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August 1968

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The following events occurred in August 1968:

August 20, 1968: Soviet Union and 750,000 Warsaw Pact troops invade Czechoslovakia

August 1, 1968 (Thursday) Edit

August 2, 1968 (Friday) Edit

  • The five-story tall Ruby Towers apartment building, located in the Santa Cruz district of Manila, collapsed during a 7.6 magnitude earthquake that struck the Philippines island of Luzon at 4:21 in the morning, killing 204 people. The quake, with an epicenter at the city of Casiguran, 140 miles (230 km) away, killed 10 people in rural areas outside Manila.[6][7]
  • Ahmed Sékou Touré, the President of the Guinea, spoke at the city of Kankan and announced his plans for a West African version of China's Cultural Revolution, with plans "to attack fetishism, charlatanism, religious fanaticism, any irrational attitude, any form of mystification, and any form of exploitation".[8] In order to further instruction in his concept of Socialist Cultural Theory, Touré ordered the creation of Centres d'Education Revolutionnaire to educate the next generation of leaders, and ordered citizens to join Pouvoir Revolutionnaire Locales to force change in towns and villages, as well as monopolizing all media.[9]
  • Eighty-two of the 95 people on board Alitalia Airlines Flight 660 survived despite the DC-8's crash into a tree-covered hillside as it was approaching Milan following a flight from Rome.[10][11]
  • Colonel Abdallah Salih Sabah al-Awlaqi, the commander of the national security forces of the relatively new People's Republic of Southern Yemen (South Yemen) defected along with 200 of his soldiers to the older Yemen Arab Republic in North Yemen, taking with him most of South Yemen's fleet of armored cars.[12]
  • A suicidal pilot stole a Cessna-180 airplane from an airstrip at Jean, Nevada, then flew to Las Vegas and crashed into the top of what was, at the time, the tallest building in the metropolitan area, the 30-story tall Landmark Hotel and Casino in Paradise. The wreckage then fell onto the adjacent Las Vegas Convention Center. The pilot was killed, but nobody on the ground was injured.[13]
  • Sirhan Sirhan pleaded not guilty to charges of murdering Senator Robert F. Kennedy in June.[14]
  • Born:
  • Died: Melitón Manzanas, 62, Spanish police superintendent and director of the Brigada Político-Social secret police force in San Sebastián, was assassinated by the Basque separatist group, Euskadi Ta Askatasuna (ETA) at his home in Irún.[16]

August 3, 1968 (Saturday) Edit

  • The Bratislava Declaration was signed by the leaders of the Communist parties of host nation Czechoslovakia, and neighboring Communist-ruled regimes in the Soviet Union, Bulgaria, Hungary, East Germany and Poland. Officially, the meeting in Czechoslovakia was called the "Declaration of Six Communist and Labor Parties of the Socialist Countries".[17] Specifically, the parties agreed to the Brezhnev doctrine (from Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev) that the Communist nations should agree on common policies and to “firmly and resolutely set their unbreakable solidarity and their high degree of vigilance against each and every effort by imperialism and also by all other anti-communist forces to weaken the leading role of the working class and the communist parties" and pledging that "They will never allow anyone to drive a wedge between socialist States or to undermine the foundations of the socialist social system.” The six nations agreed to work together for "the interests of all fraternal countries and parties, the cause of the unbreakable friendship of the peoples of our countries, and the interests of peace, democracy, national independence, and socialism.”[18] The last Soviet Army troops departed from Czechoslovakia on the same day, more than a month after the end of Warsaw Pact military exercises on June 30.[19] Troops would return 17 days later in an invasion of Czechoslovakia.
  • During the meeting, five conservative members of the Czechoslovakian Communist Party Politburo signed and had delivered a "letter of invitation" that Brezhnev would refer to as the pretext for invasion, but which would not be revealed until almost 24 years later. Vasil Bilak, Alois Indra, Drahomir Kolder, Oldrich Svestka and Antonin Kapek signed the letter, typewritten and written in Russian, that "The very essence of socialism in our country is in danger," and added "In such complex conditions we are addressing you, Soviet Communists... with a plea to provide support and help with all the means available. Take our declaration as an urgent request for your intervention and general help."[20] On July 16, 1992, after the collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe, Russian President Boris Yeltsin would deliver the original letter to Czechoslovakia's President Vaclav Havel, who would disclose it the next day.[21]
  • Born: Rod Beck, American baseball pitcher (died 2007)
  • Died:

August 4, 1968 (Sunday) Edit

August 5, 1968 (Monday) Edit

August 6, 1968 (Tuesday) Edit

  • The United Kingdom submitted a comprehensive proposal at the meeting of the Eighteen Nation Committee on Disarmament in Geneva, that would ultimately become the basis of the 1972 Biological Weapons Convention. The "Working Document on Microbiological Warfare" pointed out six shortcomings of the Geneva Protocol of 1925, including that it was limited to bacteriological and chemical weapons, that it applied only during declarations of war, that it prohibited the use, but not the manufacture of weapons and that it allowed their use against nations that weren't party to the agreement.[27]
  • The United States Air Force made the first unannounced satellite launch from Cape Kennedy in almost five years, although many local reporters learned about the plan anyway, and were present for the 7:08 a.m. liftoff. Although the secret launch was no secret, the nature of the payload — referred to only as "Agent 817" — remained classified and was thought to be intended to gather intelligence from the Soviet Union and China. The last attempt at a secret launch had been on October 16, 1963; the Associated Press commented, "That shot received such wide publicity that the Pentagon de-classified the project and opened all future launchings to newsmen."[28] In 1990, "Agent 817" would be revealed to have been the first of the USAF's CANYON project of seven spy satellites sent up between 1968 and 1977.[29]

August 7, 1968 (Wednesday) Edit

  • Former U.S. Vice-President Richard M. Nixon completed a dramatic political comeback by being nominated for president at the Republican National Convention on the first ballot. Needing 667 delegate votes, Nixon clinched the nomination when the roll call reached the 49th of the 50 state delegations and was given all 30 of Wisconsin's votes. He finished with 692. New York Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller was second with 287, and California Governor Ronald Reagan received 182.[30]
  • More than 1,000 people drowned in the Gujarat State of India, after heavy rains during the monsoon season caused the Tapti River to overflow its banks.[31] The state capital, Surat, was submerged beneath 10 feet of water for a week.[32] After the floodwaters receded, at least 1,000 more people died in Gujarat state during a cholera epidemic from the contamination of the drinking water.[33] In the years after the flood, the Ukai Dam (which would open in 1972) would be constructed to bring the Tapti's waters under control and to provide hydroelectric power.
  • Nine coal miners were killed in an explosion and subsequent slate fall at Peabody Coal Company's River Queen Mine, near Greenville, Kentucky.[34]

August 8, 1968 (Thursday) Edit

  • Maryland Governor Spiro Agnew was selected by Richard Nixon to be his choice for vice-presidential running mate. Agnew was nominated on the first ballot, receiving 1,128 of the 1,333 delegate votes, while Michigan Governor George Romney, a proposal advanced by some liberal Republican delegates, got 178 votes, and another 27 votes were scattered among several other nominees. Following the roll call, Governor Romney made a successful motion that Agnew's nomination be accepted unanimously by acclamation.[35] Almost a year later, in the publication of The Making of the President, 1968, author Theodore H. White would reveal that Nixon had offered the vice presidential job first to Robert Finch, the incumbent Lieutenant Governor of California at the time, and that Finch had declined (Nixon, at the time, was a resident of New York).[36]
  • East Germany's Premier and Communist Party First Secretary Walter Ulbricht sent a proposal to his West Germany counterpart, Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger, seeking a summit for economic cooperation between the two German nations. Ulbricht's note was viewed in the west as a signal of "the failure and abandonment" of störfreimachen, a 1960 program to make East Germany independent of West German products. The next day, Ulbricht spoke at the East German parliament, the Volkskammer, and offered to normalize relations with the West.[37]
  • Died:

August 9, 1968 (Friday) Edit

August 10, 1968 (Saturday) Edit

  • Piedmont Airlines Flight 230 crashed short of the runway while approaching Charleston, West Virginia at the end of its flight from Cincinnati.[42] Only two passengers out of the 37 people aboard survived.[43]
  • The Politburo of the Soviet Union's Communist Party voted to accept a proposal to begin discussions with the United States to limit and reduce the number of offensive and defensive antiballistic missiles (ABMs), though not the nuclear warheads carried by the missiles. The Soviet decision set the way for the signing of the 1972 ABM Treaty.[44]
  • The International Convention for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants, signed on December 2, 1961, went into effect after its ratification by just three nations.[45] Referred to as "The UPOV Convention" for its creation of the enforcement agency, the Union internationale pour la Protection des Obtentions Végétales, the treaty gave intellectual property rights to the creators of new strains of existing products through plant breeding.

August 11, 1968 (Sunday) Edit

  • The last steam passenger train service in Britain came to an end. A selection of British Railways steam locomotives made the 120-mile journey from Liverpool to Carlisle and back in what is now called the Fifteen Guinea Special.[46] The £15 price of the ride was equivalent at the time to more than USD $40 per person, and more than £240 in 2018.
  • The Deep Sea Drilling Project began operations as the D/V Glomar Challenger began its first core-drilling operation under the planning of the Joint Oceanographic Institutions for Deep Earth Sampling.[47]
  • A referendum was conducted in the Spanish west African colony of Equatorial Guinea, comprising the territories of the island of Fernando Pó (now Bioko) and the mainland territory of Río Muni, for approval of a constitution that provided for a republican government. Under voting supervised by United Nations observers and passed by a 63% to 37% margin (72,458 yes and 41,197 no).[48] Approval by the voters in Río Muni was more significant than on Fernando Pó, where the approval came by just 377 votes (4,763 to 4,486).[49]
  • The Soviet Union, East Germany and Poland began military maneuvers near their nations' borders with Czechoslovakia.[50]
  • Born: Noordin Mohammad Top, Malaysian-born Indonesian terrorist; in Kluang (killed by police, 2009)

August 12, 1968 (Monday) Edit

  • Israel was able to obtain two fully working MiG-17 jet fighters, intact when a couple of Syrian Air Force pilots mistook an airstrip at Betzet for a runway in southern Lebanon Latakia. Lieutenant Walid Adham and 2nd Lieutenant Radfan Rifai came in for a landing, and climbed out, then were stunned when local residents told them that they were on Israeli territory.[51] The Israeli Air Force was soon able to use the two MiG-17s for training missions in maneuvers against its own Shahak 32 jet fighters, and discovered that the MiG-17 could outmaneuver the Israeli fighter jets at low altitudes. Within a year, Israel was able to regain an advantage over the fighter jets of its neighboring enemies.[52]
  • At Nanning, the capital of China's Guangxi Province, political leaders began a seven-week public "Beast and Fowl Exhibit" of Chinese citizens who were branded as enemies of the Cultural Revolution. The prisoners were tied up, placed in a wooden cage for display, and made to wear signs that identified what they were accused of, including treason, espionage, war crimes, or membership in the fictitious "Anti-Communist Party Patriotic Army". Over a period of 52 days, almost half a million (489,365) spectators filed through the Chinese Red Army military headquarters for a "Class-Struggle Education" presentation.[53]

August 13, 1968 (Tuesday) Edit

  • Greece's prime minister and dictator, Georgios Papadopoulos, escaped an assassination attempt when a bomb exploded while his car was still 45 feet (14 m) away. Papadopoulos was on his way back to Athens after a stay at his summer villa in Lagonisi. Former Greek Navy Lieutenant Alexandros Panagoulis, who had been part of an underwater demolition team, misjudged the speed of the premier's car, and detonated the explosive just as the vehicle was entering a tunnel. Panagoulis was caught by police while trying to run toward a getaway motorboat, whereas the boat hadn't been able to reach the shore due to the sea being crowded with swimmers; the boat sped away and was the subject of a massive search.[54] During the next 24 hours, Greek security police arrested more than 100 people suspected as being part of the conspiracy, including three retired Greek officers, air force major general Elias Deros, army brigadier general Ioannides Koumanakos, and Navy Captain Constantine Loundras.[55] Panagoulis would spend five years in Greek prisons before being exiled in 1973.[56] After the overthrow of Papadopoulos in 1974, Panagoulis would be elected to parliament, but would be killed in an automobile accident in 1976.
  • East Germany's Communist Party leader, Walter Ulbricht arrived in Czechoslovakia as the guest of Alexander Dubcek, and the two leaders conferred at the resort town of Karlovy Vary.[57] Ulbricht was unsuccessful in his last attempt to convince the Czechoslovakian leaders to reverse their attempts to introduce "socialism with a human face".[58]
  • An unprecedented number of students and protesters marched to the Zócalo, the main square in Mexico City, to protest against Mexico's president, Gustavo Diaz Ordaz. At 5:00 in the afternoon, a crowd of 50,000 students, professors and supporters started from the university campus of the Instituto Politécnico Nacional and began the 8 miles (13 km) walk to the capital, and by the time they reached the city center, their number had increased to 150,000. The demonstration remained peaceful and the police did not intervene, despite the traffic jams created by the protests.[59] An even larger demonstration would take place two weeks later.
  • Born: Masaneh Kinteh, Gambian military officer and commander of the Gambian Armed Forces from 2009 to 2012 and again from 2017 to 2020; in Sankwia village, Jarra West district
  • Died: Rene d'Harnoncourt, 67, who had retired six weeks earlier from being Director of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, was struck and killed by a car while walking in New Suffolk, New York.

