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July 1968

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The following events occurred in July 1968:

July 17, 1968: Al-Bakr leads revolution in Iraq
July 29, 1968: Czechoslovakia's Dubcek confronts USSR's Brezhnev
July 29, 1968: Catholic Pope Paul VI issues decision on contraception

July 1, 1968 (Monday) edit

July 2, 1968 (Tuesday) edit

July 3, 1968 (Wednesday) edit

July 4, 1968 (Thursday) edit

  • British yachtsman Alec Rose completed his solo trip around the world after 354 days, as his ketch, Lively Lady, sailed into Portsmouth harbour and was welcomed by 200,000 cheering spectators after an escort by a flotilla of 300 boats. Rose, a 59-year-old vegetable dealer, had spent 320 of his 354 days alone at sea, "longer than any man known in history."[23][24][25] Rose had set off from Portsmouth on July 16, 1967, gotten repairs to his vessel from the people of Bluff, New Zealand during February, and rounded the dangerous waters off Cape Horn on April 2 before returning to Portsmouth almost a year after he had left.[26]
  • Died:
    • Hermann-Bernhard Ramcke, 79, Nazi General, commander of paratroopers during World War II, convicted war criminal, and right-wing advocate after the war.[27]
    • Gustaf Larson, 80, Swedish automotive engineer and the co-founder of Volvo

July 5, 1968 (Friday) edit

  • Two members of a USO-sponsored pop music band were killed, and two others wounded, when they were ambushed while being transported to perform a concert for a group of U.S. Army members at the coastal resort of Vung Tau. Phil Pill, 19, was a bass player and Curt Willis, 17, a drummer, for the group "Brandi Perry and the Bubble Machine". Wounded were 20-year-old Paula Levine, who had auditioned after concluding that "she could make a bigger mark as a pop singer by going to Vietnam than by any other route"[28] and Jack Bone, 18, played keyboards.
  • Rod Laver beat fellow Australian Tony Roche in three straight sets (6–3, 6–4, 6–2) to win the Wimbledon Men's Singles tennis competition.[29] Laver collected £2000 in prize money (roughly $4,800), compared to the £750 awarded to the women's singles champion.[30][31]
  • Alec Rose was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom in recognition of his achievement in sailing around the world single-handed.[32][33]

July 6, 1968 (Saturday) edit

  • The FBI sent a memorandum to its field offices outlining 11 approved COINTELPRO (COunter INTELligence PROgram) practices for disrupting American anti-government organizations collectively described as the "New Left". The ideas ranged from sending anonymous information and misinformation to the local press and the families of organization leaders, to instigating personal conflicts among group leaders, to more extreme measures such as to "create the impression that leaders are 'informants for the Bureau or other law enforcement agencies" and to "have members arrested on marijuana charges."[34]
  • Billie Jean King of the United States defeated Australian Judy Tegart 9–7, 7–5, to win the Wimbledon Ladies' Singles tennis competition. She became the first tennis player (since Maureen Connolly in 1954) to win three singles crowns in a row.[35]
  • Born: John Dickerson, American journalist and a reporter for CBS News; in Washington, D.C.[36]

July 7, 1968 (Sunday) edit

  • The Communist Party USA nominated a presidential candidate for the first time since Earl Browder ran in 1940, choosing 38-year-old Charlene Mitchell as the first African-American woman to run for President of the United States, concluding its four day convention at the Diplomat Hotel in Harlem.[37] Her running mate, Michael Zagarell was a 23-year-old white man from Brooklyn, younger than the constitutionally required age of 35. The Mitchell and Zagarell ticket, on the ballot only in New York, would receive only 1,077 of the 73,199,999 votes cast in the election in November.[38]
  • Elections were held for Japan's House of Councillors, the upper house of the Diet, Japan's parliament.[39] As in the lower house, the Liberal Democratic Party won a plurality of the vote, sufficient for 137 of the 250 seats. The Japan Socialist Party was in second place, with 65 seats.
  • Twenty-six people were killed, and 11 others seriously injured near the town of Natagaima in Colombia, when the bus they were riding struck a bridge abutment and then plunged over a cliff. The bus was on the way from Neiva to Bogota.[40][41]
  • The Yardbirds played their final concert, as the British R&B group finished its run at the Luton College of Technology in Bedfordshire.[42][43]
  • Died: Edgar Monsanto Queeny, 70, American business executive, chemist and conservationist who built the Monsanto Corporation from a small manufacturer of pesticides into the fifth largest chemical company in the world.[44]

July 8, 1968 (Monday) edit

  • A powerful solar flare knocked out short wave radio communications on all sunlit portions of the earth, starting at 1803 UTC. The flare was the result of a powerful explosion on the surface of the Sun almost 8+12 minutes earlier, four days after the Earth had reached its aphelion (94,511,923 miles, its furthest distance from the Sun) on July 4.[45]
  • Thirty-one Egyptian civilians were killed and 58 wounded when artillery shells landed in the El Arbaeen section of the city of Suez during a battle between Israeli and Egyptian forces on opposite sides of the Suez Canal. Israel said that the battle began after Israeli occupation forces at Port Tewfik were struck by Egyptian artillery.[46]
  • With reconnaissance photographs as evidence, the CIA reported to U.S. President Lyndon Johnson that, with American bombing of North Vietnam having been suspended, Haiphong, North Vietnam's largest port, was receiving military cargo from the Soviet Union and from Communist China at unprecedented levels.[47]
  • The U.S. Navy's last flight of the P-5 Marlin flying boat began when an unidentified pilot lifted off from San Diego Bay to fly the aircraft to the Smithsonian Institution.[48]
  • Born:

July 9, 1968 (Tuesday) edit

July 10, 1968 (Wednesday) edit

July 11, 1968 (Thursday) edit

  • The latest Gallup poll figures were released, showing that voters would prefer Democrat Hubert H. Humphrey over Republican Richard M. Nixon for the U.S. presidency by a 46% to 35% margin, but that if Nelson A. Rockefeller were the Republican nominee, the voters were evenly divided, 36% to 36% (with another 21% preferring independent candidate George C. Wallace.[59] A Gallup survey of a separate group of adults showed that if Eugene McCarthy was the Democrat nominee, he would have a 39% to 36% lead over Nixon and a 37% to 35% lead over Rockefeller.[60]
  • The board of trustees of Vassar College, one of the leading higher education institutions for women in the United States, voted to become fully coeducational and to admit its first male students, beginning with the 1969 spring semester. The 107-year-old institution had announced plans in October to establish a separate college for men, but chose instead to have a student exchange program with the all-male Williams College. The decision would be announced on October 1.[61]

July 12, 1968 (Friday) edit

  • The attempted hijacking of Delta Air Lines Flight 977 was foiled by members of the crew. U.S. Senator James O. Eastland of Mississippi and hijacker Oran Daniel Richards were among the 48 passengers on the flight from Philadelphia to Houston. Carrying a .45 caliber pistol, Richards forced his way into the cockpit and ordered the pilot, Captain Forrest Dines, to divert the plane to Cuba. The flight engineer, Glenn Smith, calmly talked to Richards and persuaded him to drop the weapon, then continued the conversation until Richards had calmed down. The Convair 880 then made a landing in Miami, where Richards was arrested. The event "was believed to be the first hijacking thwarted in flight".[62] Richards, a former mental patient, would be found incompetent to stand trial and would later be committed to the United States Medical Center for Federal Prisoners in Springfield, Missouri.[63]
  • Died: Antonio Pietrangeli, 49, Italian film director, killed when he fell off a cliff into the Tyrrhenian Sea near Gaeta.[64] Pietrangeli was on location for his final film, Come, quando, perché.

July 13, 1968 (Saturday) edit

July 14, 1968 (Sunday) edit

  • The Great Passion Play, which describes itself as "the largest outdoor drama in the United States" (based on total attendance each season), was first performed. Held in Eureka Springs, Arkansas at a 4,100 seat amphitheater at the base of the Christ of the Ozarks statue, and inspired by the Oberammergau Passion Play that has taken place in Germany since 1634, the play is now performed regularly between May and October every year.[72]
  • Three Soviet space program engineers were killed during the prelaunch testing of a Proton-K rocket, when a liquid oxygen tank on the fourth stage ruptured and exploded. The lower three stages of the rocket, meant to propel an unmanned Soyuz 7K-L1 spacecraft into lunar orbit as part of the Zond program, remained intact but 7K-L1 #8 was discarded.[73]
  • Two spectators were killed, and 27 others injured, at the Berlin Raceway in Marne, Michigan when a race car crashed into the grandstand after its driver lost control. The 18-year-old driver, who was thrown from the car as it rear-ended another racer, sustained only minor injuries.[74]
  • LeeRoy Yarbrough won the 1968 Northern 300 NASCAR motor race, held at Trenton Speedway.[75]
  • Died: Ron Rector, 24, American NFL running back for the Atlanta Falcons; of injuries sustained in a motorcycle accident on June 29[76][77]

July 15, 1968 (Monday) edit

July 16, 1968 (Tuesday) edit

  • Alexander Dubcek and the Presidium of the Czechoslovak Communist Party received a letter signed by the Communist Party leaders of five other Warsaw Pact nations (the Soviet Union, Poland, East Germany, Hungary and Bulgaria) giving a two week deadline for the Czechoslovakian leadership to appear at a meeting to justify the democratic reforms that the Czechoslovakian Communists had made during the "Prague Spring". The demands included outlawing political groups that opposed Communism, restoring censorship of the Czechoslovakian media, and reasserting "the principled basis of Marxism-Leninism, an undeviating observance of the principle of democratic centralism" led by the example of the Soviets.[82]
  • Born:

July 17, 1968 (Wednesday) edit

July 18, 1968 (Thursday) edit

  • Intel, which would become one of the world's leading computer semiconductor manufacturing companies, was founded by two engineers who had worked at Fairchild Semiconductor, Robert Noyce and Gordon E. Moore in Mountain View, California.[94] They initially called the company and given the name "N M Electronics, Inc.", then soon changed it to "Intelcorporation"[95] before settling on a shorter and more memorable name, Intel,[96] derived from a combination of the words integrated and electronics and suggestive of the word "intelligence".[97]
  • At 5:00 in the morning Eastern Time, mail delivery ceased in Canada as Canada Post workers walked out on strike.[98] Canadian businesses, located in cities near the United States border, compensated by renting boxes in U.S. post offices for their deliveries.[99] The strike would finally be resolved after three weeks with an accord reached on August 6.[100]
  • In Philadelphia, spokesmen for the Atlantic Richfield Company (ARCO) and the Humble Oil and Refining Company announced the discovery of the Prudhoe Bay Oil Field beneath the Alaska North Slope.[101] The oil field, the largest in North America and one of the largest in the world, had been discovered almost seven months earlier, on December 26, 1967.[102]
  • Czechoslovakia's Prime Minister Alexander Dubcek went on national television and radio and told his people that he and the Communist Party would continue the democratic reforms of the Prague Spring, despite demands from the party chiefs in the Soviet Union and its Warsaw Pact allies to discontinue the reforms.[103][104]
  • Died: Corneille Heymans, 76, Belgian physiologist and 1938 Nobel Prize laureate[105]

