Women Strike for Peace, a women's peace activist group in the United States, held its first event, as thousands of American women, most of them housewives concerned over the contamination of strontium-90 from fallout, marched in 60 different U.S. cities to demand an end to further nuclear testing.[1] Estimates of the number of participants ranged from 25,000 to 50,000.[2]
A Panair do Brasil Airlines DC-7 with 85 people on board crashed, killing 48 people. The plane, arriving from Lisbon, Portugal, was coming in for a landing at Recife when it struck a hillside in the suburb of Tijipio.[6][7]
The U.S. Interstate Commerce Commission's federal order banning segregation at all interstate public facilities officially went into effect.[8]
The first Soviet ICBM, called the R-16 in the USSR and the SS-7 by Americans, was put on active status.[9]
The cover of Oleg Penkovsky, who had passed along top secret Soviet information to American CIA agents operating in the USSR, was blown, after four KGB agents caught a CIA case officer in the act of picking up information that had been dropped off. The CIA man was expelled; the execution of Penkovsky would be announced on May 17, 1963.[14]
The musical Kean, based on the life of 18th-century Shakespearean actor Edmund Kean, opened at the Broadway Theater in New York City. It would close on January 20 after only 92 performances.[15]
Israel's Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion received approval to form a new coalition government, with the Knesset approving a vote of confidence, 63–46.[16]
In one of the more unusual finishes in pro football history, the Dallas Texans were trailing the Boston Patriots, 28–21, but had made it down to the one-yard line with one second left. Patriots fans rushed onto the field, and even after being held back by police, one spectator ran into the end zone on the final play, thwarting a pass to Dallas' Chris Burford from Cotton Davidson, then disappeared back into the crowd.[20][21]
After returning from South Vietnam on a factfinding mission for President Kennedy, U.S. Army General Maxwell Taylor submitted a report proposing the commitment of 10,000 American combat troops to defend against the Communist Viet Cong. Kennedy did not publicly commit reports, but eventually sent 25,000 troops to South Vietnam.[22]
The UN General Assembly unanimously (103–0) elected U Thant, the Ambassador from Burma (now Myanmar), as acting Secretary General, to replace the late Dag Hammarskjöld. The other candidate for the position had been General Assembly President Mongi Slim of Tunisia. Thant would serve for two terms, ending in 1971.[23][24]
U.S. Army Major General Edwin A. Walker resigned his commission, after having lost his command of a division in West Germany earlier in the year from controversial comments. Walker told reporters that "I must be free from the power of little men who, in the name of my country, punish loyal service to it."[25]
The White House Historical Association was created as a result of the efforts of U.S. First Lady Jackie Kennedy to fund the maintenance of the American presidential residence. Money was raised through the sales of the Association's book, The White House: An Historic Guide.[27]
The remains of Welsh chorus girl Mamie Stuart, who had disappeared in 1919, were located 42 years after her death. Three amateur cave explorers had gone into an abandoned lead mine at Brandy Cove in Wales, and found a sack protruding from a stone slab. Looking for a possible treasure, the three discovered human bones from a body that had been sawed into three pieces. A coroner's inquest concluded that the remains were those of Stuart, whose husband George Shotton could not be charged with murder because her body could not be found.[32]
Heinz Felfe, West Germany's chief of counterintelligence for the Bundesnachrichtendienst (BND), was arrested by his own agents. Felfe, a former Nazi, was discovered to have been passing secrets of the American CIA to the Soviet Union and to East Germany since 1959, revealing the identify of more than 100 CIA agents in Moscow.[40]
American actor Michael J. Pollard (who would later win an Oscar for his performance in the film Bonnie and Clyde) married actress Beth Howland (best known for portraying the waitress "Vera" on the TV sitcom Alice).
