1964

1964 (MCMLXIV) was a leap year starting on Wednesday of the Gregorian calendar, the 1964th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 964th year of the 2nd millennium, the 64th year of the 20th century, and the 5th year of the 1960s decade.

Millennium: 2nd millennium
Centuries:
Decades:
Years:
1964 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar1964
MCMLXIV
Ab urbe condita2717
Armenian calendar1413
ԹՎ ՌՆԺԳ
Assyrian calendar6714
Baháʼí calendar120–121
Balinese saka calendar1885–1886
Bengali calendar1371
Berber calendar2914
British Regnal year12 Eliz. 2  13 Eliz. 2
Buddhist calendar2508
Burmese calendar1326
Byzantine calendar7472–7473
Chinese calendar癸卯年 (Water Rabbit)
4660 or 4600
     to 
甲辰年 (Wood Dragon)
4661 or 4601
Coptic calendar1680–1681
Discordian calendar3130
Ethiopian calendar1956–1957
Hebrew calendar5724–5725
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat2020–2021
 - Shaka Samvat1885–1886
 - Kali Yuga5064–5065
Holocene calendar11964
Igbo calendar964–965
Iranian calendar1342–1343
Islamic calendar1383–1384
Japanese calendarShōwa 39
(昭和39年)
Javanese calendar1895–1896
Juche calendar53
Julian calendarGregorian minus 13 days
Korean calendar4297
Minguo calendarROC 53
民國53年
Nanakshahi calendar496
Thai solar calendar2507
Tibetan calendar阴水兔年
(female Water-Rabbit)
2090 or 1709 or 937
     to 
阳木龙年
(male Wood-Dragon)
2091 or 1710 or 938

Events

January

January 8: U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson's War on Poverty
  • January 1 – The Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland is dissolved.[1]
  • January 5 - In the first meeting between leaders of the Roman Catholic and Orthodox churches since the fifteenth century, Pope Paul VI and Patriarch Athenagoras I of Constantinople meet in Jerusalem.
  • January 6 – A British firm, the Leyland Motor Corp., announces the sale of 450 buses to the Cuban government, challenging the United States blockade of Cuba.[2]
  • January 9Martyrs' Day: Armed clashes between United States troops and Panamanian civilians in the Panama Canal Zone precipitate a major international crisis, resulting in the deaths of 21 Panamanians and 4 U.S. soldiers.
  • January 11 – United States Surgeon General Luther Terry reports that smoking may be hazardous to one's health (the first such statement from the U.S. government).[3]
  • January 12
    • Zanzibar Revolution: The predominantly Arab government of Zanzibar is overthrown by African nationalist rebels; a United States Navy destroyer evacuates 61 U.S. citizens.
    • Routine U.S. naval patrols of the South China Sea begin.
  • January 20Meet the Beatles!, the first Beatles album from Capitol Records in the United States, is released ten days after Chicago's Vee-Jay Records releases Introducing... The Beatles. The two record companies battle it out in court for months, eventually coming to a conclusion.[4]
  • January 22Kenneth Kaunda is inaugurated as the first Prime Minister of Northern Rhodesia.[5]
  • January 23 – Thirteen years after its proposal and nearly two years after its passage by the United States Senate, the 24th Amendment to the United States Constitution, prohibiting the use of poll taxes in national elections, is ratified.
  • January 27
    • France and the People's Republic of China announce their decision to establish diplomatic relations.
    • U.S. Senator Margaret Chase Smith, 66, announces her candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination.
  • January 28 – A U.S. Air Force jet training aircraft that strays into East Germany is shot down by Soviet fighters near Erfurt; all three crewmen are killed.[6][7]
  • January 29February 9 – The 1964 Winter Olympics are held in Innsbruck, Austria.
  • January 29
    • The Soviet Union launches two scientific satellites, Elektron I and II, from a single rocket.
    • Ranger 6 is launched by NASA, on a mission to carry television cameras and crash-land on the Moon.
  • January 30 – General Nguyễn Khánh leads a bloodless military coup d'état, replacing Dương Văn Minh as Prime Minister of South Vietnam.

