August 1963
The following events occurred in August 1963:
[August 1], 1963 (Thursday)
- The United States amended its Single Integrated Operational Plan for nuclear war for the first time, altering the original plan that had been in place since July 1, 1962.
- The Banque du Liban was established in Lebanon.
- The "Protocol to Amend the Convention for the Unification of Certain Rules Relating to International Carriage by Air signed at Warsaw on 12 October 1929", commonly known as the Hague Protocol, came into effect.
- The 11th World Scout Jamboree began, in Marathon, Greece.
- George Harrison and Paul McCartney sang a duet on a Beatles tape recording of the Goffin-King song "Don't Ever Change" for later broadcasting on BBC radio.
- The U.S. Navy destroyer collided with the NRT ship off southern California, suffering no significant damage.
- Died: Theodore Roethke, 55, American Pulitzer-winning poet, of a heart attack
[August 2], 1963 (Friday)
- The Sino-Soviet split widened as the People's Republic of China, in its strongest condemnation to that time of the Soviet Union, criticized the Soviets as being "freaks and monsters" for making "unconditional concessions and capitulation to the imperialists" after the USSR had agreed to a partial nuclear test ban treaty with the United States and the United Kingdom. The statement came in an editorial in the Chinese Communist Party newspaper, the People's Daily.
- The NFL champion Green Bay Packers were upset, 20-17, by the College All-Stars in the annual Chicago College All-Star Game. It would be the last time that the All-Stars would win the series, which would be discontinued after the 1976 contest.
- José de Jesús García Ayala was consecrated as Auxiliary Bishop of Campeche. He would go on to become the oldest bishop in the Mexican church, living beyond his 100th birthday.
- A tropical storm off Bermuda intensified and was classified as Hurricane Arlene, though it would degenerate into a tropical depression the following day.
- Died: Swami Ramdas, 79, Hindu philosopher
[August 3], 1963 (Saturday)
- The Beatles performed at The Cavern Club in Liverpool for the 275th, and final time, nearly 18 months after their first appearance on the Club's stage on February 9, 1961.
- Born:
- *James Hetfield, American singer/songwriter and founder of the rock band Metallica, in Downey, California
- *Tasmin Archer, English singer, in Bradford, Yorkshire
- Died:
- *Stephen Ward, 50, English osteopath and a central figure in the Profumo affair, three days after taking an overdose of barbiturates. In his suicide note, he wrote "It's a wish not to let them get me. I'd rather get myself."
- *Phil Graham, 48, president and chief executive officer of the publisher of The Washington Post newspaper and Newsweek'' magazine, by a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
[August 4], 1963 (Sunday)
- The African Development Bank was created by agreement of the leaders of 33 African nations meeting in Khartoum, the capital of Sudan.
- At 5:00 in the morning, Haiti was invaded from the Dominican Republic by an army of 500 Haitian rebels seeking to overthrow the dictatorship of President Francois Duvalier, commonly referred to as "Papa Doc". The rebel forces crossed the border from the Dominican town of Dajabón to strike at Ouanaminthe, moving across the Rivière du Massacre/Rio Dajabón.
- The 1963 German Grand Prix was held at the Nürburgring and won by John Surtees, with Jim Clark finishing second. Clark remained well in first place in the world auto-driving championship standings, with 42 points, while Surtees was second at 22.
- The 1963 Meadowdale SCCA National Championships event at Meadowdale International Raceway was won by Don Yenko.
- Born: Keith Ellison, U.S. Representative for Minnesota 2007–present, the first Muslim to be elected to the United States Congress; in Detroit
[August 5], 1963 (Monday)
- In Moscow, the United States, the United Kingdom, and the Soviet Union signed the first nuclear test ban treaty. The ceremony took place at the Kremlin with U.S. Secretary of State Dean Rusk, British Foreign Secretary Alec Douglas-Home, and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko signing on behalf of their respective nations.
