April 1966

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April 18, 1966: Cultural Revolution proclaimed in China (image from a 1972 play)
Chinese Communist Party Chairman Mao Zedong, who ordered the Cultural Revolution
April 3, 1966: USSR's Luna 10 becomes first Earth object to orbit the Moon
April 8, 1966: U.S. launches first astronomical observatory to orbit the Earth

The following events occurred in April 1966:

April 1, 1966 (Friday)

  • General Pham Xuan Chieu, a member of South Vietnam's 10-man military junta who was appearing as an emissary of Vietnam's Prime Minister Nguyễn Cao Kỳ to seek popular support, was surrounded by a mob of 1,000 students and Buddhist activists as he arrived at city government offices. The group then held him captive, transported him around the city in a cycle rickshaw, forced him to make a speech at the local radio station, and then released him unharmed.[1][2]
  • At the Communist Party Congress, Soviet Defense Minister Rodion Malinovsky made a cryptic reference to "the blue belt" of national defense, then discussed recently constructed intercontinental ballistic missiles and nuclear submarines, along with other weapons that could destroy "any planes and many rockets of the adversary".[3]
  • The long-running Christian telethon The 700 Club was broadcast for the first time on the Christian Broadcasting Network. Pat Robertson would host The 700 Club from 1966 until his retirement in 2021.[4][5]
  • Born:
  • Died:
    Brian O'Nolan, 54, Irish humorist who wrote under the pen names "Flann O'Brien" and "Myles na Gopaleen"; of throat cancer[7]

April 2, 1966 (Saturday)

  • Ten thousand protesters (including 2,000 South Vietnamese soldiers and sailors in uniform) marched through the streets of
    Nguyen Cao Ky.[8] Da Nang Mayor Nguyen Van Man, who had allowed protesters free use of city offices, motor vehicles and printing facilities, was accused of treason by Ky, who said that he planned to have Man executed by a firing squad.[9]
  • People's Daily, the official newspaper of the Chinese Communist Party, published an editorial by cultural critic Qi Benyu, titled "On the Essence of 'Han Rui Scolding the Emperor' and 'Hai Rui Dismissed from Office'", in what would be a prelude for the Party's calls for a violent public uprising.[10]
  • On his fourth day in office, Ecuador's new President, Clemente Yerovi, announced that he was cancelling a presidential election that had been scheduled for July.[11]
  • Died: C. S. Forester (Cecil Louis Troughton Smith), 66, English adventure novelist known for the Horatio Hornblower series

April 3, 1966 (Sunday)

  • A North Sea gale ran the British passenger ship Anzio aground at Donna Nook, Lincolnshire, near the mouth of the Humber River, and it was demolished. The ship, which had recently been purchased and was en route from London to Inverness to be delivered to its new owners, was occupied only by its skipper, Adam Fotheringham, and twelve other crewmembers. There were no survivors.[12][13][14] The bodies of ten men, all wearing life jackets but killed after being battered by debris and the rocks, washed ashore on the beach,[15] while three men (including Captain Fotheringham) were presumed to have gone down with the ship.[16]
  • At 18:44 UTC (9:44 p.m. in Moscow), the Soviet lunar probe Luna 10 became the first human-made object to orbit the Moon.[17] Luna 10 would make a complete trip around the Moon every three hours and would transmit signals back to Earth until May 30.[18][19][20]
  • Died:
    Battista Farina
    , 72, Italian car designer

April 4, 1966 (Monday)

April 5, 1966 (Tuesday)

Premier Kosygin
  • Soviet Prime Minister Alexei Kosygin said in a speech to the 23rd Communist Party Congress that the nation would begin measuring economic success by profits rather than by achievement of production target quantities. Starting in 1967, Kosygin said, nearly one-third of factory workers would be eligible for incentive bonuses. He asked the Party Congress to approve a new Five Year Economic Plan implementing the changes.[29]
Congressman Rivers

April 6, 1966 (Wednesday)

April 7, 1966 (Thursday)

H-Bomb recovered

April 8, 1966 (Friday)

Secretary Brezhnev

April 9, 1966 (Saturday)