February

March

April

  • April 1 – Deployed military rule in Brazil ends the government of democratically elected president, João Goulart.
  • April 4
    • The Beatles hold the top 5 positions in the Billboard Top 40 singles in America, an unprecedented achievement. The top songs in America as listed on April 4, in order, are: "Can't Buy Me Love", "Twist and Shout", "She Loves You", "I Want to Hold Your Hand", and "Please Please Me".
April 8: Gemini 1 launched.
  • April 7IBM announces the System/360.
  • April 8 – Gemini 1 is launched, the first unmanned test of the 2-man spacecraft.
  • April 9 – The United Nations Security Council adopts by a 9–0 vote a resolution deploring a British air attack on a fort in Yemen 12 days earlier, in which 25 persons have been reported killed.
  • April 11 – The Brazilian Congress elects Field Marshal Humberto de Alencar Castelo Branco as President of Brazil.
  • April 13
  • April 16 – In the Assize Court at Buckingham, UK, sentences totalling 307 years are passed on twelve men who stole £2,600,000 in used bank notes, after holding up the night train from Glasgow to London in August 1963 – a heist that becomes known as the Great Train Robbery.[19][20]
  • April 19 – In Laos, the coalition government of Prince Souvanna Phouma is deposed by a right-wing military group, led by Brig. Gen. Kouprasith Abhay. Not supported by the United States, the coup is ultimately unsuccessful, and Souvanna Phouma is reinstated, remaining as Prime Minister until 1975.
  • April 20
    • U.S. President Lyndon Johnson in New York, and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev in Moscow, simultaneously announce plans to cut back production of materials for making nuclear weapons.
    • Nelson Mandela makes his "I Am Prepared to Die" speech at the opening of the Rivonia Trial, a key event for the anti-apartheid movement.[21]
    • In the UK, BBC Two television starts broadcasting for the first time.[22]
  • April 22
    April 22: 1964 New York World's Fair
    • British businessman Greville Wynne, imprisoned in Moscow since 1963 for spying, is exchanged for Soviet spy Gordon Lonsdale.[23]
    • The 1964 New York World's Fair opens to celebrate the 300th anniversary of New Amsterdam being taken over by British forces under the Duke of York (later King James II) and being renamed New York in 1664. The fair runs until October 18, 1964, and reopens April 21, 1965, finally closing October 17, 1965. Although not internationally sanctioned, due to being within ten years of the Seattle World's Fair in 1962, so that some countries decline to attend, many have pavilions with exotic crafts, art and food.
  • April 25 – Thieves steal the head of the Little Mermaid statue in Copenhagen, Denmark (Although the attack was attributed to Jørgen Nash, the Danish media blamed the painter Henrik Bruun, who never confessed to the crime).[24]
  • April 26 – Tanganyika and Zanzibar merge to form Tanzania.[25]

May

  • May 1 – At 4:00 a.m., John George Kemeny and Thomas Eugene Kurtz run the first computer program written in BASIC (Beginners' All-purpose Symbolic Instruction Code), an easy to learn high level programming language which they have created.[26] BASIC is eventually included on many computers and even some games consoles.
  • May 2
    • Vietnam War: Attack on USNS Card – An explosion caused by Viet Cong commandos causes carrier USNS Card to sink in the port of Saigon.[27]
    • Some 400–1,000 students march through Times Square, New York, and another 700 in San Francisco, in the first major student demonstration against the Vietnam War. Smaller marches also occur in Boston, Seattle, and Madison, WI.
    • United States Senator Barry Goldwater receives more than 75% of the votes in the Texas Republican presidential primary.
    • Henry Hezekiah Dee and Charles Eddie Moore, hitchhiking in Meadville, Mississippi, are kidnapped, beaten and murdered by members of the Ku Klux Klan. Their badly decomposed bodies are found by chance in July during the search for missing activists Chaney, Goodman, and Schwerner.
  • May 4 – The United States Congress recognizes Bourbon whiskey as a "distinctive product of the United States".
  • May 7
    • Pacific Air Lines Flight 773 crashes near San Ramon, California, killing all 44 aboard; the FBI later reports that a cockpit recorder tape indicates that the pilot and co-pilot had been shot by a suicidal passenger.
    • At a mail rockets demonstration by Gerhard Zucker on Hasselkopf Mountain near Braunlage (Lower Saxonia, Germany), three people are killed by a rocket explosion.
  • May 9 – South Korean President Park Chung-hee reshuffles his Cabinet, after a series of student demonstrations against his efforts to restore diplomatic and trade relations with Japan.
  • May 11 – Terence Conran opens the first Habitat store on London's Fulham Road.
  • May 12 – Twelve young men in New York City publicly burn their draft cards to protest the Vietnam War; the first such act of war resistance.[28][29]
  • May 23 – Madeline Dassault, 63, wife of a French plane manufacturer and politician, is kidnapped while leaving her car in front of her Paris home; she is found unharmed the next day in a farmhouse 27 miles (43 km) from Paris.[30]
  • May 2425 – The crowd at a football match in Lima, Peru riots over a referee's decision in the Peru-Argentina game; 319 are killed, 500 injured.
  • May 27 – The ongoing Colombian conflict starts.
  • May 28 – The Charter of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) is released by the Arab League.
  • May 29 – Having deposed them in a January coup, South Vietnamese leader Nguyen Khanh had rival Generals Tran Van Don and Le Van Kim convicted of "lax morality".[31][32]

