1967
► | قرن 19 | << قرن 20 >> | قرن 21 | ◄
► | عقد 1930 | عقد 1940 | عقد 1950 | << عقد 1960 >> | عقد 1970 | عقد 1980 | عقد 1990 | ◄
► | ► | 1962 | 1963 | 1964 | 1965 | 1966 | << 1967 >> | 1968 | 1969 | 1970 | 1971 | 1972 | ◄ | ◄
تحويل 1-1-1967م الى هجري (وصلة خارجية) | تحويل 31-12-1967م الى هجري (وصلة خارجية) | ابحث في الموسوعة عن مواضيع متعلقة بسنة 1967
الألفية: | الألفية 2 |
---|---|
القرون: | القرن 19 - القرن 20 - القرن 21 |
العقود: | عقد 1930 عقد 1940 عقد 1950 - عقد 1960 - عقد 1970 عقد 1980 عقد 1990 |
السنوات: | 1964 1965 1966 - 1967 - 1968 1969 1970 |
1967 حسب الموضوع: |
الموضوع |
حسب البلد |
|
القادة |
تصنيفات المواليد والوفيات |
تصنيفات تأسيسات وانحلالات |
تصنيفات أعمال وأطروحات |
التقويم الگريگوري | 1967 MCMLXVII |
آب أوربه كونديتا | 2720 |
التقويم الأرمني | 1416 ԹՎ ՌՆԺԶ |
التقويم الآشوري | 6717 |
التقويم البهائي | 123–124 |
التقويم البنغالي | 1374 |
التقويم الأمازيغي | 2917 |
سنة العهد البريطاني | 15 إليز. 2 – 16 إليز. 2 |
التقويم البوذي | 2511 |
التقويم البورمي | 1329 |
التقويم البيزنطي | 7475–7476 |
التقويم الصيني | 丙午年 (النار الحصان) 4663 أو 4603 — إلى — 丁未年 (النار الماعز) 4664 أو 4604 |
التقويم القبطي | 1683–1684 |
التقويم الديسكوردي | 3133 |
التقويم الإثيوپي | 1959–1960 |
التقويم العبري | 5727–5728 |
التقاويم الهندوسية | |
- ڤيكرام سامڤات | 2023–2024 |
- شاكا سامڤات | 1889–1890 |
- كالي يوگا | 5068–5069 |
تقويم الهولوسين | 11967 |
تقويم الإگبو | 967–968 |
التقويم الإيراني | 1345–1346 |
التقويم الهجري | 1386–1387 |
التقويم الياباني | Shōwa 42 (昭和42年) |
تقويم جوچى | 56 |
التقويم اليوليوسي | الگريگوري ناقص 13 يوم |
التقويم الكوري | 4300 |
تقويم مينگوو | جمهورية الصين 56 民國56年 |
التقويم الشمسي التايلندي | 2510 |
سنة 1967 (MCMLXVII)
كانت
سنة بسيطة تبدأ يوم الأحد
(الرابط يعرض التقويم كاملاً) التقويم الگريگوري، السنة 1967 بعد الميلاد (م)، السنة 967 في الألفية 2، السنة 67 في القرن 20، والسنة 8 في عقد 1960.
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أحداث
- 1 يناير – Canada begins a year-long celebration of the 100th anniversary of the British North America Act, 1867, featuring the Expo 67 World's Fair.
- 2 يناير - Ronald Reagan, past movie actor and future President of the United States, is inaugurated the new governor of California.
- January 5
- Spain and Romania sign an agreement in Paris establishing full consular and commercial relations (not diplomatic ones).
- Charlie Chaplin launches his last film, A Countess from Hong Kong, in the UK.
- January 6 – Vietnam War: USMC and ARVN troops launch Operation Deckhouse Five in the Mekong Delta.
- January 8 – Vietnam War: Operation Cedar Falls starts.
- January 10 – Segregationist Lester Maddox is sworn in as Governor of Georgia.
- January 12 – Dr. James Bedford becomes the first person to be cryonically preserved with the intent of future resuscitation.
- January 13 – A military coup occurs in Togo under the leadership of Étienne Eyadema.
- January 14
- The New York Times reports that the U.S. Army is conducting secret germ warfare experiments.
- The Human Be-In takes place in Golden Gate Park, San Francisco; the event sets the stage for the Summer of Love.
- January 15
- Louis Leakey announces the discovery of pre-human fossils in Kenya; he names the species Kenyapithecus africanus.
- American football: The Green Bay Packers defeat the Kansas City Chiefs 35-10 in the First AFL-NFL World Championship Game at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.
- January 18
- Albert DeSalvo is convicted of numerous crimes and sentenced to life in prison.
- Jeremy Thorpe becomes leader of the UK's Liberal Party.
- January 23
- In Munich, the trial begins of Wilhelm Harster, accused of the murder of 82,856 Jews (including Anne Frank) when he led German security police during the German occupation of the Netherlands. He is eventually sentenced to 15 years in prison.[بحاجة لمصدر]
- Milton Keynes (England) is founded as a new town by Order in Council, with a planning brief to become a city of 250,000 people. Its initial designated area enclosed three existing towns and twenty one villages. The area to be developed was largely farmland, with evidence of permanent settlement dating back to the Bronze Age.
- 26 يناير
- The Parliament of the United Kingdom decides to nationalise 90% of the nation's steel industry.
- Chicago's largest-ever blizzard begins.
- January 27
- Apollo 1: U.S. astronauts Gus Grissom, Ed White, and Roger Chaffee are killed when fire breaks out in their Apollo spacecraft during a launch pad test.
- The United States, Soviet Union and United Kingdom sign the Outer Space Treaty (ratified by USSR May 19; comes into force October 10), prohibiting weapons of mass destruction from space.
- January 31 – West Germany and Romania establish diplomatic relations.
فبراير
- February 2 – The American Basketball Association is formed.
- February 3 – Ronald Ryan becomes the last man hanged in Australia, for murdering a guard while escaping from prison in December 1965.
