May 1966

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1966
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The following events occurred in May 1966:

May 1, 1966 (Sunday)

  • For the first time in the Vietnam War, the United States attacked Cambodia, after the U.S. 1st Infantry Division came under mortar fire while patrolling in the Tây Ninh Province along South Vietnam's border with the neutral nation.[1] When it was determined that the shelling was coming from the other side of the Cai Bac River that separated the two nations, Lt. Col. Richard L. Prillaman of the 2nd Infantry invoked the right of self-defense within the rules of engagement, and fired shells across the river into a Viet Cong position on the other side.[2]
  • Nicholas Piantanida, an American amateur parachute jumper, was fatally injured while attempting to break the world parachute altitude record. Secured inside a small Styrofoam-insulated gondola, he began his ascent for a planned supersonic free fall from over 120,000 feet. Ground controllers listening to the communications link with the Strato Jump III were startled by the sound of rushing air and a sudden, cut-off call over the radio to abort, Piantanida's oxygen mask having depressurized at about the 57,000-foot mark.[3] Ground controllers immediately jettisoned the balloon at close to 56,000 feet (17,000 m) — higher than the cruising altitude for commercial jets — and Piantanida's gondola took 25 minutes to parachute to the ground, near Lakefield, Minnesota.[4] The lack of oxygen left Piantanida with brain damage and he would remain in a coma until his death on August 29.[5]
Carlos_Lleras_Restrepo
  • Senator Carlos Lleras Restrepo of the Liberal Party won the Colombian presidential election, easily defeating his little-known challenger, lawyer Jose Jaramillo Giraldo.[6] With a margin of 1,891,175 votes against the 742,133 for Jaramillo, Lleras Restrepo polled 71.4% of the ballots. More than 60 percent of eligible voters declined to participate in the election, the highest ever up to that time.[7]
  • Fantasy novelist Diana L. Paxson staged the first "medieval-themed" event for what would later be called the Society for Creative Anachronism, restaging combat between armored knights, as well as recreating other aspects of festivals in medieval England.[8]
  • The First of May Group, a Spanish terrorist organization fighting the regime of dictator Francisco Franco, staged its first attack, kidnapping the ecclesiastic adviser for the Spanish Embassy to the Vatican, Monsignor Marcos Ussia.[9] Ussia, taken captive as he was driving to his house, remained missing for ten days, before he was released unharmed on May 11.[10][11]
  • The Genevieve E. Yates Memorial Centre was officially opened at Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada.[12]
  • Born: Abdelhakim Belhadj, Libyan politician and military leader, in Souq al Jum'aa, Tripoli[13]

May 2, 1966 (Monday)

May 3, 1966 (Tuesday)

  • Lurleen Burns Wallace, the wife of Alabama Governor George C. Wallace, overwhelmingly won the Democratic Party primary for the nomination for Governor of Alabama, a guarantee of victory in November in the overwhelmingly Democratic state. By law, George Wallace was barred from serving consecutive terms as Governor, but could continue to be the de facto executive by having his wife hold the office.[19] Sadly, Governor Wallace would die a little more than two years later, on another primary election day (May 7, 1968) from intestinal cancer.[20] After being treated successfully in 1965, the cancer had recurred only five months after she took office.[21]
  • Prime Minister of Canada Lester B. Pearson narrowly avoided a censure by the Canadian House of Commons, after being accused of perjury for contradicting testimony given by Canadian police in hearings on the Gerda Munsinger sex scandal. The vote, which would likely have brought down the Pearson government and led to the calling of new parliamentary elections, failed to pass, 106 to 133.[22]
  • "Pirate" radio stations Swinging Radio England and Britain Radio commenced broadcasting on AM, with a combined potential 100,000 watts, from the same ship anchored off the south coast of England in international waters.[23]

May 4, 1966 (Wednesday)

May 5, 1966 (Thursday)

  • The first of three strikes by bank employees in Ireland began, shutting down 900 banks in both the Republic of Ireland and in Northern Ireland.[30] These strikes would provide economists with a unique opportunity to study the functioning of a modern economy without access to cash deposits.[31] "Businesses with large cash intakes each day are getting rid of their surplus by making deals with firms that have large weekly payrolls but take no cash. One large brewery has taken on the role of banker for pubs. Saloons are favorite places for cashing cheques," a report during the strike noted.[32] An early settlement would be reached in Northern Ireland, but the strike in the Irish Republic would not be settled until July 29.[33] A second strike, in 1970, would last more than six months, and the third and final one would go for more than two months in 1976.[34]
  • In Game Six of the best-of-seven Stanley Cup finals, the Montreal Canadiens defeated the Detroit Red Wings, 3-2 in sudden death overtime, to win the championship of the National Hockey League. Detroit had won the first two games of the series, and Montreal then won the next four. After 2 minutes and 20 seconds in the extra period, Henri Richard rebounded the blocked shot of Dave Balon and sent the puck past the Red Wings' Roger Crozier for the win.[35]
  • In the 1966 European Cup Winners' Cup Final at Hampden Parkin Glasgow, Borussia Dortmund of West Germany defeated England's Liverpool F.C., 2-1, at 17 minutes into extra time after the game was tied at the end of 90 minutes. Reinhard Libuda hit a "perfectly judged cross" past Tommy Lawrence, who had blocked the first shot at goal.[36][37]
  • Born: Sergei Stanishev, Bulgarian politician, in Kherson, Ukraine.

