February 1966

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1966
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The following events occurred in February 1966:

February 1, 1966 (Tuesday)

  • West Germany bartered for the release of 2,600 political prisoners from East Germany by a transaction involving the export of $24,250,000 worth of West German consumer goods to their East German neighbors, in return for allowing the prisoners to depart the Communist nation. The New York Times described the agreement as "payment of ransom of up to $10,000 per prisoner".[1] The goods, scarce in the East and abundant in the West, were items such as coffee, fresh fruit and butter, as well as fertilizer.[2]
  • International pressure against the white-minority government of Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) was stepped up three major airlines serving the nation— British Overseas Airways Corporation (BOAC), British United Airways and Alitalia— made their last flights into the capital at Salisbury (now Harare), then departed and canceled further service.[3]
  • Nineteen employees of the John W. Campbell farms in Dade County, Florida were killed when the bus they were riding in was struck by a freight train. The men were being brought home after a day's work of harvesting vegetables, and the Seaboard Lines train was on its way to the farm to pick up the cars that had been loaded with produce. All of the dead were migrant workers from Puerto Rico, and most of them were young men in their 20s.[4][5]
  • Died: Buster Keaton, 70, American film comedian; and Hedda Hopper, 80, American gossip columnist

February 2, 1966 (Wednesday)

  • American adventurer Nick Piantanida set off in the Strato Jump II from a park in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, in an attempt to make the highest parachute jump ever, and inadvertently reached the highest altitude ever reached by a balloonist. When he reached his target altitude of 110,000 feet, he prepared to jump and then discovered that the oxygen hose that tethered him to the gondola was frozen and could not be disconnected. While he struggled to set himself free, the balloon continued to climb until he was more than 23 miles high. At 123,500 feet, he aborted the parachute jump, separated the gondola from the balloon, and spent the next 32 minutes descending to Earth while the gondola's parachute system slowed his fall. Besides not being able to set the parachute record, he did not set an officially recognized altitude record either, because he had returned to Earth without the balloon. Three months later, on May 1, Pantanida would make a new attempt to set a record, but would suffer a fatal accident on Strato Jump III.[6]
  • A vulture collided with a Pakistan International Airlines helicopter, causing a rotor blade to tear off, and killing 24 of the 25 people on board. The accident occurred as the helicopter was approaching a landing in Faridpur in what is now Bangladesh.[7]
  • At Belmore Park in Sydney, three young Australian men became the first persons to burn their draft registration cards as a protest against Australia's participation in the Vietnam War. Wayne Haylen, Barry Robinson and Greg Barker stood before a crowd of 200 people and declared their intention to refuse the draft.[8]
  • Go-Set, Australia's first pop music newspaper, was launched in Melbourne.[9]

February 3, 1966 (Thursday)

  • At 18:45:30 GMT (9:45 p.m. in Moscow), the unmanned Soviet Luna 9 became the first object to make a controlled landing on the Moon, touching down in the Oceanus Procellarum to the northwest of the Reiner crater. It began transmitting signals four minutes later, and within 20 minutes of landing, sent back the first ground-level photographs of the Moon's surface.[10] Although the arrival wasn't quite a "soft" landing— the capsule was ejected when the descent module was 16 feet above the surface, and bounced several times before coming to rest— it was a more gentle descent than previous probes that had crashed into the ground. The pictures would yield an important discovery, demonstrating that the surface of the Moon was solid rock, rather than the accumulation of eons of dust deposits, and therefore would be suitable for a manned landing.[11]

February 4, 1966 (Friday)

February 5, 1966 (Saturday)

  • The day after Pierre Harmel announced that he would resign as Prime Minister of Belgium because physicians had threatened to go on strike at midnight on Sunday, King Baudouin refused to accept the resignation and explained his reasons in a two-page letter.[13] Harmel would finally step aside six weeks later in favor of Paul Vanden Boeynants.
  • At the annual four-man bobsled world championships at Cortina D'Ampezzo in Italy, the members of the West German team were injured after their sled failed to negotiate a sharp curve and crashed. The driver, Anton Pensberger, never regained consciousness and died of brain and spinal cord injuries at the local hospital. Rider Roland Eberhardt and brakeman Ludwig Siebert were unconscious, while the fourth teammate, Helmut Wurzer, was only slightly hurt.[14]
  • Born: José María Olazábal, Spanish golfer, in Hondarribia

