 years, as a guest of the Soviet Union.[73]
  • The UN General Assembly approved a ceasefire agreement between Indonesia and the Netherlands, with UN military observers from six nations monitoring the agreement. A larger UN Security Force would arrive at West Irian on October 3.[74]
  • The British music magazine New Musical Express published a story about two 13-year-old schoolgirls, "Sue" and "Mary", releasing a disc on Decca, and added that "A Liverpool group, The Beatles, have recorded 'Love Me Do' for Parlophone Records, set for October 5 release."
  • Born: Rob Morrow, American TV actor known for Northern Exposure and Numb3rs; in New Rochelle, New York
  • Died: Marie Bonaparte, 80, French author and psychoanalyst

September 22, 1962 (Saturday) Edit

  • Autostrada 1, a 125-mile (201 km) long superhighway between Rome and Naples, opened to traffic. Travel time between the two Italian cities was cut almost in half, from 3 1/2 hours to two hours.[75]
  • India's Defence Ministry officials met to discuss plans to drive out Chinese troops from the disputed border area at Thang La ridge. Despite the argument by General P.N. Thaper, the Chief of the Army Staff of Indian Army, that Chinese troops at the border outnumbered those from India, General Thaper was given a written order to "prepare and throw out the Chinese as soon as possible".[29]
  • Born: Sirous Ghayeghran, Iranian footballer and captain of the national team, with 43 appearances from 1986 to 1993; in Bandar Anzali (died 1998)

September 23, 1962 (Sunday) Edit

  • The Jetsons— George, Jane, Judy and Elroy— were introduced in a primetime cartoon of the same name at 7:30 pm Eastern time on the ABC television network. Despite having only 24 episodes, the science fiction show, about a family living about 100 years in the future, would be rerun for 23 years until new episodes were commissioned for a syndicated revival in 1985.[76]
 
The new Philharmonic Hall
  • The Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, including its modern Philharmonic Hall, later Avery Fisher Hall, opened in New York City. The inaugural concert, which was televised live on CBS, featured Leonard Bernstein, the New York Philharmonic Orchestra, and a host of operatic stars such as Eileen Farrell and Robert Merrill.[77]
  • Unbeknownst to the world, Pope John XXIII was diagnosed with terminal stomach cancer. He would pass away on June 3, 1963.[78]
  • The Soviet Union Council of Ministers approved the development of the Global Rocket 1 (GR-1) missile, with the goal of a weapon with a range of 12,500 miles (20,100 km), capable of hitting a target anywhere on Earth. The project would be cancelled in 1964 in favor of the R-36 orbiting missile, designated as the SS-18 by NATO.[79]
  • The crash of Flying Tiger Line Flight 923 killed 28 of the 76 people on board. The L-1049H Super Constellation was on its way from the United States to West Germany when it ditched into the Atlantic Ocean after three of its four engines failed. The 48 survivors were rescued by the Swiss ship Celerina.[80] The crash investigation determined that the accident was caused by the failure of engine No. 3, the accidental closing of a shutoff valve on engine No. 1 by the flight engineer, and the failure of engine No. 2 as the plane was proceeding to the nearest available airport.[81]
  • Born: Robert Molle, Canadian athlete who won a silver Olympic medal in wrestling in 1984, and later captained the Winnipeg Blue Bombers of the Canadian Football League; in Saskatoon

September 24, 1962 (Monday) Edit

September 25, 1962 (Tuesday) Edit

  • In Yemen, Abdullah as-Sallal launched a coup d'état aimed at the overthrow of the new Imam, Muhammad al-Badr. Sallal's troops shelled the royal palace, thought they had buried the Imam in the rubble, and proclaimed his death on Aden radio. However, al-Badr had escaped and would attempt a rebellion against the newly proclaimed government.[83]
  • The new Constitutional Assembly elected Ferhat Abbas the President of Algeria and formally proclaimed the foundation of the Democratic and Popular Republic of Algeria during their opening session.[84]
  • Sonny Liston and Floyd Patterson fought for the world heavyweight boxing title in Chicago. Liston made history by being the first man ever to knock out a reigning heavyweight champion in the first round, downing the titleholder in 2 minutes and 6 seconds.[85]
  • A review conference for NASA's complex 14 was held in Los Angeles to set ground rules for all contractors. Target dates established were (1) stand availability by July 1, 1963; (2) beneficial occupancy by November 1, 1963; and (3) having the rocket on-stand date by February 1, 1964. Complex 14 would be used for launching the Gemini-Agena target vehicle and Mariner spacecraft, as well as the Gemini program.[14]

September 26, 1962 (Wednesday) Edit

 
Irene Ryan and Buddy Ebsen
  • The Beverly Hillbillies, a television situation comedy about a poor Ozark Mountain family who became multi-millionaires after oil was found on their land, began a nine-year run on the CBS network, with the first episode premiering at 9:00 pm Eastern time. UPI television critic Rick Du Brow wrote the next day that the series "is going to be a smash hit" in that it was similar in premise to TV program The Real McCoys, but added that "The nicest thing I can say... is that it is really not like 'The Real McCoys'... The McCoys are a civilized rural clan; these new hillbillies make L'il Abner and his mob look like a bunch of sophisticates."[86] Within three weeks, it was the most-watched series on American television, and stayed at #1 in its first two seasons. The show had 274 episodes, with the final one broadcast on March 23, 1971.[87]
  • A flash flood killed 445 people, in Barcelona and in the nearby villages of Sabadell and Terrassa in the Catalan region of Spain.[88]
  • As the North Yemen Civil War progressed, all areas of the Yemeni city of San'a were in the hands of the new Yemen government, led by Abdullah as-Sallal, and he proclaimed the Yemen Arab Republic.[89]
  • Restaurant entrepreneur Harland Sanders filed a patent application for his invention, a "process of producing fried chicken under pressure", describing a system using a pressure cooker with the object "to provide a novel process for quickly and thoroughly frying chicken under pressure in a manner to seal in substantially all the natural juices while browning the breaded surface thereof to desired crispness and appearance." U.S. Patent No. 3,245,800 would be granted on April 12, 1966, and was assigned by Sanders to the Kentucky Fried Chicken Corporation.[90]
  • Born:

September 27, 1962 (Thursday) Edit

September 28, 1962 (Friday) Edit

  • Yemeni radio announced the death of former ruler, Muhammad al-Badr. Al-Badr had, in fact, escaped the country and was living in Saudi Arabia.[93]
  • Prime Minister Ahmed Ben Bella founded the first government of independent Algeria.[94]
  • Wally Schirra made a 6-and-a-half-hour simulated flight of the Mercury 8 spacecraft. A worldwide tracking network of 21 ground stations and ships also participated in the exercise.[24]
  • Planning for a U.S. space station was discussed at Washington by people from the Office of Manned Space Flight (OMSF), the Office of Advanced Research and Technology (OART), the Manned Spacecraft Center (MSC), Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC), and Langley Research Center. The OMSF allowed $2.2 million to MSC and $300,000 to MSFC for contractor-related studies, and funding to Langley of $800,000.[42]
  • Born: Fred Merkel, American motorcycle racing champion; in Stockton, California

