8.12.2010

Friday, August 12, 1960: 'Green Eggs and Ham'

Random House publishes "Green Eggs and Ham," a children's book by Theodor Seuss Geisel (writing under the name Dr. Seuss), whose previous works included "The Cat in the Hat," "Horton Hears a Who!" and "One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish." The book came about after Bennett Cerf of Random House bet Seuss $50 that he could not write a book using just 50 different words. Seuss used exactly 50 for "Green Eggs and Ham."
* Seussville (Random House website): @
* The art of Dr. Seuss: @
* National memorial website: @

Friday, August 12, 1960: Echo satellite

The United States successfully launches its first communications satellite, Echo 1. It's a large metallic balloon off which communication signals are bounced; as such, it is more a reflector than a transmitter. It would remain in orbit nearly 8 years.

* More about Echo: @ and @ and @
* First-day stamp covers: @


8.09.2010

Wednesday, August 10, 1960: The Rat Pack

"Ocean's Eleven," a movie about a Las Vegas heist starring (from left) Peter Lawford, Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr. and Joey Bishop, opens in New York and Los Angeles, having premiered in Las Vegas a week earlier. Collectively they're known as the Rat Pack. Several of them have connections to presidential candidate John F. Kennedy: Lawford was married to Kennedy's sister Patricia; Sinatra had re-recorded "High Hopes" as a campaign song; and Bishop would serve as master of ceremonies for JFK's inaugural ball the following January (an event from which Davis was excluded because he had married a white woman). Together they sang the national anthem at the 1960 Democratic convention in Los Angeles.

* Movie summary and information: @
* Movie trailer: @
* Rat Pack website: @
* Footage from 1963 in Las Vegas (first of 7 parts): @
* "Fly Me to the Moon" (1998 article from American Heritage): @
* "The Rat Pack: Neon Nights with the Kings of Cool" (book): @


Tuesday, August 9, 1960: Timothy Leary

In his efforts to study, explore and understand the levels of human consciousness, Harvard psychology professor Timothy Leary ingests psilocybin mushrooms for the first time during a visit to Mexico. He later wrote, "I was whirled through an experience which could be described in many extravagant metaphors but which was above all and without question the deepest religious experience of my life." Upon his return to Harvard, he would establish the Harvard Psilocybin Project.

* Short biography: @
* Related websites and information: @ and @
* Timothy Leary Archives: @
* New Yorker article: @
* "Seeking the Magic Mushroom" (1957 article by R. Gordon Wasson, published in Life magazine): @
* "The Religious Experience: Its Production and Interpretation" (published by Leary in The Psychedelic Review): @
* Watch "Timothy Leary -- The Man Who Turned On America" (BBC documentary): @



8.06.2010

Saturday, August 6, 1960: 'The Twist'

Singer Chubby Checker brings his single (and accompanying dance) "The Twist" to a prime-time television audience on "The Dick Clark Show." Checker's remake of the 1958 original (a modest hit by Hank Ballard & The Midnighters) would reach No. 1 on the charts on September 19 and then again on January 13, 1962. Everybody was hitting the dance floor, as a string of "Twist"-themed songs followed from other singers and bands, especially in 1962 during the song's second wave of popularity. Checker explained the moves this way: "Just pretend you're wiping your bottom with a towel as you get out of the shower, and putting out a cigarette with both feet."

* Listen and watch Chubby Checker version (I think this is "The Dick Clark Show" footage): @
* More about the song and the dance craze: @ and @ and @
* Chubby Checker website: @
* 1960 photo of Chubby Checker, Dick Clark and Conway Twitty in motion: @
* Illustrated guide to the dance: @


8.03.2010

Undated: U.S. Census

From 1950 to 1960, the population of the United States increases from about 151 million to nearly 180 million, a jump of more than 18 percent. The percentage increase is the largest since the first decade of the 20th century. (The Census Bureau's definition of the post-World War II "baby boom" includes births from 1946 to 1964.)

* 50 most populous cities: @
* "Statistical Abstract of the United States" for 1960 (in 12 parts; files are 1960-01.pdf through 1960-12.pdf): @
* "The Big Count" video: @
* 1960 questions and instructions: @
* "Myths and Realities About the 1960 Census": @


8.01.2010

Undated*: Independence throughout Africa

Starting with Cameroon (January 1) and ending with Mauritania (November 28), the year 1960 sees 17 African countries, all former European colonies, achieve their independence. Of those countries, 14 become free of French rule. The transitions are not always smooth or peaceful, particularly in the case of Belgian Congo, where United Nations troops would be sent in and a military coup would take place before the year is out. (* More than half of the African changeovers -- 9 -- are in August.)