- February 4 – The Soviet Union protests the demonstrations before its embassy in Beijing.
- February 5
- NASA launches Lunar Orbiter 3.
- Italy's first guided missile cruiser, the Vittorio Veneto, is launched.
- General Anastasio Somoza Debayle becomes president of Nicaragua.
- February 6 – Alexei Kosygin arrives in the UK for an 8-day visit. He meets The Queen on February 9.
- February 7
- The Chinese government announces that it can no longer guarantee the safety of Soviet diplomats outside the Soviet Embassy building.
- Serious bushfires in southern Tasmania claim 62 lives, and destroys 2,642.7 square kilometres (653,025.4 acres) of land.
- Mazenod College, Victoria, opens in Australia.
- February 10 – The 25th Amendment to the United States Constitution (presidential succession and disability) is ratified.
- February 11 – Burgess Ice Rise, lying off the west coast of Alexander Island, Antarctica, is first mapped by the British Antarctic Survey (BAS).
- February 13 – American researchers discover the Madrid Codices by Leonardo da Vinci in the National Library of Spain.[1]
- February 15 – The Soviet Union announces that it has sent troops near the Chinese border.
- February 18 – New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison claims he will solve the John F. Kennedy assassination, and that a conspiracy was planned in New Orleans.
- February 22
- Suharto takes power from Sukarno in Indonesia (see Transition to the New Order and Supersemar).
- Donald Sangster becomes the new Prime Minister of Jamaica, succeeding Alexander Bustamante.
- February 23
- Trinidad and Tobago is the first Commonwealth nation to join the Organization of American States.
- The 25th Amendment to the United States Constitution is enacted.
- February 24 – Moscow forbids its satellite states to form diplomatic relations with West Germany.
- February 25
- The Chinese government announces that it has ordered the army to help in the spring seeding.
- Britain's second Polaris missile submarine, HMS Renown, is launched.
- February 26 – A Soviet nuclear test is conducted at the Semipalatinsk Test Site, Eastern Kazakhstan.
- February 27 – The Dutch government supports British EEC membership.
مارس
- 1 مارس
- The city of Hatogaya, Saitama, Japan is founded.
- Brazilian police arrest Franz Stangl, ex-commander of Treblinka and Sobibór extermination camps.
- The Red Guards return to schools in China.
- The Queen Elizabeth Hall is opened in London.
- Óscar Gestido is sworn in as President of Uruguay after 15 years of collegiate government.
- March 4
- The first North Sea gas is pumped ashore at Easington, East Riding of Yorkshire.
- Queens Park Rangers become the first 3rd Division side to win the English Football League Cup at Wembley Stadium, defeating West Bromwich Albion 3–2.
- March 5 – Mohammad Mosaddegh (or Mosaddeq; فارسية: مُحَمَد مُصَدِق; IPA: [mohæmˈmæd(-e) mosædˈdeɣ] ( استمع)), deposed Iranian prime minister, dies after fourteen years of house arrest.
- March 6 – Mark Twain Tonight starring Hal Holbrook as Mark Twain, premieres on CBS television in the United States.
- March 7 – U.S. labor union leader Jimmy Hoffa begins his 8-year sentence for attempting to bribe a jury.
- March 9 – Joseph Stalin's daughter, Svetlana Alliluyeva, defects to the United States via the U.S. Embassy in New Delhi.
- March 11 – The first phase of the Cambodian Civil War begins between the Kingdom of Cambodia and the Khmer Rouge.
- March 12
- The Indonesian State Assembly takes all presidential powers from Sukarno and names Suharto as acting president (Suharto resigned in 1998).
- The Velvet Underground's first album, The Velvet Underground & Nico, is released in the United States. It is initially a commercial failure but receives widespread critical and commercial acclaim in later years.
- March 13 – Moise Tshombe, ex-prime minister of Congo, is sentenced to death in absentia.
- March 14
- The body of U.S. President John F. Kennedy is moved to a permanent burial place at Arlington National Cemetery.
- Nine executives of the German pharmaceutical company Grunenthal are charged for breaking German drug laws because of thalidomide.
- March 16 – In the Aspida case in Greece, 15 officers are sentenced to 2–18 years in prison, accused of treason and intentions of staging a coup.
- March 18
- Torrey Canyon oil spill: The supertanker إسإس Torrey Canyon runs aground between Land's End and the Scilly Isles off the coast of Britain.
- The classic Pirates of the Caribbean attraction opens at Disneyland, California.
- March 19 – A referendum in French Somaliland favors the connection to France.
- March 21
- A military coup takes place in Sierra Leone.
- Vietnam War: In ongoing campus unrest, Howard University students protesting the Vietnam War, the ROTC program on campus and the draft, confront Gen. Lewis Hershey, then head of the U.S. Selective Service System, and as he attempts to deliver an address, shout him down with cries of "America is the Black man's battleground!"
- Charles Manson is released from Terminal Island. Telling the authorities that prison had become his home, he requested permission to stay. Upon his release, he relocates to San Francisco where he spends the Summer of Love.[2]
- March 26
- In New York City, 10,000 gather for the Central Park be-in.
- Jim Thompson, co-founder of the Thai Silk Company, disappears from the Cameron Highlands.
- March 28 – Pope Paul VI issues the encyclical Populorum progressio.
- March 29
- A 13-day TV strike begins in the United States.
- The first French nuclear submarine, Le Redoutable, is launched.
- The SEACOM Asian telephone cable is inaugurated.
- Torrey Canyon oil spill: British Fleet Air Arm and Royal Air Force aircraft bomb and sink the grounded supertanker إسإس Torrey Canyon.
- March 31 – U.S. President Lyndon Johnson signs the Consular Treaty.
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أبريل
- April 2 – A United Nations delegation arrives in Aden as its independence approaches. The delegation leaves April 7, accusing British authorities of lack of cooperation. The British say the delegation did not contact them.
