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August 1975

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The following events occurred in August 1975:

August 20, 1975: Viking 1 begins journey to Mars
August 27, 1975: Ex-Emperor of Ethiopia, Haile Selassie, murdered
August 1, 1975: Helsinki Accords signed by world's leaders
August 18, 1975: The bicentennial quarter introduced

August 1, 1975 (Friday)

 
Ms. KNM ER 3733
  • The skull of "KNM ER 3733", a woman of the species Homo ergaster, was discovered by Bernard Ngeneo, 1,750,000 years after her death, at the Koobi Fora Ridge near Lake Turkana in Kenya. By August 9, the nearly intact skull had been carefully unearthed.[4]
  • The Republic of Cabinda unilaterally declared independence.

August 2, 1975 (Saturday)

  • The highest temperatures ever recorded in Massachusetts (107 °F at New Bedford) [5] and Rhode Island (104 °F at Providence) [6] took place during a heat wave in northeast United States.
  • Carrying U.S. President Ford on his departure from the Helsinki summit, Air Force One strayed from its flight plan and veered into restricted air space near Swedish military installations, prompting the Swedish Air Force to send a J35 Draken to intercept the jet and turn it away. Major Carl-Christen Hjort said that the fighter was equipped with air-to-air missiles, "but, of course, there were no plans to use them".[7]
  • Billy Martin had his first game as manager of baseball's New York Yankees for owner George Steinbrenner being hired and fired in several times between 1975 and 1988. In his outing, he guided the Yankees to a 5–3 win over the Cleveland Indians.[8]

August 3, 1975 (Sunday)

  • Less than four weeks after becoming the first President of the Comoros, Ahmed Abdallah was overthrown in a bloodless coup. Foreign mercenaries, sponsored by French soldier of fortune Bob Denard, seized the lone radio station and television station in Moroni, the capital city. An hour later, opposition leader Ali Soilih announced that he was the new President.[9] Solih would place Said Mohamed Jaffar in the office of President, before assuming the job himself in January.[10]
  • A0620-00, the first x-ray nova to also be visible on an optical telescope (designated V616 Mon), was seen and detected to flare. After eight months, the flare diminished, and the object is considered to be likely to be a black hole that was created around the time of the 10th century BCE based on its distance from earth of an estimated 3,000 light years.[11]
  • The Louisiana Superdome opened in New Orleans.[12][13]
  • Died: Jack Molinas, 43, gambler and former college and professional basketball player convicted for "fixing" games, was shot and killed while standing in his backyard at his home in Hollywood Hills, California, in what was believed to have been a mob hit.[14] The gunman, Eugene Conner, was convicted of murder in 1978 after being turned in by his own brother.[15]

August 4, 1975 (Monday)

  • A chartered ALIA, Royal Jordanian Airlines Boeing 707 crashed into the side of a mountain while attempting to land at Agadir after departing Paris three hours earlier. All but four of the passengers were Moroccans who worked in France and who were coming home on their vacations. All 188 people on the jet were killed.[16]
  • Members of the Japanese Red Army terrorist group fought their way into the American consulate in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, then took 52 hostages, only five of whom were American. The group demanded the release of 7 jailed Red Army members.[17] Five of the JRA prisoners accepted the offer of safe passage and were flown to Libya.[18]

August 5, 1975 (Tuesday)

 
President Ford
 
General Lee
  • U.S. President Ford signed into law a U.S. Senate resolution posthumously restoring the American citizenship of Confederate Army General Robert E. Lee, restoring his American citizenship. Lee had died in 1870, but had signed an oath of allegiance in 1865 as part of being granted amnesty. "Although more than a century late," President Ford said, "I am delighted to sign this resolution and to complete the full restoration of General Lee's citizenship."[19]
  • The Parliament of India retroactively changed the 1971 election law that Prime Minister Indira Gandhi had violated four years earlier while running for her seat in the Lok Sabha. Gandhi had been convicted on June 12 of violating campaign laws, with a mandatory penalty of being barred from public office for six years, then declared an emergency. Most citizens of India were unaware of the rewriting of the law because of censorship of the press.[20]
  • South African troops drove ten miles into Angola, resulting in a decision by Cuba to increase its presence in the African nation.[21]
  • An armored car of the Hang Seng Bank was robbed of 75 million Hong Kong dollars, equivalent to USD $10,000,000.[22]
  • Born: Kajol (Kajol Devgan), Indian film actress and five-time winner of Filmfare Award for Best Actress; as Kajol Mukherjee in Mumbai

August 6, 1975 (Wednesday)

  • The United Nations Security Council declined to approve South Korea's application for membership. The United States would veto the application of North Vietnam and South Vietnam a week later.[23]
  • One day before it was to expire, the U.S. Voting Rights Act of 1965 was extended for another ten years. The Act of 1975 had passed the U.S. House of Representatives 341-70 on June 4, 1975, and the U.S. Senate 77-12 on July 24.[24]
  • The death of Hercule Poirot was announced worldwide by the publishers of Agatha Christie's novel Curtain.[25]
  • The Presidium of the Supreme Soviet unanimously approved the Helsinki Accords, and a resolution praying "that all countries represented at the conference will live up to the agreements reached. As to the Soviet Union, it will act precisely in this way." [26]

August 7, 1975 (Thursday)

  • Typhoon Nina produced the heaviest one-day rainfall ever recorded from a Pacific Ocean typhoon, with 97 centimeters (38 inches) at Linzhang County in the Hebei Province.[27] The typhoon itself had killed 12 people up to that point, in Taiwan,[28] but the downpour continued for 26 hours, leading to a dam burst in mainland China the next day.
  • Alger Hiss was sworn back in as an attorney, 23 years after having been disbarred in 1952 for perjury, after denying that he had given U.S. State Department documents, nicknamed the "Pumpkin Papers", to Communist spy Whittaker Chambers.[23]
  • Born:
    • Charlize Theron, South African-born American actress, 2004 Academy Award winner for Best Actress for portrayal of serial killer Aileen Wuornos in the film Monster, in Benoni, Gauteng
    • David Hicks, Australian man imprisoned by the United States at Guantanamo Bay from 2001 to 2007 while awaiting trial on charges of supporting terrorism in Afghanistan; in Adelaide

August 8, 1975 (Friday)

  • The Banqiao Dam, in China's Henan Province, failed after a freak typhoon, drowning over 26,000 people and leading to famine and disease that killed 145,000 more.[29] At 12:30 am local time, the Shimantan Dam, on the Ru River, gave way from a downpour; thirty minutes later, the pressure caused the Banqiao dam to burst, and 62 more dams further downstream failed as well. A large wave, and at least 3 meters (nearly 10 feet) high, swept through the valley, rendering eleven million people homeless. The People's Republic of China would not acknowledge the disaster until 30 years later.[30][31]
  • Singer Hank Williams Jr. was seriously injured in a near-fatal mountain climbing accident at Ajax Peak in Montana, when the ground beneath him gave way, and fell 500 feet down the slope.[32] After two years of reconstructive surgeries, Williams would set about rebuilding his career and become one of the best-selling country music artists in history.[33]
  • Died: Cannonball Adderley, 46, former high school music teacher who became a contemporary jazz artist

August 9, 1975 (Saturday)

  • The COS-B satellite, a project of the European Space Research Organisation (ESRO), was launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. "It is difficult to overestimate the importance of COS-B in the historical evolution" of ESRO, it would be written later.[34] Operating five years longer than expected, up until April 25, 1982, the European mission provided the first detailed view of gamma ray sources in the Milky Way.[35]
  • Samuel Bronfman II, son of the president of Seagram's, was reported kidnapped and held for ransom after disappearing from his home in Purchase, New York.[36] After the ransom was paid, Bronfman was located August 17 by the FBI and by the New York Police Department.[23] Defendants Mel Patrick Lynch and Dominic Byrne would later persuade a jury that Bronfman was their accomplice, and would be acquitted of kidnapping charges, and convicted only of extortion of the Bronfman family.[37] Byrne's attorney wrote a memoir before his death in 2020, confessing that the defense was a lie, and Bronfman had been an innocent victim.[38]
  • Planning began to move the capital of Nigeria from Lagos to a new location. A committee, headed by Akinola Aguda, would select a site for the Federal Capital Territory to be made up of part of the states of Nasarawa, Niger and Kogi, for the building of the new city of Abuja.[39]
  • Mark Donohue set the world record for speed on a closed race course, averaging 221.120 miles per hour while driving a Porsche 917.30 at the Talladega Motor Speedway in Talladega, Alabama. The record would stand for 11 years, but Donohue would be killed in a racing accident ten days later.[40]
  • Hours after their birth, two baby girls, born as Siamese twins, were separated by a team of 25 surgeons, anesthetists and nurses, led by Dr. Peter Jones at the Royal Children's Hospital in Melbourne.[41]
  • Died: Dmitri Shostakovich, 69, Russian composer

