Category Archives: Peace Love Art and Activism

November 24 Peace Love Art Activism

November 24 Peace Love Art Activism

BLACK HISTORY

Black Codes instituted

November 24, 1865: shortly after the end of the Civil War in 1865, Southern states sought to control and confine tcheir large populations of newly-freed black people by passing laws that authorized their arrest and incarceration. These laws, known as “black codes,” typically applied only to black people and criminalized acts that were not offenses at all when committed by whites.

In November and December 1865, the Mississippi legislature approved numerous black codes. One passed on November 24, 1865, declared that “all freedmen, free negroes and mulattoes” found without proof of employment or business or found “unlawfully assembling themselves” would be deemed vagrants and, upon conviction, owe up to $50 in fines and serve up to ten days in jail. The same law threatened whites with vagrancy convictions if found assembling or associating with freedmen “on terms of equality” or found “living in adultery” with a black partner. If convicted, whites faced up to $200 in fines and up to six months in jail.

As a result of black codes like these in Mississippi, and similar laws passed during the same period in states throughout the South, the post-Civil War era brought American black people more contact with the criminal court and prison systems than ever before. As the former Confederacy learned to wield the criminal justice system as a tool of racial control, countless black men, women, and children were convicted and sentenced under unjust laws that criminalized them for existing as free, black citizens. [CRF article] (see Dec 18)

Dramatists Guild

November 24, 1946: the issue of race discrimination in Washington theaters came to a head, it was reported on this day, when the Dramatists Guild signed a contract with local theaters demanding that there be no racial discrimination “on either side of the footlights.”

The issue of race discrimination in the nation’s capital had been brewing since the great African-American singer Marian Anderson was denied use of Constitution Hall by the hall’s owners, the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR). That controversy ended when the administration of President Franklin D. Roosevelt granted permission to hold the concert at the Lincoln Memorial, on April 9, 1939. The concert is regarded as a historic event in the history of racial equality in the U.S. (see Dec 5)

School Desegregation

November 24, 1958: the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously decided Shuttlesworth vs. Birmingham Board of Education, rejecting a challenge to Alabama’s School Placement Law. The law, designed to defy the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision and maintain school segregation, allowed Alabama school boards to assign individual students to particular schools at their own discretion with little transparency or oversight.

Alabama’s School Placement Law, which claimed to allow school boards to designate placement of students based on ability, availability of transportation, and academic background, was modeled after the Pupil Placement Act in North Carolina — enacted on March 30, 1955, in response to the Brown decision. Virginia passed the second placement law on September 29, 1956. In 1957, after the North Carolina law was upheld by a higher court, legislatures in other Southern states passed similar pupil placement laws; by 1960, such laws were on the books in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Louisiana, North Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and the city of Atlanta, Georgia.

After the Alabama law’s passage, Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth sued on behalf of four African American students in Birmingham who had been denied admission to white schools that were closer to their homes. In its unanimous decision, the Supreme Court court wrote, “The School Placement Law furnishes the legal machinery for an orderly administration of the public schools in a constitutional manner by the admission of qualified pupils upon a basis of individual merit without regard to their race or color. We must presume that it will be so administered.”

Between the Brown v. Board of Education ruling in 1954 and 1958, a total of 376,000 African American children were enrolled in integrated schools in the South. This growth slowed significantly as states passed obstructive legislation like these pupil placement laws; the figure rose by just 500 students between 1958 and 1959, and by October 1960, only six percent of African American children in the South were attending integrated schools. . (next BH, see “In 1959”; next SD, see April 18, 1959)

Fables of Faubus

In 1959: Charles Mingus released “Fables of Faubus” aimed at Arkansas governor Orval Fabus. Uncomfortable with the lyrics, Columbia records turned the song into an instrumental.

Oh, Lord, don’t let ’em shoot us!

Oh, Lord, don’t let ’em stab us!

Oh, Lord, don’t let ’em tar and feather us!

Oh, Lord, no more swastikas!

Oh, Lord, no more Ku Klux Klan!

 

Name me someone who’s ridiculous, Dannie.

Governor Faubus!