June

  • June 2
    • Senator Barry Goldwater wins the California Republican primary, making him the overwhelming favorite for the party's nomination as President of the United States.[33]
    • Five million shares of stock in the Communications Satellite Corporation (Comsat) are offered for sale at $20 a share, and the issue is quickly sold out.
  • June 3 – South Korean President Park Chung-hee declares martial law in Seoul, after 10,000 student demonstrators overpower police.
  • June 11
    • Greece rejects direct talks with Turkey over Cyprus.
    • Cologne school massacre: In Cologne, West Germany, Walter Seifert attacks students and teachers in an elementary school with a flamethrower, killing 10 and injuring 21.
  • June 12Nelson Mandela and 7 others are sentenced to life imprisonment in South Africa, and sent to the Robben Island prison.[34]
  • June 14 - Kicking off the Civil Rights project known as Freedom Summer, 300 volunteers begin preparing for a summer in Mississippi. The training is held at the Western College for Women (now Miami University).[35]
  • June 19 – U.S. Senator Edward Kennedy, 32, is seriously injured in a private plane crash at Southampton, Massachusetts; the pilot is killed.
  • June 20 – The Ford GT40 makes its first appearance at the 24 Hours of Le Mans. It does not see its first victory, however, until 2 years later in 1966. At the same event, the AC Cobra wins its class in its second Le Mans appearance.
  • June 21Spain beats the Soviet Union 2–1 to win the 1964 European Nations Cup.
  • June 26 – Moise Tshombe returns to the Democratic Republic of the Congo from exile in Spain.

July

  • July 6Malawi receives its independence from the United Kingdom.[36]
  • July 18
    • Six days of race riots begin in Harlem, New York, United States, apparently prompted by the shooting of a teenager.[37]
    • Judith Graham Pool publishes her discovery of cryoprecipitate, a frozen blood clotting product made from plasma primarily to treat hemophiliacs around the world.[38]
  • July 19Vietnam War: At a rally in Saigon, South Vietnamese Prime Minister and military leader Nguyễn Khánh calls for expanding the war into North Vietnam.[39]
  • July 20
    • Vietnam War: Viet Cong forces attack a provincial capital, killing 11 South Vietnamese military personnel and 40 civilians (30 of which are children).
    • The National Movement of the Revolution is established in the Republic of the Congo, becoming the country's sole legal political party.[40]
  • July 21 – Race riots begin in Singapore between ethnic Chinese and Malays.[41]
  • July 22 – The second meeting of the Organisation of African Unity is held.
  • July 24 – A minor criticality accident takes place at a United Nuclear Corporation Fuels recovery plant in Wood River Junction, Rhode Island, United States, causing the death of one worker.
  • July 27Vietnam War: The U.S. sends 5,000 more military advisers to South Vietnam, bringing the total number of United States forces in Vietnam to 21,000.
  • July 31Ranger program: Ranger 7 sends back the first close-up photographs of the Moon (images are 1,000 times clearer than anything ever seen from Earth-bound telescopes).