May 6, 1966 (Friday)

  • Ian Brady, 28, was found guilty on three charges of murdering children, and his partner-in-crime, 23-year old Myra Hindley guilty of murdering two of the victims, 17-year old Edward Evans and 10-year old Lesley Ann Downey, as the Moors murders concluded. Hindley was acquitted of assisting in Brady's murder of 12-year old John Kilbride. Their multiple life sentences (three for Brady, two for Hindley) were set to run concurrently.[38] Trial had been held in Chester, in the county of Cheshire.[39]
  • South Vietnam's Prime Minister Nguyen Cao Ky backtracked on the April promise to hold free elections for a civilian government by September, announcing instead that the late September voting would be limited to an assembly that would draft a new constitution. Upon completion of that document, an election for a national legislature would be scheduled, and that legislature would then appoint a civilian government. Until then, Ky told reporters in Cần Thơ, the military regime would stay in power "for at least another year".[40]

May 7, 1966 (Saturday)

  • In China, Chairman Mao Zedong issued the "May Seventh Directive", declaring that "the phenomenon of bourgeois intellectuals reigning over our schools can no longer be allowed to continue." Starting in 1968, professors, teachers,government bureaucrats and other white collar workers would be moved to rural areas, sometimes for several years, to work on farms in order to "live and labor like peasants"; in their recreational time, they were expected to study the works of Mao and of Karl Marx. The forced labor camps would be referred to during the Cultural Revolution as "May 7th Cadre Schools".[41]
  • Founded by Augustus "Gusty" Spence, the paramilitary "Ulster Volunteer Force" (UVF), based in the Shankill area of Belfast,[42] committed the first of many bombings and assassinations in its campaign "to ensure continued rule by the Protestant majority in Northern Ireland". The UVF's first act was to detonate a petrol bomb outside a Catholic-owned pub in Shankill. Instead, the fire killed Matilda Gould, a 76 year old Protestant widow who lived next door to the pub.[43]

May 8, 1966 (Sunday)

May 9, 1966 (Monday)

  • The People's Republic of China detonated its third nuclear weapon, and claimed that the bomb contained "thermonuclear material", suggesting that they had developed their own hydrogen bomb. However, meteorologists in Japan said that there was no abnormal atmospheric pressure detected after the blast and that "we don't believe that the latest Chinese device was a hydrogen bomb of a megaton class". China had exploded its first atomic bomb on October 16, 1964.[46] Two days later, however, Japanese scientists noted that the radioactive fallout from the test was more than 30 times as great as that from either of the two earlier tests, and American officials concluded that the bomb, estimated to be 120 kilotons, was six times larger than previous weapons.[47] The thermonuclear material in the bomb, which had been dropped from Xian H-6 bomber over the test site, would be determined later to be the isotope Lithium-6; China would successfully explode its first hydrogen bomb on June 17, 1967.[48]
  • The Eighteenth Amendment of the Constitution of India was introduced in the Lok Sabha by Jaisukh Lal Hathi, then Minister of State in the Ministry of Home Affairs, but the bill failed in this first attempt.[49]

May 10, 1966 (Tuesday)

May 11, 1966 (Wednesday)

May 12, 1966 (Thursday)

May 13, 1966 (Friday)

May 14, 1966 (Saturday)

  • Across the United States, more than 400,000 college students took the draft deferment examination, given at 1,200 colleges and universities, in order to be exempted from being drafted into the United States military during the Vietnam War, while anti-war demonstrations took place outside many of the testing centers.[60] Students were allowed three hours to answer 150 questions in order to see whether they could retain their 2-S draft classification; out of 1.8 million students who were 2-S, one million had registered for the test, which would be repeated on May 21, June 3 and June 24, and the test score and class rank would be evaluated by local draft boards.[61]
  • Turkey and Greece agreed to hold talks concerning a peaceful resolution of the ongoing violence in Cyprus, an island republic inhabited by people of Greek and Turkish descent.[62]
  • The 18th BRDC International Trophy motor race was held at the Silverstone Circuit and won by Jack Brabham.

May 15, 1966 (Sunday)

  • In Japan, the comedy and variety show Shōten was telecast for the first time. Fifty years later, the show continues to be watched on the Nippon Television Network. The program itself is based on a Japanese form of storytelling humor called rakugo, and features six performers who are posed questions by a host.[63]
  • Over 1,000 troops of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam were airlifted from Saigon into Da Nang to take control of the ongoing Buddhist student rebellion in the South Vietnamese city.[64] and recaptured the area after a day-long battle.[65][66]
  • Five thousand anti-war demonstrators picketed the White House, then rallied at the Washington Monument.[67]
  • Died: Maximiliano Hernández Martínez, 83, former military dictator of El Salvador, was stabbed to death by his chauffeur, Jose Cipriano Morales, in the Jamastran valley of Honduras, where he had been living in exile.[68] Cipriano's father had been one of the 30,000 people murdered by the dictator's "White Guards" between 1931 and 1944.[69]

May 16, 1966 (Monday)