Why is he so sick and ridiculous?

He won’t permit integrated schools.

 

Then he’s a fool! Boo! Nazi Fascist supremists!

Boo! Ku Klux Klan (with your Jim Crow plan)

 

Name me a handful that’s ridiculous, Dannie Richmond.

Faubus, Rockefeller, Eisenhower

Why are they so sick and ridiculous?

 

Two, four, six, eight:

They brainwash and teach you hate.

H-E-L-L-O, Hello.

(next BH, see Jan 12)

BLACK & SHOT

November 24, 2015: officer Jason Van Dyke charged with first-degree murder. Hours later, the city released the police dashcam video that captured Van Dyke shooting Laquan McDonald 16 times and killing him. Protesters marched in the Loop into the next morning. (B & S, see Nov 25; McDonald, see Dec 2)

November 24 Peace Love Art Activism

US Labor History

November 24, 1875: the United Cigar Makers of New York affiliated with the Cigar Makers’ International Union (CMIU) to form CMIU Local 144. Samuel Gompers was elected first president of the local and served several terms before going on to serve as the international’s vice president. “[W]e are powerless in an isolated condition,” Gompers said, “while the capitalists are united; therefore it is the duty of every Cigar Maker to join the organization.” (see June 21, 1877)

November 24 Peace Love Art Activism

Edwards v. California

November 24, 1941 in Edwards v California the Supreme Court declared unconstitutional a California law barring indigents from entering the state. California passed the law during the Depression in an effort to keep poor migrants out of the state and thereby avoid the costs of public relief.

The Court majority held that the law violated the Commerce Clause of the Constitution. Justices William O. Douglas, joined by Hugo Black, Frank Murphy and Robert Jackson, however, argued that the law violated the Privileges and Immunities clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.

Justice Douglas in dissent: “. . . I am of the opinion that the right of persons to move freely from State to State occupies a more protected position in our constitutional system than does the movement of cattle, fruit, steel and coal across state lines . . . The conclusion that the right of free movement is a right of national citizenship stands on firm historical ground.”

The New York Times headline for the article was “OKIE’S RIGHTS”

November 24 Peace Love Art Activism

Hollywood Ten

November 24, 1947: the House of Representatives issued citations for Contempt of Congress to the Hollywood Ten—John Howard Lawson, Alvah Bessie, Herbert Biberman, Lester Cole, Edward Dmytryk, Ring Lardner Jr., Albert Maltz, Samuel Ornitz, Adrian Scott, and Dalton Trumbo. They had refused to cooperate at hearings dealing with communism in the movie industry held by the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC). The “Hollywood 10,” as the men were known, were sentenced to one year in jail. The Supreme Court later upheld the contempt charges.

The ten responded the next day. (see November 25, 1947)

November 24 Peace Love Art Activism

Lee Harvey Oswald

November 24, 1963, Jack Ruby murdered Lee Harvey Oswald at the Dallas jail where Oswald was being held. (see March 14, 1964)

November 24 Peace Love Art Activism

November 24 Music et al

Sgt Pepper’s

November 24 Peace Love Activism

November 24, 1966: began recording Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Heart Club Band.

According to the (excellent) Beatles Bible entry, “The first song of the late-1966 sessions was John Lennon‘s Strawberry Fields Forever.” (see Dec 16)

“Photograph”

November 24, 1973: Ringo Starr becomes the third former Beatle to earn a solo #1 hit when “Photograph” topped the Billboard Hot 100.  (see March 13, 1974)

November 24 Peace Love Art Activism

My Lai Massacre

November 24, 1969: U.S. Army officials announced that 1st Lt. William Calley would be court-martialed for the premeditated murder of 109 Vietnamese civilians at My Lai. Army Secretary Stanley Resor and Army Chief of Staff William C. Westmoreland announced the appointment of Lt. Gen. William R. Peers to “explore the nature and scope” of the original investigation of the My Lai slayings in April 1968. The initial probe, conducted by the unit involved in the affair, concluded that no massacre occurred and that no further action was warranted. (see MLM for expanded chronology)

November 24 Peace Love Art Activism

Marijuana

November 24 Peace Love Art Activism

November 24, 1976, : a Washington, DC Robert Randall, afflicted by glaucoma, employed the little-used Common Law Doctrine of Necessity to defend himself against criminal charges of marijuana cultivation (US v. Randall).