* Map: @
* Timeline: @
* Summaries: @
* More about Congo crisis: @ and @


Monday, August 1, 1960: Aretha Franklin

Eighteen-year-old singer Aretha Franklin begins her first recording session for Columbia Records in New York. The songs are a mix of jazz, pop, blues and show tunes. The resulting album, "Aretha" (released in March 1961), will be her second record; an album of gospel songs was released when she was just 14.

* Listen to "Today I Sing the Blues" (the first song recorded at the first session): @
* Short biography (from rollingstone.com): @
* Essay on her early years: @


7.28.2010

Thursday-Friday, July 28-29, 1960: Project Apollo

In conjunction with the NASA-Industry Program Plans Conference in Washington, NASA announces Project Apollo, its goals for manned spaceflight. The new project, intended to build upon the ongoing Project Mercury, envisions putting men on the moon sometime after 1970 (click on chart to englarge). However, President Eisenhower is reluctant to sign off on the program, citing its multi-billion-dollar price tag.

* Chronology through July 1960: @
* The Project Apollo Archive: @
* Kennedy Space Center website: @
* Why the name Apollo was chosen: @


7.25.2010

Monday-Thursday, July 25-28, 1960: Republican National Convention

Vice President Richard Nixon is the all-but-certain nominee as the Republicans gather in Chicago, though Arizona Sen. Barry Goldwater and (presumably) New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller remain in the running. Attention turns toward the platform, the direction of the party and a running mate. Meanwhile, the accomplishments and popularity of outgoing President Dwight D. Eisenhower are a running theme of the convention.

* Platform and direction of party: Largely the work of Rockefeller, the so-called "Compact of Fifth Avenue" was hammered out during a meeting between the Nixon and Rockefeller camps at the governor's Fifth Avenue apartment on July 22-23. Nixon signed off on the platform to ensure Rockefeller's support and to placate the more liberal factions of the party. His actions outraged the GOP's more conservative elements, particularly Goldwater, whose "Conscience of a Conservative" (published that March) had brought him to prominence, as it forcefully stated the direction in which he wanted to move the party. The Chicago Tribune thundered in an editorial, "Grant Surrenders to Lee."
-- Platform summary and significance: @ and @. Text: @
-- Text of "Conscience of a Conservative": @

* July 25: Convention gets under way at the International Amphitheatre. A civil rights rally, 5,000 strong and led in part by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., takes place outside the building. (As the Democrats had done two weeks prior, the GOP would address civil rights at length in its platform.)
-- Transcript of NBC interview with King: @

* July 26: Eisenhower addresses the convention. Rockefeller officially withdraws his candidacy, releasing his pledged delegates and urging their support of Nixon.
-- Text of Eisenhower speech: @

* July 27: Party platform is approved. Nixon's and Goldwater's names are placed in nomination. Goldwater withdraws his candidacy, saying in his speech, "Let's grow up, conservatives ... let's -- if we want to take this party back and I think we can someday -- let's get to work." Nixon claims the nomination, with 1,321 delegates to 10 for Goldwater. (The photo above is Nixon's reaction to his first-ballot victory.)

* July 28: Nixon selects Henry Cabot Lodge, the United States' ambassador to the United Nations, for the vice presidential slot. (Rockefeller had turned down Nixon's offer.) Nixon addresses the convention.


* Convention summary from Chicago Historical Society: @
* Videos of convention highlights: @ and @
* Videos of speeches (includes Goldwater, Lodge and former President Herbert Hoover): @ (Audio and text of Nixon's acceptance speech: @)
* Telegram from NBC to Nixon and Kennedy (and their replies) regarding prime-time debates: @


Monday, July 25, 1960: Greensboro sit-in (update)

The lunch counter at the F.W. Woolworth in Greensboro, North Carolina, is integrated as four black Woolworth's employees sit down and eat. The store had been the launching pad for the sit-in movement that had spread throughout the South. (See February 1.) By the end of the summer, an estimated 70,000 people had taken part in sit-ins, with 3,000 arrests.

