Tag Archives: November 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

November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

Feminism

Lucy Burns

November 21, 1913: Lucy Burns fined $1 for chalking the sidewalk in front of the White House. (see Dec 8)

Suffragists Lucy Burns and Dora Lewis

November 21, 1917: Occoquan jail officials began force-feeding  Lucy Burns and Dora Lewis followed by Elizabeth McShane. Unable to pry open Burns’s mouth, officials inserted a glass tube up her nostril, causing significant bleeding and pain. McShane developed stomach ulcers and gall bladder infection. [Herstory article] (see Nov 27 – 28)

Rebecca L. Felton

November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

November 21, 1922: Rebecca L. Felton of Georgia was sworn in as the first woman to serve in the U.S. Senate. (see April 2, 1923)

November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

School Desegregation

November 21, 1927: first adopted in 1890 following the end of Reconstruction, the Mississippi Constitution divided children into racial categories of Caucasian or “brown, yellow, and black,” and mandated racially-segregated public education. In 1924, the state law was applied to bar Martha Lum, a nine-year-old Chinese American girl, from attending Rosedale Consolidated High School in Bolivar County, Mississippi, a school for white students. Martha’s father, Gong Lum, sued the state in a lawsuit that did not challenge the constitutionality of segregated education but instead challenged his daughter’s classification as “colored.”

When the Mississippi Supreme Court held that Martha Lum could not insist on being educated with white students because she was of the “Mongolian or yellow race,” her father appealed to the United States Supreme Court.

On November 21, 1927, in Gong Lum v Rice, the Supreme Court ruled against the Lums and upheld Mississippi’s power to force Martha Lum to attend a colored school outside the district in which she lived. Applying the “separate but equal” doctrine established in 1896’s Plessy v. Ferguson decision, the Court held that the maintenance of separate schools based on race was “within the constitutional power of the state legislature to settle, without intervention of the federal courts.” The Court thus reasoned that Mississippi’s decision to bar Ms. Lum from attending the local white high school did not violate the Fourteenth Amendment because she was entitled to attend a colored school. This decision extended the reach of segregation laws and policies in Mississippi and throughout the nation by classifying all non-white individuals as “colored.” (see September 18, 1945)

November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

US Labor History

Columbine Massacre
November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

November 21, 1927: six miners striking for better working conditions under the IWW banner were killed and many wounded in the Columbine Massacre at Lafayette, Colo. Out of this struggle Colorado coal miners gained lasting union contracts. (see May 18, 1928)

César E. Chávez, Dolores Huerta, and the UFW

November 21, 2000: The United Farm Workers union ended its 16-year-old boycott of California table grapes. The union’s co-founder, César Chávez, who died in 1993, had called for the boycott in 1984 to focus on the spraying of dangerous pesticides. ”Some goals of that boycott have already been met,” the union’s president, Arturo Rodriguez, said in a letter. ”César Chávez’s crusade to eliminate use of five of the most toxic chemicals plaguing farm workers and their families has been largely successful.” The union also held two boycotts against California table grapes in the 1960’s and 1970’s. (see April 23, 2003)

November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

FREE SPEECH

November 21, 1938: The Library Bill of Rights originated on this day with the Des Moines, Iowa, Public Library. The statement was a response to the anti-Semitic actions by Nazi Germany, which included excluding Jews and books written by Jews from libraries. (see June 19, 1939)

November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

Japanese Internment Camps

November 21, 1945: Manzanar, one of the Relocation Centers (usually referred to as concentration camps) in the evacuation and internment of the Japanese-American during World War II, was officially closed on this day. See February 19, 1942 for President Roosevelt’s Executive Order authorizing the program. Many historians regard the evacuation and internment of the Japanese-Americans as the greatest civil liberties tragedy in American history. The government’s program was officially ended on December 17, 1944, but Manzanar did not close until this day, almost a year later.  The site was designated a National Historic Site, on March 3, 1992, and is now managed by the National Park Service.  (see Internment for expanded chronology)

November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

November 21 Music et al

George Harrison deported

November 21, 1960: from his Anthology: It was a long journey on my own on the train to the Hook of Holland. From there I got the day boat. It seemed to take ages and I didn’t have much money – I was praying I’d have enough. I had to get from Harwich to Liverpool Street Station and then a taxi across to Euston. From there I got a train to Liverpool. I can remember it now: I had an amplifier that I’d bought in Hamburg and a crappy suitcase and things in boxes, paper bags with my clothes in, and a guitar. I had too many things to carry and was standing in the corridor of the train with my belongings around me, and lots of soldiers on the train, drinking. I finally got to Liverpool and took a taxi home – I just about made it. I got home penniless. It took everything I had to get me back. (see Dec 5)

