Jump to content

October 1966

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
<< October 1966 >>
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
01
02 03 04 05 06 07 08
09 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 31  
October 26, 1966: 44 crew of USS Oriskany killed in ship fire
October 21, 1966: 116 schoolchildren in Wales killed in landslide
October 5, 1966: "We Almost Lost Detroit"

The following events occurred in October 1966:

October 1, 1966 (Saturday)

[edit]
picture1
picture2
Albert Speer and Baldur von Schirach

October 2, 1966 (Sunday)

[edit]
Koufax
  • The 1966 Major League Baseball regular season came to a close as Sandy Koufax pitched the Los Angeles Dodgers to a 6–3 win over the Philadelphia Phillies to clinch the National League pennant and the right to face the Baltimore Orioles in the World Series.[7] In the American League, the perennial pennant-winners, the New York Yankees, finished in last place for the first time since 1913. With 70 wins and 89 losses, they were half a game behind the Boston Red Sox, and 26 12 games out of first place, despite a 2–0 win over the Chicago White Sox on the last day.[8]
  • Forty-three refugees from Cuba, along with a crew member, drowned after waves caused by the 125-mile-per-hour (201 km/h) winds of Hurricane Inez swamped the twin-engine cruiser operated by Enrique "El Falco" Gonzalez. The craft broke apart in shark-infested waters while bringing the passengers to Florida. Gonzalez and one refugee, Jorge Garcia, clung to a raft for four days before being rescued by a freighter, but Garcia died shortly after being flown to a hospital at Homestead. Relatives of the victims had paid Gonzalez $1,000 apiece for each refugee for the chance to escape Cuba, and Gonzalez and first mate Enrique Oliva had departed while the hurricane was still in progress, risking the safety of their passengers because the Cuban patrol boats were tied up by the storm as well. Of ten people who were able to make it into a life raft, eight were swept off it by powerful waves.[9]
  • Two young women in the U.S. state of Florida, Nancy Elaine Leichner, 21, and Pamela Ann Nater, 20, hiking through the Alexander Springs Wilderness recreation area of the Ocala National Forest while their friends were skin diving, were kidnapped and then found dead, the apparent victims of drowning. They were the first victims of serial killer Gerard John Schaefer, who would confess to their murders.[10][11] In all, Schaefer would be suspected of 28 murders, mostly of young women, between 1966 and his arrest in 1972.[12]
  • The first in a series of four plays in the Theatre 625 anthology strand, titled "Talking to a Stranger", was broadcast on BBC2 in the UK.[13] Hailed by critics as one of the most important television dramas of the 1960s, it would go on to be placed seventy-eighth in a 2000 poll of industry professionals conducted by the British Film Institute to determine the 100 Greatest British Television Programmes of the 20th century.[14]
  • The Soviet military newspaper Red Star published an article that officially confirmed suspicions that military advisers from the USSR were aiding the North Vietnamese. According to the article, rocket specialists had been sent to train the Vietnamese on how to fire surface-to-air anti-aircraft missiles and had been forced to dodge bombing runs made by the United States.[15]
  • The once-thriving U.S. town of Quandahl, Iowa, located in Allamakee County, was sold at a public auction for $15,300. Founded by immigrants from Norway in the 19th century, the unincorporated village had had a bank, post office, dry goods and hardware stores, a grocery store and other businesses only 30 years earlier before a steady decline in the economy.[16][17][18]
  • Jim Clark won the 1966 United States Grand Prix, held at Watkins Glen Grand Prix Race Course.
  • Born: Thor Gjermund Eriksen, Norwegian journalist and Director-General of the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation from 2013 to 2022; in Oslo[19]
  • Died: Luis Augusto Turcios Lima, 24, Guatemalan rebel leader, was killed in a car accident in Guatemala City when his car overturned and caught fire.[20][21][22]

October 3, 1966 (Monday)

[edit]
  • The Congress of Brazil voted to select Artur da Costa e Silva as the nation's 23rd President. Costa e Silva, a former General of the Brazilian Army and the hand-picked selection of President Humberto Castelo Branco, was unopposed, and received 295 votes from the majority party in Congress, the ARENA (Aliança REnovadora NAcional, or National Renewal Alliance). The opposing party, the Movimento Democrático Brasileiro (MDB), had only one-third of the seats in both the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate, and did not nominate a candidate, so Costa e Silva received 295 votes of the 472 electors.[23][24]
  • Only one month before the general election, U.S. Representative Charles Weltner of Georgia removed his name from the ballot, because he could not uphold his signed oath to support the nominees of the state Democratic Party. "I cannot compromise with hate... I cannot vote for Lester Maddox," he said, referring to the segregationist who had won the Democratic nomination primary.[25]
  • In the United Kingdom, the Morpeth to Reedsmouth line of the Great North Eastern Railway was closed.
  • Tunisia severed diplomatic relations with the United Arab Republic.
Rolf Sievert
  • Died: Rolf Sievert, 70, Swedish physicist who pioneered the measurement of safe doses of radiation for medical treatment. The "sievert", abbreviated as "Sv" is the name that the International Committee for Weights and Measures would create in 1979 for a 100 roentgen unit of radiation dosage, and 1 Sv is the maximum cumulative radiation that a NASA astronaut is allowed during a career.[26] Other units named for Sievert are the millisievert (mSv) and the microsievert (μSv).

October 4, 1966 (Tuesday)

[edit]
October 4, 1966: Kingdom of Lesotho granted independence
King Moshoehoe II

October 5, 1966 (Wednesday)

[edit]
  • The experimental Fermi 1 reactor at the Enrico Fermi Nuclear Generating Station, located near Detroit in Frenchtown Charter Township, Michigan, suffered a partial meltdown when its cooling system failed.[31] The incident would later become the subject of a 1975 bestselling book, We Almost Lost Detroit, by John G. Fuller.
  • The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals reversed the 1964 murder conviction and death sentence of Jack Ruby on grounds that the trial judge should have granted a motion for a change of venue to somewhere other than Dallas. "Jack Ruby was forced to trial under the most adverse, unusual, and extraordinary circumstances that this member of this court has yet to consider," Judge W.T. McDonald wrote in a concurring opinion. The Court remanded the case with instructions for a change of venue and a new trial. More people had witnessed Ruby's fatal shooting of accused presidential assassin Lee Harvey Oswald than any murder in history, as millions of people had watched the crime take place on live television on November 24, 1963.[32] Although a new trial would be scheduled for February in Wichita Falls, Texas, Ruby would become sick with pneumonia on December 9, and would die of a pulmonary embolism on January 3, 1967, at Parkland Memorial Hospital, where John F. Kennedy and Lee Harvey Oswald had both been pronounced dead.
  • North Korea's leader Kim Il Sung delivered a speech to the Korean Workers' Party that would later serve as "a rare instance... in which the United States was able to eventually look back and realize that later actions could be traced back to this specific threatening signal." Specifically, Kim called on his followers to "wage a positive struggle against U.S. imperialism", in the form of limited warfare against the American military presence in South Korea. Almost immediately, there was a surge of provocations at the Korean Demilitarized Zone, and the most aggressive action of all, the 1968 seizure of the USS Pueblo (AGER-2) and its crew.[33]
  • What would be described later as "the first successful, condemnatory burning of the Australian flag in recent memory"[34] took place in Canberra outside The Lodge, the official residence of the Prime Minister, as a group of 30 students protested against Australia's continued involvement in the Vietnam War. A prior attempt, on September 9, had been stopped by angry bystanders.
  • UNESCO signed the Recommendation Concerning the Status of Teachers. This event is now celebrated as World Teachers' Day.
  • Born:

October 6, 1966 (Thursday)

[edit]

October 7, 1966 (Friday)

