November 1959

November 1959

January – February – March – April – May – June – July – August – September – OctoberNovemberDecember

The following events occurred in November 1959.

Contents

November 1, 1959 (Sunday)

November 2, 1959 (Monday)

November 3, 1959 (Tuesday)

November 4, 1959 (Wednesday)

  • The government of Morocco imposed emergency measures after more than 6,700 people had been paralyzed by tainted cooking oil, including the death penalty for manufacturers who had sold the oil in Meknes during the feast of Ramadan in September and October. Peanut oil had been mixed with a jet aircraft engine rinse purchased as surplus from a United States Air Force base at Nouasseur, and the victims were poisoned by tricresyl phosphate.[8] More than 10,000 people eventually required treatment for injuries. Five of the manufacturers were sentenced to death, but never executed.[9]
  • U.S. Congressman Charles A. Boyle of Illinois was killed in an automobile accident as he returned from election day campaigning.[10]
  • Six Israeli jets and four Egyptian MiG-17s clashed in a dogfight near the border between the two nations. All planes reportedly returned safely and the battle did not lead to further action.[11]

November 5, 1959 (Thursday)

  • Test pilot Scott Crossfield encountered trouble at 45,000 feet on the third flight of the North American X-15 rocket plane and was unable to jettison his fuel because of a steep glide. The plane buckled on a hard landing on a dry lake bed. By chance, the split occurred between the cabin and the fuel tanks, and the fuel did not ignite.[12]
  • Born: Bryan Adams, Canadian pop singer, in Kingston, Ontario

November 6, 1959 (Friday)

  • In Boston, Dr. Bernard Lown was inspired to created the direct current heart defibrillator after using 400 volts of electricity to restore the heart rhythm of a patient, known to history only as "Mr. C___".[13]
  • Died: Jose P. Laurel, 68, Philippine President during Japanese occupation

November 7, 1959 (Saturday)

  • The U.S. Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the Taft-Hartley Act, and ordered 500,000 striking steelworkers to return to work for the next 80 days. In an 8–1 decision, Justice Douglas dissenting, the Court declared that the strike "imperils the national safety".[14]
  • After his troops had control of most of the disputed Ladakh border region with India, China's Premier Zhou Enlai proposed that both sides withdraw their troops. When the Sino-Indian War was fought in 1962, China insisted on the border being based on the lines of "actual control" of 7 November 1959.[15]
  • The rivalry between Bill Russell and Wilt Chamberlain began as Russell and the Boston Celtics defeated Chamberlain's Philadelphia Warriors, 115–106. During the 1960s, Chamberlain won more scoring titles, while Russell won more team championships. Their last meeting was in Game 7 of the 1969 NBA Finals (May 5), when Boston beat the Los Angeles Lakers 108–106.[16]
  • Born: Billy Gillispie, American basketball coach, in Abilene, Texas
  • Died: Victor McLaglen, 72, Western actor

November 8, 1959 (Sunday)

November 9, 1959 (Monday)

  • Seventeen days before Thanksgiving, Arthur Flemming, the U.S. Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, warned that some of the 1959 crop of cranberries was tainted with the carcinogen aminotriazole, and said that if a housewife did not know where the berries in a product came from, "to be on the safe side, she doesn't buy".[20] Cranberry sales plummeted, but producers to promote year-round sales of cranberry products, including cranberry juice.[21]
  • The first Ski-doo, a snowmobile with a new, light-weight (30 pound) engine, was manufactured in Valcourt, Quebec, one of 250 made on the first day of production. The lighter engine made snowmobiling more practical, and within a decade, more than 200,000 Ski-doos were being sold annually in North America.[22]
  • Born: Tony Slattery, British comedian and TV actor, in Stonebridge, London; Donnie McClurkin, American gospel singer, in Amityville, New York; Angela Spivey, American gospel singer, in Chicago

November 10, 1959 (Tuesday)

  • USS Triton, at 447 feet in length and 5,000 tons the largest submarine to that time, joined the U.S. Navy's nuclear sub force. With two nuclear reactors, the Triton had cost $100,000,000 to build. Meanhwile, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev claimed in an interview that he had told President Eisenhower in August that "your submarines are not so bad, but the speed of our atomic submarines is double yours." [23]
  • Born: Mackenzie Phillips, American TV actress (One Day at a Time), in Alexandria, Virginia; Linda Cohn, first female sports anchor in the U.S., in Selden, New York

November 11, 1959 (Wednesday)

