The Associated Press selected the top news stories of 1962 in Michigan as follows:[1]
George Romney's successful campaign to become Governor of Michigan (AP-1);
The end of the Michigan Constitutional Convention (AP-2);
The January 30 tragedy in which the Wallenda family, performing a high wire pyramid in front of 7,000 spectators at the Shrine Circus at Detroit's State Fair Coliseum, sustained two deaths and three other injuries when their human pyramid collapsed (AP-3);
Record profits and sales in the automobile business (AP-4);
In the 1960 United States census, Michigan was recorded as having a population of 7,823,194 persons, ranking as the seventh most populous state in the country. By 1970, the state's population had grown 13.4% to 8,875,083 persons.
Cities
The following is a list of cities in Michigan with a population of at least 60,000 based on 1960 U.S. Census data. Historic census data from 1950 and 1970 is included to reflect trends in population increases or decreases. Cities that are part of the Detroit metropolitan area are shaded in tan.
The following is a list of counties in Michigan with populations of at least 100,000 based on 1960 U.S. Census data. Historic census data from 1950 and 1970 are included to reflect trends in population increases or decreases. Counties that are part of the Detroit metropolitan area are shaded in tan.
1962 Michigan Wolverines baseball team - Under head coach Don Lund, the Wolverines compiled a 31–15 record and won the national championship, defeating Santa Clara in the finals.[4] Ed Hood was the team captain.[5] Other notable players included pitcher Dave Roebuck and center fielder Dennis Spalla.
1961–62 Detroit Red Wings season – The Red Wings compiled a 23–33–14 record under head coach Sid Abel and finished in fifth place out of six teams in the NHL. Gordie Howe was the team's leading scorer with 77 points.[21]
Motor City Open – Bruce Crampton won the Motor City Open at Knollwood Country Club on July 15. His four-round total of 267 was 17 under par and broke the tournament record set in 1959.[26]
Port Huron to Mackinac Boat Race – The Falcon II skippered by 76-year old Clare Jacobs won the race on July 16, finishing shortly after the Charley Kotovic's Gypsy but being declared the winner due to a one-hour, 20-minute handicap due to its smaller size.[27]
Spirit of Detroit Trophy race – Bill Muncey and his Century 21 unlimited hydroplane boat won the Spirit of Detroit Trophy race on August 26 before a crowd of more than 100,000 along the Detroit River.[28]
March – (You're My) Dream Come True by The Temptations was released on Motown's Gordy label and became the group's first nationally charting single, peaking at #22 on the Billboard R&B chart
April – Playboy by The Marvelettes was released on Motown's Tamla label and became the group's second top 10 hit, peaking at #7 on the Hot 100 chart and #4 on the R&B chart
June – Do You Love Me by The Contours was released on Motown's Gordy label and reached #3 on the Hot 100 in October 1962, and was a #1 hit on the R&B chart
July – Beechwood 4-5789 by The Marvelettes was released on the Tamla label and rose to #17 on the Hot 100 chart and #7 on the R&B chart
September – You Beat Me to the Punch by Mary Wells was released on the Motown label and rose to #9 on the Hot 100 and #1 on the R&B chart
October – Two Lovers by Mary Wells was released on the Motown label and reached #1 on the R&B chart and #7 on the Hot 100
December – Hitch Hike by Marvin Gaye was released on Motown's Tamla label and became the Gaye's first charting single, peaking at #30 on the Hot 100 and #12 on the R&B chart
December 26 – The Detroit Free Press published a four-column profile of 33-year-old Berry Gordy, referring to him as "Detroit's Record King". Gordy praised the musical talent in Detroit: "The talent here is terrific and was largely untapped when we came along. And the personalities of performers here seems to basically warmer than in many other cities."[29]
Undated – The band ? and the Mysterians was formed with members from Bay City and Saginaw
The following is a list of major companies based in Michigan in 1962.