July 19, 1968 (Friday) edit

  • North Vietnam released three American prisoners of war who had been captured in the past seven months. All three— Major James Frederick Low, Captain Joe Victor Carpenter, and Major Fred Thompson — were United States Air Force pilots who had been shot down on December 16, February 15 and March 20 respectively. The three men were accepted by the International Control Commission in Hanoi and flown to Vientiane in Laos.[106]
  • James Earl Ray arrived in the United States on a U.S. Air Force C-135 after almost six weeks incarceration in London's Wandsworth Prison. After the C-135 landed in Memphis, Tennessee, FBI agents handed him over to Tennessee law enforcement officials who placed him in an armored car and transported him to a specially constructed cell on the third floor of the Shelby County Jail.[107]
  • All 44 crewmen on the burning Philippine freighter SS Magsaysay were rescued by South Korean patrol boats, more than four hours after the ship sent a distress call. The 7,000 ton Magsaysay had been transporting lumber to the South Korean port of Inchon when the cargo caught fire near Daehuksando Island.[108]

July 20, 1968 (Saturday) edit

  • The first Special Olympics games were held, as 1,000 developmentally disabled American and Canadian children, between the ages of 8 and 18, competed during the one-day event at Soldier Field in Chicago.[109][110] The event, organized by Eunice Kennedy Shriver, would be celebrated 40 years later as "one of the most prominent and celebrated sporting programs in the entire world", with programs that were serving 2,500,000 athletes worldwide by 2008.[111]

July 21, 1968 (Sunday) edit

  • China's Communist Party Chairman Mao Zedong issued a decree creating what would be called "July 21 universities" or "21 July Workers' Universities". Inspired by a case study of the Shanghai Machine Tool Factory methods for training its employees, Mao directed expanding the program nationwide. "We still need to have universities," he wrote in his study, published the next day in People's Daily, "but we must shorten the period of schooling, make education reforms, put proletarian politics in command, and take the path of Shanghai Machine Tool Factory to turn factory workers into technicians and engineers." He added that universities "should select their students from workers and peasants. After a few years of study, students should return to their fields of practice." By the time of Mao's death in 1976, there would be 780,000 students enrolled in the July 21 universities.[112]
  • All 14 people on board an Aeroflot Antonov An-2 were killed when the aircraft strayed off course and crashed into a 4,000-meter (13,000 ft) high mountain peak near Sufi-Kurgan in the Soviet Union's Kirghiz SSR (now Kyrgyzstan).[113]
  • The International Convention on Load Lines, which set uniform safety standards for the waterlines of ships (the mark on a ship to show the limit of how far its hull could go into the ocean), entered into effect.[114]
  • American golfer Julius Boros won the 1968 PGA Championship, held at Pecan Valley Golf Club in San Antonio, Texas.[115]
  • Jan Janssen of the Netherlands won the 1968 Tour de France.
  • Died: Ruth St. Denis, 89, American pioneer of modern dance and co-founder (with Ted Shawn) of the Denishawn school[116]

July 22, 1968 (Monday) edit

  • The Mexican Student Movement of 1968 began after students from two rival high schools fought during a soccer game[117] between Vocational School #2 (affiliated with the Instituto Politécnico Nacional (IPN)) and the Isaac Ochoterena Preparatory School (operated by the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM)). Two neighborhood gangs, "Las Arañas" (The Spiders) and "Los Ciudadelos" (The City Boys) joined in the violence between the vocational and prep schools, and Mexican riot police brutally suppressed the street fight. "Although this street battle seemed benign," an author would later note, "it would trigger a sequence of events that led to a confrontation between youth and government forces."[118] Four days later, two groups of student marchers, both of whom had received governmental permits to march, were suppressed in another attack by police, leading to increasing student dissent met by increasing police response that would reach a climax with the massacre of more than 300 students on October 2.[119]
  • El Al Flight 426, from London to Tel Aviv, was hijacked by three members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. Thirty minutes after the Boeing 707 had taken off from Rome on its flight to Israel, the commando group forced its way into the cockpit and pistol-whipped the pilot, Captain Obed Arbabanel, and ordered the copilot to fly to Algiers, where it landed at 12:35 local time (2135 Monday UTC) in the early hours of July 23 about 90 minutes after the PFLP had taken control. The act has been described as "the advent... of the modern era of international terrorism".[120] The PFLP terrorists had selected Flight 426 in the mistaken beliefs that Israeli General Ariel Sharon was on board, and that Arbabanel carried a diplomatic pouch that would reveal Israeli state secrets.[121]
  • Saturday delivery of mail to American homes would be discontinued after August 31, and mail would be delivered to residences only four days per week beginning in December, in a plan announced to a U.S. Senate committee by United States Postmaster General W. Marvin Watson. Watson, who was responding to a Congressional mandate to reduce the number of postal workers, also testified that 314 smaller post offices had been ordered closed and that another 186 would be eliminated by year's end.[122]
  • The Soviet Union also dropped demands that Premier Dubcek and the other ten members of the Presidium of Czechoslovakia come to the USSR for a meeting with the Soviet Politburo, and announced that all 11 members of the Soviet Communist Party's Politburo would come to Czechoslovakia, a decision which the New York Times described as "momentous" and one for which "no precedent could be recalled".[123]
  • The Soviet Union withdrew its remaining troops from Czechoslovakia, more than three weeks after the originally scheduled end of the Warsaw Pact military exercises.[124] Two Soviet regiments remained at Cieszyn in Poland, directly across the Olza River from Český Těšín.[125]
  • Virginia Slims cigarettes, a tobacco product marketed as the choice of a modern woman, were introduced by the Benson & Hedges company with the slogan "You've come a long way, baby".[126] The product test marketed in San Francisco before being rolled out nationwide.[127]

July 23, 1968 (Tuesday) edit

  • At NASA Headquarters, movements were underway on July 23 and 24 to select a new name for post-Apollo human spaceflight (the Apollo Applications Program, or AAP) - one that would be more descriptive of the agency's real goals and objectives. At the Planning Study Group meeting, Douglas R. Lord, Chairman of the Working Group on Extension of Manned Space Flight, was asked to recommend a new name for NASA's Earth-orbiting flight program of the mid-1970s. However, AAP Director Charles W. Mathews urged that the name AAP be retained because NASA had a good deal invested in it. On July 26, Julian M. West wrote Lord recommending that NASA choose some other name to cover both AAP and an interim space base of the mid-1970s (dubbed the "IOWS" program, for Interim Orbital Workshop). West urged that all such names as "AAP," "Workshop," and "Extension of Manned Space Flight" be dropped because they did not accurately describe what he saw as "the major goal-manned space flight itself." West voted for a name put forward by George Trimble of Manned Spacecraft Center (MSC), "Space Base Program," which he believed covered NASA's mid-1970s missions. "We are establishing a foothold for man in space."[128]
  • Ten people were killed and 18 others wounded as police in Cleveland and a black nationalist militant group fought a gun battle in the Glenview section on the predominantly black East Side of the Ohio city near the corner of East 105th Street and Superior Avenue.[129] The violence started at 8:30 in the evening at Lakeview and Arbondale Avenues when five men with automatic rifles fired at a police car and a tow truck that had arrived to tow away an abandoned car, followed by sniper fire from apartment houses around the intersection. Fred "Ahmed" Evans, the leader of the Black Power advocacy group "Black Nationalists of New Libya", reportedly told three arresting officers, "If my carbine hadn't jammed, I would have killed you three. I had you in my sights when my rifle jammed." The ten dead were three policemen, three suspects and four bystanders; 10 of the 18 people wounded were policemen. The violence ended after a heavy rainstorm and the intervention of 2,600 Ohio National Guard troops.[130][131][132][133] One of the ten wounded police officers would die from complications of his injuries in March of 1993.[134]
  • A new labor union, the Alliance for Labor Action, was created as United Auto Workers (UAW) President Walter Reuther and International Brotherhood of Teamsters President Frank Fitzsimmons announced their partnership and their plans to lure away other affiliates of the AFL–CIO.[135] After Reuther's death in 1970 and the depletion of the ALA's treasury during a UAW strike against General Motors, the ALA would disband in 1972.
  • Born:
  • Died:
    • U.S. Air Force Major General Robert F. Worley, 48, deputy commander of the United States Seventh Air Force, killed by enemy fire in South Vietnam when the reconnaissance plane that he was piloting was shot down.[137] Worley had been directing "the huge armada of Air Force planes bombing North and South Vietnam" and had only 17 days remaining before he was to be reassigned to another country.
    • Henry Hallett Dale, 93, English pharmacologist and physiologist and 1936 Nobel laureate[138]

July 24, 1968 (Wednesday) edit

  • A group of 7,000 members of the Meskhetian Turks minority of the Soviet Union demonstrated outside of the headquarters of the Communist Party of the Georgian SSR in Tbilisi and demanded a meeting with the Soviet republic's leadership to discuss the right to return to the territory from which they had been deported in 1944.[139] Local police brutally dispersed the group, but Party First Secretary Vasil Mzhavanadze would meet with representatives of the Meskhetians two days later and promise to find a way of finding regions of the Georgian SSR that would accept roughly 100 families per year.
  • The Holy Order of MANS a monastic-style initiatory religious order, was formally incorporated in California by Earl Blighton, an electrical engineer and social worker who had come to San Francisco to preach "esoteric Christianity" to followers "who had tired of the hippie lifestyle and were searching for a coherent path of mystical enlightenment."[140]
  • In Algiers, the Palestinian hijackers holding El Al Flight 426 released the 26 non-Israeli passengers who were on board the plane and allowed them to depart to France. Three days later, 10 women and children were allowed to depart, but the remaining 12 passengers and crew of 10 were held as hostages and would remain captive until September.
  • Born: Kristin Chenoweth, American stage, TV and film actress, winner of both a Tony Award (1999) and an Emmy Award (2009); in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma[141]

