The Dan Smoot Report 1963

Bound with Original 52 Weekly Issues

Published by Dan Smoot, Hardcover

Dimensions 11.25 x 9.0 Inches


Very Good+ Excellent Vintage Condition. The book is clean, covers attached, secure binding, unmarked, no writing, no highlighting, crisp inner pages, no fading, no stains, no ripped pages, no edge chipping, no corner folds, no crease marks, no remainder marks, not ex-library. Some very light surface and edge wear from age, use, storage and handling. 


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Howard Smoot, known as   Dan Smoot   (October 5, 1913 –July 24, 2003), was a   Federal Bureau of Investigation   agent and a conservative   political   activist. From 1957 to 1971, he published   The Dan Smoot Report, which chronicled alleged   communist   infiltration in various sectors of   American   government and society. Smoot was unsuccessful in his campaign for public office, but he rose to fame as a pundit on radio and television. He initially served as the spokesperson and face of H.L. Hunt's Facts Forum before leaving to create his own. In 1962, Smoot wrote   The Invisible Government  concerning early members of the   Council on Foreign Relations. Other books include   The Hope of the World;   The Business End of Government; and his autobiography,   People Along the Way. Additionally he was associated with   Robert W. Welch, Jr.'s   John Birch Society   and wrote for the society's   American Opinion   bi-monthly magazine. In 1972, Smoot served as   campaign manager   for   American Independent Party   presidential candidate   John G. Schmitz.


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Events from the year  1963 in the United States. November 22 JFK assassinated in Texas


Incumbents

Federal government

Events


January

January 8 –  Leonardo da Vinci's  Mona Lisa  is exhibited in the United States for the only time, being unveiled at the  National Gallery of Art  in  Washington, D.C.

January 14 –  George Wallace  becomes governor of  Alabama. In his  inaugural speech, he defiantly proclaims "segregation now, segregation tomorrow, and segregation forever!"

January 28 – African American student  Harvey Gantt  enters  Clemson University  in  South Carolina, the last U.S. state to hold out against racial integration.


February

February 8 – Travel, financial and commercial transactions by United States citizens to  Cuba  are made illegal by the John F. Kennedy Administration.

February 11 – The  CIA's  Domestic Operations Division  is created.

February 12 –  Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 705  crashes in the  Florida Everglades, killing everyone aboard.

February 19 – The publication of  Betty Friedan's  The Feminine Mystique  launches the reawakening of the  Women's Movement  in the United States as women's organizations and  consciousness-raising groups  spread.

February 28 –  Dorothy Schiff  resigns from the New York Newspaper Publisher's Association, feeling that the city needs at least one paper. Her paper, the  New York Post, resumes publication on March 4.


March

March –  Iron Man  debuts in  Marvel Comics's  Tales of Suspense  #39, cover-dated this month.

March 5 – In  Camden, Tennessee, country music star  Patsy Cline  (Virginia Patterson Hensley) is killed in a plane crash along with fellow performers  Hawkshaw Hawkins,  Cowboy Copas, and Cline's manager and pilot  Randy Hughes, while returning from a benefit performance in  Kansas City, Kansas  for country radio disc jockey "Cactus"  Jack Call.

March 18 –  Gideon v. Wainwright: The  Supreme Court  rules that state courts are required to provide counsel in criminal cases for defendants who cannot afford to pay their own attorneys.

March 21 – The  Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary  on  Alcatraz Island  in  San Francisco Bay  closes; the last 27 prisoners are transferred elsewhere at the order of  Attorney General  Robert F. Kennedy.

March 31 – The  1962–63 New York City newspaper strike  ends after 114 days.


April

April 1  – The long-running  soap opera  General Hospital  debuts on  ABC  Television in the United States.

April 3 –  Southern Christian Leadership Conference  volunteers kick off the  Birmingham campaign  against  racial segregation  with a  sit-in.

April 8 – The  35th Academy Awards  ceremony, hosted by  Frank Sinatra, is held at  Santa Monica Civic Auditorium.  David Lean's  Lawrence of Arabia  wins and receives the most respective awards and nominations with seven and ten, winning  Best Picture  and Lean's second  Best Director  win.