January 2 – Jerome Cavanagh, a 33 year old lawyer, was sworn in as Mayor of Detroit. Three new members of the Detroit Common Council, including Mel Ravitz and James H. Brickley, were also sworn in.[31]
January 9 – A blizzard dropped 24 inches of snow across the northern lower peninsula. It was the worst blizzard to hit the state in 15 years.[32]
January 11 – Gov. John Swainson delivered his State of the State address to the Michigan legislature, calling for increased support for higher education and mental health.[33]
January 22 – A federal lawsuit was filed charging Detroit with maintaining a racially segregated school system.[34]
January 30 – The Wallenda family, performing a high wire pyramid in front of 7,000 spectators at the Shrine Circus at Detroit's State Fair Coliseum, sustained two deaths and three other injuries when the pyramid collapsed.[35]Karl Wallenda sustained a pelvis injury, his son-in-law and nephew both died, and his adopted son, Mario, was paralyzed from the waist down.[36] Remaining members of the family went on with the show the next day.[37]
February
February – A research and development team from Michigan State University working in South Vietnam to develop the country's civil administration was asked to leave the country by the government of Ngo Dinh Diem following publication of critical articles by members of the team.[38]
February 10 – George W. Romney declared himself a candidate for Governor.[39] Two days later, he resigned as chairman and president of American Motors.[40] Following criticism of Romney for his Mormon faith, Gov. John Swainson revealed that he, too, had been raised as a Mormon (later converting to the Lutheran faith) and declared: "I want to see the discussion of religion eliminated as a campaign matter."[41]
February 10 – Frederic Pryor, a resident of Ann Arbor, was released from an East German prison as part of a prisoner swap that also included Gary Francis Powers.[42] On arriving in Ann Arbor, Pryor expressed his desire to resume a normal life and not have his story used for cheap propaganda.[43]
February 13 – Harold M. Ryan was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives from Michigan's 14th District by a margin of 764 votes over Robert E. Waldron. The special election was set following the death of Republican Congressman Louis C. Rabaut, who introduced legislation that added the words "under God" to the Pledge of Allegiance.[44]
February 14 – The front page of the Detroit Free Press features a story by James Reston claiming that the United States was involved in an undeclared war in South Vietnam with 4,000 Americans on the ground and an unknown number of casualties.[45]
February 20 – As John Glenn was launched as the first American to orbit the Earth, the Detroit Free Press reported that "a humming city halted," and a "strange stillness settled" on the city.[46]
March
March 10 – A 32-member citizen advisory committee presented its 349-page report with findings and recommendations regarding racial segregation in Detroit schools.[47]
March 12 – Detroit's Common Council approved the demolition and clearing of the city's skid row, a 59-acre area bounded by W. Lafayette, Bagley, Cass and the John C. Lodge Freeway.[48]
March 16 – The Michigan Supreme Court overturned a $400,000 jury verdict in favor Carl Renda and against the United Auto Workers (UAW). The verdict was entered on Renda's malicious prosecution claim for his 1954 arrest following the 1948 shotgun shooting of UAW President Walter Reuther.[50]
March 20 – The Detroit Pistons defeated the Cincinnati Royals to advance to the NBA's Western Division finals against the Los Angeles Lakers. The Pistons won the decisive fourth game in the playoff series by a 112–111 score despite 32 points scored by Oscar Robertson.[51]
March 24 – Following an investigation into racketeer influence in the Teamsters Union, the U.S. Senate Rackets Investigating Committee accused Teamster President Jimmy Hoffa of protecting racketeers and criminals in the union.[52]
March 26 – The Detroit Pistons selected Dave DeBusschere of the University of Detroit in the NBA's territorial draft.[53] DeBusschere went on to play seven seasons for the Pistons and was an NBA All-Star nine times.
March 27 – Federal authorities reported that raw sewage and industrial waste were polluting water in Lake St. Clair, the Detroit River and Lake Erie. The City of Dearborn's dumping of raw and inadequately treated sewage was cited was cited as a source of concern.[54]
March 30 – Byron White, who had been an All-Pro halfback for the Detroit Lions in 1940, was appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court by President Kennedy.[55]
April
April 3 – The U.S. Army abandoned a plan to move tank manufacturing operations from the Detroit Arsenal to the Rock Island Arsenal, saving 3,000 jobs in Detroit.[56]
April 6 – Detroit Mayor Cavanagh unveiled his plan to initiate a one percent income tax on city residents and income earned in the city by non-residents.[57] The plan was adopted by the city's Common Council. A bill to prohibit commuter income taxes on non-residents was passed by the Michigan legislature, but was vetoed by Gov. Swainson.
