June 14 Peace Love Art Activism

June 14 Peace Love Art Activism

Anarchism in the US and Emma Goldman

June 14, 1917: Goldman and Alexander Berkman spoke at a No-Conscription League mass meeting. After the meeting, the police required men of draft age to show their conscription cards. As a result 30 men were detained and two arrested. (see Goldman for expanded story)

June 14 Peace Love Art Activism

BLACK HISTORY

Luisiana Prohibits Cohabitation

June 14, 1910: Louisiana’s House of Representatives broadened its ban on interracial marriage by passing legislation, by a vote of 93 to 10, prohibiting Black people and white people from living together under any circumstances. Under the new legislation, cohabitation was a felony punishable by imprisonment for up to five years. Governor Jared Sanders signed the bill into the law on July 16, 1910. [EJI article] (next BH, see June 25)

Anti-lynching demonstration

June 14, 1922: Blacks from Washington, DC staged a silent parade to protest continued lynchings and in an effort to promote action by Congress on the Dyer anti-lynching bill before the Senate Judiciary Committee. [Washington Area article] (see June 23)

Scottsboro Tragedy

June 14, 1937: Haywood Patterson’s conviction upheld by the Alabama Supreme Court. (see SB  for expanded story)

Robert Kennedy

June 14, 1963: Attorney General Robert Kennedy used a bullhorn to address civil rights demonstrators at the Justice Department. The demonstrators marched to the White House, then to the District Building, and wound up at the Justice Department. [image]

Maryland martial law

June 14, 1963: Maryland Gov. J. Millard Tawes declared martial law and sent National Guard troops to Cambridge to quell protests there after segregationists clashed with the 500 protesters marching downtown. Weeks after the National Guard left, protesters were assaulted again, leading to more protests. The National Guard returned. [Liberation article] (see June 15)

Freedom Summer

June 14, 1964: having announced (March 20, 1964) a voter registration drive in Mississippi called “Freedom Summer,” SNCC began volunteer training at Western College for Women in Oxford, Ohio. (BH, see June 16; VR, see June 15)

Statue of Liberty

June 14 Peace Love Art Activism

June 14, 1965: a Federal Court jury found Robert S Collier, Walter Bowe, Khaleel Sayyed  guilty of conspiring to blow up the Statue of Liberty and other national shrines and of smuggling dynamite from Canada for that purpose. [Justia article] (BH, see July 1; Terrorism, see Nov 4)

Minnie Lee & Mary Alice Relf

June 14, 1973: fourteen-year-old Minnie Lee Relf and her twelve-year old mentally disabled sister, Mary Alice, were sterilized without their knowledge or consent after nurses with the Montgomery Family Planning Clinic, a federally funded family planning agency, deceived their illiterate mother into believing that she was consenting to the girls receiving Women’s Health shots.

Two years earlier, after moving into public housing with their family, Mary Alice, Minnie Lee, and their older sister, Katie, had been administered experimental Women’s Health injections by the local family clinic without their informed consent and initially without their parents’ consent. After the federal government ended the experimental Women’s Health trials, clinic nurses decided that the girls should be sterilized. The clinic targeted the girls for the procedure because they were poor, black, and living in public housing. More cognitively advanced than her younger sisters, Katie narrowly escaped sterilization on June 14 by hiding from the clinic nurse who came to their house.

After the procedure, Mary Alice and Minnie Lee revealed to their parents that instead of receiving shots, they had undergone surgery. [Black Then article] (BH, see June 21; Relf family, see June 27)

Dee/Moore Murders

June 14, 2007: James Seale convicted by a federal jury on one count of conspiracy to kidnap two persons, and two counts of kidnapping where the victims were not released unharmed. (BH, see Aug 10; see Dee/Moore Murders for expanded story)

Laquan McDonald

June 14, 2019: Showtime network released “16 Shots” a documentary examining the 2014 shooting of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald by Chicago police officer Jason Van Dyke and the cover-up that ensued. After the police initially declared the shooting as justified, journalists and activists fought for footage of the event to be released, sending the Chicago Police Department and local Chicago government officials into upheaval as the community demanded justice. (rogerebert.com review) (B & S, see June 18; LMc, see July 18)

Crime and Punishment

June 14, 2021:  the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that some crack cocaine offenders sentenced to harsh prison terms more than a decade ago cannot get their sentences reduced under a federal law adopted with the purpose of doing just that.

