December 1950

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December 16, 1950: U.S. President Truman declares national emergency

The following events occurred in December 1950:

December 1, 1950 (Friday)

December 2, 1950 (Saturday)

December 3, 1950 (Sunday)

December 4, 1950 (Monday)

December 4, 1950: Flight of Refugees Across Wrecked Bridge in Korea.

December 5, 1950 (Tuesday)

December 6, 1950 (Wednesday)

  • The Washington Post music critic Paul Hume's review of a singing performance infuriated the father of the singer, who sent Hume a personal letter that made front-page news days later. The singer was 26-year old Margaret Truman, of whom Hume wrote,[33] and added that "She cannot sing with anything approaching professional finish.".[31] Her father happened to be the President of the United States; Harry S. Truman told Hume, "Some day I hope to meet you. When that happens you'll need a new nose, a lot of beefsteak for black eyes, and perhaps a supporter below!"[34] Hume apparently bore no ill will, and noting that Truman's friend Charlie Ross had died the day before, commented, "I can only say that a man suffering the loss of a close friend and carrying the terrible burden of the present world crisis ought to be indulged in an occasional outburst of temper."[35]
  • Pope Pius XII published his encyclical Mirabile illud, taking the form of a crusade of prayer for peace, prompted by concerns about the ongoing Korean War.
  • Paul Magloire was sworn into office as the 35th President of Haiti.[16]
  • The Joint Chiefs of Staff of the United States issued a directive to General Douglas MacArthur advising him to "exercise extreme caution" when making public statements, and to not speak to the press about military matters without approval from the JCS.[36] Two days later, however, the Army Secretary softened the directive with the statement that "Intent of instructions not to prohibit speeches by military on suitable occasions...Dept of Army is prepared to assist with advice and clearances when you are in doubt."[37] Violations of these orders would ultimately lead to General MacArthur being fired from the U.S. Army on April 11, 1951.
  • Died: Pietro Lana, 62, original member of Italy's national soccer football team who scored the first goal in Italy's first international game (May 15, 1910, in a 6–2 win over France).[38]

December 7, 1950 (Thursday)

  • The American cargo ship SS Lane Victory began the evacuation of civilian men, women and children at 5:00 am, shortly after docking at Hungnam in North Korea. According to Captain Albert E. Jarrell of Transport Division Eleven, the Lane Victory had expected that only 1,000 would need to be rescued from Wonsan. When the ship departed at midnight, there were 7,009 aboard, and 20,000 others desperately wanting to get on as well. Police forces had been instructed to screen for "only those persons whom the North Koreans might classify as 'enemy'".[39]
  • U.S. 1st Marine Division were able to safely evacuate across the frozen reservoir to retreat back toward South Korea.[40][41] The commander of the 1st Marines, Major General O. P. Smith, would famously tell a United Press reporter, "Retreat, hell! We're just attacking in a different direction."[42][43]
  • Aerolíneas Argentinas, was created as the government-owned national airline for Argentina by order of President Juan Perón, from the forced nationalization and merger of the private Alfa, Zonda, Aeroposta and Fama airlines.[45]

December 8, 1950 (Friday)

  • In a private meeting at the White House, President Truman told Britain's Prime Minister Attlee that he would not consider using nuclear weapons in war without consulting the United Kingdom. Attlee asked him to put it in writing, and Truman's response was that "if a man's word was no good, it would not be any better in writing". During a noon break, Secretary of State Dean Acheson and Assistant U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert A. Lovett asked Truman to talk with them privately, and Lovett reminded the President of a written agreement that the two nation's had made on January 7, 1948, canceling Britain's wartime right of veto over America's use of the atom bomb. Truman withdrew the pledge, and records of the meeting were altered to reflect only that Truman had said that it was "his desire to keep the Prime Minister at all times informed of developments."[46]
  • American General MacArthur ordered the U.S Army's X Corps to prepare for evacuation from Hungnam, starting on December 11.[47] On the same day, China's General Peng Dehuai, citing the high casualties of the Ninth Army in its fight against the American and South Korean armies, asked Mao Zedong for permission to allow the Chinese Army to recuperate rather than to pursue the retreating invaders. Chairman Mao declined, and ordered Peng to continue across the 38th Parallel in order to take control of South Korea.[48]
  • The
    amidships, on both sides. Onboard amenities would include a dancefloor and stage, tea room, buffet, cocktail bar, and a fish and chip saloon, later earning the ship the nickname "the fish and chip boat".[49]