August 10, 1975 (Sunday)

 
Betty Ford
  • An interview with U.S. First Lady Betty Ford was broadcast on the popular news show 60 Minutes. Taking questions from Morley Safer, President Ford's wife gave surprisingly candid answers, noting that she "wouldn't be surprised" if her daughter was "having an affair" (referring to premarital sex) and that marijuana was "the type of thing young people have to experience".[42] In the opinion of historian Nigel Hamilton, "alcohol certainly loosened her tongue when she gave what would become a famed interview...No First Lady had ever spoken so candidly on national television, sending moralists of both parties into a tailspin."[43]
  • Former U.S. President Richard M. Nixon signed a contract with Australian TV journalist David Frost, agreeing to answer any questions posed in four sessions of 90 minutes apiece. In return, Nixon would receive $700,000. The meetings would later be the subject of the film Frost/Nixon.[44]
  • As Indira Gandhi's exercise of "emergency rule" over India continued, the Thirty-ninth Amendment of the Constitution of India took effect, prohibiting civil lawsuits or criminal charges from being brought against an incumbent Prime Minister of India. The new rule brought to an end the June decision that had threatened to bar Gandhi from public office.[23]

August 11, 1975 (Monday)

  • British Leyland Motor Corporation, the United Kingdom's largest auto manufacturer, came under 78 percent control of the British government.[45]
  • The UDT carried out a coup in the Portuguese colony at East Timor, which was in the process of being granted eventual independence from Portugal, beginning a civil war between UDT and a rival independence group, Fretilin.[46] In the civil war that followed, the UDT troops and thousands of refugees were forced, by a counterattack from Fretilin, to flee across the border to Indonesia, but not before their leaders signed a document asking for East Timor to be annexed by Indonesia.[47]
  • Resolutions to admit North Vietnam and the Communist South Vietnam to the United Nations were vetoed in the Security Council by the United States. The Council had recommended submitting the resolutions to the U.N. General Assembly by a 13–1 margin, with the U.S. against and Costa Rica abstaining.[48]
  • Died:
    • Anthony C. McAuliffe, 77, American general famous for answering a German surrender demand at the Battle of the Bulge with the written reply "Nuts!". The U.S. 101st Airborne Division was able to hold out against the German attack for a week until relieved by other American units.
    • Rachel Katznelson-Shazar, 90, Zionist political figure and wife of third President of Israel

August 12, 1975 (Tuesday)

  • John Walker of New Zealand became the first person to run a mile in less than 3 minutes and 50 seconds, clocking in at 3:49.4 in a meet a Gothenburg in Sweden.[49]
  • Died: Laurance Labadie, 77, American anarchist and author of Anarchism Applied to Economics, and Origin and Nature of Government

August 13, 1975 (Wednesday)

  • South Korean serial killer Kim Dae-doo murdered 63-year old Ahn Jong-hyun and injured Ahn's wife, beginning a 55-day spree of killing that would not end until his arrest on October 8, 1975. [50] Over a period of eight weeks, Kim murdered 17 victims ranging in age from an infant to a 70-year-old man, including 14 during the month of September. His final victim was a 26-year-old man, Hong Jin-man.
  • A group of 33 Libyan Army officers attempted to overthrow the government of Muammar Gaddafi and his ruling Revolutionary Command Council, in the first major coup attempt since Gaddafi took power in 1969. The coup failed and the officers would be publicly executed in 1977. [51]
  • A terrorist attack by the Provisional IRA Belfast Brigade on the Bayardo Bar, a popular pub in Belfast, Northern Ireland, killed five people and injured 50. Two people outside were killed first, and a bomb placed inside the bar exploded and collapsed the building. [52] Brendan "Bik" McFarlane was arrested 20 minutes later, along with Peter Hamilton and Seamus Clarke. Sentenced to life imprisonment, McFarlane would later coordinate the 1981 Irish hunger strike at Maze Prison, and lead the successful 1983 Maze Prison escape.[53]

August 14, 1975 (Thursday)

  • The government of the Philippines and the rebel Moro Liberation Front signed a cease fire agreement after five years of fighting.[23] The Front would repudiate the agreement on September 11, and fighting would continue until 1986.[54]
  • Portugal resumed its colonial administration of Angola, but pledged to abide by the scheduled November 11 independence date.[23]

August 15, 1975 (Friday)

  • President Sheikh Mujibur Rahman of Bangladesh was assassinated at his residence in Dhaka, along with his wife, three of his sons, two daughters-in-law, and his brother, and 12 other people during a coup d'etat led by Major Syed Faruque Rahman. Khondaker Mostaq Ahmad, Mujibur's Commerce Minister, became the new President. The original six conspirators, all military officers, had met on August 6 and were soon joined by others, and the decision was made to act before September 1, when the nation's district governors would be given control over the police and armed forces. At dawn, the group struck.[55][56] Nearly 35 years later, on January 28, 2010, five of the coup leaders would be hanged after their convictions in 1998, including Syed Faruque, and the man who actually shot President Mujibur, Major Bazlul Huda.[57]
  • The Birmingham Six- Hugh Callaghan, Paddy Joe Hill, Gerry Hunter, Richard McIlkenny, Billy Power and Johnny Walker- were sentenced to life imprisonment in Great Britain, after being wrongfully convicted of the murder of 21 people in the bombings of the Mulberry Bush pub and the Talk of the Town Pub in Birmingham, the United Kingdom, on November 21, 1974. After a 16-year campaign that would show that the police coerced their confessions and mishandled evidence, their convictions would be overturned in 1991.[58]
  • Born:

August 16, 1975 (Saturday)

  • Serial killer Ted Bundy was arrested by Salt Lake County police sergeant Bob Hayward after fleeing when Hayward approached Bundy's Volkswagen Beetle. In the search of the car, Hayward found burglary tools and a ski mask. Bundy would be identified as the kidnapper of Carol Da Roach and sentenced to 15 years in prison. Transferred to a jail in Colorado to stand trial for a murder there, he would escape in 1977 and committed three more murders.[59]

August 17, 1975 (Sunday)

 
Lund with son
  • Two auto racing legends were fatally injured on the same day, thousands of miles apart.[60] Tiny Lund, who had won the 1963 Daytona 500, was killed in a six car pileup while competing in NASCAR's Talladega 500 car race in Alabama.[61] Earlier in the day, Mark Donohue, who had set a world record at the same track a week earlier, was fatally injured during a final morning practice, hours before the Austrian Grand Prix, when a punctured tire caused his car to hurtle through a fence. Donohue walked away from the crash, complaining of a severe headache, then went into convulsions. Two days after undergoing emergency brain surgery at Graz, Donohue died of complications.[62]
  • Six firemen were killed and five others were injured while fighting a blaze at a Gulf Oil refinery in Philadelphia. Two of the company employees prevented further destruction by paddling a rowboat through a pool of hot crude oil and shutting off an open valve in a naphtha storage tank.[63]
  • Died:
    • Vladimir Kuts, 48, Soviet runner, gold medalist at the 1956 Olympics in the 5,000m and 10,000m events
    • Sig Arno, 79, German-born character actor
    • Chang Chun-Ha, 56, South Korean publisher who had published the newspaper Sassanggye from 1953 until its shutdown in 1970, while mountain climbing

August 18, 1975 (Monday)

  • The "Bicentennial quarter" was put into circulation in the United States. For one year, the image of the American eagle was replaced by one of an American Revolutionary War drummer boy. The image of George Washington remained the same, but the inscription "1776-1976" was put where "1976" would have gone.[64] The coins entered general circulation starting on September 17, 1975. [65]

August 19, 1975 (Tuesday)

August 20, 1975 (Wednesday)

  • NASA launched the Viking 1 planetary probe toward Mars. Liftoff took place from Cape Canaveral at 5:22 pm local time.[67] After a journey of ten months and 505 million miles, Viking would enter orbit around Mars on June 19, 1976, and the lander would reach the surface of Mars on July 20, sending back pictures and data until November 13, 1982.[68]
  • Czechoslovak State Airlines Flight 542, an Ilyushin-62 jet, crashed while attempting to land in Damascus, killing 126 of the 128 people aboard.[23]