- Craig Breedlove set the record for fastest driver in the world, reaching 428.37 miles an hour "for a measured mile" in a jet-powered vehicle, Spirit of America, on the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah. His average for two runs was 407.45 MPH.
- The trial of Stephen Ward was formally closed with no sentence pronounced, following Ward's suicide two days earlier.
- Died: Salvador Bacarisse, 64, Spanish composer
[August 6], 1963 (Tuesday)
- The United States Senate voted, 84 to 0, for a pay increase to nearly all members of the United States Armed Services, whether active or on reserve, three months after the House of Representatives had passed a "somewhat similar, but less generous bill"
- Died:
- *Sophus Nielsen, 75, Danish soccer player and manager;
- *Lina Ruz González y Castro, 60, mother of Cuban leaders Fidel Castro and Raúl Castro
- *Ramon Vila Capdevila, 55, a/k/a Caraquemada, Spanish rebel, in a gunbattle with Spanish Civil Guards.
[August 7], 1963 (Wednesday)
- United Nations Security Council Resolution 181 was passed, calling for a voluntary arms embargo of South Africa because of its racial discrimination. The United States and the United Kingdom abstained from the vote.
- The Lockheed YF-12 jet fighter was flown for the first time, with test pilot Jim Eastham guiding the aircraft over Nevada's Groom Dry Lake.
- A freak escalator accident at the Garden State Park Racetrack in Cherry Hill, New Jersey, killed a man and his daughter. John Patrick Sweeney and 8-year old Peggy Sweeney, of Maple Shade, New Jersey, were touring the closed park with a friend when they stepped over a box of tools that had been blocking the moving stairway, unaware that a protective plate at the top had been removed for maintenance. The two fell into the moving machinery and were crushed to death.
- Born: Patrick Bouvier Kennedy, son of U.S. President John F. Kennedy and First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy, by emergency caesarean section, five and a half weeks early, at the Otis Air Force Base Hospital in Bourne, Massachusetts. He was quickly transferred to the Children's Hospital Boston, and would die 39 hours later of respiratory problems.
[August 8], 1963 (Thursday)
- The Great Train Robbery of 1963 took place at Ledburn, Buckinghamshire, England, when a gang of bandits halted a train ferrying mail between Glasgow and London. At 3:00 am, the group caused the train's engineer to stop by activating the red signal and covering the green signal. When the train came to a halt, engineer Jack Mills and his assistant were overpowered, while others in the group boarded the first two coaches hauling mail, and tied up the four employees on board. The group then uncoupled the engine and two coaches from the other ten cars on the train, and forced the engineer and assistant to move one mile down the line to the Bridego Bridge, where the mail bags were dropped into automobiles waiting beneath. The haul was estimated at £2,600,000.
- The Zimbabwe African National Union was formed by Ndabaningi Sithole, future Zimbabwean prime minister Robert Mugabe, and other members of the Zimbabwe African People's Union who were dissatisfied with the leadership of Joshua Nkomo.
[August 9], 1963 (Friday)
- American dissident Lee Harvey Oswald was arrested in New Orleans while distributing leaflets for the Fair Play for Cuba Committee at the corner of Canal Street and Baronne Street, after getting into a scuffle with three Cuban men, who were also arrested. Oswald spent the night in jail, and was then released.
- Hurricane Arlene passed directly over Bermuda with winds of 85 mph. The storm continued to intensify after passing the island, with reconnaissance recording a minimum pressure of 969 mbar and maximum winds reached 105 mph. The hurricane began to weaken hours later, with winds decreasing below 100 mph by the afternoon of August 10. Shortly afterwards, Arlene transitioned into an extratropical cyclone, while maintaining hurricane-force winds, over the north Atlantic.
- The British rock music show Ready Steady Go! premiered on Associated-Rediffusion in London, part of Britain's ITV network, and would later be shown on the other ITV stations. It would run until December 7, 1966.
