June 1968

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June 5, 1968: U.S. presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy fatally wounded by assassin following primary victory speech
June 19, 1968: Poor People's March begins in Washington, D.C.
June 9, 1968: Yugoslavia's President Tito settles student revolt

The following events occurred in June 1968:

June 1, 1968 (Saturday)

Helen Keller, with Patty Duke
  • Died: Helen Keller, 87, American author, political activist, and lecturer, and the first deaf-blind person to earn a bachelor of arts degree; at her estate near Easton, Connecticut.[7]

June 2, 1968 (Sunday)

June 3, 1968 (Monday)

  • Valerie Solanas shot and almost killed pop artist Andy Warhol after following him into his studio, "The Factory", in New York City. With a .32 caliber automatic pistol, she shot Warhol several times while he was talking on the telephone.[18] Warhol underwent 4+12 hours of surgery after the bullets tore through his chest, abdomen, spleen and both lungs. Art critic Mario Amaya was slightly wounded; Warhol survived the attack and would recover. Solanas, a self-described radical feminist who had founded the "Society for Cutting Up Men" (SCUM), and told police that she shot Warhol because "he had too much control of my life."[19] Warhol would spend two months recovering in a hospital, and Solanas would serve a three-year sentence at the New York State Prison for Women.[20][21]
  • "The Atheist Point of View", the first regularly scheduled broadcast in the United States to promote
    Fairness Doctrine, KTBC allowed a 15-minute program at 10:15, hosted by Pastor John Barclay of Austin's Central Christian Church.[23]
  • Police in Italy recaptured the University of Rome administration building, three days after it had been taken over by students.[24]

June 4, 1968 (Tuesday)

  • U.S. Senator
    Hubert H. Humphrey".[26] President Lyndon B. Johnson joked about the primary in remarks during a state dinner at the White House and said, "We might pick up some tremors later tonight from a disturbance out in California."[27]
  • Workshops. One of the Workshops would be launched by a Saturn IB, and another would serve as a backup. The third Workshop would be launched by a Saturn V. The schedule also included one Apollo Telescope Mount (ATM). Launch of the first Workshop would be in November 1970. Lunar missions were no longer planned in the AAP.[28]
  • The S&P 500 stock market index, considered by many a bellwether for the U.S. economy, closed above 100 for the first time, at 100.38.
  • Born:
    Boston, Massachusetts[29]
  • Died: Walter Nash, 86, 27th Prime Minister of New Zealand from 1957 to 1960[30]

June 5, 1968 (Wednesday)

  • Moments after thanking supporters for his win in the California primary, Senator Robert F. Kennedy was shot and fatally wounded while walking through a corridor at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles.[31] After the 12:20 a.m. shooting, police arrested Sirhan Sirhan, a citizen of Jordan who had been a U.S. resident for 12 years. Kennedy was rushed to Central Receiving Hospital, where doctors worked on trying to save his life,[32][33] and then transferred to the Hospital of the Good Samaritan for surgery. A team of six surgeons began operating at 3:12 a.m. after x-rays showed that bullet fragments had penetrated his brain stem, and finished at 6:52 a.m.; Kennedy never regained consciousness.[34] Although Kennedy had been facing Sirhan when the shots were fired, the three bullets that had hit him "traveled back to front", wounding him in the neck, the shoulder and his head.[35]
  • Five other people were wounded in addition to Kennedy, and required hospitalization: ABC News reporter William Weisel, union official Paul Schrade, radio reporter Ira Goldstein, and two campaign volunteers, Elizabeth Evans and teenager volunteer Irwin Stroll.
    Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., would both express their belief that Sirhan had not been the gunman.[37][38]
  • CIA test pilot Jack Weeks disappeared while conducting the last test of the Lockheed A-12 supersonic reconnaissance jet during the CIA's "Oxcart" program. The A-12s were already scheduled for retirement when Weeks departed from USAF Kadena Air Base in Japan and, 41 minutes later, the onboard telemetry system signaled that an engine was overheating, followed by a drop of fuel flow and a rapid decrease in altitude. Weeks's last known position had been over the Philippine Sea, 520 miles (840 km) east of Manila. No trace of the wreckage would be located.[39]