[edit]
  • The Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, announced that NASA was considering JPL's suggestion for what would become the "Grand Tour program", after JPL aerospace engineer Gary Flandro pointed out the approach of a rare opportunity for exploration of four outer planets, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune, with one spacecraft.[41] Flandro had noted that if a probe could be readied for launch within 12 years, the four planets would be closely aligned so that an optimal liftoff date of October 7, 1978 would reach all four over a nine-year voyage. A similar positioning of the planets would not happen again for 180 years. Homer Joe Stewart, JPL's manager of advanced studies, said later that by 1978, solar-electric systems could be developed for taking advantage of gravity assist (commonly called the "slingshot effect") to use one planet's gravitational field to propel a probe at high speed to the next planet on the tour.[42] Given funding for two probes in case one failed, NASA would launch both in the summer of 1977, with Voyager 2 lifting off on August 20, 1977 and Voyager 1 16 days later on September 5. The alignment of Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune will not happen again until the year 2155.[43]
  • In a major foreign policy speech in New York City to the National Conference of Editorial Writers, U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson said that if the Soviet Union reduced its military forces in central Europe (East Germany and Czechoslovakia in particular), the United States would do the same and would urge its NATO allies to follow suit.[44] "Europe is partitioned," he said, and referring to Germany, added "An unnatural line runs through the heart of a very great and a very proud nation. History warns us that until this harsh division has been resolved, peace in Europe will never be secure. We must turn to one of the great unfinished tasks of our generation--and that unfinished task is making Europe whole again".[45]
  • In Dorion, Quebec, 18 teenagers from Cité des Jeunes High School were killed along with their 21-year-old school bus driver, when the bus was struck by a Canadian National Railways freight train struck at a railroad crossing, The 42 passengers had recently won student government elections and were on their way to a dance at nearby Hudson. At 7:35 p.m., the bus had pulled onto the tracks and had not completed its crossing when the freight train sliced through it at 60 miles per hour (97 km/h).[46][47]
  • NASA revised the division of duties of the Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) and Manned Spacecraft Center (MSC) in connection with extravehicular activity (EVA) studies. MSC would be responsible for development of EVA equipment and procedures, including astronaut participation, while MSFC would develop larger structures in space that might require astronaut EVA for maintenance and repair.[48]
  • The Soviet Union declared that all Chinese students must leave the country before the end of October. According to the Soviet news agency TASS, the order came under "the principle of reciprocity" after the Communist Chinese government had declared on September 20 that it would cease allowing Soviet exchange students to study at Chinese universities.[49]
  • Born: Sherman Alexie, American filmmaker and poet; in Spokane, Washington

October 8, 1966 (Saturday)

[edit]
  • Two days before Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko met with U.S. President Lyndon Johnson, the Soviet Union announced that it was rejecting the United Kingdom's six-point plan to end the Vietnam War. British Foreign Secretary George Brown met with Gromyko in London and proposed that the two nations arrange a peace conference in Geneva. The Soviet position was that, until North Vietnam requested a conference, the USSR would not push for peace negotiations.[50]
  • An attempt to protect ten offshore oil workers from the approach of Hurricane Inez ended in tragedy when the evacuation helicopter crashed only seconds after Shell Oil employees had climbed aboard. The Bell 204 had lifted off from an oil platform but fell 300 feet (91 m) into the Gulf of Mexico only 30 seconds after takeoff, killing all 11 people on board.[51]
  • Born: Felipe Camiroaga, Chilean television presenter; in Santiago (d. 2011)[52]
  • Died:

October 9, 1966 (Sunday)

[edit]

October 10, 1966 (Monday)

[edit]
Congressman Powell

October 11, 1966 (Tuesday)

[edit]

October 12, 1966 (Wednesday)

[edit]
Castelo Branco
  • Nine days after his civilian successor had been elected by the national congress, the Brazilian president, General Humberto Castelo Branco caused a constitutional crisis by issuing a decree removing six of the legislators from office. General Castelo Branco acted under a previously authorized procedure referred to as cassação de mandato (cancellation of mandate), despite having assured the President of the Chamber of Deputies, Adauto Lúcio Cardoso, that there would be no further cancellations. Cardoso defied his President, ruled that the six congressmen could continue to serve, and offered them an opportunity to defend themselves in Congress. Castelo Branco's use of force brought the two parties, ARENA and MDB, together in challenging the President, and on October 20, he would respond by closing the Brazilian Congress for one month, citing "counterrevolutionary elements who attempt to bring tumult" as his reason.[70]
  • Only five months after it had become independent from the United Kingdom, Guyana found that its territory was being encroached upon by the neighboring nation of Venezuela. In February, Ankoko Island, located in the Cuyuni River that separated Venezuela and Guyana, had been divided by an agreement signed in Geneva, but Venezuelan troops moved onto the Guyanese half of the island after the British government had withdrawn.[71]
  • Gunter Schuller's opera, The Visitation, premiered in Hamburg, West Germany.[72]
  • Died: Arthur Lourié (stage name for Naum Izrailevich Luria), 74, Russian-born classical composer

October 13, 1966 (Thursday)

[edit]

October 14, 1966 (Friday)

[edit]
October 14, 1966: 900th anniversary of Battle of Hastings observed
  • The 900th anniversary of the Battle of Hastings was observed, celebrating the pivotal October 14, 1066, confrontation of the Norman Conquest of England, the death in combat of King Harold II, and the beginning of a new regal dynasty under William the Conqueror, who became king after his armies won. To mark the occasion, the General Post Office of the United Kingdom released 197,000,000 commemorative four-penny stamps throughout Britain. Philatelists purchased sheets of the stamps for their collections, and some found errors that increased the rarity (and the value) of their purchase, including one example in Parkstone where the image of the Queen had been omitted.[76]
Jo Cals

October 15, 1966 (Saturday)

[edit]
picture1
picture2
Bobby Seale and Huey Newton

October 16, 1966 (Sunday)

[edit]

October 17, 1966 (Monday)

[edit]
Some Hollywood Square contestants in 1974: Paul Lynde, Rose Marie, Peter Marshall and Charlie Weaver
  • At 11:30 a.m. Eastern time, The Hollywood Squares made its television debut as a new game show on the NBC television network.[91] The show, hosted by Peter Marshall, featured nine celebrities (mostly comedians) as panelists appearing on a set evocative of the game tic-tac-toe, and regularly featuring suggestive jokes and double entendres; although Paul Lynde would become identified with his place on the board, Ernest Borgnine occupied the center square on the first broadcast.Daily News critic Kay Gardella commented, "Eureka! Finaly, a game show has arrived on TV that doesn't take itself too seriously, and is still fun to play."[92] The Squares format would inspire similar shows in other nations, starting in 1975 with Celebrity Squares on Network Ten in Australia.[93]
  • In Denver, Colorado, an American organization called Housewives for Lower Food Prices began a boycott of five major supermarket chains in the area, including Safeway, Red Owl, King Soopers, and Furr's groceries.[94] Publicity from the boycott led other groups in North America to begin their own campaigns to avoid overpriced food chains, spreading to cities like Dallas, Albuquerque, New Mexico, Charlotte, North Carolina and Windsor, Ontario,[95] and then to nearly half of the states in the U.S.[96] The protests (which included complaints about prices being driven up by giveaways and trading stamps programs) would lead to Congressional investigations and ultimately stricter penalties for anti-competitive measures by grocers.[97]
  • Twelve New York firefighters were killed, and 17 others injured, in what was, at that time, the worst disaster in the history of the New York City Fire Department.[98] Most were members of Engine Company 18, and were on the ground floor of the Wonder Drug Store on East 23rd Street when the terrazzo floor beneath them collapsed, plunging them into the fire in the basement and bringing down the walls on top of them.[99][100]
  • The government of Zambia acquired the 165-square-mile (430 km2) Lochinvar Ranch from brothers Harry Wulfsohn and Edwin Wulfsohn, for 40,000 British pounds,[101] and transformed it from a former cattle ranch into a wildlife preserve, which would reopen as the Lochinvar National Park in 1972. The park, with 420 different species of animals, is one of the most popular tourist attractions in the southern African nation.[102]
  • An earthquake struck Peru, killing more than 100 people.[103] The Huaura Province reported 72 deaths, most of them in the provincial capital at Huacho, while the port city of Callao, and the capital, Lima, also suffered fatalities.[104]
  • Died:

October 18, 1966 (Tuesday)

[edit]
Multi-millionaires Arden and Kresge
  • Died:
    • Sebastian S. Kresge, 99, American multimillionaire who turned a single "five and dime" store in Detroit into a nationwide chain of 930 S.S. Kresge stores across the United States, and the Kmart discount department stores.[111]
    • Elizabeth Arden (Florence Nightingale Graham), 81, Canadian-born American beautician and cosmetics entrepreneur. One of the wealthiest women in the world, Arden left an estate of almost $50,000,000.[112]

October 19, 1966 (Wednesday)

[edit]

October 20, 1966 (Thursday)

[edit]
  • Soviet First Secretary Leonid Brezhnev and his guests (including Fidel Castro of Cuba, Nicolae Ceaușescu of Romania, János Kádár of Hungary, Willi Stoph of East Germany, Yumjaagiin Tsedenbal and the Communist Party leaders of several other Soviet allies) were at Baikonur Cosmodrome to witness Operation Palma 3, the launch of five rockets and missiles. In addition to the powerful N1 rocket that placed a seventh Molniya-1 communications satellite into orbit,[115] the leaders also watched four ICBM launches, with a UR-100 (known in the West as the SS-11 Sego), an R-36 (the SS-9 Scarp) and two R-36 missiles (SS-7 Saddler), one from a missile silo and the other from the ground.[116]
  • The West German submarine U-9 was launched. After being decommissioned in 1993, the 144-foot (44 m) long sub would be displayed as a permanent exhibit outside the Technology Museum in the city of Speyer, Rheinland-Pfalz.
  • Born: Stefan Raab, German television comedian and musician; in Köln, West Germany
  • Died:
    • Harry F. Byrd, 79, U.S. Senator for Virginia for more than 32 years and one of the most powerful men in the U.S. Senate until his resignation for health reasons in 1965. As Governor of Virginia from 1926 to 1930, he reduced the state government from 100 departments to only 12, turned a deep deficit into a financial surplus in four years, and called himself the "fiscal watchdog" over the federal budget. In 1960, despite not being on the ballot for president, Byrd received 15 electoral votes from dissatisfied Electoral College members in Mississippi, Alabama and Oklahoma.[117]
    • Mohamed Fawzi, 48, Egyptian composer who wrote the music for "Kassaman", adopted in 1963 as the National Anthem of Algeria

October 21, 1966 (Friday)

[edit]
Aberfan spoil heaps before the disaster...
... and after
  • An avalanche killed 116 schoolchildren and 28 adults at Pantglas Junior School in the South Wales village of Aberfan. At 9:15 in the morning, shortly after the school day had started, a slag heap (or spoil tip) overlooking the school suddenly collapsed, sending two million tons of rock, coal and mud cascading down the hill.[118] Over the years, the heap had risen to a height of 80 feet (24 m), until heavy rains weakened it. Most of the children, who were buried alive in their classrooms, ranged in age from eight years old to ten years old.[119] It would later be discovered to have been caused by a build-up of water in the accumulated rock and shale, which suddenly started to slide downhill in the form of slurry.[120][121]
  • The United States Congress approved the AFL–NFL merger. According to later reports, Congressman Hale Boggs, the majority whip of the U.S. House of Representatives, and U.S. Senate Finance Committee Chairman Russell B. Long, both of Louisiana, had conditioned their facilitation of the merger, through an antitrust law exemption, on the award of an NFL franchise to New Orleans. As NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle and Boggs were walking to the House chamber, Rozelle reportedly said, "I don't know how I can ever thank you enough for this," and Boggs replied, "What do you mean you don't know how to thank me? New Orleans gets an immediate franchise in the NFL." When Rozelle said that he would "do everything I can", Boggs stopped, walked back toward the committee room, and said, "Well, we can always call off the vote..."[122][123] The New Orleans Saints franchise would be announced eleven days later, on November 1.[124]
  • MSC officials reviewed the airlock module (AM) on the S-IVB spacecraft at the McDonnell plant in St. Louis, and concluded that two design problems were serious. Specifically, the design relied totally on passive thermal control for the S-IVB, and there was a lack of definition on extravehicular and intravehicular equipment.[48]
  • French philosopher Jacques Derrida delivered a lecture La Structure, le signe et le jeu dans le discours des sciences humaines ("Structure, sign, and play in the discourse of the human sciences") to a structuralism colloquium at Johns Hopkins University, bringing his work on literary theory to international prominence.
  • Ten thousand firefighters lined Fifth Avenue in New York City for the funeral procession of 10 of the firemen killed in the 23rd Street Fire on October 17.[125]
  • The Yakovlev Yak-40 airliner made its maiden flight.[126]

October 22, 1966 (Saturday)

[edit]
  • British spy George Blake escaped from the maximum security Wormwood Scrubs prison, where he was in the fifth year of a 42-year prison sentence for espionage.[127][128] Blake, who had been the British vice-consul to South Korea when the North Koreans invaded in 1950, had been a prisoner in the Communist nation until 1953, and became an adherent of Communism during his incarceration, and a spy for the Soviet Union after he resumed service to the British government. Blake would successfully flee to Moscow.[129][130]
  • The Philippines inter-island steamer MV Pioneer Leyte collided with an American freighter ship, the Golden State, and sank off Manila with the loss of 44 lives.[131][132]

October 23, 1966 (Sunday)

[edit]
  • Che Guevara left Cuba for the last time, flying from Havana to Moscow with a Cuban passport in the name Luis Hernandez Galvan, then to Prague as Ramon Benitez of Uruguay, to Vienna as Adolfo Mena of Uruguay, and, ultimately, to Bolivia, where he would be killed in an ambush on October 9, 1967.[133]
  • INS Nilgiri, the first Indian Navy ship built in India, rather than a foreign shipyard, was commissioned. In a collaboration with Yarrow Shipbuilders of Scotland, the first of the Nilgiri-class frigates had been constructed in Mumbai at the Mazagon Docks.[134]
  • Died: Claire McDowell, 88, American silent film actress

October 24, 1966 (Monday)

[edit]
  • The retrial of Dr. Sam Sheppard began, four months after the U.S. Supreme Court had concluded that he had been denied a fair trial and had been convicted (on December 21, 1954) of murdering his wife. The new proceedings would bring fame to Dr. Sheppard's new lawyer, F. Lee Bailey of Boston. Sheppard would be found not guilty on November 16.[135]
  • Born: Roman Abramovich, Russian billionaire businessman, investor and politician; in Saratov, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
  • Died:

October 25, 1966 (Tuesday)