- April 4 – Martin Luther King Jr. denounces the Vietnam War during his sermon at the Riverside Church in New York City.
- April 6 – Georges Pompidou begins to form the next French government.
- April 7 – Six-Day War (approach): Israeli fighters shoot down 7 Syrian MIG-21s.
- April 8 – Puppet on a String by Sandie Shaw (music and lyrics by Bill Martin and Phil Coulter) wins the Eurovision Song Contest 1967 for the United Kingdom.
- April 9 – The first Boeing 737 (a 100 series) takes its maiden flight.
- April 10
- The AFTRA strike is settled just in time for the 39th Academy Awards ceremony to be held, hosted by Bob Hope. Best Picture goes to A Man for All Seasons.
- Oral arguments begin in the landmark Supreme Court of the United States case Loving v. Virginia, 388 U.S. 1 (1967), challenging the State of Virginia's statutory scheme to prevent marriages between persons solely on the basis of racial classifications.
- April 12 – The Ahmanson Theatre opens in Los Angeles.
- April 13 – Conservatives win the Greater London Council elections.
- April 14 – In San Francisco, 10,000 march against the Vietnam War.
- April 15
- Large demonstrations are held against the Vietnam War in New York City and San Francisco. The march, organized by the National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam, from Central Park to the United Nations drew hundreds of thousands of people, including Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Harry Belafonte, James Bevel, and Dr. Benjamin Spock, who marched and spoke at the event. A simultaneous march in San Francisco was attended by Coretta Scott King.
- Scotland defeats England 3-2 at Wembley Stadium, with goals from Law, Lennox and McCalligog, in the British Championships. This is England's first defeat since they won the World Cup, and ends a 19-game unbeaten run.
- April 20
- The Surveyor 3 probe lands on the Moon.
- A Globe Air Bristol Britannia turboprop crashes at Nicosia, Cyprus, killing 126 people.[3][4]
- April 21
- Greece suffers a military coup by a group of military officers, who establish a military dictatorship led by George Papadopoulos; future-Prime Minister Andreas Papandreou remains a political prisoner to December 25. The dictatorship ends in 1974.
- An outbreak of tornadoes strikes the upper Midwest section of the United States (in particular the Chicago area, including the suburbs of Belvidere and Oak Lawn, Illinois, where 33 people are killed and 500 injured).
- April 23 – A group of young leftist radicals are expelled from the Nicaraguan Socialist Party (PSN). This group goes on to found the Socialist Workers Party (POS).
- April 24
- Soyuz 1: Vladimir Komarov becomes the first Soviet cosmonaut to die, when the parachute of his space capsule fails during re-entry.
- In the NBA, the Philadelphia 76ers defeat the San Francisco Warriors 125-122 in game six to win the title. Some say this team is arguably the greatest of all time.
- April 27 – Montreal, Quebec, Expo 67, a World's Fair to coincide with the Canadian Confederation centennial, officially opens with Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson igniting the Expo Flame in the Place des Nations.
- 28 أبريل
- In Houston, Texas, boxer Muhammad Ali refuses military service. He is stripped of his boxing title and not allowed to fight for three years.
- Expo 67 opens to the public, with over 310,000 people attending. Al Carter from Chicago is the first visitor as noted by Expo officials.
- The U.S. aerospace manufacturer McDonnell Douglas is formed through a merger of McDonnell Aircraft and Douglas Aircraft (it becomes part of The Boeing Company three decades later).
- 29 أبريل – فيدل كاسترو announces that all intellectual property belongs to the people and that Cuba intends to translate and publish technical literature without compensation.
- April 30 – Moscow's 537m-tall TV tower is finished.
مايو
- May 1
- Elvis Presley and Priscilla Beaulieu are married in Las Vegas.
- GO Transit, Canada's first interregional public transit system, is established.
- May 2
- The Toronto Maple Leafs win the Stanley Cup. It is their last Stanley Cup and last finals appearance to date. It will turn out to be the last game in the Original Six era. Six more teams will be added in the fall.
- Harold Wilson announces that the United Kingdom has decided to apply for EEC membership.
- May 4 – Lunar Orbiter 4 is launched by the United States.
- May 6
- Dr. Zakir Hussain is the first Muslim to become president of India.
- Four hundred students seize the administration building at Cheyney State College, now Cheyney University of Pennsylvania, the oldest institute for higher education for African Americans.
- Hong Kong 1967 riots: Clashes between striking workers and police kill 51 and injure 800.
- May 8 – The Philippine province of Davao is split into three: Davao del Norte, Davao del Sur, and Davao Oriental.
- May 10 – The Greek military government accuses Andreas Papandreou of treason.
- May 11 – The United Kingdom and Ireland apply officially for European Economic Community membership.
- May 12 – The Jimi Hendrix Experience release their debut album, Are You Experienced.
- May 15 Waiting period leading up to the Six-Day War begins
- May 17
- Syria mobilizes against Israel.
- President Gamal Abdal Nasser of Egypt demands withdrawal of the peacekeeping UN Emergency Force in the Sinai. U.N. Secretary-General U Thant complies (May 18).
- May 18
- Tennessee Governor Ellington repeals the "Monkey Law" (officially the Butler Act; see the Scopes Trial).
- In Mexico, schoolteacher Lucio Cabañas begins guerrilla warfare in Atoyac de Alvarez, west of Acapulco, in the state of Guerrero.
- NASA announces the crew for the Apollo 7 space mission (first manned Apollo flight): Wally Schirra, Donn F. Eisele, and R. Walter Cunningham.
- May 19
- The Soviet Union ratifies a treaty with the United States and the United Kingdom, banning nuclear weapons from outer space.
- Yuri Andropov becomes KGB chief.
- May 20 — The Spring Mobilization Conference, a gathering of 700 antiwar activists is held in Washington D.C. to chart the future moves for the U.S. antiwar movement
- May 22
- The Innovation department store in the centre of Brussels, Belgium burns down. It is the most devastating fire in Belgian history, resulting in 323 dead and missing and 150 injured.