February 6, 1966 (Sunday)

February 7, 1966 (Monday)

  • Lyndon Johnson of the United States and Nguyễn Cao Kỳ of South Vietnam convened with other officials in Honolulu, Hawaii to discuss the course of the Vietnam War.[19][20]
  • Television was broadcast in South Vietnam for the first time, as the United States Navy used "Stratovision" sending a C-121 Constellation airplane to carry transmitting equipment, videotape machines and a small television studio aloft. The C-121 took off from Saigon, climbed to 10,500 feet, then flew in a slow oval pattern at 170 miles per hour, and, at 7:30 p.m., transmitted the first THVN programs to outdoor television sets that had been tuned to Channel 9; the United States and South Vietnam would set up four ground-based stations in the autumn.[21]
  • Paul Williams and other students at Swarthmore College published the first issue of the rock music magazine Crawdaddy!, starting with ten pages of material and 500 copies printed on a mimeograph machine.[22] The publication, which preceded Rolling Stone by almost two years, would develop into a mass market publication lasting through 1979, and being revived by Williams from 1993 to 2003.
  • Born: Chris Rock, African-American comedian, as Christopher Julius Rock III in Andrews, South Carolina; and Kristin Otto, German Olympic swimming champion who won six gold medals for East Germany in the 1988 Summer Olympics; in Leipzig

February 8, 1966 (Tuesday)

  • The Tugu Nagara, Malyasia's National Monument to commemorate the lives of the 11,000 people who died in combat during the Malayan Emergency, was unveiled in a ceremony in near Kuala Lumpur. Ismail Nasiruddin of Terengganu, the elected monarch (Yang di-Pertuan Agong) [23] The world's tallest bronze freestanding sculpture features seven statues of Malay fighters and has the inscription, "Dedicated to the Heroic Fighters in the Cause of Peace and Freedom— May the Blessing of Allah Be upon Them."

February 9, 1966 (Wednesday)

  • The Board of Governors of the six-team National Hockey League voted to admit six expansion franchises, out of 18 candidates, for the 1966-1967 season, doubling the NHL's size. The existing teams in Boston, Chicago, Detroit, Montreal, New York, Toronto, would be joined by clubs at Los Angeles, Minnesota, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, St. Louis and San Francisco.[24]
  • The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at a record level of 995 points, then gradually declined more than 25% over the next seven months, closing at 744.32 on October 8.[25]
  • Sir John Paul, who had served as the Governor-General of The Gambia since the West African nation's grant of independence from the United Kingdom a year earlier, stepped aside in favor of a Gambian native, Sir Farimang Singateh. Singateh would preside as the Head of State on behalf of Queen Elizabeth II until 1970, when the Gambia would become a republic.[26]
  • Died: Sophie Tucker, 79, Russian-born U.S. singer, comedian, actress, and radio personality; Richard Raymond Willis, 89, Royal Army officer and one of six recipients of the Victoria Cross for heroism in the Gallipoli Campaign in 1915; and Paul S. Epstein, 82 Russian-American mathematical physicist and pioneer in quantum mechanics.

February 10, 1966 (Thursday)

  • Valley of the Dolls, by author Jacqueline Susann, was released by publisher Bernard Geis Associates and quickly rose to become the number one best-selling novel. From a friend, Susann had obtained a list of the bookstores upon which The New York Times relied on sales figures to determine its bestseller list. She then used her own money to buy large quantities of the book at these stores, resulting in her novel going to #1 on the list. Valley of the Dolls would go on to rank among the best selling novels of all time.[27]
  • Died: Major-General J. F. C. Fuller, 87, British Army strategist and military historian

February 11, 1966 (Friday)

February 12, 1966 (Saturday)

February 13, 1966 (Sunday)