  • The "Circular of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China on the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution", unofficially known as the "May 16 Directive", was approved by the CCP Politburo, and began a period on nationwide upheaval in the world's most populous nation. The document, reviewed and edited by Party Chairman Mao Zedong, declared a nationwide campaign against "those representatives of the bourgeoisie who have sneaked into the Party, the government, the army, and various cultural circles", describing such persons as "counterrevolutionary revisionists" whose aim was to "seize political power and turn the dictatorship of the proletariat into a dictatorship of the bourgeoisie".[70]
  • A moment after midnight, Britain's merchant marines went on a nationwide strike for the first time since 1911, as 62,500 members of the National Union of Seamen demanded a 40-hour work week and higher wages. At the time, Britain's seamen were "among the world's worst paid" accodring to the NUS, with a base pay of £27 (equivalent at the time to $39.20) for a 56-hour work week. As workers docked and left their ships, British ports were tied up with as many as 400 vessels and, a commentator noted, the walkout "could achieve what German submarines failed to accomplish in two world wars" and idle the Royal Navy.[71] The strike would continue for two months, ending on July 16.[72]
  • At least 175 people died when the ferry MV Pioneer Cebu capsized in the Philippines off of Cebu Island, after the ship was caught by the winds of Typhoon Irma. Of the 262 people known to have been on board, 130 were saved by a passing motor vessel, the Diana, and taken to Bantayan Island.[73][74]
  • The legendary album Pet Sounds by The Beach Boys was released.
  • Bob Dylan's seminal album, Blonde on Blonde was released in the U.S.
  • In New York City, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. made his first public speech on the Vietnam War.
  • The city of Westland, Michigan was created near Detroit, representing the last area of the original Nankin Township whose sections had been incorporated as the villages (and later, villages) of Wayne (1869), Garden City (1927), and Inkster (1927). In a reverse of the usual sequence of naming places, the new city was named after the local shopping center, the Westland Mall.[75]
  • Born: Janet Jackson, American singer, in Gary, Indiana; and Thurman Thomas, American NFL running back and member of Pro Football Hall of Fame, in Houston
  • Died: Kamel Mrowa, 52, publisher of the Lebanon conservative newspaper Al-Hayat. Mrowa, who frequently criticized Egypt's President Nasser and other Arab leaders, was shot to death in his office.[76]

May 17, 1966 (Tuesday)

  • At midnight, 7,500,000 government employees and private workers in France began a 24-hour strike in protest of the strict wage policies of President Charles de Gaulle. Newspapers did not publish, the state-operated radio and television networks went off of the air, telephones ceased to operate, subway trains and buses did not run, garbage went uncollected, and electricity and natural gas were in short supply.[77] Closed also were taxis, barber shops, bakeries, laundries and thousands of factories, and those restaurants that remained open "served only cold meals or just one hot dish" because of a shortage of power.[78]
  • Gemini 9 was awaiting launch with astronauts Thomas P. Stafford and Eugene A. Cernan aboard, when the failure of another rocket, carrying the Agena target that they were to dock with, defeated the purpose of the mission. The $145,000,000 Agena mission was on its way toward an orbit 185 miles above the Earth, when a booster engine on the Atlas rocket swiveled and went "under sustained thrust, but at a down angle" according to the NASA statement.[79]
  • Mafia chief Joseph Bonanno, nicknamed "Joe Bananas", surrendered to federal agents in New York City after being gone for 19 months. Bonanno had vanished on October 21, 1964, the day before he was scheduled to appear before a federal grand jury.[80]
  • Bob Dylan and the Hawks (later The Band) performed at the Free Trade Hall in Manchester. Dylan was booed by the audience because of his decision to tour with an electric band, the boos culminating in the famous "Judas" shout. Three years earlier, in his protest song "With God on Our Side", Dylan had sung "Through many a dark hour/I’ve been thinking about this/That Jesus Christ/Was betrayed by a kiss/But I can’t think for you/You’ll have to decide/Whether Judas Iscariot/Had God on his side".[81]
  • Born: Qusay Hussein, designated successor to his father, Iraqi President Saddam Hussein and the second most powerful man in Iraq at the time of his death; in Baghdad. Qusay would be killed in a gun battle with U.S. forces during the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

May 18, 1966 (Wednesday)

  • The Parliament of Canada came under a terrorist attack for the first time in the nation's 99-year history, when a bomb exploded in a restroom a few doors away from the office of Prime Minister Pearson in the Centre Block of the Parliament Buildings. One person, 45-year old Joseph Chartier, was killed in the explosion. At the time, Pearson was attending the ongoing session of the House of Commons. Afterward, police determined that Chartier himself was the perpetrator.[82][83] Chartier left behind a notebook at his apartment, saying that his intention was "to drop a bomb and kill as many as possible for the rotten way you are running this country" and added, "Mr. Speaker, gentlemen: I might as well give you a blast to wake you up. For one whole year. I have thought of nothing but how to exterminate as many of you as possible." [84] Other Chartier writings showed that he had calculated that he would have two and a half minutes to light the dynamite fuse, walk from the men's room to the Commons chambers, and throw in his bomb; but that he had misjudged the amount of time.[85]
  • The 1966 Giro d'Italia cycle race began in Monte Carlo.[86]
  • The 1966 European Judo Championships were held in Luxembourg.[87]
  • UK Home Secretary Roy Jenkins announced that the number of police forces in England and Wales would be cut to 68.

May 19, 1966 (Thursday)

  • The XB-70 Valkyrie strategic bomber became the first vehicle to hold a sustained (more than half an hour) in excess of Mach 3. Literally moving faster than a speeding bullet, at three times the speed of sound, the six-engine jet aircraft was flown at its "triplesonic" speed of more than 2,000 miles per hour for 32 minutes by test pilot Al White of North American Aviation, and his co-pilot, USAF Colonel Joe Cotton. Friction from the air heated the outside of the aircraft to 620 degrees Fahrenheit.[88] As the plane returned to Edwards Air Force Base in California, the two pilots discovered that the landing gear would not lower because of a short circuit; Colonel Cotton reportedly "used a paper clip to short circuit an electrical terminal" to lower the gear, sparing the crew from having "to bail out and abandon the $500 million craft".[89]
  • The Dissolution Honours List, issued by the outgoing UK government, included 12 new life peers.[90]
  • Leroy Grumman retired as chairman of Grumman Aeronautical Engineering Co..
  • Died: Alirio Ugarte Pelayo, 43, Venezuelan politician who was preparing to form his own political party as a presidential candidate. Ugarte, who had been suspended from the URD after being the front-runner for their nomination, invited reporters to his home for a press conference, but when the journalists arrived, they found him dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.[91]
  • Died: Theodore F. Green, 98, U.S. Senator for Rhode Island from 1937 to 1961; he was known as "The Grand Old Man of the Senate" because he was 69 when he took office, and served until age 93. At the time, Green was the oldest person to have served in the U.S. Senate, a record later broken by Strom Thurmond, who was 100 when his term as U.S. Senator from South Carolina expired in 2003.