April 10 – The U.S. nuclear submarine  Thresher  sinks 220  mi (190  nmi; 350  km) east of  Cape Cod; all 129 aboard (112 crewmen plus yard personnel) die.

April 12 –  Martin Luther King Jr.,  Ralph Abernathy,  Fred Shuttlesworth  and others are arrested in a Birmingham protest for "parading without a permit".

April 16 – Martin Luther King Jr. issues his  Letter from Birmingham Jail.

April 20 – Martin Luther King Jr. posts bail and begins to plan more demonstrations (the  Children's Crusade).


May

May 1 –  The Coca-Cola Company  debuts its first diet drink,  TaB  cola.

May 2 – Thousands of  African Americans, many of them children, are  arrested while protesting  segregation in  Birmingham, Alabama. Public Safety Commissioner  Eugene "Bull" Connor  later unleashes fire hoses and police dogs on the demonstrators.

May 8 –  Dr. No, the first James Bond film, is shown in U.S. theaters.

May 15 –  Mercury program:  NASA  launches  Gordon Cooper  on  Mercury 9, the last mission (on June 12 NASA Administrator  James E. Webb  tells Congress the program is complete).

May 27 –  The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan,  singer-songwriter  Bob Dylan's second  studio album, and most influential, is released by  Columbia Records.


June

June 3 –  Huế chemical attacks: Members of the  Army of the Republic of Vietnam  pour chemicals on the heads of Buddhist protesters. The U.S. threatens to cut off aid to  Ngo Dinh Diem's regime.

June 4 – President  John F. Kennedy  signs  Executive Order 11110.

June 10

President  John F. Kennedy  delivers "A Strategy of Peace" speech at the American University in Washington, D.C., outlining a road map for the complete disarmament of nuclear weapons and world peace.

The  University of Central Florida  is established by the Florida legislature.

June 11

Alabama  Governor  George Wallace  stands in the door  of the  University of Alabama  to protest against integration, before stepping aside and allowing  African Americans  James Hood  and  Vivian Malone  to enroll.

President John F. Kennedy delivers a historic  Civil Rights Address, in which he promises a Civil Rights Bill, and asks for "the kind of equality of treatment that we would want for ourselves."

June 12

Medgar Evers  is assassinated in  Jackson, Mississippi. His killer,  Byron De La Beckwith, is convicted in 1994.

The film  Cleopatra, starring  Elizabeth Taylor,  Rex Harrison  and  Richard Burton, is released in the United States.

June 13 – The cancellation of  Mercury 10  effectively ends the  Mercury program  of U.S. manned  spaceflight.

June 17 –  Abington School District v. Schempp: The  U.S. Supreme Court  rules that state-mandated Bible reading in public schools is unconstitutional.

June 23

Walt Disney's Enchanted Tiki Room  opens at  Disneyland, premiering the first  Audio-Animatronics  in the park.

Detroit Walk to Freedom  occurs in  Detroit  drawing a crowd of roughly 125,000 people.

June 26 – In a speech in  West Berlin, President  John F. Kennedy  famously declares "Ich bin ein Berliner".


July

July 1 –  ZIP codes  are introduced in the U.S.

July 7 –  Double Seven Day scuffle: Secret police loyal to  Ngô Đình Nhu, brother of President  Ngô Đình Diệm, attack American journalists including  Peter Arnett  and  David Halberstam  at a demonstration during the  Buddhist crisis.

July 26 –  NASA  launches  Syncom, the world's first  geostationary  (synchronous)  satellite.


August

August 28: "I Have a Dream" (Martin Luther King Jr.)

August 5 – The United States, United Kingdom, and Soviet Union sign a  nuclear test ban treaty.

August 18 –  James Meredith  becomes the first black person to graduate from the  University of Mississippi.

August 21 –  Cable 243: In the wake of the  Xá Lợi Pagoda raids, the  Kennedy administration  orders the  US Embassy, Saigon  to explore alternative leadership in South Vietnam, opening the way towards a coup against Diem.

August 28 –  Martin Luther King Jr.  delivers his "I Have a Dream" speech on the steps of the  Lincoln Memorial  to an audience of at least 250,000, during the  March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.


September

September 7 – The  Pro Football Hall of Fame  opens in  Canton, Ohio, with 17 charter members.

