Category Archives: Today in history

July 8 Peace Love Art Activism

July 8 Peace Love Art Activism

BLACK HISTORY

Slave Ship Clotilde

July 8, 1860: more than 50 years after Congress banned the importation of enslaved Africans into the United States, the slave ship Clotilde arrived in Mobile, Alabama, carrying more than 100 enslaved people from West Africa. Captain William Foster commanded the boat, and was later said to be working for Timothy Meaher, a white Mobile shipyard owner who built the Clotilde.

Captain Foster evaded capture by federal authorities by transferring the enslaved Africans to a riverboat and burning and then sinking the Clotilde. [EJI article]  (next BH, see March 27, 1861; Clotilde, see May 22, 2019)

Hamburg Massacre

July 8 Peace Love Art Activism

July 8, 1876: the Hamburg Massacre took place in South Carolina after African-American members of a militia marched on the Fourth of July. Two white farmers, temporarily obstructed from traveling through town, brought a formal complaint, demanding the disbandment of the militia. Hundreds of armed white men descended on the small black community, and militia members retreated to a warehouse they used as their armory. The attackers fired a cannon at the armory, eventually killing seven, six of them African Americans. It was the beginning of the “Redemption,” re-instituting white supremacist rule. The only known monument that exists honors the lone white soldier who died. [Black Past article] (next BH, see January 29, 1877)

Marcus Garvey

July 8, 1917: Garvey delivered an address, “The Conspiracy of the East St. Louis Riots,” at Lafayette Hall in Harlem, in which he stated that the East St Louis riot (see July 2) was “one of the bloodiest outrages against mankind.” (BH, see July 28; see MG for expanded Garvey story)

Robert Fahsenfeld

July 8, 1963: Robert Fahsenfeld, owner of a segregated lunchroom in the racially tense Eastern Shore community of Cambridge, Maryland, douses a white integrationist with water. The integrationist, Edward Dickerson, was among three white and eight African American protesters who knelt on the sidewalk in front of the restaurant to sing freedom songs. A raw egg, which Fahsenfeld had broken over Dickerson’s head moments earlier, still is visible on the back of Dickerson’s head. The protesters were later arrested.

Medgar Evers murder trail

July 8, 1963: Byron de La Beckwith pleaded not guilty in State Circuit Court on his indictment for the murder of Medgar W. Evers. (BH, see July 9; Evers, see July 25)

July 8 Peace Love Art Activism

Vietnam

Viet Minh

July 8, 1944: the French discovered a Viet Minh base in Cao Bang province with arms and other material and warned of an immediate need “to re-establish authority.” The Viet Minh controlled much of the border areas on northern Vietnam in Cao Bang, Bac Kan, and Lang Son provinces. (see Dec 27)

Maj. Dale R. Buis and Master Sgt. Chester M. Ovnand

July 8, 1959: Maj. Dale R. Buis and Master Sgt. Chester M. Ovnand become the first Americans killed in the American phase of the Vietnam War when guerrillas strike a Military Assistance Advisory Group (MAAG) compound in Bien Hoa, 20 miles northeast of Saigon. The group had arrived in South Vietnam on November 1, 1955, to provide military assistance. The organization consisted of U.S. Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps personnel who provided advice and assistance to the Ministry of Defense, Joint General Staff, corps and division commanders, training centers, and province and district headquarters. (see March 6, 1960)

Ambassador Maxwell Taylor

July 8, 1965: Ambassador Maxwell Taylor resigned as U.S. Ambassador to South Vietnam. Taylor had earlier been opposed to the introduction of U.S. ground troops into South Vietnam, proposing instead an intensified air campaign against North Vietnam. Taylor would be replaced by Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., who returned to Saigon for his second stint as ambassador. [1979 WGBH interview] (see July 18)

US troop withdrawal

July 8, 1969: the first U.S. troop withdrawals are made from Viet Nam. (see July 11)

The Cold War

July 8, 1960: the Soviet Union charged CIA pilot Francis Gary Powers with espionage. (CW, see Aug 4; see Powers for expanded story)

July 8 Peace Love Art Activism

July 8 Music et al

Jimi Hendrix

July 8, 1967: The Monkees, one of the biggest acts in the US, started a US concert tour. Mickey Dolenz had strongly recommended hiring Jimi Hendrix and his band as their opening act. Peter Tork and Michael Nesmith supported the choice; both were anxious to be accepted as serious musicians and believed that Hendrix would lend them some credibility among rock critics and older record buyers. Tork would later say, “Besides, …it would give us the chance to watch Jimi Hendrix perform night after night!”