“Stay” by Maurice Williams and the Zodiacs

November 21 – 27, 1960:  “Stay” by Maurice Williams and the Zodiacs #1 Billboard Hot 100. Williams wrote the song in 1953 when he was 15 after unsuccessfully trying to convince his girlfriend to ignore her 10 o’clock curfew. The original recording of “Stay” remains the shortest single ever to reach the top of the American record charts, being only 1 minute and 37 seconds long.

LSD

November 21, 1965: not the first “acid test” but a similar event held six days before the Santa Cruz Acid Test, was the Lysergic A Go Go, staged by Hugh Romney (later Wavy Gravy) and Del Close. Not as participatory as the Pranksters’ Tests, attendees “brought their own head,” recalled Romney. “We did not supply any psychotropics,” Gravy says. “What we provided was a palette.”

Though they distributed “solar meat cream” capsules at the door, according to a Los Angeles Free Press report, they were merely filled with “Safeway hamburger.” The light show was provided by Romney’s roommate, Del Close.  The Lysergic A Go Go was a genuinely chaotic happening, crammed with some 500 heads. (see Nov 27)

John & Yoko

November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

November 21, 1968: Yoko Ono suffered a miscarriage of the baby she was expecting with John Lennon. It had been due to be born in February. Lennon stayed at her side at Queen Charlotte’s Hospital, London, sleeping overnight next to her. When that bed was needed for a patient he slept on the floor. Just before the miscarriage, the fetal heartbeat was recorded. It was included in Lennon and Ono’s 1969 album Life With The Lions, followed by two minutes’ silence. The child was named John Ono Lennon II, and was buried in a secret location. It was later claimed that Ono’s miscarriage was caused by the stress of their October drugs bust and subsequent arrest.(Beatles, see Nov 22; Life, see May 9, 1969)

Beatles’ Anthology 1 

November 21, 1995: The Beatles’ Anthology 1 released in the U.S. The double CD contained 60 songs. (next Beatles, see Dec 9)

November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

BLACK HISTORY

November 21, 1964: the FBI mailed an anonymous letter to Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King containing recordings of King engaging in what the FBI regarded as extramarital sexual activity. The letter was part of the FBI’s attempt to “neutralize” King as a civil rights leader, a strategy it adopted as an official plan on December 23, 1963. The recordings on the tape were derived from secret and illegal surveillance of King by the FBI using listening devices placed in hotel rooms and other locations where the FBI knew King would be. The FBI had installed the first bug on January 5, 1964.

While Attorney General Robert Kennedy approved wiretaps on King on October 10, 1963, he did not approve the use of the far more intrusive “bugs.” The letter and the tape recording sent to King has been sealed by a judge, and it is not publicly available. (BH see Nov 29; MLK, see Dec 1)

SCOTTSBORO TRAVESTY

November 21, 2013: the State of Alabama posthumously pardoned Haywood Patterson, Charles Weems and James A. Wright, the three black men who had been falsely convicted more than 80 years ago in the rapes of two white women, thus absolving the last of the so-called Scottsboro Boys. During a hearing in Montgomery, the Alabama Board of Pardons and Paroles voted unanimously to issue pardons to the three men. (see Scottsboro for expanded chronology)

November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

Vietnam

November 21, 1967: Gen. William Westmoreland, commander of U.S. Military Assistance Command Vietnam, told U.S. news reporters: “I am absolutely certain that whereas in 1965 the enemy was winning, today he is certainly losing.”

With such reassurances, the ferocity of the Tet attacks only two months later stunned Americans. [CFR article] (see Nov 29)

Colonel “Bull” Simons 
November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

November 21, 1970: a combined Air Force and Army team of 40 Americans–led by Army Colonel “Bull” Simons–conducted a raid on the Son Tay prison camp, 23 miles west of Hanoi, in an attempt to free between 70 and 100 American suspected of being held there. The raid was conducted almost flawlessly, but no prisoners of war were found in the camp. They had been moved earlier to other locations. (see January 12, 1971)

Chicago 8

November 21, 1972: all of the convictions were reversed by the US Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit on the basis that the judge was biased in his refusal to permit defense attorneys to screen prospective jurors for cultural and racial bias. (NYT article) (see Nov 23)