At issue in the case was the long and now notorious history of sentencing under the 1986 Anti-Drug Abuse Act, which established harsh mandatory prison sentences based on the amount of drugs that the defendant possessed or sold. The triggering amount, however, was different for crack cocaine used most often by Black people, and powder cocaine, used most often by whites.

Indeed, the ratio was 100-to-1, so that a five-year mandatory minimum penalty, for instance, was triggered by possession of 5 grams of crack, whereas the same penalty was triggered by 500 grams of powder cocaine. [NYT article] (next BH, see Sept 27; next C & P, see September 26, 2022)

June 14 Peace Love Art Activism

US Labor History

Industrial Workers of the World

June 14, 1924: the Ku Klux Klan attacked members of the Industrial Workers of the World at the IWW’s meeting hall in San Pedro, California, during a benefit for the families of two workers killed in a railroad accident. The KKK beat many of the 300 members; kidnapped, tarred, and feathered others; destroyed everything inside the building; and scalded two children by burning them with a pot of coffee. [U of Washington article] (Labor, see August 25, 1925; Terrorism, see June 1, 1925)

June 14 Peace Love Art Activism

Cannabis

Federal Bureau of Narcotics

June 14, 1930: the Federal Bureau of Narcotics formed as an agency of the United States Department of the Treasury. It consolidated the functions of the Federal Narcotics Control Board and the Narcotic Division.  Harry J. Anslinger was appointed its first commissioner. He had joined the Treasury Department in 1926 and by 1929 was Assistant Commissioner of Prohibition.

As part of his effort to propagandize the so-called evils of cannabis, Anslinger sought crime stories that he tied to cannabis use. These stories collectively became know as the “Gore Files.”  He used these stories in his many public speeches regarding his perceived danger of cannabis.

He also erroneously but deliberately connected the etymologies of the words hashish and assassin.

Criminalization

In 1933, marijuana became the target of government control. Sensationalist stories linked violent acts to cannabis consumption. Many of the most outlandish stories appeared in newspapers published by William Randolph Hearst. Hearst reportedly had financial interests in the lumber and paper industries. He may have sought to eliminate competition from hemp.

The first laws against cannabis in the United States were passed in border towns with Mexico. Hearst was an up-and-coming newspaper tycoon, owning twenty-eight newspapers by the mid-1920s. Hearst dropped the words cannabis and hemp from his newspapers and began a propaganda campaign against ‘marijuana,’ (see Cannabis for expanded marijuana chronology)

Hawaii decriminalization

June 14, 2000:  Hawaii broke new ground when it became the first state to enact a law to remove criminal penalties for medical marijuana users via a state legislature. Hawaii’s governor Ben Cayetano submitted the original bill and signed the final measure into law on June 14, 2000.

Senate Bill 862 was passed by a vote of 32-18 in the House and 13-12 Senate, making Hawaii the sixth state to legalize medical marijuana.” (see Cannabis Continued for expanded chronology)

June 14 Peace Love Art Activism

Free Speech

West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette

June 14, 1943: the US Supreme Court held that the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment to the Constitution protected students from being forced to salute the American flag and say the Pledge of Allegiance in school. It was a significant court victory won by Jehovah’s Witnesses, whose religion forbade them from saluting or pledging to symbols, including symbols of political institutions. However, the Court did not address the effect the compelled salutation and recital ruling had upon their particular religious beliefs, but instead ruled that the state did not have the power to compel speech in that manner for anyone.