- May 23 – Egypt closes the Straits of Tiran to Israeli shipping, blockading Israel's southern port of Eilat, and Israel's entire Red Sea coastline.
- May 25
- The Celtic Football Club becomes the first Northern European football club to win the European Cup/Champions League.
- May 27
- Naxalite Guerrilla War: Beginning with a peasant uprising in the town of Naxalbari, this Marxist/Maoist rebellion sputters on in the Indian countryside. The guerrillas operate among the impoverished peasants, fighting both the government security forces and private paramilitary groups funded by wealthy landowners. Most fighting takes place in the states of Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra, Odisha and Madhya Pradesh.
- The Australian referendum, 1967 passes with an overwhelming 90% support, removing, from the Australian Constitution, 2 discriminatory sentences referring to Indigenous Australians. It signifies Australia's first step in recognising Indigenous rights.
- The folk rock band Fairport Convention plays their first gig in Golders Green, North London.
- May 30 – Biafra, in eastern Nigeria, announces its independence.
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يونيو
- 2 يونيو - Protests in West Berlin against the arrival of the Shah of Iran turn into fights, during which 27-year-old Benno Ohnesorg is killed by a police officer. His death results in the founding of the terrorist group 2 June Movement.
- 5 يونيو/حزيران - قيام حرب الأيام الستة (النكسة) بين إسرائيل وكل من الأردن، سوريا، مصر.
- June 8 – Six-Day War – USS Liberty incident: Israeli fighter jets and Israeli warships fire at the USS Liberty off Gaza, killing 34 and wounding 171.
- June 10
- Six-Day War ends: Israel and Syria agree to a United Nations-mediated cease-fire.
- The Soviet Union severs diplomatic relations with Israel.
- 23 يونيو – Cold War: U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson meets with Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin in Glassboro, New Jersey, for the 3-day Glassboro Summit Conference. Johnson travels to Los Angeles for a dinner at the Century Plaza Hotel where earlier in the day thousands of war protesters clashed with L.A. police.[5]
- 28 يونيو – إسرائيل declares the annexation of East Jerusalem.
- 30 يونيو – Moise Tshombe, former President of Katanga and former prime minister of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, is kidnapped to الجزائر.
يوليو
- July 1
- Canada celebrates its first one hundred years of Confederation.
- The EEC joins with the European Coal and Steel Community and the European Atomic Community, to form the European Communities (from the 1980s usually known as European Community [EC]).
- Seaboard Air Line Railroad merges with Atlantic Coast Line railroad, to become Seaboard Coast Line railroad, first step to today's CSX Transportation.
- The first UK colour television broadcasts begin on BBC2. The first one is from the Wimbledon tennis championships. A full colour service begins on BBC2 on December 2.
- American Samoa's first constitution becomes effective.
- July 3 – A military rebellion led by Belgian mercenary Jean Schramme begins in Katanga, Democratic Republic of the Congo.
- July 4 – The British Parliament decriminalizes homosexuality.
- July 5 – Troops of Belgian mercenary commander Jean Schramme revolt against Mobutu Sese Seko, and try to take control of Stanleyville, Congo.
- July 6
- Nigerian Civil War: Nigerian forces invade the secessionist Biafra May 30.
- A level crossing collision between a train loaded with children and a tanker-truck near Magdeburg, East Germany kills 94 people, mostly children.
- July 7 – All You Need Is Love is released in the UK.
- July 10
- Heavy massive rains and a landslide at Kobe and Kure, Hiroshima, Japan, kill at least 371.
- New Zealand decimalises its currency from pound to dollar at £1 to $2 ($1 = 10/-).
- July 12
- The Greek military regime strips 480 Greeks of their citizenship.
- 1967 Newark riots: After the arrest of an African-American cab driver for allegedly illegally driving around a police car and gunning it down the road, race riots break out in Newark, New Jersey, lasting 5 days and leaving 26 dead.
- July 14
- The Bee Gees release their first international album Bee Gees' 1st in the UK.
- Near Newark, New Jersey, the Plainfield, NJ, riots take place.
- July 16 – A prison riot in Jay, Florida leaves 37 dead.
- July 18 – The United Kingdom announces the closing of its military bases in Malaysia and Singapore. Australia and the U.S. disapprove.
- July 19
- A race riot breaks out in the North Side of Minneapolis on Plymouth Street during the Minneapolis Aquatennial Parade; businesses are vandalized and fires break out in the area, although the disturbance is quelled within hours. However, the next day a shooting sets off another incident in the same area that leads to 18 fires, 36 arrests, 3 shootings, 2 dozen people injured, and damages totaling 4.2 million. There will be two more such incidents in the following two weeks.
- Eighty-two people are killed in a collision between Piedmont Airlines Flight 22 and a Cessna 310 near Hendersonville, North Carolina.
- July 20 – Chilean poet Pablo Neruda receives the first Viareggio-Versile prize.
- July 21 – The town of Winneconne, Wisconsin, announces secession from the United States because it is not included in the official maps and declares war. Secession is repealed the next day.
- July 23 – July 31 – 12th Street Riot: In Detroit, one of the worst riots in United States history begins on 12th Street in the predominantly African American inner city: 43 are killed, 342 injured and 1,400 buildings burned.
- July 24 – During an official state visit to Canada, French President Charles de Gaulle declares to a crowd of over 100,000 in Montreal: Vive le Québec libre! (Long live free Quebec!). The statement, interpreted as support for Quebec independence, delights many Quebecers but angers the Canadian government and many English Canadians.
- July 29
- An explosion and fire aboard the U.S. Navy aircraft carrier يوإسإس Forrestal in the Gulf of Tonkin leaves 134 dead.
- Georges Bidault moves to Belgium where he receives political asylum.
- An earthquake in Caracas, Venezuela leaves 240 dead.
- July 30 – The 1967 Milwaukee race riots begin, lasting through August 3 and leading to a ten-day shutdown of the city from August 1.
