Category Archives: Peace Love Art and Activism

May 18 Peace Love Art Activism

May 18 Peace Love Art Activism

BLACK HISTORY

Plessy v. Ferguson

May 18, 1896: in Plessy v. Ferguson the US Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of state laws requiring racial segregation in public facilities under the doctrine of “separate but equal”. Thus the Supreme Court denied Homer Plessy’s challenge to the law. “The object of the Fourteenth Amendment was undoubtedly to enforce the absolute equality of the two races before the law,” wrote Justice Henry Billings Brown, “but in the nature of things it could not have been intended to abolish distinctions based upon color, or to enforce social, as distinguished from political, equality, or a commingling of the two races upon terms unsatisfactory to either.” Only one justice dissented, John Harlan, who contended that the decision “will not only stimulate aggressions, more or less brutal and irritating, upon the admitted rights of colored citizens, but will encourage the belief that it is possible, by means of state enactments, to defeat the beneficent purposes which the people of the United States had in view when they adopted the recent amendments of the Constitution.” [Cornell Law article] (next BH, see July 1896; SD, see May 17, 1954; Plessy, see January 5, 2022)

Hayes Turner lynched

May 18, 1918: Hampton Smith was a farmer in Valdosta, Georgia. He often He found labor by paying fines and then forcing the person to work on his farm. He was notorious for abusing those workers. On May 16, someone killed him. A Sidney Johnson was a suspect. During the  manhunt for Johnson, at least 13 people were killed. Among those killed was Hayes Turner, who was seized from custody after his arrest on the morning of May 18, 1918, and lynched. (next BH & Lynching, see May 19; for expanded chronology, see American Lynching 2)

Freedom Riders

May 18, 1961: Bull Connor ordered the jailed Riders from Birmingham to the Tennessee border in the middle of the night, dropping them off in the tiny town of Ardmore, AL and instructed them to take a train home. (see May 19)

Arthur McDuffie

May 18 Peace Love Art Activism

May 18, 1980: an all-white jury found the officers not guilty of killing Arthur McDuffie (see December 27. 1979) and violence broke out across Miami, sparking nine days of riots more violent than those of the 1960s. The National Guard responded and a state of emergency was declared. The riots left 57 dead, more than 1400 arrested, and $125 million in property damage. [Miami Herald article] (BH, see Dec 31; RR, see February 20, 1987)

May 18 Peace Love Art Activism

Native Americans

Talton v Mayes

May 18, 1896: the Supreme Court decided that the individual rights protections, which limit federal, and later, state governments, do not apply to tribal government. It reaffirmed earlier decisions, such as the 1831 Cherokee Nation v. Georgia case (see March 18, 1831) that gave Indian tribes the status of “domestic dependent nations,” the sovereignty of which is independent of the federal government. [Justia dot com article] (see January 23, 1907)

May 18 Peace Love Art Activism

Anarchism

Alexander Berkman

May 18, 1906: Alexander Berkman (see September 19, 1892), who had attempted to kill Henry Clay Frick during the steel strike at Homestead, PA in 1892, was released from prison having served thirteen years in the Western Penitentiary and one year in the Allegheny Workhouse of his 22-year sentence. [PBS article] (see May 26, 1906)

May 18 Peace Love Art Activism

US Labor History

William “Big Bill” Haywood

May 18 Peace Love Art Activism

May 18, 1928: William “Big Bill” Haywood – founding member of the Industrial Workers of the World, member of the Executive Committee of the Socialist Party of America, secretary of the Western Federation of Miners, and an advocate of industrial unionism –died at the Kremlin Hospital. He had been under treatment there for several weeks for chronic diabetes, which improved, but which was followed a month ago by the first attack of hemiplegia. He had fled to the Soviet Union after having been found guilty and sentenced to 20 years in prison under the Espionage Act of 1917. (PDF of NYT obit)

Emma Goldman

In 1930: journalist H. L. Mencken petitioned the U.S. Department of State to revoke Goldman’s deportation and grant her a visitor’s visa. He also requested that the Department of Justice return her personal papers seized in the 1917 raid on the Mother Earth office, to no avail. (see Goldman for expanded story)

United Farm Workers

May 18, 1969: march from Coachella to Calexico. (see July 17, 1970)

May 18 Peace Love Art Activism

Feminism

Ladies of Courage 

May 18, 1954:  Eleanor Roosevelt and Lorena Hickok’s book Ladies of Courage recorded women’s achievements in U.S. politics. (see January 7, 1955)