The British freighter Cinn Keith exploded and sank in the Mediterranean Sea off of the coast of Tunisia, killing 62 of the 68 crewmen on board.[41]
José María Velasco Ibarra was pressured into resigning as President of Ecuador. The Ecuadorian Army had the oath of office administered to Supreme Court President Camilo Gallegos Toledo. Ten minutes later, the Ecuadorian Congress voted to elevate Vice-president Carlos Arosemena (who had been jailed by the Army the day before) to the post.[42]
Konrad Adenauer was re-elected by the Bundestag for a fourth four-year term as Chancellor of West Germany, but by a margin of only 8 votes. With approval necessary from 250 of the 499 members, the vote was 258 to 206 in his favor, with 26 abstaining and 9 members absent.[43]
The Taiwanese cargo ship Union Reliance collided with the 9,003 GRT Norwegian tanker MS Berean in the Houston Ship Channel. As a result of the collision, Union Reliance caught fire and ran aground. Twelve people aboard the Berean were killed in the collision and subsequent fire.[44]
France secretly set off its first underground nuclear explosion, and its fifth overall since joining the nuclear club on February 13, 1960. Confirmation was not given until nearly three weeks later.[47]
Died:
Hugh Ruttledge, 77, English mountaineer who led two unsuccessful tries (in 1933 and 1936) at being the first to climb Mount Everest
Augustin Rösch, 68, German Jesuit and resistance fighter against Fascism
Imperial Airlines Flight 201/8 from Baltimore, chartered to carry U.S. Army recruits to basic training at Fort Jackson, South Carolina, crashed while attempting an emergency landing at Richmond, Virginia. The plane caught fire after coming down in a wooded ravine at 9:24 p.m., killing 77 of the 79 people on board.[48] Subsequent investigation by the Civil Aeronautics Board determined that most of the people on board had survived the impact, but died of smoke inhalation after panicking in their rush toward the exits. The crew of the plane was blamed for allowing the fuel tank for one of the engines to empty, causing the stall; for failing to use an emergency valve to deploy a malfunctioning landing gear, which would have made an emergency landing possible at the airport; and for failing to instruct the passengers about what to do in the event of a crash. There was no attempt by the recruits to open any of the three emergency exits.[49]
U.S. Amateur golf champion Jack Nicklaus, a 21-year-old senior at Ohio State University announced at a press conference that he was turning professional. Nicklaus would go on to win 19 major championships, including six Masters tournaments and six PGA Championships.[50]
The Professional Golfers' Association of America (PGA) amended its constitution, ending a rule that, since 1934, had limited its membership to white people, and only those from the Western Hemisphere. Prior to the rescission of the "Caucasian clause", the PGA had allowed non-whites to play in the PGA Tour, though not to join, most notably Charlie Sifford, an African-American who earned $1,300 on the Tour in 1961.
U.S. Air Force Captain Robert M. White set a new world record for speed in an airplane, becoming the first person to reach Mach 6. White flew an X-15 rocket plane to a speed of Mach 6.04, at 4,093 miles per hour (6,587 km/h).[51]
What would become the landmark U.S. Supreme Court case of Griswold v. Connecticut began nine days after Estelle Griswold of the Planned Parenthood League and Dr. C. Lee Buxton opened a clinic in New Haven, providing the means for birth control to patrons, in defiance of a Connecticut state law prohibiting the use of "any drug, medicinal article or instrument for the purpose of preventing conception". Ms. Griswold and Dr. Buxton were arrested[53] and would take their challenge to the law all the way to the United States Supreme Court, which would rule in 1965 that laws that infringed upon marital privacy were unconstitutional.[54]
The Soviet city of Stalingrad, site of the Soviet defense of the Nazi invasion, was renamed Volgograd in honor of the Volga River, and in keeping with the Communist Party's reassessment of former leader Joseph Stalin. Two other cities named in honor of the dictator — Stalinsk in western Siberia, and Stalino in Ukraine — were renamed Novokuznetsk and Donetsk, respectively.[55]
The classic novel Catch-22, by Joseph Heller, was first put on sale by Simon & Schuster, after favorable advance reviews in October. The book's title, which became a phrase to refer to a no-win situation, had originally been Catch-18, but was changed because of a 1961 novel by Leon Uris, Mila 18.[56]
An Atlas missile, launched from the United States with a squirrel monkey on board, exploded 30 seconds after liftoff while being tested for a 5,000-mile (8,000 km) flight. The body of "Goliath", the 24-ounce (680 g) passenger, was found in the wreckage two days later.[57]
Thirteen members of the Italian Air Force, serving as part of the UN Peacekeeping Force in the Congo, were brutally murdered after arriving at the airport in Kindu. Five days after the airmen had disappeared, United Nations investigators discovered that the unarmed group had been kidnapped shortly after their cargo planes had landed with scout cars for a contingent of Malayan UN troops. Mutinying soldiers from the Congolese army, loyal to Vice-Premier Antoine Gizenga, seized the Italian men, beat them, and then shot them in front of the town's prison. Some of the bodies were dismembered and thrown into the Lualaba River.[58]