- Born: Whitney Houston, American pop singer, in Newark, New Jersey
- Died: Patrick Bouvier Kennedy, two-day-old son of President John F. Kennedy, of infant respiratory distress syndrome. A funeral mass for the child was held the next day in the private chapel of Cardinal Richard Cushing in Boston.
[August 10], 1963 (Saturday)
- Giovanni Colombo became Archbishop of Milan, replacing Pope Paul VI, who had been elected to the papacy two months earlier.
- A new record was set for latest ending to a Major League Baseball game, when the second game of a doubleheader between the Pittsburgh Pirates, and the visiting Houston Colt.45s
- Died: Estes Kefauver, 60, American politician who almost won the 1952 Democratic presidential nomination and then served as running-mate for nominee Adlai Stevenson II in 1956
[August 11], 1963 (Sunday)
- Four of the defendants who had been arrested on July 11, at the Liliesleaf Farm near Johannesburg, were able to escape their South African jail after a bribe was promised to their guard by the ANC. Harold Wolpe and Arthur Goldreich, who were both white, were confined at Johannesburg's Marshall Square Police Station, in the same cell with Indian South Africans Abdulhay Jassat and Moosa Moolla, separate from the black South African defendants. Their white guard, Johannes Greeff, served three years of a six-year sentence, and later received 2,000 African pounds. Wolpe and Goldreich would elude a nationwide search and, "disguised as priests", make it to Swaziland, and on September 8, would charter a plane to fly to Tanganyika.
- Two teams of surgeons, at Children's Hospital Los Angeles, carried out the successful separation of a pair of conjoined twins, Daniel Bartley and David Bartley, 27 hours after their birth. The two were joined at the abdomen.
- Food poisoning struck about 150 of 800 women who had attended a dinner at which the Archbishop of Boston, Richard Cardinal Cushing, was the guest speaker.
- Retired Lt. Gen. Song Yo-Chang, at one time the Prime Minister of South Korea, was arrested on orders of the President and his former superior officer, General Park Chung-hee. On August 8, General Song had published a letter in the nation's newspapers, calling on General Park not to run in the October elections.
- Benoni Beheyt won the 1963 UCI Road World Championships bicycle race at Renaix, Belgium.
- Jim Clark won the 1963 Kanonloppet motor race at Karlskoga Circuit in Sweden.
- Died:
- *Clem Bevans, 83, American vaudeville star and film actor
- *Charles Seymour, 78, American academician
[August 12], 1963 (Monday)
- President of Kenya Jomo Kenyatta spoke to 300 white farmers at Nakuru, and reassured them that the new black African government would look after their interests if they remained. "To the chagrin of many freedom fighters, his prophecy turned out to be accurate", one commentator would observe later about the former Mau Mau Uprising leader.
- Fifteen of the 16 people on board an Air-Inter flight were killed when Viscount airplane they were on crashed while attempting a landing in a thunderstorm at Lyon. The airplane, which was stopping at Lille on the way to Nice, struck a barn as it descended, and debris from the wreckage killed the farm owner. The sole survivor was a three-year-old girl.
- The pilot and five passengers of a twin-engine Beechcraft plane, on a charter flight to Fort Erie, Ontario, were injured when their plane crashed at the Toronto Island Airport. One engine failed at an altitude of during take-off over Lake Ontario. The pilot turned back and landed on the Island, clipping a tree. Most of the plane's starboard wing was torn off.
- Born: Kōji Kitao, Japanese sumo wrestler, in Mie
[August 13], 1963 (Tuesday)
- The "Trois Glorieuses" uprising began in Congo-Brazzaville, as political rallies degenerated into violent clashes. Striking workers in the capital, Brazzaville, stormed the city prison and released all of the inmates.
- Born: Édouard Michelin, managing partner and co-chief executive of the Michelin Group from 1999, in Clermont-Ferrand
[August 14], 1963 (Wednesday)
- The first of the Yirrkala bark petitions, created by Aboriginal leaders in the Arnhem Land region of the Northern Territory of Australia, were presented to Australian governmental leaders at the capital in Canberra.
