At Ulus Square in Ankara, 87 people were killed and 200 injured when a Vickers 754D Viscount airliner fell into a crowd in the Turkish city. Middle East Airlines Flight 265, with 14 people on board, was descending for a landing at Ankara after departing from Nicosia in Cyprus. At the same time, a Turkish Air Force C-47 airplane with a crew of three was approaching the same airport after a training flight. The two collided at 7,000 feet (2,100 m), and all 17 people on both aircraft were killed. The wreckage of the Vickers Viscount fell into the crowd below, 20 seconds later.[1][2]
The collapse of a school chapel killed 104 people, mostly schoolgirls, during prayer services in the town of Biblián, in Ecuador. There were 450 people inside when the roof fell under heavy rains.[3]
Pentti Nikula of Finland broke the world record for the pole vault, which had been held by a succession of Americans for almost 35 years. Nikula cleared the bar at 4.94 meters (16 feet, 8+3⁄4 inches) using a fiberglass pole.[5]
Elections were held in Nicaragua for the President, the 42-member Chamber of Deputies, and the 16 member Senate. Evidence of massive impending fraud caused the Traditional Conservative Party, led by Fernando Agüero Rocha, to abandon its loyalist stance and to call for a boycott of the 1963 elections.[12][13]René Schick Gutiérrez of the Nationalist Liberal Party, considered a puppet of Luis Somoza and the Somoza family that had ruled since 1932, officially won 90 percent of the vote over the Conservatives Diego Manuel Chamorro. Somoza's party also won two-thirds of the seats in the Chamber and 75% of the Senate seats.
On orders from Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew, Operation Coldstore was carried out in Singapore, with the arrest of more than 150 journalists, labor and student leaders, and members of political parties that opposed Lee's People's Action Party (PAP). The detainees were kept at the Outram Road Prison for three months; with the leaders of the Barisan Sosialis and other parties forced out of campaigning, the PAP would capture 2⁄3rds of the seats in the parliamentary elections, and maintain control thereafter.[14]
Canadian Minister of National Defence Douglas Harkness resigned in disagreement over the nuclear policies of Prime Minister Diefenbaker, triggering the collapse of the rest of the ministry.[15]
The SS Marine Sulphur Queen, a tanker with a crew of 39 and a cargo of molten sulphur, was heard from for the last time, two days after its departure from Beaumont, Texas, en route to Norfolk, Virginia. Contact between the ship and its owner, Marine Transport Lines, Inc., was lost and the ship was reported missing two days later.[16] Debris from the tanker washed ashore in Florida, but a search by U.S. Coast Guard and U.S. Navy airplanes did not locate the ship.[17] The story of the disappearance of the tanker would first be described as a casualty of the "Bermuda Triangle" in the Argosy magazine article (by Vincent Gaddis in its February 1964 issue) "The Deadly Bermuda Triangle", although an investigating panel concluded that the ship, structurally unsound and burdened by its heavy cargo, broke in half during a storm.[18]
The UK Football Association decided to postpone the fifth and sixth rounds of the 1962–63 FA Cup because of delays caused by the severe winter.[19]
The Manned Spacecraft Center (MSC) postponed the April Mercury 9 mission because of damaged electrical wiring problems in the Atlas rocket.[4] The Gemini Project Office perfected plans for the first U.S. "walk in space". McDonnell Aircraft Corporation studied requirements for (1) crew maneuverability in a closed cabin; (2) allowing an astronaut to stand in an open hatch without leaving the cabin and (3) allowing a crew member to venture out of the capsule and into space.[20]
The Canadian House of Commons voted 142–111 in favor of a resolution of no confidence in the government of Prime Minister John Diefenbaker.[21] Parliament was dissolved the next day by Governor-General George Vanier, and elections were scheduled for April 8.