  • In what one author has described as "the single largest contribution made by drones during the Vietnam War",[40] a Firebee 147E unmanned aircraft with electronic intelligence monitors was sent on a one-way mission to be shot down by the SA-2 antiaircraft radar and missile defense system being used by North Vietnam. The drone was picked up by the radar and destroyed, but not before "finally acquiring the long-mysterious command uplink and downlink signals" that were used in the SA-2 operation, and relaying the data back to a nearby DC-130 transport aircraft; acquisition of the signal led to developing methods to jam it as well.[41]
  • The Washington Post ran a story headlined "Car Safety Critic Nader Reports Being 'Tailed'", by reporter Morton Mintz, a revelation that would eventually propel consumer advocate Ralph Nader to national fame and turn his recent book Unsafe at Any Speed into a bestseller. Nader's crusade against General Motors had largely been overlooked, until "the company did not recognize the value of public relations and opted instead to use intimidation and harassment to shut down Nader... The result was the media coverage and attention GM had hoped to avoid." [42] Though the Post story ran on page 43, and didn't get attention right away, other magazines and newspapers would soon investigate the story and made Nader's name a household word.[43]
  • The closing ceremony of the 1966 Winter Universiade was held at Sestriere, Italy.
  • The Second Route of Western Australia's Eastern Railway was closed, after almost 70 years of operation.

February 14, 1966 (Monday)

Australian $1 coin
  • At 12:01 a.m., "C-day" began and the currency of Australia was decimalised, and the Australian dollar was introduced, while the Australian pound would be phased out over two years under the auspices of the Decimal Currency Board. Pound notes were replaced by two-dollar bills, ten-shilling notes by one dollar notes, and the shilling itself (12 pence) exchanged for a ten-cent piece. The sixpence and the new five cent piece were interchangeable. The nation's banks, which had been closed since February 9, began the exchange of monies upon opening Monday morning.[44][45]
  • Soviet writers Yuli Daniel and Andrei Sinyavsky were convicted of authoring "anti-Soviet" books and sentenced to five and seven years hard labour, respectively. Under the pen-name "Nikolai Arzhak", Daniel had written the story "Moscow Calling", which Judge Lev Smirnov concluded to be intentionally malicious. Sinyavsky's "What Is Socialist Realism?" (written under name "Abram Tertz") was described by Judge Smirnov as "a mockery of the ideas of communist construction".[46]
  • Twenty-three people were killed and 30 injured when the train they were in derailed after departing the town of Shwe Nyaung in northeast Burma and sent seven coaches into a deep ravine.[47]

February 15, 1966 (Tuesday)

February 16, 1966 (Wednesday)

  • One week before Ash Wednesday, Pope Paul VI issued the apostolic constitution Paenitemini, revising obligations for Roman Catholic Church adherents for Lent. The age at which abstinence was required was raised to 14 years old, and the number of universal days of fasting days was reduced from 40 days to only two (Ash Wednesday and Good Friday), and the days of obligatory abstinence to eight (Ash Wednesday, Good Friday, and the Fridays in between).[51]
  • The twentieth and last nuclear explosion in Algeria was conducted in the desert in a test by France, near the village of In Eker.[52] Afterwards, until January 27, 1996, all French tests would take place at locations in the South Pacific Ocean, primarily at the atolls of Moruroa and Fangataufa.
  • Thirty-six people were killed, and 53 injured, by two bombs placed an express train in the Assam state of India. According to Railways Minister Ram Sabhag Singh, the train had been halted when a time bomb exploded in the rear compartment of a coach with passengers inside. An hour later, while the victims were still being removed, a second bomb exploded in the front of the train, killing rescue workers and more passengers.[53]
  • Twenty-nine people on a commuter train were killed as they approached the Yugoslavia city of Split (now in Croatia), and 27 more were injured. The passenger train was impacted by a 19-car coal train that had been descending a steep grade when its brakes failed.[54]
  • Sixteen coal miners died in an explosion near Kamp-Lintfort, West Germany.[55]
  • J. Carlyle Sitterson became Chancellor of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.[56]

February 17, 1966 (Thursday)