May 18 Peace Love Art Activism

Nuclear/Chemical News

Albert Schweitzer

May 18 Peace Love Art Activism

May 18, 1957: the Saturday Review magazine published “A Declaration of Conscience” by Albert Schweitzer. “The end of further experiments with atom bombs would be like the early sunrays of hope which suffering humanity is longing for.”  (NN, see July 29; Red Scare, see Aug 1)

India

May 18, 1974: India successfully detonated its first nuclear weapon, becoming the 6th nation to do so. (see November 29, 1975)

see May 18 Music et al for more

see Jimmy Soul for more

May 18 – 30, 1963,  – “If You Wanna Be Happy” by Jimmy Soul #1 on the Billboard Hot 100.

Miami Pop Festival

May 18 – 19, 1968 – The first Miami Pop Festival. An estimated 100,000 people attended this concert, which was promoted by Richard O’Barry & Michael Lang.

Northern California Folk-Rock Festival

May 18 – 19, 1968: The Northern California Folk-Rock Festival was held at Family Park in the Santa Clara County Fairgrounds in San Jose, California and promoted by Bob Blodgett. It was the first of two such festivals held at the venue, being followed by the 1969 Northern California Folk-Rock Festival.

The festival featured Country Joe and the Fish, The Animals, Jefferson Airplane, The Doors, Big Brother and the Holding Company, The Youngbloods, Electric Flag, Kaleidoscope, Taj Mahal, and Ravi Shankar. And although not mentioned in the promotional material, Grateful Dead also performed. (see Aug 3 & 4)

Archie Bell and the Drells

May 18 – 31, 1968: Tightin’ Up” by Archie Bell and the Drells #1 on the Billboard Hot 100.

May 18 Peace Love Art Activism

LGBTQ

Committee on Public Health

May 18, 1964: the Committee on Public Health of the New York Academy of Medicine issued a report stating that homosexuals had gone beyond the plane of defensiveness and argued that their “deviancy” was “a desirable, noble, preferable way of life.”  (see June 20)

Richard Baker and James Michael McConnell

May 18, 1970: the Hennepin County, Minnesota District Court’s clerk denied a marriage license  to Richard Baker and James Michael McConnell. (see Baker/McConnell for expanded story; LGBTQ, see June 27)

May 18 Peace Love Art Activism

Educational Milestone

Head Start program

May 18, 1965: President Johnson said that 530,000 of “poverty’s children” would be given a head start in pre-school guidance centers so they won’t already be doomed to fail because of family backgrounds when they start school. More than half the estimated one million disadvantaged children expected to start school next fall will take part in the first summer sessions of Project Head Start. … The program calls for teaching the children things that most people take for granted. Some of the children have never seen a book, a flush toilet or electric lights. They also would receive medical and dental care. [Head Start site]

May 18 Peace Love Art Activism
Vietnam & South Vietnam Leadership

May 18, 1966: U.S. Marines faced off against pro-Buddhist ARVN soldiers at a bridge near Da Nang.  A few shots were exchanged and the ARVN soldiers attempted to blow up the bridge. General Lewis William Walt, the commander of the U.S. Marines in South Vietnam, was present and directed the Marines to secure the bridge (V & SVL, see May 24)

Space Race

May 18 – 26, 1969: Apollo 10 utilized both the command-service module and the Lunar Module around the moon. Tom Stafford and Gene Cernan descended to within 50,000 feet of the surface of the moon. [NASA article] (see July 16)

May 18 Peace Love Art Activism

Iraq War II

May 18, 2006:  CIA Director Michael Hayden: “I wasn’t comfortable” with Bush administration approach to prewar intelligence. (see June 15)

May 18 Peace Love Art Activism

Fourth Amendment & ADA

May 18, 2015: the U.S. Supreme Court chose not to rule on whether the Americans with Disabilities Act applied during police encounters the same day the court said it would not consider a closely-watched special education case.

In a ruling, the high court failed to address key questions about the implications of the ADA in situations involving law enforcement. At issue was the case of Teresa Sheehan, a woman with mental illness who was living in a San Francisco group home. Police were called when Sheehan threatened to kill her social worker. The responding officers initially retreated from Sheehan’s room when she brandished a knife, but they then re-entered the room and shot her multiple times when she continued to confront them with the knife. Sheehan survived and sued the officers alleging that they violated her Fourth Amendment rights by entering her room without a warrant and she alleged violations of the ADA arguing that they did not accommodate her disability when they chose to enter her room a second time.