The U.S. Department of State made travel by United States citizens to Cuba illegal on a decision by President John F. Kennedy, in addition to bans on financial and commercial transactions with the Communist nation in the Caribbean.[22]
U.S. Defense SecretaryRobert McNamara appeared at a nationally televised press conference from the White House to show proof, with photographs from U-2 spy planes, that all offensive missiles had been removed from Cuba.[24]
Died:
Abd el-Krim, 77, Moroccan nationalist who fought for independence against France and Britain after Morocco had become a French protectorate in 1911.
A simulation of the Gemini ejection was conducted at Naval Ordnance Test Station. Two dummies were ejected, and for the first time the test added Gemini's "ballute" system. The ballute (a portmanteau for "balloon" and "parachute") was a device to stabilize the astronaut after ejection at high altitude. In the first test, the ballute failed to inflate or release properly on either dummy. After redesign, five consecutive dummy drops in March succeeded.[20]
In one of New Zealand's worst road accidents ever, a bus crashed after its brakes failed nearing the top of the southern descent of the Brynderwyn Range, killing 15 of the 35 people on board.[26] The bus, bringing back a group of Māori people from a welcome for Queen Elizabeth's visit to Waitangi, plunged over a 130-foot (40 m) embankment, and evoked memories of a December 24, 1953 train crash that killed 151 people who were on their way to Auckland to welcome the Queen to New Zealand.[27]
The Metropolitan Josyf Slipyj, Archbishop and leader of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church and a Roman Catholic cardinal, was allowed to leave Ukraine by the Soviet Union, departing Lviv by train. He would never return, dying in 1984.[31]
The Boeing 727 made its first flight.[32] Pilot S. L. Wallick, copilot R. L. Loesch and flight engineer M. K. Schulenberger took the plane aloft from the company's airfield at Renton, Washington.[33]
U.S. Attorney GeneralRobert F. Kennedy, taking up a challenge made by his brother, the President, for U.S. Marines to meet Theodore Roosevelt's standard for hiking 50 miles (80 km) within three days, completed the distance in 17 hours and 50 minutes.[35]
Five cities in Japan, on the northernmost part of the island of Kyūshū, were merged to become the city of Kitakyūshū, with a population of more than one million.[36]
Born:
Smiley Culture (stage name for David Victor Emmanuel), British reggae singer and DJ; in South London (committed suicide, 2011)[37]
The French Chef, one of the most well-known American cooking shows on television, premiered on Boston public television station WGBH in Boston and was hosted by Julia Child, co-author of the book Mastering the Art of French Cooking.[40] The show ran for nine seasons and 206 episodes until 1973.[41]
The Beatles recorded the ten songs of their debut album Please Please Me in a single, 13-hour session at the Abbey Road Studios.[42]
Died:Sylvia Plath, 30, American poet, novelist and short story writer and author of The Bell Jar, committed suicide at her apartment in London by inhaling carbon monoxide fumes from her gas oven.[43][44][45]
All 43 people on Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 705 were killed when the Boeing 720 broke up in mid-air during a severe thunderstorm shortly after takeoff from Miami International Airport and crashed into the Florida Everglades. The plane departed from Miami at 1:35 p.m. local time, bound for Chicago, and was cleared to climb to a higher altitude to avoid a thunderstorm. At 1:48 p.m., the plane was broken apart by downdrafts at an altitude of 10,000 feet (3,000 m) and crashed.[46][47]
NASA published objectives of the Mercury 9 mission. The first U.S. mission to stay in space for more than 24 hours would complete almost 22 orbits and splash down in the Pacific Ocean 70 nautical miles (130 km; 81 mi) from Midway Island. Astronaut Gordon Cooper's ability to function in more than one day of weightlessness would be evaluated for longer flights. MSC announced that Mercury 9, originally set for April, would be launched in May.[4]
Construction work began on the Gateway Arch at St. Louis, Missouri, United States. The 620-foot (190 m) tall structure, commemorating St. Louis as the "gateway to the West", would be completed on October 28, 1965.[48]
