1965 (
MCMLXV) was a
common year starting on
Friday (link will display full calendar) of the 1965
Gregorian calendar.
Events of 1965
January
February
March
- March 2 – The Sound of Music
premieres at the Rivoli Theater in New York City.
- March 7 – Bloody Sunday: Some 200 Alabama State
Troopers clash with 525 civil rights demonstrators in Selma, Alabama
.
- March 8 – Vietnam War: Some 3,500 United States Marines arrive in
South Vietnam, becoming the first
American combat troops in Vietnam
.
- March 9 – The second
attempt to march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama
, under the leadership of Martin Luther King, Jr., stops at
the bridge that was the site of Bloody Sunday, to hold a prayer
service and return to Selma, in obedience to a court restraining order. White supremacists beat up white Unitarian Universalist minister
James J. Reeb later that day in Selma.
- March 10 – Goldie, a London Zoo
golden eagle, is
recaptured after 13 days of freedom.
- March 10 – Engagement announced between
Princess Margriet
of the Netherlands and Pieter
van Vollenhoven, who will become the first commoner and the
first Dutchman to marry into the Dutch Royal Family.
- March 11 – White Unitarian Universalist minister
James J. Reeb, beaten by White supremacists in Selma, Alabama
on March 9 following the
second march from Selma, dies in a hospital in Birmingham,
Alabama
.
- March 16 – Police
clash with 600 SNCC marchers in
Montgomery,
Alabama
.
- March 17 – In
Montgomery,
Alabama
, 1,600 civil rights marchers demonstrate at the
Courthouse.
- March 17 – In response to the events of
March 7 and 9 in Selma, Alabama, President Johnson sends a bill to Congress
that forms the basis for the Voting Rights Act of 1965. It is
passed by the Senate May 26, the House July 10, and signed into law
by President Johnson Aug. 6.
- March 18 – Cosmonaut Aleksei
Leonov, leaving his spacecraft Voskhod
2 for 12 minutes, becomes the first person to walk in
space.
- March 18 – A
United States federal
judge rules that SCLC has the lawful
right to march to Montgomery, Alabama
to petition for 'redress of
grievances'.
- March 19 – The wreck
of the SS Georgiana, reputed
to have been the most powerful Confederate cruiser ever built and
owned by the real Rhett Butler, is
discovered off the Isle of
Palms
, South
Carolina
, by teenage
diver E. Lee Spence, exactly 102 years after she was
sunk with a million dollar cargo while attempting to run past the
Union blockade into Charleston
.
- March 20 –
Poupée de cire, poupée de son, sung by France Gall (music and text by Serge Gainsbourg) wins the Eurovision Song Contest 1965
for Luxembourg
.
- March 20 – The Indo-Pakistani War of 1965
begins.
- March 21 – Ranger program: NASA
launches
Ranger 9, which is the last in a
series of unmanned lunar space probes.
- March 21 – Martin Luther King, Jr. leads 3,200
Civil rights activists in the third
march from Selma, Alabama to the capitol in Montgomery.
- March 22 – Nicolae Ceauşescu becomes the first
secretary of the Romanian
Communist Party.
- March 23 –
Gemini 3: NASA
launches the
United
States
' first 2-person crew (Gus
Grissom, John Young) into
Earth orbit.
- March 25 – Martin Luther King, Jr. and 25,000
civil rights activists successfully end the 4-day march from Selma,
Alabama, to the capitol in Montgomery.
- March 30 – Funeral services are held
for Detroit homemaker Viola Liuzzo, who
was shot dead by 4 Klansmen as she drove marchers back to Selma at
night after the civil rights march.
April
- April 3 – The world's first space
nuclear power reactor, SNAP-10A,
is launched by the United States from Vandenberg AFB, California.
The reactor operates for 43 days and remains in high earth
orbit.
- April 5 – At the 37th Academy Awards, My Fair Lady wins 8 Academy Awards,
including Best Picture and Best Director. Rex Harrison wins an Oscar for Best Actor. Mary Poppins takes home 5 Oscars.
Julie Andrews wins an Academy Award for Best
Actress, for her portrayal in the role. Sherman Brothers receives 2 Oscars
including Best Song, "Chim Chim Cher-ee".
- April 6 – The Early Bird communications satellite is
launched. It becomes operational May 2 and is
placed in commercial service in June.
- April 9
- April 9
- April 11 – The Palm Sunday tornado
outbreak of 1965: An estimated 51 tornadoes (47 confirmed) hit
in 6 Midwestern states, killing between 256 to 271 people and
injuring some 1,500 more.
- April 14 –
In Cold Blood killers
Richard Hickock and Perry Smith, convicted of murdering 4
members of the Herbert Clutter
family of Holcomb,
Kansas
, are executed by hanging at the Kansas State
Penitentiary for Men in Lansing, Kansas
.
- April 17 – The first SDS march against
the Vietnam War draws 25,000 protestors to Washington, DC.
- April 18 –
Consecration of St Clement of
Ohrid Macedonian Orthodox Cathedral in Toronto
, Canada
.
- April 21 – The
NY World's Fair in
Flushing
Meadows
, NY, reopens.
- April 23 – The
Pennine
Way
officially opens.
- April 24 – The 1965 Yerevan demonstrations
start in Yerevan, demanding recognition of the Armenian Genocide.
- April 24
- April 28
- U.S.
troops are sent to the Dominican Republic
by President Lyndon
B. Johnson,
"for the stated purpose of protecting U.S. citizens and preventing
an alleged Communist takeover of the country", thus thwarting the
possibility of "another Cuba
".
- Vietnam War:
Prime Minister of
Australia Robert Menzies
announces that the country will substantially increase its number
of troops in South Vietnam, supposedly
at the request of the Saigon
government
(it is later revealed that Menzies had asked the leadership in
Saigon to send the request at the behest of the
Americans).
- April 29 – Australia announces that it is sending an infantry battalion to support the South Vietnam government.