September 29, 1962 (Saturday) Edit

 
Alouette 1
  • Canada's Alouette 1, the first satellite built outside the United States and the Soviet Union, was launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California.[95]
  • My Fair Lady ended its Broadway run after more than six years and 2,717 performances, a Broadway record that would stand until surpassed later by Hello, Dolly![96]
  • In order to prevent the University of Mississippi from making any further efforts to prevent James Meredith from becoming the first African-American to enroll there, President Kennedy issued a proclamation commanding all persons engaged in the obstruction of the laws and the orders of the courts to "cease and desist therefrom and to disperse and retire peaceably forthwith", citing his authority under 10 U.S.C. § 332, § 333, and § 334 to use the militia or the armed forces to suppress any insurrection, domestic violence, unlawful combination, or conspiracy."[70]
  • Reconnaissance aircraft indicated the formation of a tropical depression to the east of the Lesser Antilles, which would later develop into Hurricane Daisy.
  • Died: Muhammad VIII al-Amin, 85, last Bey of Tunisia, who reigned from 1943 to 1957 before the abolition of the monarchy.[97]

September 30, 1962 (Sunday) Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Big Vote for Merger in Singapore". Sydney Morning Herald. September 3, 1962. p. 3.
  2. ^ "Fear 10,000 Lose Lives in Iran Quake". Chicago Daily Tribune. September 4, 1962. p. 1.
  3. ^ . U.S. Geological Survey. Archived from the original on 14 January 2013.
  4. ^ "134 Now Feared Dead in Typhoon". Sydney Morning Herald. September 3, 1962. p. 3.
  5. ^ "Soviet Announces Pact With Cuba For Delivery Of Military Equipment". Toledo Blade. September 3, 1962. p. 1.
  6. ^ "Airport Operations Halt For Sky Shield". Miami News. September 2, 1962. p. 1.
  7. ^ Castillo, Dennis (2006). The Maltese Cross: A Strategic History of Malta. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 219.
  8. ^ Sterling, Christopher H., ed. (2008). "Blair, William Richards". Military Communications: From Ancient Times to the 21st Century. ABC-CLIO. pp. 61–62.
  9. ^ "Krag Succeeds Ill Danish Premier", New York Times, September 4, 1962
  10. ^ "e. e. cummings Dies", Miami News, September 3, 1962, p1
  11. ^ Richard S. Kennedy, dreams in the mirror: A Biography of E.E. Cummings (W. W. Norton & Company, 1994) p484
  12. ^ "Stormy Asian games Near End After Riotous Display". Quebec Chronicle-Telegraph. September 4, 1962. p. 5.
  13. ^ Bronson, Fred (2003). The Billboard Book of Number 1 Hits. Random House Digital. p. 148.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h   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 20 February 2023.
  15. ^ Cobb, Charles E., Jr. (2008). On the Road to Freedom: A Guided Tour of the Civil Rights Trail. Algonquin Books. p. 32. ISBN 978-1565124394.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  16. ^ Lurie, Maxine N.; Mappen, Marc (2004). Encyclopedia of New Jersey. Rutgers University Press. p. 240.
  17. ^ Lange, David W. (2005). The Complete Guide To Lincoln Cents. Zyrus Press. pp. 23–26.
  18. ^ attribution: User:AltioraPeto
  19. ^ Hall, Rex; Shayler, David (2001). The Rocket Men: Vostok & Voskhod, the First Soviet Manned Spaceflights. Springer. pp. 119–120.
  20. ^ "Object Found in Manitowoc May Be Part of Sputnik". Milwaukee Journal. September 6, 1962. p. 1.
  21. ^ Johnstone, Paul (1989). The Sea-Craft of Prehistory. Taylor & Francis. p. 89.
  22. ^ Hellwarth, Ben (2012). Sealab: America's Forgotten Quest to Live and Work on the Ocean Floor. New York: Simon & Schuster. pp. 58–59. ISBN 978-0-7432-4745-0 – via Internet Archive.
  23. ^ "Italians Kick Out Fugitive French Ex-Premier Bidault". Miami News. September 8, 1962. p. 1.
  24. ^ 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 (B) Operational Phase of Project Mercury June 1962 through June 12, 1963". Project Mercury - A Chronology. NASA Special Publication-4001. NASA. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  25. ^ Rao, K. V. Krishna (1991). Prepare Or Perish: A Study of National Security. Lancer Publishers. p. 89.
  26. ^ Ritter, Scott (2010). Dangerous Ground: America's Failed Arms Control Policy, from FDR to Obama. Nation Books. p. 113.
  27. ^ a b Lackey, Douglas P. (1984). Moral Principles and Nuclear Weapons. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 54.
  28. ^ Benjamin Zachariah, Nehru (Routledge, 2004) p246
  29. ^ a b K. V. Krishna Rao, Prepare Or Perish: A Study of National Security (Lancer Publishers, 1991) p91
  30. ^ I. C. Smith and Nigel West, Historical Dictionary of Chinese Intelligence (Scarecrow Press, 2012) p272
  31. ^ "Liberman, Evsel Grigorevich (1897-1983)", in Europe Since 1945: An Encyclopedia, Bernard A. Cook, ed. (Taylor & Francis, 2001), volume 2, p785
  32. ^ "Nicklaus Captures World Series of Golf by 4 Shots", Battle Creek (MI) Enquirer, September 10, 1962, p11
  33. ^ Holland, Julian (2013). Dr Beeching's Axe 50 Years On: Memories of Britain's Lost Railways. David & Charles.
  34. ^ "Laver's In Command". Miami News. September 11, 1962. p. 3C.
  35. ^ "This Day in History: Rod Laver wins Grand Slam". History (American TV network).
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  37. ^ Siracusa, Joseph M., ed. (September 30, 2004). "Meredith, James H(oward)". The Kennedy Years. Infobase Publishing. p. 324.
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  40. ^ "Senate Approves Marshall, 54-16". The New York Times. September 12, 1962. p. 1.
  41. ^ Starks, Glenn L.; Brooks, F. Erik (2012). Thurgood Marshall: A Biography. ABC-CLIO. p. 55.
  42. ^ a b   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. 19–22. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  43. ^ Maher, Paul, Jr. (2007). Kerouac: His Life and Work. Taylor Trade Publications. p. 428.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  44. ^ "Fly Fugitive Red Spy to U.S. Today". Chicago Daily Tribune. September 6, 1962. p. 1.
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september, 1962, 1962, january, february, march, april, june, july, august, september, october, november, december, 1516, 2223, 2930, following, events, occurred, september, 1962, james, meredith, escorted, white, university, mississippiseptember, 1962, presid. 1962 January February March April May June July August September October November December lt lt September 1962 gt gt Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa0 10 2 0 3 0 4 0 5 0 6 0 7 0 80 9 10 11 12 13 14 1516 17 18 19 20 21 2223 24 25 26 27 28 2930 The following events occurred in September 1962 September 30 1962 James Meredith escorted to the all white University of MississippiSeptember 12 1962 U S President Kennedy speaks at Houston pledges to land a man on the Moon by end of decadeSeptember 17 1962 The next group of American astronauts introduced Contents 1 September 1 1962 Saturday 2 September 2 1962 Sunday 3 September 3 1962 Monday 4 September 4 1962 Tuesday 5 September 5 1962 Wednesday 6 September 6 1962 Thursday 7 September 7 1962 Friday 8 September 8 1962 Saturday 9 September 9 1962 Sunday 10 September 10 1962 Monday 11 September 11 1962 Tuesday 12 September 12 1962 Wednesday 13 September 13 1962 Thursday 14 September 14 1962 Friday 15 September 15 1962 Saturday 16 September 16 1962 Sunday 17 September 17 1962 Monday 18 September 18 1962 Tuesday 19 September 19 1962 Wednesday 20 September 20 1962 Thursday 21 September 21 1962 Friday 22 September 22 