August 21, 1975 (Thursday)

  • The United States partially lifted its embargo against Cuba, allowing the foreign subsidiaries of American companies to trade directly with the Castro regime.[69]
  • Venezuela nationalized the oil industry there, with production facilities taken over by the state-owned company, Petróleos de Venezuela.[70]
  • Died: Sam McGee, 81, older of the country music duo The McGee Brothers, in a farming accident. A master guitarist who performed regularly at the Grand Ole Opry, McGee was cutting hay on his farm near Franklin, Tennessee when he was run over by his tractor.[71]

August 22, 1975 (Friday)

  • The destroyer ARA Santísima Trinidad, being outfitted as the most advanced ship of the Argentine Navy, was sunk in La Plata Harbor by bombs placed by the Montoneros terrorist group, causing $70,000,000 worth of damage.[72] The ship would be restored and put into service in 1981.[73]
  • Serial killer Henry Lee Lucas was paroled after serving three years of a five-year sentence for attempted kidnapping, and began a killing spree along with his friend, Ottis Toole.[74]
  • John Patler, a sniper who had assassinated American Nazi leader George Lincoln Rockwell on August 25, 1967, was paroled after serving nearly eight years of his 20-year prison sentence.[75]
  • Died: Lancelot Hogben, 79, British scientist and author of books on science, mathematics and language.

August 23, 1975 (Saturday)

  • Laos became the third Indochinese nation to come under Communist Control in six months, as Vientiane, the nation's capital, welcomed the Pathet Lao guerillas.[76] Prime Minister Souphanouvong, who led the Pathet Lao and a coalition government, pledged that King Sri Savang Vatthana would continue to reign.[23]
  • The Soviet Union detonated eight nuclear devices simultaneously in a single event, marking a new trend in multiple testing.[77]
  • Died:

August 24, 1975 (Sunday)

August 25, 1975 (Monday)

August 26, 1975 (Tuesday)

  • The Emir of Bahrain dissolved that nation's Constitutional Assembly, after a two-year experiment in parliamentary democracy, replacing the legislature with the prior system of the laws by decree of the Emir, with the advice and counsel of a cabinet of ministers of his choice. A bicameral legislature would be created in 2001.[82]
  • Bundelkhand University was created in Jhansi in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh.[83]

August 27, 1975 (Wednesday)

  • The death of Haile Selassie I, the last Emperor of Ethiopia, was announced by the African republic's radio station. Officially, the 83-year-old deposed Emperor had been found dead in his palace, and had been in failing health after prostate surgery two months earlier, and he was buried in a "secret location" by orders of President Mengistu.[84] After the overthrow of the Mengistu regime 16 years later, Selassie's body was unearthed from a grave beneath Mengistu's office at the former Imperial Palace, and it was revealed that the Emperor had been smothered with a pillow while sleeping, after he refused to provide information about his overseas bank accounts.[85]
  • The defendants in the 1970 shootings at Kent State University were acquitted of all responsibility for the May 4, 1970 killing of four students. Former Ohio Governor James A. Rhodes, former KSU President Robert I. White, and 27 members of the Ohio National Guard had been sued by the parents of the four students for $46 million.[23]
  • Governor Mário Lemos Pires of the colony of Portuguese Timor abandoned the capital Dili and departed by the freighter Macdili, along with 722 refugees, to the tiny nearby Atauro Island.[86]
  • The West German communications satellite Symphonie-B was launched into space from the United States.[87]

August 28, 1975 (Thursday)

  • The U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced a ban on the use of polyvinyl chloride plastic for packaging of certain foods, because of its potential for causing cancer. At the time, PVC was the second most-used plastic in American food packaging. Although PVC film wrapping of meat and fruits was still permitted, the use of hard PVC plastic on lunch meat packages, and for bottles of liquids, was to be prohibited.[88]
  • The FBI released the first 725 of 48,000 pages of its files concerning Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, 22 years after the American couple's execution for treason. The materials were made available following a Freedom of Information Act request by Professor Allen Weinstein of Smith College.[89]
  • Died: Fritz Wotruba, 68, Austrian sculptor

August 29, 1975 (Friday)

August 30, 1975 (Saturday)

August 31, 1975 (Sunday)

  • The largest robbery of bus passengers in history netted $35,000 worth of cash, coins and jewelry in what was described as "a 1975 version of a stagecoach holdup". Two armed bandits were among the 38 passengers on a Greyhound bus that was en route from Chicago to Toronto when the robbery took place near Detroit, taking an estimated $20,000 in cash and $15,000 in other valuables from people who chose not to fly.[95]