  • United Nations Security Council Resolution 221 was adopted by a 10 to 0 vote, with five abstentions, and authorized the United Kingdom to use military force to enforce a U.N. embargo against Southern Rhodesia. Two permanent members, the Soviet Union and France, abstained, but did not veto the British-sponsored resolution. The vote authorized the Royal Navy to halt the Greek oil tanker Joanna V, already at anchor outside the Portuguese Mozambique port of Beira, from going any further and unloading its petroleum cargo for delivery through a pipeline to Rhodesia,[60] and to stop the incoming ship Manuela from sailing into Beira.[61]
  • Nell Theobald, an American model who appeared in advertisements to promote various products, was injured on the job while posing with a lion named Ludwig as part of a photo shoot for BMW automobiles.[62] Although Ludwig co-operated with the taking of multiple pictures during the International Automobile Show at the New York Coliseum, the lion bit Ms. Theobald on the left thigh when photography was over. The model required surgery to prevent her leg from being amputated, and would later receive a $250,000 settlement from a lawsuit against multiple defendants.
  • NASA's Saturn/Apollo Applications Deputy Director, John H. Disher asked the Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) to prepare cost and schedule estimates for MSFC to integrate the Apollo Telescope Mount (ATM) with the Apollo Lunar Module (LEM).[32]
  • Spain temporarily lifted the censorship of newspapers that had been in effect since the end of the Spanish Civil War in 1936, and restored freedom of the press. The new liberties would be short-lived and would be rescinded in a decree on January 24, 1969.[63]
  • Born:
    • Thomas Doll, German soccer football midfielder who played for East Germany's national team and later for the team of reunified Germany; in Malchin, East Germany
    • Cynthia Nixon, American TV and stage actress, winner of two Emmy Awards, two Tony Awards and a Grammy Award; in New York City
  • Died:
    • Sutan Sjahrir, 56, Indonesia independence leader and that nation's first Prime Minister; following a stroke
    • Barry Butler, 31, English footballer; in a car accident[64]

April 10, 1966 (Sunday)

Cesar Chavez

April 11, 1966 (Monday)

  • Cleveland Indians. Cleveland won, 5–2, before a record Washington baseball crowd of 44,468.[69]
  • LSD discontinued all further American sales of the hallucinogenic drug. According to a spokesman, Sandoz had "released it only to highly qualified clinical investigators", but voluntarily quit due to "unforeseen public reaction".[70]
  • The conservative newsweekly U.S. News & World Report became the first American news magazine to analogize the Vietnam War as a "stalemate" with neither side likely to defeat the other. Newsweek would not use the term until December 19, and TIME not until June 30, 1967.[71]
  • The inaugural Singapore Grand Prix motor race was won by Lee Han Seng of Singapore. The race would be discontinued after 1973, but revived thirty-five years later in 2008.
  • Born: Lisa Stansfield, English singer; in Manchester

April 12, 1966 (Tuesday)

  • For the first time, American
    CIA appraisal would later note that the "Communists will spare no effort to keep it open".[75]
  • Singer
    Jan & Dean was seriously injured when he lost control of his Corvette automobile and crashed into a parked truck on Sunset Boulevard in Beverly Hills, California,[76] near (but not at) the slight turn on the Boulevard that was the inspiration for the group's 1963 hit song, "Dead Man's Curve". Berry was in a coma for two months and would undergo years of rehabilitation after awakening.[77][78]
  • The trial of Egyptian dissident Sayyid Qutb began in Cairo, after his indictment on charges of conspiring to overthrow the government of President Gamal Abdel Nasser of the United Arab Republic. Qutb and two of his accused co-conspirators would be convicted and hanged on August 29.[79]
  • The first reported instance of a flag burning in the course of protests against the Vietnam War took place in a theater in New York City, where an antiwar skit entitled LBJ was being performed.[80]
  • U.S. President Johnson told France's President de Gaulle that the United States would not comply with his ultimatum to remove all American troops before April 1, 1967.[81]
  • The Japan Art Theater Guild released Patriotism, a short film written, produced and directed by Yukio Mishima, based on his 1960 short story of the same name.[82]
  • Died:

April 13, 1966 (Wednesday)

President Arif
  • Field Marshal Abdul Salam Arif, the 45-year-old President of Iraq, was killed in a helicopter crash, along with ten of his aides, after the aircraft failed during a sandstorm after their takeoff from Al-Qurnah in southern Iraq, north of the port of Basra. The dead included Interior Minister Abdul Latif Daraji and Minister of Industry Mustafa Abdullah, and the Basra district governor.[84][85] Prime Minister Abdel Rahman Bazzaz became the Acting President, pending a selection of Marshal Arif's successor.
  • One day after the Atlanta Braves played their first regular season baseball game since moving from Milwaukee (a 3–2 loss in Atlanta to the New York Mets),[86] Milwaukee County, Wisconsin Circuit Court Judge Elmer W. Roller ordered the team to return to Milwaukee by May 18, unless the National League intended to grant Milwaukee an expansion franchise in 1967. Judge Roller also fined the league, the Braves, and the other nine NL teams $5,000 apiece for violating Wisconsin's antitrust laws. Major League Baseball Commissioner William D. Eckert announced that Judge Roller's decision would be appealed to the Wisconsin Supreme Court.[87][88] The state Supreme Court would reverse Judge Roller's ruling in August.[89]
  • U.S. President
    Lyndon Johnson signed the 1966 Uniform Time Act, setting a common date (the last Sunday in April) for all states in the U.S. to set their clocks forward one hour, beginning on April 29, 1967, and to set clocks forward one hour on the last Sunday in October, starting in 1967. At the time, 18 states observed daylight saving time (DST), 14 switched time zones rather than changing their clocks, and the other 18 left the option up to their local governments. Before the Uniform Act was passed, the prescribed days for changing the clocks varied across the nation; in the state of Iowa alone, there were 23 different DST periods.[90]
  • William Olson, a 24-year-old American
    Gambela, Ethiopia. Olson, whose remains were recovered only after the crocodile was killed and opened up, was the first Corps volunteer to die in Ethiopia, and the first to be killed by an animal.[91][92]
  • Died:
    • Felix von Luckner, 84, German naval officer known during World War I as "the Sea-Devil" (Der Seeteufel). During the war, he commanded his sea raider SMS Seeadler (literally "Sea Eagle") in the capture of 16 merchant ships, with a minimum loss of enemy lives.
    • Georges Duhamel, 81, French novelist[93]
    • Carlo Carrà, 85, Italian Futurist painter

April 14, 1966 (Thursday)

108.7-acre nation with 566 citizens
  • Vatican City released the results of its 1966 census and announced that the 108.7 acres (44.0 ha) nation had a population of 890 people inside its walls, of whom 566 were Vatican citizens. Of those 566 people, 60 were priests, 124 were other members of the clergy, 220 were members of the Swiss Guard, and 162 were civilian employees and their families.[94]
  • At a
    NASA Administrator James E. Webb stated that the AAP would be hampered by a lack of payloads unless Congress granted additional funds in the Fiscal Year 1968 budget. Efforts to obtain appropriations for post-Apollo projects were hindered by rising costs of the Vietnam War and congressional discontent with NASA's increasing administrative costs. Asked about the House Government Operations Committee's suggestion that NASA abandon AAP and participate in the Air Force's Manned Orbiting Laboratory program, Webb denied that "complete common use" of facilities was possible. He noted that many countries in which the United States had tracking facilities would not cooperate if those installations were used for military projects.[32]
  • The three convicted assassins of Malcolm X were each sentenced to life in prison, after having been found guilty of murdering the Black Nationalist leader at the Audubon Ballroom in New York City on February 21, 1965. "Norman 3X" Butler (later Muhammad Abdul Aziz), "Thomas 15X" Johnson (later Khalil Islam) and Thomas Hagan (aka Talmadge Hayer), all members of the Black Muslim's Nation of Islam movement, had been found guilty on March 11. Johnson had been the first to fire, cutting down Malcolm X with two blasts from a shotgun, and Hagan and Butler then completed the execution with their pistols.[95] Butler and Johnson would be paroled in 1985 and 1987, respectively, while Hagan would be released from prison after 44 years in 2010.[96][97]
  • Lieutenant General
    Nguyen Van Thieu, Head of State and Chairman of the military junta that ruled South Vietnam, signed a decree promising that free national elections for a civilian government would take place by September 15.[98][99]
  • Born:

April 15, 1966 (Friday)

  • NASA Associate Administrator for Manned Space Fight George E. Mueller informed Deputy Administrator
    space probes from orbit using Agena rockets launched from AAP stations in space. The proposal was feasible, Mueller advised, but did not seem a desirable mission for inclusion in the AAP. The other aspect of Lockheed's proposal concerned the development of techniques for launching vehicles from orbit. In this area, the chief contributions anticipated from AAP were assembly of large vehicles in orbit, fuel transfer, and preparation for orbital launch. Final checkout, which Lockheed proposed should be done by the astronauts, Mueller said could be accomplished more effectively by ground engineering groups through telemetry displays. Therefore, he recommended to Seamans that the proposal not be considered for inclusion in Saturn/AAP.[32]
  • MSC Director
    George E. Mueller two days earlier. Gilruth cited NASA's need for a human spaceflight goal other than "using Apollo hardware" (and suggested a Mars flyby or landing mission as an in-house focus for planning). Also, he repeated his concern over the imbalance between AAP goals and resources, as well as the extent of engineering redesign and hardware modification that had been forced upon the project. Though expressing his and MSC's desire to contribute to and be a part of AAP, Gilruth voiced concern that "the future of manned space flight... is in jeopardy because we do not have firm goals, and because the present approach appears to us to be technically unsound."[32]
  • A mob of 2,000 Indonesian Chinese protesters attacked the Embassy of the People's Republic of China in Jakarta, smashing windows and doors, throwing documents into bonfires, and tearing down the PRC flag. The protesters, Indonesian citizens with Chinese ancestry, made the attack after a two-hour rally in which they pledged their loyalty to Indonesia.[100]
  • An American military spokesman reported that there had been 1,361 U.S. servicemen killed in the Vietnam War in 1966 as of April 9, already more than the 1,342 that had died during the entire year of 1965. By April, according to the press release, the combat death rate for
    U.S. Army, Marine, Navy and Air Force personnel had was now averaging 100 people per week.[101]
  • Uganda's Prime Minister
    Edward Mutesa, into exile.[102]
  • Born:

April 16, 1966 (Saturday)

Dante Alighieri, 1265–1321
  • Italian poet
    Florence, and of corruption in public office, following an eight-hour hearing convened in Arezzo by a court headed by former Court of Cassations President Ernesto Eula, and that included former Prime Minister Giovanni Leone. Dante had been sentenced to death in both 1303 and 1315 after trials in Florence, but was subsequently exiled and had passed away on September 13, 1321. The hearing was the last event in a series of celebrations of the 700th anniversary of Dante's birth.[103]
Baptism of Mieszko in 966
  • The
    Easter Sunday, April 15, 966, at the age of 26. Church ceremonies at St. Adalbert's Cathedral ended in time for Communist Party leaders to assemble at the town square for public addresses.[104]
  • After 83 years at West 39th Street and Broadway,
    Lincoln Center on West 63rd Street, saying "The company goes on and will do all we can to deserve your continued support. The queen is dead. Long live the queen!"[105]
  • Chinese intellectual, poet and journalist Deng Tuo was publicly chastised by the government newspaper Beijing Daily, which revealed that he had written literary and political works that were now judged as counterrevolutionary, and listed the various pen names that he had used. More denunciations followed and on May 17, he committed suicide.[106]
  • Died: Nandalal Bose, 83, Indian painter

April 17, 1966 (Sunday)

April 18, 1966 (Monday)