1962 Saturday 23 September 23 1962 Sunday 24 September 24 1962 Monday 25 September 25 1962 Tuesday 26 September 26 1962 Wednesday 27 September 27 1962 Thursday 28 September 28 1962 Friday 29 September 29 1962 Saturday 30 September 30 1962 Sunday 31 ReferencesSeptember 1 1962 Saturday EditIn a referendum in Singapore voters overwhelmingly supported a proposition to merge with the Malayan Federation to become part of Malaysia with limited autonomy Out of 561 559 ballots cast there were 397 626 in favor of making all Singapore residents Malaysian citizens while allowing independence in matters of labor and education Another 144 077 ballots were left blank as a protest 1 A 7 1 magnitude earthquake killed 12 225 people and destroyed 91 villages in northwest Iran The epicenter was near Buin Zahra in the Qazvin Province 2 3 Typhoon Wanda killed 134 people and injured more than 200 after striking Hong Kong 4 Died Hans Jurgen von Arnim 73 former German military leaderSeptember 2 1962 Sunday EditThe Soviet Union announced an agreement on military and industrial assistance to Cuba following an August meeting in Yalta between Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev and Cuban Economics Minister Che Guevara 5 All non military air travel in the United States and Canada was grounded for five hours as part of Exercise Sky Shield III 6 The United Kingdom approved the Malta Independence Act providing that the British colony would become its own nation on September 21 1964 7 The 1962 UCI Road World Championships took place in Salo Italy Bishop Tord Godal consecrated Nerskogen Chapel in Rennebu Norway The fourth Taca Brasil football competition began in Brazil Born Prachya Pinkaew Thai film director producer and screenwriter in Nakhon Ratchasima Province Died William R Blair Irish born American physicist and inventor most famous for the 1937 creation of the Object Locating System better known as radar He was not allowed to apply for a patent until after World War II and was granted U S Patent No 2 803 819 five years before his death 8 September 3 1962 Monday EditJens Otto Krag succeeded the ailing Viggo Kampmann as Prime Minister of Denmark 9 Died E E Cummings 67 American poet and author following a cerebral hemorrhage the night before 10 Edward Elstin Cummings had written his last words the afternoon before about delphinium flowers chopped some wood sharpened the axe then collapsed in his home 11 Franz Schronghamer Heimdal 81 German Catholic Nazi and anti Semitic authorSeptember 4 1962 Tuesday EditThe closing ceremony of the 1962 Asian Games was held in Jakarta Indonesia following an attack on India s embassy by 1 000 rioters Earlier Asian Games Federation Vice President G D Sondhi had announced that he was seeking to have the executive council declare that the competition was not part of the name Asian Games because AGF members Israel and Nationalist China Taiwan had had their teams excluded 12 The Beatles made their first recording of a song that would become a hit single Love Me Do It would become their fourth 1 song in the United States in 1964 13 The Gemini Project Office directed McDonnell Aircraft Corporation to provide Gemini spacecraft No 3 with rendezvous radar capability and to provide a rendezvous evaluation pod as a requirement for missions 2 and 3 Four pods were required one prototype two flight articles and one flight spare 14 Born Patrice Lagisquet French rugby player for the France national rugby union team and assistant coach in Arcachon Gioronde departement Ulla Tornaes Danish politician Minister of Education 2001 2005 Minister for Development Cooperation 2016 2019 in EsbjergSeptember 5 1962 Wednesday EditThe U S National Park Service acquired Cedar Hill the home of Frederick Douglass located at 1411 W Street S E in Washington D C which became the first black national historic site 15 On the same date the Park Service acquired Glenmont the home and laboratory of Thomas Edison in West Orange New Jersey 16 The composition of the American penny was changed to 95 copper and 5 zinc which remained until 1982 when pennies became 97 5 zinc and 2 5 copper 17 Plaque in Manitowoc marking the impact site 18 Sputnik 4 a Soviet mockup of a crewed spacecraft fell out of orbit after 843 days having been launched on May 15 1960 19 What was believed to be a 20 pound 9 1 kg fragment landed at the intersection of North 8th Street and Park Street in Manitowoc Wisconsin which was along the path where the craft disintegration took place 20 Gilbert Chandler became leader of the Victorian Legislative Council in Australia Died Sekarmadji Maridjan Kartosuwirjo 57 Indonesian Islamic mystic and leader of the Darul Islam rebellion against the Sukarno regime was executed by a firing squadSeptember 6 1962 Thursday EditArchaeologist Peter Marsden discovered the first of the Blackfriars Ships in London buried in the mud of the Thames River and literally under the shadow of Blackfriars Bridge With a cofferdam to hold back the waters during low tide and assistance from the London Fire Brigade the oak craft was excavated From pottery shards in the wreckage Marsden estimated that the ship sank during the 2nd century AD when the Roman Empire ruled Britain 21 McDonnell Aircraft completed redesign and testing of the Gemini capsule ejection seat The major outstanding design task had been to determine the dynamic center of gravity of the seat man combination under expected acceleration conditions 14 September 7 1962 Friday EditThe world s first aquanaut Robert Stenuit of Belgium was brought back from the bottom of the Mediterranean Sea where he had become the first person to spend 24 hours on the ocean floor Stenuit who was lowered off the coast of France near Cap Ferrat stayed inside a pressurized airtight cylinder designed by Edwin Link Scheduled to remain below for two days in a 3 5 metre 11 ft long cylinder Stenuit was brought up early after one day instead but became the first living person to stay at least 24 hours in an underwater habitat on the ocean floor 22 Former French Prime Minister Georges Bidault who had fled from France to Italy after being indicted for anti government activities was taken into custody at Rome and ordered to leave Italy with transportation to the frontier of his choice 23 Results of a joint study by the U S Atomic Energy Commission the U S Department of Defense and NASA of possible harmful effects of the artificial radiation belt created by Operation Dominic on Mercury 8 were announced The study predicted that radiation outside Wally Schirra s capsule during the six orbit flight would be about 500 roentgens but that shielding vehicle structures and flight suit would reduce this dosage down to about 8 roentgens on the astronaut s skin well below the tolerance limits previously established 24 The Western Region of British Railways closed the Buckfastleigh Totnes and South Devon Railway in England Filming of Sergei Bondarchuk s War and Peace began and would continue for another six years Died Karen Blixen 77 Danish author known by her pen name of Isak Dinesen As Dinesen she wrote the memoir Out of Africa in 1937 which would become the basis for the 1985 film of the same name Morris Louis 49 American painter died of lung cancer from prolonged exposure to toxic paint fumesSeptember 8 1962 Saturday EditIn the Sino Indian War two companies of Communist Chinese troops crossed the McMahon Line that had marked the border between India and China to confront soldiers at the recently established Indian Army border post at Dhola 25 The Cuban Missile