Barnette overruled a 1940 decision on the same issue, Minersville School District v. Gobitis (also involving the children of Jehovah’s Witnesses), in which the Court stated that the proper recourse for dissent was to try to change the school policy democratically. [Oyez article] (see Pledge for expanded story; FS, see March 26, 1948)

Flag Day

June 14 Peace Love Art Activism

June 14, 1954: President Eisenhower signed the bill into law on Flag Day, stating, “From this day forward, the millions of our school children will daily proclaim in every city and town, every village and rural school house, the dedication of our nation and our people to the Almighty. … In this way we are reaffirming the transcendence of religious faith in America’s heritage and future; in this way we shall constantly strengthen those spiritual weapons which forever will be our country’s most powerful resource, in peace or in war.”  [full text] (see October 31, 1969)

Newdow v. U.S. Congress

June 14, 2004:  the US Supreme Court overturned a Ninth Circuit Court decision that struck the addition of “under God” to the Pledge of Allegiance. The 8-0 ruling was reached on a technicality: that Michael Newdow did not have standing to bring the case in the first place. [Oyez article] (see February 1, 2018)

Political buttons

June 14, 2018: Minnesota law prohibited people from wearing a “political badge, political button, or other political insignia” in polling places on Election Day.

In Minnesota Voters Alliance v. Mansky, the US Supreme Court ruled 7-2 that Minnesota’s political apparel law violated the First Amendment. The Supreme Court struck down the Minnesota law, finding that it is overly broad so people will not know what they can and cannot wear to polling places. (see July 10)

June 14 Peace Love Art Activism

Fourth Amendment

Trupiano v. United States

June 14, 1948: the US Supreme Court that ruled that warrantless searches following arrests were unconstitutional under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution.  [Justia article] (4th, see June 27, 1949; Trupiano, see February 20, 1950)

June 14 Peace Love Art Activism

McCarthyism

General George C. Marshall

June 14, 1951:  Senator Joe McCarthy accused General George C. Marshall of assisting the cause of international Communism. As Army Chief of Staff and military adviser to President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Marshall was one of the heroes of World War II. He also served as Secretary of State under President Harry Truman (1947–1949) and was the author of the famous Marshall Plan, which was named for him, and which was designed to revitalize the economies of European countries after World War II as a way of fending off Communist influence. [Shmoop article] (see Sept 1)

President Dwight Eisenhower

June 14, 1953: in a commencement speech at Dartmouth College, President Dwight Eisenhower made one of his very few public criticisms of Senator Joe McCarthy (R–Wisconsin). Without mentioning his name, and as part of a discussion of courage, Ike told the graduates to not become “book burners.” His comments were prompted by a recent event in which two of McCarthy’s top aides toured American facilities in Europe, inspecting U.S. Information Agency libraries and demanding the removal of books by alleged “radicals” (see April 5, 1953). When asked about his comments at his next press conference, however, Eisenhower backtracked and denied that he meant to criticize McCarthy. [Civil Liberties History article] (RS, see June 19; Free Speech, see October 26, 1954)

June 14 Peace Love Art Activism

Nuclear/Chemical News

Civil defense drill

June 14, 1954:  the US went through its first nationwide civil defense drill. Though American officials were satisfied with the results of the drill, the event stood as a stark reminder that the United States—and the world—was now living under a nuclear shadow.

The civil defense drill was organized and evaluated by the Civil Defense Administration, and included operations in 54 cities in the United States, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Alaska, and Hawaii. Canada also participated in the exercise. The basic premise of the drill was that the United States was under massive nuclear assault from both aircraft and submarines, and that most major urban areas had been targeted. At 10 a.m., alarms were sounded in selected cities, at which time all citizens were supposed to get off the streets, seek shelter, and prepare for the onslaught. Each citizen was supposed to know where the closest fallout shelter was located; these included the basements of government buildings and schools, underground subway tunnels, and private shelters. Even President Dwight D. Eisenhower took part in the show, heading to an underground bunker in Washington, D.C. The entire drill lasted only about 10 minutes, at which time an all-clear signal was broadcast and life returned to normal. Civil Defense Administration officials estimated that New York City would suffer the most in such an attack, losing over 2 million people. Other cities, including Washington, D.C., would also endure massive loss of life. In all, it was estimated that over 12 million Americans would die in an attack. (see February 17, 1955)

June 14 Peace Love Art Activism

June 14 Music et al

Beatles VI

June 14 Peace Love Art Activism

June 14, 1965, The Beatles released  Beatles VI. (the 6th Capitol label release. From All Music: Six months had elapsed since the release of Beatles ’65 in America, and the powers that were at Capitol Records recognized that some new product was needed, especially as the group was about to tour the United States. The result was Beatles VI, using the remaining tracks off of the British-released Beatles for Sale album (going all the way back to the fall of the previous year), among them that album’s highlight, a cover of Buddy Holly’s “Words of Love,” and four new songs, two of them from the second side of the soon-to-be-released U.K. Help! album.