December 9, 1950 (Saturday)

  • West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer approved the "Schuman Plan", proposed in May by French Foreign Minister Robert Schuman, to place the coal and steel industries of both nations under a unified authority. The plan, joined by other Western European governments, led to the creation of the European Coal and Steel Community. Eventually, unified economic operations would lead to the creation of the European Economic Community (the Common Market) and finally to the European Union.[50]
  • Use of the
    prefrontal lobotomy for psychiatric treatment was ordered prohibited in the Soviet Union by decree of the Ministry of Health. Thousands of such psychosurgical operations on the brain would be performed in the United States and other western nations into the 1970s, and it remains legal, though no longer commonly used.[51]
  • The catalytic converter for gasoline combustion engine automobiles was announced by French-born American mechanical engineer Eugene Houdry. At a press conference in Ardmore, Pennsylvania, Houdry explained that "we have found a way to change deadly carbon monoxide into carbon dioxide, and said that "the streets and highways will smell a lot better, and accidental deaths of motorists from carbon monoxide in vehicles should be eliminated."[52]
  • President Truman wrote in his journal, "I've had conference after conference on the jittery situation facing the country. I've worked for peace for five years and six months, and it looks like World War III is here. I hope not— but we must meet whatever comes and we will."[53]
  • According to sources within the
    British Foreign Office, in a 1992 discussion with Professor Bruce Cumings of the University of Chicago, General MacArthur requested authorization from President Truman to use atomic weapons in Korea, and submitted a list of targets on Christmas Eve. The requests were rejected and not made public knowledge.[54]
  • Greece entered the Korean War, with the arrival of the 849-member Greek Expeditionary Force. The units would serve with various cavalry and infantry regiments of the United States Army.[55]
  • An 8.2 magnitude earthquake occurred in the Atacama Desert of Chile near Calama and killed one person.[56]
  • Born:
    Basseterre, Saint Kitts

December 10, 1950 (Sunday)

  • Bertrand Russell won the Nobel Prize in Literature "in recognition of his varied and significant writings in which he champions humanitarian ideals and freedom of thought".[57]
  • Cecil Frank Powell won the Nobel Prize in Physics "for his development of the photographic method of studying nuclear processes and his discoveries regarding mesons made with this method".[58]
  • Ralph Bunche of the United States received the Nobel Peace Prize for his work in negotiating the peace agreements between Israel and its neighbors that ended the 1948 Arab–Israeli War. In his presentation speech, Nobel Committee Chairman Gunnar Jahn said, "Ralph Bunche, you have said yourself that you are an incurable optimist. You said that you were convinced that the mediation in Palestine would be successful... May you succeed in bringing victory to the ideals of peace, the foundation upon which we must build the future of mankind."[59]
  • American biochemist
    Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for their discoveries of that led to the isolation of the hormone cortisone.[60]
  • American author William Faulkner spoke at Stockholm to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature that had been awarded to him the year before. He gave "what has been hailed as one of the finest Nobel acceptance speeches ever given".[61] "Our tragedy today is a general and universal physical fear so long sustained by now that can even bear it. There are no longer problems of the spirit. There is only one question: When will I be blown up?". But, he added, "I believe that man will not merely endure: He will prevail. He is immortal, not because he alone among creatures has an inexhaustible voice, but because he has a soul, a spirit capable of compassion and sacrifice and endurance."
  • After being trapped behind enemy lines for two weeks, the 1st Division Marines, 20,000 American troops and British Commandos were finally able to break through Chinese forces that had held them at the Hagaru region. The Army soldiers and Marines pushed through narrow mountain roads, in temperatures that dropped to -25 °F (-32 °C).[62][63] At 2:40 a.m. local time, they linked up with the U.S. Army Third Division rescue force, then made the remaining 39 mile escape drive to Hungnam for evacuation.[64]
  • B-29s bombed Mirim airfield in Korea with high-explosive bombs, five days after UN forces abandoned the base and evacuated Pyongyang.[65]

December 11, 1950 (Monday)