[edit]
  • Meeting in Manila, the seven member nations of the South East Asian Treaty Organization (SEATO) agreed to a common plan for ending their participation in the Vietnam War. In the Manila Communique, signed by U.S. President Lyndon Johnson, South Vietnam's Prime Minister Nguyen Cao Ky, and other leaders, the nations endorsed a six-point peace proposal and offered to withdraw the allied forces from South Vietnam completely within six months after "the other side withdraws its forces to the North, ceases infiltration, and the level of violence thus subsides."[137][138] However, North Vietnam's Prime Minister Pham Van Dong, referring to the Munich Agreement between Adolf Hitler and Neville Chamberlain in 1938, responded, "Never Munich again, in whatever form," and pledged that his nation "will fight until final victory against the U.S. imperialists."[139][140]
  • The Luna 12 space probe, launched by the Soviet Union on October 22, entered orbit around the Moon in order to photograph potential landing sites for a crewed mission. With higher resolution television cameras (1100 scan lines) and a closer orbital approach than previous Soviet probes (as near as 103 kilometres (64 mi)), Luna 12 returned images in which 15-metre (49 ft) long objects could be discerned. Most of the photos, taken from a nearly equatorial lunar orbit, were not released.[141][142]
  • A military court in Jakarta sentenced Indonesia's ex-foreign minister Subandrio to death, on charges of being involved in the 30 September Movement.[143][144] The sentence would be reduced to life imprisonment upon the intervention of the British government.
  • Three days after accusing Britain's Royal Air Force of flying over Spanish territory in order to reach Gibraltar,[145] Spain closed off its border crossing at La Línea de la Concepción, the only land connection between the British colony and the rest of Europe.[146]
  • The People's Republic of China successfully test-fired a nuclear missile for the first time, with an accurate hit and an atomic blast at a pre-determined target in the Lop Nor desert site.[147][148]
  • The British House of Commons voted 307–239 to approve the Labour government's compulsory freeze on wages and prices, with a 500-pound sterling fine against violators.[149]
  • Gemini Program Deputy Manager Kenneth S. Kleinknecht, ordered two S-IVB trainers for use in crew training and crew evaluation of hardware for the airlock, as well as full-scale S-IVB neutral buoyancy trainer and a full-scale, high-fidelity, one-g trainer.[48] On the same day, MSFC issued its research and development plan for the Orbital Workshop (OWS), which had won approval for the Saturn/Apollo Applications 209 mission (SAA-209), a backup for the Apollo-Saturn 209. The primary purpose of SAA-209 was developing a spent S-IVB stage into a habitable space structure for extended Earth-orbiting missions.[48]
  • Died: Floyd MacMillan Davis, 70, American illustrator

October 26, 1966 (Wednesday)

[edit]
  • A fire killed 44 crewmen on the aircraft carrier USS Oriskany in the Gulf of Tonkin, killed 44 crewmen and seriously injured 15 others. Of the dead, 34 were U.S. Navy officers, of whom 24 of them were U.S. Navy pilots. The fire began at 7:21 a.m., in a locker containing flares and spread through the forward hangar bay, eventually burning parts of five decks.[150][151] An investigation found that the fire had been caused initially by the careless handling of a single magnesium parachute flare, which accidentally ignited after two sailors were returning unused flares from aircraft to a storage compartment. In a panic, one of the men tossed the flare into a storage locker containing 700 more flares, setting off flames hot enough to melt metal.[152] The loss of life would have been greater had it not been for the work of crewmen who were able to push 343 of the ship's bombs, some of them weighing 2,000 pounds (910 kg), overboard.[153]
October 26, 1966: LBJ in Vietnam

October 27, 1966 (Thursday)

[edit]
  • Erich Mende resigned his post as Vice-Chancellor of West Germany. Mende, the Chairman of the Free Democratic Party, quit along with three other FDP members, Finance Minister Rolf Dahlgruen, Economic Cooperation Minister (and future president) Walter Scheel, and Housing Minister Ewald Bucher. The four were all part of the coalition that made up the second Cabinet of Chancellor Ludwig Erhard, leaving Erhard of the Christian Democratic Union with a minority government.[158] Hans-Christoph Seebohm was appointed to succeed Mende. Chancellor Erhard himself, unable to form an acceptable government, would resign on November 30.[159]
  • The United Nations General Assembly voted, 114–2, to end the South African Mandate over the former German colony of South West Africa, with the two "no" votes coming from South Africa and from Portugal, whose colony of Angola bordered the Mandate territory. France and the United Kingdom abstained.[160] The post of United Nations Commissioner for South-West Africa was established, and Anton Vratuša would be the first office holder, unable to administer the colony, however, because South Africa maintained that the U.N. had no right to interfere with the 1920 decision of the defunct League of Nations.
  • In the United States, the CBS television network premiered It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown as a Halloween-themed animated presentation based on the comic strip Peanuts. The popular cartoon special has been shown annually since then during the last week in October, for 35 years on CBS, and (since 2001) on the ABC network.[161]
  • Walt Disney recorded his final filmed appearance prior to his death, detailing his plans for Epcot, a utopian planned city to be built in Florida. After his death less than two months later, the original concept would be scrapped and Epcot would become an amusement park.[162]
  • Born:
  • Died: Barry Faulkner, 85, American mural painter

October 28, 1966 (Friday)

[edit]
  • The People's Republic of China announced, through its official Xinhua News Agency, that it claimed sovereignty over territory within the independent Buddhist Kingdom of Bhutan. According to the Chinese announcement, the fertile Dong Nang grasslands at the base of the Himalayan Mountains were owned by China and Bhutanese farmers who used the land for cattle grazing would have to pay taxes to the Beijing government.[164]
  • An investigation was started by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) of games of chance sponsored by supermarkets, including "supermarket bingo" and sweepstakes, in order to determine whether the contests were illegal, unwinnable, or had increased food prices. The FTC called on grocery stores to voluntarily eliminate "any practices that are unfair or deceptive or that unjustifiably add to the American housewife's grocery bill."[165]
  • Born: Steve Atwater, American NFL defensive back; in Chicago
  • Died: Robert Charpentier, 50, French cyclist who won three gold medals at the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin[166]

October 29, 1966 (Saturday)

[edit]
  • Guinea's Foreign Minister Joseph Ankrah and 18 other people, all en route to the Organization of African Unity (OAU) meeting in Ethiopia, were removed from a Pan American World Airways flight when it made a stop in Accra, the capital of Ghana. The delegates were detained as prisoners by the government, which said that it was retaliating for Guinea's imprisonment of Ghanaian citizens. The U.S. Ambassador to the African nation of Guinea, Robinson McIlvaine, was placed under house arrest at his residence in Conakry, in retaliation Ankrah's imprisonment. The Guinean government charged that McIlvaine and the United States were responsible for the Ghana incident.[167] The OAU and the Ethiopian Justice Minister would mediate the confrontation. McIlvaine was released and the 19 prisoners would be released on November 5, after it was determined that none of the alleged prisoners in Guinea wished to return to Ghana.[168]
  • Less than three months after its launch on August 10, Lunar Orbiter 1 was deliberately pulled out of orbit by NASA Ground Control, and crashed into the Moon. The NASA decision, which came even as the Soviet lunar orbiter, Luna 12, was sending back photographs to the USSR, was done in order to avoid interference with the Lunar Orbiter 2 probe that would launch on November 6.[169] The crash was accomplished by transmitting a command to fire a retrorocket that slowed the probe's speed from 2,150 to 1,750 miles per hour, causing a sufficient loss of momentum to make the vehicle glide to an impact on the far side of the Moon.[170] Regarding all four Lunar Orbiters, a historian would write later, "With a total cost of the entire project at $163 million, they were almost certainly the world's most expensive disposable cameras."[171]
  • The National Organization for Women (NOW) was officially incorporated during its first national conference, held in Washington, D.C., and adopted a preamble that declared its purpose to be "to take action to bring women into full participation in the mainstream of American society now, exercising all the privileges and responsibilities thereof in truly equal partnership with men."[172]
  • The first regeneration of Doctor Who took place, as the Doctor's face changed from that of actor William Hartnell to that of his successor, Patrick Troughton. Hartnell, at 58, was supposedly exhausted from the production schedule,[173] so in the story, The Tenth Planet, the Doctor remarked "This old body of mine is wearing a bit thin," and collapsed. With the aid of a slow mix and dissolve, the closeup view of Hartnell's face was gradually replaced by that of the 46-year-old Troughton.[174]
  • Valued at half a million U.S. dollars, the Antonio da Correggio painting Madonna and Child with the infant Saint John the Baptist was stolen from the Art Institute of Chicago. Seventeen hours later, an anonymous phone call was made to the Institute, and the 450-year-old painting, wrapped in brown paper and tied with a string, was found in a wastebasket downtown, with moderate but permanent damage.[175]
  • Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and her consort Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, visited Aberfan to pay their respects to those who died in the disaster.[176]
  • Celtic defeated Rangers, 1–0, to win the 1966 Scottish League Cup Final, held at Hampden Park in Glasgow in front of 94,532 spectators.[177][178]
  • A penumbral lunar eclipse took place.[179][180]
  • Died: Jocelyn Brooke, 57, English author best known of the "Orchid Trilogy" of books, which he started with 1948's The Military Orchid