August 14, 1968 (Wednesday) Edit

  • All 21 people on board a Los Angeles Airways helicopter were killed when the Sikorsky S61 broke apart while flying the group of vacationers from the Los Angeles International Airport to Disneyland.[60] The wreckage fell onto a playground at Lueder's Park in Compton. One of the victims was the teenage grandson of the L.A. Airways shuttle director. Moments before the crash, a group of children who had been playing at the site had been led to safety by 14-year-old National Youth Corps volunteer. The crash was the second in less than three months for the Disneyland shuttle service; 23 people had been killed on May 22.
  • Born:

August 15, 1968 (Thursday) Edit

August 16, 1968 (Friday) Edit

  • The United States launched two different multiple warhead missile systems on the same day, firing (for the first time) a UGM-73 Poseidon (capable of carrying 10 separately targeted warheads) from a surface ship, the USNS Observation Island, followed a few hours later by a Minuteman 3 (which could carry 3 warheads) from a U.S. Air Force missile silo.[64]
  • Romania's President and Communist Party leader, Nicolae Ceaușescu, signed a 20-year "treaty of friendship, cooperation and mutual assistance" with Czechoslovakian President Ludvik Svoboda at a meeting in Prague.[65]
  • In one of his last official acts as Prime Minister of Portugal and dictator of the Iberian nation, António de Oliveira Salazar fired seven of his 15 cabinet ministers, including his longtime Interior Minister and head of law enforcement, Alfredo Dos Santos. Salazar, who would suffer a fatal stroke less than three weeks later, also dismissed his Finance Minister, the ministers for the Portuguese Army and the Portuguese Navy, the Health Minister, the Education Minister and the Communications Minister.[66]

August 17, 1968 (Saturday) Edit

  • The third and final phase of the Tet OffensivePhase III— began with a massive attack by the North Vietnamese Army and the Viet Cong on 27 South Vietnamese cities and towns, as well as 47 airfields and 100 outposts.[67] The fighting would continue for more than six weeks, finally ending on September 28.
  • Meeting in a closed session, the 170 members of the Soviet Communist Party's Central Committee decided "by a narrow majority" to authorize the invasion of Czechoslovakia; the decision to intervene in the domestic affairs of another Communist nation would be described later by historian Mary Heimann as "a decision that was to return to haunt subsequent Soviet administrations".[68] The Party's Politburo then approved the Central Committee decision unanimously.[69]
  • Czechoslovakian Premier Oldřich Černík told an Austrian television interviewer that his nation was considering loans from the World Bank and from other foreign banking firms. Unlike aid from the Soviet Union, loans from capitalist nations were not dependent on political preconditions.[70]
  • Hungary's Communist leader, János Kádár, visited Prague and met with Czechoslovakian party leader Alexander Dubcek, "presumably with the consent of the Kremlin".[71] According to one account, Kadar, who had been brought to power by the Soviet invasion of his country in 1956 and who was aware that an invasion of Czechoslovakia was likely, asked Dubcek, "Do you really not know the kind of people who you are dealing with?"[72]
  • Actress Mia Farrow flew from New York to El Paso, Texas, then went across the border to the neighboring city of Ciudad Juárez in Mexico. Thirty minutes later, she was granted a divorce from singer Frank Sinatra, whom she had married in December.[73]

August 18, 1968 (Sunday) Edit

  • One-hundred and four people were killed when a landslide swept two charter buses into the rain-swollen Hida River on National Highway Route 41 in Japan during a heavy rain. The two buses were part of a caravan of 15 that were on an early morning trip to Mount Norikura to watch the sunrise.[74]
  • A United Arab Airlines (now EgyptAir) Antonov 24B airplane crashed into the Mediterranean Sea while en route from Cairo to Damascus, killing all 33 passengers and its crew of 7.[75][76]
  • In Moscow, the Soviet Union's Leonid Brezhnev convened an emergency meeting with his counterparts from four other Warsaw Pact neighbors of Czechoslovakia, Todor Zhivkov (Bulgaria), Wladyslaw Gomulka (Poland), Walter Ulbricht (East Germany) and János Kádár (Hungary)[77] and read to them the August 3 "invitation letter" handed to him in Bratislava, then discussed and approved Brezhnev's plans for a joint military invasion.[20]
  • Ronald Duff, a 19-year-old guitarist for an Irish pop music band, The First Edition, was electrocuted while the band was playing a set for a dance at the ballroom of the Barry Hotel in Dublin. Witnesses said that Duff had hugged his electric guitar to his chest when the instrument short-circuited.[78][79]
  • US President Lyndon Johnson informed Presidential hopefuls Richard Nixon and Hubert Humphrey that the North Vietnamese government had refused to allow the Pope to visit Hanoi on a mission of peace. During telephone conversations which were recorded between LBJ, Nixon and Humphrey the decision by Hanoi to deny the Pope's visit was described as yet another example of how little the North Vietnamese wanted peace.[80][81]

August 19, 1968 (Monday) Edit

  • Anatoly Dobrynin, the Soviet Union's ambassador to the U.S., informed U.S. Secretary of State Dean Rusk that the Soviet Union was ready to negotiate an arms limitation treaty to stop the further production of ballistic and anti-ballistic missiles.[82]
  • U.S. Air Force Lieutenant General Samuel C. Phillips, Director of NASA's Apollo lunar landing program, announced that it was "clearly possible" for a crewed landing on the Moon to happen in 1969, fulfilling the goal announced by the late President Kennedy in 1962 to land a man on the Moon, and return him to Earth, "before the end of the decade". Speaking in Washington, Lt. Gen. Phillips said that the launch date for the first orbital flight of the Apollo program had been set for October 11. Apollo 7 would depart on that date, and Apollo 11 would land on the Moon 11 months and one day after Phillips's announcement.[83]
  • President Johnson signed the Wholesome Poultry Act into law, providing for all states to implement minimum standards for inspection of chicken and other poultry products within two years. The law was enacted eight months after the Wholesome Meat Act. Johnson commented that dirty chicken processing plants would have to "clean up or close down".[84]
  • Died: George Gamow, 64, Ukrainian-born American theoretical physicist and author known for the popular science book for young readers, One Two Three... Infinity

August 20, 1968 (Tuesday) Edit

  • At 11:00 p.m. local time (2000 UTC), the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia began as troops and tanks from the Soviet Union, Poland, East Germany, and Hungary came across Czechoslovakia's borders (with Bulgarian troops coming in from the Soviet side, and units of the 24th Soviet Tactical Air Army began landing Antonov troop and tank carriers at Prague's Ruzyne Airport and at the airports in Bratislava, Brno, Kosice, Ostrava, Karlovy Vary, Pardubice, Poprad, and other Czechoslovakian cities.[85][86] The "Prague Spring" of political liberalization had come to an end as 500,000 Warsaw Pact troops, 6,300 tanks and 550 combat aircraft and 250 transport planes[17] carried out the largest Soviet attack in peacetime and the biggest operation in Europe since World War II had ended.
  • The wreckage of the Soviet nuclear submarine K-129, which had sunk along with its crew of 98 on March 8, was located by the USS Halibut northwest of Oahu at an approximate depth of 4,900 metres (16,000 ft).[87]
  • Earlier in the day, the Czechoslovakian Communist Party (KSČ) Presidium held its weekly meeting at 2:00, where Vasil Bilak and the other hardline members had planned to read a position paper regarding chaos in the KSČ and were prepared to force a vote of no-confidence in Alexander Dubcek's management of KSČ affairs, then request the intervention of the Warsaw Pact to set up a "revolutionary workers' and peasants' government" with Alois Indra as Premier; Dubcek was discussing the position paper when news of the invasion was received.[85] Earlier in the meeting, plans for the KSČ's 14th Party Congress were approved, along with a resolution rescinding all restrictions on the teaching of religion in schools[88]

August 21, 1968 (Wednesday) Edit

  • At 2:00 in the morning local time, when most of Czechoslovakia's residents were asleep, Radio Prague broadcast an announcement "to the entire people of the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic", and said that troops from five nations had crossed the nation's frontiers. "This happened without the knowledge of the President of the Republic, the Chairman of the National Assembly, the Premier or the First Secretary of the Czechoslovak Communist Party Central Committee," the announcer explained, and urged citizens to "maintain calm and not offer resistance to troops on the march," adding that "Our army, security corps and People's Militia has not received a command to defend the country."
  • Members of the KSC Presidium had adjourned their meeting at 2:15 in the morning and remained at the KSC offices. At 8:30 in the morning, as recounted later by Josef Smrkovský's secretary, a Soviet Army colonel arrived with soldiers and two Czechoslovakian State Security agents and informed Party First Secretary Dubcek, Prime Minister Cernik, and KSČ Presidium members Smrkovský, František Kriegel, Josef Špaček, and Bohumil Šimon that they were under arrest[89] by order of the "Revolutionary Security Committee" headed by another Presidium member, Alois Indra.[85] The group was flown to the Soviet military base in Poland at Legnica, then to a base located in Zakarpattia Oblast, territory that had been annexed from Czechoslovakia by the Soviets in 1946.[90][91][92]
  • U.S. President Lyndon Johnson canceled a press conference during which he would have announced his plans to travel to the Soviet Union for a September 30 summit meeting in Leningrad.[85] The evening before, Johnson had been visited by Soviet Ambassador Dobrynin at the White House at 8:15 to discuss Soviet and American discussions on missile limitations, without any mention of the invasion of Czechoslovakia that was already in progress, and Johnson had accepted Dobrynin's invitation to come to the U.S.S.R. in the autumn.[93]
  • Romanian Communist Party (RCP) General Secretary Nicolae Ceaușescu surprised the non-Communist world by publicly condemning the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia while speaking to a crowd in Bucharest from a balcony. "The incursion in Czechoslovakia of troops belonging to the five socialist countries represents a big mistake," he told the crowd, "and a serious threat to peace in Europe and for the destiny of socialism in the world... There can be no excuse, and there can be no reason to accept, even for a single moment, the idea of a military intervention in the domestic affairs of a fraternal socialist state."[94]
  • A riot at the Ohio Penitentiary in Columbus was brought to an end at 2:45 in the afternoon, and nine guards were rescued after having been held hostage for 30 hours. More than 300 of the 2,500 inmates had seized control of the prison after a guard was overpowered by a prisoner and had his keys taken. After a spokesman for the inmates threatened to burn the hostages to death if more demands were not met, prison warden Marion J. Koloski delivered an ultimatum at 2:30 and told the rebels that he was giving them "one last chance" to release the guards, and that they had 15 minutes to respond. When the hostages were not released after 15 minutes, officers detonated dynamite outside the cell walls and, seconds later, in the roof over the cell block. Five inmates were shot and killed by the SWAT team during the rescue.[95]
  • Born:

August 22, 1968 (Thursday) Edit

  • Pope Paul VI made the first papal visit ever to South America, landing at Bogota, Colombia, at 10:27 in the morning after an 11-hour and 45-minute flight from Rome on a chartered Avianca Airlines 707.[96][97]
  • The Communist Party of Czechoslovakia moved up the September 9 start date of its 14th Party Congress, and 1,192 of the 1,543 delegates assembled at the CKD factory in Vysočany, a suburb of Prague.[98] The delegates selected a new party central committee and a new presidium, whose leaders unanimously re-elected Alexander Dubcek (who had been arrested by the Soviets the day before) as the KSČ First Secretary. An economist, Venek Šilhán, was selected to be the Acting First Secretary during Dubcek's absence.[99] At the same time, 11 of the KSČ's 22 Presidium members met at the Soviet Embassy in Prague and, at about 5:00, selected Alois Indra to be the Premier of a new government; but when they sought approval, President Ludvik Svoboda refused to accept a puppet government, and reaffirmed that Oldrich Cernik would continue to be the Prime Minister. President Svoboda then met with Soviet Ambassador Stepan Chervonenko and asked to be allowed to fly to Moscow to join the other Czechoslovakian leaders who had been arrested. Permission was granted, on the condition that Svoboda be accompanied by a collaborationist, Vice-Premier Gustáv Husák.[100]
  • The 1968 Democratic National Convention opened in Chicago and would continue until August 30. During the event, riots would break out as police clashed with anti-war protesters. The Democratic Party nominated Hubert Humphrey for president, and Edmund Muskie for vice president. The riots and subsequent trials would become an essential part of the activism for the Youth International Party, but would also taint the image of the Democrats in the November elections.
  • Ringo Starr briefly quit The Beatles after frustrations with the recording session of the song "Back in the U.S.S.R." for the White Album, and arguments with Paul McCartney; during Starr's absence, McCartney played the drums for the studio recording and overdubbing.[101] While Starr was on vacation with his wife and children during the absence, he would be inspired to write the song "Octopus's Garden".[102]

