September 1962

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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

The following events occurred in September 1962:

September 1, 1962 (Saturday)

  • 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
    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)

  • 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]
  • The United Kingdom approved the Malta Independence Act, providing that the British colony would become its own nation on September 21, 1964.[6]
  • All non-military air travel in the United States and Canada was grounded for five hours as part of "Exercise Sky Shield III".[7]
  • Born:
  • Died: William R. Blair, 89, 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.[9]

September 3, 1962 (Monday)

September 4, 1962 (Tuesday)

  • 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.[14]
  • The Gemini Project Office directed
    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.[15]
  • 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.[16]
  • Born:

September 5, 1962 (Wednesday)

Plaque in Manitowoc marking the impact site[17]

September 6, 1962 (Thursday)

September 7, 1962 (Friday)

  • The world's first
    Edwin Link. Scheduled to remain below for two days in a 3.5-metre (11 ft) long cylinder, Sténuit 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.[24]
  • Results of a joint study by the
    U.S. Department of Defense, and NASA of possible harmful effects of the artificial radiation belt, that had been 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.[25]
  • 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".[26]
  • Filming of Sergei Bondarchuk's War and Peace began and would continue for another six years.
  • Died:

September 8, 1962 (Saturday)

  • The
    R-12 (called SS-4 by NATO) offensive missiles arrived in Cuba, on board the freighter Omsk.[27] 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.[28]
  • 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.[29]
  • 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.[25]

September 9, 1962 (Sunday)

  • 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.[30]
  • 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.[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.
  • 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.[33][34]
  • Born:
  • Died: Paavo Aaltonen, 42, Finnish gymnast and a winner of three gold medals in the 1948 Olympics

September 10, 1962 (Monday)

Laver
  • Wimbledon (July).[35][36]
  • The railroad line between
    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.[37]
  • 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".[38][39]
  • The Mercury 8 launch mission was postponed to September 28, 1962, to allow additional time for flight preparation.[25]
  • Born:
    World Cup of Darts champion; in Amsterdam

September 11, 1962 (Tuesday)

  • 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.[40] 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."[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]
  • 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.[43] 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.[44]
  • Big Sur, by Jack Kerouac, was first published.[45]
  • 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).[46][47] 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.[48]

September 12, 1962 (Wednesday)

  • The first "mystery" satellite in 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.[25]
  • 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.[49] On hand were 40,000 people, mostly students.[50] 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.[51]
  • 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."[25]
  • President Kennedy visited the Manned Spacecraft Center and was shown exhibits of the
    Apollo spacecraft hardware.[25]

September 13, 1962 (Thursday)

  • 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."[52]
  • 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.[53]

September 14, 1962 (Friday)

  • 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.[15]
  • 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]
  • ITV Network to the whole of the United Kingdom.[55] Transmitters were located at Pembroke, Caernarvon and Flint.[56]
  • 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)

September 16, 1962 (Sunday)

September 17, 1962 (Monday)

September 17, 1962: The Group 2 astronauts

September 18, 1962 (Tuesday)

September 19, 1962 (Wednesday)

"Vicious ugliness'- the Dyna-Soar
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.[68] His reign would last for a week before he was overthrown.[69]
  • 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.[15]
  • 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.[70]
  • 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.[15]
  • 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.[71]
  • Died: Nikolai Pogodin, 61, Soviet playwright

September 20, 1962 (Thursday)

The MGB

September 21, 1962 (Friday)

September 22, 1962 (Saturday)

  • 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
    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".[34]
  • 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.[79]

September 23, 1962 (Sunday)

The new Philharmonic Hall
  • The
    New York Philharmonic Orchestra, and a host of operatic stars such as Eileen Farrell and Robert Merrill.[80]
  • 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.[81] 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.[82]
  • The Jetsons— George, Jane, Judy and Elroy— were introduced in a primetime cartoon of the same name at 7:30 p.m. 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.[83]
  • 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.[84]
  • Unbeknownst to the world, Pope John XXIII was diagnosed with terminal stomach cancer. He would pass away on June 3, 1963.[85]
  • 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)

September 25, 1962 (Tuesday)

  • A review conference for NASA's
    Gemini program.[15]
  • 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.[87]
  • 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.[88]
  • 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.[89]

September 26, 1962 (Wednesday)

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 p.m. 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."[90] 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.[91]
  • Restaurant entrepreneur
    Kentucky Fried Chicken Corporation.[92]
  • 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.[93]
  • A flash flood killed 445 people, in Barcelona and in the nearby villages of Sabadell and Terrassa in the Catalan region of Spain.[94]
  • Born:

September 27, 1962 (Thursday)

September 28, 1962 (Friday)

  • 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]
  • 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.[25]
  • 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.[97]
  • Prime Minister Ahmed Ben Bella founded the first government of independent Algeria.[98]
  • Born: Fred Merkel, American motorcycle racing champion; in Stockton, California

September 29, 1962 (Saturday)

September 30, 1962 (Sunday)

  • James 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".[101] That evening, at 8:15 p.m., 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.[102] 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.[103]
  • 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.[104] 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
    United Farm Workers of America, was founded in Fresno, California by Cesar Chavez.[105]
  • The
    CBS Radio Network broadcast the final episodes of Suspense and Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar, marking the end of the Golden Age of Radio.[106]
  • Died:
    Bey of Tunisia, who reigned from 1943 to 1957 before the abolition of the monarchy[107]

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