May 20, 1966 (Friday)

May 21, 1966 (Saturday)

  • In Northern Ireland, the Protestant Ulster Volunteer Force issued its "declaration of war" against the Roman Catholic Irish Republican Army, a statement that appeared in Belfast newspapers. "From this day we declare war against the IRA," UVF Chief of Staff William Johnston wrote. "Known IRA men will be executed mercilessly and without hesitation. We will not tolerate any interference from any source and we solemnly warn the authorities to make no more speeches of appeasement." [97]
  • A sentry for the Army of Cuba was shot and killed by a U.S. Marine guard firing from the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base. Cuban radio identified the dead man as Luis Ramirez Lopez.[98] The U.S. Department of Defense acknowledged the shooting three days later, and said that the Marine guard had told investigators that the Cuban sentry had been an intruder inside the base's fence, and had ignored a warning shot. The Marine, not identified, told his superiors that he had fired again and thought he had wounded the sentry, who, despite being wounded, "was able to surmount the fence and leave the area".[99][100]
  • The Broadway production of The Subject Was Roses, starring Jack Albertson, Irene Dailey and Martin Sheen, closed after 832 performances, two Tony Awards and one Pulitzer Prize. Albertson and Sheen would reprise their roles for the 1968 film adaptation, for which Albertson would win an Oscar for Best Supporting Actor.[101]

May 22, 1966 (Sunday)

May 23, 1966 (Monday)

Beale Street, Memphis
  • The conflict between Cuba and the United States naval base at Guantánamo Province escalated as six Cuban soldiers and an unreported number of U.S. Marines exchanged gunfire at the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base. According to the U.S., the Cuban soldiers had slipped through the boundary fence and onto the Base, and then opened fire. Nobody on either side was wounded.[106]
  • Justice Hugo Black delivered the opinion of the U.S. Supreme Court in Mills v. Alabama, striking down, as unconstitutional, an Alabama court ruling that had held that the printing of a newspaper editorial on an election day could be punishable as a crime. The case arose from the arrest of James E. Mills, the editor of the Birmingham Post-Herald, on November 6, 1962, for urging Post-Herald readers to vote in favor of a measure to reorganize the city government. Black noted that such an interpretation "muzzles one of the very agencies the framers of our Constitution thoughtfully and deliberately selected to improve our society and keep it free." [107]
  • Born: Graeme Hick, Rhodesia-born England cricketer, in Salisbury (Harare); and H. Jon Benjamin, American actor and comedian, in Worcester, Massachusetts
  • Died: Alvin Langdon Coburn, 84, US photographer; and Demchugdongrub, 64, Mongolian politician

May 24, 1966 (Tuesday)

  • The entire 29-man crew of the New Zealand collier MV Kaitawa drowned after the ship foundered in a storm, 10 nautical miles (19 km) off Cape Reinga with the loss of all 29 crew.[108] Wreckage washed ashore the following day, including the remains of a lifeboat, and life jackets that the crew was not able to don in time.[109] It was the worst sea disaster in New Zealand in almost 60 years, when the passenger ferry SS Penguin ran aground near Wellington on February 12, 1909.[110]
  • On orders of Uganda's President Obote, troops led by Colonel Idi Amin Dada invaded the Bugandan capital of Mengo to attack the Lubiri, palace of the King Mutesa II, the Kabaka (paramount chief) of the rebellious traditional kingdom. Outnumbered, the 120 royal bodyguards defended the palace for twelve hours while Mutesa II escaped. Amin then carried out the elimination of "all living creatures that did not leave the palace in time", whether elderly or young, and the destruction of the traditional relics— "drums, spears, crowns, insignia, stools, and so on".[93] Mutesa, who had sneaked out during a rainstorm, was sheltered by two families, then spirited out of the country to neighboring Burundi. He eventually settled in the United Kingdom.[111] Colonel Amin would stage a military coup in 1971, deposing Obote to become the new President.
  • Nigeria's President Johnson Aguiyi-Ironsi issued "Decree Number 34", abolishing the system of prior system of autonomous Northern, Eastern and Western Regions that composed the Federal Republic of Nigeria and declaring a unified government. "Nigeria ceases to be what has been described as a federation," General Ironsi said in a radio broadcast. "It now becomes simply the Republic of Nigeria." [112] The decree would prove to be his undoing, and Ironsi would be overthrown two months later.
  • Errol Wayne Noack, a 21 year old Australian Army Private, became the first Australian National Service draftee to be killed in the Vietnam War, only ten days after he had arrived, and would become a symbol for the Australian anti-war movement.[113] Private Noack was the victim of friendly fire, shot by members of another platoon of the 5th Battalion after being mistaken for an enemy combatant.[114]

May 25, 1966 (Wednesday)