August 23, 1968 (Friday) Edit

  • The Indian state of Punjab was placed under President's Rule after the resignation, two days earlier, of its Chief Minister, the Sardar Lachhman Singh Gill.[103] The decision brought to four the number of Indian states (out of 17 at the time) placed under direct rule from the national government, after West Bengal, Uttar Pradesh and Bihar.[104] President's Rule would last until February 17; although the object of the Indian National Congress Party in Delhi was to keep the Akali Dal and the United Front party from leading the Punjab state, former Chief Minister Gurnam Singh and the Akali Dal party would return to power in the 1969 elections.[105]
  • Nigeria launched its final assault on the secessionist republic of Biafra under the command of Colonel Benjamin Adekunle, who reportedly instructed the Third Nigerian Army Division to "Shoot anything that moves"; thousands of Ibo civilians would be killed in their villages in the months that followed.[106]
  • Caswell County, North Carolina, which had the last remaining racially segregated school system in the United States, was ordered by U.S. District Judge Edwin M. Stanley to integrate its schools after years of getting deferments for submitting a desegregation plan. In granting a writ of mandamus in a suit by the NAACP against the Caswell County Schools, Judge Stanley wrote that although it was too late to desegregate in time for the start of school, the school system had until November 1 to file a plan to bring together white and black students, teachers and administrative personnel in time for the 1969–1970 school year.[107] School superintendent Thomas H. Whitley would recount later that the NAACP attorney (Julius L. Chambers) told Judge Stanley that the U.S. Supreme Court had ruled that "the time for procrastination is over". Judge Stanley then conceded that Chambers was correct, and told the school officials that "The Supreme Court has made its statement. You don't have any further choice. You have to get on with integration."[108]
  • With photographs by Alfred Eisenstaedt, the American newsweekly Life magazine brought national and worldwide attention to the industrial pollution of America's Great Lakes, particularly Lake Erie, Lake Ontario and Lake Michigan.[109] The photo essay, "Blighted Great Lakes" (subtitled "Shocking case of our inland seas dying from man-made filth", was written by Richard Woodbury, who concluded "The pictures on these pages point to the appalling conclusion that water pollution has brought the U.S. to a point of no return: either we curb the slatternly despoiling of our environment, or we accept the death of lakes and rivers and a denigration of the quality in our life."[110]
  • Czechoslovakia's Prime Minister Dubcek was brought from prison in the Ukrainian SSR to Moscow, where Soviet First Secretary Brezhnev, Premier Alexei Kosygin and President Nikolai V. Podgorny discussed the invasion with him. A larger meeting, involving the incarcerated Czechoslovakian party officials and the Soviet leadership, would begin later in the day.[98]
  • Born: KK, Indian playback singer, as Krishnakumar Kannath in Delhi (d. 2022)

August 24, 1968 (Saturday) Edit

August 25, 1968 (Sunday) Edit

August 26, 1968 (Monday) Edit

  • "Hey Jude", the best-selling single ever recorded by The Beatles (as well as the most popular single of 1968 in the U.S. and the UK, and half a century later, still the 10th best-seller worldwide of all recorded songs), was released for sale in the United States, followed four days later by its debut in the United Kingdom. It was the first Beatles release for their new company, Apple Records.[118]
  • The reforms of the "Prague Spring" were rolled back with the signing of the "Moscow Protocol" between the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia after Alexander Dubcek, Oldřich Černík, Josef Smrkovský and other officials of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia (KSČ) signed a document repealing the KSČ's enactments, reimposed censorship, and agreed that Soviet Army troops could remain on Czechoslovak soil until further notice. In return, Leonid Brezhnev and other leaders of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union agreed to release the Czechoslovakian leaders, allow them to remain in office temporarily, and to dismiss charges of counterrevolution.[119]
  • Died: Kay Francis, 63, American film actress who was the leading actress for Warner Brothers during the 1930s

August 27, 1968 (Tuesday) Edit

  • Raman Raghav, a serial killer who was suspected in the murders of 12 people in the city of Bombay (now Mumbai) during the month of August, was arrested by Bombay police. Raman, who had killed his victims with knives or crowbars, initially said that his motive was robbery, but would later confess to 41 murders and claim that he had been motivated by religious beliefs.[120][121]
  • Allowed by the Soviet Union to return to Czechoslovakia with his post as KSČ Party First Secretary intact, Alexander Dubcek made a nationwide radio address hours after his return and urged citizens to accept the terms of surrender in the Moscow Protocol; by then, 84 Czechoslovaks and four Soviet soldiers had been killed in the first eight days of the invasion.[122] Several times during the broadcast, Dubcek choked, paused at length and could be heard crying as he asked his compatriots not to resist the occupation and to forgive him for capitulating, commenting at one point, "I think you know why it is"; Dubcek would retain his post, albeit without any real power, for eight more months.[123] The subsequent "normalization", a rollback of reforms in late 1968 and 1969 is referred to as the normalizace in Czech and the normalizácia in Slovak.[124]
  • In Mexico City, a crowd of 300,000 students and their supporters staged a peaceful antigovernment demonstration, the largest up to that time in Mexican history,[125] to protest against the administration of President Diaz Ordaz.[126]
  • Died:

August 28, 1968 (Wednesday) Edit

  • John Gordon Mein, the United States Ambassador to Guatemala, was assassinated while trying to escape his limousine during an ambush. At 3:05 p.m., Mein was on his way from his home to the American Embassy in Guatemala City, and when his car was on Avenida de la Reforma, another automobile pulled up in front and a truck closed in from behind. The chauffeur was pulled from the car, and when Mein opened the back door and tried to flee, he was shot to death with a machine gun.[127] Mein's killing marked the first time that an American ambassador had been murdered while in office.
  • U.S. Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey was nominated as the Democratic Party's candidate for President on the first ballot at the national convention in Chicago. Needing 1,312 ballots to capture the nomination, Humphrey received 1,761¾. U.S. Senator Eugene McCarthy, also from Humphrey's home state of Minnesota, was a distant second with 601, and U.S. Senator George S. McGovern, from Humphrey's native state of South Dakota, was third with 164½.
  • Afterward, after different speakers at Chicago's Grant Park addressed a crowd of 15,000 antiwar protesters, a crowd of about 1,500 people marched along Michigan Avenue toward the convention site at the International Amphitheatre where the convention was taking place, protesting Humphrey's nomination. The Chicago police confronted and attacked the protesters with billy clubs and tear gas at various places between the park and the convention center as violence reached its peak. Seven months later, a group of protest leaders designated as the "Chicago Seven", and an eighth leader, Bobby Seale, would be indicted on federal charges of crossing state lines in an attempt to incite a riot.[128] As one historian would note later, "Millions of Americans turned on their televisions expecting to see Hubert Humphrey win the Democratic presidential nomination," but saw the networks cut away to live coverage of the riots;[129] recognizing what was happening, the protesters began to chant "The whole world is watching!".[130]
  • The restructuring of Czechoslovakia as "a socialist federation of two national states" was announced, and would become effective on October 28.[131] A little more than 22 years later, the two states would peacefully separate into independent nations as the Czech Republic and Slovakia.
  • Selections were made for the all-England test cricket team scheduled to tour South Africa, and cricket fans were surprised and outraged when the selectors for the Marylebone Cricket Club declined to include Basil "Dolly" D'Oliveira, a brown-skinned native of South Africa who had become a naturalized British citizen.[132] D. J. Insole, the chairman of the selection commission, defended the MCC's choices by saying "We think we have got rather better players in the side", and an editorial for The Guardian responded "Anyone prepared to swallow that would believe that the moon is a currant bun", pointing out that D'Oliveira had been the top scorer in the first Test against Australia, and the second highest scorer in the rematch, and concluding that the only explanation was that the MCC had caved to South Africa's apartheid policy. After more public outcry, and South Africa's refusal to grant D'Oliviera a visa to enter that country, the MCC would cancel the planned tour in September.
  • Born: Billy Boyd, Scottish stage and film actor known for the Lord of the Rings trilogy
  • Died: Willie Narmour, 80, popular American musician who recorded numerous country music hits as part of the duo of Narmour and Smith.

August 29, 1968 (Thursday) Edit

 
Harald and Sonja
  • Crown Prince Harald (who later became King Harald V) of Norway married Sonja Haraldsen, a commoner whom he had dated for nine years. The couple had been prohibited from marriage because the Norwegian government would not approve a waiver of a law requiring a member of the Norwegian royalty to marry another member of nobility or royalty, and Prince Harald had refused to marry until the rule was lifted.[133] Because Sonja's father was deceased, King Olav V accompanied her down the aisle in the "father of the bride" role.[134]
  • According to an urban legend which would begin circulating on the Internet around 2014, every television in "America" shut down for about 25 seconds on this date, during which a murmuring sound was heard. Snopes would rate this story as "False" in March 2023, stating that there was no historical or eyewitness evidence to support it.[135]
  • Died: U.S. Army Major General Ulysses S. Grant III, 87, American engineer and military officer

August 30, 1968 (Friday) Edit

  • Romanian Communist Party (RCP) General Secretary Nicolae Ceaușescu continued his public show of Romania's defiance of the Soviet Union during a mass rally at the city of Cluj, getting respect from the non-Communist Western nations and adding to his growing personality cult. For the first time Ceaușescu referred to the RCP (and by extension, himself) as the direct successor to three medieval Romanian rulers who fought the Ottoman Empire, Prince Mircea cel Bătrân of Wallachia and Prince Ștefan cel Mare of Moldavia, and Prince Mihai Viteazu, who unified Wallachia and Moldavia. "From that moment on," a historian would later note, "the cult of ancestors and the manipulation of national symbols became key ingredients of Ceaușescuism."[136]
  • African-American inmates rioted at the "Long Bình Jail", the overcrowded military prison for U.S. servicemen near Saigon in South Vietnam.[137] The uprising would last for 9 days; one inmate was killed, and 52 inmates and 63 military policemen were injured.
  • Died: William Talman, 53, American actor best known for portraying "television's biggest loser" as Los Angeles prosecutor Hamilton Burger, who was bested every week by the title character on the popular mystery and courtroom series, Perry Mason. Six weeks before his death from lung cancer, Talman— who had smoked three packs of cigarettes a day— filmed a 60-second television commercial for the American Cancer Society, urging viewers to avoid cigarette smoking and would set a precedent for other such "warnings from beyond the grave".[138]

August 31, 1968 (Saturday) Edit

  • A 7.4 magnitude earthquake struck the Khorasan Province in northeastern Iran at 3:17 in the afternoon local time (1047 UTC), with heavy casualties in and around the towns of Ferdows, Kezri and Kakhk and killed more than 15,000 people.[139] Kakhk lost 6,000 of its 7,000 residents as the earthquake destroyed all but one of its buildings, a mosque.[140]
  • The first multi-organ transplant was carried out as four different patients at Houston's Methodist Hospital received organs from a single donor, a 20-year-old woman who had been killed by a gunshot. Dr. Michael DeBakey led a team of 60 people (surgeons, nurses and support staff) in transplanting the woman's heart, lung, and each of her kidneys into four different men who ranged in age from 22 to 50 years old.[141][142]
  • Gary Sobers, a batsman for the Nottinghamshire County Cricket Club, set a first-class cricket record by scoring 36 runs in one time at bat during a match against Glamorgan, hitting all six balls bowled to him by Glamorgan's Malcolm Nash during his over outside the pitch boundary for six consecutive sixes.[143][144] The feat has been repeated only once since then, by Ravi Shastri on January 10, 1985.[145] Nottinghamshire would go on to win the match, 394 to 254.
  • The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine released the last 12 people whom they had held captive for forty days after the July 22 hijacking of El Al Flight 426. Of the original 48 people originally board before the plane was diverted to Algiers, the seven crewmembers and five male passengers, all Israelis, remained and were flown to Rome to be handed over to Italian authorities. Israel, in turn agreed to release 12 Arab commandos being held in Israeli jails.[146]
  • Thirteen people were killed in an apartment fire in Gary, Indiana, in the worst disaster in the city's history.[147]
  • Born:
  • Died:
    • Dennis O'Keefe (Edward Vance Flanagan), 60, American film actor
    • Joe Tracy, 83, American bank robber and the last member of the Ashley Gang that stole from 40 banks across Florida and Georgia between 1915 and John Ashley's death in a shootout in 1924. Tracy had been in prison since 1948 for robbing the Perkins State Bank in Williston, Florida, turning down a chance for parole by refusing to disclose where he hid $23,700 taken in the theft.[148]