- British police arrested five persons believed to have been members of the gang that had carried out the robbery of the Glasgow-London mail train the previous week, and recovered £100,000 of the loot that had been stolen.
- The 1962–63 DFB-Pokal, the second-most important national competition in German football, was won by Hamburger SV.
- Died: Clifford Odets, 57, American playwright
[August 15], 1963 (Thursday)
- A team of scientists from Yale University and the Brookhaven National Laboratory announced their discovery of what was believed at the time to be the last class of subatomic particle, the hyperon referred to as "anti-xi-zero".
- Fulbert Youlou was forced to resign as president of the Republic of Congo, after a three-day uprising in the capital. A delegation of military leaders, led by Colonel David Mountsaka and Major Felix Mouzabakani, refused to obey President Youlou's order for the Congolese Army to shoot at the protesters, and demanded his resignation. Youlou was replaced the next day by Alphonse Massamba-Débat, who was designated by the title "chief of government", rather than president. and would be imprisoned until being freed by his supporters on February 7, 1964.
- The last of the American nuclear Thor missiles, located in the United Kingdom at the 144th Strategic Missile Squadron at North Luffenham, was taken off of alert, ending a process that had started on November 29. The missiles were removed by September 27, and the missile facilities closed by December 20.
- Born: Simon Brown, Jamaican boxer, IBF welterweight champion 1998–1991, and WBC light middleweight champion 1993–1994; in Clarendon
- Died:
- *Vsevolod Ivanov, 68, Soviet novelist
- *Eddie Mays, 34, the last person to be executed in the state of New York, in the electric chair at Sing Sing prison
- *Karl Drews, 43, former American MLB pitcher from 1946 to 1954, after being struck by a drunk driver.
[August 16], 1963 (Friday)
- The NASA M2-F1, a wingless lifting body glider nicknamed the "flying bathtub", was flown for the first time, with test pilot Milt Thompson at the controls. The lifting body design, which permitted a spacecraft to descend horizontally through the atmosphere, would be put into service through the American space shuttle.
- Canada's new Prime Minister, Lester B. Pearson, reversed the policy of his predecessor, John G. Diefenbaker, and announced that his government had agreed with the United States to arm American-deployed missiles with nuclear warheads.
- Former President of Venezuela Marcos Pérez Jiménez was extradited from the United States back to Venezuela, eight months after his arrest and confinement in the Dade County Jail in Miami. Perez Jimenez had been dictator from 1952 to 1958, then fled to the U.S., where he lived in luxury until being jailed in Miami on December 12, 1962.
- Two people walking in Dorking Woods discovered a briefcase, a holdall and a camel-skin bag, all containing money. The evidence would lead to the arrest of Brian Field, a member of the gang who had carried out the Great Train Robbery a few days earlier. The discovery raised the total amount of money recovered to £141,000.
[August 17], 1963 (Saturday)
- Fifty-five people were drowned when the Japanese ferry boat Midori Maru capsized in heavy waves as it sailed from the Okinawan capital to Kumejima Island. Another 185 of the passengers and crew were rescued by fishing boats and U.S. military aircraft.
- One day short of a year after its launch, Kosmos 8's orbit decayed.
- Died:
- *Ed Gardner, 62, American radio comedian who starred in the series Duffy's Tavern
- *Richard Barthelmess, 68, American silent film actor who was nominated for Best Actor in the first Academy Award ceremony
[August 18], 1963 (Sunday)
- James Meredith became the first African-American to graduate from the University of Mississippi in its 115 years of existence. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree, having majored in political science and minored in French. The cost of Meredith's protection by federal marshals was more than $5,000,000. His graduation day was without incident; Meredith would later earn a law degree from Columbia University.
- The last match in the third round of the 1963 CONCACAF Champions' Cup was played at the Estadio Nacional in Costa Rica. The final, scheduled to be played the following month, would eventually be scratched, and Racing Club Haïtien would eventually be declared champion.