July 25, 1968 (Thursday) edit

  • The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) of the United States issued a decision expanding the availability of VHF/FM marine radio (for two-way communication between American pleasure boats and marinas) from 18 channels to 39. The frequency range (between 156.0 and 174 megahertz, at a higher frequency than commercial FM radio broadcasting) remained the same, but the 21 additional channels were added primarily by being put in the spaces between those that existed.[142]
  • Pope Paul VI signed the papal encyclical Humanae vitae, which would be described as "the careful and prudent reflection of the pontiff upon the report of the papal commission" that had considered the Roman Catholic Church position on contraception; the encyclical was not published until four days later.[143]

July 26, 1968 (Friday) edit

  • The United Kingdom announced its plans for conversion to the metric system by the end of the year 1975, as Minister of Technology Anthony Wedgwood Benn told the House of Commons that the government had accepted the recommendations of the House's Standing Joint Committee on Metrication.[144]
  • The United Kingdom's Theatres Act 1968, subtitled "An Act to abolish censorship of the theatre and to amend the law in respect of theatres and theatrical performances", received Royal Assent after approval by both Houses of Parliament.[145]

July 27, 1968 (Saturday) edit

  • By order of China's Communist Party leader Mao Zedong, "worker-peasant thought propaganda teams" were dispatched to Beijing's Tsinghua University to direct the reform of university education. Yao Wenyuan, who was later convicted as one of the "Gang of Four" that had guided China's Cultural Revolution, would proclaim that "Contradictions which have vexed the intellectuals endlessly are quickly solved as soon as the workers participate," and outlined the goal of resolving what he called "the three differences" of the cultures of urban vs. rural, industrial vs. agricultural, and mental work vs. physical work.[146]
  • Royal assent was given to the British Standard Time Act after its passage by the House of Commons, providing for a three year experiment in which the United Kingdom would remain on Central European Time (CET) year round (one hour ahead of Greenwich Mean Time or Universal Time).[147] Rather than setting clocks back on the last Sunday in October, the British public would stay on CET.
  • Born:

July 28, 1968 (Sunday) edit

July 29, 1968 (Monday) edit

  • Pope Paul VI issued the papal encyclical Humanae vitae, subtitled On the Regulation of Birth, reaffirming the position of the Roman Catholic Church on birth control, and effectively prohibiting all forms of contraception other than sexual abstinence.[157] German Catholic theologian Bernhard Häring would later write that "No papal teaching document has ever caused such an earthquake in the church as the encyclical Humanae vitae"[158] and another author would note that dissent toward the encyclical "precipitated a crisis of authority of unprecedented proportions within the Catholic Church".[159][160] Humanae Vitae had been completed four days earlier, on July 25, a date sometimes reported as the date of release.[161]
  • At the village of Čierna nad Tisou, located in southeastern Czechoslovakia near its borders with the Soviet Union's Ukrainian SSR and with Hungary, Czechoslovakian Communist leader Alexander Dubcek began four days of meetings with Soviet Communist leader Leonid Brezhnev in an effort to avoid a war between the Communist nations of Eastern Europe.[162] The delegations that met at the railway station in Čierna nad Tisou included Prime Minister Oldřich Černík and National Assembly leader Josef Smrkovský to accompany Dubcek, and Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin and Communist Party Second Secretary Mikhail Suslov arriving with Brezhnev.[163]
  • Eighty-seven people were killed in the violent eruption of the Arenal Volcano in Costa Rica. At 7:30 in the morning local time, the first explosion took place and sent blocks of stone into the air, many of which fell onto the villages of Tabacón, Pueblo Nuevo and San Luís that were located in the valley below.[164][165]

July 30, 1968 (Tuesday) edit

July 31, 1968 (Wednesday) edit

  • Brian Howe, a three-year-old boy from Newcastle upon Tyne in England, was murdered by 10-year-old Mary Bell and another girl, Norma Bell. He was last seen by his parents in the street outside his house playing with one of his siblings, the family dog, Mary and Norma. Relatives and neighbours became concerned when Brian went missing. At 11:10 p.m., a search party discovered Brian's body between two large concrete blocks on a railway line known to local children as "Tin Lizzie".[173]
  • Cartoonist Charles M. Schulz added an African-American character, "Franklin", to his popular Peanuts comic strip.[174][175] Schulz made the decision after receiving a letter three months earlier from Mrs. Harriet Glickman, a housewife and mother of three children from Sherman Oaks, California.[176]
  • The popular British TV situation comedy Dad's Army, based on life in World War II for members of the Local Defence Volunteers (the Home Guard), is launched on BBC1 as a six-part series. It would prove so successful that it would run for nine years, with 80 episodes.[177]
  • Died: Jack Pizzey, 57, Premier of Queensland, Australia; of a heart attack[178]