April 6 – Air Force Maj. Milton Britton, a 39-year old from Owosso, became the first person from Michigan to be killed in the Vietnam War.[58][59]
April 9 – In their season opener, the Detroit Tigers lost to the Washington Senators in the first Major League Baseball game played at the new D.C. Stadium (later renamed Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium). John F. Kennedy threw out the first pitch. Don Mossi was the Tigers' opening day starter and the losing pitcher.[60]
April 10 – Ford Motor announced that it had abandoned its plan to produce a subcompact car called the Cardinal, though a modified version was to be manufactured and sold in Europe.[61] The modified version was manufactured starting in 1962 in Germany as the Ford Taunus P4.
April 11 – A strike by Jimmy Hoffa's Teamsters Union shut down both of Detroit's major newspapers, the Detroit Free Press and The Detroit News. The two papers published a single joint paper on Sunday, April 15,[62] but the newspapers otherwise remained dark until the strike ended on May 10. The Free Press resumed publication until May 11.[63]
May
May 10 - Michigan's first indoor shopping mall, the Pontiac Mall (later renamed Summit Place), opened. The 60-acre development featured 42 stores that could be visited under a single roof with air conditioning in the summer and heating in the winter. The largest store was a two-level Montgomery Ward store. Other stores included a J.L. Hudson Budget Shop, Kroger's, S.S. Kresge, and Cunningham Drug. The mall had 500,000 square feet of shopping space, 120 sculptures, and parking for 4,000 cars. The Great Wallendas performed at the grand opening.[64]
May 17 - Teamsters President Jimmy Hoffa was arrested in Washington, D.C., for allegedly beating Samuel Baron, a 59-year-old field director of the union's warehouse division, who Hoffa accused of not doing his job properly. Hoffa allegedly "went berserk" and hit Baron, knocking him to the ground, then picked him up and hit him again.[65] The charges were dropped several weeks later due to serious conflicts in eyewitness accounts.[66]
May 17 - George Romney urged Richard Durant and other members of the John Birch Society, an ultra-right organization, to resign their jobs positions in the Republican Party. He said he didn't like extremists from either side of the political spectrum and added of the John Birch members, "Anyone so identified is not capable of leadership, and should be replaced."[67] Durant resigned from the Birch Society in August and reconciled with Romney.[68] The Romney-Durant rift resurfaced as Durant was accused of distributing Birch literature, then publicly asserted his belief in Birchism.[69][70] At the state Republican convention on August 25, Romney denounced the Birch Society and Durant.[71]
May 18 - One day after his assault arrest, U. S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy announced that Jimmy Hoffa had been indicted by a federal grand jury on charges that he and an associated took more than $1 million in payoffs from a Detroit trucking firm between 1949 and 1958.[72]
May 18 - Gov. Swainson conceded that his fiscal reform plan, which included imposition of a state income tax, was dead due to opposition by Republicans in the legislature.[73]
May 20 - The Detroit Free Press reported that the city's cultural status was on the rise. A week of seven performances by the Metropolitan Opera at Detroit Masonic Temple sold out, and the Fisher Theater had 23,000 subscribers, making it the biggest pre-paid theater program in the country. The city's resident Vanguard theater company was also having its best season. Alvin Toffler also ranked the Detroit Symphony Orchestra among the top ten in the country.[74]
May 21 - The Detroit Free Press reported on a building boom in the Detroit area, with most of the construction occurring in the suburbs.[75]
May 22 - Wayne State University President Clarence Hilberry banned planned speeches on the campus by social justice activist Carl Braden and civil liberties activist Frank Wilkinson who was jailed for refusing to answer questions before the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC). The two had been scheduled to speak on HUAC.[76]
May 26 - Al Kaline broke his collarbone "while making a sensational, game-saving catch" against the New York Yankees. He was lost to the Tigers for two months.[77]
May 27 - Governor Swainson accused the Detroit Real Estate Board assessing each of its members $25 to raise funds to support a fight in favor housing discrimination, a campaign that Swainson called "an exercise in organized bigotry".[78]