References

  1. ^ "35 Nations Sign Charter For European Security", Sarasota (FL) Herald-Tribune, August 2, 1975, p. 1.
  2. ^ "Helsinki Final Act (1975), in Cold War: The Essential Reference Guide, James R. Arnold and Roberta Wiener, eds., (ABC-CLIO, 2012), p. 75.
  3. ^ B. S. S. Rao, Television For Rural Development (Concept Publishing, 1992) p70; "A visitor to the village", by Yash Paul, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists (January 1977), p. 55.
  4. ^ Mary Bowman-Kruhm, The Leakeys: A Biography (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2005), p. 89.
  5. ^ Larry B. Pletcher and Lisa Harvey, It Happened in Massachusetts (Globe Pequot, 1999) p100
  6. ^ Ted Klein, Rhode Island (Marshall Cavendish, 2007), p. 113.
  7. ^ "Swedish Fighter Intercepts Plane Transporting Ford", Sarasota (FL) Herald-Tribune, August 5, 1975, p. 1.
  8. ^ Mark Gallagher and Walter LeConte, The Yankee Encyclopedia (Sports Publishing, 2003), p. 291.
  9. ^ "Comoro Island Leader Ousted In Bloodless Coup", Sarasota Herald-Tribune, August 4, 1975, p. 11-A.
  10. ^ Ann Lynn Griffiths and Karl Nerenberg, Handbook Of Federal Countries, 2005 (McGill-Queens, 2005), pp. 123–124.
  11. ^ Philip A. Charles and Frederick D. Seward, Exploring the X-Ray Universe (Cambridge University Press, 1995) p263
  12. ^ "Superdome Opens In New Orleans", , Sarasota (FL) Herald-Tribune, August , 1975, p. 3-C.
  13. ^ Arthur Q. Davis, with J. Richard Gruber, It Happened by Design: The Life and Work of Arthur Q. Davis (University Press of Mississippi, 2009), pp. 49–50.
  14. ^ Charles E. Quirk, Sports and the Law: Major Legal Cases (Taylor & Francis, 1999), pp. 127–128; "Molinas Mob Victim?", St. Petersburg Independent, August 5, 1975, p. 1-C.
  15. ^ Stanley H. Teitelbaum, Athletes Who Indulge Their Dark Side: Sex, Drugs, and Cover-Ups (ABC-CLIO, 2010), p. 56.
  16. ^ "Moroccan Jet Crash Kills 188 Aboard", Pittsburgh Press, August 4, 1975, p. 1.
  17. ^ "TERRORISTS SEIZE U.S. EMBASSY", Pittsburgh Press, August 4, 1975, p. 1.
  18. ^ Aileen Gallagher, The Japanese Red Army (Rosen Publishing Group, 2003), pp. 42–43.
  19. ^ "President Gerald R. Ford's Remarks Upon Signing a Bill Restoring Rights of Citizenship to General Robert E. Lee", FordLibraryMuseum.gov.
  20. ^ "Election Law Changed For Indira", Sarasota (FL) Herald-Tribune, August 6, 1975, p. 3-A.
  21. ^ Victoria Brittain, Death of Dignity: Angola's Civil War (Pluto Press, 1998), p. 3.
  22. ^ Kam C. Wong, One Country, Two Systems: Cross Border Crime Between Hong Kong and China (Transaction Publishers, 2012), p. 34.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l The World Almanac and Book of Facts, 1976 (Newspaper Enterprise Association, 1975), pp. 944–946.
  24. ^ Nina M. Moore, Governing Race: Policy, Process, and the Politics of Race (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2000) p100
  25. ^ Russell H. Fitzgibbon, The Agatha Christie Companion (Popular Press, 1980), p. 44.
  26. ^ "Soviets Approve Helsinki Pact", Sarasota (FL) Herald-Tribune, August 7, 1975, p. 2-A.
  27. ^ Pukh Raj Rakhecha and Vijay P. Singh, Applied Hydrometeorology (Springer, 2009), p. 152.
  28. ^ "Typhoon Kills 12 in Taiwan", St. Joseph (MO) News-Press, August 4, 1975, p. 3A.
  29. ^ Shakuntala Bhattacharya, It's Our Earth: Environmental Education (Dorling Kindersley Pvt. Ltd, 2010), pp. 92–93.
  30. ^ "After 30 years, secrets, lessons of China's worst dams burst accident surface", People's Daily Online, October 1, 2005
  31. ^ "Failure of China’s Biggest Dam Kept Secret by Government for Decades", The Vision Times, March 11, 2019.
  32. ^ "Fall Injures Country Singer, 34", Salt Lake Tribune, August 11, 1975, p. 5.
  33. ^ "Long Gone From Daddy", by Michael Bane, Billboard magazine, May 4, 1985.
  34. ^ John Krige, Choosing Big Technologies (Taylor & Francis, 1993), p. 48.
  35. ^ "Cosmic Ray Satellite-B (COS-B)", in Encyclopedia of Space and Astronomy (Joseph A. Angelo, ed.) (Infobase Publishing, 2006), p. 156.
  36. ^ "$4.5 Million Reportedly Set As Seagram Heir's Ransom", Sarasota (FL) Herald-Tribune, August 13, 1975, p. 1.
  37. ^ "Bronfman, Samuel II: alleged kidnap victim", in The Encyclopedia of Kidnappings by Michael Newton (Infobase Publishing, 2002), p. 40.
  38. ^ Traub, Alex (August 12, 2021). "A Lawyer's Deathbed Confession About a Sensational 1975 Kidnapping". The New York Times.
  39. ^ Hilary V. Lukong, The Cameroon Nigeria Border Dispute Management and Resolution, 1981–2011 (African Books Collective, 2011), p. 3.
  40. ^ Randy Leffingwell, Porsche Legends (MotorBooks International, 2002), p. 139.
  41. ^ "Siamese Twin Girls Separated", Sarasota (FL) Herald-Tribune, August 10, 1975, p. 2-A.
  42. ^ "Betty Ford Gives Controversial Answers To Sex, Drug Questions", St. Petersburg (FL) Independent, August 11, 1975, p. 2-A; Clergymen assail Betty Ford on talk of 'affair", Miami News, August 12, 1975, p. 1.
  43. ^ Nigel Hamilton, American Caesars: Lives of the Presidents from Franklin D. Roosevelt to George W. Bush (Yale University Press, 2010).
  44. ^ "Nixon Signs Contract For Interviews On TV", Sarasota (FL) Herald-Tribune, August 11, 1975, p. 1.
  45. ^ "New British Leyland takes to the road", Glasgow Herald, August 11, 1975, p. 3.
  46. ^ Geoffrey C. Gunn, Historical Dictionary of East Timor (Scarecrow Press, 2010), p. 58.
  47. ^ Constâncio Pinto and Matthew Jardine, Inside the East Timor Resistance (James Lorimer & Company, 1997), pp. 15–16.
  48. ^ "United States' Two Vetoes Bar Vietnams From United Nations", Sarasota (FL) Herald-Tribune, August 12, 1975, p. 1.
  49. ^ Peter Matthews, Historical Dictionary of Track and Field (Scarecrow Press, 2012), p. 214.
  50. ^ "17 murders admitted", AP report in Regina (SK) Leader-Post", October 9, 1975, p. 1
  51. ^ Historical Dictionary of Libya, ed. by Ronald Bruce St John (Rowman & Littlefield, 2014) p. xxxi
  52. ^ "Belfast bar is bombed; Four killed, 40 injured", Miami News, August 14, 1975, p. 2.
  53. ^ Padraig O'Malley, Biting at the Grave: The Irish Hunger Strikes and the Politics of Despair (Beacon Press, 1991), p. 68.
  54. ^ John E. Jessup, An Encyclopedic Dictionary of Conflict and Conflict Resolution, 1945–1996 (Greenwood Publishing Group, 1998), p. 489.
  55. ^ "Military Seizes Bangladesh; Mujib Killed in Bloody Coup", Sarasota (FL) Herald-Tribune, August 16, 1975, p. 1.
  56. ^ "Bangladesh Coup Leaders Turned Grudges Into Blood", Milwaukee Journal, August 23, 1975, pp. 1–2.
  57. ^ "Five Mujib killers hanged" November 20, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, BDNews24.com, January 28, 2010.
  58. ^ "Birmingham Pub Bombings", in Encyclopedia of Terrorism, Harvey W. Kushner, ed. (SAGE, 2003), p. 78.
  59. ^ Mike Mayo, American Murder: Criminals, Crimes and the Media (Visible Ink Press, 2008), p. 51.
  60. ^ "Day of Racing Tragedy; 1 Driver Dead, 1 Critical", Milwaukee Journal, August 18, 1975), p. 7.
  61. ^ "Tiny Lund Killed In 6-Car Smashup In Talladega 500", Sarasota Herald-Tribune, August 18, 1975, p. 1-D.
  62. ^ "Donohue dead— Surgical complications", Ottawa Citizen, August 20, 1975, p. 21.
  63. ^ "Philly Refinery Fire Kills 6; Gulf Workers Shut Valve", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, August 19, 1975, p. 1.
  64. ^ "Drummer Boy Replaces Eagle", Sarasota (FL) Herald-Tribune, August 7, 1975, p. 2-A.
  65. ^ "First Bicentennial Quarters Now Being Distributed", Fort Worth Star-Telegram, September 17, 1975, p.4-B
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august, 1975, 1975, january, february, march, april, june, july, august, september, october, november, december, 1617, 2324, 3031, following, events, occurred, august, 1975, viking, begins, journey, mars, august, 1975, emperor, ethiopia, haile, selassie, murde. 1975 January February March April May June July August September October November December lt lt August 1975 gt gt Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa0 1 0 20 3 0 4 0 5 0 6 0 7 0 8 0 910 11 12 13 14 15 1617 18 19 20 21 22 2324 25 26 27 28 29 3031 The following events occurred in August 1975 August 20 1975 Viking 1 begins journey to Mars August 27 1975 Ex Emperor of Ethiopia Haile Selassie murdered August 1 1975 Helsinki Accords signed by world s leaders August 18 1975 The bicentennial quarter introduced Contents 1 August 1 1975 Friday 2 August 2 1975 Saturday 3 August 3 1975 Sunday 4 August 4 1975 Monday 5 August 5 1975 Tuesday 6 August 6 1975 Wednesday 7 August 7 1975 Thursday 8 August 8 1975 Friday 9 August 9 1975 Saturday 10 August 10 1975 Sunday 11 August 11 1975 Monday 12 August 12 1975 Tuesday 13 August 13 1975 Wednesday 14 August 14 1975 Thursday 15 August 15 1975 Friday 16 August 16 1975 Saturday 17 August 17 1975 Sunday 18 August 18 1975 Monday 19 August 19 1975 Tuesday 20 August 20 1975 Wednesday 21 August 21 1975 Thursday 22 August 22 1975 Friday 23 August 23 1975 Saturday 24 August 24 1975 Sunday 25 August 25 1975 Monday 26 August 26 1975 Tuesday 27 August 27 1975 Wednesday 28 August 28 1975 Thursday 29 August 29 1975 Friday 30 August 30 1975 Saturday 31 August 31 1975 Sunday 32 ReferencesAugust 1 1975 Friday EditThe Helsinki Accords recognized Europe s national borders and respect for human rights were signed by