Retired USAF Captain Julian Harvey, operating the chartered yacht Bluebelle for the family of Wisconsin optometrist Dr. Arthur Duperrault, murdered the Dupperrault family by sinking the boat and escaping from it as it sank between the Bahamas and Florida. Rescuers found Harvey and the body of the youngest of the three Duperrault children, whom he had taken off the boat before it went down. Harvey thought he was the sole survivor of the seven persons on board,[59] but four days later, the merchant ship Captain Theo spotted 11-year-old Terry Jo Duperrault, clinging to a cork raft.[60] The next day, after learning that there was a survivor, Harvey checked into a Miami motel and killed himself.[61] Investigators soon discovered that Harvey had taken out a $20,000 double-indemnity life insurance policy on his wife, and had almost gotten away with multiple murder.[62]
Born:Nadia Comăneci, Romanian gymnast who became the first person to win a perfect score of 10 in Olympic gymnastics; gold medalist in 1976 and 1980; in Oneşti[63]
World-famous cellist Pablo Casals, who had fled his native Spain and vowed in 1938 not to perform in any nation that recognized the regime of Francisco Franco (including the United States), played the cello at the request of the President and Mrs. Kennedy. The occasion was a state dinner at the White House in honor of Puerto Rico's Governor Luis Muñoz Marín. Casals, 84, had last performed at the White House 57 years earlier, for President Theodore Roosevelt on January 15, 1904.[64][65]
Ten days after pressure blew the cap from a natural gas well in the Sahara Desert in Algeria, the "world's biggest fire" started, sending flames 600 feet (180 m) high. Firefighting expert Red Adair would extinguish the blaze on April 29, 1962, with 660 pounds (300 kg) of dynamite.[66]
During heavy storms, the Norwegian fishing vessel Peder Vinje disappeared off Norway's north cape, with 13 men on board, while the Danish motorship Teddy sank in the Baltic Sea on the same evening, taking with it 12 of its 16 men.[67]
Died:Herman Smitt Ingebretsen, 70, Norwegian politician who had led the Conservative Party, and was later imprisoned in a Nazi concentration camp from 1943 to 1945.
The crash of a DC-4 cargo plane on its final approach to Greater Cincinnati Airport left the three crew of Zantop Air Transport with only minor injuries, but was the first of three blamed partly on the poor positioning of one of the airport's runways. Two later crashes during the approach to Runway 18, which was about two miles (3.3 km) from a tree-covered hill, would kill more than 120 people, with 58 dying in the 1965 crash of American Airlines Flight 383. After 70 more were killed when TWA Flight 128 struck trees during its approach to the same runway, high intensity lights would be installed on the hillside along with glide-slope equipment beacons on recommendation of the National Transportation Safety Board.[72]
The Shah of Iran gave Iranian Prime Minister Ali Amini the go-ahead to begin the "White Revolution", a comprehensive series of reforms aimed at improving education, combating poverty, and eliminating corruption over a period of ten years.[73]
A resolution to expel South Africa from the United Nations General Assembly failed to receive the required two-thirds majority. The vote of a committee of representatives from the 103 member nations was 47–32 in favor, and 34 abstaining.[74]
Maria Estela Martinez Cartas, who had been a nightclub dancer in Argentina using the stage name "Isabel", married former Argentine President Juan Perón in Madrid, where he had lived in exile since his overthrow in 1955. In 1973, Perón would return from exile and was elected president, with Isabel as his vice-president. Upon Juan Perón's death the following year, Isabel Perón would become the first woman to ever serve as President of any nation.[75]
McDonnell Aircraft Corporation delivered its detail specification of the two-man Mercury Mark II spacecraft to the Manned Spacecraft Center, adapting the design of the one-man Mercury spacecraft. Innovations included housing many of the mission-sustaining components in an adapter that would be carried into orbit, rather than being jettisoned following launch, as well as bipropellant thrusters to effect orbital maneuvers, crew ejection seats for emergency use, an improved onboard navigation system, and fuel cells to supplement the electrical power of silver-zinc batteries. The changes would permit a longer-duration mission of as much as seven days.[4]
Kuwait Television began broadcasting. For the first twelve years, the station in Kuwaiti City showed programming, in black and white, for four hours per day. Color television would be inaugurated on March 16, 1974.[76]
Dr. John Lykoudis, of Missolonghi in Greece, received a patent for the antibiotic medicine he had devised to effectively treat peptic ulcer disease, thought at the time to be caused by excessive stomach acid rather than by bacteria. However, he was rebuffed by the Greek government in attempting to obtain trials and approval of the medication, which he called Elgaco, and by medical journals. In 1983, three years after Lykoudis died, Drs. Barry Marshall and Robin Warren would confirm that ulcers were indeed caused by a bacterium, Helicobacter pylori, which thrived in acidic environments.[78]
The United States increased its involvement in Vietnam, beginning its first tactical airlift operations as part of "Operation Farm Gate". Four C-47 Skytrain transports began operation from Bien Hoa Air Base.[79]
Portuguese troops at the colony of Goa fired, without provocation, on the passenger ship Sabarmati near Anjadip Island, killing one person and injuring another. By the end of the month, the government of India would make the decision to drive the Portuguese out, culminating in the 1961 Indian Annexation of Goa.[83]
Died:Benny Kauff, 71, American baseball player who starred in the Federal League (1914–15); after playing MLB from 1916 to 1920, he was banned for life from baseball.