  • Along with six of her colleagues from the Department of Philosophy at Beijing University, Professor Nie Yuanzi entered the university's dining hall at 2:00 p.m.[115] and placed the first of the "big-character posters" (ta tzu pao or dazibao) on the wall, unleashing what would be a wave of similarly-styled criticisms by Chinese students. In large Chinese characters, the first of the posters was headlined "What the Peking University Committee Is Doing in the Cultural Revolution".[116] Within the text, she accused Vice-Chancellor Lu P'ing and the Committee of undermining the Revolution by suppressing the student movement toward reform.[117] Universities tried to suppress big-character posters in general, but on June 1, Chairman Mao would endorse the campaign, directing the youths of China to expose anyone believed to be a "counter-revolutionary".
  • The Soviet government delivered a diplomatic note to Israel's embassy in Moscow, with a warning that the Soviets were aware of Israel's massing of forces along its northern borders. The note included the warning that "we hope that the Israeli government would not allow external forces to determine the fate of its people and country." [118]
  • Five years after President John F. Kennedy's call for a commitment of "landing a man on the Moon and returning him safely to the earth", NASA unveiled the prototype of the machine that would take astronauts there. At 363 feet tall, the Saturn V rocket was larger than any predecessor, and three times as powerful as the Titan II GLV rocket used in the Gemini program.[119][120]
  • Died: Lieutenant General Vernon Sturdee, 76, Chief of Staff of the Australian Army during World War II

May 26, 1966 (Thursday)

  • At midnight, the colony of British Guiana was granted independence as the nation of Guyana, with Forbes Burnham as its first Prime Minister. Prince Edward, Duke of Kent, and the Duchess of Kent appeared on behalf of Queen Elizabeth.[121][122][123]
  • A new Learjet 24 completed a round-the-world flight, landing at the Lear Jet company airfield near Wichita, Kansas at 11:31 a.m., 66 hours and 19 minutes after its departure from Wichita almost three days earlier. The flight was a promotion "to demonstrate the versatility of the plane for world-wide business use". "[124]
  • In the annual U.S. presidential proclamation of the last Monday in May as Memorial Day, President Johnson pledged that the United States would not pull out of the Vietnam War until victory had been achieved. "This nation has never left the field of battle in abject surrender of a cause for which it has fought," Johnson wrote. "We shall not do so now. We shall see this through." [125]
  • On the same day, the United States military command announced that the number of American casualties in Vietnam in the week of May 15–21 marked the highest up to that time in the war, with 146 Americans killed and 820 wounded. The 966 casualties was 36% higher than the previous record of 710 in the week of November 14–20, 1965, when 86 were killed and 565 wounded.[126]
  • Born: Helena Bonham Carter, English film actress, in Hampstead, London; and Zola Budd, South African runner and one-time women's 5,000 meter world record holder
  • Died: Don Castle, 47, American film actor and television producer, of an accidental overdose of pain medication

May 27, 1966 (Friday)

File:Rafaelpaasio.jpg
Rafael Paasio
  • Rafael Paasio replaced Johannes Virolainen as Prime Minister of Finland and, for the first time since 1948, included members of Finland's Communist Party in the government. The Communist government ministers had been invited to join in order for the coalition government to win two-thirds majority approval by the 200-seat Finnish Parliament, where Paasio's Social Democratic party had a plurality with only 55 seats, compared to the Centrists' 49 and the Communists' 26.[127]
  • After getting lost during a training mission and running out of fuel, French Air Force pilots safely ejected from, and allowed to crash, six Mystère IV jet fighters, worth $600,000 apiece. At the time, the squadron of planes was only ten minutes away from either the Naval Station at Rota or the Morón Air Base, both operated jointly by Spain and the United States. The six planes crashed in the sparsely populated countryide in western Spain near the frontier with Portugal.[128]
  • Born: Heston Blumenthal, English celebrity chef, in London; and Titi DJ (Titi Dwijayati), Indonesian pop singer, in Jakarta

May 28, 1966 (Saturday)

  • Cuba's Prime Minister Fidel Castro ordered a state of alert for the Cuban armed forces, and told citizens in a nationwide television and radio address to be prepared for an attack from the United States. Castro said that statements by U.S. Secretary of State Dean Rusk had "practically threatened Cuba with war". The next day, tens of thousands of military reservists were recalled for active duty.[129]

May 29, 1966 (Sunday)

  • A group of 40 high school age students at the Middle School of Qinghua University formed a new group to resist the school's principal, Wang Pangyu,[115] and began using the name Red Guards (hongweibing) to describe itself, taking a vow that they would guard China against the people whom Chairman Mao described as those who "conspired to change the color of Communist China." [130][131]
Azteca Stadium

May 30, 1966 (Monday)

  • Graham Hill of England won the 50th Indianapolis 500, ahead of Scotland's Jim Clark, whose team protested that Hill had actually been one lap behind Clark when the checkered flag was waved to end the race. Only seven of the 33 cars, the lowest number ever, actually finished the race. Before even reaching the first turn, 11 of the cars had been eliminated in a 16-car pileup, delaying the race for nearly an hour and a half. Another Scotsman, Jackie Stewart, had been leading the race with only ten laps left, but his engine failed.[134] The next day, Clark's crew reviewed the official racing charts determined that they (and the operators of the official scoreboard) had overlooked Hill passing by while Clark was at a pit stop. The scorers had corrected the error later in the race and added added a lap for Hill on the scoreboard.[135]
  • Surveyor 1, the first American lunar exploration probe, was launched from Cape Kennedy toward a soft landing at the Oceanus Procellarum, the Moon's "Ocean of Storms", and would confirm Soviet discoveries about the suitability of the lunar surface for a manned landing.[136] On the same day, the Soviet Union lost radio contact with Luna 10, which on April 3 had become the first space probe to orbit the Moon.[137]
  • Died: Wäinö Aaltonen, 72, Finnish artist and sculptor; Bob Thompson, 48, African-American abstract expressionist painter; Alexander MacDonald Shook, 77, Canadian flying ace with 12 kills during World War One; and Michael Lvovitch Tsetlin, 42, Soviet mathematician