All I Really Want to Do

June 14, 1965: The Byrds release their second single, Bob Dylan’s All I Really Want to Do. It reached #40 on the Billboard Hot 100  (see June 15)

The Road to Bethel

June 14, 1969: John Roberts and Joel Rosenman received a certified letter from Wallkill Town Attorney Joseph Owen requesting submission of  fourteen divisions of production plans.

That day (or the next day or the day after) Abbie Hoffman called Michael Lang saying that he (Hoffman) needed money from Woodstock Ventures or else he (Hoffman) would shut down the festival. (see Chronology for expanded story)

June 14 Peace Love Art Activism

Vietnam

South Vietnam Leadership

June 14, 1965: mounting Roman Catholic opposition to South Vietnamese Premier Phan Huy Quat’s government led him to resign. On this day, a military triumvirate headed by Army General Nguyen Van Thieu took over and expanded to a 10-man National Leadership Committee. The Committee decreed the death penalty for Viet Cong (aka, National Liberation Front) terrorists, corrupt officials, speculators, and black marketeers. The Catholics approved of Quat’s resignation and warned the military against favoring the Buddhists, who asked for an appointment of civilians to the new cabinet. (V, see June 16; SVL, see September 3, 1967)

Spock et al convicted

June 14, 1968: Dr. Benjamin Spock, Michael Ferber, Mitch Goodman, and Rev. William Sloane Coffin were convicted of conspiracy to obstruct the draft during the Vietnam War. Author of Baby and Child Care (1946), Dr. Spock was the most famous pediatrician in the U.S. He first became an anti-nuclear weapons testing and then a vocal critic of the Vietnam War. Also convicted were. Co-defendant Marcus Raskin was found not guilty.

One of the principal documents offered by the prosecution was “A Call to Resist Illegitimate Authority,” published on September 27, 1967. [NYT article] (Vietnam, see “in July”; Spock, see July 11, 1969)

June 14 Peace Love Art Activism

Environmental Issues

DDT banned

June 14, 1972:   the Environmental Protection Agency ordered a ban on continued domestic use of the pesticide DDT, to take effect at year’s end. [PAN article] (see Oct 1)

Flint water polution

June 14, 2017: five officials in Michigan, including Nick Lyon the head of the state’s health department, were charged. It was the closest investigators had come to directly blaming officials for the deaths and illnesses that occurred when a water contamination crisis enveloped Flint.

The tainted water had been tied to lead poisoning in children and prompted officials to begin a costly, years-long process of replacing pipes all over the city. Even now, officials recommend that only filtered tap water be consumed, and many residents say they can trust only bottled water, given false assurances they once received from state and local officials. [2018 CNN article] (see July 3)

June 14 Peace Love Art Activism

Falklands War

June 14, 1982: General Mario Menendez surrendered to Major General Jeremy Moore as British forces marched into Port Stanley. (see June 17)

June 14 Peace Love Art Activism

Sexual Abuse of Children

June 14, 2002:   American Roman Catholic bishops adopted a policy to bar sexually abusive clergy from face-to-face contact with parishioners but keep them in the priesthood. (see Sept 17)

June 14 Peace Love Art Activism

TERRORISM

June 14, 2005: following criticism from around the world and senators from his own Republican party, Vice-President Dick Cheney defended all means used at Guantanamo Bay prison as justified to prevent further attacks on the US.