June 6, 1968 (Thursday)

June 7, 1968 (Friday)

June 8, 1968 (Saturday)

June 9, 1968 (Sunday)

June 10, 1968 (Monday)

General Abrams
  • U.S. Army General Creighton Abrams assumed the command of military operations in the Vietnam War, succeeding General William Westmoreland. During his four years as commander, a biographer would later note, General Abrams "stressed pacification rather than Westmoreland's policy of search and destroy".[68] In carrying out the American policy of "Vietnamization", to gradually withdraw American forces while increasing the strength of South Vietnam's forces, Abrams would oversee a decrease in the number of U.S. troops from 543,000 to 49,000.
  • Italy beat Yugoslavia 2–0 in a replay of the final of the 1968 European Championship. Two days earlier, the teams had played to a 1–1 draw that was unresolved after 30 minutes of extra time. Noting that and the 90 minute rematch, The Guardian noted that "It took the Italians 210 minutes of grueling football to overcome the tenacious Yugoslavs" and "won their first major honour since they captured the World Cup in 1938".[69]
  • Born:
  • Died: Marshall Hodgson, 46, American historian and authority on Islamic studies; while completing the revisions on his six-volume work The Venture of Islam: Conscience and History in a World Civilization.

June 11, 1968 (Tuesday)

  • Four inmates of the federal penitentiary in Atlanta (a murderer and three bank robbers) seized control of the administration building and took 25 employees hostage (18 men and 7 women) after failing in an escape attempt. Two of the women and a man were released later.[71] After prison officials agreed to the publication of the inmates' list of nine grievances in the Atlanta Journal, the hostages were released unharmed. Three hours after the inmates surrendered, the FBI announced the arrest of a girlfriend of one of the prisoners and charged her with having smuggled in "two pistols, 50 rounds of ammunition for each gun and four hacksaw blades".[72]
  • The progress of the Gun Control Act of 1968 was delayed by a tied vote in the U.S. House Judiciary Committee.[73]
  • The 1968 Giro d'Italia cycle race concluded in Naples, with Belgian Eddy Merckx the overall winner.[74]

June 12, 1968 (Wednesday)

June 13, 1968 (Thursday)

  • Warren Burger as Earl Warren's successor.[84]
  • The first attempt to transplant the heart of a
    Denton A. Cooley and a team of surgeons at St. Luke's Episcopal Hospital in Houston worked unsuccessfully to keep a patient alive until a human donor could be found. Sam Willoughby, a life insurance agency manager from Waterloo, Iowa, agreed for the implantation of the heart of a 125-pound ram as "a last resort" after being resuscitated from cardiac arrest in the hospital, but died before the operation could be completed.[85] On January 24, 1964, Dr. James Hardy
    had implanted the heart of a chimpanzee into a patient who had survived for one hour after the operation.
  • The U.S. House of Representatives passed the
    Gerald R. Ford said that, rather than hesitate, the President should reject the bill "so we can re-enact it over his veto".[86]
  • A tornado killed 13 people and injured 125 others in and around the small town of Tracy, Minnesota. The town elementary school and 110 houses were destroyed when the F5 tornado, with speed of up to 300 miles per hour (480 km/h) hit the town of about 2,800 people at about 7:00 in the evening.[87][88]
  • Uruguay's President, Jorge Pacheco Areco, declared a state of emergency in the South American nation in response to increasing unrest by opposition political parties and anti-government revolutionary groups. The emergency would briefly be lifted on March 15, 1969, but would be reinstated on June 24.[89]
  • Czechoslovakia abolished the Central Publication Office that had conducted censorship of all publications since the 1948 coup that had left the nation's Communist Party in control of the government. Two weeks later, on June 26, the Party would confirm the abolition of censorship.[90]
  • Died: U.S. Army Liutenant Colonel
    My Lai Massacre of 347 civilians at Song My village had taken place on March 16. "Whether or not Barker directly ordered the deliberate killing of noncombatants," a historian would write later, a U.S. Army Captain under his command would testify before a board of inquiry "that Barker had instructed him to destroy the hamlet known as My Lai". The board would conclude that Barker "was culpable of at least 11 violations of army regulations, some of which were considered war crimes".[91]