the leaders of 35 nations in Finland including the 15 member states of NATO and the 7 Warsaw Pact nations 1 Among other things the agreement conceded the legality of the Soviet Union s annexation of the Baltic nations of Latvia Lithuania and Estonia but also provided the first mechanism for holding the Communist nations to commitments toward human rights and was later cited by Vaclav Havel as a key to the success of liberating Eastern Europe in 1989 2 The Satellite Instructional Television Experiment commenced in India bringing television for the first time to 2 500 villages in six Indian states and territories in a project conducted by the Indian Space Research Organisation ISRO and NASA with the ATS 6 satellite It would operate until July 31 1976 3 Ms KNM ER 3733 The skull of KNM ER 3733 a woman of the species Homo ergaster was discovered by Bernard Ngeneo 1 750 000 years after her death at the Koobi Fora Ridge near Lake Turkana in Kenya By August 9 the nearly intact skull had been carefully unearthed 4 The Republic of Cabinda unilaterally declared independence August 2 1975 Saturday EditThe highest temperatures ever recorded in Massachusetts 107 F at New Bedford 5 and Rhode Island 104 F at Providence 6 took place during a heat wave in northeast United States Carrying U S President Ford on his departure from the Helsinki summit Air Force One strayed from its flight plan and veered into restricted air space near Swedish military installations prompting the Swedish Air Force to send a J35 Draken to intercept the jet and turn it away Major Carl Christen Hjort said that the fighter was equipped with air to air missiles but of course there were no plans to use them 7 Billy Martin had his first game as manager of baseball s New York Yankees for owner George Steinbrenner being hired and fired in several times between 1975 and 1988 In his outing he guided the Yankees to a 5 3 win over the Cleveland Indians 8 August 3 1975 Sunday EditLess than four weeks after becoming the first President of the Comoros Ahmed Abdallah was overthrown in a bloodless coup Foreign mercenaries sponsored by French soldier of fortune Bob Denard seized the lone radio station and television station in Moroni the capital city An hour later opposition leader Ali Soilih announced that he was the new President 9 Solih would place Said Mohamed Jaffar in the office of President before assuming the job himself in January 10 A0620 00 the first x ray nova to also be visible on an optical telescope designated V616 Mon was seen and detected to flare After eight months the flare diminished and the object is considered to be likely to be a black hole that was created around the time of the 10th century BCE based on its distance from earth of an estimated 3 000 light years 11 The Louisiana Superdome opened in New Orleans 12 13 Died Jack Molinas 43 gambler and former college and professional basketball player convicted for fixing games was shot and killed while standing in his backyard at his home in Hollywood Hills California in what was believed to have been a mob hit 14 The gunman Eugene Conner was convicted of murder in 1978 after being turned in by his own brother 15 August 4 1975 Monday EditA chartered ALIA Royal Jordanian Airlines Boeing 707 crashed into the side of a mountain while attempting to land at Agadir after departing Paris three hours earlier All but four of the passengers were Moroccans who worked in France and who were coming home on their vacations All 188 people on the jet were killed 16 Members of the Japanese Red Army terrorist group fought their way into the American consulate in Kuala Lumpur Malaysia then took 52 hostages only five of whom were American The group demanded the release of 7 jailed Red Army members 17 Five of the JRA prisoners accepted the offer of safe passage and were flown to Libya 18 August 5 1975 Tuesday Edit President Ford General Lee U S President Ford signed into law a U S Senate resolution posthumously restoring the American citizenship of Confederate Army General Robert E Lee restoring his American citizenship Lee had died in 1870 but had signed an oath of allegiance in 1865 as part of being granted amnesty Although more than a century late President Ford said I am delighted to sign this resolution and to complete the full restoration of General Lee s citizenship 19 The Parliament of India retroactively changed the 1971 election law that Prime Minister Indira Gandhi had violated four years earlier while running for her seat in the Lok Sabha Gandhi had been convicted on June 12 of violating campaign laws with a mandatory penalty of being barred from public office for six years then declared an emergency Most citizens of India were unaware of the rewriting of the law because of censorship of the press 20 South African troops drove ten miles into Angola resulting in a decision by Cuba to increase its presence in the African nation 21 An armored car of the Hang Seng Bank was robbed of 75 million Hong Kong dollars equivalent to USD 10 000 000 22 Born Kajol Kajol Devgan Indian film actress and five time winner of Filmfare Award for Best Actress as Kajol Mukherjee in MumbaiAugust 6 1975 Wednesday EditThe United Nations Security Council declined to approve South Korea s application for membership The United States would veto the application of North Vietnam and South Vietnam a week later 23 One day before it was to expire the U S Voting Rights Act of 1965 was extended for another ten years The Act of 1975 had passed the U S House of Representatives 341 70 on June 4 1975 and the U S Senate 77 12 on July 24 24 The death of Hercule Poirot was announced worldwide by the publishers of Agatha Christie s novel Curtain 25 The Presidium of the Supreme Soviet unanimously approved the Helsinki Accords and a resolution praying that all countries represented at the conference will live up to the agreements reached As to the Soviet Union it will act precisely in this way 26 August 7 1975 Thursday EditTyphoon Nina produced the heaviest one day rainfall ever recorded from a Pacific Ocean typhoon with 97 centimeters 38 inches at Linzhang County in the Hebei Province 27 The typhoon itself had killed 12 people up to that point in Taiwan 28 but the downpour continued for 26 hours leading to a dam burst in mainland China the next day Alger Hiss was sworn back in as an attorney 23 years after having been disbarred in 1952 for perjury after denying that he had given U S State Department documents nicknamed the Pumpkin Papers to Communist spy Whittaker Chambers 23 Born Charlize Theron South African born American actress 2004 Academy Award winner for Best Actress for portrayal of serial killer Aileen Wuornos in the film Monster in Benoni Gauteng David Hicks Australian man imprisoned by the United States at Guantanamo Bay from 2001 to 2007 while awaiting trial on charges of supporting terrorism in Afghanistan in AdelaideAugust 8 1975 Friday EditThe Banqiao Dam in China s Henan Province failed after a freak typhoon drowning over 26 000 people and leading to famine and disease that killed 145 000 more 29 At 12 30 am local time the Shimantan Dam on the Ru River gave way from a downpour thirty minutes later the pressure caused the Banqiao dam to burst and 62 more dams further downstream failed as well A large wave and at least 3 meters nearly 10 feet high swept through the valley rendering eleven million people homeless The People s Republic of China would not acknowledge the disaster until 30 years later 30 31 Singer Hank Williams Jr was seriously injured in a near fatal mountain climbing accident at Ajax Peak in Montana when the ground beneath him gave way and fell 500 feet down the slope 32 After two years of reconstructive surgeries Williams would set about rebuilding his career and become one of the best selling country music artists in history 33 Died Cannonball Adderley 46 former high school music teacher who became a contemporary jazz artistAugust 9 1975 Saturday EditThe COS B satellite a project of the European Space Research Organisation ESRO was launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California It is difficult to overestimate the importance of COS B in the historical evolution of ESRO it would be written later 34 Operating five years longer than expected up until April 25 1982 the European mission provided the first detailed view of gamma ray sources in the Milky Way 35 Samuel Bronfman II son of the president of Seagram s was reported kidnapped and held for ransom after disappearing from his home in Purchase New York 36 After the ransom was paid Bronfman was located August 17 by the FBI and by the New York Police Department 23 Defendants Mel Patrick Lynch and Dominic Byrne would later persuade a jury that Bronfman was their accomplice and would be acquitted of kidnapping charges and convicted only of extortion of the Bronfman family 37 Byrne s attorney wrote a memoir before his death in 2020 confessing that the defense was a lie and Bronfman had been an innocent victim 38 Planning began to move the capital of Nigeria from Lagos to a new location A committee headed by Akinola Aguda would select a site for the Federal Capital Territory to be made up of part of the states of Nasarawa Niger and Kogi for the building