Residents of the Rwenzori Mountains in the Toro Kingdom region of southwestern Uganda rebelled against the government and declared independence of a state they called the Republic of Ruwenzuru. The Toro independence movement would be defeated in 1970, and a majority of the secessionist leaders would be murdered in 1972.[51]
A 7.3 magnitude earthquake occurred off the coast of Taiwan, near Su-ao, Yilan County.[52] Despite its magnitude, the earthquake killed only three people. The dead were highway workers near Taichung who were buried in an avalanche triggered by the tremor.[53]
Syncom 1 was launched from the United States and became the first satellite to be placed into geosynchronous orbit, but failed to function as a communications satellite because its equipment was damaged in the process of being aligned to coincide with the rotation of the Earth.[58][59]
Harold Wilsonwas elected leader of Britain's opposition Labour Party, defeating George Brown 144–103 in the second ballot, and putting Wilson in line to be the nation's next Prime Minister when general elections took place.[28][60]
The Dutch liner Maasdam struck the wreckage of SS Harborough at Bremen, West Germany, and was holed. All 230 passengers and 276 crew were rescued by the German ship SS Gotthilf Hagen. The Maasdam had been three days away from inaugurating direct service between West Germany and the United States.[62][63]
Television was introduced in Singapore, with one hour per week of programming initially, increasing by April to five hours of programming each weeknight, and 10 hours each on Saturday and Sunday.[64]
Agena target vehicle plans were presented to the Gemini Project Office, with tests of the target docking adapter to take place at Merritt Island radar tower.[20]
Turkey accepted the proposal to remove the remaining Jupiter nuclear missiles based there by the United States, with the last of the weapons taken out by April 24; nuclear defense of Turkey would be replaced by Polaris submarines.[69]
Mount Agung, a dormant volcano on the Indonesian island of Bali, became active again for the first time in 120 years. Its lava flow would destroy villages in the vicinity and kill more than 1,000 people.[74][75]
Born:Udin (Fuad Muhammad Syafruddin), Indonesian journalist who was murdered in 1996. The date of his birth was considered unlucky in the Javanese calendar as it fell on a kliwon Monday.[76]
The results of the 1962 population census of Nigeria were found to be so inaccurate that Prime Minister Abubakar Balewa announced that the count was being scrapped and that a new census would take place later in the year.[78]
Born:Seal (stage name for Seal Henry Samuel), British pop music singer; in Paddington, London[79]
Died:Benny Moré, 43, Cuban singer; from cirrhosis of the liver[80]
Kenneth S. Kleinknecht, Manager, Mercury Project Office, noted that 1,144.51 minutes of orbital space time (19 hours, 4 minutes and 30.6 seconds) had been logged by the first three U.S. orbiting crewed missions in the first year since John Glenn's Mercury 6 launch on February 20, 1962, including those of Scott Carpenter (Mercury 7) and Wally Schirra (Mercury 8). The flights proved that humans could perform in a space environment, that the design of the Mercury spacecraft was technically sound, and that NASA was confident with the experience accrued for the coming Gemini and Apollo projects.[4]
Der Stellvetreter, by West German playwright Rolf Hochhuth, premiered in West Berlin at the Volksbühne. The play, which would be translated into 17 languages (including in English as The Deputy), was described as a revival of documentary theatre and based on the thesis that Pope Pius XII was a participant in the Holocaust by failing to speak out against it; the hero of the work was Kurt Gerstein, the Nazi SS Officer who attempted to make the Pope aware of the genocide.[81]
Dr. Hugh L. Dryden, the NASA Deputy Administrator, presented the Friendship 7 spacecraft used by John Glenn a year earlier on the Mercury 6 mission to the Smithsonian Institution. Astronaut John Glenn presented the Smithsonian with his flight suit, boots, gloves, and a small American flag that he carried on the mission.[4]