July 1967 and the evacuation of British Families from Aden, featured in the book "From Barren Rocks to Living Stones". The evacuation was a major British operation at the time.
أغسطس
- August 1 – Race riots in the United States spread to Washington, D.C..
- August 2 – The Turkish football club Trabzonspor is established in Trabzon.
- August 5 – Pink Floyd releases their debut album The Piper at the Gates of Dawn in the United Kingdom.
- August 6 – A pulsar is noted by Jocelyn Bell and Antony Hewish. The discovery is first recorded in print in 1968: "An entirely novel kind of star came to light on Aug. 6 last year [...]". The date of the discovery is not recorded.
- August 7
- Vietnam War: The People's Republic of China agrees to give North Vietnam an undisclosed amount of aid in the form of a grant.
- A general strike in the old quarter of Jerusalem protests Israel's unification of the city.
- August 8 – The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) is founded in Bangkok, تايلند.
- August 9 – Vietnam War – Operation Cochise: United States Marines begin a new operation in the Que Son Valley.
- August 10 – Belgian mercenary Jean Schramme's troops take the Congolese border town of Bukavu.
- August 13 – The first line-up of Fleetwood Mac makes their live debut at the Windsor Jazz and Blues Festival.
- August 14 – Wonderful Radio London shuts down at 3:00 PM in anticipation of the Marine Broadcasting Offences Act. Many fans greet the staff upon their return to London that evening with placards reading "Freedom died with Radio London."
- August 15 – The United Kingdom Marine Broadcasting Offences Act declares participation in offshore pirate radio illegal. Radio Caroline defies the Act and continues broadcasting.
- August 19 – West Germany receives 36 East German prisoners it has "purchased" through the border posts of Herleshausen and Wartha.
- August 21
- A truce is declared in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
- Two U.S. Navy jets stray into the airspace of the People's Republic of China following an attack on a target in North Vietnam and are shot down. Lt. Robert J. Flynn, the only survivor, is captured alive and will be held prisoner by China until 1973.
- August 25 – American Nazi Party leader George Lincoln Rockwell is assassinated in Arlington, Virginia.
- August 27
- The East Coast Wrestling Association is established.
- Beatles manager Brian Epstein is found dead in his locked bedroom.
- August 29 – The final episode of The Fugitive airs on ABC. The broadcast attracts 78 million viewers, one of the largest audiences for a single episode in U.S. television history.
- August 30 – Thurgood Marshall is confirmed as the first African American Justice of the United States Supreme Court.
سبتمبر
- September 1
- The Khmer–Chinese Friendship Association is banned in Cambodia.
- Ilse Koch, known as the "Witch of Buchenwald", commits suicide in the Bavarian prison of Aichach.
- September 3
- Nguyễn Văn Thiệu is elected President of South Vietnam.
- At 5:00 a.m. local time, all road traffic in Sweden switches from left-hand traffic pattern to right-hand traffic.[6][7]
- September 4 – Vietnam War – Operation Swift: The United States Marines launch a search and destroy mission in Quảng Nam and Quảng Tín provinces. The ensuing 4-day battle in Que Son Valley kills 114 Americans and 376 North Vietnamese.
- September 10 – In a Gibraltar sovereignty referendum, only 44 out of 12,182 voters in the British Crown colony of Gibraltar support union with Spain.
- 14 سبتمبر - انتحار عبد الحكيم عامر قائد الجيش المصري والرجل الثاني في مصر.
- September 17 - A riot during a football match in Kayseri, Turkey leaves 44 dead, about 600 injured.
أكتوبر
- October 3 – An X-15 research aircraft with test pilot William J. Knight establishes an unofficial world fixed-wing speed record of Mach 6.7.
- October 4
- Omar Ali Saifuddin III of Brunei abdicates in favour of his son, His Majesty Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah.
- The Shag Harbour UFO incident occurs.
- October 6 – Southern California's Pacific Ocean Park, known as the "Disneyland By The Sea", closes down.
- October 8 – Guerrilla leader Che Guevara and his men are captured in Bolivia; they are executed the following day.
- October 12
- Vietnam War: U.S. Secretary of State Dean Rusk states during a news conference that, because of North Vietnam's opposition, proposals by the U.S. Congress for peace initiatives are futile.
- The Naked Ape, by Desmond Morris, is published.[8]
- October 14 – Quebec Nationalism: René Lévesque leaves the Liberal Party.
- October 16 – Thirty-nine people, including singer-activist Joan Baez, are arrested in Oakland, California, for blocking the entrance of that city's military induction center.
- October 17
- The musical Hair opens off-Broadway. It moves to Broadway the following April.
- Vietnam War: The Battle of Ong Thanh takes place.
- October 18
- Vietnam War: Students at the University of Wisconsin–Madison protest over recruitment by Dow Chemical on the University campus; 76 are injured in the resulting riot.
- Walt Disney's 19th full-length animated feature The Jungle Book, the last animated film personally supervised by Disney, is released and becomes an enormous box-office and critical success. On a double bill with the film is the (now) much less well-known true-life adventure, Charlie the Lonesome Cougar.
- The Venera 4 probe descends through the Venusian atmosphere.
- October 19 – The Mariner 5 probe flies by Venus.
- October 20 – Patterson–Gimlin film: Roger Patterson and Robert Gimlin's famous film of an unidentified animate cryptid, thought to be Bigfoot or Sasquatch, is recorded at Bluff Creek, California.
- October 21
- Approximately 70,000 Vietnam War protesters march in Washington, D.C. and rally at the Lincoln Memorial; in a successive march that day, 50,000 people march to the Pentagon, where Allen Ginsberg, Abbie Hoffman, and Jerry Rubin symbolically chant to "levitate" the building and "exorcise the evil within."
- An Egyptian surface-to-surface missile sinks the Israeli destroyer Eilat, killing 47 Israeli sailors. Israel retaliates by shelling Egyptian refineries along the Suez Canal.