June 14, 1968 (Friday)

Dr. Spock
  • Dr. Benjamin Spock, a pediatrician famous to two generations for the child-raising guide The Common Sense Book of Baby and Child Care, was convicted by a 12-man federal jury in Boston for conspiracy to disrupt the selective service process, along with three of his four co-defendants.[92] Dr. Spock, Yale chaplain William Sloane Coffin, Jr., teacher Mitchell Goodman and graduate student Michael Ferber were sentenced to two years in prison for aiding young American men in avoiding being drafted into military service during the Vietnam War, but the sentences were suspended pending an appeal. The convictions would later be set aside on appeal. The other member of the "Boston Five", Marcus Raskin, was acquitted.
  • At 2148 UTC, the asteroid
    Icarus made its closest approach to Earth since 1949, but astronomers had already debunked rumors (that had abounded for the past three years) that the half-mile wide object would collide with the planet.[93] Earlier, Dr. Brian G. Marsden of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory told reporters that the "miss distance" was estimated to be roughly 3,951,000 miles (6,359,000 km), give or take "a few hundred miles", a distance that made Icarus 16 times further away than the Moon, and that Icarus would still be "600 times fainter than the naked eye can see".[94] The approach of Icarus had inspired the first group study of what is now called "asteroid impact avoidance", in an undergraduate class at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, "Advanced Space Systems Engineering", in the spring 1967 semester. Students were asked to assume that Icarus would actually strike the Earth within 70 weeks and assigned to study whether it could be deflected. Their conclusion was that the only solution was for 100-megaton thermonuclear weapons to be detonated on the surface at various times, with the first 73 days before impact (April 16, 1968) and the last chance only five days before impact, with the goal of either fragmenting or deflecting Icarus. An author would write in 2016, "most of what they concluded would still be valid today".[95]
  • Josef Windeck and Bernard Bonitz, both former prisoners of the
    "Kapo", a "Kameradschaftpolizei" ("comrade policeman") accorded special treatment in return for assisting the guards. Windeck had been charged with 117 murders and convicted of five. Boenitz had been charged with 72 and convicted of one.[96] Windeck would be released after a year for health reasons and survive until 1977.[97]
  • The student occupation of the Odeon Theatre in Paris ended after a month, as police expelled 208 young men and women who had taken over the national theater on May 14. The expulsion came peaceably as 132 people voluntarily left on the promise that they would not be arrested. The other 76 were brought out forcibly but then released as soon as they got outside.[98]
  • Died: Salvatore Quasimodo, 66, Italian poet and 1964 Nobel Prize in Literature laureate; of a cerebral hemorrhage[99]

June 15, 1968 (Saturday)

June 16, 1968 (Sunday)

  • Following up on the retaking of the Odeon Theatre, French police evicted student rebels who had occupied the
    French Tricolor on the flagpole.[103]
  • The U.S. Open golf tournament was won by Lee Trevino after he became the first golfer to shoot under par in all four of the 18-hole rounds of the event (69-68-68-69). He also tied the Open under par and tied the Open's record of 275 strokes on 72 holes. Going into the final round, Bert Yancey appeared on the verge of winning his first major championship, leading Trevino 205 to 206 after 54 holes, and the two were even during the first 8 holes, but Yancey did poorly on the 9th and 10th hole and finished with 76 strokes and third place. After the win, Trevino (who was born in Dallas) told reporters, "I'm about the happiest Mexican in the world right now."[104]
  • After the end of the Giro d’Italia, won by Eddy Merckx, 10 cyclists, including Italian champion Felice Gimondi, were disqualified for use of doping to enhance performance. It was the first major scandal in professional cycling. Giro d'Italia officials struck the records of all 10 finishers, which also changed the order of finish for 10 other cyclists. Later, the decision in Gimondi's would be reversed.
  • Five crewmembers of the U.S. Navy
    Swift boat PCF19 were killed by friendly fire when an American F-4 Phantom fired on the boat and sank it.[105]
    Two other crewmembers were able to escape from the boat, which had been near the mouth of the Cua Viet River in South Vietnam.
  • Born:
    Encino, California
  • Died: Kim Su-yeong, 46, South Korean poet and translator; after being struck by bus while walking in Seoul