The court ruled that Sheehan cannot hold the officers liable for her injuries because they acted legally when they entered her room and their use of force was “reasonable.” However, the justices declined to address the ADA issue because attorneys for the city of San Francisco changed their position on the matter. Initially, city attorneys suggested that the ADA did not apply to police at all, but in arguments before the Supreme Court earlier this year conceded that the law applied generally, but not in circumstances where a suspect is “armed and violent.”

Accordingly, Justice Samuel Alito wrote in the court’s opinion that the justices did not decide on the ADA issue because it hadn’t been completely addressed by the lower courts. [LA Times article] (4th, see June 22; ADA, see May 21)

May 18 Peace Love Art Activism

Environmental Issues

May 18, 2021:  the International Energy Agency issued a detailed road map of what it would take for the world’s nations to slash carbon dioxide emissions to net zero by 2050. That would very likely keep the average global temperature from increasing 1.5 Celsius above preindustrial levels — the threshold beyond which scientists say the Earth faces irreversible damage.

Nations around the world would need to immediately stop approving new coal-fired power plants and new oil and gas fields and quickly phase out gasoline-powered vehicles if they want to avert the most catastrophic effects of climate change.

While academics and environmentalists have made similar recommendations before, this is the first time the International Energy Agency has outlined ways to accomplish such drastic cuts in emissions.  [NYT article] (next EI, see May 24)

May 18 Peace Love Art Activism

May 17 Peace Love Art Activism

May 17 Peace Love Art Activism

Feminism

Matilda Josyln Gage

May 17, 1900,: Gage’s son-in-law, L Frank Baum, published Wizard of Oz. (next Feminism, see June 3; see Gage for expanded story)

Anarchism in the US

Ben Reitman

May 17 Peace Love Art Activism

May 17, 1912: in a New York Times article, Ben Reitman described his May 14 abduction and torture. (see May 20, 1913)

Emma Goldman

May 17, 1940: Goldman buried in Waldheim Cemetery, Chicago, close to the Haymarket memorial (see May 4, 1886) .  In an address delivered at the burial, Jacob Siegel, editor of The Jewish Daily Forward, said, “Emma Goldman was a rebel all her life against injustices, until after the last war, when a change took place in her philosophy and mode of living. Were she living today, Emma Goldman would be assisting in the present human effort to destroy Hitlerism.” (NYT article) (see Goldman for expanded story)

May 17 Peace Love Art Activism

Black History

Scottsboro 9

May 17, 1937: Attorney General Thomas Knight died. His proposed compromise was never carried out in full by the state because the new acting attorney general feared “looking soft” on rape.(see Scottsboro for expanded story)

Separate NOT equal

May 17, 1954: the Supreme Court unanimously ruled in Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kans that segregation in public schools was unconstitutional. The ruling paved the way for large-scale desegregation. The decision overturned the 1896 Plessy v. Ferguson ruling that sanctioned “separate but equal” segregation of the races. The Brown decision ruled that “separate educational facilities are inherently unequal.” It was a victory for NAACP attorney Thurgood Marshall, who later become the first black US Supreme Court justice. (BH & SD, see May 27; James Meredith, see, July 28, 1962)

Prayer Pilgrimage for Freedom

May 17, 1957: a crowd of over 30,000 nonviolent demonstrators gathered at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C., to commemorate the third anniversary of the landmark Brown v. Board of Education ruling.

In addition to celebrating the anniversary of the Supreme Court’s decision to end segregation in public education, the Prayer Pilgrimage also dramatized and politicized the failure of most Southern states to work toward or implement the court-ordered desegregation of their schools. The program featured addresses, prayers, songs and scripture recitations by Mahalia Jackson, Roy Wilkins and Mordecai Johnson, as well as Martin Luther King Jr.’s first address before a national audience. The march earned the distinction of being the largest organized demonstration for civil rights and was instrumental in laying the groundwork for future marches on the nation’s capitol. (BH, see Aug 29; SD, see Sept 9)

Nashville Student Movement

May 17, 1961: The Nashville Student Movement sent a new group of Riders to Birmingham, AL, where Public Safety Commissioner Bull Connor arrested and jailed them. (see May 18)

George Whitmore, Jr.

May 17, 1967: the jury returned a verdict of guilty. Whitmore was taken into custody for a psychiatric examination as required by state law. If he law did not so require, Justice Julius Helf stated, he would have continued Whitmore’s bail. (next BH, see May 29; see Whitmore for expanded story)

Gary Thomas Rowe Jr.