  • Werner Heyde, a psychiatrist who had guided the euthanizing of more than 100,000 handicapped persons in Nazi Germany, surrendered to police in Frankfurt after 13 years as a fugitive. As director of the Reich Association of Hospitals, Dr. Heyde had carried out "Action T4". Men, women and children who were mentally or physically handicapped were the victims of Heyde's "mercy killing" from 1939 to 1942, usually by lethal injection. Sentenced in absentia to death, Heyde had been practicing in Flensburg as "Dr. Fritz Sawade". On February 13, 1964, five days before his trial was to start, Dr. Heyde hanged himself at the prison in Butzbach.[24]

November 12, 1959 (Thursday)

November 13, 1959 (Friday)

November 14, 1959 (Saturday)

  • Inactive since 1868, the Kilauea Volcano on the island of Hawai'i had begun to swell in September. At 8:08 p.m., the volcano erupted, producing fires of lava up to 300 meters high. The fire fountains ceased by December 20.[27]
  • Born: Paul McGann, British TV actor, in Liverpool

November 15, 1959 (Sunday)

  • Herbert and Bonnie Clutter, and their teenage children, Nancy and Kenyon, were murdered at their home near Holcomb, Kansas.[28] Dick Hickock and Perry Smith would be captured in January, and hanged in 1965. The killings were immortalized in Truman Capote's 1966 book, In Cold Blood.[29]
  • Died: C. T. R. Wilson, 90, Scottish physicist, inventor of the cloud chamber, for which he won the Nobel Prize in 1927

November 16, 1959 (Monday)

November 17, 1959 (Tuesday)

  • The London Daily Herald revealed a plot to kidnap Prince Charles, the 11-year old heir to the British throne, from his boarding school, but most observers scoffed at the exclusive story. Beneath the banner headline "ROYAL KIDNAP QUIZ" came the story that the Northern Ireland nationalist group Fianna Uladh planned to raid the Cheam School to take Charles hostage. A spokesman for Scotland Yard opined that the story had been made up by the Herald "because we refused to give information about why security measures were increased at Cheam School".[33] The newspaper ceased publication in 1964.
  • Born: William R. Moses, American TV actor; in Los Angeles
  • Died: Heitor Villa-Lobos, 72, Brazilian composer

November 18, 1959 (Wednesday)

  • Ben-Hur, which would go on to become the most popular film of the year and would win a record 12 Academy Awards, debuted at New York's Loews Theater in 70 mm Ultra Panavision, before nationwide and then worldwide release.[34]
  • Ornette Coleman became a sensation in the world of jazz with his East Coast debut at the "Five Spot Cafe" in New York's Greenwich Village. Described by one critic as "the only really new thing in jazz since ... the mid 40s", the alto saxophonist's style received a mixed reaction.[35]
  • Born: Jimmy Quinn, footballer and manager, in Belfast

November 19, 1959 (Thursday)

  • The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show was introduced. The cartoon was shown on ABC network stations at 5:30 each afternoon and was originally called Rocky and Friends, although Bullwinkle the moose soon became more popular than Rocky the flying squirrel.[36]
  • In its third unsuccessful year, the last Edsel automobile was manufactured by the Ford Motor Company, after a loss of $100,000,000 on the program. Eighteen of the 1960 Edsels were produced on the final day.[37]
  • Born: Allison Janney, American actress (The West Wing), in Dayton
  • Died: Edward C. Tolman, 73, American psychologist; Aleksandr Khinchin, 65, Soviet mathematician

November 20, 1959 (Friday)

November 21, 1959 (Saturday)

November 22, 1959 (Sunday)

  • In Minneapolis, on the morning of the American Football League's first owners' meeting, the Minneapolis Star-Journal carried the headline "MINNESOTA TO GET NFL FRANCHISE". The owners of the AFL Minneapolis team denied the story, but soon were awarded the NFL's 14th team, the Minnesota Vikings. Legend has it that Harry Wismer brought copies of the newspaper to a banquet, pointed to Max Winter, and said, "This is the last supper. And he's Judas!" The Minneapolis AFL team was replaced by the Oakland Raiders.[41]
  • Died: Sam M. Lewis, 74, American songwriter

November 23, 1959 (Monday)

  • The Curtiss-Wright Corporation announced that it had developed a new internal combustion engine, in conjunction with NSU Motorenwerke AG of Germany. With only two moving parts (the rotor and the crankshaft) this would later be called the rotary engine.[42]
  • Born: Dominique Dunne, American actress (Poltergeist), in Santa Monica; murdered 1982

November 24, 1959 (Tuesday)