Jimi, on the other hand, thought The Monkees’ music was “dishwater,” but his manager convinced him to sign on for the tour and to capitalize on the buzz generated by his Monterey Pop performance

The Monkees’ young fans were confused by the overtly sexual stage antics of Hendrix, and when he tried to get them to sing along to “Foxy Lady” they stubbornly screamed “Foxy Davy!”  (next Hendrix, see July 16; see Hendrix/Monkees for expanded story)

The [bumpy] Road to Bethel

July 8, 1969
  • the Middletown Fire Department unanimously turned down a proposal to supply personnel to run Nathan’s food concessions. The fire companies’ membership objected to the long hours Natahan’s had required.
  • Wes Pomeroy and Don Ganoung  met with town fire advisory board to discuss the festival’s  fire protection needs. Instead of evaluating the festival’s requirements and coming to an informal arrangement, the advisory board decided not to act on the proposed plans until it was asked to do so by the town board under the new local law.
  • Joel Rosenman received a letter from Margaret Y Tremper, the deputy town clerk from the Town of Shawangunk in upstate NY. The letter informed the festival organizers that the festival address used on advertising was misleading as Wallkill, NY (Ulster County) was not the same as the Town of Wallkill (Orange county), where the festival was. She hoped that they would correct their advertising to avoid having thousands of attendees mistakenly arriving at her location and not theirs.
  • a Smoky Robinson and the Miracles concert in Boston resulted in scattered incidents of stone throwing and window breaking after the sound system had problems.
  •  Miles Lourie resigned as counsel for Woodstock Ventures because of the recent appointment of Peter Marshall as an additional counsel.
  • (second week of July) Peter Goodrich continued to try to find companies for the festival’s food concession stands. (see Chronology for the whole story)
July 8 Peace Love Art Activism

Native Americans

Termination policies

July 8, 1970: President Richard Nixon formally ended the termination policies established in the 1950s and announced a new policy of “self-determination without termination.” The administration introduced 22 legislative proposals supporting Indian self-rule. [APP article] (see “in August”)

Long Walkers 3

July 8, 2011: Long Walkers 3 arrived in Washington, DC. (see July 18, 2012)

July 8 Peace Love Art Activism

LGBTQ

Democratic Rules Committee

July 8, 1980: The Democratic Rules Committee states that it will not discriminate against homosexuals. At their National Convention on August 11-14, the Democrats become the first political party to endorse a homosexual rights platform. (see Sept 9)

DOMA’s Section 3

July 8, 2010: U.S. District Court Judge Joseph Tauro ruled in Gill v. Office of Personnel Management and Commonwealth of Massachusetts v. United States Department of Health and Human Services that DOMA’s Section 3, which restricts marriage to different-sex couples, was unconstitutional. [text] (see August 2010)

July 8 Peace Love Art Activism

Irish Troubles

July 8, 1981:   Irish Republican Joe McDonnell died at the Long Kesh Internment Camp after a 61-day hunger strike. (see Troubles for expanded story)

July 8 Peace Love Art Activism

US Labor History

July 8, 1982: W.A. Boyle, the former president of the United Mine Workers who was convicted of hiring assassins to kill union rival Joseph Yablonski, lost an appeal for a new trial when the Pennsylvania  State Supreme Court ruled that the verdict was fair. (see Nov 16)

July 8 Peace Love Art Activism

Iraq War II

Rape charges

July 8, 2006: four other soldiers charged with participating in the rape and murders; a fifth charged with dereliction of duty for failing to report the crimes (see in July 2006)

Colin Powell

July 8, 2007:  the former American secretary of state Colin Powell revealed that he’d spent 2½ hours vainly trying to persuade President George W Bush not to invade Iraq and believed the conflict could not be resolved by US forces. [2015 NBC News interview] (see Aug 16)

July 8 Peace Love Art Activism

Cannabis

July 8, 2011:  “The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) ruled that marijuana has “no accepted medical use” and should therefore remain illegal under federal law — regardless of conflicting state legislation allowing medical marijuana and despite hundreds of studies and centuries of medical practice attesting to the drug’s benefits.