  • Aeroflot Flight 65 crashed as it took off from Sheremetyevo International Airport near Moscow, in the first fatal accident involving the Soviet Tupolev Tu-114 turboprop airliner.[57] A wing of the jet struck a snowbank while accelerating down the runway, which hadn't been cleared of snow adequately. Reportedly, the plane — which was inaugurating the first Aeroflot service to Brazzaville in the French Congo — in reached an altitude of 100 feet before coming down, and the cabin broke in two. Initial reports set the death toll at 48 of the 70 people on board,[58] though later reports confirmed the death toll at 21 of 48 people on board.
  • At Geneva, representatives from Venezuela and the United Kingdom signed a treaty to delineate the boundary between Venezuela and British Guiana (now Guyana).[59]
  • The "Three-point Proposal" for ending the Vietnam War was presented at the United Nations headquarters in New York by a spokesman for Secretary-General U Thant, calling for cessation of bombing of North Vietnam by the United States, a scaling down of military activities, and an agreement by all sides to enter into discussions with representatives of the Viet Cong.[60]
  • The draft classification of world heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali was reclassified from 1-Y (unfit for military service) to 1-A, after the armed services revised standards from accepting only the upper 15th percentile of IQ to the upper 30th percentile. The revision would lead to Ali's refusal to register on religious beliefs, his arrest, and the loss of his championship status.[61]
  • The FIS Nordic World Ski Championships opened at the Holmenkollen ski arena in Oslo, Norway.
  • Reg Withers entered the Australian Senate, filling the vacancy caused by the death of Senator Sir Shane Paltridge. In the Australian House of Representatives, Joe Clark became Father of the House, and would go on to be the tenth longest-serving member of the House of Representatives.[62]
  • Died: Hans Hofmann, 85, German-born American abstract expressionist painter

February 18, 1966 (Friday)

  • The consulate of the People's Republic of China in Phong Saly, Laos, was heavily strafed by gunfire, and the Beijing government charged that four American fighter jets had attacked "with more than 600 bullets", as well as dropping eight bombs to the east of the city, which was 20 miles from the border with China.[63]
  • In an attempt to artificially boost the Nielsen ratings for a sweeps month television presentation of An Evening with Carol Channing, Rex Sparger conspired with Channing's husband, producer Charles Lowe, to pay viewers in 58 households in Ohio and Pennsylvania to watch the entire program. The Nielsen company's screening procedures detected the unusual spike of viewers in those locations, and omitted the areas from its sample that evening.[64] It would file a $1,500,000 lawsuit against Sparger on March 24,[65] which would be settled after Sparger signed a consent order conceding his attempt to distort the ratings. Sparger would reveal that he had found out the identities of contractors who serviced the meters placed on television sets, then followed them as they called on the sample homes.[66]
  • Twenty-two people were killed, and 23 others seriously injured, when their bus plunged over a 70 foot high cliff outside of the seaside town of Ye in Burma. Burmese officials reported that the steering rod had snapped as the bus was driving on a curving mountain road.[67]
  • Born: Phillip DeFreitas, England cricketer, in Scotts Head, Dominica
  • Died: Grigori Nelyubov, 31, one of the twenty original Soviet cosmonauts, after being struck by a train in an apparent suicide attempt. Nelyubov and two other cosmonauts had been dismissed from the Soviet space program after getting into a fight with military guards on March 27, 1963.

February 19, 1966 (Saturday)

February 20, 1966 (Sunday)

File:Valery Tarsis.jpg
Valery Tarsis
  • The Soviet Union revoked the citizenship of Soviet author Valery Tarsis, who had emigrated to the United Kingdom two weeks earlier.[71][72]
  • The Norwegian oil tanker Anne Mildred Brovig collided with the British coaster MV Pentland off of the coast of West Germany near Heligoland. Both ships caught fire [73] and the Brovig sank, spilling 16,000 tons of its cargo of Iranian crude oil, the last major spill to threaten Germany. Between the use of dispersants and favorable weather, the oil slick disappeared without damaging the German coast.[74]
  • Cecilia Cummins was born in Richmond, North Yorkshire, the fifth child of the Cummins family to have a February 20 birthday since 1952, a coincidence that has been noted in the Guinness Book Of World Records since 1977 under the category "Most siblings born on the same day". The book noted that the odds were one in 17,797,577,730.[75][76] Her arrival coincided with the birthdays of her sisters Catherine (14), Carol (13), Claudia (5) and her brother Charles (10).
  • Emmett Ashford became the first African-American Major League Baseball umpire, hired by the American League after 15 years as a minor league umpire.[77]
  • After the injection of contaminated waste water into the mountains of the Rocky Mountain Arsenal caused earthquakes in Denver, Colorado, the program was halted. Tremors had started one month after the first injection on March 8, 1962, then halted temporarily after a cessation of the process.[78]
  • Born: Cindy Crawford, American model and actress, in DeKalb, Illinois
  • Died: Chester Nimitz, 80, U.S. Fleet Admiral who commanded the Pacific Fleet in World War II, and later Chief of Naval Operations.

