March 1962


The following events occurred in March 1962:

[March 1], 1962 (Thursday)

[March 2], 1962 (Friday)

[March 3], 1962 (Saturday)

[March 4], 1962 (Sunday)

[March 5], 1962 (Monday)

[March 6], 1962 (Tuesday)

  • Rated by the U.S. Geological Survey as "The most destructive storm ever to hit the mid-Atlantic states" of the U.S., and as one of the ten worst U.S. storms in the 20th century, the Ash Wednesday Storm of 1962 began forming off the coast of North Carolina and continued for three days as it moved up the Eastern seaboard as far as New York. Heavy winds and rain coincided with a perigean spring tide, when a new Moon occurred when the Moon was making its closest approach to the Earth. The combined tugging of Moon and Sun made the tides higher than normal. Forty people were killed and $500,000,000 of damage was incurred.
  • In a joint statement issued by U.S. Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Thailand's Foreign Minister Thanat Khoman, the United States pledged to go to war to defend against any attack on Thailand by Communist guerillas.
  • U.S. Patent #3,023,527 was granted to Wayne Leek and Charles Morse for the Remington Nylon 66, a rifle which required no added lubricants because the stock was made of the nylon variant Zytel.
  • Atlas rocket 107-D was delivered to Cape Canaveral for the Mercury 7 mission to be launched in May with Scott Carpenter.
  • Born: Bengt Baron, Swedish swimmer and 1980 Olympic gold medalist; in Finspång

[March 7], 1962 (Wednesday)

  • In London, the Royal College of Physicians issued its report, "Smoking and Health", declaring that "Cigarette smoking is a cause of lung cancer. It also causes bronchitis and probably contributes to the development of coronary heart disease and various other less common diseases. It delays healing of gastric and duodenal ulcers." Sir Robert Platt, the president of the organization, led a committee of nine physicians to compile the research. A panel led by the U.S. Surgeon General would draw a similar conclusion nearly two years later on January 11, 1964.
  • OSO I, the first of nine Orbiting Solar Observatory satellites, launched by the United States, was launched from Cape Canaveral and put into orbit around the Earth, to measure radiation from the Sun. OSO I performed remarkably well in conducting the 13 different experiments for which it was programmed. Especially relevant to human spaceflight were its measurements of solar radiation in high frequency ranges, of cosmic dust effects, and of the thermal properties of spacecraft surface materials.
  • McDonnell awarded a $6.5 million subcontract to Minneapolis-Honeywell Regulator Company to provide the attitude control and maneuvering electronics system for the Gemini spacecraft. The Gemini Project Office accepted McDonnell's preliminary design of the spacecraft's main undercarriage for use in land landings and authorized McDonnell to proceed with testing to start on April 1.
  • The Tipsport Arena opened in Prague, as the Sportovni Hala Praha. In addition to concerts and entertainment, it is the host to the ice hockey team HC Sparta Praha.

[March 8], 1962 (Thursday)

[March 9], 1962 (Friday)

  • Three babies at the Binghamton General Hospital in Binghamton, New York, United States, died suddenly of heart failure. Three more were dead the next day, with four others in critical condition, and all had abnormally high sodium levels. The deaths of the six infants, three boys and three girls who ranged in age from 3 days to 8 months old, were traced to a nurse's mistaken placement of salt, three days earlier, into a sugar container used for the making of baby formula. Ironically, the discovery was made by another nurse who broke hospital rules when she made herself a cup of coffee in the formula room. The deaths were subsequently ruled as accidental.
  • In the second deadly mine explosion in West Germany in as many months, 29 underground coal miners were killed at the Saachen mine near Hamm.

[March 10], 1962 (Saturday)

  • Newly independent from France, the Kingdom of Morocco adopted its first constitution.
  • Scottish football club Kilmarnock's home attendance record was broken when a crowd of 35,995 turned out to see them play Glasgow Rangers in the Scottish Cup, at the Rugby Park stadium.
  • Born: Seiko Matsuda, Japanese pop singer and songwriter; in Kurume, Fukuoka
  • Died: John Henry Turpin, 85, African-American U.S. Navy officer and one of the last survivors of the 1898 explosion and sinking of the U.S. Navy cruiser USS Maine

[March 11], 1962 (Sunday)

[March 12], 1962 (Monday)

[March 13], 1962 (Tuesday)

  • U.S. Army General L. L. Lemnitzer, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, presented Operation Northwoods, a top-secret proposal to use American funding for terror attacks within the United States, to U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara. With the goal of carrying out violent acts that could be blamed on the Communist government in Cuba in order to get support for an invasion, the proposals included exploding an empty U.S. Navy ship in Guantanamo Bay and creating a false list of casualties; and faking an attack, to be blamed on Cuba, on a chartered airliner flying from the United States. The most incredible proposal was to simulate a "Communist Cuban terror campaign in the Miami area, other Florida cities, and even in Washington", including "exploding a few plastic bombs in carefully chosen spots", and directed against Cuban refugees "even to the point of wounding." McNamara vetoed the plan, which would be declassified in 2001, before it reached President Kennedy.
  • Wing Luke, a native of China who moved to the United States as a child, was elected as the first non-white person to serve on the city council of Seattle, and the first Asian American to hold an elective office in the State of Washington. Luke would serve until May 17, 1965, when he was killed in a plane crash.