May
- May 1 – Bob Askin replaces Jack
Renshaw as Premier of New South Wales
.
- May 1 – The Battle of Dong-Yin occurs as a conflict
between Taiwan
and the
People's
Republic of China
.
- May 1 – Liverpool wins the FA Cup Final,
beating Leeds Utd 2–1.
- May 5 – The first
draft card burnings take place at the
University of California,
Berkeley
, and a coffin is marched to the Berkeley Draft Board.
- May 12 – West Germany
and Israel
establish
diplomatic relations.
- May 12 – The Italian liner T/S Michelangelo enters into
service.
- May 13 – A West German court of appeals condemns the behavior of
ex-defense minister Franz Joseph
Strauss during the Spiegel
scandal.
- May 21 – The largest
teach-in to date begins at Berkeley,
California
, attended by 30,000.
- May 22 – The first skateboard championship is held. In
addition, several hundred Vietnam War protestors in Berkeley, CA,
march to the Draft Board again to burn more cards as well as
Lyndon Johnson in effigy.
- May 29 – A mining accident in Dhanbad
, India
kills
274.
- May 31 – Racing driver Jim Clark
wins the Indianapolis
500
, and later wins the Formula
One world driving championship in the same year.
June
- June 1 – Florida
International University
is founded in Miami, FL
.
- June 1 – A coal mine explosion in Fukuoka, Japan
kills
237.
- June 2 – Vietnam
War: The first contingent of Australian combat troops arrives in South Vietnam.
- June 3 – Gemini
4: Astronaut Edward
Higgins White makes the first U.S. space
walk.
- June 7 – A mining accident in Kakanj
, Bosnia and
Herzegovina
, results in 128 deaths.
- June 10 – Vietnam War – Battle of Dong Xoai
: About 1,500 Vietcong
mount a mortar attack on Dong Xoai
, overrunning its military headquarters and the
adjoining militia compound.
- June 16 – A planned
anti-war protest at The Pentagon
becomes a teach-in, with demonstrators distributing
50,000 leaflets in and around the building.
- June 19 – Houari Boumédienne's Revolutionary
Council ousts Ahmed Ben Bella, in a
bloodless coup in Algeria
.
- June 20 – Police in
Algiers
break up
demonstrations by people who have taken to the streets chanting
slogans in support of deposed President Ben
Bella.
- June 22 – The
Treaty on Basic Relations between Japan and the Republic of
Korea is signed in Tokyo
.
- June 25 – A U.S. Air Force Boeing
C135-A bound for Okinawa crashes just after takeoff at MCAS El Toro
in Orange County, California
, killing all 85 on board.
July
- July 14 – U.S. spacecraft Mariner 4 flies by Mars,
becoming the first spacecraft to return images from the Red
Planet.
- July 15 – Greek Prime minister George Papandreou and his
government are dismissed by King Constantine II.
- July 16 – The Mont Blanc Tunnel is inaugurated by
presidents Giuseppe Saragat and
Charles de Gaulle.
- July 24 – Vietnam
War: Four F-4C Phantoms escorting
a bombing raid at Kang Chi are
targeted by antiaircraft
missiles, in the first such attack against American planes in
the war. One is shot down and the other 3 sustain damage.
- July 25 – Bob
Dylan elicits controversy among folk purists by "going
electric" at the Newport Folk
Festival.
- July 26 – The
Maldives
receive full independence from Great
Britain.
- July 27 – Edward
Heath becomes Leader of the British Conservative Party.
- July 28 – Vietnam
War: U.S. President Lyndon B.
Johnson announces his order to increase
the number of United
States
troops in South
Vietnam from 75,000 to 125,000, and to double the number of men
drafted per month from 17,000 to 35,000.
- July 29 – Vietnam War: The first 4,000 101st Airborne Division paratroopers
arrive in Vietnam
, landing at Cam Ranh Bay
.
- July 30 – War
on Poverty: U.S. President Lyndon
B. Johnson signs the Social Security Act of 1965 into
law, establishing Medicare
and Medicaid.
August
- August 1 – Cigarette advertising
is banned on British
television.
- August 6 – U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson signs the Voting Rights Act of 1965 into
law.
- August 7 – Tunku Abdul Rahman, Prime Minister of Malaysia,
recommends the expulsion of Singapore
from the Federation of Malaysia
, negotiating its separation with Lee Kuan Yew, Prime Minister of
Singapore.
- August 9 – Singapore
is expelled from the Federation of Malaysia
, which recognizes it as a sovereign nation. Lee Kuan Yew announces Singapore's independence
and assumes the position of Prime Minister of the new island
nation.
- August 9 – An
explosion at an Arkansas
missile plant kills 53.
- August 9 – Indonesian
president Sukarno collapses
in public.
- August 11 – The
Watts Riots begin in Los Angeles,
California
.
- August 13 – The
rock group Jefferson Airplane
debuts at the Matrix in San Francisco, California
and begins to appear there
regularly.
- August 15 –
The Beatles perform the first stadium
concert in the history of rock, playing at Shea Stadium
in New
York
.
- August 18 –
Vietnam War – Operation Starlite: 5,500 United States Marines destroy a
Viet Cong stronghold on the Van Tuong
peninsula in Quang
Ngai Province
, in the first major American ground battle of the
war. The Marines were tipped-off by a Viet Cong deserter who
said that there was an attack planned against the U.S. base at
Chu Lai.
- August 19 – At the
Auschwitz
trial in Frankfurt
, 66 ex-SS
personnel
receive life sentences, 15 others
smaller ones.
- August 20 –
Jonathan Myrick Daniels, an
Episcopal
seminarian from Keene, New Hampshire
, is murdered in Hayneville
, Alabama while working in the American civil rights
movement.
- August 21 – Gemini 5 (Gordon
Cooper, Pete Conrad) is launched on
the first 1-week flight, as well as the first test of fuel cells for electrical power.
- August 30 – Casey Stengel announces his retirement after
55 years in baseball.