A report published in Time magazine and authenticated by the Pentagon had described the treatment of one prisoner “Mohammed al-Qahtani” which included:

  • forced to bark like a dog
  • stand for prolonged periods
  • had his facial hair shaved off
  • pictures of scantily clad women hung round his neck.
  • forcibly injected with fluids after refusing food and water.
  • “invasion of space by a female”, in which he was straddled by a woman soldier (see Nov 22
June 14 Peace Love Art Activism

LGBTQ

June 14, 2007: Massachusetts marriage opponents attempted to amend the constitution to strip away the freedom to marry, but the amendment was defeated when over 75 percent of the state legislature voted to stand up for all families. (see Aug 9)

June 14 Peace Love Art Activism

June 13 Music et al

June 13 Music et al

Hello Dolly!

June 13 – July 24, 1964, Louis Armstrong’s Hello Dolly! the Billboard #1 album.

From All Music: Louis Armstrong’s commercial resurgence with the song “Hello, Dolly!” — a number one hit that unseated the Beatles’ “Can’t Buy Me Love” from the top spot — came as such a surprise that Kapp Records hastened to produce an album to go along with it. The resulting long-player, appropriately titled Hello, Dolly!, also went to number one and produced a second hit, the inferior “I Still Get Jealous.”

June 13 Music et al

Marijuana in Miami

June 13, 1967: a local TV news special in Miami airs “Marijuana in Miami.” The special included the head shop of Michael Lang.

In the late summer of 1968, Lang moved to Woodstock, NY. (see Chronology for expanded story)

June 13 Music et al

seeThe Balled Of John and Yokofor more

June 13, 1969, The Beatles after live performances: over 100 US radio stations banned The Beatles new single ‘The Balled Of John and Yoko’ due to the line ‘Christ, you know it ain’t easy’, calling it offensive. The following video is the story. (see July 1)

Beatles June 13, 1970

‘The Long And Winding Road’ single

The Beatles started a two week run at No.1 on the US singles chart with ‘The Long And Winding Road,’ the group’s 20th US No.1.

June 13 Music et al

see Let It Be’ album for more

June 13 Music et al

The album ‘Let It Be’ started a four-week run at No.1 the US album chart on the same day. The 12th and final studio album by The Beatles, was recorded in January 1969, before the recording and release of Abbey Road. (see Nov 27)

John Lennon, June 13, 1975

‘Salute To Sir Lew Grade’

The TV broadcast of ‘Salute To Sir Lew Grade’ (recorded on April 18). John Lennon performed ‘Slippin And Slidin’, and ‘Imagine’. The performance was Lennon’s last one before a live audience. (see Oct 7)

June 13 Peace Love Art Activism

June 13 Peace Love Art Activism

US Labor History

Bureau of Labor formed

June 13 Peace Love Art Activism

June 13, 1884: Congress created a Bureau of Labor under the Interior Department. [BLS site] (see Aug 11)

Starbucks Wins

June 13, 2024: the Supreme Court ruled in favor of Starbucks in a challenge against a labor ruling by a federal judge, making it more difficult for a key federal agency to intervene when a company is accused of illegally suppressing labor organizing.

Eight justices backed the majority opinion.

The ruling came in a case brought by Starbucks over the firing of seven workers in Memphis who were trying to unionize a store in 2022. The company said it had fired them for allowing a television crew into a closed store. The workers, who called themselves the Memphis Seven, said that they were fired for their unionization efforts and that the company didn’t typically enforce the rules they were accused of violating.  [NYT article] (next LH, see Sept 13)

June 13 Peace Love Art Activism

BLACK HISTORY

Mother Ordered to Whip Son

June 13, 1904: Judge John J. Riley, white, ordered a Black mother to brutally beat her 15-year-old son. Simon Searce, in front of hundreds of white people in the Lexington, Kentucky, town square. Riley imposed this sentence Simon as punishment for getting into a physical altercation with a white boy.

