August 1973
The following events occurred in August 1973:
August 1, 1973 (Wednesday)
August 2, 1973 (Thursday)
August 4, 1973 (Saturday)
- Black September members open fire in a crowded passenger lounge at Athens airport; 3 people are killed, and 55 injured.
- Stevie Wonder and his friend, John Harris, are injured when their vehicle collides with a truck loaded with logs. For four days Wonder is in a coma caused by severe brain contusion, causing media attention and the preoccupation of relatives, friends and fans.[2]
August 8, 1973 (Wednesday)
August 9, 1973 (Thursday)
- Dean Corll's accomplice, Elmer Wayne Henley, leads police to the bodies of several murder victims.[5][6] Over subsequent days, this results in the discovery of the Houston Mass Murders: at least 28 boys were killed over a three-year period by Corll, Henley and David Owen Brooks.
- Died: Donald Peers, 65, Welsh popular singer; Nikos Zachariadis, 70, Greek Communist politician
- Bulgaria issues a new decoration, in recognition of the 50th Anniversary Of The People's Anti-Fascist Uprising 1923, to be awarded to all surviving anti-fascist participants in the June and September 1923 Bulgarian uprisings.
- Soviet TV station Programme One airs the first part of the Soviet television miniseries Seventeen Moments of Spring, which would run until 24 August. With an audience of between fifty and eighty million viewers per episode, it becomes the most successful television show of its time in the USSR.
- Died: Karl Ziegler, 74, German chemist and Nobel Prize laureate
- Aviaco Flight 118, a Sud Aviation SE 210 Caravelle, crashes into an abandoned farmhouse in Montrove, Spain, while attempting to land at Alvedro Airport, now A Coruña Airport, in A Coruña, Spain, killing all 85 people on board and one person on the ground.
- Kim Dae-jung is released by his kidnappers and returned to his home.
- A grand jury convenes in Harris County, Texas, to hear evidence against Dean Corll's accomplices Henley and Brooks;[7] Henley is indicted on three murder charges and Brooks on one.
- Zulfikar Ali Bhutto is sworn in as Prime Minister of Pakistan.
- British cruise liner SS Canberra runs aground off St Thomas, British Virgin Islands, and is refloated the following day.[8]
- Born: Victoria Coren, English writer, television presenter and poker player, in Hammersmith, London, the daughter of journalist Alan Coren
- The coroner in the Bloody Sunday inquest accuses the British army of "sheer unadulterated murder" after the jury returns an open verdict.[11]
- Kosmos 580 is successfully launched by the Soviet Union as part of the Dnepropetrovsk Sputnik programme.
- The Norrmalmstorg robbery occurs in Stockholm, the first criminal event in Sweden covered by live television. The perpetrators, Jan-Erik Olsson and Clark Olofsson, persuade their hostages that they are safer with them than if the police intervene; the incident becomes famous for the origin of the term Stockholm syndrome.
References
- ↑ BBC On This Day. Accessed 26 December 2012
- ↑ "Stevie Wonder Biography - Chapter 9". Steviewonder.org.uk. 1973-08-06. Retrieved 2012-02-25.
- ↑ "Kim Dae-jung – Nobel Lecture". The Nobel Foundation. 2000. Retrieved 21 June 2012.
- ↑
- ↑ The Man With The Candy, ISBN 978-0-7432-1283-0 p. 141
- ↑ The Victoria Advocate news archives
- ↑ David Hanna, Harvest Of Horror, 1975 p. 160
- ↑ "Picture Gallery" The Times (London). Friday, 17 August 1973. (58863), col D-G, p. 5.
- ↑ Elections in South Africa's Apartheid-Era Homelands "Bantustans" African Elections Database
- ↑ Apling, Harry (1984). Norfolk Corn Windmills, Volume 1. Norwich: The Norfolk Windmills Trust. pp. 33–36. ISBN 0-9509793-0-9.
- ↑ "1973: 'Bloody Sunday' inquest accuses Army". BBC News. 21 August 1973. Archived from the original on 7 March 2008. Retrieved 11 February 2008.
- ↑ Soaring 37 (11): 42. November 1973.
- ↑ "Race against time to save two trapped in midget submarine" The Times (London). Saturday, 1 September 1973. (58876), col A-E, p. A. (continued on p 2, Col A).
- ↑ "Regulations on deep-sea work to be considered after near-disaster" The Times (London). Monday, 3 September 1973. (58877), col E-G, p. 1.
- ↑ "Champagne flows after rescue from the deep" The Times (London). Monday, 3 September 1973. (58877), col D-G, p. 2.
- ↑ "Décret N° 73-293 du 30 août 1973 fixant la composition des membres du Conseil des Ministres de la République Populaire de Congo", Presidency of Congo-Brazzaville, 30 August 1973 (French).
- ↑ Africa Research Bulletin: Economic, Financial and Technical Series, volume 10 (1973), page 2,952.
- ↑ "Russian liner aground off Bermuda" The Times (London). Saturday, 1 September 1973. (58876), col F, p. 4.