Crisis began as the first consignment of Soviet R 12 called SS 4 by NATO offensive missiles arrived in Cuba on board the freighter Omsk 26 The medium range ballistic missiles which could be fitted with nuclear warheads could strike targets in the U S within 2 000 km or 1 300 miles of Cuba 27 Atlas rocket No 113 D for Schirra s Mercury 8 flight was static fired at Cape Canaveral to check modifications made to the booster for smoother engine combustion 24 September 9 1962 Sunday EditWhile India s Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru was out of the country for the Commonwealth Prime Ministers Conference in London Defence Minister V K Krishna Menon gave the order for the Indian Army to evict Chinese troops from south of the McMahon Line even though there were Indian troops north of the line in China The decision proved to be a disaster 28 29 For the first time since Taiwan began U 2 overflights over Mainland China in January one of the pilots of the Black Cat Squadron the 35th Reconnaissance Squadron of the Republic of China Air Force was shot down Colonel Chen Huai seng s U 2 plane was struck by an SA 2 Guideline missile near Nanchang and Colonel Chen did not survive the crash Another of the Black Cats Major Wang Cheng wen was killed on the same day in an unrelated accidental crash of his U 2 plane 30 Pravda the Soviet Communist Party newspaper published the article Plans Profits and Bonuses by economics professor Evsei Liberman of the Kharkiv National University of Economics as the Communist Party introduced discussion of new policies that would become a reality in the 1965 Soviet economic reform Liberman s proposal was to depart from the Communist system of measuring factory efficiency by whether a pre set production quota had been met and judging performance instead by the amount of the factories profit with the goal of increasing the quality and quantity of products 31 Jack Nicklaus won the first World Series of Golf a made for television exhibition organized by the NBC television network as a competition between the champions of the four major professional golf tournaments 32 With a 138 on 36 holes Nicklaus winner of the U S Open won the 50 000 first prize by finishing four strokes ahead of ahead of Masters and British Open champion Arnold Palmer and PGA Championship winner Gary Player who tied at 139 Born Liza Marklund Swedish journalist and crime writer in Palmark Jack Trudeau American football player and radio announcer in Forest Lake Minnesota Died Paavo Aaltonen 42 Finnish gymnast and a winner of three gold medals in the 1948 OlympicsSeptember 10 1962 Monday EditThe railroad line between Taunton and Chard Junction within Somerset became the first casualty of the Beeching cuts after the Chairman of British Railways Richard Beeching began shutting down unprofitable railroad lines For the next 13 years passenger service would be halted permanently at 29 separate rail routes a process accelerated after the publishing of the Beeching Report on March 27 1963 An author would note later that the closures would eliminate 4 500 miles 7 200 km of routes 2 500 stations and 67 700 jobs 33 Rod LaverRod Laver of Australia became only the second person in history to win the Grand Slam of tennis after taking the men s singles title in the U S Open by defeating fellow Queenslander Roy Emerson 6 2 6 4 5 7 and 6 4 Earlier in 1962 he won the Australian Open January the French Open June and Wimbledon July 34 35 Speaking for the U S Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black halted further stays against enforcement of a lower court decision and ordered the immediate admission of James Meredith as the first African American student at the then segregated University of Mississippi Black wrote that the enrollment of Meredith as a student can do no appreciable harm to the university 36 37 The Mercury 8 launch mission was postponed to September 28 1962 to allow additional time for flight preparation 24 Born Co Stompe Dutch darts player and 2010 World Cup of Darts champion in AmsterdamSeptember 11 1962 Tuesday EditWeeks before the discovery of nuclear missiles that would lead to the Cuban Missile Crisis the Soviet Union publicly warned that a U S attack on Cuba or on Soviet ships carrying supplies to the island would mean war 38 In a statement read at the Foreign Office in Moscow the government declared One cannot now attack Cuba and expect that the aggressor will be free from punishment for this attack If such an attack is made this will be the beginning of unleashing war which might plunge the world into the disaster of a universal world war with the use of thermonuclear weapons 39 Thurgood Marshall was confirmed by the U S Senate as a judge on the U S Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit 353 days after he had been nominated by a vote of 56 14 40 Marshall an African American who had argued the landmark case of Brown v Board of Education and who would later be elevated to the U S Supreme Court had been serving for eleven months after President Kennedy had made an appointment subject to Senate approval while Congress was not in session 41 Manned Spacecraft Center MSC aerospace technologists William G Davis and Robert L Turner compiled a description of instrumentation that would be required on a space station Such equipment comprised three areas 1 support and laboratory systems for crew safety and for scientific experiments 2 scientific instrumentation for study of a true space environment and for advancement of scientific knowledge of space and 3 the power system for a space station a choice between 400 cycle AC or 28 volt DC sources 42 Big Sur by Jack Kerouac was first published 43 Died Robert Soblen 61 an American spy who had been awaiting extradition to the United States to begin a life sentence in prison on conviction of espionage for the Soviet Union died five days after he lapsed into a coma from a barbiturate overdose Minutes before he was to board Pan Am Flight 101 from London to New York Soblen collapsed at the London Airport now called Heathrow 44 45 Although suicide was an obvious motive investigators speculated that Soblen may have been poisoned by the Soviet KGB in order to prevent him from revealing the identities of other spies 46 September 12 1962 Wednesday EditU S President John F Kennedy in a speech at the football stadium of Rice University in Houston reaffirmed that the U S would put a man on the Moon by the end of the decade 47 On hand were 40 000 people mostly students 48 Kennedy had declared on May 25 1961 his belief that the nation should commit to a crewed moon landing which would be achieved on July 20 1969 49 President Kennedy visited the Manned Spacecraft Center and was shown exhibits of the Mercury Gemini and Apollo spacecraft hardware 24 NASA announced it would launch a special satellite before the end of the year to obtain information on possible effects of radiation on future satellites and to give the world s scientific community additional data on the artificial environment created by the radiation belt 24 The first mystery satellite in the history of space exploration was launched according to British magazine Flight International The object of unknown origin orbited at a height of 113 miles 182 km and reentered the earth s atmosphere 12 days later An unidentified spokesman speculated that the satellite belonged to the U S Air Force but that this was a scientific guess based on our assessment of previous satellite launchings No official U S listing included such a satellite