of the new city of Abuja 39 Mark Donohue set the world record for speed on a closed race course averaging 221 120 miles per hour while driving a Porsche 917 30 at the Talladega Motor Speedway in Talladega Alabama The record would stand for 11 years but Donohue would be killed in a racing accident ten days later 40 Hours after their birth two baby girls born as Siamese twins were separated by a team of 25 surgeons anesthetists and nurses led by Dr Peter Jones at the Royal Children s Hospital in Melbourne 41 Died Dmitri Shostakovich 69 Russian composerAugust 10 1975 Sunday Edit Betty Ford An interview with U S First Lady Betty Ford was broadcast on the popular news show 60 Minutes Taking questions from Morley Safer President Ford s wife gave surprisingly candid answers noting that she wouldn t be surprised if her daughter was having an affair referring to premarital sex and that marijuana was the type of thing young people have to experience 42 In the opinion of historian Nigel Hamilton alcohol certainly loosened her tongue when she gave what would become a famed interview No First Lady had ever spoken so candidly on national television sending moralists of both parties into a tailspin 43 Former U S President Richard M Nixon signed a contract with Australian TV journalist David Frost agreeing to answer any questions posed in four sessions of 90 minutes apiece In return Nixon would receive 700 000 The meetings would later be the subject of the film Frost Nixon 44 As Indira Gandhi s exercise of emergency rule over India continued the Thirty ninth Amendment of the Constitution of India took effect prohibiting civil lawsuits or criminal charges from being brought against an incumbent Prime Minister of India The new rule brought to an end the June decision that had threatened to bar Gandhi from public office 23 August 11 1975 Monday EditBritish Leyland Motor Corporation the United Kingdom s largest auto manufacturer came under 78 percent control of the British government 45 The UDT carried out a coup in the Portuguese colony at East Timor which was in the process of being granted eventual independence from Portugal beginning a civil war between UDT and a rival independence group Fretilin 46 In the civil war that followed the UDT troops and thousands of refugees were forced by a counterattack from Fretilin to flee across the border to Indonesia but not before their leaders signed a document asking for East Timor to be annexed by Indonesia 47 Resolutions to admit North Vietnam and the Communist South Vietnam to the United Nations were vetoed in the Security Council by the United States The Council had recommended submitting the resolutions to the U N General Assembly by a 13 1 margin with the U S against and Costa Rica abstaining 48 Died Anthony C McAuliffe 77 American general famous for answering a German surrender demand at the Battle of the Bulge with the written reply Nuts The U S 101st Airborne Division was able to hold out against the German attack for a week until relieved by other American units Rachel Katznelson Shazar 90 Zionist political figure and wife of third President of IsraelAugust 12 1975 Tuesday EditJohn Walker of New Zealand became the first person to run a mile in less than 3 minutes and 50 seconds clocking in at 3 49 4 in a meet a Gothenburg in Sweden 49 Died Laurance Labadie 77 American anarchist and author of Anarchism Applied to Economics and Origin and Nature of GovernmentAugust 13 1975 Wednesday EditSouth Korean serial killer Kim Dae doo murdered 63 year old Ahn Jong hyun and injured Ahn s wife beginning a 55 day spree of killing that would not end until his arrest on October 8 1975 50 Over a period of eight weeks Kim murdered 17 victims ranging in age from an infant to a 70 year old man including 14 during the month of September His final victim was a 26 year old man Hong Jin man A group of 33 Libyan Army officers attempted to overthrow the government of Muammar Gaddafi and his ruling Revolutionary Command Council in the first major coup attempt since Gaddafi took power in 1969 The coup failed and the officers would be publicly executed in 1977 51 A terrorist attack by the Provisional IRA Belfast Brigade on the Bayardo Bar a popular pub in Belfast Northern Ireland killed five people and injured 50 Two people outside were killed first and a bomb placed inside the bar exploded and collapsed the building 52 Brendan Bik McFarlane was arrested 20 minutes later along with Peter Hamilton and Seamus Clarke Sentenced to life imprisonment McFarlane would later coordinate the 1981 Irish hunger strike at Maze Prison and lead the successful 1983 Maze Prison escape 53 August 14 1975 Thursday EditThe government of the Philippines and the rebel Moro Liberation Front signed a cease fire agreement after five years of fighting 23 The Front would repudiate the agreement on September 11 and fighting would continue until 1986 54 Portugal resumed its colonial administration of Angola but pledged to abide by the scheduled November 11 independence date 23 August 15 1975 Friday EditPresident Sheikh Mujibur Rahman of Bangladesh was assassinated at his residence in Dhaka along with his wife three of his sons two daughters in law and his brother and 12 other people during a coup d etat led by Major Syed Faruque Rahman Khondaker Mostaq Ahmad Mujibur s Commerce Minister became the new President The original six conspirators all military officers had met on August 6 and were soon joined by others and the decision was made to act before September 1 when the nation s district governors would be given control over the police and armed forces At dawn the group struck 55 56 Nearly 35 years later on January 28 2010 five of the coup leaders would be hanged after their convictions in 1998 including Syed Faruque and the man who actually shot President Mujibur Major Bazlul Huda 57 The Birmingham Six Hugh Callaghan Paddy Joe Hill Gerry Hunter Richard McIlkenny Billy Power and Johnny Walker were sentenced to life imprisonment in Great Britain after being wrongfully convicted of the murder of 21 people in the bombings of the Mulberry Bush pub and the Talk of the Town Pub in Birmingham the United Kingdom on November 21 1974 After a 16 year campaign that would show that the police coerced their confessions and mishandled evidence their convictions would be overturned in 1991 58 Born Kara Wolters American women s pro basketball player and inductee into the Women s Basketball Hall of Fame 1997 women s college basketball player of the year and Olympic gold medalist 2000 nicknamed Big Girl because of her stature 6 7 or 2 01m as one of the tallest women basketball players in Holliston Massachusetts Yoshikatsu Kawaguchi Japanese soccer football goalkeeper with 116 appearances for the national team in Fuji Shizuoka PrefectureAugust 16 1975 Saturday EditSerial killer Ted Bundy was arrested by Salt Lake County police sergeant Bob Hayward after fleeing when Hayward approached Bundy s Volkswagen Beetle In the search of the car Hayward found burglary tools and a ski mask Bundy would be identified as the kidnapper of Carol Da Roach and sentenced to 15 years in prison Transferred to a jail in Colorado to stand trial for a murder there he would escape in 1977 and committed three more murders 59 August 17 1975 Sunday Edit Lund with son Two auto racing legends were fatally injured on the same day thousands of miles apart 60 Tiny Lund who had won the 1963 Daytona 500 was killed in a six car pileup while competing in NASCAR s Talladega 500 car race in Alabama 61 Earlier in the day Mark Donohue who had set a world record at the same track a week earlier was fatally injured during a final morning practice hours before the Austrian Grand Prix when a punctured tire caused his car to hurtle through a fence Donohue walked away from the crash complaining of a severe headache then went into convulsions Two days after undergoing emergency brain surgery at Graz Donohue died of complications 62 Six firemen were killed and five others were injured while fighting a blaze at a Gulf Oil refinery in Philadelphia Two of the company employees prevented further destruction by paddling a rowboat through a pool of hot crude oil and shutting off an open valve in a naphtha storage tank 63 Died Vladimir Kuts 48 Soviet runner gold medalist at the 1956 Olympics in the 5 000m and 10 000m events Sig Arno 79 German born character actor Chang Chun Ha 56 South Korean publisher who had published the newspaper Sassanggye from 1953 until its shutdown in 1970 while mountain climbingAugust 18 1975 Monday EditThe Bicentennial quarter was put into circulation in the United States For one year the image of the American eagle was replaced by one of an American Revolutionary War drummer boy The image of George Washington remained the same but the inscription 1776 1976 was put where 1976 would have gone 64 The coins entered general circulation starting on September 17 1975 65 August 19 1975 Tuesday EditThe New York Times became the first major American newspaper to call attention to sexual harassment of female employees in an article syndicated nationwide by The New York Times News Service The Wall Street Journal would follow with an article in January 66 Died Ima Hogg 94 American philanthropist