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  147. ^ "Fire Kills 13, Debris Sifted", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, September 2, 1968, p7
  148. ^ "The Ashley-Mobley Gang", in The Mammoth Book of Gangs, by James Morton (Little, Brown and Co., 2012)

august, 1968, 1968, january, february, march, april, june, july, august, september, october, november, december, 1011, 1718, 2425, 31the, following, events, occurred, august, 1968, soviet, union, warsaw, pact, troops, invade, czechoslovakia, contents, august, . 1968 January February March April May June July August September October November December lt lt August 1968 gt gt Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa0 1 0 2 0 30 4 0 5 0 6 0 7 0 8 0 9 1011 12 13 14 15 16 1718 19 20 21 22 23 2425 26 27 28 29 30 31The following events occurred in August 1968 August 20 1968 Soviet Union and 750 000 Warsaw Pact troops invade Czechoslovakia Contents 1 August 1 1968 Thursday 2 August 2 1968 Friday 3 August 3 1968 Saturday 4 August 4 1968 Sunday 5 August 5 1968 Monday 6 August 6 1968 Tuesday 7 August 7 1968 Wednesday 8 August 8 1968 Thursday 9 August 9 1968 Friday 10 August 10 1968 Saturday 11 August 11 1968 Sunday 12 August 12 1968 Monday 13 August 13 1968 Tuesday 14 August 14 1968 Wednesday 15 August 15 1968 Thursday 16 August 16 1968 Friday 17 August 17 1968 Saturday 18 August 18 1968 Sunday 19 August 19 1968 Monday 20 August 20 1968 Tuesday 21 August 21 1968 Wednesday 22 August 22 1968 Thursday 23 August 23 1968 Friday 24 August 24 1968 Saturday 25 August 25 1968 Sunday 26 August 26 1968 Monday 27 August 27 1968 Tuesday 28 August 28 1968 Wednesday 29 August 29 1968 Thursday 30 August 30 1968 Friday 31 August 31 1968 Saturday 32 ReferencesAugust 1 1968 Thursday EditThree weeks after his 22nd birthday Hassanal Bolkiah was crowned as the 29th Sultan of Brunei in a coronation ceremony that took place ten months after his assumption of the throne following the abdication of his father on October 5 1967 1 A court in Caracas sentenced former Venezuelan dictator Marcos Perez Jimenez to four years one month and 15 days imprisonment after he was found guilty of embezzlement of government funds between 1948 and 1958 Since the time corresponded exactly to the amount of time Jimenez had been held in an American jail in Miami since 1964 the court gave Perez credit for time served and released him immediately on the condition that he leave Venezuela 2 Perez then went into exile in Spain staying at a luxury residential hotel in Madrid The Federal National Mortgage Association nicknamed Fannie Mae since its creation in 1938 as a United States government means of providing security to mortgage lenders was made a publicly traded private corporation and many of its functions of providing insurance against default for purchasers of Federal Housing Administration and Veterans Administration were assumed with the creation of the Government National Mortgage Association Ginnie Mae 3 The U S National Flood Insurance Program was established as an alternative to federal disaster relief by providing a means for homeowners in flood prone areas to pay premiums in order to purchase insurance against flooding Following receipt of NASA direction to limit Saturn V production to Vehicle 515 Marshall Space Flight Center MSFC began terminating production of engine hardware for the Apollo and Apollo Applications programs The action involved 27 H 1 eight F 1 and three J 2 rocket engines 4 The National Football League made its first test of the pressure point allowing the kicking of a point after touchdown in the 23 preseason exhibition games between NFL and American Football League teams Running or passing the ball good for two points in AFL games was worth one point Sid Blanks of the AFL s Houston Oilers tried and failed to score the pressure point after the lone touchdown in a 9 3 win over the visiting Washington Redskins in what was also the first professional football game in a domed stadium Tom Matte of the Baltimore Colts would score the first pressure point two days later in a 14 12 win over the Oakland Raiders 5 August 2 1968 Friday EditThe five story tall Ruby Towers apartment building located in the Santa Cruz district of Manila collapsed during a 7 6 magnitude earthquake that struck the Philippines island of Luzon at 4 21 in the morning killing 204 people The quake with an epicenter at the city of Casiguran 140 miles 230 km away killed 10 people in rural areas outside Manila 6 7 Ahmed Sekou Toure the President of the Guinea spoke at the city of Kankan and announced his plans for a West African version of China s Cultural Revolution with plans to attack fetishism charlatanism religious fanaticism any irrational attitude any form of mystification and any form of exploitation 8 In order to further instruction in his concept of Socialist Cultural Theory Toure ordered the creation of Centres d Education Revolutionnaire to educate the next generation of leaders and ordered citizens to join Pouvoir Revolutionnaire Locales to force change in towns and villages as well as monopolizing all media 9 Eighty two of the 95 people on board Alitalia Airlines Flight 660 survived despite the DC 8 s crash into a tree covered hillside as it was approaching Milan following a flight from Rome 10 11 Colonel Abdallah Salih Sabah al Awlaqi the commander of the national security forces of the relatively new People s Republic of Southern Yemen South Yemen defected along with 200 of his soldiers to the older Yemen Arab Republic in North Yemen taking with him most of South Yemen s fleet of armored cars 12 A suicidal pilot stole a Cessna 180 airplane from an airstrip at Jean Nevada then flew to Las Vegas and crashed into the top of what was at the time the tallest building in the metropolitan area the 30 story tall Landmark Hotel and Casino in Paradise The wreckage then fell onto the adjacent Las Vegas Convention Center The pilot was killed but nobody on the ground was injured 13 Sirhan Sirhan pleaded not guilty to charges of murdering Senator Robert F Kennedy in June 14 Born Chrystia Freeland Canadian politician Deputy Prime Minister of Canada in Peace River Alberta 15 Michael Stanco American professional wrestler who weighing 650 pounds performed under the stage name Maximum Capacity in Newark New Jersey d 2014 Died Meliton Manzanas 62 Spanish police superintendent and director of the Brigada Politico Social secret police force in San Sebastian was assassinated by the Basque separatist group Euskadi Ta Askatasuna ETA at his home in Irun 16 August 3 1968 Saturday EditThe Bratislava Declaration was signed by the leaders of the Communist parties of host nation Czechoslovakia and neighboring Communist ruled regimes in the Soviet Union Bulgaria Hungary East Germany and Poland Officially the meeting in Czechoslovakia was called the Declaration of Six Communist and Labor Parties of the Socialist Countries 17 Specifically the parties agreed to the Brezhnev doctrine from Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev that the Communist nations should agree on common policies and to firmly and resolutely set their unbreakable solidarity and their high degree of vigilance against each and every effort by imperialism and also by all other anti communist forces to weaken the leading role of the working class and the communist parties and pledging that They will never allow anyone to drive a wedge between socialist States or to undermine the foundations of the socialist social system The six nations agreed to work together for the interests of all fraternal countries and parties the cause of the unbreakable friendship of the peoples of our countries and the interests of peace democracy national independence and socialism 18 The last Soviet Army troops departed from Czechoslovakia on the same day more than a month after the end of Warsaw Pact military exercises on June 30 19 Troops would return 17 days later in an invasion of Czechoslovakia During the meeting five conservative members of the Czechoslovakian Communist Party Politburo signed and had delivered a letter of invitation that Brezhnev would refer to as the pretext for invasion but which would not be revealed until almost 24 years later Vasil Bilak Alois Indra Drahomir Kolder Oldrich Svestka and Antonin Kapek signed the letter typewritten and written in Russian that The very essence of socialism in our country is in danger and added In such complex conditions we are addressing you Soviet Communists with a plea to provide support and help with all the means available Take our declaration as an urgent request for your intervention and general help 20 On July 16 1992 after the collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe Russian President Boris Yeltsin would deliver the original letter to Czechoslovakia s President Vaclav Havel who would disclose it the next day 21 Born Rod Beck American baseball pitcher died 2007 Died Marshal Konstantin Rokossovsky 71 Soviet Army commander and World War II hero Alexander Gettler 84 American forensic scientist who became an expert on toxicology analysis August 4 1968 Sunday EditNorth Central Airlines Flight 261 was approaching Milwaukee s General Mitchell International Airport on a flight from Chicago when a private plane collided with it The pilot of the North Central Convair CV 580 turboprop Captain Ted Baum was able to land safely in spite of being struck in the side by a Cessna 150 All three people on the Cessna piloted by a 19 year old man were killed 22 In Brazzaville Alphonse Massamba Debat the civilian President of the Republic of the Congo was forced to cede most of his power to a 40 member National Revolutionary Council led by a rebellious Army officer Captain Marien Ngouabi Massamba Debat would continue for another month as a figurehead before being forced into exile 23 North Vietnam rejected yet another United States offer to begin the process to end the Vietnam War when United States negotiator Cyrus Vance met with North Vietnamese delegate Lau in Paris The formula for mutual de escalation the North Vietnamese rejected was originally put forward by the Soviet Ambassador to Paris Valerian Zorin 24 Born Lee Mack English actor and comedian star of the BBC One sitcom Not Going Out since 2006 as Lee McKillop in Southport Lancashire Olga Neuwirth Austrian classical music composer in GrazAugust 5 1968 Monday EditThree weeks after the coup d etat that installed him as Iraq s new president General Ahmed Hassan al Bakr announced a general amnesty for his nation s Kurdish population including people who had deserted from the Iraqi army or from police forces and said that the surrender of their weapons would not be required The announcement came the day after al Bakr and the Revolutionary Command Council said that the RCC would implement provisions of a 12 point plan to provide for cultural autonomy and rights to use Kurdish 25 The Republican National Convention opened in Miami Beach Florida Born Marine Le Pen French presidential candidate and runner up in 2017 and leader of the right wing Front national in Neuilly sur Seine Colin McRae Scottish rally auto racer and 1995 world champion in Lanark killed in helicopter crash 2007 Terri Clark Canadian country music artist in Montreal Died Luther Perkins 40 American country music guitarist for Johnny Cash died two days after being injured in a fire at his home in Hendersonville Tennessee Perkins had fallen asleep while smoking a cigarette 26 August 6 1968 Tuesday EditThe United Kingdom submitted a comprehensive proposal at the meeting of the Eighteen Nation Committee on Disarmament in Geneva that would ultimately become the basis of the 1972 Biological Weapons Convention The Working Document on Microbiological Warfare pointed out six shortcomings of the Geneva Protocol of 1925 including that it was limited to bacteriological and chemical weapons that it applied only during declarations of war that it prohibited the use but not the manufacture of weapons and that it allowed their use against nations that weren t party to the agreement 27 The United States Air Force made the first unannounced satellite launch from Cape Kennedy in almost five years although many local reporters learned about the plan anyway and were present for the 7 08 a m liftoff Although the secret launch was no secret the nature of the payload referred to only as Agent 817 remained classified and was thought to be intended to gather intelligence from the Soviet Union and China The last attempt at a secret launch had been on October 16 1963 the Associated Press commented That shot received such wide publicity that the Pentagon de classified the project and opened all future launchings to newsmen 28 In 1990 Agent 817 would be revealed to have been the first of the USAF s CANYON project of seven spy satellites sent up between 1968 and 1977 29 August 7 1968 Wednesday EditFormer U S Vice President Richard M Nixon completed a dramatic political comeback by being nominated for president at the Republican National Convention on the first ballot Needing 667 delegate votes Nixon clinched the nomination when the roll call reached the 49th of the 50 state delegations and was given all 30 of Wisconsin s votes He finished with 692 New York Governor Nelson A Rockefeller was second with 287 and California Governor Ronald Reagan received 182 30 More than 1 000 people drowned in the Gujarat State of India after heavy rains during the monsoon season caused the Tapti River to overflow its banks 31 The state capital Surat was submerged beneath 10 feet of water for a week 32 After the floodwaters receded at least 1 000 more people died in Gujarat state during a cholera epidemic from the contamination of the drinking water 33 In the years after the flood the Ukai Dam which would open in 1972 would be constructed to bring the Tapti s waters under control and to provide hydroelectric power Nine coal miners were killed in an explosion and subsequent slate fall at Peabody Coal Company s River Queen Mine near Greenville Kentucky 34 August 8 1968 Thursday EditMaryland Governor Spiro Agnew was selected by Richard Nixon to be his choice for vice presidential running mate Agnew was nominated on the first ballot receiving 1 128 of the 1 333 delegate votes while Michigan