In 1972, Senator James L. Buckley (New York) obtained a copy of Czechoslovakia 1968 to show on New York television stations.
Czechoslovakia | 1968 | 1968 Summer Olympics | 1968 in music | 1968 Winter Olympics | Catholic University of Leuven (1834–1968) | United States presidential election, 1968 | Czechoslovakia national football team | Basketball at the 1968 Summer Olympics | Romeo and Juliet (1968 film) | German occupation of Czechoslovakia | North American Soccer League (1968–1984) | Planet of the Apes (1968 film) | Gun Control Act of 1968 | Canoeing at the 1968 Summer Olympics | 1968–69 in English football | Wrestling at the 1968 Summer Olympics | Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia | Ski jumping at the 1968 Winter Olympics | North American Soccer League (1968-1984) | Communist Party of Czechoslovakia | Civil Rights Act of 1968 | 1968 in television | 1968 in literature | 1968 in aviation | The Lion in Winter (1968 film) | Czechoslovakia national rugby union team | Alpine skiing at the 1968 Winter Olympics | 1968 Polish political crisis | 1968 Democratic National Convention |
He won two Academy Awards, the first for Best Short Subject in 1955 for A Time Out of War that had served as his master's degree thesis at U.C.L.A. and which he co-scripted with his brother Terry Sanders; and the second for Best Documentary in 1970 for Czechoslovakia 1968.