May 17, 1982: The US Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit ruled that Alabama could not prosecute an FBI informer in the 1965 slaying of Viola Luizzo. The ruling affirmed an order by a lower court permanently prohibiting prosecution of Gary Thomas Rowe Jr. for her murder. Mr. Rowe testified against three Ku Klux Klansmen who were convicted of violating Liuzzo’s civil rights. (see Liuzzo for expanded story)

Yusuf K. Hawkins

May 17, 1990: Joseph Fama, the 19-year-old white man from the Bensonhurst section of Brooklyn, was convicted of the racial killing of Yusuf K. Hawkins , the 16-year-old black youth who went to the mostly white neighborhood to help a teen-age friend shop for a used car. (see August 23, 1989)

Fama was convicted of second-degree murder for killing Hawkins ”with depraved indifference for human life” and a series of lesser charges. He was sentenced to 32 years in prison. Five other participants were charged in connection with Hawkins’s murder and received lesser sentences. (see Dec 17)

James Hood

May 17, 1997: James Hood (see June 11, 1963) received a Ph.D. in Interdisciplinary Studies from the University of Alabama. (BH, see June 6 ; U of A, see September 13, 1998)

Terence Crutcher

May 17, 2017: a Tulsa, OK jury acquitted Tulsa police Officer Betty Shelby in the shooting death of Terence Crutcher, an unarmed black man. (B & S, see May 30)

May 17 Peace Love Art Activism

US Labor History

May 17, 1946: President Harry S. Truman seized control of the nation’s railroads, delaying a threatened strike by engineers and trainmen. (see June 10)

May 17 Peace Love Art Activism

see May 17 Music et al for more

Princeton “riot”

May 17, 1955: Princeton University students played the Bill Haley hit record Rock Around the Clock simultaneously from their dorm rooms. News reports indicated that it really wasn’t a “riot,” but university administrators were apparently not happy, since four students were later suspended “indefinitely.”  Blackboard Jungle, the film that opens with the song, was banned in several cities because of its alleged immoral influence on juveniles (and, apparently, Princeton University students). It was banned in Memphis, Tennessee, on March 28, 1955, and withdrawn as the U.S. entry in the Venice Film Festival on August 28, 1955. (next FoR, see Aug 21)

Monterey Folk Festival

May 17, 1963: the first Monterey Folk Festival took place over three days in Monterey, California. The festival featured Joan Baez, Bob Dylan and Peter Paul and Mary. Baez, had a home in Carmel Highlands, was a huge star at the time, while Dylan was a still a newcomer making a name for himself.

Dylan was not treated kindly by that Monterey audience, who had come to see more traditional folks acts such as Peter, Paul and Mary (who ironically had a hit that summer with Dylan’s “Blowin’ in the Wind”), the Weavers and the New Lost City Ramblers. As described in the excellent book about that era, David Hajdu’s “Positively 4th Street,” “The Monterey audience, which was largely unfamiliar with Dylan’s style, responded poorly, talking loudly over his singing.”

“He went over very badly,” said Barbara Dane, the festival’s host, in Hajdu’s account. “He didn’t play very long, and it felt like he was on for an hour. I think people were laughing.” Even though he did three of his hardest-hitting protest songs, “Talkin’ John Birch Paranoid Blues,” “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall” and “Masters of War,” the response was so bad it prompted Baez to walk out unannounced and admonish the audience. “She wanted everyone to know, she said, that this young man had something to say,” Hajdu wrote. “He was singing about important issues, and he was speaking for her and everyone who wanted a betterworld. They should listen, she said — she ordered them, nearly:Listen!” They performed Dylan’s “With God on Our Side” together, their voices an odd match, “salt pork and meringue,” but Hadju wrote, “the tension between their styles made their presence together all the more compelling.” They left the stage with “people cheering.” (see May 27)

Herbie Hancock

May 17, 1965: Hancock released his fifth album, Maiden Voyage. It is a concept album aimed at creating an oceanic atmosphere.