Governor George Romney a proposal advanced by some liberal Republican delegates got 178 votes and another 27 votes were scattered among several other nominees Following the roll call Governor Romney made a successful motion that Agnew s nomination be accepted unanimously by acclamation 35 Almost a year later in the publication of The Making of the President 1968 author Theodore H White would reveal that Nixon had offered the vice presidential job first to Robert Finch the incumbent Lieutenant Governor of California at the time and that Finch had declined Nixon at the time was a resident of New York 36 East Germany s Premier and Communist Party First Secretary Walter Ulbricht sent a proposal to his West Germany counterpart Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger seeking a summit for economic cooperation between the two German nations Ulbricht s note was viewed in the west as a signal of the failure and abandonment of storfreimachen a 1960 program to make East Germany independent of West German products The next day Ulbricht spoke at the East German parliament the Volkskammer and offered to normalize relations with the West 37 Died Fritz Stiedry 84 Austrian born composer and conductor of the Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra Raphael Demos 76 Turkish born American philosopherAugust 9 1968 Friday EditBritish Eagle International Airlines Flight 802 crashed in Langenbruck West Germany killing all 44 passengers and the crew of 4 after the loss of its electrical power supply uncontrollable stress on the aircraft and its structural failure 38 The Viscount turboprop airplane was en route from London to Innsbruck in Austria four years earlier on February 29 1964 all 83 people on a flight with the same number British Eagle International Airlines Flight 802 crashed into a mountain on another London to Innsbruck flight British Eagle would go out of business shortly after the crash of the second Flight 802 39 Yugoslavia s President Josip Broz Tito a Communist known for not always agreeing with the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact visited Czechoslovakia s Prime Minister Alexander Dubcek and was cheered by tens of thousands of people during his visit to Prague 40 Born Gillian Anderson American born British television and film actress known for being Dana Scully on The X Files in Chicago 41 Eric Bana Australian television and film actor as Eric Banadinovic in Melbourne James Roy Welsh born Australian children s book author known for the Edsel Grizzler seriesAugust 10 1968 Saturday EditPiedmont Airlines Flight 230 crashed short of the runway while approaching Charleston West Virginia at the end of its flight from Cincinnati 42 Only two passengers out of the 37 people aboard survived 43 The Politburo of the Soviet Union s Communist Party voted to accept a proposal to begin discussions with the United States to limit and reduce the number of offensive and defensive antiballistic missiles ABMs though not the nuclear warheads carried by the missiles The Soviet decision set the way for the signing of the 1972 ABM Treaty 44 The International Convention for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants signed on December 2 1961 went into effect after its ratification by just three nations 45 Referred to as The UPOV Convention for its creation of the enforcement agency the Union internationale pour la Protection des Obtentions Vegetales the treaty gave intellectual property rights to the creators of new strains of existing products through plant breeding August 11 1968 Sunday EditThe last steam passenger train service in Britain came to an end A selection of British Railways steam locomotives made the 120 mile journey from Liverpool to Carlisle and back in what is now called the Fifteen Guinea Special 46 The 15 price of the ride was equivalent at the time to more than USD 40 per person and more than 240 in 2018 The Deep Sea Drilling Project began operations as the D V Glomar Challenger began its first core drilling operation under the planning of the Joint Oceanographic Institutions for Deep Earth Sampling 47 A referendum was conducted in the Spanish west African colony of Equatorial Guinea comprising the territories of the island of Fernando Po now Bioko and the mainland territory of Rio Muni for approval of a constitution that provided for a republican government Under voting supervised by United Nations observers and passed by a 63 to 37 margin 72 458 yes and 41 197 no 48 Approval by the voters in Rio Muni was more significant than on Fernando Po where the approval came by just 377 votes 4 763 to 4 486 49 The Soviet Union East Germany and Poland began military maneuvers near their nations borders with Czechoslovakia 50 Born Noordin Mohammad Top Malaysian born Indonesian terrorist in Kluang killed by police 2009 August 12 1968 Monday EditIsrael was able to obtain two fully working MiG 17 jet fighters intact when a couple of Syrian Air Force pilots mistook an airstrip at Betzet for a runway in southern Lebanon Latakia Lieutenant Walid Adham and 2nd Lieutenant Radfan Rifai came in for a landing and climbed out then were stunned when local residents told them that they were on Israeli territory 51 The Israeli Air Force was soon able to use the two MiG 17s for training missions in maneuvers against its own Shahak 32 jet fighters and discovered that the MiG 17 could outmaneuver the Israeli fighter jets at low altitudes Within a year Israel was able to regain an advantage over the fighter jets of its neighboring enemies 52 At Nanning the capital of China s Guangxi Province political leaders began a seven week public Beast and Fowl Exhibit of Chinese citizens who were branded as enemies of the Cultural Revolution The prisoners were tied up placed in a wooden cage for display and made to wear signs that identified what they were accused of including treason espionage war crimes or membership in the fictitious Anti Communist Party Patriotic Army Over a period of 52 days almost half a million 489 365 spectators filed through the Chinese Red Army military headquarters for a Class Struggle Education presentation 53 August 13 1968 Tuesday EditGreece s prime minister and dictator Georgios Papadopoulos escaped an assassination attempt when a bomb exploded while his car was still 45 feet 14 m away Papadopoulos was on his way back to Athens after a stay at his summer villa in Lagonisi Former Greek Navy Lieutenant Alexandros Panagoulis who had been part of an underwater demolition team misjudged the speed of the premier s car and detonated the explosive just as the vehicle was entering a tunnel Panagoulis was caught by police while trying to run toward a getaway motorboat whereas the boat hadn t been able to reach the shore due to the sea being crowded with swimmers the boat sped away and was the subject of a massive search 54 During the next 24 hours Greek security police arrested more than 100 people suspected as being part of the conspiracy including three retired Greek officers air force major general Elias Deros army brigadier general Ioannides Koumanakos and Navy Captain Constantine Loundras 55 Panagoulis would spend five years in Greek prisons before being exiled in 1973 56 After the overthrow of Papadopoulos in 1974 Panagoulis would be elected to parliament but would be killed in an automobile accident in 1976 East Germany s Communist Party leader Walter Ulbricht arrived in Czechoslovakia as the guest of Alexander Dubcek and the two leaders conferred at the resort town of Karlovy Vary 57 Ulbricht was unsuccessful in his last attempt to convince the Czechoslovakian leaders to reverse their attempts to introduce socialism with a human face 58 An unprecedented number of students and protesters marched to the Zocalo the main square in Mexico City to protest against Mexico s president Gustavo Diaz Ordaz At 5 00 in the afternoon a crowd of 50 000 students professors and supporters started from the university campus of the Instituto Politecnico Nacional and began the 8 miles 13 km walk to the capital and by the time they reached the city center their number had increased to 150 000 The demonstration remained peaceful and the police did not intervene despite the traffic jams created by the protests 59 An even larger demonstration would take place two weeks later Born Masaneh Kinteh Gambian military officer and commander of the Gambian Armed Forces from 2009 to 2012 and again from 2017 to 2020 in Sankwia village Jarra West district Died Rene d Harnoncourt 67 who had retired six weeks earlier from being Director of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City was struck and killed by a car while walking in New Suffolk New York August 14 1968 Wednesday EditAll 21 people on board a Los Angeles Airways helicopter were killed when the Sikorsky S61 broke apart while flying the group of vacationers from the Los Angeles International Airport to Disneyland 60 The wreckage fell onto a playground at Lueder s Park in Compton One of the victims was the teenage grandson of the L A Airways shuttle director Moments before the crash a group of children who had been playing at the site had been led to safety by 14 year old National Youth Corps volunteer The crash was the second in less than three months for the Disneyland shuttle service 23 people had been killed on May 22 Born Darren Clarke Northern Irish professional golfer and 2011 British Open champion in Dungannon Catherine Bell English born American television actress and co star of the TV series JAG in London Jason Leonard English born president of the Rugby Football Union and forward for the England national team 1990 2004 in BarkingAugust 15 1968 Thursday EditA 7 4 magnitude earthquake in Indonesia s Gulf of Tomini struck at 6 14 in the morning 2214 August 14 UTC 61 and triggered a tsunami that killed more than 200 people on the island of Sulawesi formerly the Celebes 62 WHK FM a Cleveland radio station that had rebroadcast pop music from WHK AM changed its format to progressive rock and began its broadcast day with DJs playing what the station referred to as The New Groove and would go on to become one of the most popular and influential FM radio stations in the nation as WMMS 63 Born Debra Messing American TV and film actress and co star of Will amp Grace in BrooklynAugust 16 1968 Friday EditThe United States launched two different multiple warhead missile systems on the same day firing for the first time a UGM 73 Poseidon capable of carrying 10 separately targeted warheads from a surface ship the USNS Observation Island followed a few hours later by a Minuteman 3 which could carry 3 warheads from a U S Air Force missile silo 64 Romania s President and Communist Party leader Nicolae Ceaușescu signed a 20 year treaty of friendship cooperation and mutual assistance with Czechoslovakian President Ludvik Svoboda at a meeting in Prague 65 In one of his last official acts as Prime Minister of Portugal and dictator of the Iberian nation Antonio de Oliveira Salazar fired seven of his 15 cabinet ministers including his longtime Interior Minister and head of law enforcement Alfredo Dos Santos Salazar who would suffer a fatal stroke less than three weeks later also dismissed his Finance Minister the ministers for the Portuguese Army and the Portuguese Navy the Health Minister the Education Minister and the Communications Minister 66 August 17 1968 Saturday EditThe third and final phase of the Tet Offensive Phase III began with a massive attack by the North Vietnamese Army and the Viet Cong on 27 South Vietnamese cities and towns as well as 47 airfields and 100 outposts 67 The fighting would continue for more than six weeks finally ending on September 28 Meeting in a closed session the 170 members of the Soviet Communist Party s Central Committee decided by a narrow majority to authorize the invasion of Czechoslovakia the decision to intervene in the domestic affairs of another Communist nation would be described later by historian Mary Heimann as a decision that was to return to haunt subsequent Soviet administrations 68 The Party s Politburo then approved the Central Committee decision unanimously 69 Czechoslovakian Premier Oldrich Cernik told an Austrian television interviewer that his nation was considering loans from the World Bank and from other foreign banking firms Unlike aid from the Soviet Union loans from capitalist nations were not dependent on political preconditions 70 Hungary s Communist leader Janos Kadar visited Prague and met with Czechoslovakian party leader Alexander Dubcek presumably with the consent of the Kremlin 71 According to one account Kadar who had been brought to power by the Soviet invasion of his country in 1956 and who was aware that an invasion of Czechoslovakia was likely asked Dubcek Do you really not know the kind of people who you are dealing with 72 Actress Mia Farrow flew from New York to El Paso Texas then went across the border to the neighboring city of Ciudad Juarez in Mexico Thirty minutes later she was granted a divorce from singer Frank Sinatra whom she had married in December 73 August 18 1968 Sunday EditOne hundred and four people were killed when a landslide swept two charter buses into the rain swollen Hida River on National Highway Route 41 in Japan during a heavy rain The two buses were part of a caravan of 15 that were on an early morning trip to Mount Norikura to watch the sunrise 74 A United Arab Airlines now EgyptAir Antonov 24B airplane crashed into the Mediterranean Sea while en route from Cairo to Damascus killing all 33 passengers and its crew of 7 75 76 In Moscow the Soviet Union s Leonid Brezhnev convened an emergency meeting with his counterparts from four other Warsaw Pact neighbors of Czechoslovakia Todor Zhivkov Bulgaria Wladyslaw Gomulka Poland Walter Ulbricht East Germany and Janos Kadar Hungary 77 and read to them the August 3 invitation letter handed to him in Bratislava then discussed and approved Brezhnev s plans for a joint military invasion 20 Ronald Duff a 19 year old guitarist for an Irish pop music band The First Edition was electrocuted while the band was playing a set for a dance at the ballroom of the Barry Hotel in Dublin Witnesses said that Duff had hugged his electric guitar to his chest when the instrument short circuited 