February 21, 1966 (Monday)

February 22, 1966 (Tuesday)

  • The Soviet Union launched two dogs, "Veterok" and "Ugolyok" (translated in the American press as "Breezy" and "Blackie", respectively) into orbit around the Earth on board the satellite Kosmos 110.[84] The two dogs would remain in orbit for 22 days and then safely return to Earth on March 16.[85]
  • British Prime Minister Harold Wilson announced that the United Kingdom would withdraw its troops from the Aden Protectorate by 1968, endorsing the "Defence White Paper" that stated "we do not think it appropriate that we should maintain defence facilities there" after independence was granted.[86]
  • Milton Obote, the Prime Minister of Uganda, called for a meeting of his cabinet. After discussions started, he called in soldiers and then placed five of the group (State Minister Grace Ibingira, Agriculture Minister Mathias Ngobi, Health Minister Emmanuel Lumu, Minister of Works Balaki Kirya and Labour Minister George Magezi) [87] under arrest on grounds that they had been "conspiring to overthrow the Government by violent means".[88]
  • The Broadway production of Slapstick Tragedy: Two Plays by Tennessee Williams premiered at the Longacre Theatre. Despite Williams's success with productions such as The Glass Menagerie, A Streetcar Named Desire and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, the double-bill of plays (The Mutilated and The Gnädiges Fräulein) would close after only seven performances.[89]
  • The 1966 Australian Grand Prix was held at Lakeside International Raceway and was won by Graham Hill.[90]

February 23, 1966 (Wednesday)

  • 1966 Syrian coup d'état: Major General Salah Jadid launched a coup, arresting President Amin al-Hafiz, Prime Minister Salah al-Din al-Bitar, Speaker of Parliament Mansour Attrish, and the Defense Minister, Major General Mohammed Omran. Major Jedid had been leader of the extremist faction of the Ba'ath Party until a purge in December. A future President, Air Force General Hafez al-Assad, was named as the new Defense Minister.[82][91] Hafiz's private residence was attacked by troops led by Salim Hatum and Rifaat al-Assad. Jadid appointed Nureddin al-Atassi was as the new figurehead President, and Yusuf Zu'ayyin was restored to office as Prime Minister.[92]
  • Isaac Adaka Boro, leader of the rebel Ijaw Volunteer Force, captured the city of Yenagoa with a force of 159 youths, then declared the independence of the short-lived Niger Delta People's Republic; the Republic lasted only 12 days before police arrived from Lagos and arrested the rebels.[93]

February 24, 1966 (Thursday)

  • A military coup in Ghana overthrew President-for-Life Kwame Nkrumah while he was making a state visit to Beijing.[94][95] Former Major General Joseph A. Ankrah, who had been fired the year before by Nkrumah, was named as the leader of the seven-man National Liberation Council that took control of the government. Across Ghana, enthusiastic crowds tore down statues that Nkrumah had erected for himself as "Redeemer of the Nation".[96] Declassified CIA and U.S. State Departmend documents, released in 2001, would show that the U.S., the U.K. and France provided the funding to the coup leaders.[97] Ankrah would be forced to resign on April 3, 1969, after being charged with corruption.[26]
  • Two days after arresting cabinet members, Uganda's Prime Minister Milton Obote fired Sir Edward Mutesa and took over as the new President of Uganda.[98]
  • Student protesters outside of the presidential palace in Jakarta were killed when Indonesian President Sukarno's guards fired into the crowd.[99]
  • Born: Billy Zane, American film actor, in Chicago

February 25, 1966 (Friday)

Guyana's coat of arms

February 26, 1966 (Saturday)

February 27, 1966 (Sunday)

February 28, 1966 (Monday)