June 17, 1968 (Monday)

June 18, 1968 (Tuesday)

June 19, 1968 (Wednesday)

June 20, 1968 (Thursday)

  • In the United Kingdom, Austin Currie, an elected member of Northern Ireland's parliament, the Stormont, called national attention to discrimination against the Roman Catholic minority in predominantly Protestant Northern Ireland by becoming a squatter. Currie and two other people learned of a house in Caledon, County Tyrone, that had been allocated to a single, 19-year old Protestant woman even though there were 269 families ahead of her on a waiting list for housing. When police from the Royal Ulster Constabulary moved in to remove Currie and his group, he had a television crew present to film the action. The BBC Evening News telecast the incident and "for many people in Britain, it was the first they heard of religious discrimination in Northern Ireland", an author would later note.[120]
  • A federal law, that had prohibited the printing of color images of United States postage stamps, was repealed as President Johnson signed legislation. "Since stamp counterfeiting is today virtually nonexistent," a White House statement said, "this restriction is no longer necessary. There is no reason now why the full meaning and beauty of our postage stamps cannot be communicated to all the world in color reproduction." Previously, stamp catalogs and encyclopedias could only display black-and-white images. The law had become obsolete after U.S. stamps were "impregnated with an invisible phosphor which causes canceling machines to reject counterfeits".[121]
  • David Ruffin was fired from The Temptations for missing a performance, after he developed a cocaine addiction and began questioning Berry Gordy's handling of the group's financial affairs.[122]
  • The Air Defense Artillery Branch was created as a separate combat branch of the United States Army to specialize in anti-aircraft weapons.[123]
  • Born:
  • Died:
    People's Republic of China, hanged himself after being accused of spying during China's Cultural Revolution
    .

June 21, 1968 (Friday)

June 22, 1968 (Saturday)

June 23, 1968 (Sunday)

  • Newspaper columnist Joseph Kraft coined the term "Middle America" to describe American voters who are economically "middle class" rather than "working class" or "upper class". Kraft would say later that his focus was on "Americans who were not young or poor or black" and the largest group of voters.[136] The context was Kraft's column about the Democratic Party primary election in the state of New York, noting that the great majority of middle class voters didn't vote in the primary and that Democratic leaders could not ignore them in the general election.[137] Previously the phrase was used as a geographic term, usually as a synonym for the Spanish-speaking nations in Central America.[138]
  • El Monumental. The teams had played to a 0–0 tie but, for reasons not entirely clear, some of the members of the exiting crowd hurried to get to one of the 24 stadium exits and pushed past other people. Shoving matches ensued, people fell and a panic ensued and 200 people were trampled "because everyone tried to leave at once".[140][141]
  • The first round of voting took place in the
    May. With a larger turnout than usual, President de Gaulle's party won 142 seats in the French National Assembly, a record number for the first round when most candidates don't receive a majority.[142]

June 24, 1968 (Monday)

  • At 11:00 in the morning, Washington D.C. police enforced the U.S. Department of the Interior order to evict the 300 remaining members of the Poor People's Campaign from West Potomac Park. Despite concerns that the removal of the squatters (whose permit had expired the evening before) would become violent, the process was quietly completed in 90 minutes. A police official told campaign leader Ralph Abernathy and the demonstrators, "Those of you who desire to be arrested, we will be systematic and we hope that you will co-operate with us as ladies and gentleman." Abernathy agreed to co-operate, and he and other leaders then lined up to be taken to a patrol wagon. The buildings that constituted "Resurrection City" were torn down in the afternoon by a city work crew.[143] A historian would note later that while the Campaign "secured a few concessions from federal agencies, it cannot be considered successful. President Johnson ignored it and Congress closed its governmental coffers to the poor people's economic demands as the Vietnam War sapped the federal tax base."[144]
  • The
    St-Jean-Baptiste Day Riots, blamed on Quebecois separatists, broke out in Montreal during Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau’s visit. Trudeau refused to leave despite threats to his safety.[145] Estimates of attendance ranged as high as 400,000 (one-quarter of Montreal's population) for the evening parade. As the parade began at 8:00 p.m., 1,000 demonstrators led by Pierre Bourgault approached the reviewing stand, Montreal police charged the crowd, and the demonstrators began throwing glass bottles (including Molotov cocktails) and overturned cars before the riot was suppressed.[146][147]
  • In the wake of the recent assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr. and Senator Robert Kennedy, U.S. President
    Edward Kennedy who testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee of the need for the bill a few days later.[149]
  • Giorgio Rosa declared the independence of the Republic of Rose Island, an artificial micronation that he had designed and constructed. Located off of the coast of Rimini, Italy, the structure consisted of a 400-square-metre (4,300 sq ft) platform supported by nine pylons, and was designed to hold a restaurant, bar, nightclub, shop and post office. Italian police quickly took possession of the platform.[150]
  • In a ceremony at the White House George Ball was sworn in as the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations.[151]