References edit

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  2. ^ "Army Specialist E5 James Griffith Became a Pawn in a Geopolitical Game When His Troop Transport Was Forced to Land By Soviet Fighters," Military Heritage, January 2013, pp. 16-17, 65.
  3. ^ "Stray U.S. Plane Freed by Russia", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, July 3, 1968, p1
  4. ^ "U.S. Jet Carrying 92 Hijacked", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, July 2, 1968, p1
  5. ^ "87 Follow Hijack Jet From Cuba", Pittsburgh Press, July 2, 1968, p1
  6. ^ Harry G. Summers, Jr., Vietnam War Almanac (New York: Facts on File Publications, 1985,) 283.
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  13. ^ "18th Berlin International Film Festival". berlinale.de. Retrieved 28 February 2010.
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  29. ^ "Rod Laver Wins Wimbledon Title Easily", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, July 6, 1968, p9
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  34. ^ James Kirkpatrick Davis, Assault on the Left: The FBI and the Sixties Antiwar Movement (Greenwood, 1997) p58
  35. ^ "Billie Jean Wins Wimbledon Crown", Pittsburgh Press, July 7, 1968, p4-1
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july, 1968, 1968, january, february, march, april, june, july, august, september, october, november, december, following, events, occurred, july, 1968, bakr, leads, revolution, iraq, july, 1968, czechoslovakia, dubcek, confronts, ussr, brezhnev, july, 1968, ca. 1968 January February March April May June July August September October November December lt lt July 1968 gt gt Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa 0 1 0 2 0 3 0 4 0 5 0 6 0 7 0 8 0 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 The following events occurred in July 1968 July 17 1968 Al Bakr leads revolution in Iraq July 29 1968 Czechoslovakia s Dubcek confronts USSR s Brezhnev July 29 1968 Catholic Pope Paul VI issues decision on contraception Contents 1 July 1 1968 Monday 2 July 2 1968 Tuesday 3 July 3 1968 Wednesday 4 July 4 1968 Thursday 5 July 5 1968 Friday 6 July 6 1968 Saturday 7 July 7 1968 Sunday 8 July 8 1968 Monday 9 July 9 1968 Tuesday 10 July 10 1968 Wednesday 11 July 11 1968 Thursday 12 July 12 1968 Friday 13 July 13 1968 Saturday 14 July 14 1968 Sunday 15 July 15 1968 Monday 16 July 16 1968 Tuesday 17 July 17 1968 Wednesday 18 July 18 1968 Thursday 19 July 19 1968 Friday 20 July 20 1968 Saturday 21 July 21 1968 Sunday 22 July 22 1968 Monday 23 July 23 1968 Tuesday 24 July 24 1968 Wednesday 25 July 25 1968 Thursday 26 July 26 1968 Friday 27 July 27 1968 Saturday 28 July 28 1968 Sunday 29 July 29 1968 Monday 30 July 30 1968 Tuesday 31 July 31 1968 Wednesday 32 ReferencesJuly 1 1968 Monday editAn American airplane and its crew of 214 U S Army soldiers was forced to land at an airfield in the Soviet Union after being intercepted in Soviet airspace by two MiG 17 jet fighters 1 Seaboard World Airlines Flight 253A a Douglas DC 8 chartered by the Army had been en route to South Vietnam when it was ordered to land and was escorted to an airfield at Burevestnik in the Kurile Islands The Americans would be detained for two days 2 After the United States apologized to the Soviet Union for allowing its aircraft to stray into Soviet airspace the American DC 8 was allowed to leave on July 3 and arrived at the Yokota Air Base in Japan four hours later 3 Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 714 was hijacked to Cuba by a passenger as it approached Miami after taking off from Chicago The Boeing 727 carried 92 people including the gunman who ordered the pilot to fly to Havana 4 Cuban officials refused to allow the Boeing 727 to take off from the Havana Airport because of concerns that the 10 500 feet 3 200 m runway was not long enough for a fully loaded 727 to depart so the passengers and crew were taken by bus the next day to Varadero where they boarded a Douglas DC 7 operated by an American refugee airlift service 5 The Phoenix Program a U S initiative intended to identify and neutralize the infrastructure of the National Liberation Front of South Vietnam the Viet Cong was launched by the American CIA 6 Japan s new postal code system was launched at Tokyo s Central Post Office 7 Initially the code consisted of five digits starting in 1998 it became a seven digit code 8 The Treaty on the Non Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons was signed in Washington Moscow and London and opened for signature by the other nations of the world 9 10 In the United States the Chicago Great Western Railway was merged with the Chicago and North Western Railway 11 July 2 1968 Tuesday editFrank Milton the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate of London s Bow Street Magistrates Court ordered that accused American assassin James Earl Ray be extradited back to the United States to face charges for the murder of Dr Martin Luther King Jr Extradition had been sought both by the state of Tennessee for King s April 4 murder and by Missouri for Ray s escape from prison in 1967 Milton told Ray directly that the ruling would not take effect until July 17 and that Ray had a right to apply for a writ of habeas corpus 12 The 18th Berlin International Film Festival ended The Golden Bear prize was awarded to the Swedish film Ole dole doff directed by Jan Troell 13 Born Ron Goldman American restaurant waiter and friend of actress Nicole Brown Simpson in Chicago Illinois murdered by alleged killer O J Simpson 1994 14 Died Cardinal Francis Brennan 74 Roman Catholic cardinal and Dean of the Roman Rota An obituary would note that he rose from a coal town in Pennsylvania to the highest post ever held by an American in the Vatican 15 Sir Hans Heysen 90 German born Australian painter 16 July 3 1968 Wednesday editAt the direction of CCP Chairman Mao Zedong the Chinese Communist Party CCP Central Committee issued the July 3 Public Notice described as an important turning point of the Cultural Revolution and the first clear indication that Mao and the central leadership had finally decided to put an end to nationwide violence and chaos 17 The order came in the wake of the massacre of thousands of rebels in the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region by the armies of the Guangxi political commissar General Wei Guoqing one historian estimated that as many as 80 000 people were killed in Guangxi during the period before and after the July 3 notice 18 Six people and eight racehorses were killed in a cargo plane crash at London Heathrow Airport 19 20 The chartered BKS Air Transport plane an Airspeed Ambassador was arriving from France where it was transporting the group from William Hill s farm in Deauville when metal fatigue caused it to lose control while landing The plane struck two empty BEA airliners after touching down 21 At the end of a two day closed door meeting of the Soviet Communist Party Politburo regarding the crisis of the Prague Spring in Czechoslovakia Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko told the 11 full members that It is now quite clear that we cannot avoid an armed intervention 22 July 4 1968 Thursday editBritish yachtsman Alec Rose completed his solo trip around the world after 354 days as his ketch Lively Lady sailed into Portsmouth harbour and was welcomed by 200 000 cheering spectators after an escort by a flotilla of 300 boats Rose a 59 year old vegetable dealer had spent 320 of his 354 days alone at sea longer than any man known in history 23 24 25 Rose had set off from Portsmouth on July 16 1967 gotten repairs to his vessel from the people of Bluff New Zealand during February and rounded the dangerous waters off Cape Horn on April 2 before returning to Portsmouth almost a year after he had left 26 Died Hermann Bernhard Ramcke 79 Nazi General commander of paratroopers during World War II convicted war criminal and right wing advocate after the war 27 Gustaf Larson 80 Swedish automotive engineer and the co founder of VolvoJuly 5 1968 Friday editTwo members of a USO sponsored pop music band were killed and two others wounded when they were ambushed while being transported to perform a concert for a group of U S Army members at the coastal resort of Vung Tau Phil Pill 19 was a bass player and Curt Willis 17 a drummer for the group Brandi Perry and the Bubble Machine Wounded were 20 year old Paula Levine who had auditioned after concluding that she could make a bigger mark as a pop singer by going to Vietnam than by any other route 28 and Jack Bone 18 played keyboards Rod Laver beat fellow Australian Tony Roche in three straight sets 6 3 6 4 6 2 to win the Wimbledon Men s Singles tennis competition 29 Laver collected 2000 in prize money roughly 4 800 compared to the 750 awarded to the women s singles champion 30 31 Alec Rose was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom in recognition of his achievement in sailing around the world single handed 32 33 July 6 1968 Saturday editThe FBI sent a memorandum to its field offices outlining 11 approved COINTELPRO COunter INTELligence PROgram practices for disrupting American anti government organizations collectively described as the New Left The ideas ranged from sending anonymous information and misinformation to the local press and the families of organization leaders to instigating personal conflicts among group leaders to more extreme measures such as to create the impression that leaders are informants for the Bureau or other law enforcement agencies and to have members arrested on marijuana charges 34 Billie Jean King of the United States defeated Australian Judy Tegart 9 7 7 5 to win the Wimbledon Ladies Singles tennis competition She became the first tennis player since Maureen Connolly in 1954 to win three singles crowns in a row 35 Born John Dickerson American journalist and a reporter for CBS News in Washington D C 36 July 7 1968 Sunday editThe Communist Party USA nominated a presidential candidate for the first time since Earl Browder ran in 1940 choosing 38 year old Charlene Mitchell as the first African American woman to run for President of the United States concluding its four day convention at the Diplomat Hotel in Harlem 37 Her running mate Michael Zagarell was a 23 year old white man from Brooklyn younger than the constitutionally required age of 35 The Mitchell and Zagarell ticket on the ballot only in New York would receive only 1 077 of the 73 199 999 votes cast in the election in November 38 Elections were held for Japan s House of Councillors the upper house of the Diet Japan s parliament 39 As in the lower house the Liberal Democratic Party won a plurality of the vote sufficient for 137 of the 250 seats The Japan Socialist Party was in second place with 65 seats Twenty six people were killed and 11 others seriously injured near the town of Natagaima in Colombia when the bus they were riding struck a bridge abutment and then plunged over a cliff The bus was on the way from Neiva to Bogota 40 41 The Yardbirds played their final concert as the British R amp B group finished its run at the Luton College of Technology in Bedfordshire 42 43 Died Edgar Monsanto Queeny 70 American business executive chemist and conservationist who built the Monsanto Corporation from a small manufacturer of pesticides into the fifth largest chemical company in the world 44 July 8 1968 Monday editA powerful solar flare knocked out short wave radio communications on all sunlit portions of the earth starting at 1803 UTC The flare was the result of a powerful explosion on the surface of the Sun almost 8 1 2 minutes earlier four days after the Earth had reached its aphelion 94 511 923 miles its furthest distance from the Sun on July 4 45 Thirty one Egyptian civilians were killed and 58 wounded when artillery shells landed in the El Arbaeen section of the city of Suez during a battle between Israeli and Egyptian forces on opposite sides of the Suez Canal Israel said that the battle began after Israeli occupation forces at Port Tewfik were struck by Egyptian artillery 46 With reconnaissance photographs as evidence the CIA reported to U S President Lyndon Johnson that with American bombing of North Vietnam having been suspended Haiphong North Vietnam s largest port was receiving military cargo from the Soviet Union and from Communist China at unprecedented levels 47 The U S Navy s last flight of the P 5 Marlin flying boat began when an unidentified pilot lifted off from San Diego Bay to fly the aircraft to the Smithsonian Institution 48 Born Michael Weatherly American TV actor known for NCIS and for Bull in New York City Billy Crudup American stage and film actor in Manhasset New YorkJuly 9 1968 Tuesday editThe first heart transplant in a Communist nation and the 25th overall was performed by a 25 man team of surgeons led by Dr Karol Siska at the Slovak Institute of Further Education