West German pediatrician Widukind Lenz of Hamburg delivered his findings at a meeting of the German Pediatric Society, making the link between the morning sickness pill thalidomide and phocomelia, a birth defect causing missing limbs. Dr. Lenz found that in 17 out of 20 cases of defects that he had investigated in Hamburg, the mothers had used the medicine, marketed there under the name Contergan.[84] By contrast, there had been only one case of phocomelia out of 210,000 births in Hamburg between 1930 and 1955.[85] A reporter at the meeting broke the story the next day in the German national Sunday paper Welt am Sonntag.
Eddie Arcaro, who had more wins in U.S. Classics than any other jockey, finished third in what would prove to be his final horse race, showing with Endymion in the Pimlico Futurity at Aqueduct Racetrack in New York City. Arcaro retired before the 1962 racing season, having ridden 24,092 races and winning 4,779 of them, as well as 807 second place and 3,302 third-place finishes. Finishing first in the race was Willie Shoemaker, who would later hold the records.[86]
Barry Goldwater, U.S. Senator from Arizona, spoke out in Atlanta against President Kennedy and big government. Although he was a member of the NAACP, the man who would become the Republican nominee for president in 1964, said that states, rather than Washington, should enforce school desegregation, offering "I wouldn't like to see my party assume it is the role of the federal government to enforce integration of schools."[87]
The "Rebellion of the Pilots" (La Rebelión de los Pilotos), an uprising by six Dominican Republic Air Force officers against the remaining members of the family of the late Rafael Trujillo, forced the resignation of General Rafael "Ramfis" Trujillo, Jr., who had continued the Trujillo rule of the Caribbean nation in the months after the assassination of his father.[89]
Factory roll-out inspection of Atlas launch vehicle 109-D was conducted. This booster was designated for the Mercury-Atlas 6 (MA-6) mission, the United States' first crewed orbital space flight.[3]
Manned Spacecraft Center notified North American to proceed with Phase II-A of the Paraglider Development Program, an eight-month effort to develop the design concept of a paraglider landing system and to determine its optimal performance configuration.[4] A NASA working group chaired by Milton W. Rosen, Director of Launch Vehicles and Propulsion, reviewed the technical and operational problems posed by an orbital rendezvous, essential for future missions, and concluded that "a vigorous high priority rendezvous development effort must be undertaken immediately."[4]
The last 27 members of the Trujillo family departed the Dominican Republic, where the relatives of the late Rafael Trujillo had ruled for 30 years. Rafael had been assassinated on May 30. Three of his brothers (including former President Héctor Trujillo) joined Rafael, Jr., who had left the previous day. The group departed on a chartered Pan American DC-6 to Miami from the soon to be renamed Dominican capital, Ciudad Trujillo.[94]
İsmet İnönü of CHP formed the new government of Turkey (26th government, first coalition in Turkey, partner AP).
The first revolving restaurant in the United States, "La Ronde", opened on the 23rd floor of the Ala Moana Building on 1441 Kapiolani Boulevard in Honolulu.[95]
Died:Anselmo Alliegro y Milá, 61, acting President of Cuba for two days after the January 1, 1959 departure of dictator Fulgencio Batista prior to the arrival of Fidel Castro's troops.