May 28 - A strike by the Carpenters Union brought residential construction to a halt in Wayne, Oakland, Macomb, St. Clair, and Monroe Counties.[79] The strike ended on June 4 with an agreement to a 10 cents per hour pay raise.[80]
June
June 1 - The Detroit Free Press reported on a split in the Wayne County Republican Party between a moderate faction and John Birch Society conservatives.[81]
June 1 - The U.S. Army's Mobility Command was created with its headquarters in Detroit. Maj. Gen. Alden Sibley called it "the most important peacetime military procurement activity ever centered in Detroit."[82]
June 4 - A Circuit Court Judge in Ingham County struck down Michigan's Rule 9 forbidding housing discrimination by real estate agents. Governor Swainson criticized the ruling, and Attorney General Frank Kelley vowed to appeal with dispatch.[83]
June 11 - Henry Ford II announced that Ford Motor would no longer abide by an Automobile Manufacturers Association resolution against advertising speed or horsepower of automobiles. The move was expected "to open the gates to another horsepower race by American auto makers."[84]
June 19 - The Michigan Fair Employment Practices Commission found Northwest Airlines guilty of discrimination and ordered it to hire African American clerk, Marlene White, as a stewardess.[86]
June 6–25 - A strike by 3,200 UAW members at Ford Motors' stamping plant in Walton Hills, Ohio, shut down all of the company's assembly plants and many of its manufacturing facilities.[87] The strike lasted 1 days and ended on June 24.[88]
June 24 - The Detroit Tigers and New York Yankees played the longest game in elapsed time in Major League Baseball history—seven hours and 22 innings. The Yankees won, 9–7, on a Jack Reed home run off Phil Regan.[89]
June 28 - At a White House meeting with President Kennedy, Governor Swainson announced that Burroughs Corp. had been awarded an Air Force contract to build "BUIC"—an automated computer system to provide early warnings of the approach of enemy aircraft. The contract was expected to create 1,000 new jobs in Detroit.[90]
July
July 1 - A series of state nuisance taxes went into effect in Michigan, including seven cents on a pack of cigarettes, two cents for a bottle of beer, eight percent on bottles of liquor, and four percent on telephone calls and telegrams.[91]
July 1 - Detroit's one percent income tax, including a commuter tax on non-residents working in Detroit went into effect.[92] A legal challenge to the commuter tax was rejected by Wayne County Circuit Judge Neal Fitzgerald on July 2.[93]
July 1 - Detroit Mayor Cavanagh's two-and-a-half year old son, Christopher, was choked and pinned at the neck by an automatic car window. He remained unconscious and near death for 10 minutes until receiving mouth-to-mouth respiration by an FBI agent.[94]
July 3 - A crowd estimated at between 500,000 and 600,000 watched the annual International Freedom Festival fireworks display on the Detroit River.[95]
July 10 - An investigation into Detroit's municipal garbage incinerators results in the indictment of 30 city employees and five private contractors. The contractors allegedly bribed the workers to allow them to use the incinerators without paying over $1 million in fees.[96]
July 18 - The Michigan Supreme Court ordered redistricting of Michigan Senate seats with equal representation in each district. The old districts were created in 1952, had populations as low as 55,806 in the Upper Peninsula and as high as 690,583 in Oakland County,[98] and were held to violate the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Court also cancelled the August 7 primary elections for the Senate seats and ordered the legislature and governor urgently to draw new districts. The Detroit Free Press called the decision "a political revolution which may realign the balance of rural-urban power."[99] Republican leaders in the legislature threatened to impeach the justices.[100]
July 20 - General Motors reported a record $776 million in earnings in the first half of 1962. It also reported record sales of $7.691 billion and record payroll of $1.936 billion during the same period.[101]
July 25 - Ford Motor reported earnings of $268.3 and sales of $4.042 billion for the first half of 1962.[102]
July 27 - After hearing arguments from both sides in a small New Hampshire courthouse, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart temporarily stayed the Michigan Supreme Court's redistricting order until the full court could hear the matter in the fall.[103]
July 30 - A British freighter, the Montrose, sank in the Detroit River after it collided with a cement barge.[104] The Montrose was towed away on November 19.[105]
July 30 - Detroit architect Minoru Yamasaki was named "Nisei of the Biennium" at the 17th biennial Japanese-American Citizens League convention.[106]