of Physicians and Pharmacists in Bratislava the capital of the Slovak region of Czechoslovakia 49 Mrs Elena Horvathova died five hours after receiving the donor heart At the time of the surgery only 7 of the 25 people who had received donor hearts were still alive North Vietnamese Air Force pilot Nguyen Phi Hung claimed to have become an ace by shooting down his fifth enemy plane of the Vietnam War a U S Navy F 8 Crusader although the U S Navy records did not show the loss of an F 8 over the Gulf of Tonkin his honor was short lived because before 1st Lieutenant Hung could land he was killed when his MiG 17 fighter was shot down by a U S Navy F8 E 50 The flag of North Vietnam was raised over the Khe Sanh Combat Base by the North Vietnamese Army 12 days after the United States Marines had abandoned the outpost 51 52 During the fighting that continued in South Vietnam s Quang Tri Province in the hills above the base the Marines killed 89 of the North Vietnamese and lost 13 of their own 53 All 11 people on board a chartered Saudi Arabian Airlines Convair CV 340 were killed when the plane crashed while attempting to land at the Dhahran International Airport during a dust storm 54 55 July 10 1968 Wednesday editGeorges Pompidou resigned from his position as Prime Minister of France after more than six years apparently after he and President Charles de Gaulle disagreed over de Gaulle s handling of the student and worker strikes of May 1968 After accepting Pompidou s resignation de Gaulle asked Maurice Couve de Murville to form a new government 56 Gunmen assassinated the governor of the Philippines Tarlac Province in front of 100 witnesses as he was walking back to his office in Tarlac City Minutes earlier Nicolas Feliciano and his pilot Captain Cenen Tumbaga who was also killed had returned to the provincial capital after a flight from Manila 57 In the United Kingdom the 135 year old National Provincial Bank and the 134 year old Westminster Bank completed their merger to become National Westminster Bank which operates under the trade name NatWest 58 Born Hassiba Boulmerka Algerian athlete and gold medalist in the 1500 meter race in the 1992 Summer Olympics and the 1991 and 1995 world championships in ConstantineJuly 11 1968 Thursday editThe latest Gallup poll figures were released showing that voters would prefer Democrat Hubert H Humphrey over Republican Richard M Nixon for the U S presidency by a 46 to 35 margin but that if Nelson A Rockefeller were the Republican nominee the voters were evenly divided 36 to 36 with another 21 preferring independent candidate George C Wallace 59 A Gallup survey of a separate group of adults showed that if Eugene McCarthy was the Democrat nominee he would have a 39 to 36 lead over Nixon and a 37 to 35 lead over Rockefeller 60 The board of trustees of Vassar College one of the leading higher education institutions for women in the United States voted to become fully coeducational and to admit its first male students beginning with the 1969 spring semester The 107 year old institution had announced plans in October to establish a separate college for men but chose instead to have a student exchange program with the all male Williams College The decision would be announced on October 1 61 July 12 1968 Friday editThe attempted hijacking of Delta Air Lines Flight 977 was foiled by members of the crew U S Senator James O Eastland of Mississippi and hijacker Oran Daniel Richards were among the 48 passengers on the flight from Philadelphia to Houston Carrying a 45 caliber pistol Richards forced his way into the cockpit and ordered the pilot Captain Forrest Dines to divert the plane to Cuba The flight engineer Glenn Smith calmly talked to Richards and persuaded him to drop the weapon then continued the conversation until Richards had calmed down The Convair 880 then made a landing in Miami where Richards was arrested The event was believed to be the first hijacking thwarted in flight 62 Richards a former mental patient would be found incompetent to stand trial and would later be committed to the United States Medical Center for Federal Prisoners in Springfield Missouri 63 Died Antonio Pietrangeli 49 Italian film director killed when he fell off a cliff into the Tyrrhenian Sea near Gaeta 64 Pietrangeli was on location for his final film Come quando perche July 13 1968 Saturday editA worldwide pandemic began when the first diagnosis of influenza A virus subtype H3N2 was recorded in Hong Kong The subsequent illness which caused the deaths of an additional 1 000 000 people worldwide and perhaps as many as 4 000 000 65 was referred to as the Hong Kong flu worldwide 66 Gary Player of South Africa won the British Open golf tournament held at Carnoustie Golf Links in Scotland With 289 strokes for 72 holes Player finished two strokes ahead of both Jack Nicklaus of the United States and Bob Charles of New Zealand 67 68 A Boeing 707 cargo plane of the Belgian airline Sabena hit trees and crashed on approach to Lagos Airport Nigeria all seven people on board were killed 69 Martha Vasconcellos appearing as Miss Brazil won the 17th Miss Universe beauty pageant held in Miami 70 Died Jess Lapid 34 Filipino action film star known in the Philippines for film Westerns and detective movies shot by two gunmen at the Lanai Nightclub in Manila Lapid had just completed work on his latest film The Simmaron Brothers 71 July 14 1968 Sunday editThe Great Passion Play which describes itself as the largest outdoor drama in the United States based on total attendance each season was first performed Held in Eureka Springs Arkansas at a 4 100 seat amphitheater at the base of the Christ of the Ozarks statue and inspired by the Oberammergau Passion Play that has taken place in Germany since 1634 the play is now performed regularly between May and October every year 72 Three Soviet space program engineers were killed during the prelaunch testing of a Proton K rocket when a liquid oxygen tank on the fourth stage ruptured and exploded The lower three stages of the rocket meant to propel an unmanned Soyuz 7K L1 spacecraft into lunar orbit as part of the Zond program remained intact but 7K L1 8 was discarded 73 Two spectators were killed and 27 others injured at the Berlin Raceway in Marne Michigan when a race car crashed into the grandstand after its driver lost control The 18 year old driver who was thrown from the car as it rear ended another racer sustained only minor injuries 74 LeeRoy Yarbrough won the 1968 Northern 300 NASCAR motor race held at Trenton Speedway 75 Died Ron Rector 24 American NFL running back for the Atlanta Falcons of injuries sustained in a motorcycle accident on June 29 76 77 July 15 1968 Monday editThe first commercial air service between the United States and the Soviet Union began with the landing of an Aeroflot Ilyushin Il 62 airliner from Moscow at 5 27 in the afternoon at New York s John F Kennedy International Airport 78 At 8 23 in the evening Pan American World Airways Flight 44 a Boeing 707 took off from JFK and arrived 11 hours and 19 minutes later at 2 42 p m local time the next day at Moscow s Sheremetyevo International Airport 79 The Women s Social Services Law took effect in Iran directing that all women between the age of 18 and 25 and who had graduated from high school could be called military service in order for 18 months service in rural areas or poor urban neighborhoods For women under the age of 30 who had a degree beyond high school the military service was obligatory 80 The first episode of the American soap opera One Life to Live was introduced on the ABC television network The show would continue for more than 43 years until its farewell episode on January 20 2012 81 July 16 1968 Tuesday editAlexander Dubcek and the Presidium of the Czechoslovak Communist Party received a letter signed by the Communist Party leaders of five other Warsaw Pact nations the Soviet Union Poland East Germany Hungary and Bulgaria giving a two week deadline for the Czechoslovakian leadership to appear at a meeting to justify the democratic reforms that the Czechoslovakian Communists had made during the Prague Spring The demands included outlawing political groups that opposed Communism restoring censorship of the Czechoslovakian media and reasserting the principled basis of Marxism Leninism an undeviating observance of the principle of democratic centralism led by the example of the Soviets 82 Born Larry Sanger American Internet project developer and philosopher who co founded Wikipedia along with Jimmy Wales in Bellevue Washington 83 Dhanraj Pillay Indian field hockey player with 339 appearances for the Indian national team in Khadki Maharashtra state Barry Sanders American NFL football running back and Pro Football Hall of Fame member in Wichita KansasJuly 17 1968 Wednesday editA U S Army amphibious boat and its crew of 11 Americans and one South Vietnamese was seized by the neutral kingdom of Cambodia and then kept imprisoned for more than five months 84 after veering into the Cambodian side of the Mekong River that marked its border with South Vietnam 85 Cambodia s monarch Prince Norodom Sihanouk demanded a ransom of 12 bulldozers or tractors for return of the LCU amphibious craft and its men and refused an American apology 86 Although treated well during their captivity the Americans would not be released until December 20 87 National Airlines Flight 1064 from Los Angeles to New Orleans was hijacked shortly after it had stopped at Houston Just 35 minutes before the DC 8 jet reached New Orleans a passenger holding a hand grenade took control and diverted the flight to Cuba At Havana Cuban authorities transferred the other 56 passengers to a U S government chartered propeller driven DC 7 and they were flown to Miami to catch a flight to their original destination The crew of the DC 8 flew back to Miami separately 88 Yellow Submarine a psychedelic animated film that was inspired by a 1966 song of the same name premiered at the London Pavilion The Beatles had a cameo appearance but their animated characters were voiced by other actors John Clive Geoffrey Hughes Peter Batten and Paul Angelis 89 Most critics enjoyed the animation style although TIME magazine would later describe the film as too square for hippies and too hip for squares 90 The 17 July Revolution took place in Iraq as the Ba ath Party overthrew the government of Abdul Rahman Arif and put the Middle Eastern nation under the control of its Revolutionary Command Council 91 Arif was arrested and put on an Iraqi Airways flight from Baghdad to Istanbul where he then proceeded to London 92 As Chairman of the Council Ba athist leader Ahmed Hassan al Bakr became the new President of Iraq 93 July 18 1968 Thursday editIntel which would become one of the world s leading computer semiconductor manufacturing companies was founded by two engineers who had worked at Fairchild Semiconductor Robert Noyce and Gordon E Moore in Mountain View California 94 They initially called the company and given the name N M Electronics Inc then soon changed it to Intelcorporation 95 before settling on a shorter and more memorable name Intel 96 derived from a combination of the words integrated and electronics and suggestive of the word intelligence 97 At 5 00 in the morning Eastern Time mail delivery ceased in Canada as Canada Post workers walked out on strike 98 Canadian businesses located in cities near the United States border compensated by renting boxes in U S post offices for their deliveries 99 The strike would finally be resolved after three weeks with an accord reached on August 6 100 In Philadelphia spokesmen for the Atlantic Richfield Company ARCO and the Humble Oil and Refining Company announced the discovery of the Prudhoe Bay Oil Field beneath the Alaska North Slope 101 The oil field the largest in North America and one of the largest in the world had been discovered almost seven months earlier on December 26 1967 102 Czechoslovakia s Prime Minister Alexander Dubcek went on national television and radio and told his people that he and the Communist Party would continue the democratic reforms of the Prague Spring despite demands from the party chiefs in the Soviet Union and its Warsaw Pact allies to discontinue the reforms 103 104 Died Corneille Heymans 76 Belgian physiologist and 1938 Nobel Prize laureate 105 July 19 1968 Friday editNorth Vietnam released three American prisoners of war who had been captured in the past seven months All three Major James Frederick Low Captain Joe Victor Carpenter and Major Fred Thompson were United States Air Force pilots who had been shot down on December 16 February 15 and March 20 respectively The three men were accepted by the International Control Commission in Hanoi and flown to Vientiane in Laos 106 James Earl Ray arrived in the United States on a U S Air Force C 135 after almost six weeks incarceration in London s Wandsworth Prison