and art collector Mark Donohue 38 American race car driver and 1972 Indianapolis 500 winner following a racing accident at Osterreichring racetrack in Spielberg bei Knittelfeld Austria Frank Shields 65 American tennis player and International Tennis Hall of Fame inducteeAugust 20 1975 Wednesday EditNASA launched the Viking 1 planetary probe toward Mars Liftoff took place from Cape Canaveral at 5 22 pm local time 67 After a journey of ten months and 505 million miles Viking would enter orbit around Mars on June 19 1976 and the lander would reach the surface of Mars on July 20 sending back pictures and data until November 13 1982 68 Czechoslovak State Airlines Flight 542 an Ilyushin 62 jet crashed while attempting to land in Damascus killing 126 of the 128 people aboard 23 August 21 1975 Thursday EditThe United States partially lifted its embargo against Cuba allowing the foreign subsidiaries of American companies to trade directly with the Castro regime 69 Venezuela nationalized the oil industry there with production facilities taken over by the state owned company Petroleos de Venezuela 70 Died Sam McGee 81 older of the country music duo The McGee Brothers in a farming accident A master guitarist who performed regularly at the Grand Ole Opry McGee was cutting hay on his farm near Franklin Tennessee when he was run over by his tractor 71 August 22 1975 Friday EditThe destroyer ARA Santisima Trinidad being outfitted as the most advanced ship of the Argentine Navy was sunk in La Plata Harbor by bombs placed by the Montoneros terrorist group causing 70 000 000 worth of damage 72 The ship would be restored and put into service in 1981 73 Serial killer Henry Lee Lucas was paroled after serving three years of a five year sentence for attempted kidnapping and began a killing spree along with his friend Ottis Toole 74 John Patler a sniper who had assassinated American Nazi leader George Lincoln Rockwell on August 25 1967 was paroled after serving nearly eight years of his 20 year prison sentence 75 Died Lancelot Hogben 79 British scientist and author of books on science mathematics and language August 23 1975 Saturday EditLaos became the third Indochinese nation to come under Communist Control in six months as Vientiane the nation s capital welcomed the Pathet Lao guerillas 76 Prime Minister Souphanouvong who led the Pathet Lao and a coalition government pledged that King Sri Savang Vatthana would continue to reign 23 The Soviet Union detonated eight nuclear devices simultaneously in a single event marking a new trend in multiple testing 77 Died Sidney Buchman 73 blacklisted American screenwriter Hank Patterson 86 American TV actor Fred Ziffel on Green Acres August 24 1975 Sunday EditStylianos Pattakos Nikolaos Makarezos and former President George Papadopoulos the three Greek Army colonels who had led the 1967 military coup in Greece were sentenced to death after being convicted of treason and insurrection while eight other defendants including former President Demetrios Ioannidis received life sentences and seven others got terms ranging from 4 to 20 years On August 25 the Greek cabinet voted to commute the sentences to life imprisonment 23 The North American Soccer League the major professional soccer football league in North America played its 8th championship but the first to be called the Soccer Bowl In a match of two expansion teams playing their first seasons the Tampa Bay Rowdies defeated the Portland Timbers 2 to 0 with goals coming from Arsene Auguste of Haiti and Clyde Best of Bermuda Ed Halicki of the San Francisco Giants Major League Baseball team pitched a no hitter against the New York Mets the Giants wouldn t win another no hitter until 2009 Died Charles Revson 68 cosmetics manufacturer who founded the Revlon company August 25 1975 Monday EditIn a luxury railroad car parked in the middle of the Victoria Falls Bridge Ian Smith the Prime Minister of Rhodesia and leader of the white minority government of the mostly black African nation met with Bishop Abel Muzorewa of the black African National Council to negotiate a peaceful solution to a threatened racial war The bridge linked white ruled Rhodesia later Zimbabwe and the black ruled Zambia formerly Northern Rhodesia 78 Earlier in the day Prime Minister John Vorster of white ruled South Africa met with Zambia s President Kenneth Kaunda at the Musi o Tunya Hotel at the Zambian town of Livingstone later referred to as Maramba with both leaders sponsoring the meeting between Smith and Muzorewa 79 However the meeting was not successful 80 Bruce Springsteen s album Born to Run was released in the United States becoming a hit and making Springsteen a rock superstar 81 August 26 1975 Tuesday EditThe Emir of Bahrain dissolved that nation s Constitutional Assembly after a two year experiment in parliamentary democracy replacing the legislature with the prior system of the laws by decree of the Emir with the advice and counsel of a cabinet of ministers of his choice A bicameral legislature would be created in 2001 82 Bundelkhand University was created in Jhansi in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh 83 August 27 1975 Wednesday EditThe death of Haile Selassie I the last Emperor of Ethiopia was announced by the African republic s radio station Officially the 83 year old deposed Emperor had been found dead in his palace and had been in failing health after prostate surgery two months earlier and he was buried in a secret location by orders of President Mengistu 84 After the overthrow of the Mengistu regime 16 years later Selassie s body was unearthed from a grave beneath Mengistu s office at the former Imperial Palace and it was revealed that the Emperor had been smothered with a pillow while sleeping after he refused to provide information about his overseas bank accounts 85 The defendants in the 1970 shootings at Kent State University were acquitted of all responsibility for the May 4 1970 killing of four students Former Ohio Governor James A Rhodes former KSU President Robert I White and 27 members of the Ohio National Guard had been sued by the parents of the four students for 46 million 23 Governor Mario Lemos Pires of the colony of Portuguese Timor abandoned the capital Dili and departed by the freighter Macdili along with 722 refugees to the tiny nearby Atauro Island 86 The West German communications satellite Symphonie B was launched into space from the United States 87 August 28 1975 Thursday EditThe U S Food and Drug Administration announced a ban on the use of polyvinyl chloride plastic for packaging of certain foods because of its potential for causing cancer At the time PVC was the second most used plastic in American food packaging Although PVC film wrapping of meat and fruits was still permitted the use of hard PVC plastic on lunch meat packages and for bottles of liquids was to be prohibited 88 The FBI released the first 725 of 48 000 pages of its files concerning Julius and Ethel Rosenberg 22 years after the American couple s execution for treason The materials were made available following a Freedom of Information Act request by Professor Allen Weinstein of Smith College 89 Died Fritz Wotruba 68 Austrian sculptorAugust 29 1975 Friday EditJuan Velasco Alvarado was deposed as President of Peru by a military coup after seven years of dictatorial rule His Prime Minister General Francisco Morales Bermudez was installed as Velasco s successor 23 General Vasco Goncalves was fired as Prime Minister of Portugal by President Francisco da Costa Gomes 23 The nova V1500 Cygni was first observed on Earth reaching a magnitude of 1 7 the next day making it bright enough to be visible with the naked eye It would remain visible for about a week It was the second brightest nova of the 20th Century exceeded only by CP Puppis in 1942 90 The distance of the V1500 Cygni was calculated at 1 95 kiloparsecs 6 360 light years so the nova occurred in roughly 4400 BC 91 Died Charles C Bass American physician and medical researcher b 1875 92 Eamon de Valera 92 Irish statesman who served as President of Ireland from 1959 to 1973 and as Prime Minister 1937 48 1951 54 and 1957 59August 30 1975 Saturday EditThe Convention on the Prevention of Marine Pollution by Dumping of Wastes and Other Matter sometimes called the London Convention of 1972 entered into force 93 At the Statler Hilton Hotel in New York City the Libertarian Party held its second nominating convention selecting Roger MacBride as its candidate for President of the United States in the 1976 election After the 1972 election MacBride one of 12 Virginian Republicans in the Electoral College broke ranks and cast one electoral vote for the Libertarian candidate John Hospers 94 August 31 1975 Sunday EditThe largest robbery of bus passengers in history netted 35 000 worth of cash coins and jewelry in what was described as a 1975 version of a stagecoach holdup Two armed bandits were among the 38 passengers on a Greyhound bus that was en route from Chicago to Toronto when the robbery took place near Detroit taking an estimated 20 000 in cash and 15 000 in other valuables from people who chose not to fly 95 References Edit 35 Nations Sign Charter For European Security Sarasota FL Herald Tribune August 