July - Detroit's 1963 automobile offerings included 22 cars with more than 300 horsepower and 12 over 400 horsepower. New models included the Buick Riviera and Studebaker Avanti. Cadillac introduced a high-compression V-8 engine with 325 horsepower.[107]
August
August - Revival meetings by Texas faith healer Gene Ewing draw large crowds to his tent in Highland Park and criticism from mainstream religious leaders and the press.[108][109][110][111] On August 24, Highland Park officials ordered Ewing to move his tent out of the city within two days.[112]
August - A divorce action filed in 1961 by Horace Dodge, Jr., against his fifth wife, Gregg Sherwood, a former showgirl, became public.[113] The divorce proceedings remained a prominent topic in the news through the remainder of 1962, much of it focusing on alleged extravagant spending by Mrs. Dodge and alleged excessive drinking by Mr. Dodge.[114][115][116][117][118][119][120]
August 7 - In Michigan's primary elections, John Swainson and George Romney were unopposed as the gubernatorial candidates of the Democrat and Republican parties.[121] The defeat of 12 incumbents in the state legislature was viewed as a slap at the legislators for increasing their pay and imposing new "nuisance" taxes.[122]
August 12 - Barbara Holliday began publishing a series of six articles on the front page of the Detroit Free Press detailing her undercover experience starting in February as a member of the John Birch Society.[123]
August 13 - George Romney vowed that, if elected Governor of Michigan, he would not run for president in 1964.[124]
August 17 - The final 1962 model automobiles were manufactured. The total output was 6,685,000, a 23.6% increase over the 1961 model year and the second highest total in industry history, trailing only the 1955 model year with 7,136,000 vehicles manufactured.[125]
August 18 - An accident at the Calvert Distillery in Amherstburg, Ontario, resulted in 5,000 gallons (or 640,000 shots) of 100-proof whisky being dumped into the Detroit River.[126]
August 30 - The U.S. Justice Department filed an antitrust suit against General Motors seeking an injunction preventing the company from controlling the prices at which dealers sell the company's automobiles.[127]
August 31 - Democratic State Chairman Joe Collins filed a protest with the National Fair Practices Campaign Committee after George Romney asserted that Communist infiltration was currently a problem in the Democratic Party. After the protest, Romney clarified that he was not asserting that there were Communists in the Democratic Party at the present time.[128]
September
September 3 - At Detroit's annual Labor Day celebration, John Swainson and Walter Reuther spoke at the Michigan State Fairgrounds. Reuther campaigned to get people registered and out to vote on November 6 to reelect Gov. Swainson and to give President Kennedy the Congress he needed to enact his agenda.[129]George Romney's request for an invitation to speak at the event was rejected, but he showed up to march in the parade and to listen to the speeches.[130]
September 3 - The Michigan State Fair closed for the year with record-setting attendance that exceeded 1 million persons.[131]
September 16 - Two boys, ages 10 and 12, suffocated and died east of Grand Rapids when a clay pit at Murray Lake collapsed on them.[132]
September 17 - Nine new astronauts were introduced to the country. The group included Kalamazoo High School and University of Michigan graduate James McDivitt.[134]
September 21 - University of Michigan research scientist Stephen Dinka aided Hungarian dancer Emese Szklenkay escape from her Communist watchdogs while she was in Paris. Dinka and Sklenkay fled to Ann Arbor where Dinka was married to Szklenkay's sister.[136] The escape was the subject of a five-part series on the front page of the Detroit Free Press,[137][138] and President Kennedy met with Szlenkay on October 6.[139]
October - Automobile sales of 722,886 set an all-time record for a single month, passing the previous record of 702,400 set in April 1955.[141]
October 5–6 - President Kennedy campaigned in Michigan for Governor Swainson and Democratic Congressional nominees. A veteran Secret Service officer said that the crowds greeting Kennedy in Detroit were the largest he had seen for a presidential visit since Franklin Roosevelt.[142] Kennedy also appeared in Flint and Muskegon.[143]
October 5 - Two freighters collided in the fog on Lake St. Clair. There were no injuries, though one of the freighters, the Hutchcliffe Hall, was badly damaged. The other ship maneuvered the Hutchcliffe Hall to shallow waters near the Grosse Pointe Farms municipal pier so that it could sink with the decks above water level.[144]