May 31, 1966 (Tuesday)

  • Only a few years after most Negroes had effectively been barred, by state voter registration laws, from voting in Alabama, former postal worker Lucius Amerson became the first African-American to win a Democratic Party nomination for a major office in that state, defeating incumbent Macon County Sheriff Harvey Sadler in the primary.[138] In the general election, Amerson would defeat two white opponents who had run against him in the May primary, to become "the only member of his race to hold the office in the South" [139] and the first black sheriff since the Reconstruction Era.
  • One day after their arrest on charges of conspiring to assassinate President Joseph Mobutu, a military tribunal in the former Belgian Congo tried and convicted former Congolese Prime Minister Évariste Kimba and three other former cabinet ministers, and sentenced them to be hanged in public.[140] After a 90-minute proceeding, Prime Minister Kimba, Defense Minister Jeromy Anany, Finance Minister Emmanuel Bamba, and Alexandre Mahamba, were found guilty, and all four were hanged in front of 80,000 spectators two days later.[141]

References

  1. "U.S. Admits Shelling Reds in Cambodia", Milwaukee Journal, May 3, 1966, p1
  2. John M. Carland, Combat Operations: Stemming the Tide, May 1965 to October 1966 (Government Printing Office, 2000) p308
  3. Craig Ryan, Magnificent Failure: Free Fall from the Edge of Space (Smithsonian Institution, 2014)
  4. David Shayler, Disasters and Accidents in Manned Spaceflight (Springer, 2000) p38
  5. "Sky Divers Oxygen Loss Damages Brain", Chicago Tribune, May 2, 1966, p5
  6. "Liberal Easily Wins Colombia Presidency", May 2, 1966, p1
  7. John D. Martz, The Politics of Clientelism: Democracy and the State in Colombia (Transaction Publishers, 1997) p116
  8. Sonja Sadovsky, The Priestess & the Pen: Marion Zimmer Bradley, Dion Fortune & Diana Paxson's Influence on Modern Paganism (Llewellyn Worldwide, 2014)
  9. "Priest-Diplomat Feared Kidnap Victim in Rome", Bridgeport (CT) Post, May 1, 1966, p2
  10. "Kidnaped Priest Freed", UPI report in Kingsport (TN) News, May 12, 1966, p1
  11. Gordon Carr, The Angry Brigade: A History of Britain's First Urban Guerilla Group (PM Press, 2010) pp45-46
  12. Yates and Sterndale Bennett Theatres
  13. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. – Translated as Top Libyan Rebel Leader Has Deep Al Qaeda Ties
  14. "8 Protestant Churches Open Merger Talks", Chicago Tribune, May 3, 1966, p2-6
  15. "Merger Of Protestant Churches Years Away", Brownsville (TX) Herald, May 6, 1966, p14
  16. "Smooth Take-Over at Abbotsinch", Glasgow Herald, May 3, 1966, p1
  17. Keith McCloskey, Glasgow's Airports: Renfrew and Abbotsinch (The History Press, 2009) ISBN 978-0-7524-5077-3.
  18. Rob Bowater, Glasgow Airport Through Time (Amberley Publishing, 2015)
  19. "MRS. WALLACE BIG WINNER", Chicago Tribune, May 4, 1966, p1
  20. "Lurleen Loses Fight For Life", Ottawa Journal, May 7, 1968, p1
  21. "Lurleen to Undergo Cancer Treatment in Texas July 4", Pasadena (CA) Independent, June 29, 1967, p1
  22. "Pearson Beats Censure Vote", Chicago Tribune, May 4, 1966, p1
  23. The story of Swinging Radio England
  24. Frank N. Magill, Chronology of Twentieth-Century History: Business and Commerce (Routledge, 2014) p993
  25. "Mays Breaks Record; Hits 512th Career Homer", Chicago Tribune, May 5, 1966, p3-1
  26. David Vincent, Home Run: The Definitive History of Baseball's Ultimate Weapon (Potomac Books, 2007)
  27. "INDIAN SHORTSTOP'S SKULL FRACTURED", Chicago Tribune, May 5, 1966, p3-1
  28. "Brown, Larry Leslie", in The Cleveland Indians Encyclopedia, by Russell Schneider (Sports Publishing LLC, 2004) p146
  29. Bridgeport Post, May 4, 1966, p1
  30. "Bank Strike Looming In Ireland", Ottawa Journal, May 6, 1966, p5
  31. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  32. "No Settlement In Bank Strike", Brandon (Manitoba) Sun, June 6, 1966, p9
  33. "Three-Month Bank Strike Ends In Ireland", AP report in Troy (NY) Record, July 30, 1966, p12
  34. "How six-month bank strike rocked the nation", Irish Independent, December 29, 1999
  35. "MONTREAL WINS CUP IN SUDDEN DEATH", Chicago Tribune, May 6, 1966, p3-1
  36. "Cup-Winners' Cup for Borussia", The Glasgow Herald, May 6, 1966, p6
  37. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  38. "Guilty Verdicts in Moors Case", Glasgow Herald, May 7, 1966, p1
  39. "Moor Murders Pair Get Life", Chicago Tribune, May 7, 1966, p4
  40. "Ky Defiant on Viet Nam Election", Chicago Tribune, May 7, 1966, p1
  41. John F. Cleverley, In the Lap of Tigers: The Communist Labor University of Jiangxi Province (Rowman & Littlefield, 2000) p156
  42. Hugh Jordan, Milestones in Murder: Defining Moments in Ulster's Terror War (Random House, 2011)