“Louie, Louie”

May 17, 1965: the FBI had launched a formal investigation in 1964 into the supposedly pornographic lyrics of the song “Louie, Louie.” That investigation finally neared its conclusion on this day in 1965, when the FBI Laboratory declared the lyrics of “Louie Louie” to be officially unintelligible. (see FBI for expanded story; Teenage Culture, see January 8, 1966; next FoR, see March 26, 1867)

Bob Dylan

May 17, 1967: D A Pennebaker’s film, Dont Look Back, first shown publicly at the Presidio Theater in San Francisco. (see Dec 27)

John Lennon pleads for mercy

May 17, 1972: deportation hearings for John Lennon Yoko Ono, closed with Lennon telling the Immigration Service inquiry officer: “I don’t know if there’s any mercy to plead for because this isn’t a Federal Court. But if there is, I’d like it, please.” (see John for expanded story)

May 17 Peace Love Art Activism

Religion and Public Education

Repeal of Butler Act

May 17, 1967: the governor of Tennessee signed into law the repeal of the 1925 state law, the Butler Act (see March 21, 1925)  prohibiting the teaching of evolution.

The law had made it “unlawful for any teacher in any of the Universities, Normals and all other public schools of the State which are supported in whole or in part by the public school funds of the State, to teach any theory that denies the story of the Divine Creation of man as taught in the Bible, and to teach instead that man has descended from a lower order of animals.” (Religion, see November 12, 1968; Separation, see Sept 1)

May 17 Peace Love Art Activism

Vietnam

Catonsville Nine
May 17 Peace Love Art Activism
Fr. Philip Berrigan (center), his brother Fr. Daniel Berrigan (right) and others of the “Catonsville Nine”

May 17, 1968: the Catonsville Nine [Father Daniel Berrigan, a Jesuit priest, Philip Berrigan, a former Josephite priest, Bro. David Darst, John Hogan, Tom Lewis, an artist, Marjorie Bradford Melville, Thomas Melville, a former Maryknoll priest, George Mische, and Mary Moylan] enter the Selective Service offices in Catonsville, Maryland, take dozens of selective service draft records, and burn them with napalm as a protest against the Vietnam War. (see May 27)

May 17 Peace Love Art Activism

Watergate Scandal

May 17, 1973: the Senate Watergate committee began its nationally televised hearings. Attorney General-designate Elliot Richardson selected former solicitor general Archibald Cox as the Justice Department’s special prosecutor for Watergate. (see Watergate for expanded story)

May 17 Peace Love Art Activism

Symbionese Liberation Army

May 17, 1974: Los Angeles, California police raid Symbionese Liberation Army headquarters, killing 6 members. (see June 7)

May 17 Peace Love Art Activism

TERRORISM

May 17 Peace Love Art Activism

May 17, 1987: U.S.S. Stark is hit by two Iraqi-owned Exocet AM39 air-to-surface missiles killing 47 sailors. (see October 16)

May 17 Peace Love Art Activism

LGBTQ

World Health Organization

May 17, 1990: the World Health Organization removed homosexuality from its list of diseases.

AIDS

In 1991: created by the New York-based Visual AIDS, the red ribbon was adopted as a symbol of awareness and compassion for those living with HIV/AIDS. (AIDS, see December 3, 1992 ; LGBTQ, see July 29, 1992)

Massachusetts legalizes gay marriage

May 17, 2004: Massachusetts became the first state to legalize gay marriage. The court finds the prohibition of gay marriage unconstitutional because it denies dignity and equality of all individuals. In the following six years, New Hampshire, Vermont, Connecticut, Iowa and Washington D.C. will follow suit. (see July 14)

May 17 Peace Love Art Activism

FREE SPEECH

Speaker Ban Law

May 17, 1995: the North Carolina General Assembly repealed the Speaker Ban Law, which had been essentially unenforceable for 27 years. (see February 27, 1997)

May 17 Peace Love Art Activism

ADA

Tennessee v Lane

May 17, 2004: the Supreme Court decided the Tennessee v. Lane case in which individuals sued the state of Tennessee for failing to ensure that courthouses are accessible to people with disabilities. One plaintiff had been arrested when he refused to crawl or be carried up stairs. The state argues that they cannot be sued under Title II of the ADA. The Supreme Court decided in favor of people with disabilities ruling that Tennessee could be sued for damages under Title II for failing to provide access to the courts. (see November 15, 2006)

May 17 Peace Love Art Activism

Crime and Punishment

May 17, 2010:  in Graham v. Florida the US Supreme Court held that juvenile offenders cannot be sentenced to life imprisonment without parole for non-homicide offenses. (8th, see June 25, 2012; C & P, see June 28)

May 17 Peace Love Art Activism

Stop and Frisk Policy

May 17, 2012: NYC Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly sent a letter to Speaker Christine Quinn outlining changes to the NYPD’s stop-and-frisk policy, including changes to training and supervision. (see May 20, 2012)

May 17 Peace Love Art Activism

Women’s Health

May 17, 2018: the Trump administration announced that clinics that provided abortions or referred patients to places that did would lose federal funding under a new Trump administration rule that takes direct aim at Planned Parenthood.