78 79 US President Lyndon Johnson informed Presidential hopefuls Richard Nixon and Hubert Humphrey that the North Vietnamese government had refused to allow the Pope to visit Hanoi on a mission of peace During telephone conversations which were recorded between LBJ Nixon and Humphrey the decision by Hanoi to deny the Pope s visit was described as yet another example of how little the North Vietnamese wanted peace 80 81 August 19 1968 Monday EditAnatoly Dobrynin the Soviet Union s ambassador to the U S informed U S Secretary of State Dean Rusk that the Soviet Union was ready to negotiate an arms limitation treaty to stop the further production of ballistic and anti ballistic missiles 82 U S Air Force Lieutenant General Samuel C Phillips Director of NASA s Apollo lunar landing program announced that it was clearly possible for a crewed landing on the Moon to happen in 1969 fulfilling the goal announced by the late President Kennedy in 1962 to land a man on the Moon and return him to Earth before the end of the decade Speaking in Washington Lt Gen Phillips said that the launch date for the first orbital flight of the Apollo program had been set for October 11 Apollo 7 would depart on that date and Apollo 11 would land on the Moon 11 months and one day after Phillips s announcement 83 President Johnson signed the Wholesome Poultry Act into law providing for all states to implement minimum standards for inspection of chicken and other poultry products within two years The law was enacted eight months after the Wholesome Meat Act Johnson commented that dirty chicken processing plants would have to clean up or close down 84 Died George Gamow 64 Ukrainian born American theoretical physicist and author known for the popular science book for young readers One Two Three InfinityAugust 20 1968 Tuesday EditAt 11 00 p m local time 2000 UTC the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia began as troops and tanks from the Soviet Union Poland East Germany and Hungary came across Czechoslovakia s borders with Bulgarian troops coming in from the Soviet side and units of the 24th Soviet Tactical Air Army began landing Antonov troop and tank carriers at Prague s Ruzyne Airport and at the airports in Bratislava Brno Kosice Ostrava Karlovy Vary Pardubice Poprad and other Czechoslovakian cities 85 86 The Prague Spring of political liberalization had come to an end as 500 000 Warsaw Pact troops 6 300 tanks and 550 combat aircraft and 250 transport planes 17 carried out the largest Soviet attack in peacetime and the biggest operation in Europe since World War II had ended The wreckage of the Soviet nuclear submarine K 129 which had sunk along with its crew of 98 on March 8 was located by the USS Halibut northwest of Oahu at an approximate depth of 4 900 metres 16 000 ft 87 Earlier in the day the Czechoslovakian Communist Party KSC Presidium held its weekly meeting at 2 00 where Vasil Bilak and the other hardline members had planned to read a position paper regarding chaos in the KSC and were prepared to force a vote of no confidence in Alexander Dubcek s management of KSC affairs then request the intervention of the Warsaw Pact to set up a revolutionary workers and peasants government with Alois Indra as Premier Dubcek was discussing the position paper when news of the invasion was received 85 Earlier in the meeting plans for the KSC s 14th Party Congress were approved along with a resolution rescinding all restrictions on the teaching of religion in schools 88 August 21 1968 Wednesday EditAt 2 00 in the morning local time when most of Czechoslovakia s residents were asleep Radio Prague broadcast an announcement to the entire people of the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic and said that troops from five nations had crossed the nation s frontiers This happened without the knowledge of the President of the Republic the Chairman of the National Assembly the Premier or the First Secretary of the Czechoslovak Communist Party Central Committee the announcer explained and urged citizens to maintain calm and not offer resistance to troops on the march adding that Our army security corps and People s Militia has not received a command to defend the country Members of the KSC Presidium had adjourned their meeting at 2 15 in the morning and remained at the KSC offices At 8 30 in the morning as recounted later by Josef Smrkovsky s secretary a Soviet Army colonel arrived with soldiers and two Czechoslovakian State Security agents and informed Party First Secretary Dubcek Prime Minister Cernik and KSC Presidium members Smrkovsky Frantisek Kriegel Josef Spacek and Bohumil Simon that they were under arrest 89 by order of the Revolutionary Security Committee headed by another Presidium member Alois Indra 85 The group was flown to the Soviet military base in Poland at Legnica then to a base located in Zakarpattia Oblast territory that had been annexed from Czechoslovakia by the Soviets in 1946 90 91 92 U S President Lyndon Johnson canceled a press conference during which he would have announced his plans to travel to the Soviet Union for a September 30 summit meeting in Leningrad 85 The evening before Johnson had been visited by Soviet Ambassador Dobrynin at the White House at 8 15 to discuss Soviet and American discussions on missile limitations without any mention of the invasion of Czechoslovakia that was already in progress and Johnson had accepted Dobrynin s invitation to come to the U S S R in the autumn 93 Romanian Communist Party RCP General Secretary Nicolae Ceaușescu surprised the non Communist world by publicly condemning the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia while speaking to a crowd in Bucharest from a balcony The incursion in Czechoslovakia of troops belonging to the five socialist countries represents a big mistake he told the crowd and a serious threat to peace in Europe and for the destiny of socialism in the world There can be no excuse and there can be no reason to accept even for a single moment the idea of a military intervention in the domestic affairs of a fraternal socialist state 94 A riot at the Ohio Penitentiary in Columbus was brought to an end at 2 45 in the afternoon and nine guards were rescued after having been held hostage for 30 hours More than 300 of the 2 500 inmates had seized control of the prison after a guard was overpowered by a prisoner and had his keys taken After a spokesman for the inmates threatened to burn the hostages to death if more demands were not met prison warden Marion J Koloski delivered an ultimatum at 2 30 and told the rebels that he was giving them one last chance to release the guards and that they had 15 minutes to respond When the hostages were not released after 15 minutes officers detonated dynamite outside the cell walls and seconds later in the roof over the cell block Five inmates were shot and killed by the SWAT team during the rescue 95 Born Theodore Beale controversial American science fiction writer and right wing activist expelled from the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America in Minnesota Dina Carroll English R amp B singer as Geraldine Carroll in Newmarket SuffolkAugust 22 1968 Thursday EditPope Paul VI made the first papal visit ever to South America landing at Bogota Colombia at 10 27 in the morning after an 11 hour and 45 minute flight from Rome on a chartered Avianca Airlines 707 96 97 The Communist Party of Czechoslovakia moved up the September 9 start date of its 14th Party Congress and 1 192 of the 1 543 delegates assembled at the CKD factory in Vysocany a suburb of Prague 98 The delegates selected a new party central committee and a new presidium whose leaders unanimously re elected Alexander Dubcek who had been arrested by the Soviets the day before as the KSC First Secretary An economist Venek Silhan was selected to be the Acting First Secretary during Dubcek s absence 99 At the same time 11 of the KSC s 22 Presidium members met at the Soviet Embassy in Prague and at about 5 00 selected Alois Indra to be the Premier of a new government but when they sought approval President Ludvik Svoboda refused to accept a puppet government and reaffirmed that Oldrich Cernik would continue to be the Prime Minister President Svoboda then met with Soviet Ambassador Stepan Chervonenko and asked to be allowed to fly to Moscow to join the other Czechoslovakian leaders who had been arrested Permission was granted on the condition that Svoboda be accompanied by a collaborationist Vice Premier Gustav Husak 100 The 1968 Democratic National Convention opened in Chicago and would continue until August 30 During the event riots would break out as police clashed with anti war protesters The Democratic Party nominated Hubert Humphrey for president and Edmund Muskie for vice president The riots and subsequent trials would become an essential part of the activism for the Youth International Party but would also taint the image of the Democrats in the November elections Ringo Starr briefly quit The Beatles after frustrations with the recording session of the song Back in the U S S R for the White Album and arguments with Paul McCartney during Starr s absence McCartney played the drums for the studio recording and overdubbing 101 While Starr was on vacation with his wife and children during the absence he would be inspired to write the song Octopus s Garden 102 August 23 1968 Friday EditThe Indian state of Punjab was placed under President s Rule after the resignation two days earlier of its Chief Minister the Sardar Lachhman Singh Gill 103 The decision brought to four the number of Indian states out of 17 at the time placed under direct rule from the national government after West Bengal Uttar Pradesh and Bihar 104 President s Rule would last until February 17 although the object of the Indian National Congress Party in Delhi was to keep the Akali Dal and the United Front party from leading the Punjab state former Chief Minister Gurnam Singh and the Akali Dal party would return to power in the 1969 elections 105 Nigeria launched its final assault on the secessionist republic of Biafra under the command of Colonel Benjamin Adekunle who reportedly instructed the Third Nigerian Army Division to Shoot anything that moves thousands of Ibo civilians would be killed in their villages in the months that followed 106 Caswell County North Carolina which had the last remaining racially segregated school system in the United States was ordered by U S District Judge Edwin M Stanley to integrate its schools after years of getting deferments for submitting a desegregation plan In granting a writ of mandamus in a suit by the NAACP against the Caswell County Schools Judge Stanley wrote that although it was too late to desegregate in time for the start of school the school system had until November 1 to file a plan to bring together white and black students teachers and administrative personnel in time for the 1969 1970 school year 107 School superintendent Thomas H Whitley would recount later that the NAACP attorney Julius L Chambers told Judge Stanley that the U S Supreme Court had ruled that the time for procrastination is over Judge Stanley then conceded that Chambers was correct and told the school officials that The Supreme Court has made its statement You don t have any further choice You have to get on with integration 108 With photographs by Alfred Eisenstaedt the American newsweekly Life magazine brought national and worldwide attention to the industrial pollution of America s Great Lakes particularly Lake Erie Lake Ontario and Lake Michigan 109 The photo essay Blighted Great Lakes subtitled Shocking case of our inland seas dying from man made filth was written by Richard Woodbury who concluded The pictures on these pages point to the appalling conclusion that water pollution has brought the U S to a point of no return either we curb the slatternly despoiling of our environment or we accept the death of lakes and rivers and a denigration of the quality in our life 110 Czechoslovakia s Prime Minister Dubcek was brought from prison in the Ukrainian SSR to Moscow where Soviet First Secretary Brezhnev Premier Alexei Kosygin and President Nikolai V Podgorny discussed the invasion with him A larger meeting involving the incarcerated Czechoslovakian party officials and the Soviet leadership would begin later in the day 98 Born KK Indian playback singer as Krishnakumar Kannath in Delhi d 2022 August 24 1968 Saturday EditFrance became the fifth nation to successfully explode a hydrogen bomb joining the United States the Soviet Union the United Kingdom and China as a thermonuclear superpower The test codenamed Operation Canopus took place over the Fangataufa Atoll in French Polynesia at 8 30 in the morning local time 1830 UTC after heavy rains had caused six postponements 111 The Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association staged the first civil rights protest march held in Northern Ireland in the United Kingdom to call attention to discrimination against the Roman Catholic minority Between 2 500 112 and 4 000 113 people marched peacefully from the coal mining town of Coalisland along the five mile route to Dungannon where local police barred the protesters from conducting a rally Born Shoichi Funaki Japanese born American WWE wrestler in Tokyo Tim King Fish Salmon American baseball outfielder and 1993 AL rookie of the year in Long Beach CaliforniaAugust 25 1968 Sunday EditA group of eight dissidents in the Soviet Union were arrested in Moscow s Red Square after protesting against the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia At noon poet Natalya Gorbanevskaya physicist Pavel Litvinov writer Larisa Bogoraz linguist Viktor Fainberg poet Vadim Delaunay and Konstantin Babitsky Vladimir Dremliuga and Tatiana Baeva surprised the crowd by unfurling a Czechoslovakian flag and displaying protest banners 114 Within three minutes security agents of the KGB moved in and beat up the five male protesters all of the group except for Baeva would be charged with violations of laws against Anti Soviet agitation and would receive sentences ranging from three to five years of exile to remote settlements in Siberia to detention in a labor camp or forced confinement in a psikhushka a psychiatric