nor a launch confirmation 24 The 1962 European Athletics Championships opened at the Partizan Stadium in Belgrade September 13 1962 Thursday EditGovernor of Mississippi Ross Barnett delivered a 20 minute address on statewide television and radio to urge state officials not to obey the federal court order to integrate the University of Mississippi signing a legal document to implement the legal doctrine of interposition whereby state law superseded a contrary federal government action The Governor declared We will not drink from the cup of genocide There is no case in history where the Caucasian race has survived integration Barnett then made a proclamation saying I hereby direct each official to uphold and enforce the laws duly and legally enacted by the legislature of the State of Mississippi regardless of this unwarranted illegal and arbitrary usurpation of power and added There is no cause which is more moral and just than the protection of the integrity of our races 50 In elections in Grenada for the 15 member Legislative Council of the British Crown Colony Chief Minister Herbert Blaize s Grenada National Party won 6 of the 10 elected seats 51 September 14 1962 Friday EditTeledu Cymru now Wales West and North Television began broadcasting to the North and West Wales region of Britain extending the ITV Network to the whole of the United Kingdom 52 Transmitters were located at Pembroke Caernarvon and Flint 53 Frederick S Modise a minister of South Africa s Zion Christian Church was inspired to form a separate Christian denomination while in the Coronation Hospital in Johannesburg for what was diagnosed as an incurable illness Modise who would found the International Pentecost Holiness Church of South Africa would say later that a voice had told him that he would be healed and would be able to return home on October 3 For the remainder of his life Reverend Modise would minister to other ill patients 54 An interagency coordination meeting defined the uncrewed first Gemini mission as a spacecraft maximum heating rate test As many spacecraft systems as possible were to be tested to allow the second flight to carry astronauts Another meeting on September 18 set ground rules for the first mission The trajectory was to be ballistic with a range of about 2 200 miles 3 500 km The primary objective was to obtain thermodynamics and structures data and the secondary objective was partial qualification of spacecraft systems 14 Died William Lindsay Gresham 53 American novelist and non fiction author took an overdose of sleeping pills after having been diagnosed with incurable cancerSeptember 15 1962 Saturday EditIran s foreign minister Abbas Aram and Soviet Union Ambassador Nikolai Pegov signed an agreement providing that Iran would not allow any foreign nation to set up rocket bases on its soil 55 The first Soviet medium range missiles were deployed in Cuba a week after their arrival 27 On the same day American electronic intelligence detected that Soviet high altitude surface to air missiles had become operational An SA 2 or S 75 Dvina missile had downed the U 2 spy plane flown by Francis Gary Powers in 1960 and the weapons located near the port of Mariel were capable of stopping further American attempts to verify a missile buildup 56 Died William Coblentz 88 American physicistSeptember 16 1962 Sunday EditThe first semiconductor laser began operation using a gallium arsenide compound The initial test was done by Gunter Fenner at the General Electric Research Laboratory in Schenectady New York 57 British driver Graham Hill won the Italian Grand Prix held at Monza Born Joanne Catherall English vocalist for The Human League in Sheffield South Yorkshire 58 Josephus Thimister Belgian designer in Maastricht d 2019 September 17 1962 Monday Edit A Mil Mi 8BBC Wales Today was broadcast for the first time As of September 17 2022 it had been on the air for sixty years as one of the world s longest running daily television news programmes The final prototype of the Mil Mi 8 helicopter with 1 500 shaft horsepower engines was given its initial test flight The Soviet and later Russian built machine would sell more units than any other helicopter in history 59 Khalid al Azm became Prime Minister of Syria for the sixth and last time succeeding Bashir al Azma The Ba ath Party would overthrow the Syrian government on March 8 1963 and al Azm would be arrested 60 Nine new American astronauts officially members of NASA Astronaut Group 2 were introduced at a press conference at the University of Houston Manned Space Center Director Robert R Gilruth introduced the selections for the training program for the Gemini and Apollo flights 14 61 Of the nine four were from the U S Air Force three were from the U S Navy and two were civilians The New Nine were civilians Neil Armstrong and Elliot See USAF officers Frank Borman James McDivitt Thomas P Stafford and Ed White and Navy officers Pete Conrad Jim Lovell and John Young 14 62 Armstrong would become the first man to walk on the Moon Conrad would be third and Young ninth Borman and Lovell would orbit the Moon White would be the first American to walk in space but would die in the fire of Apollo 1 Young would command the space shuttle s first launched mission and See would die in a plane crash before he could fly in space 62 Studies by the U S Navy School of Aviation Medicine found that astronaut John Glenn had received less than one half the cosmic radiation dosage expected during his orbital flight because of the excellent protection by the walls of his Mercury 6 capsule 24 Born Paul Feig American TV director and actor in Royal Oak Michigan BeBe Winans stage name for Benjamin Winans American gospel singer and brother of CeCe Winans in DetroitSeptember 18 1962 Tuesday EditU S Marine Corps helicopters flew a combat mission from Da Nang South Vietnam for the first time airlifting South Vietnamese troops into the hills south of Da Nang 63 Donald Slayton one of the seven chosen for the Mercury astronaut training program was designated Coordinator of Astronaut Activities at the Manned Spacecraft Center 24 Died Therese Neumann 64 German Catholic mystic and stigmatic Her followers said that she had inedia the ability to survive without food and that she had stopped eating in 1926 64 September 19 1962 Wednesday Edit The last Imam of YemenPrince Saif Al Islam Muhammad al Badr became the new Imam of Yemen following the death of his 71 year old father Imam Ahmad bin Yahya who was described at his death as despotic the perennial target of assassins and a man said to have died from natural causes hastened by old wounds The following day al Badr was proclaimed at the Imam Al Mansoor Billah 65 His reign would last for a week before he was overthrown 66 A full scale mockup of the Boeing X 20 Dyna Soar spaceplane was unveiled for reporters in Las Vegas where the Air Force Association was holding its annual convention and the six pilots who would be the first to fly the X 20 were introduced Technical men familiar with sketches and photographs of the X 20 were startled by the vicious ugliness of the plane the Associated Press reported noting that With its upturned wingtips and long snout the X 20 looks like its designer had somehow managed to cross a manta ray with a shark 67 The Dyna Soar project scheduled for a 1965 launch would be cancelled after cost overruns and none were ever built The United States Intelligence Board reviewed all available data on arms shipments to Cuba and reported to President Kennedy erroneously that there was no