October 30, 1966 (Sunday)

[edit]
  • Cheri Jo Bates, an 18-year old freshman at Riverside Community College in southern California, was brutally murdered after leaving the campus library at closing time.[181] When her body was found the next morning, she had been "slashed three times in the chest, once in the back, and seven times in her throat" with wounds "so extensive that she was nearly decapitated".[182] An anonymous letter, claiming responsibility for the killing, would be received by city police on November 29,[183] with the warning that Bates "is not the first and she will not be the last". The form of the murders, and the wording of the letters, were similar enough to that of the Zodiac Killer[184] that Bates would be considered to have likely been his first victim.
  • The Montreal Alouettes defeated the Ottawa Rough Riders 1–0 in the lowest-scoring game in Canadian Football League history and a record for modern pro football history. The Als' score came when kicker Peter Kempf attempted a 25-yard field goal and the wind sent the ball wide; the Riders' Don Gilbert fell on the missed kick in the end zone, which gave Montreal a single point under CFL rules. A previous 1–0 game had happened in 1949, before the CFL was founded by a merger of two leagues.[185]
  • Born:
  • Died:
    • Dr. Smiley Blanton, 84, American psychiatrist who, along with the Reverend Norman Vincent Peale, created the profession of pastoral counseling, an integration of psychiatry and religion. They co-founded the Religio-Psychiatric Clinic in 1937, and later the American Foundation of Religion and Psychiatry, as well as authoring Faith Is the Answer: A Psychiatrist and a Pastor Discuss Your Problems and The Art of Real Happiness.[188]
    • John Drainie, 50, Canadian radio and television actor who was dubbed, by Orson Welles, as "the greatest radio actor in the world" for the lead role in Jake and the Kid, died of cancer.[189]
    • Bill Farnsworth, 79, Australian rugby and cricket star

October 31, 1966 (Monday)