On November 24, 1976, federal Judge James Washington ruled Randall’s use of marijuana constituted a ‘medical necessity…’

Judge Washington dismissed criminal charges against Randall. Concurrent with this judicial determination, federal agencies responding to a May, 1976 petition filed by Randall, began providing this patient with licit, FDA-approved access to government supplies of medical marijuana. Randall was the first American to receive marijuana for the treatment of a medical disorder. (see February 21, 1978)

November 24 Peace Love Art Activism

Nuclear & chemical weapons

Superpower treaty

November 24, 1987: the US and the Soviet Union agreed to scrap shorter- and medium-range missiles in the first superpower treaty to eliminate an entire class of nuclear weapons.  [DoS article] (Cold War, see Dec 7; NN, see Dec 8)

Iran’s nuclear program

November 24, 2013: the US and five other world powers announced a landmark accord that would temporarily freeze Iran’s nuclear program and lay the foundation for a more sweeping agreement. It was the first time in nearly a decade, American officials said, that an international agreement had been reached to halt much of Iran’s nuclear program and roll some elements of it back. In return for the initial agreement, the US agreed to provide $6 billion to $7 billion in sanctions relief. Of this, roughly $4.2 billion would be oil revenue that has been frozen in foreign banks. [NYT article] (see January 12, 2014)

November 24 Peace Love Art Activism

Crime and Punishment

November 24, 2015: Governor Steve Beshear, Democrat of Kentucky, issued an executive order restoring voting rights for nonviolent ex-felons who had completed their sentences. The order gave 170,000 ex-offenders the opportunity to register to vote, according to the Brennan Center for Justice. (see January 25, 2016)

November 24 Peace Love Art Activism

Cannabis

November 24, 2021: the South Dakota Supreme Court  ruled that a voter-approved marijuana legalization initiative was invalid on procedural grounds, a major setback for activists who have been awaiting the court’s decision for months. That said, advocates would pursue a two-track plan to enact the reform next year.

In a 4-1 vote, the justices upheld a circuit court ruling that found the 2020 ballot measure violated the state’s single subject rule for constitutional amendments, meaning it covered too much ground and was not narrowly focused enough to meet the electoral standard.

The lawsuit was officially brought by two law enforcement officers but was funded with taxpayer money supplied by the administration of Gov. Kristi Noem (R)  [MM article] (next Cannabis, see  Nov 30, or see CAC for expanded chronology).

November 24 Peace Love Art Activism

November 23 Peace Love Art Activism

November 23 Peace Love Art Activism

Technological Milestone

November 23 Peace Love Art Activism

November 23, 1889: the jukebox made its debut, at the Palais Royale Saloon in San Francisco. [Wired article] (next TI, see September 15, 1891)

November 23 Peace Love Art Activism

Anti-beer bill

November 23, 1921, President Warren G. Harding signed the Willis-Campbell Act, popularly termed the “anti-beer bill”,  prohibiting doctors from prescribing beer or liquor for medicinal purposes. [WP article]

November 23 Peace Love Art Activism

Feminism

Maternity and Infancy Protection Act of 1921

November 23, 1921: President Warren Harding signed The Sheppard–Towner Maternity and Infancy Protection Act of 1921. The act provided for federally-financed instruction in maternal and infant health care and gave 50-50 matching funds to individual US states to build women’s health care clinics. (see Republicans support health care for more) [EPE article] (see Dec 15)

Women’s Health

November 23, 2015: federal 7th Circuit Kudge Richard Posnerpanel ruled that a Wisconsin law that required abortion providers to get admitting privileges at nearby hospitals was unconstitutional. The panel’s 2-1 decision didn’t put the question to rest. Nearly a dozen states had imposed similar requirements on abortion providers, and the U.S. Supreme Court agreed last week to hear a challenge to Texas’ law in a case that could settle the issue nationally.