After the C 135 landed in Memphis Tennessee FBI agents handed him over to Tennessee law enforcement officials who placed him in an armored car and transported him to a specially constructed cell on the third floor of the Shelby County Jail 107 All 44 crewmen on the burning Philippine freighter SS Magsaysay were rescued by South Korean patrol boats more than four hours after the ship sent a distress call The 7 000 ton Magsaysay had been transporting lumber to the South Korean port of Inchon when the cargo caught fire near Daehuksando Island 108 July 20 1968 Saturday editThe first Special Olympics games were held as 1 000 developmentally disabled American and Canadian children between the ages of 8 and 18 competed during the one day event at Soldier Field in Chicago 109 110 The event organized by Eunice Kennedy Shriver would be celebrated 40 years later as one of the most prominent and celebrated sporting programs in the entire world with programs that were serving 2 500 000 athletes worldwide by 2008 111 July 21 1968 Sunday editChina s Communist Party Chairman Mao Zedong issued a decree creating what would be called July 21 universities or 21 July Workers Universities Inspired by a case study of the Shanghai Machine Tool Factory methods for training its employees Mao directed expanding the program nationwide We still need to have universities he wrote in his study published the next day in People s Daily but we must shorten the period of schooling make education reforms put proletarian politics in command and take the path of Shanghai Machine Tool Factory to turn factory workers into technicians and engineers He added that universities should select their students from workers and peasants After a few years of study students should return to their fields of practice By the time of Mao s death in 1976 there would be 780 000 students enrolled in the July 21 universities 112 All 14 people on board an Aeroflot Antonov An 2 were killed when the aircraft strayed off course and crashed into a 4 000 meter 13 000 ft high mountain peak near Sufi Kurgan in the Soviet Union s Kirghiz SSR now Kyrgyzstan 113 The International Convention on Load Lines which set uniform safety standards for the waterlines of ships the mark on a ship to show the limit of how far its hull could go into the ocean entered into effect 114 American golfer Julius Boros won the 1968 PGA Championship held at Pecan Valley Golf Club in San Antonio Texas 115 Jan Janssen of the Netherlands won the 1968 Tour de France Died Ruth St Denis 89 American pioneer of modern dance and co founder with Ted Shawn of the Denishawn school 116 July 22 1968 Monday editThe Mexican Student Movement of 1968 began after students from two rival high schools fought during a soccer game 117 between Vocational School 2 affiliated with the Instituto Politecnico Nacional IPN and the Isaac Ochoterena Preparatory School operated by the National Autonomous University of Mexico UNAM Two neighborhood gangs Las Aranas The Spiders and Los Ciudadelos The City Boys joined in the violence between the vocational and prep schools and Mexican riot police brutally suppressed the street fight Although this street battle seemed benign an author would later note it would trigger a sequence of events that led to a confrontation between youth and government forces 118 Four days later two groups of student marchers both of whom had received governmental permits to march were suppressed in another attack by police leading to increasing student dissent met by increasing police response that would reach a climax with the massacre of more than 300 students on October 2 119 El Al Flight 426 from London to Tel Aviv was hijacked by three members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine Thirty minutes after the Boeing 707 had taken off from Rome on its flight to Israel the commando group forced its way into the cockpit and pistol whipped the pilot Captain Obed Arbabanel and ordered the copilot to fly to Algiers where it landed at 12 35 local time 2135 Monday UTC in the early hours of July 23 about 90 minutes after the PFLP had taken control The act has been described as the advent of the modern era of international terrorism 120 The PFLP terrorists had selected Flight 426 in the mistaken beliefs that Israeli General Ariel Sharon was on board and that Arbabanel carried a diplomatic pouch that would reveal Israeli state secrets 121 Saturday delivery of mail to American homes would be discontinued after August 31 and mail would be delivered to residences only four days per week beginning in December in a plan announced to a U S Senate committee by United States Postmaster General W Marvin Watson Watson who was responding to a Congressional mandate to reduce the number of postal workers also testified that 314 smaller post offices had been ordered closed and that another 186 would be eliminated by year s end 122 The Soviet Union also dropped demands that Premier Dubcek and the other ten members of the Presidium of Czechoslovakia come to the USSR for a meeting with the Soviet Politburo and announced that all 11 members of the Soviet Communist Party s Politburo would come to Czechoslovakia a decision which the New York Times described as momentous and one for which no precedent could be recalled 123 The Soviet Union withdrew its remaining troops from Czechoslovakia more than three weeks after the originally scheduled end of the Warsaw Pact military exercises 124 Two Soviet regiments remained at Cieszyn in Poland directly across the Olza River from Cesky Tesin 125 Virginia Slims cigarettes a tobacco product marketed as the choice of a modern woman were introduced by the Benson amp Hedges company with the slogan You ve come a long way baby 126 The product test marketed in San Francisco before being rolled out nationwide 127 July 23 1968 Tuesday editAt NASA Headquarters movements were underway on July 23 and 24 to select a new name for post Apollo human spaceflight the Apollo Applications Program or AAP one that would be more descriptive of the agency s real goals and objectives At the Planning Study Group meeting Douglas R Lord Chairman of the Working Group on Extension of Manned Space Flight was asked to recommend a new name for NASA s Earth orbiting flight program of the mid 1970s However AAP Director Charles W Mathews urged that the name AAP be retained because NASA had a good deal invested in it On July 26 Julian M West wrote Lord recommending that NASA choose some other name to cover both AAP and an interim space base of the mid 1970s dubbed the IOWS program for Interim Orbital Workshop West urged that all such names as AAP Workshop and Extension of Manned Space Flight be dropped because they did not accurately describe what he saw as the major goal manned space flight itself West voted for a name put forward by George Trimble of Manned Spacecraft Center MSC Space Base Program which he believed covered NASA s mid 1970s missions We are establishing a foothold for man in space 128 Ten people were killed and 18 others wounded as police in Cleveland and a black nationalist militant group fought a gun battle in the Glenview section on the predominantly black East Side of the Ohio city near the corner of East 105th Street and Superior Avenue 129 The violence started at 8 30 in the evening at Lakeview and Arbondale Avenues when five men with automatic rifles fired at a police car and a tow truck that had arrived to tow away an abandoned car followed by sniper fire from apartment houses around the intersection Fred Ahmed Evans the leader of the Black Power advocacy group Black Nationalists of New Libya reportedly told three arresting officers If my carbine hadn t jammed I would have killed you three I had you in my sights when my rifle jammed The ten dead were three policemen three suspects and four bystanders 10 of the 18 people wounded were policemen The violence ended after a heavy rainstorm and the intervention of 2 600 Ohio National Guard troops 130 131 132 133 One of the ten wounded police officers would die from complications of his injuries in March of 1993 134 A new labor union the Alliance for Labor Action was created as United Auto Workers UAW President Walter Reuther and International Brotherhood of Teamsters President Frank Fitzsimmons announced their partnership and their plans to lure away other affiliates of the AFL CIO 135 After Reuther s death in 1970 and the depletion of the ALA s treasury during a UAW strike against General Motors the ALA would disband in 1972 Born Mr Warburton American television cartoon producer and director known for creating the animated television series Codename Kids Next Door in Philadelphia Pennsylvania 136 Gary Payton American NBA basketball point guard and Hall of Fame member in Oakland California Died U S Air Force Major General Robert F Worley 48 deputy commander of the United States Seventh Air Force killed by enemy fire in South Vietnam when the reconnaissance plane that he was piloting was shot down 137 Worley had been directing the huge armada of Air Force planes bombing North and South Vietnam and had only 17 days remaining before he was to be reassigned to another country Henry Hallett Dale 93 English pharmacologist and physiologist and 1936 Nobel laureate 138 July 24 1968 Wednesday editA group of 7 000 members of the Meskhetian Turks minority of the Soviet Union demonstrated outside of the headquarters of the Communist Party of the Georgian SSR in Tbilisi and demanded a meeting with the Soviet republic s leadership to discuss the right to return to the territory from which they had been deported in 1944 139 Local police brutally dispersed the group but Party First Secretary Vasil Mzhavanadze would meet with representatives of the Meskhetians two days later and promise to find a way of finding regions of the Georgian SSR that would accept roughly 100 families per year The Holy Order of MANS a monastic style initiatory religious order was formally incorporated in California by Earl Blighton an electrical engineer and social worker who had come to San Francisco to preach esoteric Christianity to followers who had tired of the hippie lifestyle and were searching for a coherent path of mystical enlightenment 140 In Algiers the Palestinian hijackers holding El Al Flight 426 released the 26 non Israeli passengers who were on board the plane and allowed them to depart to France Three days later 10 women and children were allowed to depart but the remaining 12 passengers and crew of 10 were held as hostages and would remain captive until September Born Kristin Chenoweth American stage TV and film actress winner of both a Tony Award 1999 and an Emmy Award 2009 in Broken Arrow Oklahoma 141 July 25 1968 Thursday editThe Federal Communications Commission FCC of the United States issued a decision expanding the availability of VHF FM marine radio for two way communication between American pleasure boats and marinas from 18 channels to 39 The frequency range between 156 0 and 174 megahertz at a higher frequency than commercial FM radio broadcasting remained the same but the 21 additional channels were added primarily by being put in the spaces between those that existed 142 Pope Paul VI signed the papal encyclical Humanae vitae which would be described as the careful and prudent reflection of the pontiff upon the report of the papal commission that had considered the Roman Catholic Church position on contraception the encyclical was not published until four days later 143 July 26 1968 Friday editThe United Kingdom announced its plans for conversion to the metric system by the end of the year 1975 as Minister of Technology Anthony Wedgwood Benn told the House of Commons that the government had accepted the recommendations of the House s Standing Joint Committee on Metrication 144 The United Kingdom s Theatres Act 1968 subtitled An Act to abolish censorship of the theatre and to amend the law in respect of theatres and theatrical performances received Royal Assent after approval by both Houses of Parliament 145 July 27 1968 Saturday editBy order of China s Communist Party leader Mao Zedong worker peasant thought propaganda teams were dispatched to Beijing s Tsinghua University to direct the reform of university education Yao Wenyuan who was later convicted as one of the Gang of Four that had guided China s Cultural Revolution would proclaim that Contradictions which have vexed the intellectuals endlessly are quickly solved as soon as the workers participate and outlined the goal of resolving what he called the three differences of the cultures of urban vs rural industrial vs agricultural and mental work vs physical work 146 Royal assent was given to the British Standard Time Act after its passage by the House of Commons providing for a three year experiment in which the United Kingdom would remain on Central European Time CET year round one hour ahead of Greenwich Mean Time or