The policy was a return to one instituted in 1988 by President Ronald Reagan that required abortion services to have a “physical separation” and “separate personnel” from other family planning activities. That policy is often described as a domestic gag rule because it barred caregivers at facilities that received family planning funds from providing any information to patients about an abortion or where to receive one.

Federal family planning laws already banned direct funding of organizations that use abortion as a family planning method. (see May 29)

May 17 Peace Love Art Activism

Immigration History

May 17, 2019: the Trump administration identified at least 1,712 migrant children it may have separated from their parents in addition to those separated under the “zero tolerance” policy.

U.S. District Court Judge Dana Sabraw had ordered the Trump administration to identify children separated before the zero tolerance policy went into effect in May 2018, resulting in the separation of over 2,800 children. Sabraw had previously ordered those migrant families to be reunited, but the additional children were identified afterward when the Inspector General for Health and Human Services estimated “thousands more” may have been separated before the policy was officially underway, NBC News reported.

The government had reviewed the files of 4,108 children out of 50,000 so far. (next IH, see May 24; next Separation, see Oct 19; next Judge Sabraw, see Oct 18)

May 17 Peace Love Art Activism

May 16 Peace Love Art Activism

May 16 Peace Love Art Activism

Feminism

Angelina Grimké

May 16, 1838: abolitionist and feminist Angelina Grimké spoke in the recently completed Pennsylvania Hall. As mobs rioted outside, she urged the abolitionists to stand fast in their work for the slave. The next day, mobs burned down the building.  (women’s history dot org article) (see  May 1840)

May 16 Peace Love Art Activism

Cultural Milestone

May 16 Peace Love Art Activism

May 16, 1866: Charles Elmer Hires invented root beer. (Philadelphia Encyclopedia dot org article) (see February 18, 1885)

May 16 Peace Love Art Activism

Anarchism

Sedition Act

May 16, 1918: Congress passed the Sedition Act, an amendment to the Espionage Act. The act prohibited anti-government speech, activities or publications, including anti-conscription or strike activities. Under this act, the government effectively censored any criticism of itself or its war effort. (Politico article) (see August 30, 1918)

May 16 Peace Love Art Activism

FREE SPEECH

Whitney v California

May 16, 1927: Anita Whitney was convicted under the California’s 1919 Criminal Syndicalism Act for allegedly helping to establish the Communist Labor Party of America, a group the state charged was devoted to teaching the violent overthrow of government. Whitney claimed that it had not been her intention, nor that of other organizers, that the party become an instrument of violence. (see Oct 15)

The US Supreme Court held that Whitney’s conviction under California’s criminal syndicalism statute for membership in the Communist Labor Party did not violate her free speech rights as protected under the Fourteenth Amendment, because states may constitutionally prohibit speech tending to incite crime, disturb the public peace, or threaten the overthrow of government by unlawful means. (Oyez article) (see November 25, 1930)

Terminiello v. Chicago

Arthur Terminiello was giving a speech to the Christian Veterans of America in which he criticized various racial groups and made a number of inflammatory comments. There were approximately 800 people present in the auditorium where he was giving the speech and a crowd of approximately 1,000 people outside, protesting the speech.

The Chicago Police Department was present, but was unable to maintain order completely. Terminiello was later assessed a fine of 100 dollars for violation of Chicago’s breach of peace ordinance, which he appealed. Both the Illinois Appellate Court and Illinois Supreme Court affirmed the conviction.

On May 16, 1949, in a 5 – 4 decision, the US Supreme Court reversed Terminiello’s conviction, finding Chicago’s statute unconstitutionally overbroad. (Oyez article) (see January 2, 1952)

May 16 Peace Love Art Activism

US Labor History

International Brotherhood of Teamsters

May 16 Peace Love Art Activism

May 16, 1934: when employers refused to recognize their union, members of the Minneapolis General Drivers and Helpers Union, Local 574 of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters went on strike, bringing trucking operations in the city to a halt. Despite a concerted and violent effort by employers, the police, and military, the strike ended successfully, (see May 23)

NLRB v. Mackay Radio & Telegraph Co.