hospital for commitment on false diagnoses of schizophrenia and other mental illnesses 115 Becky Godwin the 14 year old daughter of Virginia Governor Mills Godwin was struck by lightning while walking back to the seashore in Virginia Beach on a sunny day the victim of a thunderstorm several miles offshore She never regained consciousness after being injured Four days later she died in a hospital from complications arising from severe electrical burns of the lungs 116 117 Born Rachael Ray American television talk show host in Glens Falls New York Died Harry Elmer Barnes 79 American historian known after World War II for his prominent role in the Holocaust denial movementAugust 26 1968 Monday Edit Hey Jude the best selling single ever recorded by The Beatles as well as the most popular single of 1968 in the U S and the UK and half a century later still the 10th best seller worldwide of all recorded songs was released for sale in the United States followed four days later by its debut in the United Kingdom It was the first Beatles release for their new company Apple Records 118 The reforms of the Prague Spring were rolled back with the signing of the Moscow Protocol between the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia after Alexander Dubcek Oldrich Cernik Josef Smrkovsky and other officials of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia KSC signed a document repealing the KSC s enactments reimposed censorship and agreed that Soviet Army troops could remain on Czechoslovak soil until further notice In return Leonid Brezhnev and other leaders of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union agreed to release the Czechoslovakian leaders allow them to remain in office temporarily and to dismiss charges of counterrevolution 119 Died Kay Francis 63 American film actress who was the leading actress for Warner Brothers during the 1930sAugust 27 1968 Tuesday EditRaman Raghav a serial killer who was suspected in the murders of 12 people in the city of Bombay now Mumbai during the month of August was arrested by Bombay police Raman who had killed his victims with knives or crowbars initially said that his motive was robbery but would later confess to 41 murders and claim that he had been motivated by religious beliefs 120 121 Allowed by the Soviet Union to return to Czechoslovakia with his post as KSC Party First Secretary intact Alexander Dubcek made a nationwide radio address hours after his return and urged citizens to accept the terms of surrender in the Moscow Protocol by then 84 Czechoslovaks and four Soviet soldiers had been killed in the first eight days of the invasion 122 Several times during the broadcast Dubcek choked paused at length and could be heard crying as he asked his compatriots not to resist the occupation and to forgive him for capitulating commenting at one point I think you know why it is Dubcek would retain his post albeit without any real power for eight more months 123 The subsequent normalization a rollback of reforms in late 1968 and 1969 is referred to as the normalizace in Czech and the normalizacia in Slovak 124 In Mexico City a crowd of 300 000 students and their supporters staged a peaceful antigovernment demonstration the largest up to that time in Mexican history 125 to protest against the administration of President Diaz Ordaz 126 Died Princess Marina of Greece and Denmark 61 widow of Prince George Duke of Kent daughter in law of King George V of the United Kingdom and representative of the British royal family Robert Z Leonard 78 American film directorAugust 28 1968 Wednesday EditJohn Gordon Mein the United States Ambassador to Guatemala was assassinated while trying to escape his limousine during an ambush At 3 05 p m Mein was on his way from his home to the American Embassy in Guatemala City and when his car was on Avenida de la Reforma another automobile pulled up in front and a truck closed in from behind The chauffeur was pulled from the car and when Mein opened the back door and tried to flee he was shot to death with a machine gun 127 Mein s killing marked the first time that an American ambassador had been murdered while in office U S Vice President Hubert H Humphrey was nominated as the Democratic Party s candidate for President on the first ballot at the national convention in Chicago Needing 1 312 ballots to capture the nomination Humphrey received 1 761 U S Senator Eugene McCarthy also from Humphrey s home state of Minnesota was a distant second with 601 and U S Senator George S McGovern from Humphrey s native state of South Dakota was third with 164 Afterward after different speakers at Chicago s Grant Park addressed a crowd of 15 000 antiwar protesters a crowd of about 1 500 people marched along Michigan Avenue toward the convention site at the International Amphitheatre where the convention was taking place protesting Humphrey s nomination The Chicago police confronted and attacked the protesters with billy clubs and tear gas at various places between the park and the convention center as violence reached its peak Seven months later a group of protest leaders designated as the Chicago Seven and an eighth leader Bobby Seale would be indicted on federal charges of crossing state lines in an attempt to incite a riot 128 As one historian would note later Millions of Americans turned on their televisions expecting to see Hubert Humphrey win the Democratic presidential nomination but saw the networks cut away to live coverage of the riots 129 recognizing what was happening the protesters began to chant The whole world is watching 130 The restructuring of Czechoslovakia as a socialist federation of two national states was announced and would become effective on October 28 131 A little more than 22 years later the two states would peacefully separate into independent nations as the Czech Republic and Slovakia Selections were made for the all England test cricket team scheduled to tour South Africa and cricket fans were surprised and outraged when the selectors for the Marylebone Cricket Club declined to include Basil Dolly D Oliveira a brown skinned native of South Africa who had become a naturalized British citizen 132 D J Insole the chairman of the selection commission defended the MCC s choices by saying We think we have got rather better players in the side and an editorial for The Guardian responded Anyone prepared to swallow that would believe that the moon is a currant bun pointing out that D Oliveira had been the top scorer in the first Test against Australia and the second highest scorer in the rematch and concluding that the only explanation was that the MCC had caved to South Africa s apartheid policy After more public outcry and South Africa s refusal to grant D Oliviera a visa to enter that country the MCC would cancel the planned tour in September Born Billy Boyd Scottish stage and film actor known for the Lord of the Rings trilogy Died Willie Narmour 80 popular American musician who recorded numerous country music hits as part of the duo of Narmour and Smith August 29 1968 Thursday Edit nbsp Harald and SonjaCrown Prince Harald who later became King Harald V of Norway married Sonja Haraldsen a commoner whom he had dated for nine years The couple had been prohibited from marriage because the Norwegian government would not approve a waiver of a law requiring a member of the Norwegian royalty to marry another member of nobility or royalty and Prince Harald had refused to marry until the rule was lifted 133 Because Sonja s father was deceased King Olav V accompanied her down the aisle in the father of the bride role 134 According to an urban legend which would begin circulating on the Internet around 2014 every television in America shut down for about 25 seconds on this date during which a murmuring sound was heard Snopes would rate this story as False in March 2023 stating that there was no historical or eyewitness evidence to support it 135 Died U S Army Major General Ulysses S Grant III 87 American engineer and military officerAugust 30 1968 Friday EditRomanian Communist Party RCP General Secretary Nicolae Ceaușescu continued his public show of Romania s defiance of the Soviet Union during a mass rally at the city of Cluj getting respect from the non Communist Western nations and adding to his growing personality cult For the first time Ceaușescu referred to the RCP and by extension himself as the direct successor to three medieval Romanian rulers who fought the Ottoman Empire Prince Mircea cel Bătran of Wallachia and Prince Ștefan cel Mare of Moldavia and Prince Mihai Viteazu who unified Wallachia and Moldavia From that moment on a historian would later note the cult of ancestors and the manipulation of national symbols became key ingredients of Ceaușescuism 136 African American inmates rioted at the Long Binh Jail the overcrowded military prison for U S servicemen near Saigon in South Vietnam 137 The uprising would last for 9 days one inmate was killed and 52 inmates and 63 military policemen were injured Died William Talman 53 American actor best known for portraying television s biggest loser as Los Angeles prosecutor Hamilton Burger who was bested every week by the title character on the popular mystery and courtroom series Perry Mason Six weeks before his death from lung cancer Talman who had smoked three packs of cigarettes a day filmed a 60 second television commercial for the American Cancer Society urging viewers to avoid cigarette smoking and would set a precedent for other such warnings from beyond the grave 138 August 31 1968 Saturday EditA 7 4 magnitude earthquake struck the Khorasan Province in northeastern Iran at 3 17 in the afternoon local time 1047 UTC with heavy casualties in and around the towns of Ferdows Kezri and Kakhk and killed more than 15 000 people 139 Kakhk lost 6 000 of its 7 000 residents as the earthquake destroyed all but one of its buildings a mosque 140 The first multi organ transplant was carried out as four different patients at Houston s Methodist Hospital received organs from a single donor a 20 year old woman who had been killed by a gunshot Dr Michael DeBakey led a team of 60 people surgeons nurses and support staff in transplanting the woman s heart lung and each of her kidneys into four different men who ranged in age from 22 to 50 years old 141 142 Gary Sobers a batsman for the Nottinghamshire County Cricket Club set a first class cricket record by scoring 36 runs in one time at bat during a match against Glamorgan hitting all six balls bowled to him by Glamorgan s Malcolm Nash during his over outside the pitch boundary for six consecutive sixes 143 144 The feat has been repeated only once since then by Ravi Shastri on January 10 1985 145 Nottinghamshire would go on to win the match 394 to 254 The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine released the last 12 people whom they had held captive for forty days after the July 22 hijacking of El Al Flight 426 Of the original 48 people originally board before the plane was diverted to Algiers the seven crewmembers and five male passengers all Israelis remained and were flown to Rome to be handed over to Italian authorities Israel in turn agreed to release 12 Arab commandos being held in Israeli jails 146 Thirteen people were killed in an apartment fire in Gary Indiana in the worst disaster in the city s history 147 Born Hideo Nomo Japanese born professional baseball pitcher who became the first Japan League star to have a long Major League Baseball career in Osaka After being the Pacific League in 1990 for the Kintetsu Buffaloes in 1990 he was the National League Rookie of the Year for the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1995 and played for seven MLB teams before retiring in 2008 Tom Warburton American television cartoon producer and director in Ambler Pennsylvania Died Dennis O Keefe Edward Vance Flanagan 60 American film actor Joe Tracy 83 American bank robber and the last member of the Ashley Gang that stole from 40 banks across Florida and Georgia between 1915 and John Ashley s death in a shootout in 1924 Tracy had been in prison since 1948 for robbing the Perkins State Bank in Williston Florida turning down a chance for parole by refusing to disclose where he hid 23 700 taken in the theft 148 References Edit East Roger Thomas Richard J 2014 Profiles of People in Power The World s Government Leaders Routledge Ex Dictator Guilty In Venezuela Case Pittsburgh Press August 1 1968 p 1 A Report on Operation Breakthrough U S Department of Housing and Urban Development 1974 p 1 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Brooks Courtney G Ertel Ivan D Newkirk Roland W Part II Apollo Application Program January 1967 to December 1968 Skylab A Chronology NASA Special Publication 4011 NASA pp 140 141 Retrieved 11 May 2023 Ford Mark L 2014 A History of NFL Preseason and Exhibition Games 1960 to 1985 Rowman amp Littlefield p 84 Police Fear 200 Dead In Manila Earthquake Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 3 1968 p1 Manila Quake Toll Hits 214 Pittsburgh Press August 5 1968 p6 Ramon Sarro Politics of Religious Change on the Upper Guinea Coast Iconoclasm Done and Undone Iconoclasm Done and Undone Edinburgh University Press 2008 p140 Music for a revolution the sound archives of Radio Television Guinee in From Dust to Digital Ten Years of the Endangered Archives Programme ed by Maja Kominko Open Book Publishers 2015 p554 Italian Jet Crashes Most Safe Pittsburgh Press August 2 1968 p1 Aviation Safety Network F Gregory Gause III Saudi Yemeni Relations Domestic Structures and Foreign Influence Columbia University Press 1990 p86 Suicide Pilot Slams Tallest Building In Vegas Pittsburgh Press August 3 1968 p1 RFK Suspect Sirhan Pleads Not Guilty Pittsburgh Press August 2 1968 p1 Profile The origins of ETA between Francoism and democracy 1958 1981 by Gaizka Fernandez in ETA s Terrorist Campaign From Violence to Politics 1968 2015 ed by Rafael Leonisio et al Routledge 2016 p26 a b August 1968 as Seen from Bratislava by Slavomir Michalek and Stanislav Sikora in The Prague Spring and the Warsaw Pact Invasion of Czechoslovakia 1968 Forty Years Later ed by M Mark Stolarik Bolchazy Carducci Publishers 2010 pp81 83 Partial text of the declaration from Keesing s Contemporary