The Wisconsin case centers on a lawsuit filed by Planned Parenthood and Affiliated Medical Services. The groups argue that the 2013 law amounts to an unconstitutional restriction on abortion. (see January 25, 2016)

Sexual abuse of Catholic nuns

November 23, 2018: The Catholic Church’s International Union of Superiors General, a global organization of nuns, denounced the “culture of silence and secrecy” surrounding sexual abuse in the church and urged sisters who had been abused to report the crimes to police and their superiors.

The organization represents more than 500,000 sisters worldwide. It vowed to help nuns who had been abused to find the courage to report it, and pledged to help victims heal and seek justice.

The statement, issued on the eve of the U.N.-designated International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women. [ABC News report] (see March 8, 2019)

November 23 Peace Love Art Activism

School Desegregation

November 23, 1950: a federal judge on this day ordered an end to the segregation of Mexican-American students in the town of Tolleson, Arizona. School officials in Tolleson had justified the separate schools on the grounds that Mexican-American students often had limited command of English. It was not clear at this point whether the ruling would apply to other school systems in the state. Some, but not all, school districts in the state also had segregated school systems affecting Mexican-American students. Two weeks earlier, on November 7, Arizona voters rejected a referendum that would have ended segregation by race or ethnicity in the state.

The decision in this case came three years after a decision ruling separate Mexican-American schools in California unconstitutional in Mendez v. Westminster on April 14, 1947, and four years before the historic Supreme Court decision in Brown v. Board of Education, on May 17, 1954, declaring racially segregated schools unconstitutional. [PDF on topic] (see January 20, 1951)

November 23 Peace Love Art Activism

US Labor History

November 23, 1956: the first meeting between members of the newly-formed National Football League Players Association and team owners takes place in New York. Union founders included Frank Gifford, Norm Van Brocklin, Don Shula and Kyle Rote. They were asking for a minimum $5,000 salary, a requirement that their teams pay for their equipment, and a provision for the continued payment of salary to injured players. The players’ initial demands were ignored.(see December 6, 1957)

November 23 Peace Love Art Activism

November 23 Music et al

see Beatles 1962 audition for more

November 23, 1962, The Beatles before their US appearance: a 10-minute lunchtime audition before a panel of BBC television producers to assess The Beatles’ talents as a group.

The BBC audition came about after a fan, David John Smith from Preston, wrote to the corporation asking for The Beatles to appear on a show. Falsely assuming that Smith was their manager, the BBC replied offering the group an audition.

Four days afterwards, Brian Epstein received a letter from Ronnie Lane, the BBC’s Light Entertainment Auditioner, declining the request to perform. (Beatles, see Nov 26; BBC see April 13, 1963).

Dale and Grace

November 23 – December 6, 1963,  “I’m Leaving It Up to You” by Dale and Grace #1 on the Billboard Hot 100.

The Beatles Story

November 23, 1964:  Capital Records released The Beatles Story double LP . Capital billed it as “a narrative and musical biography of Beatlemania on two long-play records.”  The albums featured interviews, press conferences, and songs by the The Beatles.  It was The Beatles’ fourth release by Capitol Records. (see Dec 4)

November 23 Peace Love Art Activism

BLACK HISTORY

Vietnam Race Revolts

November 23, 1972: USS Kitty Hawk crewmen described October 12 riots as a series of all-night brawls during which about 100 black and white sailors “used knives, forks, and chains and anything else they could get their hands on” as weapons. (NYT article) (see Nov 30)

Black Lives Matter

November 23, 2015: during a Black Lives Matter protest in Minneapolis, shots were fired at the protesters hitting 5. (see Nov 25)

Colin Kaepernick

November 23, 2019: ESPN reported that in the week after Colin Kaepernick worked out for seven NFL teams at Charles R. Drew High School in Riverdale, Georgia, no teams reached out to work him out, visit with him or sign him

Kaepernick’s representatives also sent video of their client’s workout to the 25 NFL teams that did not attebd, but that did not led to any interest, either. (next CK, see Dec 23)

#StillReady

November 23, 2020: for the first time in the National Football League’s history, the seven-man crew officiating the Monday Night Football game between the Los Angeles Rams and Tampa Bay Buccaneers were Black.