The judgment came in response to a 2002 petition by supporters of medical marijuana, which called on the government to reclassify cannabis, which is currently a Schedule I drug — like heroin, illegal for all uses — and to place it in Schedule III, IV or V, which would allow for common medical uses…

The government had long delayed making a judgment on the petition, but now that it has, it makes it possible for advocates to appeal it in federal court. Now, that process can be set in motion.” (next Cannabis, see November or see CCC for expanded chronology)

July 8 Peace Love Art Activism

Women’s Health

Wisconsin abortion Law blocked

July 8, 2013: a federal U.S. District Judge William Conley temporarily blocked part of Wisconsin’s new abortion law and scheduled a hearing for next week. The law includes provisions similar to those in several other states that require women to undergo an ultrasound procedure before having an abortion and require doctors who provide abortion services to have admitting privileges at a hospital. Opponents, including Planned Parenthood of Wisconsin, which is representing two doctors and an abortion clinic in challenging the law, said the measure was rushed into effect and that the provision affecting doctors would force two of the state’s four clinics to close. Conley agreed that the law had been rushed onto the books, noting that it was proposed, passed, signed and enacted in just 34 days, a timeline he called “precipitous.” [Reuters article] (see Oct 28)

Contraception blocked

July 8, 2020:  in Little Sisters of the Poor Saints Peter and Paul Home v .Pennsylvania, the Supreme Court upheld a Trump administration regulation that lets employers with religious or moral objections limit women’s access to birth control coverage under the Affordable Care Act.

As a consequence of the ruling, about 70,000 to 126,000 women could lose contraceptive coverage from their employers, according to government estimates.

The vote was 7 to 2, with Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sonia Sotomayor dissenting. [NYT article] (next WH/ACA, see July 10)

July 8 Peace Love Art Activism

Fair Housing

July 8, 2015: Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julián Castro released new rules to promote integrated neighborhoods, a goal that has lagged in many cities, despite a 1960s ban on racial discrimination. The potentially far-reaching initiative would require localities receiving HUD funds to study patterns of racial bias in housing, report publicly on their findings and set goals for ending segregation that will be monitored.

Efforts to combat segregation in housing date to the 1968 Fair Housing Act, which was recalled last month when the U.S. Supreme Court (June 25) reaffirmed its authority to prohibit housing policies unfair to minorities The ruling and the new administration effort put heat on local governments to carry out the mandate of the nearly half-century-old law to “affirmatively further” the goals of nondiscrimination in housing.  [NYT article] (see July 13)

July 8 Peace Love Art Activism

Nuclear/Chemical News

July 8, 2019: Behrouz Kamalvandi of Iran’s country’s atomic energy agency  announced that the country had breached a crucial limit on the level of uranium enrichment set out in the 2015 nuclear deal.  China, another signatory to the deal, accused the United States of “bullying” Tehran with crippling economic sanctions.

Kamalvandi told the Iranian state broadcaster IRIB that the country had surpassed a limit of 3.67 percent uranium enrichment, and was prepared to go further. Kamalvandi later told another Iranian news outlet, ISNA, that the enrichment level was above 4.5 percent. (next N/C N, see Aug 2; next Iran, see January 5, 2020)

July 8 Peace Love Art Activism

Consumer Protection

July 8, 2019: Judge Amit P. Mehta, of the United States District Court in the District of Columbia ruled that the Trump administration could not force pharmaceutical companies to disclose the list price of their drugs in television ads

Mehta ruled that the Department of Health and Human Services exceeded its regulatory authority by seeking to require all drugmakers to include in their television commercials the list price of any drug that costs more than $35 a month. [NYT article] (see Sept 11)

July 8 Peace Love Art Activism

SEPARATION OF CHURCH AND STATE

July 8, 2020: in the cases of Our Lady of Guadalupe School v. Morrissey-Berru, No. 19-267, and St. James School v. Darryl Biel, No. 19-348 , the Supreme Court ruled that federal employment discrimination laws do not apply to teachers at church-run schools whose duties include religious instruction.