Demonstration of Astronaut Maneuvering Unit
  • The extravehicular life support system (ELSS) for Gemini spacecraft No. 9 was returned to Cape Kennedy and underwent an electrical compatibility test with the
    Manned Spacecraft Center for tests (April 22) while the AMU was prepared for installation in the adapter. The ELSS was returned to the Cape April 26. AMU Final Systems Test and installation for flight were accomplished May 7. The ELSS was serviced and installed for flight May 16.[113]
  • The first official sporting event ever played on
    Houston Astrodome in Texas.[114] Originally, the turf was installed only in the infield. Astros outfielder Jimmy Wynn would later comment, "You could already feel the difference in how quickly the ball moved when it took its first good roll or hard bounce off that surface. It occurred to me that big changes were coming."[115] The visiting Los Angeles Dodgers defeated the Houston Astros in that game, 6–3.[116] The Dodgers and the Astros had previously been the first to test the turf in a preseason exhibition game on March 19.[117]
  • The
    Jiefangjun Bao, published a front-page editorial with the title "Hold High the Great Red Banner of Mao Tse-tung's Thought, and Actively Participate in the Great Socialist Cultural Revolution".[118][119]
  • Bill Russell became the first African-American head coach in the National Basketball Association (NBA), when the Boston Celtics named him to the helm at the end of the regular season.[120] Russell, who would continue to play for the Celtics even while coaching them, was named after Red Auerbach decided to retire from coaching in order to spend full-time as the Celtics' general manager.[121]
  • As a counter to France's announcement that it would withdraw from NATO on July 1, West Germany's Foreign Minister
    Gerhard Schroeder informed his French counterpart, Maurice Couve de Murville, that the 75,000 French troops in West Germany would either have to be placed under German authority or withdrawn.[122]
  • The Sound of Music, which had already broken the record for highest grossing motion picture, earned five Oscars out of ten nominations, including the award for Best Picture, at the 38th Academy Awards.[123][124][125]
  • The government of India declared the new
    Paradip Port to be the nation's eighth major port. Located in the state of Odisha, Paradip was also the first major port on India's east coast.[126]

April 19, 1966 (Tuesday)

  • Roberta Gibb of San Diego became the first woman to run in the Boston Marathon, though unofficially, because the foot race was officially limited to men at the time. Gibb had applied to the Boston Athletic Association in 1965 to run for that year's Marathon, and was rejected with a letter explaining that it was "not physiologically possible for a woman" to run the distance of more than 26 miles. On the day of the 1966 race, Gibb dressed in a hooded sweatshirt and sweatpants, hid near the starting line, then jumped in with the other runners as the race began in Hopkinton.[127] Unofficially, Gibb (whose married name was Mrs. Roberta Bingay) finished in 124th place in the field of more than 500 contestants, completing the course in 3 hours, 21 minutes and 25 seconds.[128] Winning the laurels in first place was Kenji Kimihara, who, as with the finishers in second (Seiichiro Sasaki), third (Toru Terasawa) and fourth place (Hikokoaru Okabe) was from Japan.[129]
  • Myra Hindley went on trial at Chester Crown Court, before Mr Justice Fenton Atkinson, for the murders of three children who had vanished between November 1963 and October 1965. They would be convicted two weeks later.[130]
  • Died:

April 20, 1966 (Wednesday)

April 21, 1966 (Thursday)

Ras Tafari, Emperor Haile Selassie
  • Ethiopia's Emperor Haile Selassie, known before his ascent to the throne as Ras Tafari Makonnen, a Ras among the Ethiopian nobility, was and remains a Messianic figure among thousands of adherents to the Rastafarian religion, primarily in Jamaica. When he arrived in Jamaica, thirty years after Rastafari took root, he was greeted at the Palisadoes Airport in Kingston by more than 100,000 people.[136][137][138] The anniversary of his visit is still celebrated as "Grounation Day", a holy day in the Rastafarian religion.[139]
  • MSC Director Robert R. Gilruth designated Deputy Director
    George M. Low as the principal focus and point of contact for all matters pertaining to AAP. This action, Gilruth told George E. Mueller, was only a short-range measure. He stated that he planned to create an AAP office as soon as practical, but that such action would take a number of weeks because it would involve a number of people throughout the Houston organization.[32]
  • For the first time, an artificial heart was installed in a human being, as Dr. Michael DeBakey and a team of surgeons from Baylor University implanted the device into coal miner Marcel DeRudder in order to keep him alive. The six-hour surgery took place at the Methodist Hospital in Houston.[140][141] Five days later, DeRudder, a resident of Westville, Illinois, would die from a ruptured lung.[142]
  • The opening of the Parliament of the United Kingdom was televised for the first time.[143]
  • Died: Sepp Dietrich, 73, convicted Nazi German war criminal and general who commanded various armored divisions during World War II