August

  • August 2Vietnam War: United States destroyer Maddox is attacked in the Gulf of Tonkin. Air support from the carrier USS Ticonderoga sinks one gunboat, while the other two leave the battle.
  • August 5
    • Vietnam War: Operation Pierce Arrow – Aircraft from carriers USS Ticonderoga and USS Constellation bomb North Vietnam in retaliation for strikes against U.S. destroyers in the Gulf of Tonkin.
    • The Simba rebel army in the Democratic Republic of the Congo captures Stanleyville, and takes 1,000 Western hostages.
  • August 7 – Vietnam War: The United States Congress passes the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, giving U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson broad war powers to deal with North Vietnamese attacks on U.S. forces.[42]
  • August 8 – A Rolling Stones gig in Scheveningen gets out of control. Riot police end the gig after about fifteen minutes, upon which spectators start to fight the riot police.[43]
  • August 13 – The last judicial hanging in the United Kingdom takes place when murderers Gwynne Owen Evans and Peter Anthony Allen are executed at Walton Prison in Liverpool.[44]
  • August 16 – Vietnam War: In a coup, General Nguyễn Khánh replaces Dương Văn Minh as South Vietnam's chief of state and establishes a new constitution, drafted partly by the U.S. Embassy.[45]
  • August 18 – The International Olympic Committee bans South Africa from the Tokyo Olympics on the grounds that its teams are racially segregated.[46]
  • August 20 – The International Telecommunications Satellite Consortium (Intelsat) began to work.
  • August 22 – Goalkeeper Derek Foster of Sunderland becomes the youngest-ever player to play in the English Football League, aged 15 years and 185 days.
  • August 2427 – The Democratic National Convention in Atlantic City nominates incumbent President Lyndon B. Johnson for a full term, and U.S. Senator Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota as his running mate.
  • August 27Walt Disney's Mary Poppins has its world premiere in Los Angeles. It will go on to become Disney's biggest moneymaker, and winner of 5 Academy Awards, including a Best Actress. It is the first Disney film to be nominated for Best Picture.
  • August 2830 – Philadelphia 1964 race riot: Tensions between African American residents and police lead to 341 injuries and 774 arrests.[47]

September

October

November

December

  • December 1 – Gustavo Díaz Ordaz takes office as President of Mexico.
  • December 3
    • Berkeley Free Speech Movement: Police arrest about 800 students at the University of California, Berkeley, following their takeover of and massive sit-in at the Sproul Hall administration building. The sit-in most directly protested the U.C. Regents' decision to punish student activists for what many thought had been justified civil disobedience earlier in the conflict.[60]
    • The Danish football club Brøndby IF is founded as a merger between the two local clubs Brøndbyøster Idrætsforening and Brøndbyvester Idrætsforening. The club wins the national championship Danish Superliga 10 times, and the Danish Cups six times, after joining the Danish top-flight football league in 1981.
  • December 5 – Australian Senate election, 1964: The Liberal/Country Coalition Government led by Prime Minister Robert Menzies hold their status quo, while the Labor Party led by Arthur Calwell lose one seat to the Democratic Labor Party, who hold the balance of power in the Senate alongside independent Reg Turnbull.
  • December 10 – Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. is awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo, Norway.[61]
  • December 11Che Guevara addresses the United Nations General Assembly.[62] A bazooka attack is launched at the Headquarters of the United Nations in New York City.
  • December 12 – Jamhuri Day: Kenya becomes a republic, with Jomo Kenyatta as its first President.
  • December 14Heart of Atlanta Motel v. United States (379 US 241 1964): The U.S. Supreme Court rules that, in accordance with the Civil Rights Act of 1964, establishments providing public accommodation must refrain from racial discrimination.
  • December 18 – The Christmas flood of 1964 begins in the United States, affecting the Pacific Northwest and some of Northern California. It will continue until January 7, resulting in 19 deaths, serious damage to buildings, roads and bridges, and the loss of 4,000 head of livestock.[63]
  • December 21 – The General Dynamics F-111 Aardvark supersonic attack aircraft, developed for the U.S. Air Force, makes its first flight, at Carswell Air Force Base, Texas.[64]
  • December 22
  • December 23 – Wonderful Radio London becomes the United Kingdom's fourth "Pirate" radio station, broadcasting from MV Galaxy (a former US Navy minesweeper) anchored off the east coast of England, with an American-style Top 40 ("Fab 40") playlist of popular records.
  • December 24 – The Brinks Hotel in Saigon, Vietnam, is bombed by the Viet Cong, resulting in the deaths of two US soldiers and injuries to a further 60 people, including civilians.[66]
  • December 30 – The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) is established as a permanent organ of the UN General Assembly.[67]

Date unknown

  • Spring – First recognition of cosmic microwave background radiation as a detectable phenomenon.[68]
  • Jerome Horwitz synthesizes zidovudine (AZT), an antiviral drug which will later be used in treating HIV.[69]
  • Farrington Daniels becomes an early advocate of solar energy in his book Direct Use of the Sun's Energy, published by Yale University Press in the United States.[70]
  • Rudi Gernreich designs the original monokini topless swimsuit in the U.S.[71]
  • The Vishva Hindu Pariṣad is founded in India.[72]