basis for speculation that nuclear missiles would be placed on the Caribbean island 68 ACF Electronics delivered an engineering prototype radar beacon to McDonnell for Project Gemini An engineering prototype C band beacon had operated at ACF Electronics under simulated reentry conditions with no degradation in performance 14 MSC s Life Systems Division reported that continuing studies were underway for extravehicular operations during Gemini missions These included evaluation of a superinsulation coverall to be worn over the pressure suit for thermal protection ventilation system requirements and hardware and methods of maneuvering in proximity to the spacecraft 14 Vicious ugliness the Dyna SoarThe first episode of The Virginian starring James Drury in the title role the character s real name was never revealed was shown on NBC as the first 90 minute weekly TV series It would run nine seasons ending in 1971 69 Died Nikolai Pogodin 61 Soviet playwrightSeptember 20 1962 Thursday EditEscorted by federal marshals James Meredith arrived at Oxford Mississippi in order to become the first African American to enroll at the University of Mississippi Governor Ross Barnett personally blocked Meredith s entrance into the admissions building 70 Voting was conducted for Algeria s first Constituent Assembly since the nation s independence with voters being given a choice of yes or no for the 196 candidates from the National Liberation Front led by Ahmed Ben Bella 71 The MGBThe MGB sports car was introduced by MG Cars Over the next 18 years 500 000 MGBs would be sold making it the best selling sports car in history 72 Died Robert Colquhoun 47 Scottish painter printmaker and theatre set designer Conrad Emil Lambert Helfrich 75 Dutch naval commander of World War IISeptember 21 1962 Friday EditComposer Igor Stravinsky returned to Russia after an absence of 48 years as a guest of the Soviet Union 73 The UN General Assembly approved a ceasefire agreement between Indonesia and the Netherlands with UN military observers from six nations monitoring the agreement A larger UN Security Force would arrive at West Irian on October 3 74 The British music magazine New Musical Express published a story about two 13 year old schoolgirls Sue and Mary releasing a disc on Decca and added that A Liverpool group The Beatles have recorded Love Me Do for Parlophone Records set for October 5 release Born Rob Morrow American TV actor known for Northern Exposure and Numb3rs in New Rochelle New York Died Marie Bonaparte 80 French author and psychoanalystSeptember 22 1962 Saturday EditAutostrada 1 a 125 mile 201 km long superhighway between Rome and Naples opened to traffic Travel time between the two Italian cities was cut almost in half from 3 1 2 hours to two hours 75 India s Defence Ministry officials met to discuss plans to drive out Chinese troops from the disputed border area at Thang La ridge Despite the argument by General P N Thaper the Chief of the Army Staff of Indian Army that Chinese troops at the border outnumbered those from India General Thaper was given a written order to prepare and throw out the Chinese as soon as possible 29 Born Sirous Ghayeghran Iranian footballer and captain of the national team with 43 appearances from 1986 to 1993 in Bandar Anzali died 1998 September 23 1962 Sunday EditThe Jetsons George Jane Judy and Elroy were introduced in a primetime cartoon of the same name at 7 30 pm Eastern time on the ABC television network Despite having only 24 episodes the science fiction show about a family living about 100 years in the future would be rerun for 23 years until new episodes were commissioned for a syndicated revival in 1985 76 The new Philharmonic HallThe Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts including its modern Philharmonic Hall later Avery Fisher Hall opened in New York City The inaugural concert which was televised live on CBS featured Leonard Bernstein the New York Philharmonic Orchestra and a host of operatic stars such as Eileen Farrell and Robert Merrill 77 Unbeknownst to the world Pope John XXIII was diagnosed with terminal stomach cancer He would pass away on June 3 1963 78 The Soviet Union Council of Ministers approved the development of the Global Rocket 1 GR 1 missile with the goal of a weapon with a range of 12 500 miles 20 100 km capable of hitting a target anywhere on Earth The project would be cancelled in 1964 in favor of the R 36 orbiting missile designated as the SS 18 by NATO 79 The crash of Flying Tiger Line Flight 923 killed 28 of the 76 people on board The L 1049H Super Constellation was on its way from the United States to West Germany when it ditched into the Atlantic Ocean after three of its four engines failed The 48 survivors were rescued by the Swiss ship Celerina 80 The crash investigation determined that the accident was caused by the failure of engine No 3 the accidental closing of a shutoff valve on engine No 1 by the flight engineer and the failure of engine No 2 as the plane was proceeding to the nearest available airport 81 Born Robert Molle Canadian athlete who won a silver Olympic medal in wrestling in 1984 and later captained the Winnipeg Blue Bombers of the Canadian Football League in SaskatoonSeptember 24 1962 Monday EditSamuel Barber s Piano Concerto performed by John Browning premiered at the Philharmonic Hall 82 Born Ally McCoist Scottish footballer manager and television personality in Bellshill North Lanarkshire Sergey Schepkin Russian pianist in Leningrad now Saint Petersburg Russian SFSR Soviet UnionSeptember 25 1962 Tuesday EditIn Yemen Abdullah as Sallal launched a coup d etat aimed at the overthrow of the new Imam Muhammad al Badr Sallal s troops shelled the royal palace thought they had buried the Imam in the rubble and proclaimed his death on Aden radio However al Badr had escaped and would attempt a rebellion against the newly proclaimed government 83 The new Constitutional Assembly elected Ferhat Abbas the President of Algeria and formally proclaimed the foundation of the Democratic and Popular Republic of Algeria during their opening session 84 Sonny Liston and Floyd Patterson fought for the world heavyweight boxing title in Chicago Liston made history by being the first man ever to knock out a reigning heavyweight champion in the first round downing the titleholder in 2 minutes and 6 seconds 85 A review conference for NASA s complex 14 was held in Los Angeles to set ground rules for all contractors Target dates established were 1 stand availability by July 1 1963 2 beneficial occupancy by November 1 1963 and 3 having the rocket on stand date by February 1 1964 Complex 14 would be used for launching the Gemini Agena target vehicle and Mariner spacecraft as well as the Gemini program 14 September 26 1962 Wednesday Edit Irene Ryan and Buddy EbsenThe Beverly Hillbillies a television situation comedy about a poor Ozark Mountain family who became multi millionaires after oil was found on their land began a nine year run on the CBS network with the first episode premiering at 9 00 pm Eastern time UPI television critic Rick Du Brow wrote the next day that the series is going to be a smash hit in that it was similar in premise to TV program The Real McCoys but added that The nicest thing I can say is that it is really not like The Real McCoys The McCoys are a civilized rural clan these new hillbillies make L il Abner and his mob look like a bunch of sophisticates 86 Within three weeks it was the most watched series on American television and stayed at 1 in its first two seasons The