April 22, 1966 (Friday)

picture1
picture 2
Rambahadur and Victoria Cross

April 23, 1966 (Saturday)

The cassock

April 24, 1966 (Sunday)

  • A "mini-census" was conducted across the United Kingdom in Great Britain and Northern Ireland, using a ten percent sample. The detailed results, however, were ordered sealed for a century and are not scheduled to be released until January 1,
    2067
    .
  • The
    Stardust Grand Prix at Las Vegas, Nevada. The opening race was won by Canada's John Cannon
    .
  • Died:
    • George Humphrey, 76, English psychologist who, in 1923, published one of the first popular books about experimental psychology, The Story of Man's Mind.
    • Louis A. Johnson, 75, U.S. Secretary of Defense who was fired by President Harry Truman after the Korean War began.
    • Vyacheslav Oltarzhevsky, 86, Soviet skyscraper architect

April 25, 1966 (Monday)

  • The Kelud volcano in Indonesia, in East Java, erupted, sending lava and hot ash over into the surrounding area. According to the Indonesian news agency Antara, the village of Bambunan was destroyed[154] along with much of another nearby hamlet, Margomuijo.[155] The final death toll for three days of eruptions, including a larger blast on April 27, was 175 people, with another 60 missing.[156] The final toll, after the cessation of the eruption on May 7, would be 215.[157]
  • Eleven schoolchildren, mostly 7 and 8 years old, were killed by a drunken driver in Belgium in the town of Waregem-Asse while their teacher was giving them a lesson on how to safely cross the street.[158] The children had been standing on a sidewalk when a bakery truck skidded on to the curb after coming around a curve.[159] The driver, 43 year old Emile Tibeout, was later charged with manslaughter.[160]
  • TASS, the official Soviet news agency, reported that Asmar Salakhova of the Armenian SSR was the oldest woman in the world at the supposed age of 153 years old. Mrs. Salkhova claimed that she had been born in 1812, that she had been forced to go into exile at the age of 65 after an invasion in 1877, and that after 62 years away, when she was 137, "her dream came true" of returning home in 1949.[161]
  • The first edition of the British newspaper Morning Star (formerly the Daily Worker) was issued.[162]
  • Died:
    Maria Nikolaevna Kuznetsova, 85, Russian/Soviet opera singer and dancer[163]

April 26, 1966 (Tuesday)

April 27, 1966 (Wednesday)

April 28, 1966 (Thursday)

April 29, 1966 (Friday)

Bill Russell and Red Auerbach after the championship

April 30, 1966 (Saturday)

An SR.N6 hovercraft
  • Regular hovercraft service began over the English Channel, between Ramsgate and Calais, with an SR.N6 transporting 36 passengers. It would be discontinued in 2000.[185] The customers paid two pounds, two shillings (equivalent to $6.30) apiece for the journey.[186]
  • The body of
    Crown Prince Wilhelm of Germany and grandson of Kaiser Wilhelm II, was found in the Rhine river near the town of Bingen am Rhein, two weeks after he went missing from his home in the West German village of Erbach.[187]
  • Walpurgisnacht) as the beginning of the first day of the first "Anno Satanas".[188]
  • Died:
    • Everett Case, 65, North Carolina State University basketball coach who would later be inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame. In his will, Case bequeathed three-quarters of his estate to be divided among the 57 players whom he had coached over the years.[189]
    • Richard Fariña, 29, American folk singer and novelist; in a motorcycle accident in Carmel Valley Village, California, after a book-signing party for his first novel.[190]

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