- August 30 – Rock
musician Bob Dylan releases his
influential album Highway 61
Revisited, featuring the song "Like a Rolling Stone."
- August 30 – An
avalanche buries a dam
construction site at Saas-Fee
, Switzerland
killing 90 workers.
- August 31 – President Johnson signs a
law penalizing the burning of draft cards with up to 5 years in
prison and a $1,000 fine.
September
- September 2 –
Pakistani
troops enter the Indian
sector of
Kashmir
, while Indian
troops try
to invade Lahore
.
- September 6
Islamic
Republic Of Pakistan
observes its Defence day.
- September 7 – The
People's
Republic of China
announces that it will reinforce its troops on the
Indian border.
- September 7 – Vietnam War: In a follow-up to August's Operation Starlite, United States Marines and South Vietnamese forces initiate Operation
Piranha on the Batangan Peninsula, 23 miles south of the Chu Lai
Marine base.
- September 8 –
India
opens 2 additional fronts against Pakistan
.
- September 9 – Sandy Koufax pitches a perfect game in a baseball match against the Chicago Cubs. The opposing pitcher, Bob Hendley, allows only 1 run, which is
unearned.
- September 9 – U.N. Secretary General U Thant negotiates with Pakistan
President Ayub
Khan.
- September 9 – U
Thant recommends China for United
Nations membership.
- September 9 –
Hurricane Betsy roars ashore near
New Orleans,
Louisiana
with winds of 145 MPH, causing 76 deaths and $1.42
billion in damage. The storm is the first hurricane to cause
$1 billion in unadjusted damages, giving it the nickname "Billion
Dollar Betsy". It is the last major hurricane to strike New Orleans
until Hurricane Katrina 40 years
later.
- September 13 –
The Congress of Arab Countries begins in
Casablanca
; Habib Bourguiba of
Tunisia
boycotts the meeting.
- September 14 – The fourth and final
period of the Second Vatican
Council opens.
- September 15 –
Mary Poppins comes out in
theaters in France
.
- September 16 – China protests
against Indian provocations in its border region.
- September 16 –
In Iraq
, Prime
Minister Arif Abd ar-Razzaq's
attempted coup fails.
- September 17 – King Constantine II of Greece forms a
new government with Prime Minister Stephanos Stephanopoulos, in an
attempt to end a 2-year-old political crisis.
- September 18 –
In Denmark
, Palle Sørensen
shoots 4 policemen in pursuit; he is apprehended the same
day.
- September 18 – Comet Ikeya-Seki is first sighted by
Japanese astronomers.
- September 18 –
Soviet Premier Alexey Kosygin invites the leaders of
India
and Pakistan
to meet in the Soviet Union
to negotiate.
- September 22 – Radio Peking announces that Indian
troops have dismantled their equipment on the Chinese side of the
border.
- September 24 –
Fighting resumes between Indian
and Pakistani
troops.
- September 24 –
The British governor of Aden
cancels
the constitution and takes direct control of the protectorate, due
to the bad security situation.
- September 25 – The Tom & Jerry cartoon series makes its
world broadcast premiere on CBS.
- September 27 –
The largest tanker ship at the time, Tokyo Maru, is
launched in Yokohama, Japan
.
- September 28 –
Fidel Castro announces that anyone who
wants to can emigrate to the United States
.
- September 28 –
Taal
Volcano
in Luzon
, Philippines
, erupts, killing hundreds.
- September 30 –
October 1 – The Indonesian
army, led by General Suharto, crushes an alleged communist coup attempt
(see Transition to the New
Order and 30 September
Movement).
- September 30 – Classic family
sci-fi show Thunderbirds
debuts on ITV
October
- October 3 – Fidel Castro announces that Che Guevara has resigned and left the
country.
- October 3 – U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson signs an immigration bill which abolishes
quotas based on national
origin.
- October 4 – At
least 150 killed when a commuter train derails at the outskirts of
Durban
, KwaZulu-Natal, South
Africa.
- October 4 – Prime minister Ian Smith of Rhodesia and
Arthur Bottomley of the Commonwealth of Nations begin
negotiations in London.
- October 4 – Pope Paul VI visits the United States.
He
appears for a Mass in Yankee Stadium
and makes a speech at the United Nations.
- October 4 – The
University of California,
Irvine
opens its doors.
- October 5 –
Pakistan
severs diplomatic
relations with Malaysia
because of their disagreement in the
UN.
- October 6 –
Ian Brady, a 27-year-old stock clerk from
Hyde
in Cheshire
, is arrested for allegedly hacking 17-year-old
apprentice electrician Edward Evans to death at a house on the
Hattersley
housing
estate.
- October 7 – Seven
Japanese fishing boats are sunk off Guam
by super
typhoon Carmen; 209 are killed.
- October 8 – The Indonesian army
instigates the arrest and execution of communists which last until
March 1966 (see Indonesian killings of
1965–66).
- October 8 – The
International Olympic
Committee
admits East Germany
as a member.
- October 8 – The
Post Office
Tower
opens in London.
- October 9 –
Yale
University
presents the Vinland
map.
- October 9 – A
brigade of South
Korean
soldiers arrive in South Vietnam.
- October 10 – The
first group of Cuban
refugees
travels to the U.S.
- October 12 –
Per Borten forms a government in Norway
.
- October 12 – The U.N. General Council
recommends that the United Kingdom
try everything to stop a rebellion in Rhodesia.
- October 13 – Congo President Joseph Kasavubu fires Prime Minister
Moise Tshombe and forms a provisional
government, with Evariste Kimba in a
leading position.
- October 15 –
Vietnam War: The student-run National
Coordinating Committee to End the War in Vietnam stages the
first public burning of a draft card in
the United
States
to result in arrest under the new law.