Universal Time 147 Rather than setting clocks back on the last Sunday in October the British public would stay on CET Born Julian McMahon Australian TV and film actor in Sydney Jorge Salinas Mexican TV actor in Mexico CityJuly 28 1968 Sunday editChinese Communist Party s Chairman Mao Zedong began the process of phasing out the Red Guards and the bringing to an end of the most violent part of the Cultural Revolution summoning Nie Yuanzi and four other influential Red Guard leaders Kuai Dafu Tan Houlan Han Aijing and Wang Dabin to his office and then reprimanded them Mao s harsh reproach of the Red Guards at the meeting an author would later note and his decision to send students away from cities afterwards marked the beginning of the end of the Red Guard movement in China 148 Pravda the official publication of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union printed an editorial signaling an unofficial Soviet warning to Czechoslovakia The Communists and working people of Czechoslovakia have been warned by their class brothers a party spokesman wrote on the eve of the meeting between the leaders of the two nations and declared that Our entire party and people attach great importance to this meeting time is running out 149 The American Indian Movement which would become the first militant advocacy group for the interests of more than 800 000 Native Americans in the United States was founded in Minneapolis by Dennis Banks Clyde Bellecourt and George Mitchell and other members of the Chippewa Ojibwe tribe initially to protest the police brutality against the Native American minority in Minneapolis and St Paul 150 A United States Air Force C 124C Globemaster II crashed into a mountain while descending into Recife Guararapes International Airport in Brazil All 10 people on board were killed The plane was making its regular weekly flight from Dobbins Air Force Base in Marietta Georgia to resupply workers at the United States missile base codenamed Wideawake on Ascension Island in the South Atlantic Ocean 151 152 England s Court of Appeal upheld a ruling against a judgment of the previous year which had found Hubert Selby Jr s novel Last Exit to Brooklyn to be a violation of the Obscene Publications Act Writer John Mortimer QC appeared for the defence 153 154 Died Dr Charles W Mayo 70 American surgeon and diplomat in an auto accident on his 70th birthday 155 Otto Hahn 89 German chemist who is the discoverer of nuclear fission Nobel Prize laureate 156 Angel Herrera Oria 81 Spanish Jesuit priest Roman Catholic Cardinal and Bishop of MalagaJuly 29 1968 Monday editPope Paul VI issued the papal encyclical Humanae vitae subtitled On the Regulation of Birth reaffirming the position of the Roman Catholic Church on birth control and effectively prohibiting all forms of contraception other than sexual abstinence 157 German Catholic theologian Bernhard Haring would later write that No papal teaching document has ever caused such an earthquake in the church as the encyclical Humanae vitae 158 and another author would note that dissent toward the encyclical precipitated a crisis of authority of unprecedented proportions within the Catholic Church 159 160 Humanae Vitae had been completed four days earlier on July 25 a date sometimes reported as the date of release 161 At the village of Cierna nad Tisou located in southeastern Czechoslovakia near its borders with the Soviet Union s Ukrainian SSR and with Hungary Czechoslovakian Communist leader Alexander Dubcek began four days of meetings with Soviet Communist leader Leonid Brezhnev in an effort to avoid a war between the Communist nations of Eastern Europe 162 The delegations that met at the railway station in Cierna nad Tisou included Prime Minister Oldrich Cernik and National Assembly leader Josef Smrkovsky to accompany Dubcek and Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin and Communist Party Second Secretary Mikhail Suslov arriving with Brezhnev 163 Eighty seven people were killed in the violent eruption of the Arenal Volcano in Costa Rica At 7 30 in the morning local time the first explosion took place and sent blocks of stone into the air many of which fell onto the villages of Tabacon Pueblo Nuevo and San Luis that were located in the valley below 164 165 July 30 1968 Tuesday editJust 13 days after leading the Ba ath Party coup that installed him as President of Iraq Ahmed Hassan al Bakr consolidated his power by eliminating his Ba ath Party rivals who had assisted him including Prime Minister Abd ar Razzaq an Naif who had been installed on July 17 93 Saddam Hussein al Tikriti a 31 year old civilian and al Bakr s chief adviser led the reorganizational coup and had al Naif arrested and forced his resignation Colonel Abd al Rahman al Dawud who had also assisted al Bakr in the July 17 coup had been on a diplomatic mission to neighboring Jordan and agreed not to return to Iraq 166 The Uniform Anatomical Gift Act the first model law designed to facilitate the process of organ donation in the United States was adopted by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws Within a year 20 of the 50 United States would enact statutes that used the text of the uniform act 167 The unsuccessful Apple Boutique a retail store in London that had been created as a business venture by The Beatles closed its doors not quite eight months after its December 7 1967 opening and gave away all of its remaining merchandise 168 A U S Air Force Boeing KC 135 Stratotanker on a training exercise crashed when its vertical stabilizer separated from the aircraft over a forest on Mount Lassen near Red Bluff California all nine people on board were killed 169 Only three customers showed up for the final run of passenger train service on the Grand Canyon Railway The company s assets were then acquired as a subsidiary of the Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railway 170 Thames Television went on the air for the first time broadcasting to London and the surrounding area of the UK The company would continue to hold the independent television franchise for this area until 1992 171 Born Robert Korzeniowski Polish athlete and gold medalist in the 50 kilometer walk in three Olympics 1996 2000 and 2004 and 3 world championships 1997 2001 and 2003 in Lubaczow Terry Crews American TV actor and pro football player in Flint Michigan Died Jon Leifs 69 Icelandic composer pianist and conductor 172 July 31 1968 Wednesday editBrian Howe a three year old boy from Newcastle upon Tyne in England was murdered by 10 year old Mary Bell and another girl Norma Bell He was last seen by his parents in the street outside his house playing with one of his siblings the family dog Mary and Norma Relatives and neighbours became concerned when Brian went missing At 11 10 p m a search party discovered Brian s body between two large concrete blocks on a railway line known to local children as Tin Lizzie 173 Cartoonist Charles M Schulz added an African American character Franklin to his popular Peanuts comic strip 174 175 Schulz made the decision after receiving a letter three months earlier from Mrs Harriet Glickman a housewife and mother of three children from Sherman Oaks California 176 The popular British TV situation comedy Dad s Army based on life in World War II for members of the Local Defence Volunteers the Home Guard is launched on BBC1 as a six part series It would prove so successful that it would run for nine years with 80 episodes 177 Died Jack Pizzey 57 Premier of Queensland Australia of a heart attack 178 References edit Soviets Intercept U S Troop Plane Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 1 1968 p1 Army Specialist E5 James Griffith Became a Pawn in a Geopolitical Game When His Troop Transport Was Forced to Land By Soviet Fighters Military Heritage January 2013 pp 16 17 65 Stray U S Plane Freed by Russia Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 3 1968 p1 U S Jet Carrying 92 Hijacked Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 2 1968 p1 87 Follow Hijack Jet From Cuba Pittsburgh Press July 2 1968 p1 Harry G Summers Jr Vietnam War Almanac New York Facts on File Publications 1985 283 World s first mail processing equipment Tokyo Science Museum Retrieved 12 January 2017 Postal Services and ICTs in Japan in Encyclopedia of Digital Government ed by Ari Veikko Anttiroiko Idea Group 2006 p1341 Ronald E Powaski The Cold War The United States and the Soviet Union 1917 1991 Oxford University Press 1997 Nuclear Control Treaty Signed U S Russians Slate Talks Provo UT Daily Herald July 1 1968 p1 Fiore David J 2006 The Chicago Great Western Railway Arcadia Publishing p 8 ISBN 978 0 7385 4048 1 BRITISH ORDER RAY EXTRADITED Kings Suspect Must Return For Slay Trial Pittsburgh Press July 2 1968 p1 18th Berlin International Film Festival berlinale de Retrieved 28 February 2010 Family of Ron Goldman William Hoffer amp Marilyn Hoffer 1997 His Name is Ron Our Search for Justice HarperCollins Publishers ISBN 978 0 688 15117 1 Cardinal Brennan Dies In Philly Pittsburgh Press July 2 1968 p1 Jane Hylton John Neylon 2004 Hans Heysen Into the Light Wakefield Press p 41 ISBN 9781862546578 July 3 Public Notice 1968 in Historical Dictionary of the Chinese Cultural Revolution ed by Guo Jian Yongyi Song and Yuan Zhou Rowman amp Littlefield 2015 p156 Frank Dikotter The Cultural Revolution A People s History 1962 1976 Bloomsbury 2016 Six killed and six injured in airport crash The Guardian London July 4 1968 p1 2 Parked Planes Hit Seven Killed Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 4 1968 p1 BKS Crash Fatigue failure PDF Flight International 42 11 July 1968 Retrieved 31 August 2009 The Prague Spring Resistance and Surrender of the PCI by Victor Zaslavsky in Promises of 1968 Crisis Illusion and Utopia ed by Vladimir Tismaneanu Central European University Press 2011 p389 Lone Briton Sails Around World Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 5 1968 p1 On this day 4 July 1968 BBC Retrieved 15 November 2014 Alec Rose returns British Pathe video 1968 Retrieved 15 November 2014 Adrian Flanagan The Cape Horners Club Tales of Triumph and Disaster at the World s Most Feared Cape Bloomsbury 2017 pp87 90 David A Miller 1997 Die Schwertertraeger Der Wehrmacht Recipients of the Knight s Cross with Oakleaves and Swords Merriam Press p 45 ISBN 9781576380734 Game Singer s Bubble Burst By VC Bullets AP story by Peter Arnett Fort Lauderdale FL News July 7 1968 p1 Rod Laver Wins Wimbledon Title Easily Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 6 1968 p9 Little Alan 2013 Wimbledon Compendium 2013 23 ed London All England Lawn Tennis amp Croquet Club pp 327 334 ISBN 978 1899039401 John Barrett ed 1969 BP Year Book of World Tennis London Sydney Ward Lock amp Co Ltd p 52 OCLC 502175694 Queen Knights Rose For Global Voyage Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 6 1968 p2 Alec Rose and Lively Lady at Daily Mirror Building British Pathe video 1968 Retrieved 16 November 2014 James Kirkpatrick Davis Assault on the Left The FBI and the Sixties Antiwar Movement Greenwood 1997 p58 Billie Jean Wins Wimbledon Crown Pittsburgh Press July 7 1968 p4 1 Dickerson John 1968 Library of Congress Retrieved May 13 2017 Reds Choose Negro Woman for President Chicago Tribune July 8 1968 p13 USAElectionAtlas org Liberals Lead In Japan Vote Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 8 1968 p2 Bus Plunge Kills 26 in Columbia sic Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 9 1968 p1 24 los Muertos por el Accidente en el Tolima El Tiempo Bogota July 9 1968 p3 Buckley Peter ed 2003 The Rough Guide to Rock p 1198 ISBN 1 84353 105 4 Rock John J Rolling Stone 6 July 1968 Edgar M Queeny Dead at 70 Monsanto s Former Chairman New York Times July 8 1968 Retrieved October 10 2023 High Intensity Solar Flare Produces Long Noise Storm Baltimore Sun July 9 1968 p3 Israeli Gunfire Kills 31 Egyptians Minneapolis Star July 9 1968 p4 The President s Daily Brief 8 July 1968 Retrieved 1 May 2020 Marlin Phased Out Des Moines IA Register July 9 1968 p3 Czechs Perform Heart Transplant Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 10 1968 p1 Istvan Toperczer MiG 17 19 Aces of the Vietnam War Bloomsbury 2016 Reds Claim to Have Raised Their Flag Over Khe Sanh La Crosse WI Tribune July 9 1968 p1 Michael A Eggleston Dak To and the Border Battles of Vietnam 1967 1968 McFarland 2017 p111 Marines Repulse Viets Near Khe Sanh Montgomery AL Advertiser July 9 1968 p1 Aviation Safety Network Accident Description Saudi Arabian Plane Crashes Killing 10 Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 10 1968 p1 Pompidou Quits In French Shakeup Pittsburgh Press July 10 1968 p1 Gunmen Kill Official Pilot Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 11 1968 p2 J E Wadsworth The Banks and the Monetary System in the UK 1959 1971 Routledge 2013 pp388 389 Humphrey Rocky In Dead Heat But Nixon s Pounding At Heels