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Timeline:
1957
Jan 1 Bolivia has been suffering from inflation.
The U.S. is concerned about radicalism in Latin America. U.S. financial
aid to Bolivia is greater than any other country relative to the size
of that country's population. The U.S. is subsidizing 30 percent of the
Bolivian government's central budget.
Jan
5 In the wake of the Suez crisis, President Eisenhower asks
Congress to create economic aid and military assistance to prevent Soviet
expansion into the Middle East - the Eisenhower Doctrine.
Jan
9 Stress during the Suez crisis broke Anthony Eden's health.
He resigns as Prime Minister and is replaced by Harold Macmillan.
Jan
10 Responding to what is considered the decline of France
and Britain in world affairs, Eisenhower proclaims his administration's
commitment to the defense of the entire free world.
Jan
10 In Montgomery Alabama, six African-American churches
and the home of two ministers are bombed.
Jan
14 Humphrey Bogart, actor and heavy smoker, dies at the
age of 57 from cancer of the esophagus.
Jan
16 French colons in Algeria want a more energetic commander
in the fight against the Algerian independence movement. They attempt
to assassinate General Salan, using a bazooka, killing instead a colonel.
Jan
19 The United Nations is urging Israel to withdraw its troops
from Egypt's Sinai territory.
Jan
22 Premier David Ben-Gurion of Israel withdraws his nation's
troops from Egypt's Sinai territory.
Feb
7 In the U.S., King Saud and Eisenhower agree to a five-year
renewal of the US lease of the airbase at Dhahran in Saudi Arabia. King
Saud supports the Eisenhower Doctrine.
Feb
11 U.S. Communists are chided by a leader of the French
Communist Party, Jacques Duclos, for "dangerous" tendencies.
Duclos has urged solidarity with Soviet foreign policy. The U.S. Communist
Party asserts its independence from the Soviet Communist Party.
Feb
14 In New Orleans, the Southern Leadership Conference is
created, with Martin Luther King Jr. elected as president.
Mar
6 Ghana becomes the first African country to gain independence
from Britain. The Duchess of Kent opens an Independence Monument where,
in 1948, members of the Ghanaian ex-servicemen's union were shot while
marching to present a petition to the British Governor.
Mar
20 The French newspaper L'Express reveals that the French
army has tortured Algerian prisoners.
Mar
21 Vice President Nixon returns from a 22-day tour of Africa.
He reports that Africa is an area of conflict "between the forces
of freedom and international Communism."
Mar
25 Economic cooperation, in the form of the European Commission
for Steel and Coal, develops into the European Economic Community and
the European Atomic Energy Community - steps away from the narrow nationalism
that had divided Europe and toward the creation of the European Union.
Mar
31 Israel has given the Gaza Strip back to Egypt.
Apr
9 Egypt opens the Suez Canal for all shipping.
Apr
12 A copy of Allen Ginsberg's poem Howl, printed in England,
is seized by U.S. customs on the grounds that it is obscene.
May
2 Senator Joe McCarthy dies of acute hepatitis.
May
13 Chuck Berry is playing music that white teenagers enjoy
and he has risen to the top of the Rhythm & Blues chart.
May
29 Algerian rebels kill 336 they deem as collaborators.
Jun
1 The French believe that Algerian rebels are entering Algeria
across the border with Tunisia. Premier Bourguiba of Tunisia states that
French troops should not cross into his country without permission from
his government.
Jun
2 Interviewed on "Face the Nation," Nikita Khrushchev
says: "I can prophecy that your grandchildren in America will live
under socialism. And please do not be afraid of that. Your grandchildren
will ... not understand how their grandparents did not understand the
progressive nature of a Socialist society."
Jun
17 The U.S. Supreme Court rules the Smith Act unconstitutional.
U.S. Communists are being freed from accusations of crime.
Jun
18 In the Soviet Union's Presidium (formerly the Politburo)
Malenkov, Molotov & Kaganovich organize a vote to dismiss Nikita Khrushchev.