May 16, 1938: in a 7-0 decision, US Supreme Court held that workers who strike remain employees for the purposes of the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA). The Court granted the relief sought by the National Labor Relations Board, which sought to have the workers reinstated by the employer. However, the the Court also said that an employer may hire strikebreakers and is not bound to discharge any of them if or when the strike ends.The decision had little impact until Ronald Reagan’s replacement of striking air traffic controllers (PATCO) in 1981, a move that signaled anti-union private sector employers that it was OK to do likewise. (Justia dot com article) (see June 25)

May 16 Peace Love Art Activism

BLACK HISTORY

Briggs v Elliott

May 16, 1950: a South Carolina lawsuit, Briggs v. Elliott, was filed that would help lead to the successful Brown v. Board of Education decision four years later. Levi Pearson had previously sued, asking that school buses be provided for black students. After J.A. DeLaine as well as Harry and Eliza Briggs joined this litigation, both Briggs were fired from their jobs, and DeLaine’s church was torched. The judge in the case, Walter Waring, who sided with their concerns, was forced to leave the state. In 2003, Congressional Gold Medals were awarded posthumously to the Harry and Eliza Briggs, Pearson and DeLaine.  (National Park Service article) (see June 5)

Delray Beach Cross Burning

May 16, 1956: white residents of Delray Beach, Florida, burned a cross to terrorize Black residents and prevent them from using the city’s “public” beach that had been open to only white visitors for decades.

The day before this racial violence, U.S. District Judge Emmett C. Choate had dismissed a federal civil rights lawsuit in which nine Black Delray residents had sued for access to Delray’s municipal beach. Though Black citizens had been barred by terrorism and de facto segregation for decades, the Delray Beach City Commission tried to avoid federal intervention by informing the court that the city had no written policy denying Black residents access to the beach. In dismissing the lawsuit on this basis, Judge Choate expressly recognized that the city was legally authorized to continue practicing segregation, and recommended that the commission segregate portions of the beach by race.

Local law enforcement declined to investigate or to hold white citizens accountable. [EJI article] (next BH & Delray Beach, see May 20)

George Whitmore, Jr

May 16, 1967: both sides rest in the third Whitmore trial for assault and attempted rape of  Elba Borrero. (see GW, Jr for expanded chronology)

Memphis sanitation workers strike

May 16, 1968: six weeks after the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., the city of Memphis settled its sanitation strike. King  had come to Memphis to help the sanitation workers with their strike. (see May 27)

Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis in the Negro Male

May 16, 1997: Bill Clinton issued a formal apology to the surviving victims of the Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis in the Negro Male and their families. The study, conducted between 1932 and 1972 in Tuskegee, Alabama by the U.S. Public Health Service, studied the natural progression of untreated syphilis in poor, rural black men who thought they were receiving free health care from the U.S. government. (NCBI dot gov article) (see May 17)

May 16 Peace Love Art Activism

see May 16 Music et al for more

Alan Freed

May 16, 1958: Freed pleaded innocent in Massachusetts Superior Court to two indictments in connection with disturbances that followed his rock ‘n’ roll show in Boston on May 3. (see July 19)

Kingston Trio

May 16 – May 22, 1960: the Kingston Trio’s Sold Out was Billboard’s #1 album.

Mary Wells

May 16 – 29, 1964 – “My Guy” by Mary Wells #1 on the Billboard Hot 100. The first #1 hit for Motown Records. Motown Records would go on to release another 32 #1 hits in the next 10 years, but “My Guy” would be the last solo hit for Mary Wells, on Motown or any other label.

Blond on Blonde

May 16, 1966: Bob Dylan released Blond on Blonde.  He had recorded in during January, February, and March 1966

The cover shows Dylan in front of a brick building, wearing a suede jacket and a black and white checkered scarf. The jacket is the same one he wore on his next two albums, John Wesley Harding and Nashville Skyline. Photographer Jerry Schatzberg, described how the photo was taken: I wanted to find an interesting location outside of the studio. We went to the west side, where the Chelsea art galleries are now. At the time it was the meat packing district of New York and I liked the look of it. It was freezing and we were very cold. The frame he chose for the cover is blurred and out of focus. Of course everyone was trying to interpret the meaning, saying it must represent getting high on an LSD trip. It was none of the above; we were just cold and the two of us were shivering. There were other images that were sharp and in focus but, to his credit, Dylan liked that photograph. (see July 29, 1966)

Side one

  1. “Rainy Day Women #12 & 35”
  2. “Pledging My Time”
  3. “Visions of Johanna”
  4. “One of Us Must Know (Sooner or Later)”
Side three

  1. “Most Likely You Go Your Way (And I’ll Go Mine)”
  2. “Temporary Like Achilles”
  3. “Absolutely Sweet Marie”
  4. “4th Time Around”
  5. “Obviously 5 Believers”
Side two

  1. “I Want You”
  2. “Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again”
  3. “Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat”
  4. “Just Like a Woman”
Side four

  1. “Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands”
seePet Soundsfor more

May 16, 1966: The Beach Boys released “Pet Sounds“. The LP has been called one of the most influential records in the history of popular music and one of the best albums of the 1960s, including songs such as “Wouldn’t It Be Nice” and “God Only Knows”.