- October 23 – Charles de Gaulle becomes the first French Co-Prince of Andorra to visit his Andorran subjects. In addition to being President of France, de Gaulle is a joint ruler (along with Spain's Bishop of Urgel of the tiny nation located in the mountains between France and Spain, pursuant to the 1278 agreement creating the nation.[9]
- October 25 – The Abortion Act 1967 passes in the British Parliament and receives royal assent two days later.
- October 26
- The coronation ceremony of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi of Iran, ruler of the nation since 1941, takes place.
- U.S. Navy pilot John McCain is shot down over North Vietnam and taken prisoner. His capture is confirmed two days later, and he remains a prisoner of war for more than five years.
- October 27
- French President Charles de Gaulle vetoes British entry into the European Economic Community for the second time in the decade.
- London criminal Jack McVitie is murdered by the Kray twins, a crime that eventually leads to their imprisonment and downfall.
- October 29
- President Joseph Mobutu of the Democratic Republic of the Congo launches an offensive against mercenaries in Bukavu.
- Expo 67 closes in Montreal, after having attracted more than 50 million visitors in six months.
- October 30 – Hong Kong 1967 riots: British troops and Chinese demonstrators clash on the border of China and Hong Kong.
نوفمبر
- November – Islamabad officially becomes Pakistan's political capital, replacing Karachi.[مطلوب توضيح][بحاجة لمصدر]
- November 2 – Vietnam War: U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson holds a secret meeting with a group of the nation's most prestigious leaders ("the Wise Men") and asks them to suggest ways to unite the American people behind the war effort. They conclude that the American people should be given more optimistic reports on the progress of the war.
- November 3 – Vietnam War – Battle of Dak To: Around Đắk Tô (located about 280 miles north of Saigon near the Cambodian border), heavy casualties are suffered on both sides (the Americans narrowly win the battle on November 22).
- November 4–November 5 – In the Democratic Republic of the Congo, mercenaries of Jean Schramme and Jerry Puren withdraw from Bukavu, over the Shangugu Bridge, to Rwanda.
- November 6 – The Rhodesian parliament passes pro-Apartheid laws.
- November 7
- U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson signs the Public Broadcasting Act of 1967, establishing the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
- Carl B. Stokes is elected mayor of Cleveland, Ohio, becoming the first African American to be elected mayor of a major United States city.
- The 50th anniversary of the Great October Socialist Revolution is celebrated in the Soviet Union.
- November 8 – The BBC's first local radio station (BBC Radio Leicester) is launched.
- November 9 – Apollo program: NASA launches the first Saturn V rocket, successfully carrying the unmanned Apollo 4 test spacecraft from Cape Kennedy into Earth orbit.
- November 11 – Vietnam War: In a ceremony in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, 3 United States prisoners of war are released by the Viet Cong and turned over to American "New Left" antiwar activist Tom Hayden.
- November 14 – The Congress of Colombia, in commemoration of the 150-year anniversary of the death of Policarpa Salavarrieta, declares this day as the "Day of the Colombian Woman".
- November 15
- General Georgios Grivas and his 10,000 strong Greek Army division are forced to leave Cyprus, after 24 Turkish Cypriot civilians are killed by the Greek Cypriot National Guard in the villages of Kophinou and Ayios Theodhoros; relations sour between Nicosia and Athens. Turkey flies sorties into Greek territory, and masses troops in Thrace on her border with Greece.
- Test pilot Michael Adams is killed when his X-15 rocket plane tumbles out of control during atmospheric re-entry and disintegrates.
- November 17
- Vietnam War: Acting on optimistic reports he was given on November 13, U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson tells the nation that, while much remains to be done, "We are inflicting greater losses than we're taking...We are making progress." (2 months later the Tet Offensive by the Viet Cong is widely reported as a Viet Cong victory by the U.S. press and thus as a major setback to the U.S.'s pursuit of the war.)
- French author Régis Debray is sentenced to 30 years imprisonment in Bolivia.
- November 18 – The UK pound is devalued from £1 = US$2.80 to £1 = US$2.40.
- November 20 The "population clock" of the United States Census Bureau records the U.S. population at 200 million people at 11:03 a.m. Washington, D.C. time.[10]
- November 21 – Vietnam War: United States General William Westmoreland tells news reporters: "I am absolutely certain that whereas in 1965 the enemy was winning, today he is certainly losing."
- November 22 – UN Security Council Resolution 242 is adopted by the UN Security Council, establishing a set of principles aimed at guiding negotiations for an Arab–Israeli peace settlement.
- November 26 – Major floods hit Lisbon, Portugal, killing 462.
- November 27 – The Beatles release Magical Mystery Tour in the U.S. as a full album. The songs added to the original six songs on the double EP include "All You Need Is Love", "Penny Lane", "Strawberry Fields Forever", "Baby, You're a Rich Man" and "Hello, Goodbye". Release as a double EP will not take place in the UK until December.
- November 28 – The first pulsar to be discovered by Earth observers is found in the constellation of Vulpecula by astronomers Jocelyn Bell Burnell and Antony Hewish, and is given the name PSR B1919+21.
- November 29 – Vietnam War: U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara announces his resignation to become president of the World Bank. McNamara's resignation follows U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson's outright rejection of McNamara's early November recommendations to freeze troop levels, stop the bombing of North Vietnam, and hand over ground fighting to South Vietnam.
- November 30
- Zulfikar Ali Bhutto founds the Pakistan People's Party and becomes its first chairman. It has gone on to become one of Pakistan's major political parties (alongside the Pakistan Muslim League) that is broken into many factions, bearing the same name under different leaders, such as the Pakistan's Peoples Party Parliamentarians (PPPP).
- 30 نوفمبر اليمن الجنوبي يحصل على استقلاله منبريطانيا
- Pro-Soviet communists in the Philippines establish Malayang Pagkakaisa ng Kabataan Pilipino as its new youth wing.
- U.S. Senator Eugene McCarthy announces his candidacy for the Democratic Party presidential nomination, challenging incumbent President Lyndon B. Johnson over the Vietnam War.