The 7-to-2 ruling could affect more that 100,000 teachers at Catholic elementary and secondary schools and many other employees of religious groups.

Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr., writing for the majority, said the First Amendment’s protection of religious freedom forbids judges from interfering in the internal workings of religious institutions.

“When a school with a religious mission entrusts a teacher with the responsibility of educating and forming students in the faith,” he wrote, “judicial intervention into disputes between the school and the teacher threatens the school’s independence in a way that the First Amendment does not allow.” [NYT article] (next Separation, see July 24)

July 8 Peace Love Art Activism

July 7 Peace Love Art Activism

July 7 Peace Love Art Activism

BLACK HISTORY

Seay J. Miller lynched

July 7, 1893: a crowd of over 5,000 white people lynched a Black man named Seay J. Miller in Bardwell, Kentucky, for allegedly killing Mary and Ruby Ray, two young white girls, despite ample evidence of his innocence.

Statements from Mr. Miller’s wife and from law enfocement witnesses indicated that Mr. Miller was not even in Kentucky on the date the girls were killed, and multiple eyewitnesses identified the Ray girls’ killer as a white man. Even John Ray, the girls’ father, was unconvinced of Mr. Miller’s guilt. Frank Gordon was the sole witness who implicated Mr. Miller, but he originally told police that the person he saw was a white man—as did other witnesses. Mr. Gordon changed his statement only after the county sheriff threatened to charge him as an accomplice if he did not do so. This same sheriff handed Mr. Miller over to a crowd of thousands of white citizens to be lynched.

Around 3 pm, the heavily-armed mob hanged Mr. Miller from a telephone pole, shot hundreds of bullets into his body, then left his corpse hanging from the pole for hours. Afterward, white people cut off his fingers, toes, and ears as “souvenirs,” and then burned Mr. Miller’s body in a public fire.  [EJI article] (next BH & Lynching, see Oct 9 or see Never for expanded lynching chronology)

Allison Turaj injured

July 7 Peace Love Art Activism

July 7, 1963: Allison Turaj, 25, of Washington, D.C. was cut over her right eye by a thrown rock in a mass demonstration at a privately owned, segregated amusement park in suburban Woodlawn in Baltimore. (see July 8)

July 7 Peace Love Art Activism

Technological Milestone

July 7 Peace Love Activism

July 7, 1928: pre-sliced bread first appeared on store shelves, courtesy of Otto Rohwedder‘s machine that made uniform slices. (see Nov 18)

July 7 Peace Love Art Activism

Vietnam

Ngô Đình Diệm

July 7, 1954: Ngô Đình Diệm became Prime Minister and established his new government in South Vietnam with a cabinet of 18 people. (Vietnam, see July 21; SVL, see Oct 24)

National Referendum

July 7, 1955: on the first anniversary of his installation as prime minister, Ngô Đình Diệm announced that a national referendum would be held to determine the future of the country. (see July 16)

“…five year miracle”

July 7, 1959: on the fifth anniversary of Diem’s coming to power, a NY Times editorials stated: a five year miracle has been carried out. Vietnam is free and becoming stronger in defense of its freedom and ours. There is reason today to salute president Ngo Dihn Diem.” (V, see July 8; SVL, see November 11, 1960)

July 7 Peace Love Art Activism

July 7 Music et al

The Stripper

July 7 – 13, 1962: “The Stripper” by David Rose & His Orchestra #1 Billboard Hot 100.