Pet Sounds was created several months after Brian Wilson had quit touring with the band in order to focus his attention on writing and recording. In it, he wove elaborate layers of vocal harmonies, coupled with sound effects and unconventional instruments such as bicycle bells, buzzing organs, harpsichords, flutes, Electro-Theremin, dog whistles, trains, Hawaiian-sounding string instruments, Coca-Cola cans and barking dogs, along with the more usual keyboards and guitars.

Pet Sounds has been ranked at number one in several music magazines’ lists of greatest albums of all time, including New Musical Express, The Times and Mojo Magazine.

It was ranked number two in Rolling Stone’s 500 Greatest Albums of All Time list. (see June 20)

Side one

  1. Wouldn’t It Be Nice
  2. You Still Believe in Me
  3. That’s Not Me
  4. Don’t Talk (Put Your Head on My Shoulder)
  5. I’m Waiting for the Day
  6. Let’s Go Away for Awhile
  7. Sloop John B
Side 2

  1. God Only Knows
  2. I Know There’s an Answer
  3. Here Today
  4. I Just Wasn’t Made for These Times
  5. Pet Sounds
  6. Caroline No
May 16 Peace Love Art Activism

The Cold War

Eisenhower v Khrushchev

May 16, 1960: a harsh exchange between Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev and President Dwight D. Eisenhower doomed a much heralded summit conference between the two nations, following the Soviet downing of an American U-2 reconnaissance plane. (History dot com article) (CW & Powers, see July 8)

 

May 16, 1980, the Department of Education officially began.  [President Jimmy Carter had signed into law the Department of Education Organization Act on October 17, 1979.] (Federal Education Policy History article) (see January 20, 1981)

May 16 Peace Love Art Activism

Environmental Issues

May 16, 1985: scientists of the British Antarctic Survey announce discovery of the ozone hole. (see July 10)

May 16 Peace Love Art Activism

Consumer Protection

May 16, 1988: Surgeon General, Dr. C. Everett Koop warned that nicotine was as addictive as heroin and cocaine and recommended the licensing of those who sell tobacco products and tougher laws prohibiting their sale to minors.

The warning came in the Surgeon General’s annual report on the health consequences of smoking. Koop, said he hoped the new focus on the addictive nature of tobacco would encourage new antismoking efforts by Federal, state and local officials. (NY Times article) (see March 20, 1997)

May 16 Peace Love Art Activism

Iraq War II

May 16, 2005:  Army Specialist Sabrina Harman was convicted at Fort Hood, Texas, for her role in the mistreatment of Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib and was sentenced to 6 months in prison. (see May 30)

May 16 Peace Love Art Activism

Stop and Frisk Policy

May 16, 2012: Federal Judge, Shira A. Scheindlin, granted class-action status to a lawsuit challenging the NYC Police Department’s stop-and-frisk tactics, saying she was disturbed by the city’s “deeply troubling apathy towards New Yorkers’ most fundamental constitutional rights.” (NY Times article) (see May 17)

May 16 Peace Love Art Activism

Sexual Abuse of Children

May 16, 2018:  Michigan State University announced that it had reached a settlement of $500 million to the victims of Lawrence G. Nassar, the Michigan State University physician who sexually abused young women under the guise of medical treatment.

It is believed that the $500 million is the largest settlement ever reached in a sexual abuse case involving an American university.

It dwarfed the size of the settlement reached in the sex abuse scandal at Pennsylvania State University. And it was larger than many of the settlements that followed the child sex abuse crisis in the Roman Catholic Church.

“I think the number being so large sends a message that is undeniable, that something really terrible happened here and that Michigan State owns it,” said John Manly, a lawyer for many of the 332 women who sued the university over abuse by Dr. Nassar. “When you pay half a billion dollars, it’s an admission of responsibility.” [NYT article] (next SAoC, see June 20; MSU, see September 5, 2019)

May 16 Peace Love Art Activism