[August 19], 1963 (Monday)
- Israel's Prime Minister Levi Eshkol agreed to allow American observers to visit the Negev Nuclear Research Center at Dimona, where Israel was working on developing a nuclear weapon.
- Born: Monday Michiru, Japanese "acid jazz" musician, in Tokyo
- Died:
- *Maulvi Tamizuddin Khan, 74, Pakistani politician, President of Pakistan's first Constituent Assembly
- *Jay Meuser, 51, American abstract expressionist painter
[August 20], 1963 (Tuesday)
- In the case of Curtis Publishing Co. v. Butts, former University of Georgia football coach Wally Butts won a $3,060,000 judgment in his libel lawsuit against the Saturday Evening Post magazine. The March 19, 1963 issue of the magazine alleged in an article that Butts, and University of Alabama Coach Bear Bryant, had conspired to fix the outcome of the game between their schools. The jury verdict would later be reduced to $460,000 by the trial court, but would be upheld by the United States Supreme Court.
- In the Bristol South East by-election, Tony Benn regained his seat in the House of Commons. Benn had been forced to resign Commons in 1960, when he inherited a peerage, becoming the 2nd Viscount Stansgate on his father's death. Benn had won the by-election on May 4, but had been disqualified by law. When the Peerage Act 1963 took effect, Benn renounced his peerage, ran again and received 79.7% of the vote.
- The Israeli government informed the United Nations Special Committee on Apartheid that it had taken all necessary steps to ensure that no arms, ammunition, or strategic materials would be exported from Israel to South Africa in any form, directly or indirectly.
- The Royal Shakespeare Company introduced its performance cycle of Shakespeare's history plays under the title The Wars of the Roses, adapted and directed by John Barton and Peter Hall, at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon.
[August 21], 1963 (Wednesday)
- The Army of the Republic of Vietnam Special Forces, on orders of President Ngô Đình Diệm and his brother, Ngô Đình Nhu, arrested thousands of monks and nuns, and vandalised Buddhist pagodas across South Vietnam.
- Victor Mostovoy, the pilot of a disabled Aeroflot Tupolev Tu-124 airliner, successfully made an emergency landing in the Neva River at Leningrad, after the jet developed engine trouble. The Tu-124 remained afloat, and all 52 persons on board were able to escape without injury.
- U.S. President Kennedy issued a Presidential Memorandum establishing the National Communications System.
- The Soviet Union established diplomatic relations with Jordan for the first time.
- Lee Harvey Oswald, identifying himself as New Orleans representative of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee, debated against Cuban exile Carlos Bringuier in a live program radio on the New Orleans station WDSU-AM.
- Born: King Mohammed VI of Morocco, son of King Hassan II of Morocco and Lalla Latifa Hammou
- Died: Gladys Dick, 81, American physician and co-developer of the vaccine against scarlet fever
[August 22], 1963 (Thursday)
- American test pilot Joe Walker achieved a second sub-orbital spaceflight, according to the international standard of 100 kilometers, piloting an X-15 rocket to an altitude of 354,200 feet. The record was unofficial, because the X-15 did not take off from the ground under its own power, and sent up by an air launch. Walker's flight would remain the highest ever achieved by an airplane for more than fifty years, until broken on October 4, 2004, when Brian Binnie would pilot SpaceShipOne to an altitude of 367,500 feet.
- Lloyd Miller Jr., convicted in 1956 of the murder and rape of an 8-year-old girl, was given a stay of execution seven hours before he was scheduled to die in the electric chair at the Stateville Correctional Center in Illinois. U.S. District Court Judge Bernard M. Decker issued a writ of habeas corpus to halt proceedings while Miller's attorneys continued to pursue an appeal. Three-and-a-half years later, on February 13, 1967, the U.S. Supreme Court would reverse Miller's conviction after it was determined that the prosecutor in Fulton County, Illinois, had presented faked evidence at Miller's trial, and Miller would be set free on March 20 after more than ten years behind bars.