Compelled by the judge’s order, Simon’s mother took her son straight from the courtroom, through the crowded streets, and to the town square filled with white residents. There, her son was stripped of his clothing and tied to a post, and she administered 20 lashes from a buggy whip. If Simon’s mother had refused to whip her son as ordered, she risked facing her own charges of contempt, and also risked angering the judge who had power to impose an even harsher punishment upon her son. [EJI article] (next BH, see Aug 16)

Freedom Riders (Florida)

June 13, 1961: an interracial group of eighteen rabbis and ministers participated in a freedom ride to Tallahassee, Florida, sponsored by the Congress of Racial Equality. The riders experienced a few minor confrontations along the way, but were spared major incidents of violence in Florida due to the governor’s negotiations with local officials to ensure that the riders were left alone. (see June 15)

George Whitmore, Jr

June 13, 1966: in Miranda v. Arizona the US. Supreme Court held that police must warn suspects of their rights to remain silent and consult with a lawyer before submitting to questioning. [Oyez article re Miranda] (next BH, see June 16; see Whitmore for expanded story)

Anti-apartheid concert

June 13, 1988: the biggest charity rock concert since Live Aid three years earlier took place at London’s Wembley Stadium, to denounce South African apartheid. Among the performers were Sting, Stevie Wonder, Bryan Adams, George Michael, Whitney Houston and Dire Straits. Half the money raised went towards anti-apartheid activities in Britain, the rest was donated to children’s charities in southern Africa. (see Dec 7)

US Senate apologizes

June 13, 2005: between 1882 and 1968, approximately 4743 people were lynched in America, and nearly three-quarters of those lynching victims were black. Lynchings were extrajudicial and heinous killings, usually intended to warn other blacks not to transgress racialized social, political, and economic boundaries. Victims often were hanged, but sometimes were shot, stabbed, or burned alive. Their murders ranged from community spectacles at which hundreds of participants ate picnics and took body parts and photo postcards as souvenirs to low-profile concealed murders involving as few as two assailants.

During the lynching era, seven United States presidents exhorted Congress to pass legislation authorizing federal prosecution of lynch mobs. Two hundred anti-lynching bills were introduced but only three passed the House of Representatives and none passed the Senate due to Southern conservatives’ successful filibusters. In the absence of federal protection, and amidst the inaction of local state courts, lynchings persisted for decades.

On June 13, 2005, the United States Senate formally apologized for failing to pass anti-lynching legislation. Resolution sponsor Senator George Allen (R-VA) expressed his regret for “the failure of the Senate to take action when action was most needed,” while co-sponsor Senator Mary Landrieu (D-LA) declared, “It’s important that we are honest with ourselves and that we tell the truth about what happened.” Nearly eighty other senators co-sponsored the resolution.

Hundreds of relatives of lynching victims were present to witness the apology, as was ninety-one-year-old James Cameron, largely considered the only known survivor of a lynching attempt. In 1930, Mr. Cameron was sixteen when he and two friends were seized by a white lynch mob in Marion, Indiana, and both of his friends were hung and killed. Mr. Cameron was cut down and released. No one was ever arrested or charged. (next BH, see June 21; next Lynching, see February 10, 2015; see March 7, 2022 for lynching bill; for expanded chronology of lynching, see also AL4)

June 13 Peace Love Art Activism

Cultural Milestone

June 13, 1923: a sign consisting of 50-foot-tall letters spelling out “HOLLYWOODLAND” was dedicated in the Hollywood Hills to promote a subdivision (the last four letters were removed in 1949) [images] (see April 10, 1925)

June 13 Peace Love Art Activism

Fair Housing

June 13 Peace Love Art Activism

June 13, 1933: The Homeowners Refinancing Act (also known as the Home Owners’ Loan Act of 1933 and the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation Act) went into effect. It was a part of President Roosevelt’s New Deal to help those in danger of losing their homes. The act provided mortgage assistance to homeowners or would-be homeowners by providing them money or refinancing mortgages.