  • The Hungnam evacuation started and continued for fifteen days, allowing 105,000 troops (mostly from the U.S. X Army Corps and the South Korean 1st Army Corps) to be evacuated from North Korea, along with 91,000 civilians. All serviceable equipment was taken out, including 17,500 vehicles and 350,000 tons of cargo. The evacuees from Hungnam harbor were protected by U.S. Navy air support from seven aircraft carriers, and by shelling from 13 ships. Fortunately, China and North Korea did not seriously interfere with the process, which would end on December 26.[47]
  • The
    Maria Hertogh riots broke out in Singapore when Muslims protested the return of a 13-year-old girl to her parents in her native land of the Netherlands. Maria's parents, both of the Roman Catholic faith, had been imprisoned by Japanese occupying forces during World War II; Maria was raised by Che Aminah and Mansoor Adabi, a Muslim couple in Bandung in the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia). After the Hertoghs located their daughter, now renamed Nadra, Adeline Hertogh went to court in Singapore and was awarded custody on December 2 (and annulled her betrothal to a Muslim schoolteacher) as the British colonial court in Singapore applied Netherlands law. The case of the "Dutch jungle girl" made headlines worldwide.[66] Singapore's Muslim community sided with Che and Aminah, who had fought to keep Maria. From December 3 to December 7, English and Malay language newspapers inflamed the situation by publishing photographs of Maria at the Christian Convent of the Good Shepherd. In three days of rioting, 18 people were killed, 173 injured and more than 500 arrested. Maria and her mother were flown to the Netherlands on December 12.[67]
  • For the first time, the United States Atomic Energy Commission established rules for the maximum measurable level of exposure to radiation.[68]
  • The parliament of South Korea passed the National Defense Forces Act, requiring all males between the ages of 17 and 40 to enlist and train as reserve military personnel. Soldiers, police and government officials were exempt from the requirement.[69]
  • North Korea's Kim Il Sung was fired from his post as Vice-Minister of Defense, after having been criticized by his fellow Communists as having failed to order enough air power to prevent the seizure of the nation by United Nations forces. As a result, General Kim Chaek was given the honor of addressing the rally to welcome North Korean soldiers back to Pyongyang. Dae-Sook Suh, Kim Il Sung: The North Korean Leader (Columbia University Press, 1988) p358
  • Died: Leslie Comrie, 57, New Zealand astronomer and computing pioneer, died of a stroke

December 12, 1950 (Tuesday)

  • The National Science Board, chosen by the President and confirmed by the U.S. Senate, held its first meeting as the National Science Foundation began operations.[70]
  • Paula Ackerman became the first woman in the United States to serve a congregation as a Rabbi. Her husband, Rabbi William Ackerman, had led the Temple Beth Israel in Meridian, Mississippi, but had passed away. Mrs. Ackerman, acting under the authority of a ruling in Reform Judaism, became the "interim spiritual leader", and was granted authority by the state of Mississippi to conduct marriages.[71]
  • The BBC began broadcasting its first television adaptation of Little Women, starring future broadcaster David Jacobs as Laurie. No recording of the series was made.[72]
  • Announcing an early version of sending printed materials to subscribers electronically, RCA Laboratories unveiled what it called "the first atomic facsimile library". The press release noted that it would give scientists "quick access to any scientific information anywhere that telephone lines can reach". The collection of nuclear science information was located at Oak Ridge, Tennessee. RCA reported that the first test of what is now referred to as "faxing" a document was when a scientist at the Y-12 electromagnetic separation plant needed a two-page report from the library and that "He had it complete in four and a half minutes."[73]
  • Born: Rajinikanth, Indian film idol and winner of six Best Actor awards from the Tamil Nadu State Film Awards, as Shivaji Rao Gaekwad in Bangalore
  • Died:
    Peter Fraser, 66, the 24th Prime Minister of New Zealand from 1940 to 1949, and Leader of the Opposition after the defeat of the New Zealand Labour Party
    in the 1949 elections.