The [bumpy] Road to Bethel

July 7, 1969:  in Albany, NY, Wes Pomeroy and Don Ganoung met with Harrison F Dunbrook, the director of traffic operations for the NY State Dept of Transportation. Pomeroy and Ganoung hoped to get permission for highway alterations during the festival weekend. Their request was denied. Signage for the festival along Rt 17 would be permitted provided Woodstock Ventures went through the normal approval process. Permission to use a nearby completed but unused section of Interstate 84 was denied. (see Chronology for expanded story)

July 7 Peace Love Art Activism

Feminism

West Point

July 7, 1976: the 1st female cadets enrolled at West Point. [Army article]  (next Feminism see July 12, 1976)

Supreme Court

July 7 Peace Love Art Activism

July 7, 1981: President Reagan nominated the first woman, Sandra Day O’Connor, to the Supreme Court. (NYT article) [2016 CBS news article] (see Sept 25)

July 7 Peace Love Art Activism

INDEPENDENCE DAY

July 7 Peace Love Art Activism

 

July 7, 1978: Solomon Islands independent of the United Kingdom. [Princeton article] (see Nov 3)

July 7 Peace Love Art Activism

Student Rights

July 7, 1986: Bethel School District #43 v. Fraser, Students do not have a First Amendment right to make obscene speeches in school. School officials suspended Matthew N. Fraser, a student at Bethel High School (Pierce County, Washington) for three days for delivering an obscene and provocative speech nominating a fellow classmate for Student Body Vice President. The Supreme Court held that his free speech rights were not violated. (FS, see June 24, 1987; SR, see January 13, 1988)

July 7 Peace Love Art Activism

CLINTON IMPEACHMENT

July 7, 1998: Linda Tripp returns for her third day of testimony before the grand jury, as the Maryland state’s attorney opens investigations into Tripp’s taping of her conversations with Monica Lewinsky. The investigation is aimed at deciding whether Tripp had broken Maryland state laws that require both parties in a conversation to consent to be taped.

The U.S. Court of Appeals ruled that Secret Service agents must testify before the grand jury, upholding Judge Norma Holloway Johnson’s earlier decision. (see Clinton for expanded story)

July 7 Peace Love Art Activism

Native Americans

July 7 Peace Love Art Activism

July 7, 1999: President Bill Clinton visited the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota for a “nation to nation” business meeting and tours the reservation’s housing facilities. The president signed a pact with Oglala leaders establishing an empowerment zone and participated in a conference on home ownership and economic development for Native Americans. [Clinton text] (see Native Americans, October)

July 7 Peace Love Art Activism

AIDS

July 7 > 12, 2002: The 14th International AIDS Conference was held in Barcelona, Spain. Dozens of countries reported that they were experiencing serious HIV/AIDS epidemics and many more were on the brink. (see January 28, 2003)

July 7 Peace Love Art Activism

Sexual Abuse of Children

July 7, 2004: in an unprecedented move, the Portland Archdiocese filed for bankruptcy because of the huge costs from clergy sex abuse lawsuits. The action halts a trial of a lawsuit seeking some $155m against the late Rev Maurice Grammond, who was accused of molesting more than 50 boys in the 1980s. [NYT article]  (see Sept 27)

July 7 Peace Love Art Activism

Nuclear/Chemical News

July 7, 2017: The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) was adopted at the United Nations by a vote of 122-1. The Treaty, which prohibits the development, testing, production, manufacture, acquisition, possession, stockpiling, transfer, use, and threatened use of nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive devices, will enter into force once it has been ratified by 50 states. The International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons [ICAN] called the TPNW “a landmark international agreement that outlaws, categorically, the worst weapons of mass destruction and establishes a pathway to their elimination.” [NTI article] (Nuclear, see Aug 8; ICAN, see Oct 6)