October 7 - Unemployment figures for September showed an unemployment rate in Michigan of 4.9%, the lowest since 1955. Approximately 140,000 persons were unemployed in Michigan out of a workforce of 2,868,000.[145]
October 8 - Gov. Swainson and George Romney met for a one-hour debate at the Detroit Economic Club.[146] A second televised debate was held the next day.[147] Telephone polling found low interest in the debate and lack of consensus as to who won the debate.[148]
October 10 - George Romney met with Detroit Mayor Cavanagh. Cavanagh insisted on remaining neutral in the gubernatorial race.[151]
October 11 - Gov. Swainson distanced himself from a committee supporting him after it issued campaign literature touting Swainson's loss of both legs in a land mine explosion while serving in World War II.[152]
October 13 - Michigan State defeated Michigan, 28–0, and Sherman Lewis scored three touchdowns in the battle for the Paul Bunyan Trophy. The game was played before a crowd of 77,501, a record crowd at Spartan Stadium in East Lansing.[153]
October 16 - Detroit was selected by the United States Olympic Committee as the United States' nominee as host city for the 1968 Summer Olympics.[154]
October 20 - The 44th National Automobile Show opened at Cobo Hall in Detroit. The opening ceremony touted industry statistics, including automobile employment in the United States totaling 2,233,000. New models attracting the most attention included the Studebaker Avanti, Buick Riviera, and a new sport coupe Chevrolet Corvette Sting Ray.[155] Attendance over the 10 days of the show totaled 1,137,627.[156]
October 22 - As the Cuban Missile Crisis gripped the country with a blockade of Cuba, Detroit Mayor Cavanagh urged business leaders at the Automobile Show to unite behind President Kennedy.[157] On October 23, Michigan-based military units were on alert, and six Strategic Air CommandB-47 Stratojet bombers landed at Detroit Metro Airport.[158]
October 24 - Mrs. Edsel Ford pledged $1 million to the Detroit Institute of Arts, the largest single gift made to the City of Detroit to that time.[159]
October 28–31 - Amid fear following the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Detroit Free Press published a series of articles on its front page detailing the likely impact if an atomic bomb were dropped on Detroit and offering tips for survival.[160]
October 28 - Democratic Party officials in Michigan charged that the Committee for Honest Elections was using tactics suited to the Gestapo or Soviet Secret Police to intimidate black voters.[161]
October 29 - General Motors announced record-setting third quarter results, including $10.45 billion in sales and $962 million in net income.[162]
November
November 3 - Employment figures for October were released, showing an unemployment rate of 4.5% in Michigan with 128,000 persons lacking jobs. The unemployment rate was the lowest since 1955 when the rate dipped to 2.8%.[163]
* In the race for Michigan's at-large Congressional seat, a seat resulting from a new Congressional seat being awarded to the state and the state's inability to adopt a redistricting plan, Democrat Neil Staebler of Ann Arbor defeated Republican Alvin Morell Bentley of Owosso.[167] No Michigan Congressional districts changed parties, as 17 incumbents were reelected, and Republican J. Edward Hutchinson won the District 4 seat previously held for 28 years by Republican Clare Hoffman.
November 8 - After the best start in team history (8-0-2), the Detroit Red Wings suffered the first loss of their 1962–63 season, falling 4–1 to the Montreal Canadiens.[168]
November 9 - The Ford Rotunda in Dearborn, the fifth most popular tourist site in the mid-20th century, was destroyed by fire. The fire began in the early afternoon on the roof and quickly consumed the structure. A maintenance worker, John Riley, remained in the building to turn off gas and electrical lines, suffered smoke inhalation, and was the only person injured.[169]
November 9 - More than 100 city, state, and federal officers raided the Gotham Hotel in Detroit. The hotel was alleged to be the headquarters of the city's numbers gambling ring. A total of 41 arrests were made.[170]
November 11 - The $13 million interchange between the Chrysler (I-75) and Ford Freeways (I-94) was partially completed and opened to traffic. It was the first interchange in Michigan between two interstate highways.[171]
November 15 - American Motors distributed $3.2 million in stock to 27,000 workers as part of the first profit-sharing plan in the automobile industry.[172] Two weeks later, UAW President Walter Reuther warned that the auto industry's Big Three would need in 1964 to provide similar profit-sharing programs or provide the equivalent in wages.[173]