Pittsburgh Press July 11 1968 p1 McCarthy Leads Nixon Rocky by George Gallup Pittsburgh Press July 12 1968 p1 Men to Be Admitted To Vassar College Pittsburgh Post Gazette October 2 1968 p2 Jetliner Hijacker Surrenders Talked Out Of Flight To Cuba Indianapolis News July 13 1968 p2 Tim Naftali Blind Spot The Secret History of American Counterterrorism Basic Books 2009 pp20 21 Movie Critic Dies In Fall Off Cliff Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 13 1968 p1 1968 Flu Pandemic Britannica com Jester B J Uyeki T M Jernigan D B 2020 Fifty Years of Influenza A H3N2 Following the Pandemic of 1968 American Journal of Public Health 110 5 669 676 doi 10 2105 AJPH 2019 305557 PMC 7144439 PMID 32267748 Player Wins British Open Pittsburgh Press July 13 1968 p1 Media guide The Open Championship 2011 pp 68 203 8 Archived from the original on 18 April 2012 Retrieved 8 July 2012 1968 crash at the Aviation Safety Network Aviation safety net 1968 07 13 Retrieved 2014 07 23 Birnbaum Cara 2006 Universal Beauty The Miss Universe Guide to Beauty Thomas Nelson Inc pp 26 ISBN 978 1 4016 0229 1 Movies Fastest Gun Too Slow For Killers Pittsburgh Press July 13 1968 p1 Timothy M Kovalcik The Great Passion Play Arcadia Publishing 2008 p29 Wesley T Huntress Jr and Mikhail Ya Marov Soviet Robots in the Solar System Mission Technologies and Discoveries Springer 2011 p174 2 Dead 27 Hurt When Race Car Hits Grandstand Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 15 1968 p1 1968 Northern 300 information winner information Everything Stock Car Archived from the original on 2011 07 10 Retrieved 2011 03 03 The 1966 Draft by Chris Willis in The 1966 Green Bay Packers Profiles of Vince Lombardi s Super Bowl I Champions ed by George Bozeka McFarland 2016 p23 Rector Dies of Injuries Milwaukee Sentinel July 15 1968 p1 2 Moscow N Y Flight Arrives Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 16 1968 p2 U S Flight to Moscow Beats Reds Pittsburgh Press July 16 1968 p12 Gender and the Army of Knowledge in Pahlavi Iran 1968 1979 by Farian Sabahi in Women Religion and Culture in Iran ed by Sarah Ansari and Vanessa Martin Routledge 2014 p109 Agnes Nixon Creator of All My Children Will Help ABC Soap Say Goodbye by John Sellers The Wrap August 8 2011 Czechs Get Red Chiefs Demands Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 17 1968 p2 Western History for Kids Part 1 ancient and medieval Sanger Academy on YouTube video taken from Sanger s official educational YouTube channel pronunciation confirmed around 0 10 accessed May 7 2016 Executive Sessions of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee 1968 U S Government Printing Office 2010 p996 Cambodia Seizes U S Boat Newport RI News July 19 1968 p1 Patrol Boat Strays U S Apologizes Cincinnati Enquirer July 20 1968 p1 Cambodia Frees 11 GIs Held Captive 5 Months LaCrosse WI Tribune December 20 1968 p1 56 Flown From Cuba After Hijack Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 18 1968 p7 Hunter Davies The Beatles Book Random House 2016 Martin A Grove Beatle Madness Manor Books 1978 Revolution of 1968 in Historical Dictionary of Iraq ed by Beth K Dougherty and Edmund A Ghareeb Scarecrow Press 2013 p505 Military Coup Ousts Leftist Regime in Iraq Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 18 1968 p1 a b Iraq Republic of in Heads of States and Governments A Worldwide Encyclopedia of Over 2 300 Leaders 1945 through 1992 ed by Harris M Lentz Routledge 2013 p410 p418 Ross Knox Bassett To the Digital Age Research Labs Start up Companies and the Rise of MOS Technology Johns Hopkins University Press 2007 p173 advertisement Arizona Republic Phoenix December 13 1968 p19 advertisement Los Angeles Times March 10 1970 Secret of Intel s name revealed The Inquirer 2007 Archived from the original on August 11 2009 Retrieved June 11 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Long strike forecast Montreal Gazette July 18 1968 p1 Mailless Canada Keeps in Touch Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 20 1968 p1 Canada Mail Strike Accord Reached Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 7 1968 p1 Large Oil Field Found in Alaska Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 19 1968 p1 Anderson Robert O in Historical Dictionary of the Petroleum Industry by M S Vassiliou Scarecrow Press 2009 p48 Czechs Hold Fast Spurn Old Guard Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 19 1968 p1 Czechs Defy Bloc Demands Reforms Will Continue Dubcek Tells Kremlin Pittsburgh Press July 18 1968 p1 Karl Grandin ed 1938 Corneille Heymans Biography Les Prix Nobel The Nobel Foundation Retrieved 2008 07 24 Freed Fliers Headed For Safer Zone Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 19 1968 p5 RAY HELD IN STEEL PLATE CELL Tight Security Rings Arrival in Memphis Pittsburgh Press July 19 1968 p1 44 Rescued On Burning Ship Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 20 1968 p3 1 000 Retarded Kids Compete in Chicago Special Olympics Chicago Tribune July 21 1968 p28 Paul Michael Peterson Images of Sports Chicago s Soldier Field Arcadia Publishing 2007 p67 Recognizing the Special Olympics 40th Anniversary Congressional Record House of Representatives July 30 2008 p17079 July 21 University in The A to Z of the Chinese Cultural Revolution by Guo Jian Yongyi Song and Yuan Zhou Scarecrow Press 2009 Aviation Safety Network Accident Description Erik Franckx and Ann Pauwels Vessel source Pollution and Coastal State Jurisdiction in the South eastern Baltic Sea Maklu 2006 p110 Jenkins Dan July 29 1968 The Junkman cools it Sports Illustrated p 12 Ruth St Denis Pioneer of Modern Dance Is Dead Paved Way for a Free New Art in 7 Decade Career Performed and Taught With Her Husband Ted Shawn Ruth St Denis Pioneer of Modern Dance Is Dead The New York Times July 22 1968 Student Movement in Mexico City by Susana Bernuecos Garcia Travesi in Mexico and the United States ed by Lee Stacy Marshall Cavendish 2002 p790 Elaine Carey Plaza of Sacrifices Gender Power and Terror in 1968 Mexico University of New Mexico Press 2005 p39 Talking of Tlatelolco The Power of a Collective Memory Suppressed but Not Surrendered by Julia L Sloan in Projections of Power in the Americas Routledge 2012 p62 Alan M Dershowitz Why Terrorism Works Understanding the Threat Responding to the Challenge Yale University Press 2008 Middle Eastern Terrorism 1948 1969 in International Encyclopedia of Terrorism ed by Martha Crenshaw and John Pimlott Routledge 2015 p308 MORE MAIL CUTS IN THE WORKS Senate Told Of 4 Day Delivery Plan Pittsburgh Press July 22 1968 p1 Soviet Politburo Yields to Prague on a Parley Site by Raymond H Anderson New York Times July 23 1968 p1 Russia Pulls Troops Completely Sets Up Talks on Czech Soil Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 23 1968 p1 Russians Encamp in Polish Woods Military Unit Plainly Visible Near the Czech Border by Jonathan Randal New York Times July 23 1968 p14 You ve Come A Long Way Baby Virginia Slims and the Women s Lib Movement HistoryDaily org March 21 2019 Is Women s Market Next Cigaret Target by George Lazarus Chicago Daily News reprinted in Akron O Beacon Journal July 31 1968 pE 11 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 p 140 Retrieved 11 May 2023 10 DIE IN CLEVELAND SNIPING STOKES CLAIMS VIOLENCE PLOT Pittsburgh Press July 24 1968 p 1 via Google News Masotti Louis H Corsi Jerome R 1969 Shoot Out in Cleveland Black Militants and the Police A Report to the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence Washington D C U S Government Printing Office Lieutenant Leroy Jones Cleveland Division of Police Ohio The Officer Down Memorial Page Inc Retrieved 11 May 2023 Patrolman Louis Golonka Cleveland Division of Police Ohio The Officer Down Memorial Page Inc Retrieved 11 May 2023 Patrolman Willard J Wolff Cleveland Division of Police Ohio The Officer Down Memorial Page Inc Retrieved 11 May 2023 Patrolman Thomas J Smith Cleveland Division of Police Ohio The Officer Down Memorial Page Inc Retrieved 11 May 2023 Alliance for Labor Action The Oxford Encyclopedia of American Business Labor and Economic History Oxford University Press pp 36 37 Cartoon Network s Codename Kids Next Door Challenges Tyrannical Rule of Adults Starting TOMORROW December 6 Business Wire December 5 2002 Archived from the original on March 25 2009 Retrieved October 23 2008 AF General Killed as U S Repels Reds Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 24 1968 p 1 Feldberg W S 1970 Henry Hallett Dale 1875 1968 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 16 77 174 doi 10 1098 rsbm 1970 0006 PMID 11615480 S2CID 7383038 Dina Zisserman Brodsky Constructing Ethnopolitics in the Soviet Union Samizdat Deprivation and the Rise of Ethnic Nationalism Springer 2003 p139 Phillip Charles Lucas The Odyssey of a New Religion The Holy Order of MANS From New Age to Orthodoxy Indiana University Press 1995 p1 Chase s Calendar of Events 2019 The Ultimate Go to Guide for Special Days Weeks and Months Bernan Press 2018 p 382 ISBN 9781641432641 Talk Ain t Cheap No More by Richard Humphrey in MotorBoating magazine January 1970 p268 Thomas Petri Aquinas and the Theology of the Body Catholic University of America Press 2016 p79 1975 target date for changeover to a metric Britain The Guardian July 27 1968 p3 David Thomas et al Theatre Censorship From Walpole to Wilson Oxford University Press 2007 p216 Lowell Dittmer Liu Shao ChI and the Chinese Cultural Revolution The Politics of Mass Criticism University of California Press 1982 p282 Historic Hansard s historic parliamentary record Mao Zedong Meeting with the Five Red Guard Leaders 28 July 1968 in Historical Dictionary of the Chinese Cultural Revolution ed by Guo Jian Yongyi Song and Yuan Zhou Rowman amp Littlefield 2015 p182 Russian Paper Airs Warning to Czechs Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 29 1968 p5 Donald L Fixico Landmarks of the American Mosaic Bureau of Indian Affairs ABC CLIO 2012 p135 10 U S Airmen Killed Off Brazil Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 30 1968 p1 Aviation Safety Network Accident Description Newburn Tim 1992 Permission and Regulation Law and Morals in Post War Britain London Routledge pp 96 8 Google Books Sutherland John Fender Stephen 2011 Love Sex Death amp Words surprising tales from a year in literature London Icon pp 283 4 ISBN 978 184831 247 0 Dr Charles W Mayo Dies in Auto Crash Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 29 1968 p1 Seaborg Glenn T 1966 Introduction to Otto Hahn A Scientific Autobiography Charles Scribner s sons New York Pope Bars Catholics From Using The Pill Pittsburgh Press July 29 1968 p1 Peter Steinfels A People Adrift The Crisis of the Roman Catholic Church in America Simon and Schuster 2013 Peter M Mitchell The Coup at Catholic University The 1968 Revolution in American Catholic Education Ignatius Press 2015 Stamane l atteso documento del Pontefice sulla pillola La Stampa 1968 07 29 Retrieved 2016 10 30 Alana Harris The Schism of 68 Catholicism Contraception and Humanae Vitae in Europe 1945 1975 Springer 2018 p68 Czechs Soviets Talking Reds Meet At Village Near Border Pittsburgh Press July 29 1968 p1 Stefano Bottoni Long Awaited West Eastern Europe since 1944 Indiana University Press 2017 pp120 121 Guillermo E Alvarado Induni Costa Rica Land of Volcanoes EUNED Editorial Universidad Estatal a Distancia 2005 p109 Volcano Toll 78 In Costa Rica Pittsburgh Post Gazette August 1 1968 p1 Historical Dictionary of Iraq ed by Beth K Dougherty and Edmund A Ghareeb Scarecrow Press 2013 pp26 27 Paul Ramsey The Patient as Person Explorations in Medical Ethics Yale University Press 2002 p198 Jeremy Roberts Biography The Beatles Twenty First Century Books 2002 p87 Aviation Safety Network Accident Description Bianchi Curt May 1995 By steam to the Grand Canyon Trains 38 45 Graham Russ J Lights Camera Inaction Archived 2007 01 23 at the Wayback Machine Talk of Thames from Telemusications 2005 accessed 26 April 2006 Hjalmar H Ragnarsson 1990 Jon Leifs pdf Andvari pp 5 38 Retrieved 11 October 2013 National Archives Catalogue Bell Mary and Bell Norma Murder of Brian Howe 3 on 31 July 1968 15 December 1998 Retrieved 12 July 2021 Charles Schulz Peanuts Comic Strip July 31 1968 on GoComics com GoComics Charles M Schulz Celebrating Peanuts 60 Years Andrews McMeel Publishing 2009 p106 The sweet story behind Peanuts groundbreaking first black character Quartz Media Dad s Army Musical Images Of A Nation At War by Sheila Whiteley in Popular Music And Television In Britain ed by Ian Inglis Ashgate Publishing 2013 p123 Paul D Williams Pizzey Jack Charles Allan 1911 1968 Australian Dictionary of Biography Volume 16 Melbourne University Press 2002 pp 9 10 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title July 1968 amp oldid 1219193273, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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