The federal government drew red lines on maps to delineate where loans were “best-suited” and banks followed the government’s lead in other non-government backed loans. [Living New Deal article] (see June 16, 1933)

June 13 Peace Love Art Activism

FREE SPEECH

June 13 Peace Love Art Activism

June 13, 1934: movie censorship code adopted . Early Hollywood films often had many edgy moments and themes with regard to sex. In response, moralistic activists began demanding that Hollywood “clean up” the movies. There were a number of efforts at voluntary film censorship by industry leaders beginning in the 1920s. There were actually many different versions of “The Code,” taking into account all the revisions. See, for example, the “Don’ts and Be Carefuls,” issued on October 15, 1927, and an early version of the code, adopted on March 31, 1930. All of these early efforts were voluntary, however, with little enforcement mechanisms.

This 1934 version, released had tighter enforcement, and marked the beginnings of the most heavy-handed censorship in the history of American movies. The enforcement of the Code rested on an agreement between the major movie theater chains (which at that time were largely owned by Hollywood studios) would not show a film that did not have the production code seal of approval. In practice, many films were produced and released only after negotiations with production code officials. [Censorship in Film site article]  (see Aug 7)

June 13 Peace Love Art Activism

McCarthyism

June 13, 1949: Justice Clark of the Washington, DC Court of Appeals upheld the convictions of the Hollywood Ten [images] convictions. In November 1949 the US Supreme Court refused to hear an appeal. (Red Scare, see October 1, 1949; Hollywood Ten, see April 10, 1950)

June 13 Peace Love Art Activism

see June 13 Music et al for more

Hello Dolly!

June 13 – July 24, 1964, Louis Armstrong’s Hello Dolly! is the Billboard #1 album.

“Marijuana in Miami”

June 13, 1967: a local TV news special in Miami airs “Marijuana in Miami.” The special included the head shop of Michael Lang.

Michael Lang

In the late summer of 1968, Lang moved to Woodstock, NY.

Earth Light Theatre

June 13, 1968: the Earth Light Theatre began performances in the converted barn on Elliot Tibor’s El Monaco property.  (see Chronology for expanded Woodstock story)

‘The Balled Of John and Yoko’

June 13, 1969: over 100 US radio stations banned The Beatles new single ‘The Balled Of John and Yoko’ due to the line ‘Christ, you know it ain’t easy’, calling it offensive. (see July 1)

Beatles June 13, 1970
‘The Long And Winding Road’ single

The Beatles started a two week run at No.1 on the US singles chart with ‘The Long And Winding Road,’ the group’s 20th US No.1.

‘Let It Be’ album

The album ‘Let It Be’ started a four-week run at No.1 the US album chart on the same day. The 12th and final studio album by The Beatles, was recorded in January 1969, before the recording and release of Abbey Road. (see Nov 27)

‘Salute To Sir Lew Grade’

June 13, 1975, The Beatles post break-up: the TV broadcast of ‘Salute To Sir Lew Grade’ (recorded on April 18). John Lennon performed ‘Slippin And Slidin’, and ‘Imagine’. The performance was Lennon’s last one before a live audience. (see Oct 7)

June 13 Peace Love Art Activism

Vietnam

Scranton Commission

June 13 Peace Love Art Activism

June 13, 1970:  President Nixon established the President’s Commission on Campus Unrest, which became known as the Scranton Commission after its chairman, former Pennsylvania governor William Scranton. [text download] (see June 30; Commission & FS, see Sept 26)

Daniel Ellsberg/Pentagon Papers

June 13, 1971: the New York Times began to publish the Pentagon Papers, which are a US Department of Defense history of US political-military involvement in Vietnam from 1945 to 1967. A 1996 article in The New York Times said that the Pentagon Papers “demonstrated, among other things, that the Johnson Administration had systematically lied, not only to the public but also to Congress, about a subject of transcendent national interest and significance“.  (NYT article) (Vietnam, see June 28); see DE/PP for expanded story)

June 13, 1973: Watergate Scandal & Pentagon Papers

June 13, 1973: Watergate prosecutors find a memo addressed to John Ehrlichman describing in detail the plans to burglarize the office of Pentagon Papers defendant Daniel Ellsberg’s psychiatrist, The Post reports.