* More about Geneva Tisdale, one of the four Woolworth's employees: @ and @
* Civil Rights Greensboro website: @
* Instructions from Students Executive Committee for Justice on how to conduct protests: @ (scroll down to "Greensboro Four Letter")
* List of sit-in cities: @
* More about sit-ins in Nashville, Tennessee: @ and @ and @

7.21.2010

Thursday, July 21, 1960: First female prime minister

Sirimavo Ratwatte Dias Bandaranaike takes office as prime minister of Ceylon (present-day Sri Lanka), making her the world's first female head of government. She rose to power as the widow of prime minister Solomon West Ridgeway Dias Bandaranaike (assassinated the year before by a Buddhist monk), taking over the leadership of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party. "There will be need for a new word. Presumably, we shall have to call her a Stateswoman. This is the suffragette's dream come true," wrote London's Evening News.

* Obituary after her death in 2000: @
* More about Sri Lanka: @ and @ and @

7.20.2010

Wednesday, July 20, 1960: Underwater missile

Sitting about 30 miles off Cape Canaveral, Florida, the USS George Washington fires a Polaris A1 nuclear missile. It was the first successful launch of a ballistic missile by a submerged submarine. The launch was a key progression in the ongoing arms race between the United States and the Soviet Union. The Polaris' 1,200-mile range meant that the U.S. could strike nearly any land target from the safety of international waters.

* More about Polaris missile system: @ and @
* Polaris timeline: @
* More about USS George Washington: @ and @
* Newsreel: @


7.15.2010

Monday-Friday, July 11-15, 1960: Democratic National Convention

* July 5: Lyndon Baines Johnson, the Senate majority leader from Texas, announces he will seek the Democratic nomination for president. Johnson had not campaigned during the primaries; he had hoped to prevail at the convention as a compromise candidate. Also waiting in the wings are Sen. Stuart Symington of Missouri as well as Adlai Stevenson, the party's nominee in 1952 and 1956. The reason for all the maneuvering: While Sen. John F. Kennedy heads into the convention as the front-runner, he has just 600 of the 761 delegates needed to secure the nomination.
-- More about Johnson's candidacy: @

* July 10: To a mixture of cheers and boos, Kennedy speaks at an NAACP rally before the convention; also speaking is the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. The two men had met for the first time the month before, discussing civil rights, which would be a key element of the Democratic platform.
-- King's account of first meeting: @

* July 11: Convention opens at the Los Angeles Sports Arena.
-- Preview from NBC (July 9): @

* July 12: Party platform approved.
-- Significance and summary: @
-- Text: @

* July 13: Kennedy wins the nomination on the first ballot, collecting 806 delgates to Johnson's 409. Symington and Stevenson fall far short. The next day's Boston Globe would carry the headline "JACK, IN WALK".
-- Account from Time magazine on the jockeying for delegates: @
-- Account from Life magazine: @
-- Excerpt from book "The First Modern Campaign: Kennedy, Nixon, and the Election of 1960": @
-- New York Times story: @
-- Telegram from Harpo Marx congratulating Kennedy: @
(Thanks to Larry Harnisch of the Los Angeles Times for the front-page image. Click here for The Daily Mirror, the Times' blog on L.A. history.)

* July 14: Kennedy asks Johnson to join the ticket as the vice presidential nominee. Johnson accepts. The circumstances surrounding the somewhat surprising offer are debated to this day.
-- Short summary from PBS: @
-- Account from Kennedy aide Kenneth O'Donnell: @
-- Account from Philip Graham, confidant of both Kennedy and Johnson: @
-- New York Times story: @

* July 15: In front of 80,000 people at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, Kennedy formally accepts the nomination (also known as the "New Frontier" speech).
-- Text, audio and video: @


* Videos of convention highlights: @ and @
* Panoramic photo of scene inside convention hall: @
* The convention was the basis for Norman Mailer's "Superman Comes to the Supermarket," which would be published in the November issue of Esquire magazine: @


7.14.2010

Thursday, July 14, 1960: Jane Goodall

A novice researcher with no formal college training, Jane Goodall arrives by boat on the shores of Lake Tanganyika in modern-day Tanzania and begins her pioneering studies of chimpanzee behavior. The world would learn of her work three years later when "My Life Among Wild Chimpanzees" is published in National Geographic magazine.

* Timeline of Goodall's life: @
* Jane Goodall Institute website: @
* Interviews: @ and @ (video) and @ (audio)
* More about Gombe National Park: @
* National Geographic site: @


Blog archive

Twitter

Follow: @