show had 274 episodes with the final one broadcast on March 23 1971 87 A flash flood killed 445 people in Barcelona and in the nearby villages of Sabadell and Terrassa in the Catalan region of Spain 88 As the North Yemen Civil War progressed all areas of the Yemeni city of San a were in the hands of the new Yemen government led by Abdullah as Sallal and he proclaimed the Yemen Arab Republic 89 Restaurant entrepreneur Harland Sanders filed a patent application for his invention a process of producing fried chicken under pressure describing a system using a pressure cooker with the object to provide a novel process for quickly and thoroughly frying chicken under pressure in a manner to seal in substantially all the natural juices while browning the breaded surface thereof to desired crispness and appearance U S Patent No 3 245 800 would be granted on April 12 1966 and was assigned by Sanders to the Kentucky Fried Chicken Corporation 90 Born Chunky Panday stage name for Suyash Panday Indian film actor in Bombay now Mumbai Mark Haddon English author of children s books in NorthamptonSeptember 27 1962 Thursday EditRachel Carson s book Silent Spring was released giving rise to the modern environmentalist movement 91 The 25th Canadian Parliament opened its first and only session adjourning on February 6 1963 92 September 28 1962 Friday EditYemeni radio announced the death of former ruler Muhammad al Badr Al Badr had in fact escaped the country and was living in Saudi Arabia 93 Prime Minister Ahmed Ben Bella founded the first government of independent Algeria 94 Wally Schirra made a 6 and a half hour simulated flight of the Mercury 8 spacecraft A worldwide tracking network of 21 ground stations and ships also participated in the exercise 24 Planning for a U S space station was discussed at Washington by people from the Office of Manned Space Flight OMSF the Office of Advanced Research and Technology OART the Manned Spacecraft Center MSC Marshall Space Flight Center MSFC and Langley Research Center The OMSF allowed 2 2 million to MSC and 300 000 to MSFC for contractor related studies and funding to Langley of 800 000 42 Born Fred Merkel American motorcycle racing champion in Stockton CaliforniaSeptember 29 1962 Saturday Edit Alouette 1Canada s Alouette 1 the first satellite built outside the United States and the Soviet Union was launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California 95 My Fair Lady ended its Broadway run after more than six years and 2 717 performances a Broadway record that would stand until surpassed later by Hello Dolly 96 In order to prevent the University of Mississippi from making any further efforts to prevent James Meredith from becoming the first African American to enroll there President Kennedy issued a proclamation commanding all persons engaged in the obstruction of the laws and the orders of the courts to cease and desist therefrom and to disperse and retire peaceably forthwith citing his authority under 10 U S C 332 333 and 334 to use the militia or the armed forces to suppress any insurrection domestic violence unlawful combination or conspiracy 70 Reconnaissance aircraft indicated the formation of a tropical depression to the east of the Lesser Antilles which would later develop into Hurricane Daisy Died Muhammad VIII al Amin 85 last Bey of Tunisia who reigned from 1943 to 1957 before the abolition of the monarchy 97 September 30 1962 Sunday EditJames Meredith was escorted by a team of United States Marshals to the campus of the University of Mississippi for enrollment as the first African American student at Ole Miss 98 That evening at 8 15 pm rioting broke out as a mob joined students on the campus and the 4 000 troops of the 108th Armored Cavalry Regiment of the Mississippi National Guard was federalized under the command of Brigadier General Charles Billingslea of the U S Army to restore order taking the side of the United States against the State of Mississippi 99 Two civilians were killed by unknown persons which many believed to be rioters Paul Guihard a British reporter on assignment for the Agence France Presse was shot in the back and a local jukebox repairman George Gunter was shot in the head while visiting the situation out of curiosity 100 The CBS Radio Network broadcast the final episodes of Suspense and Yours Truly Johnny Dollar marking the end of the Golden Age of Radio 101 In the final scheduled games of the 1962 Major League Baseball season the San Francisco Giants 100 61 defeated the Houston Colt 45s 2 1 while the Los Angeles Dodgers 101 60 lost to the St Louis Cardinals 1 0 giving both the Giants and Dodgers identical 101 61 records and first place in the National League and forcing a playoff series between the two 102 The Dodgers who had had a two game lead with only four games left in the season went on to lose the playoff to the Giants who would go on to the 1962 World Series The National Farm Workers of America which would later merge with the Agricultural Workers Organizing Committee to form the United Farm Workers of America was founded in Fresno California by Cesar Chavez 103 References Edit Big Vote for Merger in Singapore Sydney Morning Herald September 3 1962 p 3 Fear 10 000 Lose Lives in Iran Quake Chicago Daily Tribune September 4 1962 p 1 Earthquakes with 1 000 or More Deaths since 1900 U S Geological Survey Archived from the original on 14 January 2013 134 Now Feared Dead in Typhoon Sydney Morning Herald September 3 1962 p 3 Soviet Announces Pact With Cuba For Delivery Of Military Equipment Toledo Blade September 3 1962 p 1 Airport Operations Halt For Sky Shield Miami News September 2 1962 p 1 Castillo Dennis 2006 The Maltese Cross A Strategic History of Malta Greenwood Publishing Group p 219 Sterling Christopher H ed 2008 Blair William Richards Military Communications From Ancient Times to the 21st Century ABC CLIO pp 61 62 Krag Succeeds Ill Danish Premier New York Times September 4 1962 e e cummings Dies Miami News September 3 1962 p1 Richard S Kennedy dreams in the mirror A Biography of E E Cummings W W Norton amp Company 1994 p484 Stormy Asian games Near End After Riotous Display Quebec Chronicle Telegraph September 4 1962 p 5 Bronson Fred 2003 The Billboard Book of Number 1 Hits Random House Digital p 148 a b c d e f g h 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 20 February 2023 Cobb Charles E Jr 2008 On the Road to Freedom A Guided Tour of the Civil Rights Trail Algonquin Books p 32 ISBN 978 1565124394 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Lurie Maxine N Mappen Marc 2004 Encyclopedia of New Jersey Rutgers University Press p 240 Lange David W 2005 The Complete Guide To Lincoln Cents Zyrus Press pp 23 26 attribution User AltioraPeto Hall Rex Shayler David 2001 The Rocket Men Vostok amp Voskhod the First Soviet Manned Spaceflights Springer pp 119 120 Object Found in Manitowoc May Be Part of Sputnik Milwaukee Journal September 6 1962 p 1 Johnstone Paul 1989 The Sea Craft of Prehistory Taylor amp Francis p 89 Hellwarth Ben 2012 Sealab America s Forgotten Quest to Live and Work on the Ocean Floor New York Simon amp Schuster pp 58 59 ISBN 978 0 7432 4745 0 via Internet Archive Italians Kick Out Fugitive French Ex Premier Bidault Miami News September 8 1962 p 1 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 B Operational Phase of Project Mercury June 1962 through June 12 1963 Project Mercury A Chronology NASA Special Publication 4001 NASA Retrieved 23 March 2023 Rao K V Krishna 1991 Prepare Or Perish A Study of National Security Lancer