British
ferryMona's Isle collides with a fishing vessel and runs aground at
Fleetwood,
Lancashire, UK. The fishing vessel is cut in two and sinks with the loss of one of her three crew. Mona's Isle is later refloated.[4]
Born:Tim Berners-Lee, English computer scientist and inventor, in London
Mir mine, the first diamond mine in the Soviet Union, is discovered by geologists Yuri Khabardin, Ekaterina Elagina and Viktor Avdeenko during the large Amakinsky Expedition in
Yakut ASSR.
A
total solar eclipse of 7 min 8 sec duration, the longest between the 11th and 22nd centuries, visible in
Southeast Asia. During the entire Second Millennium, only seven such eclipses exceed seven minutes of totality.
Soviet armed forces shoot down a U.S. Navy patrol plane of
VP-9 over the
Bering Strait. The Soviet Union surprises the United States by paying half the damages and issuing a statement of regret even though the American plane clearly had violated Soviet
airspace.[10]
While approaching
USS Oriskany (CV-34) for a night landing in the
Sea of Japan, U.S. naval aviator
John R. C. Mitchell's
McDonnell F2H Banshee crashes into the ship's fantail. The rear half of the airplane falls into the ocean in flames, but Mitchell sustains only minor injuries. Five sailors sleeping on the fantail are injured. The incident will be immortalized in The Right Stuff by
Tom Wolfe, which refers to Mitchell by the alias of "accident-prone Mitch Johnson".[11][12]
The
East Preston tram depot opens in Melbourne, Australia, replacing the old Preston depot (also referred to as Thornbury depot). Its opening coincides with the reintroduction of tram services to
Bourke Street; the former Bourke Street
cable lines,
Melbourne's last, had been converted to bus operations on 26 October 1940.[13][14]
^Fleming, Colin (28 November 2003). "Reissues: Glenn Gould - 'A State of Wonder: The Complete Goldberg Variations 1955 & 1981' [review]". Goldmine 29 (24): 63.
^Isenberg, Michael T., Shield of the Republic: The United States Navy in an Era of Cold War and Violent Peace, Volume I: 1945-1962, New York: St. Martin's Press,
ISBN0-312-09911-8, p. 598.