- Died: Eric Johnston, 66, American motion picture executive who had served as president of the Motion Picture Association of America since 1945.
[August 23], 1963 (Friday)
- Einar Gerhardsen resigned as Prime Minister of Norway after losing a motion of no confidence by a two-vote margin. The 76-74 vote came about when two deputies in the Storting broke with the ruling Labor Party to vote against Gerhardsen.
- At the Geurie crossing, a Sydney-bound Bourke Mail train, with 110 passengers on board, collided with a goods train, hauled by a 265-tonne Beyer-Garratt AD60 class locomotive 6003. There were 19 injuries but no fatalities.
- Born:
- *Stephanie Biddle, Canadian jazz musician, in Sainte-Agathe-des-Monts, Quebec
- *Glória Pires, Brazilian actress, in Rio de Janeiro
[August 24], 1963 (Saturday)
- The very first games of the Bundesliga, composed of the 16 best professional soccer football teams in West Germany, were played, with all eight matches starting at 5:00 pm. In Bremen, Timo Konietzka of Borussia Dortmund scored the first goal in league history, 59 seconds into the match against SV Werder Bremen, although Bremen would win 3-2. In other contests, Meidericher SV beat Karlsruher SC, 4-1; FC Schalke 04 defeated VfB Stuttgart, 2-0; 1. FC Köln won 2-0 over FC Saarbrücken. The other four games ended in 1-1 draws.
- What would become known later as "Cable 243" was sent by the U.S. Department of State, with conditional approval by President Kennedy, to Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge in South Vietnam. The wording of the message, which was dispatched after the violent Xá Lợi Pagoda raids, included the statement that the Ambassador should "make detailed plans as to how we might bring about Diem's replacement if this should become necessary", and implied support for a coup against President Ngo Dinh Diem.
- John Pennel, who had broken the world record in the pole vault on August 5, became the first person to vault more than 17 feet, vaulting 17 feet, 0.75 inches in a meet near his hometown, at the University of Miami.
[August 25], 1963 (Sunday)
- Nearly three years after the December 15, 1960 decision by King Mahendra of Nepal to abolish the nation's short-lived elected legislature, the King held the first meeting of the new "National Guidance Council" as an advisory body.
- The Greek freighter MV Donald, formerly the U.S. Navy cargo ship USS Cabell, was last heard from, when its captain reported by radio that he was encountering bad weather in the Indian Ocean. The ship had been en route to Indonesia with 26 people on board and a cargo of 5,000 tons of iron, and was never found after being reported as missing a month later by the Greek Ministry of Merchant Marine.
- The Beatles gave their sixth concert in Blackpool in two months, at the ABC Theatre.
- Died: Karl Probst, 79, American automobile engineer who, in 1940, designed the U.S. Army's "G.P." vehicle, which would become known as the "jeep"
[August 26], 1963 (Monday)
- In a meeting with U.S. President Kennedy, Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin told Kennedy that all Soviet combat troops had been removed from Cuba. In actuality, one brigade of Soviet troops had remained after the end of the Cuban Missile Crisis, at the request of Fidel Castro. The existence of the brigade would not be discovered by U.S. intelligence until 1979.
- Born: Cristina Favre-Moretti and Isabella Crettenand-Moretti, twin sisters Swiss ski mountaineers who both won gold medals in the 2004 World Championships
[August 27], 1963 (Tuesday)
- Eighteen miners were killed in an explosion at an underground potash mine near Moab, Utah, but five men were able to survive the carbon monoxide by finding an air pocket, 2,712 feet below the surface, and were lifted to safety by rescue workers.
- Less than six hours before the railroads of the United States were scheduled to be shut down by a walkout of railway employees, President Kennedy signed anti-strike legislation that had been passed minutes earlier by the U.S. House of Representatives. The vote in the House, finished at 4:42 pm, was 286-66 on a bill that had passed the U.S. Senate on August 22. President Kennedy signed the bill into law at 6:14 pm, ending the strike that had been scheduled for one minute after midnight.