[edit]
  • A footlocker, containing the materials from the 1963 autopsy of U.S. President John F. Kennedy, was brought to the National Archives Building following an authorization by the Kennedy family, and opened in the presence of the officials from the Archives, the Government Services Administration, and the U.S. Department of Justice, on condition that the contents not be available for five years. When an inventory was made, eight of the nine sets of items were available, the stainless steel container that had contained Kennedy's brain was found to be empty. Explanations differ, with some authors believing it to be part of the coverup of a conspiracy, the custodian, Burke Marshall would testify in 1978 that the brain tissue was disposed of by Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy in order to prevent it from being "placed on public display in future years in an institution such as the Smithsonian."[190]
  • Staff Sergeant Herbert W. Boeckenhaupt, a 23-year old U.S. Air Force noncommissioned officer, was arrested at March Air Force Base in California, where he worked as a communications repairman and had top secret clearance.[191] After the FBI presented evidence that he had conspired to deliver national defense secrets to Soviet Embassy counselor Aleksey R. Malinin, Boeckenhaupt would be convicted of espionage and sentenced to 30 years in federal prison[192] and Malinin would be expelled from the United States. He was ordered to be released from prison by a Federal Judge for the Middle District of Pennsylvania in March 1978 after a writ of habeas corpus was filed, and granted, that he was being held improperly for non-statutory reasons. The Court granted the petition for release. The government did not appeal the decision.
  • John Paul Chase, a henchman in the U.S. gangs of Baby Face Nelson, John Dillinger and Alvin Karpis during the 1930s, was paroled from Leavenworth Federal Prison after 30 years. He had been convicted in 1935 of the murder of FBI Agent Samuel Cowley. Chase, 64 years old, would spend the last years of his life as a janitor in California before dying of cancer on October 5, 1973.[193]
  • U.S. President Johnson, on his first visit to Malaysia, stopped at Kampung Labu Jaya village in Negeri Sembilan state. The village would rename itself Kampung L.B. Johnson in honor of the 36th American president.[194]
  • The Delhi High Court was established, with four judges.[195]
  • Born: Ad-Rock (stage name for Adam Keefe Horovitz), American guitarist and co-founder of the hip hop trio the Beastie Boys; in Manhattan[196]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "From the archive, 1 October 1966: Nazi leaders freed after 20 years", The Guardian, 1 October 2014. Accessed 28 November 2014
  2. ^ "Crowd Jeers as Nazis Freed", Ottawa Journal, October 1, 1966, p1
  3. ^ "Russ Bar Freedom for Rudolf Hess", Chicago Tribune, October 2, 1966, p1
  4. ^ "Hunt Missing Jet with 20 in Mountains", Chicago Tribune, October 2, 1966, p1
  5. ^ Aircraft Accident Report. West Coast Airlines, Inc DC-9 N9101. Near Wemme, Oregon Archived 2008-02-16 at the Wayback Machine, Adopted: 11 December 1967
  6. ^ O'Malley, Daniel (October 4, 1966). "Mike Coppola Dies; Scottoriggio Figure". Daily News. New York City. p. 4. Retrieved July 2, 2022 – via newspapers.com.
  7. ^ "KOUFAX PITCHES DODGERS TO PENNANT!". Chicago Tribune. October 3, 1966. p. 3-1.
  8. ^ "White Sox And Rain Give Yankees Last Place Finish". Newport Daily News. Newport, Rhode Island. October 1, 1966. p. 8.
  9. ^ "INEZ HITS BOAT; 45 LOST". Chicago Tribune. October 8, 1966. p. 1.
  10. ^ "Nancy Elaine Leichner". The Doe Network.org.
  11. ^ "Pamela Ann Nater". The Doe Network.org.
  12. ^ "The Charley Project: Nancy Elaine Leichner". charleyproject.org. June 13, 2018. Retrieved June 10, 2022.
  13. ^ "British Film Institute ScreenOnline site".
  14. ^ "BFI TV 100 site". Archived from the original on 21 March 2012. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
  15. ^ "Soviets Admit Troops Are in N. Viet Nam". Chicago Tribune. October 3, 1966. p. 5.
  16. ^ "Do You Want To Buy Town?". Muscatine Journal. Muscatine, Iowa. October 1, 1966. p. 1.
  17. ^ "Iowa Village Sold For $15,300". La Crosse Tribune. La Crosse, Wisconsin. October 5, 1966. p. 9.
  18. ^ "Once Thriving Iowa Town Auctioned Off". Chicago Tribune. November 26, 1966. p. 1.
  19. ^ "Thor Gjermund Eriksen". Store norske leksikon (in Norwegian). Foreningen Store norske leksikon.
  20. ^ "Luis Turcios, Leader of the Leftist Guerrilla Forces in Guatemala, Is Killed in an Auto Crash at 24". The New York Times. October 4, 1966.
  21. ^ Van Ness, Peter (1970). Revolution and Chinese Foreign Policy: Peking's Support for Wars of National Liberation. Vol. 34. University of California Press. p. 154. GGKEY:966F0LCC9P2 – via Google Books.
  22. ^ Ariel Batres Villagrán, "Somos los jóvenes rebeldes; memorias de un guerrillero" (We are the young rebels: Memories of a guerrilla), Monografías (2013)
  23. ^ "Brazil's Congress Picks President". Albuquerque Journal. October 4, 1966. p. 4.
  24. ^ "Costa e Silva já está eleito" [Costa e Silva already elected]. Folha de S.Paulo (in Portuguese). São Paulo. Folha. 4 October 1066. p. 1.
  25. ^ "Can't Support Maddox, Quits Georgia Race". Chicago Tribune. October 4, 1966. p. 4.
  26. ^ Kerr, R. A. (31 May 2013). "Radiation Will Make Astronauts' Trip to Mars Even Riskier". Science. 340 (6136): 1031. Bibcode:2013Sci...340.1031K. doi:10.1126/science.340.6136.1031. PMID 23723213.
  27. ^ Jessup, John E. (1998). "Lesotho". An Encyclopedic Dictionary of Conflict and Conflict Resolution, 1945-1996. Greenwood Press. p. 423.
  28. ^ Obituary: King Moshoeshoe II of Lesotho by Benjamin Pogrund in The Independent, 16 January 1996 (accessed 3 November 2007)
  29. ^ "Lesotho Now New Nation in Africa", Tucson (AZ) Daily Citizen, October 4, 1966, p17
  30. ^ "Israel Asks to Have Common Market Tie", Bridgeport Telegram, October 5, 1966, p18
  31. ^ Lees, Frank (2005). Lees' Loss Prevention in the Process Industries: Hazard Identification, Assessment and Control. Butterworth-Heinemann. pp. 20/9.
  32. ^ "Ruby Wins New Trial". Chicago Tribune. October 6, 1966. p. 1.
  33. ^ Jackson, Van (2016). Rival Reputations: Coercion and Credibility in US-North Korea Relations. Cambridge University Press. pp. 29–30.
  34. ^ Scalmer, Sean (2002). Dissent Events: Protest, the Media, and the Political Gimmick in Australia. University of New South Wales Press. p. 46.
  35. ^ "Inesa Kravets". Olympedia. OlyMADMen. Retrieved 12 April 2023.
  36. ^ "Many New California Laws Go Onto Books", Daily Independent Journal (San Rafael, CA), October 6, 1966, p1
  37. ^ Albert Somit and Steven A. Peterson, Biopolicy: The Life Sciences and Public Policy (Emerald Group Publishing, 2012) p232
  38. ^ "LSD Bill Signed by Brown", Independent (Long Beach CA), May 31, 1966, p1
  39. ^ Michael J. Kramer, The Republic of Rock: Music and Citizenship in the Sixties Counterculture (Oxford University Press, 2013) p59
  40. ^ "Shirin to become first woman Speaker". bdnews24.com. 29 April 2013. Retrieved 29 April 2013.
  41. ^ "Planet 'tour' planned". The Age. Melbourne. October 8, 1966. p. 4.
  42. ^ Dighton, Ralph (November 27, 1966). "Space Cue: Planetary Billiards". Courier-Journal. Louisville, Kentucky. AP. p. 4.
  43. ^ "The Grand Tour: 11-Year Trip to Outer Planets". Los Angeles Times. April 13, 1969. p. 1.
  44. ^ Cohen, Warren I.; Tucker, Nancy Bernkopf (1994). Lyndon Johnson Confronts the World: American Foreign Policy 1963-1968. Cambridge University Press. p. 197.
  45. ^ "Remarks in New York City Before the National Conference of Editorial Writers". The American Presidency Project, UC-Santa Barbara.
  46. ^ "Train Hits School Bus; Death Toll At Least 22". Montreal Gazette. October 8, 1966. p. 1.
  47. ^ "Inquiry Pressed As Area Morns 19 Dead In Crash". Montreal Gazette. October 10, 1966. p. 1.
  48. ^ a b c d Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain. Brooks, Courtney G.; Ertel, Ivan D.; Newkirk, Roland W. "PART II: Apollo Application Program -August 1965 to December 1966.". SKYLAB: A CHRONOLOGY. NASA Special Publication-4011. NASA. pp. 92–94. Retrieved 7 April 2023.