- October 16 –
Police find a girl's body on Saddleworth Moor
near Oldham
in Lancashire
. The body is quickly identified as that of
10-year-old Lesley Ann Downey, who
disappeared on Boxing Day the previous
year from a fairground in the Ancoats
area of Manchester
. Ian Brady, arrested
for the murder of a 17-year-old man in nearby Hattersley
, is charged with murdering Lesley, as is his
23-year-old girlfriend Myra
Hindley.
- October 16 – Anti-war protests draw
100,000 in 80 U.S. cities and around the world.
- October 17 – The NY World's Fair at Flushing Meadows, NY,
closes. Due to financial losses, some of the projected site park
improvements fail to materialize.
- October 18 – The Indonesian
government outlaws the Communist Party of
Indonesia.
- October 20 –
Ludwig Erhard is re-elected Chancellor
of West
Germany
(he had first been elected in 1963).
- October 21 – Comet Ikeya-Seki approaches perihelion,
passing 450,000 kilometers from the sun.
- October 21 – The
OAU meets in Accra
, Ghana
.
- October 22 – French authors André
Figueras and Jacques Laurent are
fined for their comments against Charles De Gaulle.
- October 22 –
African countries demand that the United Kingdom
use force to prevent Rhodesia from declaring unilateral
independence.
- October 22 – Colonel Christophe Soglo stages a second coup in
Dahomey.
- October 24 – British Prime Minister
Harold Wilson and Commonwealth
Secretary Arthur Bottomley travel
to Rhodesia for negotiations.
- October 24 –
British police find
the decomposed body of a boy on Saddleworth Moor
.
- October 25 – The
Soviet
Union
declares its support of African countries in case
Rhodesia unilaterally declares independence.
- October 26 –
Anti-government demonstrations occur in the Dominican
Republic
.
- October 26 –
Police discover the body of Sylvia
Likens in Indianapolis
, Indiana
.
- October 27 –
Brazilian
president Humberto de Alencar Castelo
Branco removes power from parliament, legal courts and
opposition parties.
- October 27 –
Süleyman Demirel of AP forms the new government of
Turkey
(30th
government)
- October 28 – French Foreign Minister Couve de Murville travels to Moscow.
- October 28 – Pope Paul VI announces that the ecumenical council has decided that Jews
are not collectively responsible for the killing of Christ.
- October 28 – In
St.
Louis, Missouri
, the 630-foot-tall parabolic steel Gateway
Arch
is completed.
- October 29 –
Mehdi Ben Barka, a Moroccan
politician, is kidnapped in Paris
and never seen again.
- October 29 – Ian
Brady and Myra Hindley appear in
court, charged with the murders of Edward Evans (17), Lesley Ann
Downey (10), and John Kilbride (12).
- October 29 – An
80-kiloton nuclear device is detonated at Amchitka
Island
, Alaska
as part of the Vela
Uniform program, code-named Project Long Shot.
- October 30 –
Vietnam War: Near Da Nang
, United States
Marines repel an intense attack by Viet
Cong forces, killing 56 guerrillas. Among the dead, a
sketch of Marine positions is found on the body of a 13-year-old
Vietnamese
boy who sold drinks to the Marines the day
before.
- October 30 – In
Washington, DC
, a pro-Vietnam War march draws 25,000.
November
- November 2 –
Republican John Lindsay is elected mayor of New York City
.
- November 2 –
Quaker member Norman Morrison, 32, sets himself on fire in
front of The
Pentagon
.
- November 3 – French President Charles De Gaulle announces that he will
stand for re-election.
- November 5 – Martial law is announced in Rhodesia. The UN General Assembly accepts
British intent to use force against Rhodesia if necessary by a vote
of 82–9.
- November 6 –
Freedom Flights begin: Cuba
and the
United
States
formally agree to start an airlift for Cubans who
want to go to the United States (by 1971
250,000 Cubans take advantage of this program).
- November 7 – Pillsbury's world-famous mascot, the Pillsbury Doughboy, is created.
- November 8 – Vietnam War – Operation Hump: The 173rd Airborne is ambushed by over 1,200
Viet Cong.
- November 8 – The
British Indian Ocean
Territory
is created, consisting of Chagos
Archipelago
, Aldabra, Farquhar
and Des
Roches
islands (on June 23,
1976 Aldabra, Farquhar and Des Roches are
returned to the Seychelles
).
- November 8 – The Murder Act
1965 is given Royal Assent, suspending the death penalty for murder in the United
Kingdom; renewal of the Act in 1969 made the abolition
permanent.
- November 8 – The soap opera Days
of our Lives debuts on NBC.
- November 9 –
Northeast Blackout of
1965: Several U.S. states (VT, NH,
MA, CT, RI, NY and portions of NJ) and parts of Canada
are hit by a series of blackouts lasting up to 13½ hours.
- November 9 –
Vietnam War: In New York City
, 22-year-old Catholic Worker Movement member
Roger Allen LaPorte sets himself
on fire in front of the United
Nations building in protest of the war.
- November 11 – In
Rhodesia (modern-day Zimbabwe
), the white-minority government of Ian Smith unilaterally
declares independence.
- November 12 – A UN Security Council
resolution (voted 10–0) recommends that other countries not
recognize independent Rhodesia.
- November 13 –
The SS Yarmouth Castle
burns and sinks 60 miles off Nassau
, with the loss of 90 lives.
- November 14 –
Vietnam War – Battle of the Ia Drang
: In the Ia Drang Valley
of the Central Highlands
in Vietnam
, the first major engagement of the war between
regular United
States
and North Vietnamese
forces begins.
- November 15 – U.S. racer Craig Breedlove sets a new land speed record of 600.601 mph.
- November 16 –
Venera program: The Soviet Union
launches the Venera
3 space probe from Baikonur
, Kazakhstan
toward Venus (on March 1, 1966 it became the
first spacecraft to reach the surface of another planet).
- November 20 – The UN Security Council recommends
that all states stop trading with Rhodesia.
- November 22 – Man of La Mancha opens in a Greenwich
Village theatre in New York and eventually becomes one of the
greatest musical hits of all time, winning a Tony Award for its star, Richard Kiley.