September 15 – The  16th Street Baptist Church bombing  in  Birmingham, Alabama, kills four children and injures 22.

September 19 –  Iota Phi Theta  fraternity is founded.

September 24 – The U.S. Senate ratifies the  nuclear test ban treaty.


October

October 1 – The  Presidential Commission on the Status of Women  issues its final reports to President Kennedy.

October 6 – The  Los Angeles Dodgers  defeat the  New York Yankees, 4 games to 0, to win their third World Series title in baseball.

October 8 –  Sam Cooke  and his band are arrested after trying to register at a "whites only" motel in Louisiana. In the months following, he records "A Change Is Gonna Come".

October 22 –  Chicago Public Schools Boycott.

October 28 – Demolition of the  1910  Pennsylvania Station  begins in New York City, continuing until  1966.

October 31 –  1963 Indiana State Fairgrounds Coliseum gas explosion: 81 die in a gas explosion during a  Holiday on Ice  show at the  Indiana State Fair Coliseum  in  Indianapolis.


November

November 2–4 –  1963 Freedom Ballot, a  mock election  organized to protest and combat the systematic  disenfranchisement  of blacks in  Mississippi.

November 10 –  Malcolm X  makes his "Message to the Grass Roots" speech in Detroit.

November 16 – A newspaper strike begins in  Toledo, Ohio.

November 18 – The first  push-button telephone  is made available to  AT&T  customers in the United States.

November 22: President  Kennedy  assassinated

Lyndon Johnson  being sworn in as next president, 2 hours after Kennedy's assassination

November 22 –  John F. Kennedy assassination: In  Dallas, President  John F. Kennedy  is shot to death,  Texas  Governor  John B. Connally  is seriously wounded, and  Vice President  Lyndon B. Johnson  becomes  the 36th president. All television coverage for the next three days is devoted to the assassination, its aftermath, the procession of the horsedrawn casket to the  Capitol Rotunda, and the  funeral  of President Kennedy. Stores and businesses shut down for the entire weekend and Monday, in tribute.

November 23 – The  Golden Age Nursing Home fire  kills 63 elderly people near Fitchville,  Ohio. 

November 24: President Kennedy lying in state at the  Capitol rotunda

November 24

Lee Harvey Oswald, assassin of John F. Kennedy, is shot dead by  Jack Ruby  in  Dallas  on live national  television. Later that night, a hastily arranged program,  A Tribute to John F. Kennedy from the Arts, featuring actors, opera singers, and noted writers, all performing dramatic readings and/or music, is telecast on  ABC-TV.

Vietnam War: President Johnson confirms that the United States intends to continue supporting  South Vietnam  militarily and economically.

November 25 – President Kennedy is buried at  Arlington National Cemetery. Schools around the nation do not have class on that day, and millions around the world watch the funeral on live television.

November 29 – President Johnson establishes the  Warren Commission  to investigate the assassination of President Kennedy.


December

December 1 –  Wendell Scott  becomes the first African-American driver to win a  NASCAR  race at  Speedway Park

December 8

Frank Sinatra Jr.  is kidnapped at  Harrah's Lake Tahoe.

A lightning strike causes the crash of  Pan Am Flight 214  near  Elkton, Maryland, killing 81 people.

December 10

The  X-20 Dyna-Soar  spaceplane  program is cancelled.

Chuck Yeager  becomes the first pilot to make an emergency ejection in the full pressure suit needed for high altitude flights.

December 14 –  Baldwin Hills Dam disaster  floods  South Los Angeles, causing five deaths.

December 25 –  Walt Disney  releases his 18th feature-length animated motion picture,  The Sword in the Stone, about the boyhood of  King Arthur. It is Disney's final animated film to be released during his lifetime, before his death in 1966.

December 26 –  The Beatles' songs "I Want to Hold Your Hand" and "I Saw Her Standing There" are released in the U.S., marking the beginning of full-scale  Beatlemania.


Undated

David. H. Frisch  and  James H. Smith  prove that the  radioactive decay  of  mesons  is slowed by their motion (see  Einstein's  special relativity  and  general relativity).


Ongoing

Cold War  (1947–1991)

Space Race  (1957–75)