However, on the same day the Colin Kaepernick tweeted out a video of himself training with former San Francisco 49ers teammate Eric Reid, along with the caption: “1,363 days of being denied employment. Still putting in work with @E_Reid35 Still going hard 5 days a week. #StillReady #StopRunning.” [CNN story] (next BH, see Dec 16; next CK, see Dec 17)

November 23 Peace Love Art Activism

Irish Troubles

November 23 Peace Love Art Activism

November 23, 1979: in Dublin, Ireland, Provisional Irish Republican Army member Thomas McMahon was sentenced to life in prison for the assassination of Lord Mountbatten of Burma on August 27, 1979. (see March 1, 1981)

November 23 Peace Love Art Activism

Iran–Contra Affair

November 23 Peace Love Art Activism

November 23, 1981: President Ronald Reagan on this day signed a secret directive authorizing the CIA to create the Contras, an anti-Communist insurgency group in Nicaragua. The directive, NSDD-1, authorized $19 million in secret funds. This order was one of the first steps that led to the Iran-Contra scandal that engulfed the Reagan administration in late 1986, and which involved a number of violations of law, established government policy, and civil liberties. President Reagan and his CIA Director William Casey were fierce anti-communists, determined to fight what they saw as communist threats anywhere in the world. They were both committed to this effort, even if it meant violating the law and established policies, as the Iran-Contra affair revealed. (see September 13, 1985)

November 23 Peace Love Art Activism

Jack Kevorkian

November 23, 1992: Catherine Andreyev of Moon Township, Pennsylvania, died in Kevorkian’s assistant Neil Nicol’s home. She was 45 and had cancer. Hers is the first of 10 deaths Kevorkian attended over the next three months; all die from inhaling carbon monoxide. (see JK for expanded chronology)

November 23 Peace Love Art Activism

Native Americans

November 23, 2017: Colin Kaepernick went to Alcatraz Island to join Native Americans protesting the genocide they said  Thanksgiving Day represents to them.

Kaepernick made the surprise visit to the site of the former Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary to join indigenous people who occupied the island off the coast of San Francisco between 1969 and 1971. There has been an annual sunrise gathering on the island since the takeover of Alcatraz to highlight the deadly, destructive impact on indigenous people of the arrival in America of European colonizers.

He received two eagle feathers from a Native American elder before delivering a brief speech at the UnThanksgiving Day event.“I’m very humbled to share this space with all of you,” he said. “Our fight is the same fight. We’re all fighting for our justice, for our freedom. And realizing that we’re in this fight together makes us all the more powerful.” (NA, see Nov 27; CK, see Dec 3)

November 23 Peace Love Art Activism

Environmental Issues

November 23, 2018: a major scientific report issued by 13 federal agencies presented the stark warnings of the consequences of climate change for the United States, predicting that if significant steps are not taken to rein in global warming, the damage will knock as much as 10 percent off the size of the American economy by century’s end.

The report, which was mandated by Congress and made public by the White House, was notable not only for the precision of its calculations and bluntness of its conclusions, but also because its findings were directly at odds with President Trump’s agenda of environmental deregulation, which he asserts will spur economic growth. [NYT article]

November 23 Peace Love Art Activism

LGBTQ

November 23, 2018: the Trump administration asked the Supreme Court to allow it to leapfrog federal appeals courts in several cases concerning the president’s decision to bar transgender people from serving in the military.

Federal district courts had entered injunctions against the new policy, but no appeals court yet ruled on it. The Supreme Court does not ordinarily intercede until at least one appeals court has considered an issue, and it typically awaits a disagreement among appeals courts before adding a case to its docket. [NYT report] (next LGBTQ, see January 15, 2010)

November 23 Peace Love Art Activism

Cannabis

November 23, 2022: President Joe Biden signed a bipartisan marijuana research bill. The Senate had approved the legislation under unanimous consent the previous week, two months after it had cleared the House. It represented the first piece of cannabis reform legislation in U.S. history to be transmitted to the president.