November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

Native Americans

Alcatraz Takeover

November 21, 1970: the Indians occupying Alcatraz began their second year on the island in San Francisco Bay today, still determined to get the United States to deed it to them for an Indian culture center. (NA, see Nov 26; Alcatraz, see June 12, 1971)

Code Talkers

November, 21, 2013: 96-year-old Edmond Harjo and other American Indian “code talkers” were formally awarded the Congressional Gold Medal to using their native language to outwit the enemy and protect U.S. battlefield communications during World Wars I and II. (see Nov 26)

November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

Watergate Scandal

November 21, 1973: President Richard Nixon’s attorney, J. Fred Buzhardt, revealed the existence of an 18 1/2-minute gap in one of the White House tape recordings related to Watergate. (NYT article) (see Watergate for expanded chronology)

November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

DEATH PENALTY

November 21, 1974: the National Conference of Catholic Bishops spoke out against capital punishment in a reversal of the traditional Roman Catholic Church position supporting the death penalty as a legitimate means of self-protection for the state. (see July 2, 1976)

November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

Iran–Contra Affair

November 21, 1986,: National Security Council member Oliver North and his secretary, Fawn Hall, started shredding documents that implicated them in selling weapons to Iran and channeling the proceeds to help fund the Contra rebels in Nicaragua. (see Nov 25)

November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

The Cold War

Dissolution of Yugoslavia

November 21, 1995: leaders of Croatia, Bosnia and Serbia agreed to the Dayton Accords ending nearly four years of terror and ethnic bloodletting that had left a quarter of a million people dead in the worst war in Europe since World War II. The Accords were formally signed in Paris, France on December 14.  (see Dec 14)

NATO expanded

November 21, 2002: NATO invited seven former communist countries to join the alliance: Slovenia, Slovakia, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania and Bulgaria.  [RFE article] (see February 19, 2008)

Gen. Ratko Mladic

November 21, 2017: Gen. Ratko Mladic, the former Bosnian Serb commander, was convicted of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes. He was sentenced to life in prison.

From 1992 to 1995, the tribunal found, Mr. Mladic, 75, was the chief military organizer of the campaign to drive Muslims, Croats and other non-Serbs off their lands to cleave a new homogeneous statelet for Bosnian Serbs.

The deadliest year of the campaign was 1992, when 45,000 people died, often in their homes, on the streets or in a string of concentration camps. Others perished in the siege of Sarajevo, the Bosnian capital, where snipers and shelling terrorized residents for more than three years, and in the mass executions of 8,000 Muslim men and boys after Mladic’s forces overran the United Nations-protected enclave of Srebrenica. [BBC article] (see Yugoslavia for expanded chronology)

November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

Sexual Abuse of Children

November 21, 2003: Ohio state Judge Richard Niehaus of Common Pleas Court found the Archdiocese of Cincinnati guilty of failing to report sexually abusive priests in the 1970’s and 80’s and imposed the maximum penalty possible, a fine of $10,000. (NYT article) (see February 27, 2004)

November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

Consumer Protection

November 21, 2007: officials announced the recall of more than a half-million pieces of Chinese-made children’s jewelry contaminated with lead. [TC article] (see February 5, 2014)

November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

SEPARATION OF CHURCH AND STATE

November 21, 2011: in the Republican race for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination, Rick Santorum, former U.S. Senator from Pennsylvania, based his campaign on his strong Christian views.

On this day, he said that the U.S. should be governed by “God’s law.” His position was characteristic of many fundamentalist Christians and their political leaders who believed that religious doctrine — which is to say, their view of what it says — was a higher law than the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. (see May 5, 2014)

November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

LGBTQ

November 21, 2013: the Pentagon had ordered national guard facilities nationwide to extend equal treatment to married couples in the U.S. military – including same-sex married couples – and Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel gave them a December 1 deadline to comply. Rather than comply, Gov. Mary Fallin of Oklahoma’s announced that Oklahoma will stop processing all military spouse benefit applications at state-owned National Guard facilities rather than begin accepting the applications from same-sex spouses. Instead, military spouse applications, including those of same-sex couples, will only be accepted at four federally owned National Guard bases: the Air National Guard bases in Tulsa and Oklahoma City, the Regional Training Institute in Oklahoma City and Camp Gruber. (see Nov 27)

November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

TERRORISM

November 21, 2013: officials arrested Pamela Morris, 45, the former secretary of the KKK chapter, for committing perjury before a grand jury investigating a 2009 cross burning her son, Stephen, is being investigated about. (see Nov 29)

November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

Immigration History

November 21, 2017: District Judge William H. Orrick in San Francisco issued an injunction to permanently block President Trump’s executive order to deny funding to cities that refused to cooperate with federal immigration officials, after finding the order unconstitutional.