  43. "Ulster Volunteer Force", in Encyclopedia of Terrorism, by Harvey W. Kushner (SAGE Publications, 2003) pp377-378
  44. Harris M. Lentz, Heads of States and Governments Since 1945 (Routledge, 2014)
  45. Yan Jiaqi and Gao Gao, Turbulent Decade: A History of the Cultural Revolution (University of Hawaii Press, 1996) p192
  46. "China Explodes Third Nuclear Bomb", Glasgow Herald, May 10, 1966, p1; "Red Chinese Set Off H-Blast", Chicago Tribune, May 10, 1966, p4
  47. "Red Chinese Radioactivity Far Heavier, Japan Reports", Chicago Tribune, May 10, 1966, p3
  48. Jeffrey T. Richelson, Spying on the Bomb: American Nuclear Intelligence from Nazi Germany to Iran and North Korea (W. W. Norton & Company, 2007) pp191-192
  49. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  50. E. Ike Udogu, Liberating Namibia: The Long Diplomatic Struggle Between the United Nations and South Africa (McFarland, 2011) p126
  51. "Eleven Cities Entered In Pro Soccer League", Bridgeport (CT) Telegram, May 11, 1966, p22
  52. Dennis J. Seese, The Rebirth of Professional Soccer in America: The Strange Days of the United Soccer Association (Rowman & Littlefield, 2015) p19
  53. "Smith Team in London Hotel", The Glasgow Herald, May 9, 1966, p1
  54. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  55. "Real Madrid Again Win European Cup", Glasgow Herald, May 12, 1966, p6
  56. Bill Chuck and Jim Kaplan, Walkoffs, Last Licks and Final Outs: Baseball's Grand (and Not-so-grand) Finales (ACTA Publications, 2007) pp132-133
  57. "CHINESE HURL WAR CHARGE— Plane Downed Over Mainland by Yank Flyers, Peking Says", Chicago Tribune, May 13, 1966, p1
  58. "Americans Deny Attack in Red China", Chicago Tribune, May 13, 1966, p1
  59. Nicholas M Poúlantzas, The Right of Hot Pursuit in International Law (Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 2002) p334
  60. "400,000 Take Draft Deferment Tests Despite Jeers, Chants", Chicago Tribune, May 15, 1966, p1
  61. "Million Students Report Today for Deferment Tests", San Antonio Express and News, May 14, 1966, p7
  62. "Turkey, Greece Agree to Talk", Idaho State Journal (Pocatello, ID), May 15, 1966, p9
  63. Lorie Brau, Rakugo: Performing Comedy and Cultural Heritage in Contemporary Tokyo (Lexington Books, 2008) p175
  64. "TROOPS FIRE ON REBELS", Chicago Tribune, May 15, 1966, p1
  65. "DA NANG REBELS CRUSHED", Chicago Tribune, May 16, 1966, p1
  66. William Conrad Gibbons, The U.S. Government and the Vietnam War: Executive and Legislative Roles and Relationships, Part IV: July 1965-January 1968 (Princeton University Press, 2014) pp315-316
  67. "5,000 Protest War in Viet Nam", Chicago Tribune, May 16, 1966, p3
  68. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  69. "Suspect Is Sought In Honduras Slaying", Albuquerque (NM) Journal, May 19, 1966, pE-9
  70. "Mao Zedong in Power (1949-1976), by Frederick C. Teiwes, in Politics in China: An Introduction (Oxford University Press, 2010) p83
  71. "British Seamen Strike", Chicago Tribune, May 16, 1966, p1
  72. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  73. "Tell Horror of Ship Sinking in Typhoon", Chicago Tribune, May 18, 1966, p1
  74. "Picture Gallery" The Times (London). Friday, 20 May 1966. (56636), col C-E, p. 10.
  75. Daryl Alan Bailey and Sherrye Louise Huggins Bailey, Images of America: Westland (Arcadia Publishing, 2004) p8
  76. "Gunman Kills Beirut Editor in His Office", Chicago Tribune, May 17, 1966, p1
  77. "Millions Join Nation-wide French Strike", Chicago Tribune, May 17, 1966, p1A-6
  78. "Strikers March Through Paris Streets— 7 Million Quit to Protest Pay Ceilings", Chicago Tribune, May 17, 1966, p1C-5
  79. "Engine Locks, Ruins Gemini Launch Plans", Chicago Tribune, May 18, 1966, p1
  80. "Joe Bananas Gives up and Is Indicted", Chicago Tribune, May 18, 1966, p1B-1
  81. Nick Smart and Nina Goss, Dylan at Play (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2011) p86
  82. "Explosion in Parliament's Centre Block Takes Life Of 45-Year-Old Bomb Carrier", Montreal Gazette, May 19, 1966, p1
  83. "BOMB JARS CANADA MPS", Chicago Tribune, May 19, 1966, p1
  84. "Members of House Chartier's Target", Montreal Gazette, May 20, 1966, p1
  85. "Timing Slipup In Fuse", Montreal Gazette, May 20, 1966, p1
  86. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  87. Results of the 1966 European Judo Championships (JudoInside.com)
  88. "XB70A Sets Flight Record", Syracuse (NY) Post-Standard, May 20, 1966, p1
  89. "XB70 Hits 2,000 MPH For 32 Min.", UPI report in Sandusky (OH) Register, May 20, 1966, p1
  90. "Twelve new life peers named in Dissolution Honours; Lady Megan Lloyd George, CH" (News). The Times (London). Monday, 19 May 1966. (56635), col F, p. 13.
  91. Judith Ewell, Venezuela: A Century of Change (Stanford University Press, 1984) p166
  92. "Chiang Begins 4th Term as President", Chicago Tribune, May 21, 1966, p8