ديسمبر
- December 1
- The Jimi Hendrix Experience releases Axis: Bold as Love.
- The RMS Queen Mary is retired. Her place is taken by the RMS Queen Elizabeth 2.
- December 3 – Christiaan Barnard carries out the world's first heart transplant at Groote Schuur Hospital in Cape Town, South Africa.
- December 4
- At 6:50 PM, a volcano erupts on Deception Island in Antarctica.
- Vietnam War: U.S. and South Vietnamese forces engage Viet Cong troops in the Mekong Delta (235 of the 300-strong Viet Cong battalion are killed).
- 5 ديسمبر - مذبحة داك سون هي مذبحة تمت في قرية داك سون التابعة حاليًا لإقليم داك نونغ في منطقة تاي وين في فيتنام، والتي كانت خاضعة سابقا لفيتنام الجنوبية، أثناء حرب فيتنام.
- December 6 – Vice President Jorge Pacheco Areco is sworn in as President of Uruguay after President Oscar Gestido dies in office.
- December 8 – Magical Mystery Tour is released by The Beatles as a double EP in the U.K., whilst the only psychedelic rock album by The Rolling Stones, Their Satanic Majesties Request, is released in the U.K and in the U.S.A.
- December 9
- Nicolae Ceaușescu becomes the Chairman of the Romanian State Council, making him the de facto leader of Romania.
- Jim Morrison is arrested on stage in New Haven, Connecticut for attempting to spark a riot in the audience during a Doors-concert.
- December 11 – Supersonic airliner Concorde is unveiled in Toulouse, France.
- December 12 – Guess Who's Coming to Dinner, one of the seminal race relations films of the 1960s, is released to theaters.
- December 13 – King Constantine II of Greece flees the country when his coup attempt fails.
- December 15 – The Silver Bridge over the Ohio River in Point Pleasant, West Virginia, collapses, killing 46 people.
- December 17 – Harold Holt, Australian prime minister, disappears when swimming at a beach 60 km from Melbourne.
- December 19 – Professor John Archibald Wheeler coined the astronomical term black hole.
- December 26 – The Beatles' film Magical Mystery Tour receives its world première on BBC Television in the UK
- December 31
- The Green Bay Packers become the first team in the modern era to win their third consecutive NFL Championship, 21-17 over the Dallas Cowboys in what became known as "The Ice Bowl".
- Motorcycle daredevil Evel Knievel attempts to jump 141 feet over the Caesars Palace Fountains on the Las Vegas Strip. Knievel crashes on landing and the accident is caught on film.
مواليد
- آنا نيكول سميث
- أحمد مختار (فنان)
- أخيم فاجنر
- عبد العزيز الأحمد
- أرنيل بينيدا
- أرون وينتر
- أكشاي كومار
- أكيهيكو يوشيدا
- ألان روتش
- ألكس أندرو كيلي
- ألكسندر بيس
- أليخاندرو آمينابار
- أندرياس مولر
- أيمن حسن
- إبراهيم بوالطيب
- إدريس الحسيني
- إريك روي
- إيدي مالييت
- إيغور دوبروفولسكي
- إيفان زامورانو
- الشاب خلاص
- اندرسون كوبر
- باميلا أندرسون
- بروك سميث
- بوبي ديول
- بودو إليغنر
- بورس بيكر
- بول إنس
- بول جياماتي
- بول غاسكوين
- بيتر فينك
- بينيشيو ديل تورو
- تاكويا تاكاغي
- تشاك شولدينر
- تشيرو فيرارا
- توني براكستون
- جان خليل
- جان لوك دوغون
- جعفر الدرازي
- جورج أوبويل
- جوردان تشان سيو تشون
- جوليا روبرتس
- جون ستيفنسون فون تيتزشنر
- جوناثان إيف
- جيمي فوكس
- جيمي كاميل
- جينا ترابياني
- حسان حطاب
- حكيم دكار
- حمد الصالح
- حميد ستيلي
- حنان شوقي
- خالد سكاح
- خوان كارلوس فرسناديلو
- خوسيه لويس كامينيرو
- دانييل دوتويل
- ديفيد جوتا
- راجح عمر
- رغد صدام حسين
- روبرتو باجيو
- روبيرتو روزيتي
- روجييرو ريدزيتيلي
- ريا الحفار الحسن
- ريم القروي
- رينيه زيلويجر
- ستريدا جعجع
- سحر رامي
- سعد الغامدي
- سعيد العويران
- سعيد فودة
- سمير حسن
- سونيا روف
- سيرج تانكيان
- سيمونه بينكه
- شيرين سيف النصر
- صابرين
- طارق لطفي
- طاهر يولداشيف
- عباس سعد
- عبد الرحمن بن مساعد بن عبد العزيز آل سعود
- عبد العزيز الشايجي
- عبد الله بن صالح الخليفي
- عبد الله تراوري
- عبد الناصر السعيد
- عزازي
- علي الراشد
- علي الهاجري
- علي باباجان
- عماد حجاج
- عمرو خالد
- غاي بيرس
- غويليرمو أمور
- فجر السعيد
- فريد بن ستيتي
- فضيلة الفاروق
- فيث هيل
- فيليب راستشك
- فيليب سيمور هوفمان
- فين ديزل
- فينس غيليغان
- قاسم الحسيني الجلالي
- قيس السندي
- كارلا بروني
- كاري-آن موس
- كازيوشي ميورا
- كايت والش
- كريس بنوا
- كريستوف كوكارد
- كريستين جونستون
- كلاوديو بياجيو
- كلاوديو كانيجيا
- كوبيلاي توركيلماز
- كورتني ثورن سميث
- كوفي كودجا
- كيرت كوبين
- لورا ديرن
- ليلى السيد
- ليونيل بيريز
- مات لوبلان
- ماتياس زامر
- ماثيو هولمان
- ماجد الكدواني
- مادهوري ديكسيت
- مارسيلو بالبوا
- مارك روفالو
- ماركو جيامباولو
- ماريا بيلو
- ماساشي ناكاياما
- ماسيميليانو أليغري
- محمد السماحي
- محمد جربوعة
- محمد جميل ولد منصور
- محمود أبو هنود
- مراد بوكرزازة
- موريل ديغوك
- ميتسو إيواتا
- ميج كابوت
- ميخائيل ساكاشفيلي
- ميراندا أوتو
- ميغومي هاياشيبارا
- ميليسا مولر
- ناتالي توزيا
- نعمان بن عثمان
- نوبيوكي هياما
- نورينا هرتز
- نيكول كيدمان
- نيكولا أنه ميلهورن
- هبة قطب
- هنري إيان كوسيك
- هوبيرت فورنير
- ويل فيرل
- ويليام ألكسندر من هولندا
- ويليام برونييه
- ياكوب فريس هانسين
- يان إيريكسون
- يورغن كلوب
- يوكيكو أوكادا
- الطيب بوعزة
يناير
- 26 يناير - توشيوكي موريكاوا, مؤدي أصوات ياباني.