Orrick’s came in response to a lawsuit filed by the city of San Francisco and nearby Santa Clara County and followed a temporary halt on the order that the judge issued in April.

Orrick, in his summary of the case, found that the Trump administration’s efforts to move local officials to cooperate with its efforts to deport undocumented immigrants violated the separation of powers doctrine as well as the Fifth and Tenth amendments.

The Constitution vests the spending powers in Congress, not the President, so the Executive Order cannot constitutionally place new conditions on federal funds. Further, the Tenth Amendment requires that conditions on federal funds be unambiguous and timely made; that they bear some relation to the funds at issue; and that they not be unduly coercive,” the judge wrote. “Federal funding that bears no meaningful relationship to immigration enforcement cannot be threatened merely because a jurisdiction chooses an immigration enforcement strategy of which the President disapproves.”  [WP article] (IH, see Nov 29; Trump restrictions, see Dec 4)

November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

Nuclear/Chemical News

November 21, 2017: Russia’s meteorological service reported “extremely high pollution” of a radioactive isotope in the Urals near a facility that previously suffered the third worst nuclear catastrophe in history. This was the first time that the Russians admitted to any issues.

The news bolstered international November 9 report that a ruthenium-106 leak originating in the Urals sent a radioactive cloud over Europe.  Greenpeace Russia said it would ask the prosecutor general to investigate the possible cover-up of a nuclear accident.

Rosatom, Russia’s state nuclear company, said in a statement to The Telegraph there had been “no unreported accidents” and the ruthenium-106 emission was “not linked to any Rosatom site”. Its Mayak facility, where an explosion on September 29, 1957 contaminated a swath of central Russia, told state news agency RIA Novosti that it had not processed nuclear fuel with ruthenium-106 in 2017.[Telegraph article]

Terrorism vulnerability

November 21, 2017: officials with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission announced a three-month investigation at Millstone Nuclear Power Plant in Waterford, CT had found that a contract security guard there failed to follow proper procedures regarding testing weapons used for the facility’s security and then falsified records to hide what had happened.

The investigation determined the officer deliberately failed to perform his assigned duties, including being responsible for the accountability, testing and maintenance of weapons used to respond to terrorist attacks. Investigators also found numerous discrepancies on a number of weapons maintenance records between January 2015 and June 2016, according to Sheehan.

Specifically, the officer indicated in records that test-firing, cleaning or maintenance activities had been performed on weapons. But in reality, the weapons had not been worked on, and in some cases, had not been retrieved from their staged locations. [ctpost article] (NN and T, see Nov 28)

November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

Trump Impeachment Inquiry/Public

November 21, 2019: in her opening statement, the former top Russia expert on the National Security Council Fiona Hill called for Republicans to stop propagating what she called a “fictional narrative” that Ukraine, not Russia, meddled in the 2016 elections. She called the conspiracy claim a story invented by Russian intelligence services to destabilize the United States and deflect attention from their own culpability.

David Holmes, who worked in the United States Embassy in Kyiv told lawmakers that he overheard President Trump, who was speaking loudly, asking Ambassador Sondland whether Ukraine President Zelensky was “going to do the investigation.” Sondland told Trump that Zelensky “loves your ass,” and would conduct the investigation and do “anything you ask him to,”

According to Holmes’s account, Sondland later told him that Trump cared only about “big stuff that benefits the president” like the “Biden investigation” into the son of former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. Mr. Sondland largely confirmed that account on Wednesday but said he did not recall specifically mentioning Mr. Biden. [NYT story] (see TII/P for expanded coverage)

November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

Environmental Issues/Space

November 21, 2020: SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launched the Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich satellite, an advanced ocean-mapping satellite into orbit for NASA and the European Space Agency.

Built by Airbus in Germany, the satellite was roughly the size of a small pickup truck and carried multiple instruments to track changes in sea level down to just a few centimetres. To measure sea levels, they’ll beam electromagnetic signals down to the world’s oceans and then measure how long it takes for them to bounce back.