Thalidomide was withdrawn from sale in West Germany, five days after Dr. Widukind Lenz told a medical conference about the deformities that it caused. According to a report six years later, pharmaceuticals in other nations withdrew the drug from the market "and within nine months the wave of malformations subsided", but that "estimates of the world-wide number of crippled babies run up to 6,500, the figures compiled a few years ago by an international parents association."[99]
Andy Warhol wrote gallerist Muriel Latow a check for $50, thought to have been payment for coming up with the idea of soup cans as subject matter for his art.[101]
The United Nations General Assembly approved Resoulution 1653 (XVI), the "Declaration on the Prohibition of the Use of Nuclear and Thermonuclear Weapons", by a 2⁄3rds majority (55–20, with 26 abstentions).[103]
Lieutenant Hugh B. Haskell, U.S. Navy, and his co-pilot made a pioneer flight from Byrd Station in Antarctica to establish Sky-High Camp (later Eights Station) at 75°14'S, 77°06'W.
The Soviet Union first opened dialogue with Vatican City as Nikita Khrushchev sent congratulations to Pope John XXIII on the latter's 80th birthday.[106]
The USS Enterprise, the world's first nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, was commissioned.[107]
The Roman Catholic dioceses of Malolos and Imus were created in the Philippines.
West German pharmaceutical manufacturer Grünenthal GmbH became the first company to take thalidomide off of the market, nine days after the first report of its link to birth defects was published. The Distillers Company removed the drug from British distribution on December 21.[108]
In the Avellaneda derby soccer match between Club Atlético Independiente and Racing Club de Avellaneda, the referee was forced to suspend play for six minutes due to fighting amongst the players. Four players from each team were sent off. The game ended in a 1–1 draw.
U.S. brothers Brian, Dennis and Carl Wilson; their cousin Mike Love; and their friend Al Jardine, who had created a band called "The Pendletones", saw the release of their first recorded song, "Surfin'" (with "Luau" on the "B"- side). For the single, record distributor Russ Regen renamed the group, The Beach Boys, and their first song peaked at #75 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart.[109]
Four days after the #2 Ohio State Buckeyes American football team had closed its season unbeaten, with a record of 8 wins and one tie and the championship of the Big Ten Conference, the faculty council at Ohio State University voted 28–25 to reverse the OSU Athletic Council's 6–4 decision to accept an invitation to the Rose Bowl. Objections to the post-season game, and a chance at the mythical national championship, were that OSU's academic prestige had been hurt by its image as "a football school".[110]
Representatives of the Space and Information Systems Division of North American, Langley Research Center, Flight Research Center (formerly High Speed Flight Station), and the Manned Spacecraft Center agreed that paraglider research and development would be oriented to the Mercury Mark II project.[4]
After Morocco's King Hassan II agreed to allow the Arab nation's Jewish minority to leave, the first group of 105 Jews was allowed to fly out to Israel. By the end of the year, 11,478 had left, and over the next two years, the 85,000 members of the community had emigrated.[112]
Nuclear test ban talks resumed in Geneva between the United States, the United Kingdom, and the USSR. Thirteen meetings would be held over the next two months.[113]
Born:Florian Vijent, Dutch-Surinamese football goalkeeper; in Amsterdam (killed in airplane crash, 1989)
The United States successfully placed a 37.5-pound (17.0 kg) chimpanzee, Enos, into orbit around the Earth, clearing the way for the first American astronaut to break the pull of Earth's gravity. Enos lifted off from Cape Canaveral on board Mercury-Atlas 5 at 9:07 a.m. for the second and final orbital qualification of the spacecraft prior to crewed flight. Scheduled for three orbits, the spacecraft was returned to earth after two orbits due to the failure of a roll reaction jet and to the overheating of an inverter in the electrical system. Both of these difficulties could have been corrected had an astronaut been aboard. Enos was recovered safely at 12:28 p.m. in the Atlantic Ocean, 255 miles (410 km) southeast of Bermuda, by the USS Stormes. During the flight, the chimpanzee performed psychomotor duties and upon recovery was found to be in excellent physical condition. The flight was termed highly successful and the Mercury spacecraft well qualified to support crewed orbital flight.[3][114]John Glenn was selected as the pilot for the first crewed orbital flight, although Donald "Deke" Slayton had been announced as the second choice after Glenn.[115]Scott Carpenter was chosen as the backup if Glenn was unable to fly. The remaining astronauts concentrated their efforts on various engineering and operational groups of the Manned Spacecraft Center in preparation for the mission.[3]
U.S. President Kennedy authorized Operation Mongoose, the secret funding of Cuban groups to overthrow Cuba's new revolutionary socialist government led by prime minister Fidel Castro. Brigadier General Edward Lansdale was put in command of the project, which had 4,000 operatives on its payroll between 1961 and 1963.[121]
The Soviet Union vetoed Kuwait's application for United Nations membership, in alliance with Iraq. After the Arab League withdrew its forces from the sheikdom, the Security Council, including the USSR, approved Kuwait's membership.[103]
Atlas launch vehicle 109-D for the Mercury 6 mission of February 20, 1962, which would make John Glenn the first U.S. astronaut to orbit the Earth, was delivered to Cape Canaveral.[3]
^"Kim Polese". Connecticut Forum. Retrieved November 8, 2023.