[March 14], 1962 (Wednesday)

  • NASA set specifications for the ejection seat for the Gemini spacecraft, directing that the seats to be operated manually, and that both seats had to eject simultaneously if either system was activated. McDonnell awarded a $1.8 million subcontract to Weber Aircraft for the Gemini ejection seats on April 9 and a $741,000 subcontract to Rocket Power, Inc. on May 15 for the escape system rocket catapult.
  • On the same day, the MSC revised the Gemini program schedule to increase the number of test vehicles. The first uncrewed qualification flight (Gemini 1 was still scheduled for July 1963, though it would be postponed later to April 8, 1964. The first crewed flight (Gemini 3, with Gus Grissom and John L. Young was postponed to late October 1963; it would be launched on March 23, 1965. Gemini 6, the first flight that would use the Agena target vehicle, was delayed to April 1964, though Agena's first launch attempt on October 25, 1965 would fail.
  • Edward M. "Teddy" Kennedy, the 30-year-old brother of U.S. President John F. Kennedy and U.S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, announced his candidacy for the Democratic nomination for the United States Senate seat that had been held by JFK. The incumbent, Benjamin A. Smith II, was a Kennedy family friend who had been appointed to fill the seat until a special election could be scheduled. Ted Kennedy, who had to wait until his 30th birthday, on February 22, to become eligible, would win the primary and general election, and then re-election in 1964, 1970, 1976, 1982, 1988, 1994, 2000 and 2006, serving for almost 47 years until his death in 2009.
  • Tony Jackson of the Chicago Majors scored 12 three-point baskets, as part of the short-lived American Basketball League, which pioneered the rule for shots from more than away. Jackson's pro record for most treys, set in a 124–122 loss to the Cleveland Pipers, tied in 2003 and 2005, would be surpassed on October 29, 2018 by Klay Thompson of the Golden State Warriors with 14 three-pointers in a 149–124 win over the Chicago Bulls.

[March 15], 1962 (Thursday)

[March 16], 1962 (Friday)

[March 17], 1962 (Saturday)

[March 18], 1962 (Sunday)

[March 19], 1962 (Monday)

  • After more than seven years of fighting between the French Army and the Algerian FLN, a ceasefire was declared in the Algerian War at noon local time pursuant to Article 1 of the Évian Accords. Sporadic fighting continued in Saint-Denis-du-Sig, where 52 people were killed in fighting between Muslim crowds and a Muslim unit of the French Army.
  • Columbia Records released Bob Dylan, the debut album of the singer-songwriter of the same name. The record would sell only a few hundred copies in its first six months. The next year, Dylan would become famous with the best-selling album The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan.
  • Resolution 83-A took effect in Cuba, outlawing professional sports.
  • Advanced Technology Laboratories, Inc. received a $3.2 million subcontract from McDonnell to provide the horizon sensor system for the Gemini spacecraft, while Thiokol Chemical Corporation was awarded a $400,000 subcontract to provide the retrograde rockets for the Gemini spacecraft.
  • Died:
  • *Samuel Cate Prescott, 89, American food scientist and pioneer in food preservation
  • *Vasily Dzhugashvili, 40, son of Joseph Stalin, disgraced former general and sportsman

[March 20], 1962 (Tuesday)

[March 21], 1962 (Wednesday)

[March 22], 1962 (Thursday)

  • FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover met at the White House with John F. Kennedy, to advise him about what findings from a wiretap revealed. Not only was Hoover aware that President Kennedy was conducting an extramarital affair with Judith Exner, Hoover advised that Ms. Exner was also romantically involved with organized crime figures Sam Giancana and Johnny Roselli, and with Frank Sinatra. After the meeting, Kennedy called Exner to terminate the relationship. The affair would not become public knowledge until Congressional hearings were held in 1975.
  • As part of the Evian Accords, France and Algeria granted a general amnesty to Algerian nationalists who "aided or abetted the Algerian insurrection" and to French and Algerian servicemen who "have committed infractions during the maintenance of order against the Algerian insurrection". On June 17, 1966, France would extend the amnesty to OAS members who "committed infractions against state security during the events in Algeria".
  • Having moved to the Soviet Union, Lee Harvey Oswald received a March 7 notice advising that his discharge from the U.S. Marines had been changed from "honorable" to "undesirable" and wrote an unsuccessful protest to the U.S. Department of Defense.
  • Adolf Eichmann began an appeal to an Israeli court, as his lawyer, Robert Servatius, sought to spare Eichmann from the death sentence ordered in his 1961 war crimes conviction. The verdict would be upheld, and Eichmann would be executed on May 31.