The oceanography satellite was named for Michael Freilich, the former head of NASA’s Earth science division. [Space.com article] (next EI, see Nov 25; next Space, see January 24, 2021)

November 21 Peace Love Art Activism

November 18 Peace Love Art Activism

November 18 Peace Love Art Activism

Cultural Milestone

November 18, 1883: North American railroads adopted Standard Railway Time at noon sharp. With the implementation of SRT came the delineation of four continental time zones: Eastern Standard Time, Central Daylight Time, Mountain Standard Time and Pacific Daylight Time. (next CM, see May 31, 1884)

Feminism

Voting Rights

November 18, 1913: a mass suffrage meeting in Washington, DC, heard an address by the British suffragist leader Emmeline Pethick Lawrence. The meeting was also the occasion to welcome back to Washington leaders of the American Congressional Union, the principal lobby organization for a suffrage amendment to the Constitution. The Congressional Union leaders had just returned from a lobbying trip through western states in the U.S. 

The American Congressional Union was led by Alice Paul, who then led militant suffrage pickets of the White House in 1917, which played a major role on causing President Woodrow Wilson to end his opposition to women’s suffrage. (see Nov 21)

Alice Paul

November 18, 1917:  Alice Paul, leader of the militant protests in front of the White House in support of a constitutional amendment granting women the right to vote, was on this day transferred from the prison to the prison hospital. She and several other supporters had begun a hunger strike in the prison, and after 78 days was force-fed on November 8, 1917. Paul had been confined in the psychopathic ward of the prison, and was so weak from the hunger strike that she was transferred to the prison hospital on a stretcher. 

Paul managed to smuggle out of the prison a hand-written account of her ordeal. She explained that she had been denied letters, books, visitors, and decent food.

Paul had first organized pickets of the White House in early 1913. as Woodrow Wilson became president. The picketing escalated in 1917, and members of Paul’s group were on several occasions attacked by anti-feminists while the police stood by making no arrests. (see Nov 21)

Women’s Health

November 18, 1921: Margaret Sanger gave a speech on “The Morality of Birth Control,” at the Park Theater in New York City five days after the police had closed down an earlier meeting of the first birth control conference in the U.S where she was scheduled to speak.. The New York Times reported that the police intervention on that occasion was “brought about at the instance of Archbishop Patrick J. Hayes of the NY Roman Catholic Archdiocese.”

In 1923 Margaret Sanger successfully opened the first legal Women’s Health clinic in the U.S. with the stated intent of only using contraceptives for medical purposes, such as the prevention of life-threatening pregnancies. (see April 23, 1929)

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INDEPENDENCE DAYS

Latvia

November 18, 1918:  Latvia independent from Russia. (see Dec 1)

Morocco

November 18, 1956:  Morocco independent from France and Spain. (see March 6, 1957)

November 18 Peace Love Art Activism

Black History

Marcus Garvey

November 18, 1927: President Coolidge commuted Garvey’s sentence. Garvey wass released from the Atlanta Federal Penitentiary and taken to New Orleans for deportation. (see Garvey for full story)

Sen. Coleman Blease

In 1928, Sen. Coleman Blease (D-SC), a Ku Klux Klan supporter who had previously served as South Carolina’s governor, made a third attempt to amend the U.S. Constitution in order to ban interracial marriage in every state. Like its predecessors, it failed. (see June 12)

Martin Luther King, Jr, the FBI
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Albany Movement

November 18, 1962: Martin Luther King, Jr accused agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation in Albany, Ga., of siding with the segregationists. “One of the great problems we face with the FBI in the South is that the agents are white Southerners who have been influenced by the mores of the community. To maintain their status, they have to be friendly with the local police and people who are promoting segregation. Every time I saw an FBI man in Albany, they were with the local police force.” (next BH, see Nov 20; see AM for expanded story)

John Coltrane

November 18, 1963: John Coltrane recorded his civil rights elegy “Alabama” at Van Gelder Studio in Englewood Cliffs, NJ three months after the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing of September 15.

McCoy Tyner on piano, Jimmy Garrison on bass, and Elvin Jones on drums accompanied Coltrane. Martin Luther King’s speech, delivered in the church sanctuary three days after the bombing, had inspired Coltrane who patterned his saxophone playing on it. Like the speech, “Alabama” shifts its tone from one of mourning to one of renewed determination for the struggle against racially motivated crimes. (see Nov 19)

J. Edgar Hoover
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Martin Luther King, Jr and the FBI

November 18, 1964: FBI director J. Edgar Hoover characterized Martin Luther King Jr as “the most notorious liar in the country.” King replied that Hoover “has apparently faltered under the awesome burden, complexities, and responsibilities of his office.”