Charles Bassett and Elliot See

References

  1. "W. Germany Buys Freedom for 2,600", Ottawa Journal, February 1, 1966, p1
  2. "Bonn Frees Political Prisoners" , Corsicana (TX) Daily Sun, February 2, 1966, p18
  3. J. R. T. Wood, A Matter of Weeks Rather Than Months: The Impasse Between Harold Wilson and Ian Smith Sanctions, Aborted Settlements and War 1965-1969 (Trafford Publishing, 2012) p50
  4. "Florida Train Kills 18", Kansas City Times, February 2, 1966, p1
  5. "18 Killed In Miami Bus-Train Crash", Sarasota (FL) Herald-Tribune, February 2, 1966, p1
  6. David Shayler, Disasters and Accidents in Manned Spaceflight (Springer, 2000) p38
  7. "Helicopter Collides With Vulture; 24 Die", Bridgeport (CT) Telegram, February 3, 1966, p1
  8. Sean Scalmer, Dissent Events: Protest, the Media, and the Political Gimmick in Australia (University of New South Wales Press, 2002) pp4-5
  9. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  10. Paolo Ulivi, Lunar Exploration: Human Pioneers and Robotic Surveyors (Springer, 2004) p62
  11. Tim Furniss, A History of Space Exploration: And Its Future (Globe Pequot, 2003) p54
  12. John Ion, Laser Processing of Engineering Materials: Principles, Procedure and Industrial Application (Butterworth-Heinemann, 2005) p18
  13. "Belgian King Tells Premier To Stay On", San Antonio Express and News, February 6, 1966, p10-A
  14. "Pensberger, German Sled Driver, Dies After Crash", Chicago Tribune, February 6, 1966, p2-3
  15. Nohlen, D & Stöver, P (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p1165 ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7
  16. Tim Brooks and Earle F. Marsh, The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows, 1946-Present (Random House, 2009) p905
  17. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  18. "Sets World Skate mark", Chicago Tribune, February 7, 1966, p3-1
  19. 19.0 19.1 19.2 19.3 Mary Katharine Hammond, "The Month in Review", Current History, April 1966.
  20. Foreign Relations of the United States, 1964–1968, Volume IV, Vietnam, 1966, "January 31–March 8: The Honolulu Conference; Congressional Hearings on the War", ed. David C. Humphrey & David S. Patterson, 1998.
  21. Lynn Boyd Hinds, Broadcasting the Local News: The Early Years of Pittsburgh's KDKA-TV (Penn State Press, 2010) p33
  22. Thomas M. Kitts, John Fogerty: An American Son (Routledge, 2015)
  23. Kevin Blackburn and Karl Hack, War Memory and the Making of Modern Malaysia and Singapore (National University of Singapore Press, 2012) pp237-238
  24. "NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE ADDS 6 CLUBS", Chicago Tribune, February 10, 1966, p3-1
  25. Ed Carlson, Technical Analysis Trading Methods and Techniques (Financial Times Press, 2011)
  26. 26.0 26.1 Heads of States and Governments Since 1945, by Harris M. Lentz (Routledge, 2014)
  27. Barbara Seaman, Lovely Me: The Life of Jacqueline Susann (Seven Stories Press, 1996) p303
  28. Walter Thabit, How East New York Became a Ghetto (New York University Press, 2005)
  29. cricinfo: England tour of Australia, 1965/66. Accessed 7 April 2014
  30. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  31. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  32. Lunar calendar:between January 23 and February 26 of 1966
  33. 33.0 33.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  34. "Bangladesh", in Historical Dictionary of Pakistan, by Shahid Javed Burki (Rowman & Littlefield, 2015) p103
  35. Yan Jianqi and Gao Gao (D. W. Y. Kwok, translator), Turbulent Decade: A History of the Cultural Revolution (University of Hawaii Press, 1996) p31
  36. Dan J. O'Keefe, The Real Festivus: The True Story Behind America's Favorite Made-up Holiday (Penguin, 2005)
  37. to the World, Festivus is come.html|"Fooey to the World: Festivus Is Come", by Allen Salkind, New York Times, December 19, 2004
  38. Rabbi's brutal 1966 murder witnessed by hundreds,by Jerome Hansen and Susan Holmes, "Detroit Free Press", February 12, 2016
  39. Rabbi Morris Adler Shot in His Synagogue in Detroit; Condition Grave, February 13, 1966, "Jewish Telegraphic Agency"
  40. Laurence R. "Nuke" Newcome, Unmanned Aviation: A Brief History of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, 2004) p90
  41. Steven J. Zaloga, Red SAM: The SA-2 Guideline Anti-Aircraft Missile (Osprey Publishing, 2011) p18