The Communist government of East Berlin yielded to public protests and reversed a decision to assign graduating students to specific occupations and prohibit them from applying for other lines of work. A week earlier, high schools had been sent "lists containing the name of each pupil and the job that the state authorities had picked for him or her" as part of the national requirement of one year of manual labor prior to being able to attend a university. Teachers, students and parents had sent letters of criticism. Neues Deutschland, the official newspaper of East Germany's ruling communist organization, the Socialist Unity Party, announced the rescission of the order and criticized it as "bureaucratic, narrow-minded and schematic".[85]
Telstar 1, the first privately financed satellite, became the first satellite to be destroyed by radiation. Telstar had been launched from the United States eight months earlier on July 10, 1962, one day after the U.S. had conducted a high altitude nuclear test, and the increased concentration of electrons in the Van Allen radiation belt had caused the communication satellite's transponders to deteriorate.[86]
Gordon Cooper and Alan Shepard, pilot and backup pilot, respectively, for May's Mercury 9 mission, received a one-day briefing on all experiments approved for the flight, and all hardware and operational procedures to handle the experiments were established.[4]
The Central Committee of the Soviet Communist Party sent a formal letter to the Chinese Communist Party's Central Committee, proposing a summit between the two in order to settle their differences. China would respond favorably on March 9.[87]
A 5.3 magnitude earthquake destroyed the city of Al Maraj, Libya. The quake lasted for 15 seconds, collapsed 70 percent of the town's buildings, killed more than 300 people, and left 12,000 homeless.[88][89]
Klein's Sporting Goods of Chicago received a shipment of Mannlicher–Carcano rifles from Crescent Firearms Company of New York, including rifle #C2766, which would be used to kill John F. Kennedy.[90]
Executive Order 11085 from U.S. President Kennedy established the Presidential Medal of Freedom, for the stated purpose of honoring "any person who has made an especially meritorious contribution" in one of three categories, "the security or national interests of the United States", "world peace", or "cultural or other significant public or private endeavors".
China and Pakistan signed an agreement to settle the 280-mile (450 km) long border between China's Xinjiang region and Pakistan's Gilgit–Baltistan area, with China relinquishing 775 square miles (2,010 km2) to Pakistan.[92]
General Ne Win, the President of Burma, ordered the nationalization of all that country's banks. At 1:00 in the afternoon, tanks were sent to the various financial institutions in Rangoon and the private management was forced by troops to relinquish the vaults to the Army.[94][95]
Women were permitted to vote for the first time in the tiny European nation of Monaco as elections were held for the nation's parliament, the 18-member National Council.[97][98] The National and Democratic Union party, which had been created by a merger of the two parties that had opposed each other in the 1958 election (the conservative Union Nationale des Indépendents and the less conservative Entente Nationale Démocratique), won 17 of the 18 seats. Charles Soccal, a Communist running on the Democratic Union Movement ticket, won the 18th seat in a runoff election.
The fifth running of the Daytona 500 was won by Tiny Lund. The first place purse of $23,350 (equivalent to $178,000 fifty years later and $215,000 in 2013[100]) was the highest in stock car racing at the time.[101]
The sinking of the Japanese ferryTokiwa Maru killed 47 of the 66 people on board, ten minute after the ferry collided with a much larger Japanese cargo ship, Richmond Maru off Kobe. The Tokiwa Maru disaster was one of four fatal ship accidents in a 24-hour period. In the other accidents, The Greek ore carrier SS Aegli capsized in a storm and sank in the Aegean Sea with the loss of 18 of her 22 crew; the four survivors were able to swim to nearby islands. An unidentified Japanese fishing boat and its 11 crew sank in a storm in the East China Sea, and four persons on the Italian oil tanker Miraflores were killed in a fiery collision on the Scheldt River with the British tanker Abadesa.[102][103]