  93. 93.0 93.1 A.B.K. Kasozi, Social Origins of Violence in Uganda, 1964-1985 (McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 1994) pp85-86
  94. Onek C. Adyanga, Modes of British Imperial Control of Africa: A Case Study of Uganda, c.1890-1990 (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2011) p162
  95. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  96. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  97. "Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF)", by Ricki Schoen, in Europe Since 1945: An Encyclopedia (Routledge, 2014) p648
  98. "Cuba Reports Sentry Slain", Bridgeport (CT) Post, May 23, 1966, p1
  99. "Marine Wounds Cuban Soldier", UPI report in Anderson (IN) Herald, May 26, 1966, p31
  100. "Cuba Spurns U.S. Warning on Navy Base", Chicago Tribune, May 29, 1966, p1
  101. Theatre World 2009-2010, Ben Hodges and Scott Denny, eds. (Applause Theatre & Cinema, 2011) p235
  102. ClassicTVInfo.com
  103. Michael Asimow, Lawyers in Your Living Room!: Law on Television (American Bar Association, 2009) p60
  104. Joan Metge, Rautahi: The Maoris of New Zealand (Routledge, 2013) pp196-197
  105. "Jackie Stewart Wins Monaco Grand Prix", Glasgow Herald, May 23, 1966, p1
  106. "6 Cubans Invade Guantanamo Base", Charleston (WV) Daily Mail, May 27, 1966, p1
  107. "Supreme Court Voids Curb on Election-Day Editorials", Chicago Tribune, May 24, 1966, p5
  108. "29 are feared lost at sea" The Times (London). Wednesday, 25 May 1966. (56640), col D, p. 11.
  109. "Wreckage of NZ collier washed ashore", The Age (Melbourne), May 25, 1966, p1
  110. "Worst in 59 years", The Age (Melbourne), May 25, 1966, p1
  111. A.B.K. Kasozi, The Bitter Bread of Exile: The Financial Problems of Sir Edward Mutesa II during his final exile, 1966 - 1969 (Progressive Publishing House, 2013) pp73-77
  112. Michael Gould, The Struggle for Modern Nigeria: The Biafran War 1967-1970 (I. B. Tauris, 2013)
  113. "The Vietnam War at Home and Abroad", by Jason Flanagan, in The 1960s in Australia: People, Power and Politics (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2012) p207
  114. Ashley Ekins, with Ian McNeill, Fighting to the Finish: The Australian Army and the Vietnam War, 1968-1975 (Allen & Unwin, 2012) p66
  115. 115.0 115.1 Julia Kwong, Cultural Revolution in China's Schools: May 1966–April 1969 (Hoover Press, 1988)
  116. Hong Yung Lee, The Politics of the Chinese Cultural Revolution: A Case Study (University of California Press, 1980) p17
  117. Michael Dillon, China: A Modern History (I.B.Tauris, 2012) p329
  118. William Roger Louis and Avi Shlaim, The 1967 Arab-Israeli War: Origins and Consequences (Cambridge University Press, 2012) pp203-204
  119. Richard W. Orloff, David Harland, Apollo: The Definitive Sourcebook (Springer, 2006) p53
  120. "Giant moon rocket unveiled in U.S.", The Age (Melbourne), May 27, 1966, p4
  121. "British Guiana Becomes Guyana", Ottawa Journal, May 26, 1966, p1
  122. "Whose Freedom at Midnight? Machinations towards Guyana's Independence, May 1966", by Clem Seecharan, in The Iconography of Independence: 'Freedoms at Midnight (Routledge, 2013)
  123. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  124. A Lear Jet Returns", Kansas City Times, May 27, 1966, p9
  125. "U.S. Won't Pull Out of Viet, LBJ Pledges", Chicago Tribune, May 27, 1966, p1
  126. "War Casualties for Week Set Record High", Chicago Tribune, May 27, 1966, p1
  127. "Finnish Regime Includes Reds", Bridgeport (CT) Post, May 27, 1966, p45
  128. "French Pilots Bail Out Near 2 Spain Bases", Chicago Tribune, May 28, 1966, p6
  129. "Cuba Places Forces on Alert After Rejecting U.S. Protest", Bridgeport (CT) Post, May 29, 1966, p1
  130. "Red Guards", in The A to Z of the Chinese Cultural Revolution, Jian Guo, et al. (Rowman & Littlefield, 2009) p239
  131. Chesneaux, J; 'China: The People's Republic Since 1949'; Harvester Press (1979) p141
  132. "Estadio Azteca", in The Stadium Guide
  133. "Indonesia, Malay Aides Peace Parley over Tea", Chicago Tribune, May 30, 1966, p1
  134. "CLARK DISPUTES HILL'S '500' VICTORY", Chicago Tribune, May 31, 1966, p3-1
  135. "Hill Official '500' Winner", Chicago Tribune, June 1, 1966, p3-1
  136. William David Compton, Where No Man Has Gone Before: A History of Apollo Lunar Exploration Missions (NASA, 1996) p79
  137. Wesley T. Huntress, Jr. and Mikhail Ya. Marov, Soviet Robots in the Solar System: Mission Technologies and Discoveries (Springer, 2011) p158
  138. "County in Alabama Nominates Negro", Milwaukee Sentinel, June 1, 1966, p3
  139. "Mrs. Wallace Wins In Alabama", Tucson (AZ) Daily Citizen", November 9, 1966, p9
  140. "Plan Public Hangings Of Congo Coup Plotters", Ottawa Journal, June 1, 1966, p3
  141. "Hang 4 Ex-Ministers of Congo as Plotters", Chicago Tribune, June 1, 1966, p2-7