- November 23 – Soviet general Mikhail
Kazakov assumes command of the Warsaw
Pact.
- November 24 –
Congolese
lieutenant
general Mobutu ousts Joseph Kasavubu and declares himself
president.
- November 26 – At
the Hammaguira
launch facility in the Sahara Desert, France
launches a Diamant-A
rocket with its first satellite,
Asterix-1 on board, becoming the
third country to enter outer
space.
- November 27 –
Tens of thousands of Vietnam War protesters picket the White House
, then march on the Washington Monument.
- November 27 –
Vietnam War: The Pentagon
tells U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson
that if planned major sweep operations to neutralize Viet Cong forces during the next year are to
succeed, the number of American
troops in Vietnam
will have to be increased from 120,000 to
400,000.
- November 28 – Vietnam War: In
response to U.S. President Lyndon
B. Johnson's
call for "more flags" in Vietnam
, Philippines
President-elect
Ferdinand Marcos announces he will
send troops to help fight in South
Vietnam.
- November 29 – The Canadian satellite
Alouette 2 is launched.
December
- December 1 – The
Border Security Force is
established in India
as a special
force to guard the borders.
- December 3 – The
first British aid flight arrives in Lusaka
; Zambia
had asked for British help against
Rhodesia.
- December 3 –
Members of the Organization of African Unity
decide to sever diplomatic relations with the United
Kingdom
, unless the British government ends the
rebellion of Rhodesia by mid-December.
- December 5 – Charles de Gaulle is re-elected as French
president with 10,828,421 votes.
- December 8 – Rhodesian prime minister
Ian Smith warns that Rhodesia will resist a trade embargo by neighboring countries with
force.
- December 8 – The Second Vatican Council closes.
- December 9 – A Charlie Brown Christmas,
the first Peanuts television special, debuts on CBS, quickly becoming an annual tradition.
- December 15 –
Tanzania and Guinea
sever diplomatic relations with the United
Kingdom
.
- December 15 – Gemini 6 and Gemini
7 perform the first controlled rendezvous in Earth
orbit.
- December 17 –
The British government begins an oil embargo against Rhodesia; the
United
States
joins the effort.
- December 21 –
The Soviet
Union
announces that it has shipped rockets to
North Vietnam.
- December 21 – Soviet scientists
condemn Trofim Lysenko for
pseudoscience.
- December 21 – In West Germany,
Konrad Adenauer resigns as chairman
of the Christian Democratic Party.
- December 21 – A new, 1-hour
German-American production of The
Nutcracker, with an international cast that includes
Edward Villella in the title role,
makes its U.S. TV debut. It is repeated annually by CBS over the
next 3 years, but after that, it is virtually forgotten.
- December 22 – A military coup occurs in Dahomey.
- December 22 – A 70 mph speed limit is imposed on British roads.
- December 25 –
The Yemeni
Nasserite Unionist
People's Organisation is founded in Taiz
.
- December 27 –
The British oil platform Sea
Gem collapses in the North Sea
.
- December 28 – Italian Foreign
Minister Amintore Fanfani resigns.
- December 30 –
President Kenneth Kaunda of Zambia
announces that Zambia and the United Kingdom
have agreed on a deadline before which the Rhodesian white
government should be ousted.
- December 30 – Ferdinand Marcos becomes President of the
Philippines.
- December 31
Farhid Najafpour was born; Bokassa takes
power in the Central Africa Republic
.
Undated
Ongoing
Births
January
- January – Paudge
Behan, Irish actor
- January 4 – Julia Ormond, British actress
- January 5 – Patrik Sjoberg, Swedish high jumper
- January 6 – Konnan, Cuban-born professional wrestler
- January 9 – Joely Richardson, British actress
- January 12 – Nikolai Borschevsky, Russian
professional ice hockey player (retired)
- January 14 – Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall,
British chef
- January 14 – Shamil Basayev, Chechen rebel (d. 2006)
- January 14 – Marc Delissen, Dutch field hockey player
- January 14 – Bob Essensa, Canadian ice hockey player
- January 14 – Slick Rick, English rapper
- January 15 – Adam Jones, American rock musician
(Tool)
- January 15 – James Nesbitt, Northern Irish actor
- January 18 – Dave Attell, American comedian
- January 20 – Greg Kriesel, American rock musician (The Offspring)
- January 20 – Sophie, Countess of Wessex
- January 22 – Steven Adler, American rock musician (Guns N' Roses)
- January 22 – DJ Jazzy Jeff, American rapper and actor
- January 22 – Diane Lane, American actress
- January 24 – Mike Awesome, American professional wrestler
(d. 2007)
- January 25 – Esa Tikkanen, Finnish ice hockey player
- January 26 – Natalia Yurchenko, Soviet gymnast
- January 26 – Siavash Shams, Iranian Singer
- January 27 – Alan Cumming, Scottish actor
- January 29 – Dominik Hašek, Czech hockey player
February
- February 1 – Brandon Lee, Chinese-American actor (d. 1993)
- February 1 – Sherilyn Fenn, American actress
- February 1 – Princess Stéphanie of
Monaco
- February 3 –
Maura Tierney, American
actress
- February 4 – Jerome Brown, American football player (d. 1992)
- February 5 – Gheorghe Hagi, Romanian footballer
(footballer)
- February 7 – Chris Rock, American actor and comedian
- February 8 – Dicky Cheung, Hong Kong actor
- February 11 – Stephen Gregory, American actor
- February 18 – Dr.