  • TWA Flight 595, a cargo plane with three crew members on board, crashed into a Chicago neighborhood adjacent to Midway Airport. At 5:37 a.m., the Constellation airplane crashed at the corner of 64th Street and Knox Avenue, and destroyed apartments and bungalows. In addition to the crew, eight people on the ground were killed and 13 more injured.[43]
  • Near Geneva, the Proton Synchrotron developed by the European nuclear agency, CERN, went online and exceeded expectations, accelerating protons to 25 GeV (25 billion electron volts), more than twice as much as the Soviet synchrotron at Dubna.[44]
  • Died: Dally Messenger, 76, Australian rugby league player

November 25, 1959 (Wednesday)

November 26, 1959 (Thursday)

  • The maiden flight of the Atlas-Able rocket, the most powerful ever built by the United States, failed less than a minute after its launch. The rocket lifted off at 2:26 a.m. from Cape Canaveral, with plans to carry the Pioneer V satellite to be placed in lunar orbit. Forty seconds later, parts fell from the third stage and the rocket misfired.[46]

November 27, 1959 (Friday)

  • Nazi war criminal Dr. Josef Mengele, the "Angel of Death" at the Auschwitz and Birkenau concentration camps, was granted citizenship by Paraguay, whose dictator Alfredo Stroessner refused to allow the extradition of a Paraguayan citizen. Mengele later fled to Brazil, and was never captured, living until 1979 when he drowned.[47]
  • More than 20,000 protesters in Tokyo, demanding that Japan end its military ties with the United States, stormed the grounds of the Japanese parliament. In the ensuing riot, 159 policemen and 212 civilians were injured in the worst violence in Japan since the May Day riots of 1952.[48]
  • Born: Viktoria Mullova, Russian violinist, in Zhukovsky

November 28, 1959 (Saturday)

  • Victims of the mercury-poisoning induced Minamata disease, and their families, began a sit-in at the chemical factory operated by Chisso in Minamata, Japan, and after a month's protest, secured an agreement for injury compensation.[49]
  • The first of the Nashville sit-ins, aimed at ending the policy of discrimination against African-Americans at lunch counters, began with a test run at Harveys Department Store in downtown Nashville, Tennessee. By 1960, the nonviolent protests were being duplicated, successfully and nationwide.[50]
  • Born: Judd Nelson, American actor (The Breakfast Club), in Portland, Maine

November 29, 1959 (Sunday)

November 30, 1959 (Monday)