November 18 - In a move seen as a setback by those seeking to challenge to the authority of Teamsters president Jimmy Hoffa, long-distance truckers voted 3,780 to 3,274 to remain with the Teamsters rather than join the AFL-CIO.[174] Six days later, Hoffa loyalists held a rally at Cobo Hall in Detroit. At the rally, Hoffa attacked several U.S. Senators, referred to Robert F. Kennedy as "Bobby Boy", and denounced newspaper stories about him as "a barrage of filth and slime."[175]
November 22 - The Detroit Lions defeated the Green Bay Packers, 26–14, on Thanksgiving Day in Detroit, snapping the Packers' 19-game unbeaten streak. The Lions sacked Bart Starr for 110 yards in losses.[176]
November 26 - Detroit Mayor Cavanagh signed into law an ordinance prohibiting realtors from trying to generate sales and rentals by claiming that a neighborhood is about to undergo a racial, religious or ethnic change.[177] Two days later, Cavanagh signed a law providing for fluoridation of Detroit's water.[178]
November 29 - George Fitzgerald, Teamsters attorney since 1935, was fired after testifying in the bribery trial of Jimmy Hoffa in Nashville. Fitzgerald testified he cashed a $15,000 check at Hoffa's request and delivered the money to Hoffa. Hoffa claimed Fitzgerald resigned, but Hoffa was quoted as telling Fitzgerald in the hallway outside the courtroom: "You're all through. Turn in your books and records."[179]
December
December 5 - Jimmy Hoffa was shot with a pellet gun by assailant Warren Swanson while in the Nashville courtroom where he was being tried on bribery charges. After being shot, Hoffa jumped from his chair and punched Swanson in the jaw, knocking him to the ground.[180] Hoffa's motion for a mistrial was denied, and the jury was sequestered and one juror removed.[181] It was later revealed that the juror was removed after a Teamster official met with her husband in alleged attempt at jury tampering. A second juror was removed after telling the judge that he had been offered $10,000 to vote against conviction.[182]
December 5 - Cadillac announced a $55 million plan to expand its production facilities in Detroit. It was the largest industrial expansion in Detroit since World War II.[183]
December 7 - The Fisher brothers sold the 28-story Fisher Building in Detroit's New Center district for $15 million to a group led by Louis Berry and George D. Seyburn.[184]
December 7 - Samuel Shapiro, a history professor at Michigan State University-Oakland, was fired after visiting Cuba with the pro-Castro Fair Play for Cuba Committee.[185]
December 8 - Jimmy Hoffa was reelected as president of Detroit Teamsters Local 299.[186]
December 11 - Much of western Michigan was buried in snow, with snowfall in Paw Paw totaling 48 inches.[187]
December 11 - Developers revealed that a new hotel to be built across from the Cobo Hall, the first major hotel to be built in Detroit in over 30 years, would be named the Pontchartrain (later renamed the Crowne Plaza Detroit Downtown Riverfront), which was the original name of the city and the name of an old hotel in the city.[188]
December 12 - A special Vincent van Gogh retrospective consisting of 80 painting and 60 drawings opened at the Detroit Institute of Arts. The exhibition ran through January 27, 1963.[189] The exhibition broke the museum's attendance record,[190] drawing 147,000 persons.[191]
March 4 - Hanley Dawson, bank teller to Henry Ford who was given a Detroit Ford dealership in 1911, in Birmingham at age 73[195]
March 20 - John Tjaarda, Dutch-born designer of kitchenware and automobiles whose innovations included the first rear-engine auto in the United States, independent wheel suspension, and fully automatic drives, in Diamond Springs, California, at age 65[196]
March 24 - Jean Goldkette, Detroit bandleader who "discovered" the Dorsey brothers, Artie Shaw, and Glen Gray, in Santa Barbara, California, at age 67[197]
August 7 - Matt Mann, swimming coach at the University of Michigan since 1921, at Camp Chikopi in Ontario at age 77[207]
August 11 - David M. Borden, chief automotive research engineer for Chrysler and developer of the company's gas-turbine engine, in Royal Oak at age 60[208]
September 14 - Frederick Schule, track star at the University of Michigan, gold medalist in 110 meter hurdles at 1904 Summer Olympics, in DeRuyter, New York, at age 82[210]
December 7 - Bobo Newsom, baseball pitcher who compiled a 21–5 record in leading the 1940 Detroit Tigers to the American League penant, in Orlando, Florida, at age 55[212]
December 29 - Sam Dibert, bandleader, in Detroit at age 55[213]