Births

Births
January · February · March · April · May · June · July · August · September · October · November · December

January

February

March

April

May

  • May 1 – Yvonne van Gennip, Dutch speed-skater[109]
  • May 5
    • Heike Henkel, German Olympic athlete[110]
    • Minami Takayama, Japanese voice actress and singer (Two-Mix and DoCo)
  • May 8 – Melissa Gilbert, American actress and president of the Screen Actors Guild[111]
  • May 13Stephen Colbert, American comedian, political commentator, and television personality; host of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert
  • May 19 – Samuel Okwaraji, Nigerian footballer (died 1989)
  • May 20 – Charles Spencer, 9th Earl Spencer, British aristocrat, author, print journalist and broadcaster. Younger brother of Diana, Princess of Wales.[112]
  • May 21 – Rui Maria de Araújo, East Timorese politician
  • May 23 – Ruth Metzler-Arnold, member of the Swiss Federal Council
  • May 24 – Adrian Moorhouse, British swimmer[113]
  • May 25 – Ray Stevenson, Northern Irish-born actor
  • May 26Lenny Kravitz, American singer, songwriter, and actor[114]
  • May 28 – Jeff Fenech, Australian boxer[115]
  • May 29 – Arumugam Thondaman, Sri Lankan politician (died 2020)
  • May 30Tom Morello, American musician and political activist (Rage Against the Machine, Audioslave, Prophets of Rage)

June

July

Edi Rama
Pedro Passos Coelho
  • July 1
    • Yu Long, Chinese conductor
    • Bernard Laporte, French rugby player and coach
    • Loli Sánchez, Spanish basketball player
    • Chie Satō, Japanese voice actress
  • July 2Jose and Ozzie Canseco, Cuban-born American baseball players; twin brothers
  • July 3
    • Joanne Harris, English novelist
    • Aleksei Serebryakov, Russian-Canadian actor
    • Peyton Reed, American television and film director
    • Yeardley Smith, American actress, voice actress, comedian, writer and artist
  • July 4 – Edi Rama, 33rd Prime Minister of Albania[123]
  • July 5 – Stephen H. Scott, Canadian neuroscientist and engineer
  • July 6 – Kim Jee-woon, South Korean film director and screenwriter
  • July 9Courtney Love, American musician/actress
  • July 11 – Goran Radaković, Serbian actor
  • July 13 – Pascal Hervé, French road racing cyclist[124]
  • July 15
    • Tetsuji Hashiratani, Japanese football player and manager
    • Tengku Zulpuri Shah Raja Puji, Malaysian politician
  • July 16Miguel Indurain, Spanish cyclist[125]
  • July 17 – Heather Langenkamp, American actress
  • July 18 – Wendy Williams, African-American talk show host[126]
  • July 19
    • Teresa Edwards, American basketball player[127]
    • Miyeegombyn Enkhbold, Mongolian politician
  • July 20
  • July 22
    • John Leguizamo, Colombian-American actor, stand-up comedian, producer, playwright and screenwriter
    • David Spade, American comedian, actor and television personality
  • July 24
    • Barry Bonds, African-American baseball player[128]
    • Pedro Passos Coelho, 118th Prime Minister of Portugal [129]
  • July 26
  • July 28Lori Loughlin, American actress[131]
  • July 30
  • July 31 – C.C. Catch, Dutch-born German singer

August

Giuseppe Conte

September

Jack Ma

October

Kamala Harris

November

Magnús Scheving

December

Edith González

Deaths

Deaths
January · February · March · April · May · June · July · August · September · October · November · December