مارس
مايو
- 4 مايو - أكيكو ياجيما, مؤدية أصوات يابانية.
- 5 مايو - تاكهيتو كوياسو, مؤدي أصوات ياباني.
يونيو
- 15 يونيو - يوجي أُيدا, مؤدي أصوات ياباني.
سبتمبر
- 13 سبتمبر - مايكل جونسون، عداء أمريكي سابق.
أكتوبر
- 19 أكتوبر - يوكو شيمومورا, ملحنة يابانية.
نوفمبر
- 2 نوفمبر - أكيرا إيشيدا, مؤدي أصوات ياباني.
- 25 نوفمبر - كازُيا ناكاي, مؤدي أصوات ياباني.
ديسمبر
- 8 ديسمبر -
- كوتونو ميتسويشي، مؤدية أصوات يابانية.
- ماهر الأسد، عميد ركن سوري، وشقيق الرئيس السوري بشار الأسد.
وفيات
يناير
- أحمد التليلي
- أرنستو تشى جيفارا
- ألبرت جون لوتولي
- ألفريد مارجول شبيربر
- أوسكار ماريا جراف
- إرنستو تشي جيفارا
- بول ميوني
- جاك روبي
- جمال الدين الشيال
- جون كوكروفت
- رئيف خوري
- روبرت أوبنهايمر
- ريشارد كون
- رينيه ماغريت
- زولتان كودالي
- سليم حاطوم
- سمير نجيب
- سيريل هنشلوود
- عبد الكريم بن ثابت
- عبد اللطيف أبو قورة
- عبد الله الفضالة
- فلاديمير كوماروف
- فيفيان لي
- كليمنت أتلي
- كونراد أديناور
- محمد الجلالي
- محمد بن عوض بن لادن
- محمد فريد أبو حديد
- محمد مصدق
- محمود محمد صالح
- مصطفى خريف
- نورمان إنجيل
- هرمان مولر
- هنري لوس
- ياروسلاف هايروفسكي
فبراير
- February 6
- Martine Carol, French actress (و. 1920)
- Henry Morgenthau Jr., United States Secretary of the Treasury during World War II (و. 1891)
يونيو
- 30 يونيو - شكري القوتلي، رئيس سوري.
سبتمبر
- 14 سبتمبر - عبد الحكيم عامر أحد رجال ثورة 23 يوليو في مصر.
- 19 سبتمبر - زينايدا سيريبرياكوفا، رسامة روسية.
أكتوبر
- 20 أكتوبر - شيغه-رو يوشيدا، سياسي ياباني.
نوفمبر
- 17 نوفمبر - أمجد الزهاوي، عالم وفقيه وداعية إسلامي عراقي.
نال جائزة نوبل
- في الفيزياء – الأمريكي هانز بته.
- في الكيمياء – بين الألماني مانفرد آيگن والبريطانيين رونالد نوريش و جورج بورتر.
- في الطب – بين السويدي رانيار گرانيت والأمريكيان هالدان هارتلاين و جورج والد.
- في الأدب – الگواتيمالي ميگل أنخل أستورياس.
- في السلام – محجوبة.
المصادر
- 1967 – Headlines A report from Michael Wallace of WCBS Newsradio 880 (WCBS-AM New York) Part of WCBS 880's celebration of 40 years of newsradio.
- 1967 – The Year in Sound An Audiofile produced by Lou Zambrana of WCBS Newsradio 880 (WCBS-AM New York) Part of WCBS 880's celebration of 40 years of newsradio.
- 1967 Coin Pictures
- Everything you want to know about the Expo 67
الهامش
- ^ The Controversial Replica of Leonardo da Vinci's Adding Machine Archived مايو 29, 2011 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Bugliosi, Vincent (1994). Helter Skelter – The True Story of the Manson Murders 25th Anniversary Edition. W.W. Norton & Company. pp. 137–146. ISBN 0-393-08700-X.
- ^ "Aviation accidents". Archived from the original on May 5, 2009. Retrieved 2009-04-06.
{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help)CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ "PRESIDENTS DAILY DIARY, June 23, 1967". Lbjlib.utexas.edu. 1967-06-23. Retrieved 2011-11-29.
{{cite web}}
: C1 control character in|title=
at position 10 (help) - ^ "Sweden Goes to Right— Momentous Traffic Change", Amarillo (TX) Globe-Times, February 15, 1967, p42
- ^ "Swedes Freeze Traffic— Silence Precedes Shift", Minneapolis Star, September 3, 1967, p1
- ^ "1967: The Naked Ape steps out". On This Day. BBC News. 1967-10-12. Retrieved 2011-08-24.
- ^ "Andorra Has Lordly Visit by de Gaulle", Chicago Tribune, October 24, 1967, p1A-4
- ^ "Nation Reaches 200 Million, And Then Some", Salt Lake (UT) Tribune, November 21, 1967, p1
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- القرن 20
- عقد 1960
- 1967
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