  49. ^ "Russia Ousts All Chinese Students". Tucson Daily Citizen. Tucson, Arizona. October 7, 1966. p. 1.
  50. ^ "RUSS SPURN PEACE PARLEY". Chicago Tribune. October 9, 1966. p. 1.
  51. ^ "11 Die in Gulf Copter Crash". Chicago Tribune. October 9, 1966. p. 1.
  52. ^ "Ministro de Defensa cierra toda posibilidad tras accidente en Juan Fernández: No hay sobrevivientes" [Defense Ministry rules out any possibility after accident in Juan Fernández: There were no survivors]. Radio Bio-Bío (in Spanish). 3 September 2011. Archived from the original on 24 November 2011. Retrieved 3 September 2011.
  53. ^ "Pop Star Johnny Kidd Dies in Smash", Manchester Evening News, October 8, 1966, p.1
  54. ^ Thompson, Dave (2004). Smoke on the Water: The Deep Purple Story. ECW Press. p. 13.
  55. ^ "BALTIMORE THE CHAMPS!", Chicago Tribune, October 10, 1966, p1
  56. ^ Armstrong, Charles (2001). Critical Asian Studies, Volume 33, Issue 4: America's Korea, Korea's Vietnam. Routledge.
  57. ^ Elliott, Francis; Hanning, James (2007). Cameron: the Rise of the New Conservative. Harper Perennial. ISBN 978-0-00-724367-9.
  58. ^ "Jury Convicts Rep. Powell". Chicago Tribune. October 11, 1966. p. 1.
  59. ^ Billingham, John; Pešek, Rudolf (2013). Communication with Extraterrestrial Intelligence. Elsevier. pp. 3–5.
  60. ^ Pinch, Trevor; Trocco, Frank (2012). "Shaping the Synthesizer". In Sterne, Jonathan (ed.). The Sound Studies Reader. Routledge. p. 261.
  61. ^ Miles, Barry (2009). The British Invasion: The Music, the Times, the Era. Sterling Publishing Company. p. 237. ISBN 978-1-4027-6976-4.
  62. ^ Mayer, Sebastian (2014). NATO’s Post-Cold War Politics: The Changing Provision of Security. Springer. p. 319.
  63. ^ "HH Sultan Ghalib bin Awadh bin Saleh al-Qu'aiti (II) | Al Qu'aiti Royal Family". alquaiti.com. Retrieved 2023-09-09.
  64. ^ Soszynski, Henry. "Shihr and Mukalla". Genealogical Gleanings. University of Queensland. Archived from the original on 2009-08-07. Retrieved 2011-05-28.
  65. ^ "Charlotte Cooper". Olympedia. OlyMADMen. Retrieved 12 April 2023.
  66. ^ "Nazi hangs himself in prison cell", The Guardian (Manchester), October 11, 1966, p.9
  67. ^ "Actor Dies". The Salina Journal. AP. 11 October 1966. p. 2. Retrieved 12 April 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  68. ^ Olsen, Bertha F. (1968). "New Opportunities for Communication— Consumer and Marketing Service". Proceedings of Nutrition Education Conference: February 20–22, 1967. U.S. Department of Agriculture. p. 38.
  69. ^ Catholic Hierarchy
  70. ^ Maria Helena Moreira Alves, State and Opposition in Military Brazil (University of Texas Press, 1988) p72
  71. ^ "Beyond Post-Socialist Conversions: Functional Cooperation and Trans-Regional Regimes in the Global South", by Diane Brook Napier, in Post-Socialism Is Not Dead: (Re)Reading The Global In Comparative Education (Emerald Group, 2010) p423
  72. ^ Butterworth, Neil (2013). Dictionary of American Classical Composers. Routledge.
  73. ^ "Chicago Medic Nobel Winner". Chicago Tribune. October 14, 1966. p. 1.
  74. ^ Sue Harper and Justin Smith, British Film Culture in the 1970s: The Boundaries of Pleasure (Edinburgh University Press, 2011) pp36-37
  75. ^ "Clifton Webb, Hollywood's Urbane, Witty Actor, Dies", The Tampa Tribune, October 15, 1966, p.17-A
  76. ^ "British Find Stamp Flaws", San Mateo (CA) Times, October 15, 1966, p20
  77. ^ "Netherlands Premier, Cabinet Resign", Tucson (AZ) Daily Citizen, October 14, 1966, p2
  78. ^ "The Dream Comes True— Metro Opens", Montreal Gazette, October 15, 1966, p1
  79. ^ Walter L. Hixson, The United States and the Vietnam War: Leadership and diplomacy in the Vietnam War (Taylor & Francis, 2000) p57
  80. ^ Christoph H. Schreuer, The ICSID Convention: A Commentary (Cambridge University Press, 2001) p xi
  81. ^ Michael Brecher and Jonathan Wilkenfeld, A Study of Crisis (University of Michigan Press, 1997) p328
  82. ^ McDowell, Jonathan. "Launch Log". Jonathan's Space Page. Retrieved 4 January 2014.
  83. ^ Amy Abugo Ongiri, Spectacular Blackness: The Cultural Politics of the Black Power Movement and the Search for a Black Aesthetic (University of Virginia Press, 2010) p43
  84. ^ Rickey Vincent, Party Music: The Inside Story of the Black Panthers' Band and How Black Power Transformed Soul Music (Chicago Review Press, 2013) p67
  85. ^ "Dept. of Transport Created by Johnson", Chicago Tribune, October 16, 1966, p3
  86. ^ This Is Your Government: The Department of Transportation (Rosen Publishing Group, 2006)pp12-13
  87. ^ "Historic Preservation", in Encyclopedia of Twentieth Century Architecture, by R. Stephen Sennott (Taylor & Francis, 2004) p616
  88. ^ John Glatt, Live at the Fillmore East and West: Getting Backstage and Personal with Rock's Greatest Legends (Rowman & Littlefield, 2014) p79
  89. ^ Nohlen, D & Stöver, P (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p1919 ISBN 9783832956097
  90. ^ "Between the Sheets: Mary Elizabeth McGlynn". YouTube.
  91. ^ Marshall, Peter (2002). Backstage with the Original Hollywood Square. Thomas Nelson.
  92. ^ "Pat and New Game Show Are Boone to Daytime TV", by Kay Gardella, Daily News (New York), October 18, 1966, p.3
  93. ^ "Celebrity Squares (Australia)". NostalgiaCentral.com.
  94. ^ "Housewives Open Fight On Prices". Amarillo Globe-Times. Amarillo, Texas. AP. October 17, 1966. p. 1.
  95. ^ "The Housewives' Battle to Lower Food Costs Spreads Across U.S.". Bridgeport Telegram. Bridgeport, Connecticut. October 22, 1966. p. 1.
  96. ^ "Boycott of Housewives Spreads in 21 States". Colorado Springs Gazette-Telegraph. Colorado Springs, Colorado. October 30, 1966. p. 1.
  97. ^ "Consumer Food Dollar".
  98. ^ "12 Dead: The Department's Worst Fire; 'Absolute Nightmare,' Mayor Says". The New York Times. October 19, 1966. p. 1.
  99. ^ "N.Y. Shaken By Death of 12 Firemen". Bridgeport Post. Bridgeport, Connecticut. October 19, 1966. p. 1.
  100. ^ Dunn, Vincent (2015). Safety and Survival on the Fireground. Fire Engineering Books. p. 147.
  101. ^ Macmillan, Hugh (2005). An African Trading Empire: The Story of the Susman Brothers and Wulfsohn, 1901-2005. I.B.Tauris. p. 361.
  102. ^ ZambiaTourism.com
  103. ^ "Quake Shakes Peru Coast; Report 83 Die". Chicago Tribune. October 18, 1966. p. 1.
  104. ^ "Peru Quake Death Toll Put at 120". Chicago Tribune. October 18, 1966. p. 3.
  105. ^ "Cancer Fatal To Bob Swift", San Francisco Examiner, October 17, 1966, p.57
  106. ^ Wieland Wagner: The Positive Sceptic, by Geoffrey Skelton, New York: St. Martin's Press, 1971
  107. ^ Yallop, David (2014). Beyond Reasonable Doubt?. Little, Brown Book Group.
  108. ^ Timothy Evans Gets a Free Pardon", by Stanley Sparks, Birmingham (England) Evening Mail, October 18, 1966, p.20
  109. ^ Kabatchnik, Amnon (2011). Blood on the Stage, 1950-1975: Milestone Plays of Crime, Mystery, and Detection. Scarecrow Press. p. 457.
  110. ^ "New Ford Cortina With More Room". The Glasgow Herald. 18 October 1966. p. 6. Retrieved 2013-03-05 – via Google News.
  111. ^ "S.S. Kresge, Dime Store Magnate, Dies", Chicago Tribune, October 19, 1966, p2
  112. ^ "Set Elizabeth Arden Estate at 50 Millions", Chicago Tribune, October 28, 1966, p3
  113. ^ Zeisler, Laurel (2012). "Orr, Robert Gordon 'Bobby'". Historical Dictionary of Ice Hockey. Scarecrow Press. p. 240.
  114. ^ Dick, Bernard F. (2015). Engulfed: The Death of Paramount Pictures and the Birth of Corporate Hollywood. University Press of Kentucky. p. 103.
  115. ^ Chertok, Boris (2009). Rockets and People. Vol. III: Hot Days of the Cold War. NASA. p. 512.
  116. ^ Lardier, Christian; Barensky, Stefan (2013). The Soyuz Launch Vehicle: The Two Lives of an Engineering Triumph. Springer. p. 196.
  117. ^ "Ex-Sen. Byrd of Virginia Dies; Fiscal Watchdog in Coma Since Early July". Chicago Tribune. October 21, 1966. p. 1.
  118. ^ Davis, Lee Allyn (2010). Natural Disasters. Infobase Publishing. p. 23.
  119. ^ "Hiraeth: Connecting with the land".
  120. ^ "Fear 137 Perish in Landslide". Chicago Tribune. October 22, 1966. p. 1.
  121. ^ "1966: Coal tip buries children in Aberfan". BBC. 21 October 1966. Retrieved 14 February 2013.