January

Julius Raab
Bechara El Khoury

February

Sofoklis Venizelos

March

Brendan Behan

April

May

June

Carlos Quintanilla
Plaek Phibunsongkhram
  • June 3
    • Raoul Magrin-Vernerey, French army officer (born 1892)
    • Frans Eemil Sillanpää, Finnish writer, Nobel Prize laureate (born 1888)
  • June 6
    • Vasile Atanasiu, Romanian general (born 1886)
    • Prince Hermann of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach (born 1886)
    • Robert Warwick, American actor (born 1878)
  • June 7
    • Violet Attlee, Countess Attlee, wife of former British PM Clement Attlee (born 1895)
    • Charlie Llewellyn, first non-white South African Test cricketer (born 1876)
  • June 8 – Carlos Quintanilla , 37th President of Bolivia (born 1888)
  • June 9 – Max Aitken, 1st Baron Beaverbrook, Canadian-born British newspaper publisher and politician (born 1879)
  • June 11
    • Catharine Carter Critcher, American painter (born 1868)
    • John Eke, Swedish Olympic athlete (born 1886)[189]
    • Plaek Phibunsongkhram, Thai field marshal and 3rd Prime Minister of Thailand (born 1897)
  • June 18 – Giorgio Morandi, Italian painter (born 1890)
  • June 24 – Stuart Davis, American painter (born 1892)[190]
  • June 25 – Gerrit Rietveld, Dutch architect (born 1888)
  • June 27
    • Salvatore Aldisio, Italian politician (born 1890)
    • Mona Barrie, English actress (born 1909)
  • June 29Eric Dolphy, American saxophonist (born 1928)

July

Prince Axel of Denmark
  • July 1 – Pierre Monteux, French conductor (born 1875)
  • July 2 – Fireball Roberts, American race car driver and a member of the NASCAR Hall of Fame (born 1929)
  • July 6 – Zeng Junchen, Sichuan's 'King of Opium' (born 1888)
  • July 7 – Lillian Copeland, American athlete (born 1904)
  • July 11 – Maurice Thorez, leader of the French Communist Party (born 1900)
  • July 13 – Stephen Galatti, Director of AFS, American Field Service (born 1888)
  • July 14 – Prince Axel of Denmark (born 1888)
  • July 15 – Luis Batlle Berres, Uruguayan political figure, 30th President of Uruguay (born 1897)
  • July 16 – Alfred Junge, German-born art director (born 1886)
  • July 21 – Jean Fautrier, French painter and sculptor (born 1898)
  • July 22
    • Leonid Baratov, Soviet director (born 1895)
    • Gildo Bocci, Italian actor (born 1886)
  • July 23 – Thakin Kodaw Hmaing, Burmese poet and politician (born 1876)
  • July 25 – Sir John Latham, Australian judge and politician (born 1877)[191]
  • July 26 – William A. Seiter, American film director (born 1890)
  • July 31 – Jim Reeves, American country singer (born 1923)

August

Aleksander Zawadzki
Gracie Allen

September

Otto Grotewohl
Harpo Marx
  • September 2
    • Glenn Albert Black, American archaeologist (born 1900)
    • Francisco Craveiro Lopes, Portuguese military officer and politician, 12th President of Portugal (born 1894)
    • Alvin Cullum York, American hero of World War I (born 1887)
  • September 9
    • Sir George Abercromby, 8th Baronet, British baronet (born 1886)
    • Herschel Bennett, American baseball player of St. Louis Browns (born 1896)
  • September 15 – Herbert Heywood, American actor (born 1881)
  • September 17 – Clive Bell, English art critic (born 1881)
  • September 18 – Seán O'Casey, Irish writer (born 1880)[195]
  • September 21 – Otto Grotewohl, East German Communist politician, 1st Prime Minister of the German Democratic Republic (born 1894)
  • September 23 – Fred M. Wilcox, American film director (born 1907)
  • September 28
    • Nacio Herb Brown, American songwriter (born 1896)
    • Harpo Marx, American comedian, actor, mime artist, and musician (born 1888)
  • September 29 – Fred Tootell, American Olympic athlete (born 1902)

October

Khawaja Nazimuddin

November

Servant of God Franciszek Barda
Rickard Sandler

December

Pina Pellicer
Ólafur Thors

Nobel Prizes

References

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  2. United States. Department of State (1964). Foreign Relations of the United States: Diplomatic Papers. U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 546.
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  4. Kenneth Womack (June 30, 2014). The Beatles Encyclopedia: Everything Fab Four [2 volumes]: Everything Fab Four. ABC-CLIO. p. 473. ISBN 978-0-313-39172-9.
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  7. Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 27 October 2011
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  11. Emmanuel Kwaku Akyeampong; Henry Louis Gates (February 2, 2012). Dictionary of African Biography. OUP USA. p. 290. ISBN 978-0-19-538207-5.
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  14. Tempo: Indonesia's Weekly News Magazine. Arsa Raya Perdana. 2004. p. 8.
  15. Wagner, Laura (June 10, 2016). "Muhammad Ali Changed His Name in 1964" via Slate.
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  26. Brigham Narins (2001). Notable Scientists from 1900 to the Present. Gale Group. p. 1205. ISBN 978-0-7876-1754-7.
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