July 7 Peace Love Art Activism

July 6 Peace Love Art Activism

July 6 Peace Love Art Activism

BLACK HISTORY

The Essence of the Reconstruction Question

July 6, 1865: the first editorial in first issue of The Nation was titled, “The Essence of the Reconstruction Question,” and it addressed the main topic of public debate in the first summer after the Civil War: “fixing the status of the negro at the South.” Andrew Johnson, a Southern Democrat who succeeded to the presidency after the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, seemed willing to quickly re-admit the old Confederate states back into the Union, despite the fact that all reports from the South indicated that whites would re-introduce slavery in all but name at the earliest opportunity. It would mean little to have fought a war to end slavery, The Nation argued, if no provision was made to protect the most basic civil rights of the emancipated slave. “To suppose that he will receive fair play from white legislators, who are not responsible to him, who have no sympathy with him, and who, in their secret hearts, consider him a beast of the field,” The Nation warned, “is to violate every rule of democratic government, and to make an open and shameless declaration of want of faith in our own principles.“ (see Nov 22)

Only a Pawn in Their Game

July 6, 1963: Bob Dylan first performed “Only a Pawn in Their Game” at a voter registration rally in Greenwood, Mississippi.

The song refers to the murder of Medgar Evers. Bernice Johnson Reagon would later tell critic Robert Shelton that “‘Pawn’ was the very first song that showed the poor white was as victimized by discrimination as the poor black. The Greenwood people didn’t know that Pete [Seeger], Theo[dore Bikel] and Bobby [Dylan] were well known. (Seeger and Bikel were also present at the registration rally.) They were just happy to be getting support. But they really like Dylan down there in the cotton country.”

Also on this date, Peter, Paul and Mary’s cover of Dylan’s “Blowin’ In the Wind” will reach#2 on Billboard with sales exceeding one million. (BH, see July 7; ME, see July 8; Dylan, see July 26 – 28, 1963; see Pawn for expanded story)

Philando Castile

July 6, 2016: St Anthony, Minnesota police officer Jeronimo Yanez shot and killed Philando Castile after Yanez being pulled over Castile in Falcon Heights, a suburb of St. Paul. Castile was driving a car with his girlfriend, Diamond Reynolds, and her four-year-old daughter as passengers, According to Reynolds, after being asked for his license and registration, Castile told the officer he was licensed to carry a weapon and had one in his pants pocket. Reynolds said Castile was shot while reaching for his ID after telling Yanez he had a gun permit and was armed. The officer shot at Castile seven times. (B & S, see March 26, 2017; Yanez, see June 16, 2017)

Colin Kaepernick

July 6, 2020: Colin Kaepernick’s production arm, Ra Vision Media, and Disney announced that Colin Kaepernick would be featured in an exclusive docuseries produced by ESPN Films as part of a first-look deal with The Walt Disney Co

The partnership would focus on telling scripted and unscripted stories that explore race, social injustice and the quest for equity. It also will provide a platform to showcase the work of minority directors and producers.

“I am excited to announce this historic partnership with Disney across all of its platforms to elevate Black and Brown directors, creators, storytellers, and producers, and to inspire the youth with compelling and authentic perspectives,” Kaepernick said in a statement. “I look forward to sharing the docuseries on my life story, in addition to many other culturally impactful projects we are developing.” [ESPN article] (next BH, see July 17; next CK, see Sept 8 or see Kaepernick for expanded chronology)

July 6 Peace Love Art Activism

US Labor History

Homestead Strike

July 6, 1892: Homestead Strike, a lockout at the Homestead Steel Works turns violent as 300 Pinkerton detectives hired by the company arrive at the mills by barge. Workers picketing the plant greet the Pinkerton’s with violence and the confrontation soon becomes a full-scale pitched battle, with seven Pinkertons and eleven union members killed. Court injunctions help to crush the union, safeguarding the steel industry from organized labor for decades. [AFL-CIO article] (see Sept 30)

July 6 Peace Love Art Activism

July 6 Music et al

Quarry Men

July 6, 1957: The Quarry Men perform at St. Peter’s Church Garden Fete. John and Paul meet and find that they have similar pop idol interests: “Paul, what kind of music do you like?” asked John. “Well I used to like Lonnie Donnegan but now that skiffle is fading out I love the music of Elvis Presley, Eddie Cochrane, Gene Vincent, Little Richard…” “Hey,” John interrupted, “they’re all the people I’m into.” (see Oct 18; RoR, see January 24, 1958; Elvis, see Sept 1)

Easier Said Than Done

July 6 – 19, 1963,  “Easier Said Than Done” by the Essex #1 on the Billboard Hot 100.