In 2014, on the 50th anniversary of Hoover’s characterization the radio show, Democracy Now, had an extended piece on the relationship between Martin Luther King, Jr and the FBI. (BH, see Nov 18; MLK, see Nov 21)

George Whitmore, Jr

November 18, 1964: Whitmore convicted by a jury before Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice David L. Malbin of the Elba Borrero assault and attempted rape, but Malbin delayed sentencing pending Whitmore’s trial for the Wylie-Hoffert murders. (next BH, see Nov 21; see GW for expanded story)

Sixteenth Street Baptist Church bombing

November 18, 1977: The NY Times reportedFourteen years after a dynamite bomb exploded here at the 16th Street Baptist Church and killed four young black girls in one of the worst racial incidents in Southern history, a jury of three blacks and nine whites delivered a murder conviction of Robert  Chambliss. (Robert Chambliss guilty) (BH, see February 1, 1978; Sixteenth Street, see May 1, 2001)

Chicago Police Torture James Cody

November 18, 1983:  a Black man named James Cody was beaten with a flashlight, subjected to electric shock on his testicles and buttocks, and threatened with castration by officers acting under Chicago Police Commander Jon Burge. Over the course of almost 30 years, Commander Burge oversaw and participated in the torture of over 100 Black men, resulting in scores of forced confessions. When Commander Burge first took command of the jurisdiction known as Area 2 as a detective in 1972, he and his men—known as the “Midnight Crew”—began forcing confessions using brutal torture practices such as beating, suffocation, electric shock, burning, Russian roulette, and mock execution. [EJI article] (next BH, see Dec  9)

William Zantzinger

November 18, 1991: Zantzinger pleaded guilty to 50 misdemeanor counts of unfair and deceptive trade practices. He was sentenced to 18 months in the county jail and fined $50,000. The judge also sentenced Zantzinger to 2,400 hours of community service and directed him to help groups that advocate low-cost housing.  [2009 NYT obit] (Zanzinger, see January 3, 2009; BH, see April 29, 1992)

SOUTH AFRICA/APARTHEID

November 18, 1993: black and white leaders endorsed a new constitution for South Africa that tried to balance majority rule with safeguards to reassure whites and other minorities. But the Zulu-based Inkatha Freedom Party and an array of white separatist groups threatened to boycott elections and hint at insurrection. [NYT article] (Apartheid, see January 3, 1994; Mandela, see April 27, 1994)

Trayvon Martin Shooting

November 18, 2013: police arrested George Zimmerman for allegedly pointing a shotgun at his girlfriend and pushing her out of her house as he packed to move out, the Seminole County Sheriff’s Office said. Zimmerman barricaded himself in the house Samantha Scheibe rented in Apopka, which he had shared with her since around August, Chief Deputy Dennis Lemma said at a news conference. She gave deputies a key, and they pushed aside furniture he had piled against the door. [NYP article] (see February 24, 2015)

137 SHOTS

November 18, 2014: without any major filings or motions from either side, the city of Cleveland settled a wrongful death suit with the families of Timothy Russell and Marissa Williams (see November 29, 2012)  for $3 million. Police killed Russell and Williams at the end of a car chase that most likely started when a cop mistook the backfire of a car for a gunshot.

Of the 13 officers involved in the fatal shooting one was indicted for involuntary manslaughter. Five others were charged with dereliction of duty for allowing the chase to escalate. They had all pled not guilty. (see 137 for expanded story)

Malcolm X Murder

November 18, 2021:  the Manhattan district attorney and lawyers for  Muhammad A. Aziz and Khalil Islam , two of the men found guilty of the assassination of Malcolm X in 1965abnnounced that the men’s convictions were thrown out.

For decades, historians had cast doubt on the case against the two men, who each spent more than 20 years in prison.

“It’s long overdue,” said Bryan Stevenson a civil rights lawyer and the founder of the Equal Justice initiative. “This is one of the most prominent figures of the 20th century who commanded enormous attention and respect. And yet, our system failed.”

A 22-month investigation conducted jointly by the Manhattan district attorney’s office and lawyers for the two men found that prosecutors and two of the nation’s premier law enforcement agencies — the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the New York Police Department — had withheld key evidence that, had it been turned over, would likely have led to the men’s acquittal.