June 25, 1968 (Tuesday)

June 25, 1968: Pope Cyril VI (left) dedicates new cathedral
  • The new
    Saint Mark that had been given by the Roman Catholic Church to a delegation. The ceremony was presided over by Pope Cyril VI of Alexandria and attended by Egypt's President Gamal Abdel Nasser and Ethiopia's Emperor Haile Selassie.[152]
  • Giovanni Leone was sworn in as the new Prime Minister of Italy after he and 22 other members of the Christian Democrats party formed Italy's 28th government since the end of World War II; it's a so-called “bathing cabinet”, aimed to manage the current affair in the summer, waiting for a clarification of the confused situation got out of the May election. President Giuseppe Saragat administered the oath as the Christian Democrats, who had a plurality of seats in Parliament, sought to form a coalition government with the Socialist Party.[153]
  • U.S. negotiator
    Lyndon Johnson. After two days, however, Vance reported that he was met by "more of the standard party line" from the North Vietnamese, but that the two sides agreed to meet again.[156]
  • As the Prague Spring continued, Czechoslovakia's National Assembly passed the Law on Judicial Rehabilitation, called "a humane step, rare in history, and unique in the communist world, to restore justice to the victims of illegalities of an entire historical period"[157] "to re-examine the cases of up to 100,000 individuals unjustly sentenced" under the Communist government, to compensate victims and to punish unjust prosecution.[158] The CIA noted that additional Soviet troops had entered Czechoslovakian territory to join the Warsaw Pact military exercises that were underway at that time.[159]
  • Bobby Bonds made his Major League Baseball debut and hit a grand slam in his first game, becoming only the second major league player (after Bill Duggleby in 1898) to do so. In the 21st century, five other players would hit a grand slam in their first game.[160] Bonds's hit came in a 9–0 win for the San Francisco Giants over the Los Angeles Dodgers.[161] Coincidentally, Duggleby's grand slam on April 21, 1898, had been against the Giants as well (in a 13–4 win).[162]
  • Canada's Liberal Party, led by Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, won 58% control of the House of Commons, getting 154 of the 264 available seats.[163] Prior to the vote, the Liberals had 128, five short of a majority.[164][165] The 102-member Senate of Canada, whose members are appointed by the Governor-General, was split among 62 Liberals, 28 Conservatives and 3 independents, with 9 vacancies.[166]
  • Died: Tony Hancock, 44, English comedian; in his flat at Bellevue Hill, New South Wales of an overdose of amylobarbitone tablets washed down with vodka.[167][168]

June 26, 1968 (Wednesday)

June 27, 1968 (Thursday)