December 13, 1950 (Wednesday)

  • The Battle of Chosin Reservoir ended inconclusively, with Chinese forces recapturing most of North Korea but the United Nations securing their position in South Korea.
  • People's Republic of China, replied to a confidential telegram sent two days earlier by Wu Xiuquan and Qiao Guanhua, who had appeared for an invitation by the United Nations Security Council to discuss an end to the Korean War. Zhou responded with a summary of his discussion the day before with India's Ambassador to China, K. M. Panikkar who had been a conduit for messages between China and the United States. "It is good that the Indian government is making great efforts for peace," he said, "however, it has not been entrusted by either America or the UN.... We are eager to know the whole opinion of the USA and the UN regarding conditions for an armistice." However, he added, "As to the 38th Parallel issue, it has long since been violated by the American invading armies and MacArthur, and is no longer in existence." The telegram would be made public decades later.[74]
  • Britain's Food Minister, Maurice Webb, announced a more than one-half reduction in the meat ration for its citizens, effective December 31. The new limit would go from 26 pence of fresh meat and corned beef per week, per person, to 12 pence, because of the halt of meat shipments by Argentina earlier in the year.[75] The Associated Press noted that the ration would allow a family of four to buy one-pound of beefsteak per week, but that "cheaper cuts of beef, lamb or mutton could stretch that allowance slightly".[76]
  • U.S. Senator Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin and one of his strongest critics, newspaper columnist Drew Pearson, got into a fistfight when the two encountered each other at the Sulgrave Club in Washington D.C.. McCarthy, known for his hunt for Communists and sympathizers in the United States, had made comments in the Senate that he would "take the hide off" Pearson when they next met; the senator said that Pearson had approached him and said "You get rough and I'll get you, McCarthy." In response, McCarthy said, "I smacked him with my open hand and knocked him down on his hips." Pearson's version was that "The senator kicked me twice in the groin. As usual, he hit below the belt."[77]
  • Born:
  • Died: Abraham Wald, 48, statistician and mathematician. Professor Wald and his wife, on his lecture tour of India, were en route from Madras to Trivandrum when their airplane crashed.[79]

December 14, 1950 (Thursday)

  • The office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) was created by vote of the UN General Assembly's Resolution 428 (V).[80]
  • Inventor Wayne M. Pierce, Jr. applied for a patent for the first snowmaking machine, the "snow gun", based on the discovery by Canadian scientist Ray Ringer, that artificial snowflakes could be created by blowing compressed water vapor through freezing air. U.S. Patent No. 2,676,471 would be granted to them on April 27, 1954. The three Americans had been inspired in 1948 after a winter without snow had severely decreased sales in their ski shop.[81][82]
  • Minister-President of Hesse; he remained in post until 1969.[83]

December 15, 1950 (Friday)

December 16, 1950 (Saturday)

  • At 10:20 a.m.,[88] President Truman signed Presidential Proclamation 2914, that included the statement "Whereas world conquest by communist imperialism is the goal of the forces of aggression that have been loosed upon the world; and Whereas, if the goal of communist imperialism were to be achieved, the people of this country would no longer enjoy the full and rich life they have with God's help built for themselves and their children..." among the reasons for proclaiming "the existence of a national emergency, which requires that the military, naval, air, and civilian defenses of this country be strengthened as speedily as possible...".[89] In pursuit of those purposes, the Office of Defense Mobilization was established. Truman's order, along with three other presidential proclamations of an emergency (on March 6, 1933; March 23, 1970; and August 15, 1971) would not be rescinded until the enactment of the "National Emergencies Act", which would become effective on September 14, 1978.[90]
  • The United States State Department froze all assets held in America by residents of China[91] and embargoed all trade with China and North Korea.[92] China would freeze all American assets on December 28.
  • East Germany enacted its "Law on Defense of Peace", directing that "Whoever slanders other peoples and races, incites against them, and demands their boycott in order to disturb peaceful relations between them to involve the German people in a new war, shall be punished by imprisonment or, in grave cases, by imprisonment at hard labor," effectively criminalizing any dissent against the government that might be considered to be defamation. Similar "defense of peace" laws would soon be passed in Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Poland and Romania.[93] Socialist Unity Party Chairman Walter Ulbricht announced the same day that the membership cards of all 1.2 million Party members were revoked and that no new ones would be issued until completion of a purging of anyone found to be inappropriate following an investigation.[94]

December 17, 1950 (Sunday)