The review did not uncover a police or government conspiracy to murder  Malcolm X. It also left unanswered questions about how and why the police and the federal government failed to prevent the assassination by Mujahid Abdul Halim, who was also found guilty, and his conviction stood.

Altogether, the re-investigation found that had the new evidence been presented to a jury, it may well have led to acquittals. And Mr. Aziz, 83, who was released in 1985, and Mr. Islam, who was released in 1987 and died in 2009 at age 74, would not have been compelled to spend decades fighting to clear their names.  [NYT story] (next BH, see )

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Technological Milestones

November 18

November 18, 1928: the first successful sound-synchronized animated cartoon, Walt Disney’s “Steamboat Willie” starring Mickey Mouse, premiered in New York. (see January 31, 1930) 

November 18

November 18, 1963: the advent of the push-button phone, officially introduced in two Pennsylvania communities, Carnegie and Greensburg. (see Nov 22)

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Vietnam

November 18, 1961: President Kennedy sent 18,000 military advisors to South Vietnam. [NYT article] (see Dec 11)

November 18 Peace Love Art Activism

Cold War

November 18, 1963: at the Americana Hotel in Miami President John F. Kennedy told the Inter-American Press Association that only one issue separated the United States from Fidel Castro’s Cuba: Castro’s “conspirators” had handed Cuban sovereignty to “forces beyond the hemisphere” (meaning the Soviet Union), which were using Cuba “to subvert the other American republics.” Kennedy said, “As long as this is true, nothing is possible. Without it, everything is possible.”

That same day, Ambassador William Attwood, a Kennedy delegate to the United Nations, secretly called Castro’s aide and physician, Rene Vallejo, to discuss a possible secret meeting in Havana between Attwood and Castro that might improve the Cuban-American relationship. Attwood had been told by Castro’s U.N. ambassador, Carlos Lechuga, in September 1963, that the Cuban leader wished to establish back-channel communications with Washington.

Kennedy’s national security adviser, McGeorge Bundy, told Attwood that J.F.K. wanted to “know more about what is on Castro’s mind before committing ourselves to further talks on Cuba.” He said that as soon as Attwood and Lechuga could agree on an agenda, the president would tell him what to say to Castro (see Cuban Missile Crisis)

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November 18 Music et al

November 18, 1963: NBC’s evening news program, The Huntley-Brinkley Report, aired a four-minute segment on the Beatles. (see Nov 22)

November 18 Peace Love Art Activism

LGBTQ

Anita Bryant

November 18, 1977: a federal judge dismissed a $5 million lawsuit accusing Anita Bryant of conducting a hate campaign against homosexuals. The suit had been filed by the parents of Robert Hillsborough (Hillsborough, see June 21, 1977 ; next LGBTQ, see November 27, 1978)

Goodridge v. Department of Public Health

November 18, 2003: the Massachusetts Supreme Court ruled in Goodridge v Department of Public Health that the state constitution mandates the freedom to marry for same-sex couples. Three months later, the Court reaffirmed its decision, stating that only marriage – not separate and lesser mechanisms, such as civil union – sufficiently protects same-sex couples and their families. (see February 4, 2004)

Rev Frank Schaefer

November 18, 2013: a 13-member jury convicted the Rev Frank Schaefer, a United Methodist pastor, of breaking church law by officiating his son’s same-sex wedding. Schaefer could be defrocked after a high-profile trial that has rekindled debate over the denomination’s policy on gay marriage. The Methodist church put  Schaefer on trial in southeastern Pennsylvania, accusing him of breaking his pastoral vows by presiding over the 2007 ceremony in Massachusetts. The jury convicted Schaefer on two charges: that he officiated a gay wedding, and that he showed “disobedience to the order and discipline of the United Methodist Church.” (LGBTQ, see Nov 18; Schaefer, see Dec 16)

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Ronald Reagan/Iran–Contra

November 18, 1987: U.S. Senate and House panels released reports charging President Ronald Reagan with ‘ultimate responsibility’ for the affair. [NYT article] (see March 16, 1988)

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SEPARATION OF CHURCH AND STATE

November 18, 2002: in August 2001, Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore had a 5,280-pound block of granite with the Ten Commandments engraved on it in the rotunda of the Alabama Judicial Building.

A group of lawyers consisting of Stephen R. Glassroth, Melinda Maddox and Beverly Howard, who felt their clients might not receive fair treatment if they did not share Moore’s religious opinion, and that the placement of the monument violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment, filed civil suits in Federal Court against Justice Moore in his official capacity as Chief Justice to have the monument removed.