Alexander Butterfield

June 13, 1973: Alexander Butterfield, former presidential appointments secretary, revealed in congressional testimony that since 1971 Nixon had recorded all conversations and telephone calls in his offices. (see Watergate for expanded story)

June 13 Peace Love Art Activism

Falklands War

June 13 – 14, 1982: British forces took Argentine positions on mountains overlooking Port Stanley. (see June 14)

June 13 Peace Love Art Activism

Environmental Issues

June 13, 1994: a jury in Anchorage, Alaska, blamed recklessness by Exxon Corp. and Capt. Joseph Hazelwood for the Exxon Valdez disaster, allowing victims of the nation’s worst oil spill to seek $15 billion in damages. (see January 19, 1996)

June 13 Peace Love Art Activism

Oklahoma City Explosion

June 13, 1997: a jury sentenced Timothy McVeigh to death for his part in the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing. (see Dec 23)

June 13 Peace Love Art Activism

LGBTQ

June 13, 2011: The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Central District of California in Los Angeles released an opinion in In Re Balas and Morales finding Section 3 of the so-called Defense of Marriage Act unconstitutional. In a rare statement of support, the opinion was signed by 20 of the district’s bankruptcy judges. Following the opinion, the Department of Justice shifted its policy and no longer intervened to block married same-sex couples from filing joint petitions for bankruptcy. [NYT article]  (California, see February 7, 2012; LGBTQ, see June 24  or see or see December 13, 2022 re DoMA)

June 13 Peace Love Art Activism

Native Americans

June 13, 2022:  the National Park Service (NPS) announced. That it had renamed a Yellowstone National Park mountain to honor Native Americans instead of the US Army captain who massacred them.

Once named after Gustavus Doane, Mount Doane was renamed First Peoples Mountain, The 10,551-foot peak stands east of Yellowstone Lake in the country’s first national park.

Doane led an attack in 1870, now known as the Marias Massacre, against the Piegan Blackfeet, killing at least 173 Native Americans including many elderly Tribe members and children who were sick with smallpox, according to NPS.

“Doane wrote fondly about this attack and bragged about it for the rest of his life,” NPS said in a news release.

Blackfeet Tribal member Tom Rodgers told CNN the Indigenous community has long “petitioned our government to do what is right and what is moral.”

“We heard our Blackfeet sisters screams as they ran to the river on that cold January morning in 1870,” Rodgers, also an adviser on the Rocky Mountain Tribal Council, said. “We heard their cry for justice. We sought justice. We sought an accounting. We sought a reckoning with history. It has taken far far too long for this journey of healing to arrive.”

“Finally hope and history rhyme,” he added. [CNN article] (next NA, see June 29)

Makah Tribe/Whale hunting

June 13, 2024: the Makah Tribe, which had long sought approval to resume hunting whales off the Washington State coast, won approval from federal regulators to harvest as many as 25 gray whales over the next decade.

The decision from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration was a crucial victory for the tribe in its decades-long quest to resume whaling traditions that were enshrined as a right in an 1855 treaty. Tribal leaders have said the whaling is needed for the tribe’s culture and welfare at a time when each is under threat.  [NYT article] (next NA, see )

June 13 Peace Love Art Activism

Women’s Health

June 13, 2024: the Supreme Court unanimously voted to uphold access to mifepristone, a widely available abortion pill, rejecting a bid from a group of anti-abortion organizations and doctors to unravel the Food and Drug Administration’s approval of the pill. The unanimous decision, written by Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh, held that the plaintiffs lacked standing to challenge the F.D.A.’s actions. [NYT article] (next WH, see Nov 5)

Crime and Punishment

June 13, 2024:  the Justice Department issued a sweeping rebuke of policing in Phoenix, finding severe discrimination against Black, Hispanic and Native American people, routine violations of the rights of homeless people and excessive use of force.

The review was one of the harshest to come out of the Biden administration in its efforts to investigate police departments for systemic problems. It is also the first time a civil rights investigation into police practices found that the rights of homeless people were violated.

“Ultimately, our findings reveal evidence showing longstanding dysfunction,” Kristen Clarke, the assistant attorney general who leads the department’s civil rights division, told reporters on Thursday. She added, “The problems at their core reflect the lack of effective supervision, training and accountability.”  [NYT article] (next C & P, see )