  • Lieutenant Colonel Bruce Hinton shot down a Soviet MiG-15
    F-86 Sabre jets that the United States Air Force was using in combat for the first time, going up against four MiGs in a battle involving eight jet fighters.[95] The downed MiG-15 was piloted by Major Yakov Efromeenko, who ejected safely before his plane crashed.[96] F-86 pilots would shoot down another 791 Soviet-built fighters during the war.[97]
  • General
    Saigon (now Ho Chi Minh City) to serve as the new High Commissioner of French Indochina.[98] A strict disciplinarian, de Lattre would be able to temporarily halt the Viet Minh guerillas from taking Hanoi during 1951, but would serve for only a year, being forced to return to France on January 11, 1952, after being diagnosed with terminal cancer. He would die four months later, on May 8, 1952.[99]
  • Yonpo Airfield, located three miles from Hungnam and within range of Chinese and North Korean guns, was abandoned by the United Nations after completing the aerial evacuation of personnel there. Evacuation by sea from Hungnam Harbor would continue for another week.[100] By the time the UN forces withdrew from Yonpo, however, U.S. Army engineers and construction battalions had built a new airfield closer to the shoreline. The clearing of jungle, and the creation of a suitable landing strip, had been accomplished in only four days.[101]

December 18, 1950 (Monday)

  • The Bengal Central Bank merged with three other banks to form the United Bank of India.[102]
  • President Truman ordered the establishment of the Nevada Proving Ground so that nuclear weapons testing could be performed within the continental United States, and the American stockpile of atomic bombs and hydrogen bombs could be rapidly increased during the national emergency. There were five proposed locations, all of them federally owned, and the other four choices were at White Sands in New Mexico; Dugway Proving Ground in Utah; a fifty-mile strip of land between Fallon and Eureka, Nevada; or Pamlico Sound near Camp Lejeune in North Carolina. Three days later, the Atomic Energy Commission would lease a 350 square mile portion of the U.S. Air Force's Tonopah Bombing and Gunnery Range in Nye County, Nevada, 65 miles away from Las Vegas. The ground, renamed the Nevada Test Site, would be added to over the years. The desert site itself was relatively unpopulated, 25 miles away from the towns of Indian Springs and Cactus Springs. Six weeks after the selection, an atomic bomb would be detonated at Frenchman Flat on January 27, 1951.[103]
  • Born: Leonard Maltin, American film critic and historian, in New York City

December 19, 1950 (Tuesday)

December 20, 1950 (Wednesday)

December 21, 1950 (Thursday)

  • General Douglas MacArthur ordered the censorship of all news reports concerning the Korean War, with his office to provide official clearance before news reports, magazine articles, photographs and films, or broadcasts could be released to the world press.[109] Prohibited news included any criticism of the American and United Nations soldiers and commanders, or their handling of the war, and all correspondents were put under the jurisdiction of the United States Army, with punishments for violation of the order ranging from suspension of privileges, to trial by court martial. United Press reporter Peter Webb was one of the first to be punished, after failing to clear a report about the death of General Walker with MacArthur's headquarters; he was detained for 18 hours before being released. The Daily Dispatch of London would comment that the only thing that could officially be said about the United Nations troops was that they were in Korea.[110]
  • For the first time, the United States
    Robert E. Fulton, Jr. Like all other automobile airplanes that had sought a blessing from the CAB, the Airphibian had detachable wings. Fulton flew into Washington's National Airport, removed the wings, then, drove to offices of the Civil Aeronautics Administration, where he accepted the certification from administrator Donald W. Nyrop.[111]
  • The gold town of
    Free State Province
    of South Africa.
  • One of the most well-known articles of clothing in comic strips was introduced, when Charlie Brown was first seen in his "zig-zag T-shirt". Cartoonist Charles M. Schulz had added the distinction in order to set Charlie Brown apart from the rest of the strip's characters.[112]
  • The comedy-drama film Harvey starring James Stewart and Josephine Hull was released in the United States.
  • Born:
    Foreign Minister of Greece from 2015 to 2018; in Athens[113]
  • Died:

December 22, 1950 (Friday)

December 23, 1950 (Saturday)

December 24, 1950 (Sunday)

December 25, 1950 (Monday)

December 26, 1950 (Tuesday)