Dre, American rapper and music
producer
- February 22 – Dean Karr, American director and photographer
- February 23 – Michael Dell, American computer
manufacturer
- February 23 – Kristin Davis, American actress
- February 25 – Brian Baker, American rock guitarist
(Bad Religion)
- February 27 – Joakim Sundström, Swedish sound editor, sound
designer and musician
- February 28 – Park Gok-ji, South Korean film editor
March
- March 1 – Booker T, American professional wrestler,
5-time WCW World Champion
- March 1 – Stewart Elliott, Canadian jockey
- March 3 – Dragan Stojkovic, Serbian footballer and
coach
- March 4 – Ron
Gant, American baseball player
- March 4 – Andrew Collins, British
radio DJ and journalist
- March 4 – Jonathan Shearer, Scottish castaway
- March 4 – Paul W.S. Anderson, British filmmaker, producer and
screenwriter
- March 4 – WestBam
(Maximillian Lenz), German rave techno DJ
- March 7 – Jesper Parnevik, Swedish golfer
- March 8 – Kenny
Smith, American basketball player, 2-time NBA Champion
- March 9 – Benito Santiago, American baseball
player
- March 10 – Rod
Woodson, American football player
- March 11 – Jesse Jackson, Jr., American
politician
- March 11 – Lawrence Llewelyn-Bowen, British
television presenter
- March 12 – Steve Finley, American baseball player
- March 12 – Liza
Umarova, Chechen singer and actress
- March 14 – Kevin Brown, American
baseball player
- March 14 – Aamir
Khan, Indian Bollywood actor
- March 24 – Mark Calaway, American professional wrestler
("The Undertaker")
- March 24 – Patrick Scales, British-German electric bass
guitar player
- March 25 – Sarah Jessica Parker, American
actress
- March 25 – Stefka Kostadinova, Bulgarian high jumper and president of the Bulgarian Olympic Committee
- March 25 – Avery Johnson, American basketball player and
coach
- March 29 – Voula Patoulidou, Greek athlete
April
- April 1 – Robert Steadman, English composer
- April 1 – Mark Jackson, American basketball
player and analyst
- April 3 – Nazia
Hassan, Pakistani pop singer (d. 2000)
- April 4 – Robert Downey Jr., American actor
- April 6 – Frank
Black, American musician
- April 7 – Bill
Bellamy, American actor and comedian
- April 11 – Eelco van Asperen, Dutch computer
scientist
- April 12 – Tom O'Brien , American
actor-producer
- April 13 – The Real Darren Stevens, Canadian
radio personality
- April 13 – Patricio Pouchulu, Argentine
architect
- April 15 – Linda
Perry, American musician
- April 16 – Martin Lawrence, American actor, comedian,
and producer
- April 16 – Jon
Cryer, American actor
- April 19 – Suge
Knight, American record producer
- April 19 – Natalie Dessay, French soprano
- April 21 – Ed
Belfour, Canadian hockey player
- April 23 – Jamling Tenzing Norgay, Indian
mountain climber
- April 26 – Kevin James, American comedian and
actor
May
- May 3 – Gary
Mitchell, Irish playwright
- May 4 – Aykut
Kocaman, Turkish footballer
- May 7 – Owen
Hart, Canadian professional wrestler (d. 1999)
- May 9 – Steve
Yzerman, Canadian hockey player
- May 10 – Linda Evangelista, Canadian
supermodel
- May 11 – Monsour del Rosario, Filipino Olympic
athlete and actor
- May 13 – José Antonio Delgado, Venezuelan
mountain climber (d. 2006)
- May 13 – Tim
Chapman, American Bounty Hunter
- May 13 – Hikari
Ota, Japanese comedian
- May 14 – Eoin
Colfer, Irish novelist
- May 16 – Krist
Novoselic, American rock bassist (Nirvana)
- May 17 – Trent
Reznor, American rock musician (Nine
Inch Nails)
- May 19 – Philippe Dhondt, French singer known as
Boris
- May 23 – Manuel Sanchís Hontiyuelo,
Spanish footballer
- May 24 – Shinichiro Watanabe, Japanese anime director
- May 24 – John
C. Reilly, American actor
- May 24 – Carlos
Franco, Paraguayan golfer
- May 27 – Todd
Bridges, American actor
- May 28 – Chris
Ballew, American rock musician (The Presidents
of the United States of America)
- May 31 – Brooke
Shields, American actress and supermodel
June
- June 1 – Nigel
Short, English chess player
- June 2 – Steve
and Mark Waugh, Australian
cricketers
- June 4 – Mick
Doohan, Australian motorcycle
racer
- June 7 – Mick
Foley, American professional wrestler
- June 7 – Jean-Pierre François, French
footballer and singer
- June 7 – Damien
Hirst, British artist
- June 7 – Christine Roque, French singer
- June 8 – Chris
Chavis, American professional wrestler ("Tatanka")
- June 10 – Elizabeth Hurley, English model and
actress
- June 11 – Manuel Uribe Garza, morbidly obese
Mexican
- June 10 – Scott
Graham, American sportscaster
- June 15 – Bernard Hopkins, American boxer
- June 17 – Dara
O'Kearney, Irish ultra runner and professional poker
player
- June 19 – Sean Marshall, American child actor
and singer
- June 23 – Paul
Arthurs, British rock guitarist (Oasis)
- June 26 – Mike
Breen, American sports announcer
July
- July 1 – Harald
Zwart, Norwegian film
director
- July 3 – Shinya Hashimoto, Japanese professional
wrestler
- July 4 – Horace
Grant, American basketball player
- July 4 – Jo
Whiley, British radio DJ
- July 5 – Eyran Katsenelenbogen, Israeli jazz
pianist
- July 11 – Ernesto Hoost, Dutch kickboxer
- July 17 – Craig Morgan, American singer
- July 19 – Stuart
Scott, American sports reporter
- July 19 – Evelyn Glennie, Scottish virtuoso
percussionist
- July 21 – Guðni Bergsson, Icelandic
footballer
- July 22 – Michael Hickenbottom aka The Heartbreak Kid Shawn
Michaels, American professional wrestler
- July 23 – Slash (Saul Hudson), American rock musician
(Guns N' Roses)
- July 24 – Brian
Blades, American National
Football League wide receiver
- July 26 – Jeremy
Piven, American actor
- July 27 – José Luis Chilavert, Paraguayan
footballer
- July 31 – J. K. Rowling, English author
August
- August 2 – Sandra
Ng, Hong Kong actress
- August 2 – Hisanobu Watanabe, Japanese baseball
player and coach