  • Citing "an increase in the enemy's threat due to both a greater flow of replacements and a change in tactics," the U.S. Command in
    Quang Trị, and close the Khe Sanh Combat Base.[186] The United States Marines had sustained over 2,500 casualties during a 77-day siege of Khe Sanh by Viet Cong and North Vietnamese Army attackers. The South Vietnamese Army, with the financial support of the United States, would take over the responsibility of defending Quang Tri, which would become the first province to be conquered during the invasion of 1975. North Vietnam would cite the date of the announcement as a milestone in its history, noting that "On July 15, 1968, our soldiers were in complete control of Khe Sanh."[187]
  • An essay that one historian would describe later as "the last straw for Prague's neighbors", "The Two Thousand Words Manifesto", was published in the new Czechoslovakian literary journal Literární listy, 54 days before the invasion by the other nations of the Warsaw Pact. Ludvík Vaculík had written "Two Thousand Words that Belong to Workers, Farmer, Officials, Scientists, Artists and Everybody", and more than 60 other Czechoslovakian authors had signed the declaration. The Politburo of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia would decide against arresting Vaculik or the other signatories for their defiance, and the Soviet Union and the other Communist nations of Eastern Europe would conclude that "The Two Thousand Words" was the sign that the reforms of the "Prague Spring" had gotten out of control.[188]
  • In London, American murder suspect James Earl Ray appeared for an extradition hearing at the Bow Street Magistrates' Court before Magistrate Frank Milton. British barrister David Calcutt appeared upon behalf of the United States to request extradition so that Ray could be put on trial for the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.. Roger Frisby, appointed to appear on Ray's behalf, argued that Dr. King had been "a political figure" and that the extradition agreement between the UK and the U.S. did not apply to political crimes. On questioning by Frisby, Ray said that he did not kill Dr. King.[189]
  • Two days of review of experiments were made at the
    Manned Spacecraft Center (MSC) to determine what progress had been made in the development of experiment hardware for the Apollo Applications Program, and showed "very slow progress" on fixing problems identified in a January review by the MSC on developing medical, habitability and engineering experiments. The MSC noted a critical lack of overall motivation.[28]
  • Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. defeated Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv F.C., 2–1, to win the Israel Super Cup and the unofficial championship of Israeli soccer football.[190][191] Maccabi had finished first place in the Liga Leumit season, and Bnei Yehuda had won the Israel State Cup playoffs on June 12.
  • U.S. and North Korean officials met at Panmunjom to discuss the terms for the release of the crew of the captured U.S. Navy vessel USS Pueblo (AGER-2).[192]
  • Died: Colonel Renzo Rocca, 58, an Italian official formerly with the Italian military intelligence agency SIFAR; from a gunshot wound to the head. The death was ruled a suicide, despite speculation that Rocca was murdered.

June 28, 1968 (Friday)

  • The
    Washington's Birthday had always been on February 22, Memorial Day on May 30, Columbus Day on October 12 (in 34 of the 50 states) and Veterans Day on November 11. Starting in 1971, Washington's Birthday would be on the third Monday in February; Memorial Day on the last Monday in May; Columbus Day on the second Monday in October in all states; and Veterans Day on the fourth Monday in October (although it would be restored permanently to November 11 in 1978).[193] The legislation had passed the U.S. House of Representatives on May 10 by a 218 to 83 vote, but sailed through the U.S. Senate on June 24 "by voice vote on a routine call of the calendar with only about eight senators present."[194]
  • A passenger on board a chartered Douglas DC-3 airliner fell 8,000 feet to his death when the rear door opened and he was pulled out. Jerrold Potter of Pontiac, Illinois, was one of 23 passengers who were en route to the annual Lions Clubs International convention in Dallas after boarding at Kankakee, Illinois on the DC-3, operated by the now defunct Purdue Airlines. Potter had told friends that he was going to the lavatory at the back of the plane.[195] The pilot told reporters that Potter might have mistaken the airplane's rear exit for the door to the bathroom. At the time, the plane's position was over Phelps County, Missouri, about 10 miles northwest of Rolla.[196] Potter's body, which fell somewhere in the Ozark Mountains, would still be missing 50 years later.[197]
  • Johnson also sent proposed legislation for Congress to introduce a resolution that would amend the U.S. Constitution, allowing qualified U.S. citizens the right to vote at the age of 18. "Reason does not permit us to ignore any longer the reality that 18-year-old young Americans are prepared," the President wrote in a message to Congress, "by education, by experience, by exposure to public affairs of their own land and all the world — to exercise the privilege to vote."[198] Although the bill failed, new legislation would be introduced in 1971 and the Twenty-sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution would be ratified within four months.
  • The Revenue and Expenditure Control Act of 1968 was signed into law, temporarily raising individual and corporate federal income taxes in the United States and cutting spending by $14 billion. Bill Moyers, an aide to President Johnson, would later say that the two and a half year delay in seeking a tax increase from Congress had been "the single most devastating decision in the Johnson administration" and the marking of "the beginning of the end, a time when he lost control of the administration and lost control of events."[199][200]
  • Born:
    • Adam Woodyatt, British actor who has portrayed Ian Beale in the BBC soap opera EastEnders for more than 30 years since the program debut in 1985; in Walthamstow
    • Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico

June 29, 1968 (Saturday)

  • Southeast Airlines Flight 101, a Douglas DC-3 flight from Marathon, Florida to Key West, was hijacked to Cuba shortly after takeoff, by one of its 15 passengers, an individual who had bought a ticket under the name "E. H. Carter".[201] Although there had been previous instances of airplane flights being forced to land in Havana, the Southeast hijacking would attract copycat crimes throughout the month of July and the rest of 1968 and 1969.[202] The pilot, a stewardess and the 14 remaining passengers were returned to the United States, but co-pilot George Prellezo, who had become a naturalized American citizen after fleeing the Castro government in 1960, was arrested and charged with desertion and for stealing a Cuban cargo plane to make his escape.[203] Prellezo would be released three weeks later.[204]
  • The
    massacre of 88 civilians in Son Tra, a coastal fishing village outside where the houses had been built with money from the United States because of the residents' opposition to Communism. Two months earlier, Viet Cong soldiers had come to Son Tra and made the threat that the village would be destroyed if the leaders continued to cooperate with the Americans. Another 103 people were wounded, and 50 houses were burned. Troops who were assigned to protect Son Tra would say later that they were unaware of the raid until after it had ended.[205][206]
  • The "
    Midsummer High Weekend" rock concert was held in Hyde Park, London; Pink Floyd, T-Rex, Jethro Tull and Roy Harper were among those appearing. It was the first large free concert ever held in the UK and attracted 650,000 people.[207][208]
  • The Indian state of Bihar was put under President's rule after none of the political parties were able to form a government.[209]
  • Born: Brian d'Arcy James, American stage actor; in Saginaw, Michigan
  • Died: Paddy Driscoll, 73, American professional football and baseball player, and inductee into the Pro Football Hall of Fame

June 30, 1968 (Sunday)

  • A force of 18,500 Red Army troops and 650 tanks from the Soviet Union remained in Czechoslovakia, even though the Operation Šumava military exercise had been scheduled to end on June 30. Soviet Army Marshal Ivan Yakubovsky declined to give an explanation to Czechoslovakian Defense Minister Martin Dzúr for prolonging the exercises, and when Prime Minister Alexander Dubček asked Marshal Yakubovsky about his intentions, the Soviet general said that he would "try" to finish the maneuvers by July 3, a deadline that would subsequently be ignored.[113] It would not be until July 11 that Marshal Yakubovsky would pledge to withdraw the remaining forces over a three-day period to end no later than July 16.[210] A withdrawal was finally completed by July 22, after several halts.[211]
  • In the second round of voting in
    paralyzing strikes of the previous month
    .
  • The Lockheed C-5 Galaxy heavy (248 tons when empty) military transport aircraft, described as "the biggest airplane in the world", made its very first flight. Lockheed test pilot Leo J. Sullivan guided the plane's liftoff from Marietta, Georgia, where the GELAC (Lockheed-Georgia) aeronautical systems factory had constructed the aircraft.[213]
  • The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 went into effect as the quotas that had severely limited immigration to the United States from African and Asian nations were ended.[214]
  • Born: Phil Anselmo, American heavy metal musician and lead vocalist for Pantera; in New Orleans

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  4. ^ "Italy's Coalition Falls Amidst Political Crisis", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, June 3, 1968, p1
  5. . p 4
  6. .
  7. ^ "Helen Keller Dies at 87 in Connecticut", Chicago Tribune, June 2, 1968, p1
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  12. ^ "United Nations Peacekeeping Force in Cyprus", by Jan Asmussen, in The Oxford Handbook of United Nations Peacekeeping Operations (Oxford University Press, 2015)
  13. ^ Türkiye'nin 75 yılı Hürgüç Gazetecilik, İstanbul, 1998 p 202
  14. ^ "Results of the senate elections" (in Turkish). Archived from the original on 2012-03-13. Retrieved 2016-12-29.
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