- Japanese Construction Minister Kono Ichiro announced that the government would construct a new city at undeveloped land in "a very suitable place near Mount Tsukuba". The "Tsukuba Science City", located 35 miles northeast of Tokyo and intended as a community for researchers and scientists, would be ready for its first residents after ten years of construction, and would have over 200,000 residents within 50 years.
- Died:
- *W. E. B. Du Bois, 95, African-American professor and civil rights activist, who later became a citizen of Ghana
- *Garrett Morgan, 86, African-American inventor
- *Inayatullah Khan Mashriqi, 75, Indian mathematician, logician, political theorist, Islamic scholar and the founder of the Khaksar movement
- *Werner Kuhn, 64, Swiss physical chemist
[August 28], 1963 (Wednesday)
- At the 1963 "March on Washington", Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his I Have A Dream speech on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial to an audience of at least 250,000 people.
- The "Career Girls Murders" were committed as Janice Wylie, a 21-year-old researcher for Newsweek magazine, and her roommate, 22-year-old schoolteacher Emily Hoffert, were stabbed to death in their luxury apartment on New York's Upper East Side. An innocent man would be convicted of the murders and was imprisoned until the discovery of the actual killer, Richard Robles.
- John Lyng became Prime Minister of Norway, forming the first government in 28 years not to be led by the Norwegian Labour Party. Lyng's government would last for only one month.
- Two U.S. Air Force KC-135 Stratotankers collided over the Atlantic Ocean and crashed.
[August 29], 1963 (Thursday)
- Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., the U.S. Ambassador to South Vietnam, sent a top secret cable to the White House, reporting that "We are launched on a course from which there is no turning back: the overthrow of the Diem government." At noon in Washington, DC, President Kennedy held a conference with his Secretaries of State, Defense and the Treasury, as well as with the CIA Director, after which Kennedy authorized a reply to Lodge, which included the statement that "The USG will support a coup whicara Nationalist Movement, who stole 14,000,000 Argentine pesos, and killed two bank employees in the process.
- Gulzarilal Nanda replaced Lal Bahadur Shastri as India's Minister for Home Affairs.
- The 47th General Assembly of Nova Scotia ended its term.
[August 30], 1963 (Friday)
- The Moscow–Washington hotline began operations, as the U.S. Department of Defense made a one-sentence announcement to the world press: "The direct communication link between Washington and Moscow is now operational."
- The audio cassette tape and the tape recorder that used it were both introduced to the public by the Philips Company, at the annual Internationale Funkausstellung Berlin, an exhibition of the latest consumer technology, in West Germany. For the next 30 years, the "cassette" would be the standard form of portable recorded music.
- Born:
- *John King, American journalist, in Dorchester, Massachusetts
- *Mark Strong, English actor, in London
- Died:
- *Guy Burgess, 52, British spy
- *Eddie Mannix, 72, American film executive
- *Axel Stordahl, 50, American bandleader
[August 31], 1963 (Saturday)
- Singapore declared its independence from the United Kingdom, with Yusof bin Ishak as the head of state and Lee Kuan Yew as prime minister; sixteen days later, Singapore would join the Federation of Malaysia, but would declare independence again on August 9, 1965.
- The National Museum of Malaysia opened, on the sixth anniversary of the independence of Malaya.
- British North Borneo became the self-governing territory known as Sabah, pending the establishment of the Federation of Malaysia later in the year.
- Winston P. Wilson became chief of the U.S. National Guard Bureau.
- John Dalgleish Donaldson and his first wife, Henrietta Clark Horne, married at Port Seton, Scotland. One of their daughters, Mary Donaldson, would marry Frederik, Crown Prince of Denmark in 2010 and become Mary, Crown Princess of Denmark.
- Died: Georges Braque, 81, French painter and sculptor