The legislation gave the U.S. attorney general 60 days to either approve a given application or request supplemental information from the marijuana research applicant. It would also create a more efficient pathway for researchers who request larger quantities of cannabis. [MM article] (next Cannabis, see March 31, 2023 or see CAC for wider chronology)

November 23 Peace Love Art Activism

November 22 Peace Love Art Activism

November 22 Peace Love Art Activism

BLACK HISTORY

Redefining slavery

November 22, 1865: after the physical and economic devastation of the Civil War, Southern states faced the daunting task of rebuilding with the young white male population drastically reduced by war-time casualties and, due to emancipation, without the enslaved black labor supply on which the entire region had been built. In response, some Southern state legislatures passed race-specific laws to establish new forms of labor relations between black workers and white “employers” that ostensibly complied with the letter of the law while re-creating the involuntary, master-slave relationship.

The Mississippi legislature on November 22, 1865, passed “An Act to regulate the relation of master and apprentice, as relates to freedmen, free negroes, and mulattoes.”  [text] Under the law, sheriffs, justices of the peace, and other county civil officers were authorized and required to identify all minor black children in their jurisdictions who were orphans or whose parents could not properly care for them. Once identified, the local probate court was required to “apprentice” black children to white “masters or mistresses” until age 18 for girls and age 21 for boys.

Though not required to pay a wage to the children, whites were required to pay a fee to the county for the apprentice arrangement and the children’s former owners were to be given preference. The law purportedly required white “masters” to provide their apprentices with education, medical care, food, and clothing but also re-established many of the more notorious features of slavery, including authorizing white masters to “re-capture” any apprentice who left their employment without consent, and threatened children with criminal punishment for refusing to return to work. (see Nov 24)

Nation of Islam

November 22, 1930: Elijah Muhammad founded the Nation of Islam in Detroit. (next BH, see January 12, 1931)

Eleanor Roosevelt

November 22, 1938: first Lady Eleanor Roosevelt violated racial segregation laws in Birmingham, Alabama, by integrating the meeting of the Southern Conference for Human Welfare. At the first day of the conference, white and African-American delegates mixed freely. Someone reported this to local authorities. City Commissioner Eugene Connor ordered the conference to be segregated the following day. Eleanor refused to comply and placed her chair squarely between the separated white and African-American sections. Connor became infamous as “Bull” Connor in the 1963 civil rights demonstrations in Birmingham, when he used fire hoses and police dogs against civil rights demonstrators. (see Dec 12)

Albany Movement

November 22, 1961: when Albany (GA) State College students went to the bus terminal to return home for the Thanksgiving holiday, an Albany State dean — whose job depended on the all-white Georgia Board of Regents — was stationed there to direct them to the “Colored” waiting room. Five young people — 3 from the NAACP Youth Council and 2 from Albany State — defied the dean and the orders of Police Chief Pritchett to leave the white waiting room. They were arrested. Bertha Gober, one of the Albany State students, chose to remain in jail over the holidays to dramatize their demand for justice. (see Albany Movement for expanded chronology)

Star Trek kiss

November 22 Peace Love Art ActivismNovember 22, 1968: in a Star Trek episode a kiss between William Shatner and Nichelle Nichols is believed to have been the first interracial kiss ever broadcast on national television. It occurred on an episode entitled “Plato’s Stepchildren,” Season 3, Episode 10.  (see January 3, 1969)

Black and Shot: Tamir Rice
November 22 Peace Love Art Activism

November 22, 2014: responding to reports of someone with a gun, Cleveland police officer Timothy Loehmann shot and killed 12-year-old Tamir Rice.

The weapon Rice had in his hand was a pellet gun. Rice died a day later in the hospital. Video footage released by police showed that Loehmann  shot Rice within two seconds of exiting his car. [some chronology]  (B & S, see Dec 2; Rice, see June 11, 2015)

Groveland Four Exonerated

November 22, 2021:  Administrative Judge Heidi Davis officially exonerated Ernest Thomas,  Samuel Shepherd, Charles Greenlee, and Walter Irvin, four young African American men of the false accusation that they raped a white woman in 1949, making partial and belated amends for one of the greatest miscarriages of justice of Florida’s Jim Crow era.