Publishers p 89 Ritter Scott 2010 Dangerous Ground America s Failed Arms Control Policy from FDR to Obama Nation Books p 113 a b Lackey Douglas P 1984 Moral Principles and Nuclear Weapons Rowman amp Littlefield p 54 Benjamin Zachariah Nehru Routledge 2004 p246 a b K V Krishna Rao Prepare Or Perish A Study of National Security Lancer Publishers 1991 p91 I C Smith and Nigel West Historical Dictionary of Chinese Intelligence Scarecrow Press 2012 p272 Liberman Evsel Grigorevich 1897 1983 in Europe Since 1945 An Encyclopedia Bernard A Cook ed Taylor amp Francis 2001 volume 2 p785 Nicklaus Captures World Series of Golf by 4 Shots Battle Creek MI Enquirer September 10 1962 p11 Holland Julian 2013 Dr Beeching s Axe 50 Years On Memories of Britain s Lost Railways David amp Charles Laver s In Command Miami News September 11 1962 p 3C This Day in History Rod Laver wins Grand Slam History American TV network Integrationists Laud Decision By Black Today Florence Times Daily Florence Alabama September 11 1962 p 2 Siracusa Joseph M ed September 30 2004 Meredith James H oward The Kennedy Years Infobase Publishing p 324 Franklin Jane 1997 Cuba and the United States A Chronological History Melbourne Ocean Press ISBN 1 875284 92 3 Reds Threaten War If Cuba Attacked Miami News September 11 1962 p 1 Senate Approves Marshall 54 16 The New York Times September 12 1962 p 1 Starks Glenn L Brooks F Erik 2012 Thurgood Marshall A Biography ABC CLIO p 55 a b 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 19 22 Retrieved 23 March 2023 Maher Paul Jr 2007 Kerouac His Life and Work Taylor Trade Publications p 428 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Fly Fugitive Red Spy to U S Today Chicago Daily Tribune September 6 1962 p 1 Russian Spy Collapses At Airport Sydney Morning Herald September 7 1962 p 1 Probe Theory of Murder in Soblen Death Chicago Daily Tribune September 12 1962 p 7 Kennedy John F John F Kennedy Address at Rice University on the Space Effort Rice University JFK Vows to Take Over Lead in the Space Race Pittsburgh Post Gazette September 13 1962 p 1 Dick Steven J 2008 Remembering the Space Age Government Printing Office p 163 Barnett Tells Miss Officials Defy Federal Racial Orders Times Daily Hendersonville NC September 14 1962 p1 Nohlen D 2005 Elections in the Americas A data handbook Volume I p307 ISBN 978 0 19 928357 6 Johnson Catherine Turnock Rob 2005 ITV Cultures McGraw Hill International pp 97 98 Wales to Get Its Own TV on Friday Teludu Cymru for square deal The Guardian Manchester September 11 1962 p 2 Frederick Modise and the International Pentecost Church A Modern African Messianic Movement by Allan Anderson Institute for Theological Research Afkhami Gholam R 2009 The Life and Times of the Shah University of California Press p 336 Bamford James 2002 Body of Secrets Anatomy of the Ultra Secret National Security Agency Random House Digital p 106 Ion John C 2005 Laser Processing Of Engineering Materials Principles Procedure And Industrial Application Butterworth Heinemann pp 16 17 Larkin Colin ed 27 May 2011 Human League The Encyclopedia of Popular Music 5th Concise ed London Omnibus Press p 1897 ISBN 978 0 85712 595 8 Retrieved 13 February 2023 Boyne Walter J 2011 How the Helicopter Changed Modern Warfare Pelican Publishing p 211 Podeh Elie 1999 The Decline of Arab Unity The Rise And Fall of the United Arab Republic Sussex Academic Press p 171 Meet Our Nine New Men Into Space Miami News September 17 1962 p 1 a b Lindsay Hamish 2001 Tracking Apollo to the Moon Springer p 83 Chinnery Philip D 1991 Vietnam The Helicopter War Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press p 15 ISBN 1 55750 875 5 Freze Michael 1989 They Bore the Wounds of Christ The Mystery of the Sacred Stigmata Our Sunday Visitor Publishing p 281 Yemen s New King Liberal With Grudge At West Miami News September 20 1962 p 2 Bronson Rachel 2006 Thicker Than Oil America s Uneasy Partnership with Saudi Arabia Oxford University Press p 85 Our Black Dyna Soar Shows Its Ugly Snout Miami News September 20 1962 p 1 Hilsman Roger 1996 The Cuban Missile Crisis The Struggle Over Policy Greenwood Publishing Group p 32 Olson James S 1999 Historical Dictionary of the 1960s Greenwood Publishing p 467 a b Wilson Smith and Thomas Bender American Higher Education Transformed 1940 2005 Documenting the National Discourse JHU Press 2008 p122 Mahfoud Bennoune The Making of Contemporary Algeria 1830 1987 Cambridge University Press 2002 p98 Anders Ditlev Clausager Original MGB With MGC and MGB GT V8 MBI Publishing 1995 p8 Soviet Acclaims Stravinsky Visit New York Times September 22 1962 p1 Jacob Bercovitch Scott Sigmund Gartner International Conflict Mediation New Approaches and Findings Taylor amp Francis US 2009 p45 A Superhighway Links Rome Naples Miami News September 23 1962 p 3 Tim Brooks and Earle Marsh The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows 1946 present Random House Digital 2003 p607 Jack Gottlieb Working With Bernstein A Memoir Hal Leonard Corporation 2010 pp312 313 Richard P McBrien Lives of the Popes The Pontiffs from St Peter to Benedict XVI Harper Collins 2006 p373 Oleg Bukharin et al Russian Strategic Nuclear Forces MIT Press 2004 pp199 200 Rescuers Grab 49 From Wild Sea September 24 1962 p1 CAB Aircraft Accident Report September 13 1963 FlyingTiger923 com I Goofed 28 Killed Miami News November 15 1962 p5A Barbara B Heyman Samuel Barber The Composer and His Music Oxford University Press 1994 p418 Dresch Paul 2000 A History of Modern Yemen Cambridge University Press p 87 Naylor Phillip C 2000 France and Algeria A History of Decolonization and Transformation University Press of Florida p 55 Liston Kayos Floyd In 2 06 Daytona Beach Morning Journal Daytona Beach Florida September 26 1962 p 1 via Google News Beverly Hillbillies Make Yokums Look Sophisticated by Rick Du Brow Wilmington DE News Journal September 27 1962 p10 Ray Broadus Browne and Pat Browne The Guide to United States Popular Culture Popular Press 2001 p87 Lee Davis Natural Disasters New Edition Infobase Publishing 2009 pp175 176 Sarah Phillips Yemen s Democracy Experiment in Regional Perspective Patronage and Pluralized Authoritarianism Macmillan 2008 p43 U S Patent No 3 245 800 Google patents Piddock Charles 2009 Rachel Carson A Voice for the Natural World Gareth Stevens Publishing p 89 Parliaments Duration of Sessions Parliament of Canada Arabia Felix Time 26 October 1962 ISSN 0040 781X Archived from the original on October 17 2010 Retrieved August 26 2008 Reich Bernard 1990 Political Leaders of the Contemporary Middle East and North Africa A Biographical Dictionary Greenwood Publishing Group p 88 Dick Steven J Launius Roger D 2009 Societal Impact of Spaceflight Government Printing Office p 210 Stirling Richard 2009 Julie Andrews An Intimate Biography Macmillan The Former Bey Of Tunis Dies At 85 Miami News October 2 1962 p 2 James Meredith Three Years in Mississippi Indiana University Press 1966 p326 OLE MISS FIGHTING KILLS 2 GEN WALKER LEADS CHARGE Miami News October 1 1962 p1 Fatal Rioting at Ole Miss JFK Issues Peace Plea Milwaukee Sentinel October 1 1962 p1 Jim Cox American Radio Networks A History McFarland 2009 pp160 164 Dodgers Did Best To Avoid Pennant Pittsburgh Press October 1 1962 p26 Aaron Brenner et al The Encyclopedia of Strikes in American History M E Sharpe 2009 p426 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title September 1962 amp oldid 1161980658, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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