Jun
27 Hurricane Audrey demolishes Cameron, Louisiana, and kills
400 people.
Jul
2 Investments by the French in oil in Algeria's Sahara region
is based on a calculation that Algeria will not win independence.
Jul
3 Khrushchev wins against Molotov, Malenkov, Kaganovich
and Voroshilov. They are denounced as "Anti-Party." Molotov
is banished as ambassador to Mongolia. Malenkov becomes the manager of
a hydroelectric plant in Kazakhstan. Kaganovich is made director of a
small potassium plant in the Urals. Voroshilov switches to supporting
Khrushchev. It's a change from what happened to such losers in the Stalin
era.
Jul
17 Eisenhower declares that he could not imagine any set
of circumstances that would induce him to send federal troops to the South.
Jul
22 French Polynesia becomes an overseas territory of France.
The islanders become French citizens.
Jul
25 Habib Bourguiba is elected President of Tunisia. He abolishes
the constitutional monarchy, a 250-year dynasty, turning Tunisia into
a republic.
Aug
1 In his first interview as president, Bourguiba announces
that his government will be Western in sympathy and policy. Bourguiba
is going to oppose Islamic fundamentalism, to promote secularism and women's
rights. His is to prohibit polygamy, legalize divorce and to raise the
age at which girls can marry to seventeen.
Sep
4 Governor Orville Faubus of Arkansas calls out the National
Guard to prevent black students from enrolling at Little Rock's Central
High School
Sep
18 Secretary of State Dulles predicts that in a few years
the Western powers may be able to defend themselves with tactical nuclear
weapons in the event of a non-nuclear attack by the Soviet Union.
Sep
20 A federal court orders Governor Faubus to remove the
National Guard.
Sep
23 Nine black students enter Little Rock High School under
police protection but are removed in fear of mob violence.
Sep
24 President Eisenhower federalizes the Arkansas Nation
Guard and sends 1,000 from 101 Airborne Division to Little Rock "to
prevent anarchy." Senator Barry Goldwater, establishing himself as
a leader among conservatives, opposes Eisenhower's move - although he
is not a segregationist.
Oct
4 The Soviet Union launches the world's first orbiting satellite,
Sputnik.
Oct
10 Ayn Rand's heaviest book of fiction, Atlas Shrugged,
her philosophical magnus opus, is published.
Oct
15 Since the month of March, the French in the city of Algiers
have been conducting a counter-insurgency campaign, led by General Jacques
Massu. They have weakened the independence organization in Algiers, the
FLN, and re-established French authority. They have used torture, but
intelligence gathered from the torture has contributed little to their
success. Their success has been the result of accurate intelligence obtained
through informants and the application of overwhelming military force.
Torture has been turning more people against the French and in favor of
the temporarily weakened FLN.
Oct
31 Malaya becomes independent within the Commonwealth. A
war being won there against Communist guerrillas continues.
Oct
31 In the southern half of Vietnam, where Ngo Dien Diem
is defending his rule, peasants are being put into communities surrounded
by barbed wire. Communists and other supporters of Ho Chi Minh in the
South are under attack. Ho Chi Minh's supporters have been annoyed at
the slowness of the North to act. The North starts organizing new fighting
units in the South - the Vietcong.
Nov
3 The Soviet Union launches Sputnik 2, which has a dog named
Laika aboard.
Nov
7 The Gaither Report, authored by Paul Nitze and others
is given to President Eisenhower. The report calls for having Strategic
Air Command (SAC) bombers in the air at all times, putting long range
missiles in underground silos and developing a massive shelter program
to protect civilians in case of a nuclear war.
Nov
25 Eisenhower has a stroke. From now on his speech will
by slightly impaired.
Nov
30 In Indonesia, some who belong to a Muslim group hostile
to President Sukarno, hurl some grenades at him while he is leaving a
school. Ten are killed and 48 children injured.
Dec
6 The United States tries to launch its first satellite. It blows
up on the launch pad.
SHS
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