- August 4 – Fredrik Reinfeldt, Swedish Prime Minister
- August 4 – Dennis Lehane, American crime writer
- August 6 – David Robinson, American
basketball player
- August 6 – Mark
Speight, British television presenter (d. 2008)
- August 9 – Chin
Kar Lok, Hong Kong actor
- August 10 – Mike E. Smith,
American jockey
- August 10 – John Starks, American
basketball player
- August 11 – Duane Martin, American actor
- August 14 – Emmanuelle Béart, French actress
- August 15 – Vincent Kuk, Hong Kong director and actor
- August 18 – Koji Kikkawa, Japanese singer
- August 23 – Roger Avary, American film
writer/director/producer
- August 24 – Reggie Miller, American basketball player
- August 25 – Mia
Zapata, American singer (d. 1993)
- August 28 – Amanda Tapping, Canadian actress
- August 28 – Shania Twain, Canadian country singer and songwriter
- August 30 – Peter Grant, Scottish footballer
and football manager
September
- September 1 – Craig McLachlan, Australian actor and
singer
- September 2 – Lennox Lewis, British boxer
- September 2 – Partho Sen-Gupta, Indian independent filmmaker
- September 3 – Charlie Sheen, American actor
- September 4 –
Bowie Lam, Hong Kong
actor and singer
- September 9 – Constance Marie, American actress
- September 10 – Marco Pastors, Dutch politician Mik1884.Derby
Fan
- September 11 – Moby, American musician
- September 11 – Paul Heyman, American wrestling promoter,
ECW
- September 12 –
Einstein Kristiansen, Norwegian
cartoonist, designer and TV host
- September 14 – Dmitry Medvedev, Russian President since
2008
- September 14 – Ron Pearson, American actor, comedian and
juggler
- September 16 – Katy Kurtzman, American actress, director, and
producer
- September 17 – Kyle Chandler, American actor
- September 19 – Sabine Paturel, French singer
- September 20 – Robert Rusler, American actor
- September 21 – Cheryl Hines, American actress
- September 21 – Johanna Vuoksenmaa, Finnish film
director
- September 25 – Scottie Pippen, American basketball
player
- September 26 – Alexandra Lencastre, Portuguese
actress
- September 27 – Peter MacKay, Canadian politician
- September 27 – Steve Kerr, American basketball player
- September 30 – Kathleen Madigan, American comedienne
October
- October 1 – Andreas Keller, German field hockey
player
- October 1 – Cliff Ronning, Canadian ice hockey player
- October 4 – John Melendez, American TV announcer
- October 4 – Rykers Solomon, Nauruan politician
- October 4 – Micky Ward, American boxer
- October 5 – Mario Lemieux, Canadian ice hockey player
- October 5 – Patrick Roy, Canadian ice hockey player
- October 8 – C-Jay Ramone, American rock bassist (The Ramones)
- October 9 – Dionicio Ceron, Mexican long-distance
runner
- October 10 – Chris Penn, American actor (d. 2006)
- October 14 – Steve Coogan, British comedian and actor
- October 14 – Constantine Koukias, Australian
composer
- October 16 – Steve Lamacq, British radio DJ
- October 17 – Aravinda de Silva, Sri Lankan
cricketer
- October 18 – Curtis Stigers, American jazz vocalist and
saxophonist
- October 18 – Zakir Naik, Indian Islamic speaker and
doctor
- October 19 – Ty Pennington, American television
presenter
- October 20 – Jil Caplan, French singer and songwriter
- October 20 – Mikhail Shtalenkov, Russian ice hockey
player
- October 26 –
Aaron Kwok, Hong Kong
singer and actor
- October 26 – Kelly Rowan, Canadian actress
- October 26 –
Kenneth Rutherford,
New
Zealand
cricketer
- October 29 – Christy Clark, Canadian politician
- October 30 – Gavin Rossdale, English musician
- October 31 – Rob Rackstraw, British voice actor
November
- November 2 – Shahrukh Khan, Indian actor
- November 3 – Ann
Scott, French novelist
- November 4 – Wayne Static, American rock singer (Static-X)
- November 4 – Pata, Japanese rock guitarist (X
Japan)
- November 4 – Jeff Scott Soto, American musician
- November 5 – Famke Janssen, Dutch model and actress
- November 6 – Greg Graffin, American rock singer (Bad Religion)
- November 7 – Sigrun Wodars, German athlete
- November 9 – Bryn Terfel, Welsh baritone
- November 10 – Eddie Irvine, Northern Irish racecar
driver
- November 19 – Paulo Barreto, Brazilian
cryptographer
- November 20 – Yoshiki Hayashi, Japanese rock composer,
piano and drummer (X Japan)
- November 21 – Björk, Icelandic singer, songwriter, and
musician
- November 21 – Alexander Siddig, Sudanese-born English
actor
- November 23 – Don Frye, American professional wrestler and mixed martial arts fighter
- November 25 – Cris Carter, American football player
- November 25 – Tim Armstrong, American singer and
musician
- November 28 – Peter Beagrie, English footballer
- November 30 – Ben Stiller, American actor
- November 30 – Tashi Tenzing, Indian mountaineer
December
- December 3 – Steve Harris, American actor
- December 3 – Katarina Witt, German figure skater
- December 4 – Anthony DeSando, American actor
- December 5 – John Rzeznik, American rock singer (The Goo Goo Dolls)
- December 5 – Carlton Palmer, English footballer
- December 8 – Carina Lau Kar-ling, Chinese
actress
- December 15 – Luis Fabián Artime, Argentine
footballer
- December 18 – John Moshoeu, South African footballer
- December 19 – Jessica Steen, Canadian actress
- December 21 – Andy Dick, American actor
- December 22 – Lee Berger American-born explorer and
paleoanthropologist
- December 27 – Salman Khan, Indian actor
- December 29 – Dexter Holland, American rock singer
(The Offspring)
- December 30 – Zoe Kelli Simon, American actress
- December 31 – Nicholas Sparks, American
author
- December 31 – Gong Li, Chinese actress
Unknown dates
Deaths
January
- January 4 – T. S. Eliot, American-born writer, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1888)
- January 10 –
Frederick Fleet, English sailor and
lookout aboard the RMS
Titanic
(b.