^Dieter Nohlen, et al., Elections in Asia and the Pacific: South East Asia, East Asia, and the South Pacific (Oxford University Press, 2001) p227; "Macapagal Winner In Philippines", Miami News, November 15, 1961, p1
^"Remarks of Hon. Robert Taft Jr., Aircraft Accident Report", Congressional Record, September 24, 1969, p. 26977
^Kristen Blake, The U.S.-Soviet Confrontation in Iran, 1945-1962: A Case in the Annals of the Cold War (University Press of America, 2009) p155
^"South Africa Hangs Onto Its Seat In U.N.", Miami News, November 14, 1961, p5A
^Crassweller, Robert D. (1988). Peron and the Enigmas of Argentina. W. W. Norton & Company. p. 316.
^"Minuteman In Pit Fired 3,000 Miles". Milwaukee Sentinel. November 18, 1961. p. 4.
^Jenkins, Dennis R. (2002). To Reach the High Frontier: A History of U.S. Launch Vehicles. University Press of Kentucky. p. 254.
^Singh, Satyindra (1992). Blueprint to Bluewater, the Indian Navy, 1951-65. Lancer Publishers. p. 350.
^Mitchell H. Gail and Jacques Bénichou, Encyclopedia of Epidemiologic Methods (John Wiley and Sons, 2000 p924
^Philip J. Hilts, Protecting America's Health: The FDA, Business, and One Hundred Years of Regulation (UNC Press Books, 2004) p155
^Paul J. Christopher and Alicia Marie Smith, 50 Plus One Greatest Sports Heroes of All Times: North American Edition (Encouragement Press, LLC, 2006) p28; "Crimson Satan touted as hot Derby prospect", Hopkinsville (KY) New Era, November 20, 1961, p17
^
Allan J. Lichtman, White Protestant Nation: The Rise of the American Conservative Movement (Grove Press, 2009) p232; "Goldwater Attacks 'Indecision' of JFK", Rome News-Tribune, - November 19, 1961, p1
^"3 Presidents at Rayburn Funeral", Chicago Tribune, November 19, 1961, p1
^"Trujillo's Son Flees Dominican Republic". Pittsburgh Press. November 19, 1961. p. 1.
^"The News Around the U.S.". Miami News. February 1, 1964. p. 14A.
^The 100 Greatest Movie Stars of Our Time. People Books. 2002. p. 94. ISBN9781931933230.
^"The Story of Crystal Waters' "Gypsy Woman (She's Homeless)"". Thump. vice.com. April 8, 2016. Retrieved July 6, 2018. My family were very musical. My great-aunt, Ethel Waters, was a very famous actor and singer in the 1940s, and my father was a jazz musician for his entire life. My uncle was the lead saxophonist with MSFB, if you remember them? I grew up with all of that, and there were rehearsals in our house, and I'd go on tour with my father in the summers, so the musician's lifestyle was just part of my life.
^"TRUJILLO BROTHERS FLEE, ARRIVE ON BEACH". Miami News. November 20, 1961. p. 1.
^Chad Randl, Revolving Architecture: A History of Buildings that Rotate, Swivel, and Pivot (Princeton Architectural Press, 2008) p105; Some Construction and Housing Firsts in Hawaii, by Robert C. Schmitt, in The Hawaiian Journal of History (Hawaiian Historical Society, 1981) p110
^Theatre World 2008-2009: The Most Complete Record of the American Theatre. Hal Leonard. 2009. p. 35.
^Dulles, Allen W. (2006). The Craft of Intelligence: America's Legendary Spy Master on the Fundamentals of Intelligence Gathering for a Free World. Globe Pequot. p. 39.