"Please Please Me", The Beatles' first single to be sold in the United States, was released by Vee-Jay Records. Only 7,310 copies of the record were bought.[104][105]
Armenian-born U.S. inventor Luther Simjian received a patent for his invention of the "Bankograph", a depository machine for receiving and accurately recording (using optical character recognition) deposits of checks, currency and coins and providing a receipt for the customer. U.S. Patent 3,079,603 had been applied for on June 30, 1963. Although the Bankograph, which had been tested by the City Bank of New York while the patent was pending, did not come into widespread use, some of Simjian's optical recognition technology would be incorporated for automated banking.[108]
Gemini Project Office (GPO) decided that spacecraft separation from the launch vehicle would be accomplished manually, and that no second-stage cutoff signal to the spacecraft would be required. GPO directed McDonnell to remove pertinent hardware from the spacecraft and Martin to recommend necessary hardware changes to the launch vehicle.[20]
Juan Bosch took office as the 41st president of the Dominican Republic. His democratically elected government would exist for less than seven months, and be overthrown by a military coup on September 25, 1963.[109]
Chicago AldermanBenjamin F. Lewis of the 24th Ward, the first African-American to be elected to the Chicago City Council from the ward, was found murdered at his office in the 24th Ward's Democratic Party headquarters, two days after being overwhelmingly re-elected to a second term. Lewis had been handcuffed and then shot four times in the back of his head.[112][113] The murder was never solved.[114]
Dorothy Schiff resigned from the New York Newspaper Publisher's Association, saying that the city needed at least one paper operating during the newspaper strike. Her newspaper, the New York Post, would resume publication on March 4.[115]
American comedian Lenny Bruce was convicted by a jury in a Chicago municipal court on charges of obscenity arising from his profanity-laced performance at the Gate of Horn nightclub on December 5.[116]
The Gemini Project Office (GPO) reported that spacecraft No. 3 had been reassigned to the Gemini flight program.[20]
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^Luxmoore, Jonathan and Babiuch, Jolanta (1998) The Vatican and the Red Flag: The Struggle for the Soul of Eastern Europe. Continuum International. pp. 116–117. ISBN022566772X
^Lawrence, Philip K. and Thornton, David W. (2005) Deep Stall: The Turbulent Story of Boeing Commercial Airplanes. Ashgate Publishing. p. 46. ISBN9781138273559
^"3 Jet Airliner Tested", Spokane (WA) Daily Chronicle, February 9, 1963, p. 2
^"Kassem Executed: Iraq to 'Annihilate' Reds", Miami News, February 10, 1963, p. 1
^Ayres, Ed (2012). The Longest Race: A Lifelong Runner, an Iconic Ultramarathon, and the Case for Human Endurance. Workman Publishing.
^"This is Japan". Asahi Shimbun Newspaper Publishing Company (18): 374. 1971.
^Goethals, George R. et al., eds. (2004) "Friedan, Betty", in Encyclopedia of Leadership. SAGE Publishing. p. 523. ISBN9781452265308
^Diamond, Larry (1988) Class, Ethnicity, and Democracy in Nigeria: The Failure of the First Republic. Syracuse University Press. p. 136. ISBN0815624220
^"Seal", in The Encyclopedia of Popular Music, ed. by Colin Larkin (Omnibus Press, 2011)
^"Tiny Lund Wins Race at Daytona", Minneapolis (MN) Morning Tribune, February 25, 1963, p. 22
^"4 Ship Disasters Around World Take 85 Lives; Japanese Ferry Collides with Freighter, Sinks", AP report in Scranton (PA) Times-Tribune, February 26, 1963, p. 2
^"Japanese Ferry Disaster". The Times. No. 56635. London. 26 February 1963. col D, p. 10.
^Schultz, Linda (2004). Tales of the Awesome Foursome: Beatles Fans Share Personal Stories and Memories of the Fab Four. Infinity Publishing. p. 130.
^Beckwith, Harry (2011). Unthinking: The Surprising Forces Behind What We Buy. Hachette Digital.
^Atkins, G. Pope and Wilson, Larman C. (1998) The Dominican Republic and the United States: From Imperialism to Transnationalism. University of Georgia Press. pp. 129–130. ISBN0820319317