1887)
- January 12 – Lorraine Hansberry, American writer (b.
1930)
- January 14 – Jeanette MacDonald, American actress and
singer (b. 1903)
- January 20 – Alan Freed, American disc jockey (b. 1922)
- January 24 – Winston Churchill, Prime Minister of the
United Kingdom, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literature (b.
1874)
- January 28 – Maxime Weygand, French soldier (b. 1867)
- January 28 – Tich Freeman, English cricketer (b. 1888)
February
- February 5 – Irving Bacon, American actor (b. 1893)
- February 7 – Nance O'Neil, stage & film actress, friend
of Lizzie Borden (b. 1874)
- February 13 – Gloria
Morgan-Vanderbilt, Swiss-born socialite (b. 1906)
- February 15 – Nat King Cole, American singer and musician
(b. 1919)
- February 19 – Forrest Taylor, American stage, film and
television actor (b. 1883)
- February 21 – Malcolm X, American activist (assassinated) (b.
1925)
- February 22 –
Felix Frankfurter, U.S.
Supreme
Court Justice
(b. 1882)
- February 23 – Stan Laurel, British actor (b. 1890)
- February 26 – George Adamski, Polish-born alleged UFO
traveler (b. 1891)
March
April
- April 3
- April 8 – Lars
Hanson, Swedish actor (b. 1886)
- April 10 – Linda Darnell, American actress (b. 1923)
- April 14 – Perry Smith (b. 1928) and Dick Hickock (b.
1931), American murderers of the Clutters in 1959
(executed)
- April 16 – Sydney Chaplin, American actor (b. 1885)
- April 18 – Guillermo González
Camarena, Mexican inventor (b. 1917)
- April 21 – Edward Victor Appleton, English
physicist, Nobel Prize
laureate (b. 1892)* April
25 – Owney Madden, English-born
gangster (b. 1891)
- April 24 – Louise Dresser, American actress (b. 1878)
- April 27 – Edward R. Murrow, American journalist (b. 1908)
- April 30 – Helen Chandler, American actress (b. 1906)
May
June
July
August
September
October
- October 1 – Gareth Hughes, Welsh actor (b. 1894)
- October 3 – Zachary Scott, American actor (b. 1914)
- October 11
- October 12 – Paul Hermann Müller, Swiss chemist,
recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology
or Medicine (b. 1899)
- October 14 – Randall Jarrell, American poet (b. 1914)
- October 17 – John Barton King, American cricketer (b. 1873)
- October 18 – Henry Travers, English actor (b. 1874)
- October 21 – Marie McDonald, American actress (b. 1923)
- October 26 – Sylvia Likens, American murder victim (b.
1949)
- October 29 – Miller Anderson, American Olympic diver (b.
1922)
- October 30 – Arthur Schlesinger, Sr., American
historian (b. 1888)
- October 31 – Rita Johnson, American actress (b. 1913)
November
- November 6 – Edgard Varèse, French-born composer (b.
1883)
- November 6 – Clarence Williams, American musician (b.
1893)
- November 8 – Dorothy Kilgallen, American newspaper
columnist (b. 1913)
- November 12 – Syedna Taher Saifuddin, Indian Bohra
Spiritual Leader (b. 1888)
- November 16 – Harry Blackstone, Sr., American
magician (b. 1885)
- November 16 – W. T. Cosgrave, Irish politician (b. 1880)
- November 18 – Henry A. Wallace, Vice President of the United
States (b. 1888)
- November 24 – Abdullah III Al-Salim
Al-Sabah, Emir of Kuwait (b. 1895)
- November 25 – Dame Myra Hess, English pianist (b. 1890)
December
Unknown date
Ship events
Nobel Prizes
Academy Awards
- Best Picture: My Fair
Lady, Jack Warner,
producer
- Best Director: George Cukor,
My Fair Lady
- Best Actor: Rex Harrison,
My Fair Lady
- Best Actress: Julie Andrews,
Mary Poppins
- Best Supporting Actor: Peter
Ustinov, Topkapi
- Best Supporting Actress: Lila
Kedrova, Zorba the
Greek
- Best Original Screenplay: Father Goose written by Frank Tarloff, Peter
Stone and S.H.Barnett
- Best Adapted Screenplay: Becket, by Edward Anhalt
- Best Original Song: Mary
Poppins, Richard M.
Sherman and Robert B. Sherman
- Best Original Score: Mary
Poppins by Richard M.
Sherman and Robert B. Sherman
World population
| World
population |
|
1965 |
1960 |
1970 |
World |
3,334,874,000 |
3,021,475,000 |
313,399,000 |
3,692,492,000 |
357,618,000 |
Africa |
313,744,000 |
277,398,000 |
36,346,000 |
357,283,000 |
43,539,000 |
Asia |
1,899,424,000 |
1,701,336,000 |
198,088,000 |
2,143,118,000 |
243,694,000 |
Europe |
634,026,000 |
604,401,000 |
29,625,000 |
655,855,000 |
21,829,000 |
Latin-America |
250,452,000 |
218,300,000 |
1,270,000 |
284,856,000 |
34,404,000 |
Northern
America |
219,570,000 |
204,152,000 |
15,418,000 |
231,937,000 |
12,367,000 |
Oceania |
17,657,000 |
15,888,000 |
1,769,000 |
19,443,000 |
1,786,000 |
See also
Notes
External links
Table of contents