[March 23], 1962 (Friday)

  • In Vancouver, British chemist Neil Bartlett created the first noble gas compound when he created xenon hexafluoroplatinate from a reaction of xenon and platinum hexafluoride.
  • The Air Force Space Systems Division published the "Development Plan for the Gemini Launch Vehicle System". From experience in Titan II and Mercury programs, the planners estimated a budget of $164,400,000, including a 50% contingency for cost increases and unforeseen changes.
  • Louis Joxe, France's Minister for Algerian Affairs, broadcast on radio to clarify the substance of the Franco-Algerian Accords signed in Évian five days previously, as well as the future outlook for Algeria.
  • The Scandinavian States of the Nordic Council signed the Helsinki Convention on Nordic Co-operation.
  • Born:
  • *Bassel al-Assad, eldest son and expected successor of Syrian President Hafez al-Assad until his death in a car accident in 1994; in Damascus
  • *Sir Steve Redgrave, English Olympic rower; in Marlow, Buckinghamshire

[March 24], 1962 (Saturday)

[March 25], 1962 (Sunday)

[March 26], 1962 (Monday)

  • In Baker v. Carr, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled, 6–2, that federal courts could order state legislatures to reapportion seats. In doing so, the Court overturned its 1946 ruling, in Colegrove v. Green, that it had no jurisdiction to decide redistricting disputes were political issues. Within a year after the ruling, lawsuits had been filed in 36 states to redraw the legislative maps.
  • After having withdrawn from public view for several months, Cuban Premier Fidel Castro went on television to denounce Anibal Escalante, who had been a high-ranking official of the Cuban Communist Party. Escalante, whom Castro accused of "sectarianism" and using the Party to further his personal ambition, was fired the next day.
  • Hundreds of European settlers in Algeria staged a peaceful march in Algiers to protest against the sealing off of their neighborhood at Bab El Oued. As they approached French Army barricades, fighting broke out, leaving 51 dead, mostly European, and 130 wounded.
  • France shortened the term for mandatory military service for eligible men from 26 months to 18.

[March 27], 1962 (Tuesday)

[March 28], 1962 (Wednesday)

[March 29], 1962 (Thursday)

  • U.S. Comedian Jack Paar concluded his last appearance as host of The Jack Paar Show, then known informally as The Tonight Show on NBC, after five years. The guests on the last show were Jack E. Leonard, Alexander King, Robert Merrill and Buddy Hackett. Among those appearing in taped farewell messages were Richard Nixon, Robert Kennedy, Billy Graham, Bob Hope and Jack Benny. Hugh Downs was the announcer, and Jose Melis led the band. The show would continue as The Tonight Show the following week, with guest hosts, until Johnny Carson took over on October 1, 1962. Paar's last regular appearance was on a Thursday. On the next day, the final show was a "Best Of Paar" rerun.
  • U.S. Supreme Court Justice Charles Evans Whittaker resigned due to poor health. The next day, President Kennedy nominated former college and pro football player Byron "Whizzer" White, the Deputy Attorney General of the United States, to succeed Charles Whittaker.
  • Honeywell received an $18,000,000 subcontract from McDonnell to provide the inertial measuring unit for the Gemini spacecraft, to provide a stable reference for determining spacecraft attitude and to indicate changes in spacecraft velocity.
  • The conveying of a life peerage on British Conservative MP Sir Ian Macdonald Horobin was announced. Two weeks later he would withdrew his acceptance and would be subsequently jailed for an indecency offence.
  • The Danish cargo ship Kirsten Skou collided with a West German ship, Karpfanger, in the English Channel and sank. Luckily, all 35 crew members were rescued.

[March 30], 1962 (Friday)

  • Ted Kennedy, running for the U.S. Senate seat vacated by his older brother, President John F. Kennedy, disclosed that he had been required to drop out of Harvard University in 1951, after having cheated on a freshman examination. Nevertheless, the younger Kennedy would win the 1962 primary and general elections, and be re-elected for more terms by Massachusetts voters.
  • Martin-Baltimore submitted a "Description of the Launch Vehicle for the Gemini Spacecraft" to Air Force Space Systems Division. This document laid the foundation for the design of the Gemini launch vehicle by defining the concept and philosophy of each proposed subsystem.
  • Born: MC Hammer, American rapper and dancer, best known for his 1990 hit "U Can't Touch This"; in Oakland, California

[March 31], 1962 (Saturday)

  • The 494-member Lok Sabha, the lower house of the Parliament of India adjourned its final session, to make way for the new Lok Sabha, elected in February, to be inaugurated in April.
  • A tornado killed 15 people in the city of Milton, Florida, and injured more than 75.
  • The McDonnell Aircraft Company formally froze further changes in the configuration of the Gemini spacecraft, and the specifications were submitted to NASA and approved.
  • The Whitecliffs Branch Railway, serving the Canterbury region of New Zealand's South Island, was closed.