  • The new Headquarters of the United Nations building opened at 760 East 42nd Street in New York (now 760 United Nations Plaza). Secretary General Trygve Lie and most of his staff of 3,000 employees had previously been working at quarters leased from the Sperry Gyroscope Company at 1111 Marcus Avenue in Lake Success, New York.[137]
  • Lieutenant General Matthew Ridgway arrived in South Korea as the new commander of the Eighth U.S. Army, replacing General Walton Walker, who had died three days earlier.[138] Ridgway had been called to duty a few hours after Walker's death, and flew almost immediately to Tokyo to report to General MacArthur.[139]
  • Troops of the Chinese People's Volunteer Army crossed the 38th Parallel, aiding North Korea's second invasion of South Korea.[140] By then, thousands of South Korean men, women and children were fleeing Seoul.[141]
  • Outgoing Major League Baseball Commissioner Albert "Happy" Chandler announced an unprecedented deal of six million dollars from Mutual Broadcasting Company and the Gillette company for television rights to the World series.[142]
  • A fire at Prahran Market in Melbourne, Australia, destroyed part of the building.[143]
  • The comedy-drama film Born Yesterday starring Judy Holliday (in an Oscar-winning performance), William Holden and Broderick Crawford was released.
  • Died: James Stephens, 70, Irish novelist and poet

December 27, 1950 (Wednesday)

  • The United States began designating large areas of airspace over the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans and the Gulf of Mexico with the classification Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ) for any place "within which the ready identification, location, and control of aircraft is required in the interest of national security". From then on, all domestic and foreign flights would be required to file flight plans. Any incoming foreign aircraft was required to give their position to controllers when aircraft were "not less than one hour cruising distance via the most direct route, from the United States". Thus, the Atlantic ADIZ could range from 300 miles to 600 miles from U.S. territory.[144]
  • The agreed upon date for the
    Netherlands New Guinea until its handover to Indonesia in 1962–63, and is now the provinces of Papua and West Papua
    .
  • The
  • Born: Terry Bozzio, American drummer, in San Francisco, California
  • Died: Max Beckmann, 66, German artist who championed the "New Objectivity" school of post-expressionism in artistry.

December 28, 1950 (Thursday)

December 29, 1950 (Friday)

December 30, 1950 (Saturday)

  • After the Joint Chiefs of Staff had instructed him not to take the offensive in Korea, General MacArthur made a four-point counter-proposal to take the war to the People's Republic of China. He requested authority to "(1) blockade the coast of China; (2) destroy, through naval gunfire and air bombardment, China's industrial capacity to wage war; (3) secure reinforcements from the Nationalist garrison on Formosa [Taiwan] to strengthen our position in Korea if we decide to continue the fight for that peninsula; and (4) release existing restrictions on the Formosan garrison for diversionary action, possibly leading to counter invasions against vulnerable areas of the Chinese mainland." The Chiefs rejected the suggestions as unreasonable, and began to bypass MacArthur's command by sending orders directly to his subordinates.[156]
  • After a successful run on Los Angeles station KECA-TV, Space Patrol made its national television debut, on the ABC television network. The setting of the half-hour-long science fiction adventure series was 1,000 years in the future, in the year 2950 of the 30th Century, with Commander Buzz Corry and his sidekick, Cadet Happy, flying for the United Planets Space Patrol. The maiden episode was "Treachery on Mars". Live telecasts were made in Los Angeles at 6:00 pm Pacific time, and kinescope recordings were sent to other ABC affiliates.[157]
  • At 11:20 in the morning, a Royal Australian Air Force CAC Wirraway crashed into a crowded beach at Maroochydore in Queensland, Australia, killing three children and seriously injuring 14 other people on the beach. The Wirraway airplane had been conducting a patrol for sharks and was flying only 30 feet off the ground when its engine stalled. At the time, there were an estimated 700 people on the beach, and another 700 in the water. After a wingtip hit the ground, the plane cartwheeled through a group of 40 people. The two-man crew survived the crash, although the pilot's right leg was amputated.[158]
  • Over the Sierra Nevada desert, near Bishop, California, William S. Ivans, Jr. shattered the record for highest altitude achieved in a glider. The Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI) had recognized a 33,500 feet height reached by Jack Robinson earlier in the year. Ivans and his unpowered Schweitzer 1-23 aircraft were released from a B-13 bomber at 12,000 feet, and he soared a record 30,100 feet to more than eight miles altitude, topping off at 42,100 feet, as verified by inspection of a sealed barograph. He would be awarded the FAI's Lilienthal Prize for 1950.[159]
  • The comedy film At War with the Army starring the team of Martin and Lewis (in their first starring feature) premiered in San Francisco.[160]
  • "
    The Tennessee Waltz" by Patti Page topped the Billboard Best Sellers in Stores chart
    .
  • Died: Mihail Manoilescu, 59, Romanian fascist and journalist, in Sighet Prison