At the request of the local prosecutor, Davis dismissed the indictments Thomas and Shepherd, who were fatally shot by law enforcement, and set aside the convictions and sentences of Greenlee and Irvin. The men known as the Groveland Four, who ranged from 16 to 26 at the time, were accused of raping a woman in the central Florida town of Groveland in 1949.

“We followed the evidence to see where it led us and it led us to this moment,” said Bill Gladson, the local state attorney, following the hearing in the same Lake County courthouse where the original trials were held. Gladson, a Republican, moved last month to have the men officially exonerated. [NPR story] (next BH, see Dec 6; next Lynching, see  March 7, 2022, or see AL4 for expanded chronology)

November 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Feminism

“The Uprising of the 20,000″

November 22, 1909:  “The Uprising of the 20,000.” Some 20,000 female garment workers strike in New York; Judge tells arrested pickets: “You are on strike against God.” The walkout, believed to be the first major successful strike by female workers in American history, ended the following February with union contracts bringing better pay and working conditions. [JWA article] (next Feminism, see January 2, 1910; Labor March 9, 1910)

Rosenfeld v. Southern Pacific Company

November 22, 1968: the federal court ruled that women cannot be prohibited from working overtime or participating in labor that requires lifting excessive weight. The decision reinforces the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s 1968 issuance of revised guidelines on sex discrimination, which include that  sex-segregated “help-wanted” ads are illegal. (see Dec 1)

Reed v. Reed

November 22, 1971: The Supreme Court decided Reed v. Reed, an Equal Protection case. The Court ruled that the administrators of estates cannot be named in a way that discriminates between sexes.

After the death of their adopted son Richard Lynn Reed, Sally and Cecil Reed sought to be named the administrator of their son’s estate; the Reeds were separated. The Idaho Probate Court specified that “males must be preferred to females” in appointing administrators of estates, so Cecil was appointed administrator.

In a unanimous decision, the Supreme Court held that the law’s dissimilar treatment of men and women was unconstitutional.

From Chief Justice Burger’s opinion; To give a mandatory preference to members of either sex over members of the other, merely to accomplish the elimination of hearings on the merits, is to make the very kind of arbitrary legislative choice forbidden by the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment; and whatever may be said as to the positive values of avoiding intrafamily controversy, the choice in this context may not lawfully be mandated solely on the basis of sex. (see Dec 15)

November 22 Peace Love Art Activism

INDEPENDENCE DAY

November 22 Peace Love Activism

November 22, 1943: Lebanon independent from France. (see June 17, 1944)

November 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Religion and Public Education

November 22, 1947: the American Ethical Union announced that it had asked the United States Supreme Court for permission to join in a brief submitted to test the constitutional validity of a system under which sectarian religious instruction is conducted in public school buildings during regular school hours. (see November 25, 1947)

November 22 Peace Love Art Activism

November 22, 1963

Cold War

In Paris, the C.I.A. gave a disaffected comrade of Castro’s a poison pen that was to be used against the Cuban leader. It was never used. (see Dec 20)

John F Kennedy

November 22, 1963: JFK assassinated in Dallas. LBJ sworn in. (see Nov 24)

Space Race & Technological Milestone

The Relay 1 first broadcast. It was to be a prerecorded address from the President Kennedy to the Japanese people, but was instead the announcement of the Kennedy’s assassination. Later that day, satellite carried a broadcast titled Record, Life of the Late John F. Kennedy, the first television program broadcast simultaneously in the U.S. and Japan.  (Space Race, see October 12, 1964; TM, see Dec 7) 

November 22 Peace Love Art Activism

see Beatles November 22 for more

Beatles/CBS

November 22, 1963: The “CBS Morning News With Mike Wallace” runs a story on the Beatles for the network’s morning news show.  CBS planned to repeat the segment that evening on Walter Cronkite’s newscast.  However, that day, in mid afternoon, Walter Cronkite was breaking the tragic news to a shocked nation that their President, John F. Kennedy, had been shot and killed while visiting Dallas, Texas.