On this date, the District Court held the monument violated the Establishment Clause. The following day, the District Court directed Moore to remove the monument from the building. (see August 22, 2003)

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Occupy Wall Street

November 18, 2011: a group of University of California Davis occupy protesters who were sitting passively on the ground with their arms interlocked was pepper sprayed by an campus security guard, an action the university chancellor  called “chilling to us all.” (see January 3, 2012)

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DEATH PENALTY

Alabama

November 18, 2013: US Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor called for a new look at whether judges should be allowed to overrule juries to impose death sentences, saying that elected judges in Alabama “appear to have succumbed to electoral pressures” in making such decisions.

Although three states allow judges to override jury recommendations that a killer receive life in prison — Florida and Delaware are the others — only judges in Alabama are using the power. (see February 11, 2014)

Julius Jones

November 18, 2021: Gov. Kevin Stitt  of Oklahoma called off the execution of Julius Jones, a death-row inmate, just hours before he was to be put to death, in a case in which the state’s Pardon and Parole Board had twice recommended that his sentence be commuted.

“After prayerful consideration and reviewing materials presented by all sides of this case, I have determined to commute Julius Jones’s sentence to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole,” Stitt said in a statement.

Jones was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to death in 2002. He was found guilty of killing Paul Howell, who was in a car in the driveway of his parents’ home when he was carjacked and fatally shot in 1999. The commutation came less than a month after the Supreme Court, with its three more liberal members dissenting, lifted a stay of execution that a federal appeals court had granted to Mr. Jones and another Oklahoma death row inmate, John Marion Grant, who was executed last month. [NYT article] (next DP, see March 24, 2022)

November 18 Peace Love Art Activism

Consumer Protection

Safe Water report

November 18, 2019: two national non-profit groups, DigDeep and the US Water Alliance, released a new report, “Closing the Water Access Gap in the United States: A National Action Plan.”  The study found that more than two million Americans were living without running water, indoor plumbing, or wastewater treatment.

The report was most comprehensive national study on the more than two million Americans who lackrf access to water service. The report filled a knowledge gap: there is no one entity—a federal agency or research institution—that collected comprehensive data on the scope of the United States water access problem.

The report made several recommendations to help close the water gap in the United States. Recommendations included re-introducing Census questions about whether homes have working taps and toilets, as well as changes to how the federal government funds and regulates water systems for rural and unincorporated areas. There are also recommendations for the philanthropic and global WASH (water, sanitation, and hygiene) sectors to drive community empowerment, deploy innovative technologies, and apply successful WASH models from abroad here in the United States. [Yahoo news article]

Vaping

November 18, 2019: under pressure from his political advisers and lobbyists to factor in the potential pushback from his supporters, President Trump resisted moving forward with any action on vaping, while saying he still wanted to study the issue.

Even a watered-down ban on flavored e-cigarettes that exempted menthol, which was widely expected, appeared to have been set aside. [NYT article] (next CP & vaping, see January 2, 2020)

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Cannabis

November 18, 2019: NJ Senate President Steve Sweeney (D) and Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Nicholas Scutari (D) announced that while they had “made further attempts to generate additional support in the Senate to get this done legislatively,” the “votes just aren’t there.” As a result, they filed a proposal that would allow residents to vote on legalization as a constitutional amendment.

“We are moving forward with a plan to seek voter approval to legalize adult use marijuana in New Jersey,” the leaders said in a press release. “We introduced legislation today to authorize a public referendum for a proposal that will lead to the creation of a system that allows adults to purchase and use marijuana for recreational purposes in a responsible way.” (see CCII for expanded modern cannabis history)

November 18 Peace Love Art Activism

Immigration History

November 18, 2020: Judge Emmet G. Sullivan of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia blocked President Trump’s policy of turning away migrant children at the border as public health risks, ruling that the expulsion of thousands of children without due process exceeded the authority that public health emergency decrees confer.

The Trump administration had since March used an emergency decree from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to effectively seal the border to migrants, rapidly returning them to Mexico or Central America without allowing immigration authorities to hear their claims for asylum. Top homeland security officials had cited the potential spread of the coronavirus that could come from detaining asylum seekers in border facilities.

But Sullivan said that while the emergency rule allowed the authorities to prevent the “introduction” of foreigners into the United States, it did not give border authorities the ability turn away children who would normally be placed in shelters and provided an opportunity to have a claim for refuge heard. The order applies across the country. [NYT article] [next IH, see Dec 4]

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