  42. Karla Gower, Public Relations and the Press: The Troubled Embrace (Northwestern University Press, 2007) p75
  43. Michael R. Lemov, Car Safety Wars: One Hundred Years of Technology, Politics, and Death (Rowman & Littlefield, 2015) p82
  44. "DOLLARS, CENTS TODAY— PM expects 'C' change to be smooth", The Age (Melbourne), February 14, 1966, p1
  45. David Solomon and Tom Spurling, The Plastic Banknote: From Concept to Reality (CSIRO Publishing, 2014) pp1-2
  46. "Two Soviet Writers Get Prison Terms", Chicago Tribune, February 15, 1966, p3
  47. "Burmese Wreck Toll Rises To 23", Cumberland (MD) Evening Times, February 15, 1966, p1
  48. "Gas Kills 17 in Swiss Tunnel", Chicago Tribune, February 16, 1966, p1
  49. Political Studies and Public Administration Department of the American University of Beirut (1966). Chronology of Arab Politics 4. American University of Beirut.
  50. Enrique Dussel, A History of the Church in Latin America (Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, 1981) p166
  51. Lauren Pristas, The Collects of the Roman Missals: A Comparative Study of the Sundays in Proper Seasons before and after the Second Vatican Council (A & C Black, 2013) p119
  52. Dennis Kumeta, Managing the Transition: Renewable Energy and Innovation Policies in the UAE and Algeria (Routledge, 2014)
  53. "Bombs Kill 36 Indians Riding Train", Nashua (NH) Telegraph, February 18, 1966, p3
  54. "Train Crash Kills 29", Kansas City Times, February 17, 1966, p3-C
  55. "Blast Kills 16 Miners In Germany", Troy (NY) Record, February 17, 1966, p2
  56. Chancellor of Change - The Legacy of J. Carlyle Sitterson '31
  57. Aviation Safety Network
  58. "Soviet Tu-114 Crash Kills 48 in Moscow", Chicago Tribune, February 18, 1966, p1
  59. J. A. S. Grenville and Bernard Wasserstein, Major International Treaties of the Twentieth Century: A History and Guide with Texts (Taylor & Francis, 2000) p791
  60. M. S. Rajan and T. Israel, "The United Nations and the Conflict in Vietnam", in The Vietnam War and International Law, Volume 4: The Concluding Phase (Princeton University Press, 2015) p124
  61. Terry Crowdy, Military Misdemeanors: Corruption, Incompetence, Lust and Downright Stupidity (Osprey Publishing, 2007) pp218-219
  62. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  63. "China Charges Attack by U.S.", Chicago Tribune, February 20, 1966, p1
  64. "Industrial Spying Upsets Nielsen", Newport (RI) Daily News, March 3, 1966, p15
  65. "Nielsen Sues Former Congress Investigator", Corpus Christi (TX) Caller-Times, March 25, 1966, p26
  66. Hugh Malcolm Beville, Audience Ratings: Radio, Television, and Cable (Routledge, 1988) p98
  67. "22 Riding Bus Hurled to Death", Albuquerque (NM) Journal, February 19, 1966, p1
  68. "British Naval Boss Resigns Over Policy", Chicago Tribune, February 20, 1966, p4
  69. Richard A. Greenwald, Exploring America's Past: A Reader in Social, Political, and Cultural History, 1865-present (University Press of America, 1996) p242
  70. David L. DiLeo, George Ball, Vietnam, and the Rethinking of Containment (University of North Carolina Press Books, 1991) p141
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  72. "Russia Lifts Citizenship of Tarsis", Chicago Tribune, February 21, 1966, p3
  73. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  74. Sebastian A. Gerlach, Marine Pollution: Diagnosis and Therapy (Springer, 2013) p84
  75. Guinness World Records website
  76. "FIVE of these siblings share the same birthday - and there's not even a pair of twins!", Daily Mail, February 21, 2014
  77. "African-American Umpires", in A Game of Inches: The Stories Behind the Innovations that Shaped Baseball, Volume 1 (Rowman & Littlefield, 2006)
  78. Harsh K. Gupta and B.K. Rastogi, Dams and Earthquakes (Elsevier, 2013) p84
  79. "NATO Warned by De Gaulle", Chicago Tribune, February 22, 1966, p1
  80. Helga Haftendorn, NATO and the Nuclear Revolution: A Crisis of Credibility, 1966-1967 (Clarendon Press, 1996) pp1-2
  81. Will Fowler, Britain's Secret War: The Indonesian Confrontation, 1962-66 (Osprey Publishing, 2006) p41
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  111. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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