The [bumpy] Road to Bethel

July 6, 1969: More bad media news: The NYT reported, “The Newport Jazz Festival was invaded…by several hundred young people who broke down a section of the 10-foot wooden fence surrounding Festival Field and engaged in a rock throwing battle with security guards.” (see July 7)

July 6 Peace Love Art Activism

FREE SPEECH

July 6, 1961: the Appellate Division of the NY State Supreme Court unanimously reversed a lower court decision that had supported the city’s former ban on folk singing in Washington Square. (see Ban for expanded chronology; next Free Speech, see Aug 11)

July 6 Peace Love Art Activism

INDEPENDENCE DAYS

Malawi

July 6, 1964: Malawi independent from United Kingdom. [SAHO article] (see ID for expanded list of countries gaining independence in the 1960s)

Comoros

July 6 Peace Love Art Activism July 6, 1975: Comoros independent of France. [BBC article] (see July 12)

July 6 Peace Love Art Activism

Feminism

July 6, 1976: the first class of women was inducted at the United States Naval Academy. [2016 WP article] (next Feminism, see July 7)

TERRORISM

July 6 Peace Love Art Activism

July 6, 1990: the Marines declared William R. Higgins, USMC dead. (T, see December 4, 1991; Higgins, see December 23, 1991)

July 6 Peace Love Art Activism

Environmental Issues

July 6, 2020: NPR reported that U.S. District Judge James Boasberg ruled that the Dakota Access Pipeline must be emptied while the Army Corps of Engineers produced an environmental review.

Boasberg said that it was clear shutting down the pipeline would cause disruption, but that “the seriousness of the Corps’ deficiencies outweighs the negative effects of halting the oil flow” during the estimated 13 months it would take to complete the environmental impact statement.

The court vacated the Corps’ decision to grant federal approval for the project, and required the pipeline to be emptied within 30 days.

Boasberg, a judge in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, had ordered the Corps in March to conduct a full environmental impact analysis. He said that the Corps had made a “highly controversial” decision in approving federal permits for the project. Among other things, he said the Corps had failed to answer major questions about the risks of oil spills.

Members of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, whose reservation lies downstream of the pipeline, have been fighting against its construction for years. Crude oil began flowing through the pipeline in 2017. The $3.8 billion pipeline stretches more than 1,100 miles from North Dakota to Illinois, transporting 570,000 barrels of oil per day, (next EI, see July 15)

July 6 Peace Love Art Activism

Immigration History

July 6 2020: officials with the Student and Exchange Visitor Program (SEVP) announced modifications to temporary exemptions that will require non-immigrant students to take some in-person classes due to the pandemic for the fall 2020 semester.

The temporary exemptions issued  by the SEVP for the fall 2020 semester state that non-immigrant F-1 and M-1 students taking classes entirely online at schools attending may not remain in the United States. Those students enrolled in entirely online schools and/or programs will not receive student visas from the U.S. Department of State.

Additionally, U.S. Customs and Border Protection will not permit these students to enter the United States. Active students currently in the United States enrolled in the above described online programs will be required to leave the U.S. or take other measures, such as transferring to a school with in-person instruction to remain in lawful status.

Students who do not take such measures may face immigration consequences including, but not limited to, the initiation of removal proceedings. [CBS News article] (next IH, see July 14)

July 6 Peace Love Art Activism

Nuclear/Chemical News

July 6, 2023: the NY Times reported that the US Army’s would soon complete the destruction of the chemical weapon stockpile. The article stated that a depot near Pueblo had destroyed its last weapon in June and that the remaining handful at another depot in Kentucky would be destroyed in the next few days. And when they are gone, all of the world’s publicly declared chemical weapons would have been eliminated.

The American stockpile, built up over generations, was shocking in its scale: Cluster bombs and land mines filled with nerve agent. Artillery shells that could blanket whole forests with a blistering mustard fog. Tanks full of poison that could be loaded on jets and sprayed on targets below. [NYT article] (next N/C N, see July 20)