Archives August 1968 reprinted by Stanford University Czechs Bloc Meet Last Troops Leave Pittsburgh Press August 3 1968 p1 a b Ben Fowkes Eastern Europe 1945 1969 From Stalinism to Stagnation Routledge 2014 pp 125 126 Czechoslovakia reveals 68 invitation to Soviets by Ondrej Hejma in Fort Worth TX Star Telegram July 17 1992 p16 Plane Liner Collide in Air 3 Die Chicago Tribune August 5 1968 p3 Congo Brazzaville in Elections in Africa A Data Handbook ed by Dieter Nohlen et al Oxford University Press 1999 p260 Foreign Relations of the United States 1964 1968 Volume VI Vietnam January August 1968 Office of the Historian Nader Entessar Kurdish Politics in the Middle East Rowman amp Littlefield 2010 p88 Luther Perkins Guitarist Dies Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 6 1968 p2 Rudolph Th Jurrjens and Jan Sizoo Efficacy and Efficiency in Multilateral Policy Formation The Experience of Three Arms Control Negotiations Martinus Nijhoff 1997 p206 Secret Spy Rocket Launched at Cape Agent 817 To Peep At Russia China Miami News August 6 1968 p1 Jeffrey T Richelson The Wizards Of Langley Inside The Cia s Directorate Of Science and Technology Westview Press 2002 Nixon Winner on First Ballot Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 8 1968 p1 1 000 Believed Dead In India Flooding Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 13 1968 p1 Western India Town Under 10 Feet Of Water Flood Toll Hits 1 000 Indianapolis Star August 15 1968 p2 Lee Allyn Davis Facts on File Natural Disasters Infobase Publishing Jun 23 2010 pp166 167 9 Miners Killed In Kentucky Pittsburgh Press August 8 1968 p1 Nixon Promises Open World Anti Agnew Revolt Crushed Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 9 1968 p1 Finch Turned Down VP Job Writer Says Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 7 1969 p2 Helene Seppain Contrasting US and German Attitudes to Soviet Trade 1917 91 Politics by Economic Means Springer 1992 p196 48 Die In Crash Of British Plane Pittsburgh Press August 9 1968 p 1 Aviation Safety Network Czechs Cheer Tito in Prague Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 10 1968 p 1 Sweet Home Cook County PDF Cook County Clerk p 1 Archived from the original PDF on 28 May 2016 Retrieved 31 May 2023 32 On Airliner Killed In Charleston Crash Pittsburgh Press August 10 1968 p1 Aviation Safety Network Nuclear Weapons and Strategy in The Oxford Encyclopedia of American Military and Diplomatic History Oxford University Press 2013 p97 Michael Blakeney Intellectual Property Rights and Food Security CAB International 2009 p85 Gareth David Railway Renaissance Britain s Railways After Beeching Pen and Sword 2017 p278 Deep Sea Drilling Project in The Encyclopedia of the Solid Earth Sciences ed by Philip Kearey John Wiley amp Sons 2009 p153 Equatorial Guinea in Elections in Africa A Data Handbook ed by Dieter Nohlen Oxford University Press 1999 p358 Oscar Scafidi Equatorial Guinea Bradt Travel Guides 2015 p26 Red Bloc Troops Maneuver Anew At Czech Border Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 12 1968 p1 2 Arab Jets Land In Israel Pittsburgh Press August 12 1968 p4 Shlomo Aloni Israeli Mirage III and Nesher Aces Bloomsbury Publishing 2012 pp54 56 Yang Su Collective Killings in Rural China during the Cultural Revolution Cambridge University Press 2011 p204 BOMB MISSES MARK GREEK PREMIER SAFE Athens Holds Ex Officer As Assassin Pittsburgh Press August 13 1968 p1 Greece s Premier Escapes Injury In Assassination Try Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 14 1968 p1 Francesco Buffa A Journey through Countries and History A Century of Historical Events as Seen by the European Court of Human Rights Key Editore 2017 Czech Leaders Ulbricht Meet Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 13 1968 p1 Martin McCauley The German Democratic Republic since 1945 Springer 1983 p138 150 000 Mexican Students and Backers March by Ruben Salazar Los Angeles Times August 14 1968 p1 California Copter Crash Kills 21 Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 15 1968 p1 Engdahl E R Vallasenor A 2002 Global seismicity 1900 1999 International Handbook of Earthquake amp Engineering Seismology PDF Part A Volume 81A First ed Academic Press p 682 ISBN 978 0124406520 Celebes Earthquake Death Toll Set at 200 Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 21 1968 p1 Deanna R Adams Rock n Roll and the Cleveland Connection Kent State University Press 2002 p102 U S Fires 2 Multiwarhead Missile Tests Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 17 1968 p1 Czechoslovak Line Backed By Romania Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 17 1968 p2 Seven Leaders Dropped From Portugal s Cabinet Courier Journal Louisville KY August 17 1968 p15 Cheng Guan Ang Ending the Vietnam War The Vietnamese Communists Perspective Routledge 2005 p12 Mary Heimann Czechoslovakia The State that Failed Yale University Press 2009 p241 Post Stalinist Reformism and the Prague Spring by Pavel Kolar in The Cambridge History of Communism Volume 2 The Socialist Camp and World Power 1941 1960s Cambridge University Press 2017 Galia Golan Reform Rule in Czechoslovakia The Dubcek Era 1968 1969 Cambridge University Press 2017 p39 Hungary by Ferenc A Vali in The Communist States in Disarray 1965 1971 edited by Adam Bromke and Teresa Rakowska Harmstone University of Minnesota Press 1972 p129 Ben Fowkes Eastern Europe 1945 1969 From Stalinism to Stagnation Routledge 2014 Mia Divorces Sinatra In Mexican Quickee Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 17 1968 p3 Buses in River 100 Feared Dead Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 19 1968 p1 UAR Plane Down At Sea 41 Dead Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 19 1968 p1 Aviation Safety Network The Czechoslovak Crisis of 1968 in the Context of Soviet Geopolitics by Mikhail V Latysh in The Prague Spring and the Warsaw Pact Invasion of Czechoslovakia 1968 Forty Years Later p10 Guitar Electrocutes Irish Pop Musician Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 20 1968 p1 Pop Singer s Death Probed Arizona Republic Phoenix August 21 1968 p4 Telephone conversation 13306 sound recording LBJ and Richard Nixon 8 18 1968 5 01PM Discover Production Telephone conversation 13307 sound recording LBJ and Hubert Humphrey 8 18 1968 5 23PM Discover Production Ronald E Powaski The Cold War The United States and the Soviet Union 1917 1991 Oxford University Press 1997 Lunar Landing Possible in 1969 First Manned Apollo Flight Slated Oct 11 Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 20 1968 p1 LBJ Sings Wholesome Poultry Act Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 20 1968 p2 a b c d Karen Dawisha The Kremlin and the Prague Spring University of California Press 1984 Red Troops Cross Czech Border Communist Party s Building Encircled By Soviet s Forces Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 21 1968 p1 K 129 in Historical Dictionary of International Intelligence by Nigel West Rowman amp Littlefield 2015 p183 Catholicism Behind the Iron Curtain Czechoslovak and Hungarian Responses to Humanae Vitae by Mary Heimann and Gabor Szegedi in The Schism of 68 Catholicism Contraception and Humanae Vitae in Europe 1945 1975 by Alana Harris Springer 2018 p320 The Arrest of the CpCz CC Presidium Members as Recalled by Josef Smrkovsky s Personal Secretary H Maxa in The Prague Spring 1968 A National Security Archive Documents Reader ed by Jaromir Navratil Central European University Press 1998 p418 The Prague Spring and the Warsaw Pact Invasion as Seen from Prague by Jan Rychlik in The Prague Spring and the Warsaw Pact Invasion of Czechoslovakia 1968 Forty Years Later ed by M Mark Stolarik Bolchazy Carducci Publishers 2010 p46 Czechs Crushed by Russia Soviet Bloc Invaders Hold Liberal Chiefs Pittsburgh Press August 21 1968 p1 Russians Arrest Czech Leaders Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 22 1968 p1 Kenneth N Skoug Czechoslovakia s Lost Fight for Freedom 1967 1969 An American Embassy Perspective Greenwood Publishing 1999 p137 Legitimacy Nation Building and Closure Meanings and Consequences of the Romanian August of 1968 by Dragoș Petrescu in The Prague Spring op cit pp247 Walls Blasted Five Ohio Convicts Killed Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 22 1968 p1 Jubilo por la Visita de Su Santidad Joy for the Visit of His Holiness El Tiempo Bogota August 23 1968 p1 Over 1 000 000 Greet Pope Paul in Colombia Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 23 1968 p1 a b The Prague Spring 1968 A National Security Archive Documents Reader ed by Jaromir Navratil Central European University Press 1998 p xxxvi Strike Threatened By Czech Liberals If Invaders Remain Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 23 1968 p1 Eugen Steiner The Slovak Dilemma Cambridge University Press 1973 p186 Back in the U S S R Lennon McCartney in The Beatles Encyclopedia Everything Fab Four by Kenneth Womack ABC CLIO 2014 p63 Philippe Margotin Jean Michel Guesdon All The Songs The Story Behind Every Beatles Release Running Press 2014 Gill Lachhman Singh Sardar by Gulcharan Singh in Dictionary of National Biography Volume II Indian Institute of Historical Studies 1990 p69 Punjab under direct rule The Guardian August 24 1968 p4 Pritam Singh Federalism Nationalism and Development India and the Punjab Economy Routledge 2008 p34 Frederick Forsyth The Biafra Story The Making of an African Legend Penguin Books 1969 reprinted by Pen and Sword 2015 Caswell Ordered To Integrate Daily Times News Burlington NC August 23 1968 p1 Vanessa Siddle Walker Their Highest Potential An African American School Community in the Segregated South University of North Carolina Press 1996 p192 Gisela Parak Photographs of Environmental Phenomena Scientific Images in the Wake of Environmental Awareness USA 1860s 1970s transcript Verlag 2015 pp142 143 Blighted Great Lakes Life magazine August 23 1968 pp36 47 France detonates its 1st hydrogen bomb Honolulu Star Bulletin August 24 1968 p1 William D Perdue Terrorism and the State A Critique of Domination Through Fear ABC CLIO 1989 p30 Tim Pat Coogan The Troubles Ireland s Ordeal and the Search for Peace Palgrave Macmillan 2002 p70 Red Square at Noon What I remember of the demonstration by Natalya Gorbanevskaya Philip Boobbyer Conscience Dissent and Reform in Soviet Russia Routledge 2005 Burns Fatal To Godwin Daughter Lightning Struck Va Governor s Child on Beach Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 30 1968 p2 Virginia Governor Rushes To Bedside Of Daughter Struck By Lightning Bolt Gettysburg PA Times August 26 1968 p2 Hey Jude Lennon McCartney in The Beatles Encyclopedia Everything Fab Four ABC CLIO 2014 pp389 390 The Moscow Negotiations Normalizing Relations between the Soviet Leadership and the Czechoslovak Delegation after the Invasion by Peter Ruggenthaler and Harald Knoll in The Prague Spring and the Warsaw Pact Invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968 ed by Gunter Bischof et al Rowman amp Littlefield 2010 p182 Ritual Slayer Of 22 Confesses Robbery Motive Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 31 1968 p1 Raman Raghav When India s Jack the Ripper terrorised Mumbai BBCNews Asia November 5 2015 Accept Pact Dubcek Urges Czechs Tearful Talk Asks Peace Compliance Pittsburgh Press August 27 1968 p1 Mark Gilbert Cold War Europe The Politics of a Contested Continent Rowman amp Littlefield 2014 pp152 153 Normalization Normalizace in Historical Dictionary of the Czech State by Rick Fawn and Jiri Hochman Rowman amp Littlefield 2010 pp173 174 Laurence French and Magdaleno Manzanarez NAFTA amp Neocolonialism Comparative Criminal Human amp Social Justice University Press of America 2004 p223 300 000 Demonstrators March in Mexico City by Ruben Salazar Los Angeles Times August 28 1968 p9 U S Envoy Assassinated In Guatemala Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 29 1968 p1 The Chicago Seven Trial in Trials of the Century An Encyclopedia of Popular Culture and the Law ed by Scott P Johnson ABC CLIO 2011 p441 TV Networks Hit By Irate Viewers Pittsburgh Post Gazette September 13 1968 p2 David Copeland The Media s Role in Defining the Nation The Active Voice Peter Lang 2010 p221 The Velvet Divorce of Czechoslovakia as a Solution to a Conflict of Nationalisms by Radka Havlova in Democracy and Ethnic Conflict Advancing Peace in Deeply Divided Societies ed by Adrian Guelke Springer 2004 p109 D Oliveira is left out of tour party The Guardian London August 29 1968 p1 Prince Harald Waits Weds A Commoner Pittsburgh Press August 29 1968 p 2 Commoner Prince Wed Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 30 1968 p 3 Emery David 25 March 2023 Did American TV Viewers Hear the Devil s Voice on Aug 29 1968 Fact Check Snopes Media Group Inc Retrieved 26 March 2023 Communist Legacies in the New Europe History Ethnicity and the Creation of a Socialist Nation in Romania 1945 1989 by Dragoș Petrescu in Conflicted Memories Europeanizing Contemporary Histories ed by Konrad H Jarausch and Thomas Lindenberger Berghahn Books 2007 p44 Catherine Reef African Americans in the Military Infobase Publishing 2010 p xvii A Last Plea Stop Smoking Talman Had Lung Cancer AP report in Miami News September 13 1968 p1 8 222 Iranians Perish in Quake Pittsburgh Post Gazette September 2 1968 p1 Once Prosperous Town of Kakhk Wiped Out by Quake 11 000 Iranians Killed or Missing Pittsburgh Post Gazette September 3 1968 p1 Aug 31 1968 One Donor Four Patients Medical History by Tony Long Wired magazine August 31 2007 Heart Lung Kidneys Transplanted From 1 Pittsburgh Press August 31 1968 p1 6 6 6 6 6 6 Sobers beats world record The Observer London September 1 1968 p16 Suvam Pal The HarperCollins Book of World Cup Trivia Harper Collins 2015 10th January 1985 Ravi Shastri Hits Six Sixes in an Over Hijacked Jet Is Released To Israelis Pittsburgh Post Gazette September 2 1968 p4 Fire Kills 13 Debris Sifted Pittsburgh Post Gazette September 2 1968 p7 The Ashley Mobley Gang in The Mammoth Book of Gangs by James Morton Little Brown and Co 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title August 1968 amp oldid 1178280071, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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