December 31, 1950 (Sunday)

  • Gapyeong and Chuncheon in the process.[161] China's "Third Phase Offensive" began at dusk on New Year's Eve, and would reach Seoul by January 4. The First Phase had been halting the advance of UN Troops toward China, and the Second Phase had been the retaking of North Korea.[25][162]
  • A proposed new national anthem for West Germany, Hymne an Deutschland (Hymn to Germany), was performed for the first time, played nationwide on the radio following a New Year's Eve message by President Theodor Heuss. Written by Rudolf Alexander Schroeder, and set to music by Hermann Reuter, the Hymne was not embraced by the public, and the traditional Deutschlandlied (without its "Deutschland, Deutschland über alles" stanza) would be reaffirmed as the nation's national anthem.[163]
  • Died:
    • Second Austrian Republic
      after World War II
    • Charles Koechlin, 83, French classical music composer

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  4. LCCN 61060979
    .
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  7. ^ Paul M. Edwards, The Korean War (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2006) p25
  8. ^ Danzig, Allison (December 3, 1950). "Navy Upsets Army, 14-2, Ending Cadet 28-Game Streak; Fordham Tops Syracuse; Oklahoma and Tennessee Win". The New York Times: S1.
  9. ^ "Past Commanders". navy.lk. Archived from the original on 2 September 2014. Retrieved 17 September 2014.
  10. ^ Prince of Pianists | Lipatti | Classical Music | Mark Ainley Archived 2015-10-22 at the Wayback Machine
  11. .
  12. ^ "Wounded Yanks Say Chinese Are Kept Doped Up". Chicago Daily Tribune. December 4, 1950. p. 4.
  13. ^ "Missing: One Korean Town, after Marine Flyers Go to Work". Chicago Daily Tribune. December 4, 1950. p. 2.
  14. ^ "Chinese Reds Help 4 Tommies Start up Truck". Chicago Daily Tribune. December 4, 1950. p. 2.
  15. ^ "Chinese Send 27 Wounded Yanks Back to Lines". Chicago Daily Tribune. December 4, 1950. p. 5.
  16. ^ a b c Lentz, Harris M. (2014). Heads of States and Governments Since 1945. Routledge.
  17. .
  18. ^ "Swiss Voters Agree to Keep War Time Taxes". Chicago Daily Tribune. December 4, 1950. p. 1.
  19. ^ Cox, Jim (2009). American Radio Networks: A History. McFarland. p. 210.
  20. ^ Kwan, Elizabeth (2006). Flag and Nation: Australians and their national flags since 1901. University of New South Wales Press. p. 100.
  21. .
  22. ^ "KOREAN WAR REFUGEES FLEE". AP Images. Associated Press. Retrieved 16 September 2021.
  23. The Pulitzer Prizes
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  24. ^ "Volcano Erupts in Caspian Sea; Island is Born". Chicago Daily Tribune. December 8, 1950. p. 5.
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  26. ^ "NEW ATTLEE PARLEY TODAY!". Chicago Daily Tribune. December 5, 1950. p. 1.
  27. .
  28. ^ "Election Coverage". Toronto Star. December 5, 1950.
  29. ^ "Aviation Hawaii: 1950–1959 Chronology of Aviation in Hawaii".
  30. ^ "Red Troops Take Pyongyang's Air Field— Last American Forces Leave Enemy's Capital", Chicago Daily Tribune, December 5, 1950, p1
  31. ^ a b Margaret Truman, Harry S. Truman (William Morrow & Company, 1973)
  32. ^ "Ross, Truman Aide, Dies in White House", Chicago Daily Tribune, December 6, 1950, p1
  33. ^ "Miss Truman cannot sing very well. She is flat a good deal of the time..." Franklin D. Mitchell, Harry S. Truman and the News Media: Contentious Relations, Belated Respect (University of Missouri Press, 1998) p198
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