2 1975 p 1 Helsinki Final Act 1975 in Cold War The Essential Reference Guide James R Arnold and Roberta Wiener eds ABC CLIO 2012 p 75 B S S Rao Television For Rural Development Concept Publishing 1992 p70 A visitor to the village by Yash Paul Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists January 1977 p 55 Mary Bowman Kruhm The Leakeys A Biography Greenwood Publishing Group 2005 p 89 Larry B Pletcher and Lisa Harvey It Happened in Massachusetts Globe Pequot 1999 p100 Ted Klein Rhode Island Marshall Cavendish 2007 p 113 Swedish Fighter Intercepts Plane Transporting Ford Sarasota FL Herald Tribune August 5 1975 p 1 Mark Gallagher and Walter LeConte The Yankee Encyclopedia Sports Publishing 2003 p 291 Comoro Island Leader Ousted In Bloodless Coup Sarasota Herald Tribune August 4 1975 p 11 A Ann Lynn Griffiths and Karl Nerenberg Handbook Of Federal Countries 2005 McGill Queens 2005 pp 123 124 Philip A Charles and Frederick D Seward Exploring the X Ray Universe Cambridge University Press 1995 p263 Superdome Opens In New Orleans Sarasota FL Herald Tribune August 1975 p 3 C Arthur Q Davis with J Richard Gruber It Happened by Design The Life and Work of Arthur Q Davis University Press of Mississippi 2009 pp 49 50 Charles E Quirk Sports and the Law Major Legal Cases Taylor amp Francis 1999 pp 127 128 Molinas Mob Victim St Petersburg Independent August 5 1975 p 1 C Stanley H Teitelbaum Athletes Who Indulge Their Dark Side Sex Drugs and Cover Ups ABC CLIO 2010 p 56 Moroccan Jet Crash Kills 188 Aboard Pittsburgh Press August 4 1975 p 1 TERRORISTS SEIZE U S EMBASSY Pittsburgh Press August 4 1975 p 1 Aileen Gallagher The Japanese Red Army Rosen Publishing Group 2003 pp 42 43 President Gerald R Ford s Remarks Upon Signing a Bill Restoring Rights of Citizenship to General Robert E Lee FordLibraryMuseum gov Election Law Changed For Indira Sarasota FL Herald Tribune August 6 1975 p 3 A Victoria Brittain Death of Dignity Angola s Civil War Pluto Press 1998 p 3 Kam C Wong One Country Two Systems Cross Border Crime Between Hong Kong and China Transaction Publishers 2012 p 34 a b c d e f g h i j k l The World Almanac and Book of Facts 1976 Newspaper Enterprise Association 1975 pp 944 946 Nina M Moore Governing Race Policy Process and the Politics of Race Greenwood Publishing Group 2000 p100 Russell H Fitzgibbon The Agatha Christie Companion Popular Press 1980 p 44 Soviets Approve Helsinki Pact Sarasota FL Herald Tribune August 7 1975 p 2 A Pukh Raj Rakhecha and Vijay P Singh Applied Hydrometeorology Springer 2009 p 152 Typhoon Kills 12 in Taiwan St Joseph MO News Press August 4 1975 p 3A Shakuntala Bhattacharya It s Our Earth Environmental Education Dorling Kindersley Pvt Ltd 2010 pp 92 93 After 30 years secrets lessons of China s worst dams burst accident surface People s Daily Online October 1 2005 Failure of China s Biggest Dam Kept Secret by Government for Decades The Vision Times March 11 2019 Fall Injures Country Singer 34 Salt Lake Tribune August 11 1975 p 5 Long Gone From Daddy by Michael Bane Billboard magazine May 4 1985 John Krige Choosing Big Technologies Taylor amp Francis 1993 p 48 Cosmic Ray Satellite B COS B in Encyclopedia of Space and Astronomy Joseph A Angelo ed Infobase Publishing 2006 p 156 4 5 Million Reportedly Set As Seagram Heir s Ransom Sarasota FL Herald Tribune August 13 1975 p 1 Bronfman Samuel II alleged kidnap victim in The Encyclopedia of Kidnappings by Michael Newton Infobase Publishing 2002 p 40 Traub Alex August 12 2021 A Lawyer s Deathbed Confession About a Sensational 1975 Kidnapping The New York Times Hilary V Lukong The Cameroon Nigeria Border Dispute Management and Resolution 1981 2011 African Books Collective 2011 p 3 Randy Leffingwell Porsche Legends MotorBooks International 2002 p 139 Siamese Twin Girls Separated Sarasota FL Herald Tribune August 10 1975 p 2 A Betty Ford Gives Controversial Answers To Sex Drug Questions St Petersburg FL Independent August 11 1975 p 2 A Clergymen assail Betty Ford on talk of affair Miami News August 12 1975 p 1 Nigel Hamilton American Caesars Lives of the Presidents from Franklin D Roosevelt to George W Bush Yale University Press 2010 Nixon Signs Contract For Interviews On TV Sarasota FL Herald Tribune August 11 1975 p 1 New British Leyland takes to the road Glasgow Herald August 11 1975 p 3 Geoffrey C Gunn Historical Dictionary of East Timor Scarecrow Press 2010 p 58 Constancio Pinto and Matthew Jardine Inside the East Timor Resistance James Lorimer amp Company 1997 pp 15 16 United States Two Vetoes Bar Vietnams From United Nations Sarasota FL Herald Tribune August 12 1975 p 1 Peter Matthews Historical Dictionary of Track and Field Scarecrow Press 2012 p 214 17 murders admitted AP report in Regina SK Leader Post October 9 1975 p 1 Historical Dictionary of Libya ed by Ronald Bruce St John Rowman amp Littlefield 2014 p xxxi Belfast bar is bombed Four killed 40 injured Miami News August 14 1975 p 2 Padraig O Malley Biting at the Grave The Irish Hunger Strikes and the Politics of Despair Beacon Press 1991 p 68 John E Jessup An Encyclopedic Dictionary of Conflict and Conflict Resolution 1945 1996 Greenwood Publishing Group 1998 p 489 Military Seizes Bangladesh Mujib Killed in Bloody Coup Sarasota FL Herald Tribune August 16 1975 p 1 Bangladesh Coup Leaders Turned Grudges Into Blood Milwaukee Journal August 23 1975 pp 1 2 Five Mujib killers hanged Archived November 20 2010 at the Wayback Machine BDNews24 com January 28 2010 Birmingham Pub Bombings in Encyclopedia of Terrorism Harvey W Kushner ed SAGE 2003 p 78 Mike Mayo American Murder Criminals Crimes and the Media Visible Ink Press 2008 p 51 Day of Racing Tragedy 1 Driver Dead 1 Critical Milwaukee Journal August 18 1975 p 7 Tiny Lund Killed In 6 Car Smashup In Talladega 500 Sarasota Herald Tribune August 18 1975 p 1 D Donohue dead Surgical complications Ottawa Citizen August 20 1975 p 21 Philly Refinery Fire Kills 6 Gulf Workers Shut Valve Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 19 1975 p 1 Drummer Boy Replaces Eagle Sarasota FL Herald Tribune August 7 1975 p 2 A First Bicentennial Quarters Now Being Distributed Fort Worth Star Telegram September 17 1975 p 4 B He Said She Said by Carrie N Baker in Disco Divas Women and Popular Culture in the 1970s University of Pennsylvania Press 2003 p 42 Women Begin to Speak Out Against Sexual Harassment at Work by Enid Nemy The New York Times August 19 1975 p 38 Viking Lifts Off To Seek Life On Mars Modesto CA Bee August 21 1975 p A 4 Peter Bond Exploring the Solar System John Wiley amp Sons 2012 p 428 US Softens Trade Bans Against Cuba Milwaukee Sentinel August 21 1975 p 2 John D Wirth The Oil Business in Latin America The Early Years Beard Books 2001 p 212 Hay mishap robs Opry of star Montreal Gazette August 23 1975 p 37 Terrorists Scuttle Argentine Ship Milwaukee Journal August 22 1975 p 3 Antonius C G M Robben Political Violence and Trauma in Argentina University of Pennsylvania Press 2007 p 159 Christopher Berry Dee Serial Killers Up Close and Personal Inside the World of Torturers Psychopaths and Mass Murderers Ulysses Press 2007 pp 261 262 Rockwell Slayer Paroled in Va Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 23 1975 p 2 Laotians Celebrate as Communists Complete Takeover Palm Beach FL Post August 24 1975 p A8 Oleg Bukharin et al Russian Strategic Nuclear Forces MIT Press 2004 p 453 Rhodesia talks end in failure The Sydney Morning Herald August 27 1975 p 3 Vorster to meet Kaunda at vital Rhodesia talks Glasgow Herald August 25 1975 p 1 Zambia in Historical Dictionary of United States Africa Relations Scarecrow Press 2009 p 318 Scott Schinder and Andy Schwartz Icons of Rock Greenwood Publishing Group 2008 p 513 David Seddon A Political and Economic Dictionary of the Middle East Taylor amp Francis 2004 p 90 Ameeta Gupt and Ashish Kumar Handbook of Universities Volume 1 Atlantic Publishers amp Distributors 2006 p 142 Once all powerful Haile Selassie dies but no one mourns Ottawa Citizen August 27 1975 p1 Selasssie s body is exhumed Reading PA Eagle February 17 1992 p A4 David Hamilton Shinn Thomas P Ofcansky Historical Dictionary of Ethiopia Scarecrow Press 2004 pp 195 196 Governor Staff Flee Timor Strife Milwaukee Sentinel August 28 1975 p 2 Niklas Reinke The History of German Space Policy Ideas Influences and Interdependance 1923 2002 Editions Beauchesne 2007 p 116 FDA Set to Ban Certain Plastics Milwaukee Journal August 29 1975 p 8 FBI releases Rosenberg files St Petersburg FL Times August 30 1975 p 3 V1500 Cyg Nova Cygni 1975 American Association of Variable Star Observers The interstellar reddening and distance of Nova Cygni 1975 V1500 Cygni by G J Ferland Astrophysical Journal August 1 1977 pp 873 876 https www newspapers com image 395930257 terms Charles 20Bass amp match 1 Ashbindu Singh One Planet Many People Atlas of Our Changing Environment United Nations Environment Programme 2005 p 92 Libertarian Party Picks Candidate Toledo OH Blade August 31 1975 p 2 35 000 haul in bus hijack Deseret News Salt Lake City September 2 1975 p 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title August 1975 amp oldid 1149970321, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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