Paris Herald Tribune Is On Sale in Moscow
Date: 10 July 1968
Internatl Herald Tribune goes on sale in Moscow; displayed on counter; other Western pubs are usually kept under counter and sold only to foreigners
The July 9, 1968 was a Tuesday under the star sign of ♋. It was the 190 day of the year. President of the United States was Lyndon B. Johnson.
If you were born on this day, you are 57 years old. Your last birthday was on the Wednesday, July 9, 2025, 96 days ago. Your next birthday is on Thursday, July 9, 2026, in 268 days. You have lived for 20,915 days, or about 501,978 hours, or about 30,118,681 minutes, or about 1,807,120,860 seconds.
Date: 10 July 1968
Internatl Herald Tribune goes on sale in Moscow; displayed on counter; other Western pubs are usually kept under counter and sold only to foreigners
Date: 09 July 1968
Special to The New York Times
New submarine cable planned linking S Africa and GB via Portugal; Portugal pledges no interference with news transmission
Date: 10 July 1968
Special to The New York Times
A Winnington, correspondent for Communist daily Morning Star, London, regains Brit passport denied him in '53 after charges that he participated in brainwashing of UN troops while reptg on Communist side in war
Date: 10 July 1968
Pittsburgh Press resumes after 1-day strike by mailers over suspension of local pres, who was later reinstated
Date: 09 July 1968
NY Times sues, Fed Ct, charging Heritage Soc of Amer sells reproductions of Times front pages without Times permission; seeks ban and triple damages
Date: 09 July 1968
By JOHN J. ABELE
John ABELE
Date: 10 July 1968
By TERRY ROBARDS
Terry ROBARDS
Date: 09 July 1968
Natl Broadcasters Assn pres Wasilewski denies Humphrey charge TV spreads message of rioting and looting
Date: 09 July 1968
HR Banking subcom staff study holds that commercial banks are acquiring dangerous econ power over big sees of US indus; Repr Patman urges Atty Gen Clark look into possible antitrust questions raised; study contends that banks' influence is exerted largely through estimated $607-billion in assets which banks hold as trustees for pension funds, foundations, private trusts and other actual owners; holds influence especially strong in airlines and nonferrous metals industries; some banks challenge rept