• In retaliation for the
Palos incident of the previous week, the German cruiser
Königsberg forced the Spanish steamer
Soton aground near
Santander while the
Graf Spee stopped another steamer, the
Aragon, and forced it to change course to a
Nationalist-held port. The
Spanish government called Germany's recent naval actions "acts of aggression and war." Germany sent a note offering to release the
Aragon and cease attacks on Spanish shipping as soon as restitution was made for the loss of cargo of the
Palos, a proposal which Spain rejected. The Act, given royal assent on December 18, was aimed at the
British Union of Fascists, led by
Oswald Mosley, whose black shirt uniforms had been modeled after those of the Fascist Party of Italy. • General
Anastasio Somoza García was inaugurated as the 21st
President of Nicaragua in a colorful ceremony on the parade grounds at the foot of Loma Hill in
Managua. beginning 19 years of rule that would last until his assassination in 1956, and control of Nicaragua by the
Somoza family until 1979. Somoza, commander of the
Nicaraguan National Guard, succeeded
Carlos Alberto Brenes, whom he had installed after leading a military coup d'état on June 9, and
winning a fraudulent election on December 8. •
Alan Turing's seminal 1936 paper on the principles of modern computing was published, titled
On Computable Numbers, with an Application to the Entscheidungsproblem, and presenting the concept of a
Universal Turing Machine. • In American college football, with the Associated Press having issued
its final rankings on November 30, the #3 ranked
Pittsburgh Panthers beat the #5 ranked
Washington Huskies, 21 to 0, in the
Rose Bowl in
Pasadena, California. The #2 ranked
LSU Tigers lost to the
Santa Clara Broncos, 21–14 in the
Sugar Bowl. Because the
Big Ten Conference did not allow its members to play in postseason bowl games, the #1 ranked
Minnesota Golden Gophers (who had beaten the Washington Huskies in their season opener) remained idle. • The
first Cotton Bowl was played in
Dallas as the highest ranked team in
Texas, the
TCU Horned Frogs beat the
Marquette Golden Avalanche 16–6. •
Born: •
Sayed Amjad Hussain, Pakistani-born American cardiothoracic surgeon who developed the pleuroperitoneal shunt and a special endotracheal tube; in
Peshawar,
North West Frontier Province,
British India (now
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in
Pakistan) •
Porter W. Anderson Jr., American microbiologist known for developing a vaccine against
bacterial meningitis from the influenza virus
H. influenzae B. •
Vinod Kumar Shukla, Indian
Hindi novelist; in
Rajnandgaon,
princely state of
Nangaon,
British India (now in
Chhattisgarh state of India) •
Chuck Davis, African-American choreographer and dancer who founded
DanceAfrica, the Chuck Davis Dance Company, and the African American Dance Ensemble; in
Raleigh, North Carolina (d. 2017) •
Matt Robinson, African-American TV actor known for portraying one of the human characters on the first seasons of
Sesame Street; in
Philadelphia (d. 2002) •
Lenita Airisto, Finnish business leader and TV journalist, former beauty pageant winner; in
Helsinki •
Died: • Lieutenant Colonel
Frederick I. Eglin, U.S. Army officer and pilot for whom
Eglin Air Force Base is named. Eglin and a co-pilot, Lieutenant Howard E. Shelton, were killed in the crash of a
Northrop A-17 airplane into the side of
Cheaha Mountain in the U.S. state of Alabama. • Father
William J. Stanton, Canadian Roman Catholic missionary and former Canadian football coach, was killed in a car accident when his automobile overturned in a ditch as he was driving from
Cedar Springs, Ontario to
Blenheim, Ontario. •
Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati, 62, Hindu Bengali Indian theologian of the
Gaudiya Vaishnavi sect ==January 2, 1937 (Saturday)==