Beatles/with the Beatles

The UK release of the 2nd Beatle album: with the beatles (see Nov 29)

LSD

On his deathbed, unable to speak, Aldous Huxley made a written request to his wife Laura for “LSD, 100 µg, intramuscular.” (see June 17, 1964)

Bob Marries Sara

November 22, 1965:  during a break on his tour, Dylan married Sara Lownds in a secret ceremony on Long Island, NY. The only guests were manager Albert Grossman and a maid of honor for Sara.  A son, Jesse Byron Dylan, will be born on January 6, 1966. (see March 16, 1966)

Alice’s Restaurant
Thanksgiving and Vietnam
Arlo Guthrie’s “Alice’s Restaurant” album cover

November 22, 1967:  Reprise Records released Arlo Guthrie’s “Alice’s Restaurant” album.

White album

November 22, 1968: released The Beatles, usually referred to as the White Album. [link to site with information] The “White Album’s” original working title was A Doll’s House, which is the name of Henrik Ibsen’s play written in the 19th century. In addition, according to Geoffrey Giuliano, author of The Beatles Album, an illustration was prepared for the cover of A Doll’s House by the famed artist Patrick. However the title was changed when the British band Family released the similarly titled Music in a Doll’s House ear­lier that year. The plain white cover was opted for instead after McCartney then requested the albums sleeve design “be as stark a con­trast to Peter Blake’s vivid cover art for Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band as possible, the complete opposite of it…” he said. (see Nov 28)

Kinks

November 22, 1968, The Kinks released The Kinks Are The Village Green Preservation Society album.

The Vatican, Jesus and the Beatles

November 22, 2008: the official Vatican newspaper L’Osservatore Romano suggested that the infamous statement by John Lennon of the Beatles– who outraged many people in 1966 by saying that the band was “more popular than Jesus”– should be recognized as “the boasting of an English working-class lad struggling to cope with unexpected success.” In an editorial marking the 40th anniversary for the “White Album,” L’Osservatore Romano said that the influence of the Beatles has shown “an extraordinary resistance to the effects of time, providing inspiration for several generations of pop musicians.” (see June 18, 2010)

November 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Jack Kevorkian

November 22, 1998: CBS’s “60 Minutes” aired Kevorkian’s videotape of Thomas Youk.  The broadcast triggered an intense debate within medical, legal and media circles. (see JK for expanded chronology)

November 22 Peace Love Art Activism

TERRORISM

November 22, 2005: Jose Padilla, an American once accused of plotting with al-Qaida to detonate a radioactive “dirty bomb,” was charged with supporting terrorism. (see April 22, 2006)

November 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Stop and Frisk Policy

November 22, 2013: a federal appeals panel denied a request by lawyers for New York City that it overturn Judge Shira Scheindlin’s sweeping ruling on the Police Department’s stop-and-frisk practices on grounds that her impartiality had been called into question. The city had sought to have Scheindlin’s ruling vacated, but the appeals court declined the request, effectively saying the appeal process should run its course. The appeals court added that the city could renew its request later as part of the full appeal. (see Dec 16)

The city’s request appeared to be strategic. While Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg disagrees with Judge Scheindlin’s ruling, Mayor-elect Bill de Blasio does not, and has promised to withdraw the city’s appeal when he takes office in January. Ending the appeal would mean that Judge Scheindlin’s order would most likely go into effect. (see Nov 29)

November 22 Peace Love Art Activism

Women’s Health

November 22, 2017: U.S. District Court Judge Lee Yeakel struck down Texas restrictions on a common second-trimester  abortion procedure, ruling that the law blocked a woman’s constitutionally guaranteed right to an abortion.

The Texas law, Senate Bill 8, which was supposed to go into effect in September, would have required doctors to stop the heart of a fetus before it could be removed in an abortion, Yeakel ruled that the law imposed an unnecessary medical procedure on women with no known benefit to them.

“The Act does not further the health of the woman before the fetus is viable,” Yeakel wrote. [Reuters article] (see Dec 6)

November 22 Peace Love Art Activism