References

  1. ^ Gérard Prunier, The Rwanda Crisis: History of a Genocide (Columbia University Press, 1997), pp48–49
  2. ^ Robert Niemi, History in the Media: Film and Television (ABC-CLIO, 2006), pp362–364
  3. ^ Dalton Ross, The Top Teams Ever: Football, Baseball, Basketball, and Hockey Winners (Rosen Publishing Group, 2003), p94
  4. ^ Michael R. Real, Exploring Media Culture: A Guide (Sage Publications, 1996), p230 ; "'I Had TV Quiz Script', Van Doren Confesses", Oakland Tribune, November 2, 1959, p1
  5. ^ Neill Lochery, The Israeli Labour Party: In the Shadow of the Likud (Ithaca Press, 1997), p271
  6. ^ Jolyon Howorth and Patricia Chilton, Defence and Dissent in Contemporary France (St. Martin's Press, 1984), p55
  7. ^ Anni P. Baker, American Soldiers Overseas: The Global Military Presence (Praeger, 2004), p101
  8. ^ "Cooking Oil 'Poisoned' In Morocco", Winnipeg Free Press, November 5, 1959, p24; "The Malady of Meknes", Time Magazine, November 30, 1959
  9. ^ Stephen O. Hughes, Morocco Under King Hassan (Ithaca Press, 2006), p83
  10. ^ "Congressman Dies in Chicago Crash", Oakland Tribune, November 4, 1959
  11. ^ "Egypt, Israel Jet Planes In Dogfight", Oakland Tribune, November 4, 1959, p1
  12. ^ David Shayler, Disasters and Accidents in Manned Spaceflight (Springer, 2000), pp43–44
  13. ^ William H. Colby, Unplugged: Reclaiming Our Right to Die in America (American Management Association, 2008), pp;57–60
  14. ^ "Supreme Court Orders End of Steel Strike", Oakland Tribune, November 8, 1959, p1
  15. ^ Dictionary of the Politics of the People's Republic of China (Routledge, 1998), p196
  16. ^ David K. Wiggins, ed. Out of the Shadows: A Biographical History of African American Athletes (University of Arkansas Press, 2006), pp231–233
  17. ^ The Nile: Histories, Cultures, Myths (L. Rienner, 2000), p257
  18. ^ The Government and Politics of the Middle East and North Africa (Westview Press, 2007), p17
  19. ^ "Lakers' Baylor Gets 64 Points", Oakland Tribune, p39
  20. ^ "The Cranberry Boggle", Time Magazine, November 23, 1959
  21. ^ Allan Mazur, True Warnings and False Alarms: Evaluating Fears About the Health Risks of Technology, 1948–1971 (Resources for the Future, 2004), pp112–113
  22. ^ Ralph Nader, Nadia Milleron and Duff Conacher, Canada Firsts (McClelland & Stewart, 1992), p32
  23. ^ "Triton Joins Growing U.S. Nuclear Fleet"; "Khrushchev Says Russ Subs Faster"; Oakland Tribune, November 10, 1959, p1
  24. ^ "Heyde, Werner", in Who's Who in Nazi Germany (Routledge, 2001), p 107
  25. ^ "Princess Passed Over For Australia Post", Oakland Tribune, November 12, 1959, p19
  26. ^ Leigh Edmonds, The Vital Link: A History of Main Roads Western Australia, 1926–1996 (University of Western Australia Press, 1997), pp142–143
  27. ^ Kathy Morey, Hawaii Trails: Walks, Strolls, and Treks on the Big Island (Wilderness Press, 2006), p158; S.J. Lane and J.S. Gilbert, Fluid Motions in Volcanic Conduits, Geological Society Special Publication 307, (2008), pp137–138
  28. ^ "4 in Family Slain", San Antonio Light, November 16, 1959, p1
  29. ^ Katherine M. Ramsland, Inside the Minds of Mass Murderers: Why They Kill (Praeger Publishers, 2005), pp18–21
  30. ^ Laurence Maslon, The Sound of Music Companion (Fireside, 2006) p71
  31. ^ "All 42 Feared Dead in Wreck Of Airliner Spotted in Gulf", Syracuse Herald-Journal, p1
  32. ^ planecrashinfo.com.
  33. ^ "London Snorts at Kidnap Story", Long Beach Independent, November 17, 1959, p7
  34. ^ Widescreenmuseum.com
  35. ^ Francis Davis, Jazz and Its Discontents (Da Capo Press, 2004), p15
  36. ^ Keith Scott, The Moose That Roared: The Story of Jay Ward, Bill Scott, a Flying Squirrel, and a Talking Moose (St. Martin's Griffin, 2000), p96
  37. ^ Thomas E. Bonsall, Disaster in Dearborn: The Story of the Edsel (Stanford General Books, 2002), pp173–174
  38. ^ Encyclopedia of Human Rights (Taylor & Francis, 1990), p234
  39. ^ James M. Curtis, Rock Eras: Interpretations of Music and Society, 1954–1984 (Bowling Green State University Popular Press, 1987), pp37–38
  40. ^ "Cubs Swap 2 For Gernert", San Antonio Express and News, November 22, 1959, p C-7
  41. ^ Michael MacCambridge, America's Game: The Epic Story of How Pro Football Captured a Nation (Anchor Books, 2005), pp127–128
  42. ^ John B. Hege, The Wankel Rotary Engine: A History (McFarland & Co., 2001), p47; "Efficient New Engine Has Only Two Moving Parts", Oakland Tribune, November 24, 1959, p8;
  43. ^ "7 Killed as Air Freighter Slams into Chicago Homes", Amarillo (Tex.) Globe-Times, November 24, 1959, p 1
  44. ^ Gordon Fraser, The Quark Machines (Institute of Physics Publishing, 1997), p 81
  45. ^ "International Investment", in Research Handbook in International Economic Law (E. Elgar, 2007), p215
  46. ^ "SPACE: We're in Trouble", Time Magazine, December 6, 1959; "Giant U.S. Moon Orbit Shot Fails", Oakland Tribune, November 26, 1959, pp1, 14
  47. ^ Henry C. Lee and Frank Tirnady, Blood Evidence: How DNA is Revolutionizing the Way We Solve Crimes (Perseus Publishing, 2003)
  48. ^ "50,000 Riot Against U.S. in Tokyo; 371 Hurt", Oakland Tribune, November 27, 1959, p1
  49. ^ Henry N. Pontell and Gilbert Geis, eds., International Handbook of White-collar and Corporate Crime (Springer, 2007), pp332–333
  50. ^ Susan M. Glisson, The Human Tradition in the Civil Rights Movemen (Rowman & Littlefield, 2006)
  51. ^ Alice Fleming, Martin Luther King, Jr.: A Dream of Hope (Sterling Publishing, 2008), p42
  52. ^ "Hungary", An Encyclopedic Dictionary of Conflict and Conflict Resolution, 1945–1996 (Greenwood Press, 1998), p291

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