  122. ^ "Congress Passes Merger; Awaits LBJ's Hand". Troy Record. Troy, New York. October 22, 1966. p. 16.
  123. ^ MacCambridge, Michael (2008). America's Game: The Epic Story of How Pro Football Captured a Nation. Knopf Doubleday. p. 229.
  124. ^ "New Orleans Gets NFL Pro Grid Franchise". Monroe News-Star. Monroe, Louisiana. November 1, 1966. p. 1.
  125. ^ Alden, Robert (October 22, 1966). "Firemen Bear Their Dead Down 5th Ave. in Silent Grief; Throngs Watch as Firemen Bear Their Dead Down Fifth Ave, in Silent Grief". The New York Times. Page 28, columns 1-8. Retrieved 8 April 2023.
  126. ^ Taylor, John W. R. (1976). Jane's All The World's Aircraft 1976–77. London: Jane's Yearbooks. pp. 448–9. ISBN 0-354-00538-3.
  127. ^ "Double-agent breaks out of jail". BBC News. 22 October 1966. Archived from the original on 7 March 2008. Retrieved 2008-02-03.
  128. ^ "British Spy Flees Prison", Chicago Tribune, October 23, 1966, p1
  129. ^ "British Spy Who Fled Jail Now Traced to Soviet Union", Nashua (NH) Telegraph, September 25, 1967, p10
  130. ^ "Blake, George", in Encyclopedia of Cold War Espionage, Spies, and Secret Operations, by Richard C. S. Trahair and Robert L. Miller (Enigma Books, 2013) pp32-34
  131. ^ "Ships Crash, 28 Killed in Manila Bay", Chicago Tribune, October 23, 1966, p3
  132. ^ "40 die in collision off Manila". The Times. No. 56770. London. 24 October 1966. col B, p. 7.
  133. ^ Taibo, Paco Ignacio (1999). Guevara, Also Known as Che. Macmillan. p. 630.
  134. ^ Vice Admiral G.M. Hiranandani (retired), Transition to Guardianship: The Indian Navy 1991–2000 (Lancer Publishers, 2013)
  135. ^ Jack DeSario and William D. Mason, Dr. Sam Sheppard on Trial: The Prosecutors and the Marilyn Sheppard Murder (Kent State University Press, 2003) p58
  136. ^ "Sof'ya Aleksandrovna Janovskaja", Biographies of Women Mathematicians, Agnes Scott College
  137. ^ "LBJ, ALLIES OFFER TROOP PULLOUT WITHIN 6 MONTHS AFTER A PEACE". Bridgeport Post. Bridgeport, Connecticut. October 25, 1966. p. 1.
  138. ^ Nguyen, Phu Duc (2005). The Viet Nam Peace Negotiations: Saigon's Side of the Story. Dalley Book Service. p. 35.
  139. ^ "No Munich for Vietnam Reds". Kansas City Times. October 25, 1966. p. 1.
  140. ^ Thies, Wallace J. (1980). When Governments Collide: Coercion and Diplomacy in the Vietnam Conflict, 1964-1968. University of California Press. p. 339.
  141. ^ Davies, Merton; Murray, Bruce C. (1973). The View from Space: Photographic Exploration of the Planets. Columbia University Press. p. 41.
  142. ^ Reeves, Robert (2013). The Superpower Space Race: An Explosive Rivalry through the Solar System. Springer. p. 118.
  143. ^ "Subandrio Sentenced to Death by Jakarta Tribunal". Chicago Tribune. October 26, 1966. pp. 2–9.
  144. ^ Hughes, John (2002). The End of Sukarno – A Coup that Misfired: A Purge that Ran Wild. Archipelago Press. p. 19. ISBN 981-4068-65-9.
  145. ^ "British Overflying Zone, Spain Claims". Ogden Standard-Examiner. Ogden, Utah. October 23, 1966. p. 7.
  146. ^ "Spain Shuts Off Traffic To Gibraltar". Corpus Christi Caller-Times. October 25, 1966. p. 12-C.
  147. ^ "ATOM MISSILE FIRED: CHINA". Chicago Tribune. October 28, 1966. p. 1.
  148. ^ Li, Xiaobing (ed.). "Second Artillery Corps (Strategic Rocket Force)". China at War: An Encyclopedia.
  149. ^ "Commons OK's Labor Regime's Wage Freeze". Chicago Tribune. October 26, 1966. p. 1A-6.
  150. ^ "Carrier Fire Kills 43". Chicago Tribune. October 27, 1966. p. 1.
  151. ^ "A Carrier's Agony— Hell Afloat". LIFE. November 25, 1966.
  152. ^ Polmar, Norman (2008). Aircraft Carriers: A History of Carrier Aviation and Its Influence on World Events. Vol. II: 1946-2006. Potomac Books. p. 253.
  153. ^ Tucker, Spencer C., ed. (2011). "Oriskany, USS, Fire aboard". The Encyclopedia of the Vietnam War: A Political, Social, and Military History. ABC-CLIO. pp. 866–867.
  154. ^ "Lyndon Goes to Viet Nam, Salutes GIs". Chicago Tribune. October 27, 1966. p. 1.
  155. ^ "Case Studies: The Aberfan Disaster". National Recovery Guidance. UK Resilience. Archived from the original on 26 November 2010.
  156. ^ "NATO Council Will Shift Its Offices to Brussels". Chicago Tribune. October 27, 1966. p. 10.
  157. ^ Kisangani, E.F.; et al. Historical Dictionary of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. p. 375.
  158. ^ "4 Erhard Aids Quit; Coalition Collapses", Chicago Tribune, October 28, 1966, p17
  159. ^ R. Gerald Hughes, Britain, Germany and the Cold War: The Search for a European Détente 1949–1967 (Routledge, 2007) p143
  160. ^ "U.N. Votes to Rule S.W. Africa", Chicago Tribune, October 28, 1966, p1
  161. ^ Beverly Gherman, Sparky: The Life and Art of Charles Schulz (Chronicle Books, 2013) p121
  162. ^ "E.P.C.O.T Film - The Original E.P.C.O.T Project". google.com. Retrieved 18 September 2015.
  163. ^ "Q&A with Conservative prospective parliamentary candidate Kit Malthouse".
  164. ^ "China lays claim to Bhutanese territory", The Indian Express (Madras), October 29, 1966, p1
  165. ^ "FTC Probes Supermarket Games", Milwaukee Journal, October 29, 1966, p3
  166. ^ Robert Charpentier at Cycling Archives (archived)
  167. ^ "Guinea Holds U.S. Envoy in Residence". Chicago Tribune. October 30, 1966. p. 3.
  168. ^ Bercovitch, Jacob; Fretter, Judith (2004). Regional Guide to International Conflict and Management from 1945 to 2003. Congressional Quarterly Press. p. 73.
  169. ^ "Crash Orbiter 1". Chicago Tribune. October 30, 1966. p. 3.
  170. ^ Cherrington, Ernest H. (2013). Exploring the Moon Through Binoculars and Small Telescopes. Courier Corporation. p. 73.
  171. ^ Capelotti, P.J. (2010). The Human Archaeology of Space: Lunar, Planetary and Interstellar Relics of Exploration. McFarland. p. 55.
  172. ^ Sinopoli, Richard C., ed. (1996). From Many, One: Readings in American Political and Social Thought. Georgetown University Press. p. 150.
  173. ^ Decker, Kevin S. (2013). Who is Who?: The Philosophy of Doctor Who. I.B.Tauris. p. 132.
  174. ^ Chapman, James (2006). Inside the Tardis: The Worlds of Doctor Who. I.B.Tauris. p. 49.
  175. ^ "FIND STOLEN ART TREASURE". Chicago Tribune. October 31, 1966. p. 1.
  176. ^ "Her Majesty: new book of photographs celebrating the life of Queen Elizabeth II". Daily Telegraph.
  177. ^ Soccerbase
  178. ^ "Celtic Outplayed by Rangers but Retain League Cup". Glasgow Herald. October 31, 1966. p. 4.
  179. ^ Hermit Eclipse: Saros cycle 116
  180. ^ "While You Slept This A.M. There Was an Eclipse". Chicago Tribune. October 29, 1966. p. 1.
  181. ^ "South State Co-ed Slain", San Mateo (CA) Times, October 31, 1966, p1
  182. ^ Dirk C. Gibson, Clues from Killers: Serial Murder and Crime Scene Messages (Greenwood, 2004) p90
  183. ^ "Letter Writer Admits Killing Riverside Coed", San Bernardino (CA) County Sun, December 2, 1966, p20
  184. ^ "Zodiac Still Taunts, Threatening to Kill", Waco (TX) Tribune-Herald, December 20, 1970, p10-D
  185. ^ "Als Slip By Riders 1-0, Tie Record Low", Montreal Gazette, October 31, 1966, p25
  186. ^ Mardon, Cydonee (25 July 2014). "Heartache endures for lost little girl Cheryl Grimmer". Illawarra Mercury. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  187. ^ "Murder charge in 1970 toddler case dropped". BBC News. 15 February 2019. Retrieved 15 February 2019.
  188. ^ Beate Lohsher and Peter M. Newton, Unorthodox Freud: The View from the Couch (Guilford Press, 1996) p118
  189. ^ "Radio Veteran John Drainie Dies at 50", The Vancouver Sun, October 31, 1966, p.2
  190. ^ Vincent Bugliosi, Reclaiming History: The Assassination of President John F. Kennedy (W. W. Norton & Company, 2007) pp430-431
  191. ^ "GI Is Accused As Spy", Kansas City Times, November 1, 1966, p1
  192. ^ "Boeckenhaupt, Staff Sergeant Herbert W.", in Spies, Wiretaps, and Secret Operations: An Encyclopedia of American Espionage, by Glenn P. Hastedt (ABC-CLIO, 2011) p100
  193. ^ Henry M. Holden, FBI 100 Years: An Unofficial History (Zenith Imprint) pp70-71
  194. ^ Malaysia at Random (Editions Didier Millet, 2009) p100
  195. ^ "History – Delhi HC". delhihighcourt.nic.in. Retrieved 2 March 2012.
  196. ^ Who's who in Entertainment, volume 2. Marquis Who's Who. 1992. p. 300.