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California History

S. Clay Wilson, Taboo-Breaking Underground Cartoonist, Dies at 79

February 11, 2021 by sergneri Leave a Comment

His drawings were so outrageous that, on first encountering them, his fellow cartoonist R. Crumb recalled feeling that “suddenly my own work seemed insipid.” . A NYT obituary of S. Clay Wilson . . Hucklecatt Hawaii 1h ago Sitting in the upstairs rooms of Peter Rich’s “Velo Sport” shop in Berkeley doing windowpane and reading … [Read more…]

Posted in: California History, Faits Divers, Obituaries, Politics, Racism, Sea Stories, Thinking about Tagged: Arcade, Art Spiegelman, Bent, Bill Griffith, Captain Pissgums and his Pervert Pirates, Jack Kirby, Jay Kinney, Ruby the Dyke, S. Clay Wilson, The Berkeley Barb, the Checkered Demon, the Hog Riding Fools, The Realist, underground cartoonist, Victor Moscoso, Wally Wood, William S. Burroughs, Zap Comix

Migrant Farm workers, 1940 California

January 1, 2021 by sergneri 1 Comment

Geyserville Press 5 January 1940 The FARMERS CORNER by RALPH H TAYLOR – Sec. Agricultural Legislative Committee of California California’s battle to escape being known the world over as the promised land of the migrant worker is still far from won. Wheezing relics of the nation’s second-hand car lots—the drab “covered wagons” of the victims … [Read more…]

Posted in: California History, California Newspaper Archive, Faits Divers, Politics, Thinking about Tagged: Arkansas, California, cotton picker, depression, drought, hoping for work, labor, migrants, Oklahoma, Texas

Diane di Prima, Poet of the Beat Era and Beyond, Dies at 86

October 28, 2020 by sergneri Leave a Comment

A NY Times Book section obituary Diane di Prima, Poet of the Beat Era and Beyond, Dies at 86  and an Associated Press obituary were published today, 10/28/2020. From the New York Times: Ms. di Prima often spoke of the influence of her maternal grandfather, Domenico Mallozzi, a tailor and ardent anarchist who had immigrated … [Read more…]

Posted in: California History, Ethical and green living, Faits Divers, Feminism, Flying, Obituaries, Politics, Racism, Sea Stories, Thinking about, This Day in History Tagged: Activism, autobiographical, Beat Era, Ezra Pound, Greenwich Village, heresies, Hidden Religion, Liberation News Service, Loba, Memoirs of a Beatnik, poet laureate of San Francisco, Poetics Program, Poetry, San Francisco, the Diggers

BELIEVED DEAD IN STORM ON DIVIDE – BOLSHEVISM

October 25, 2020 by sergneri 2 Comments

Auburn Journal 20 February 1919 WEALTHY LINCOLN MAN BELIEVED DEAD IN STORM ON DIVIDE, BODY SOUGHT Lume Adams, well-to-do Lincoln man, 83 years old, was lost in a snow storm near Forest Hill early Tuesday morning of last week and it is believed he perished, as no trace of him has been found. Searching parties … [Read more…]

Posted in: California History, California Newspaper Archive, Faits Divers, Obituaries, Pandemic, Sea Stories, Thinking about Tagged: Bolshevism, February 1919, Federal Reserve, gold, influenza, lost, Lume Adams, pestilence, snow storm, thrift

AFTER THE “FLU”

October 14, 2020 by sergneri Leave a Comment

An interesting editorial from the Fresno Republican, reprinted in the Calistoga California “Weekly Calistogian” of 14 February, 1919. It strikes me as interesting in both the thought given to what they expected after the epidemic but the need for social reform to support these expectation. – JS The Weekly Calistogian 14 February 1919 AFTER THE … [Read more…]

Posted in: California History, California Newspaper Archive, Pandemic, Thinking about Tagged: 1919 Spanish Influeza, Calistogian, convalescence, Fresno, grippe, influenza, pandemic, pneumonia, public health, public health service, public welfare service, social cost, Spanish Flu, tuberculosis

DR. POTTER WARNS PUBLIC

October 13, 2020 by sergneri Leave a Comment

From the Morning Press, 24 August 1918, just before the Spanish influenza epidemic began to rage on the west coast of America: DR. POTTER WARNS PUBLIC AGAINST SPAIN’S INFLUENZA That Spanish influenza, a scourge which has attacked the great armies Europe, is bound to make its presence felt in the United States, was a prediction of … [Read more…]

Posted in: California History, California Newspaper Archive, Pandemic, Thinking about Tagged: American Medical Association, coughing, disease, epidemics, face mask, grippe, healthy, mask, sneezing, Spanish Influenza

I’m not so timid about germs

October 6, 2020 by sergneri 1 Comment

Substitute COVID-19 for INFLUENZA in the article below, and you sum up how epidemics impact people. – JS. Riverside Daily Press 18 February 1919 SIDE TALKS BY RUTH CAMERON Rocking the Boat “Well, I’m thankful to say, I’m not so timid about germs. My carcass isn’t quite so valuable to me as all that,” said … [Read more…]

Posted in: California History, California Newspaper Archive, Pandemic, Thinking about Tagged: #SonomaResponds, 1919 Spanish Influeza, contagion, Death, disease, germs, plague, Spanish Influenza

REDONDO BEACH USES TRAVELING SCHOOLS – 1918

September 23, 2020 by sergneri 1 Comment

Calexico Chronicle 23 December 1918 REDONDO BEACH USES TRAVELING SCHOOLS Redondo Beach, Dec. 23.—Grammar schools have been closed here during the influenza epidemic, but the work of education goes on. Equipped with a small portable blackboard and necessary text books and records, each teacher calls upon each pupil enrolled in her classes and hears recitations … [Read more…]

Posted in: California History, California Newspaper Archive, Faits Divers, Pandemic, Thinking about Tagged: 1918 Spanish Influeza, Education, epidemic, Grammar school, quarantine, Redondo Beach, Spanish Flu, Teaching

WOMAN KILLED ON STOCKTON STREETS

September 6, 2020 by sergneri Leave a Comment

WOMAN KILLED ON STOCKTON STREETS. (By United Press) Hanford Sentinel 19 December 1918 Stockton, Dec. 17. – Mystified by the murder of Mrs. Alice Kroyer, the police Monday admitted they had learned nothing that would clear up the identity of the murderer who killed her with a blow from an iron bar late Saturday night. … [Read more…]

Posted in: California History, California Newspaper Archive, Faits Divers, Sea Stories Tagged: MURDER, murderer, police, Stockton

BUSINESS HAS FELT THE PINCH

July 17, 2020 by sergneri 1 Comment

Stockton Independent 2 November 1918 Considerable Loss Due to the Closing Down During the Influenza Epidemic. Merchants and businessmen in all the towns and cities of the country where the Spanish influenza is raging have suffered from a depression of trade amounting, in some lines and in some places to almost a complete suspension. In … [Read more…]

Posted in: California History, California Newspaper Archive, Pandemic, Thinking about Tagged: business, businessmen, epidemic, health authorities, infection, influenza, Merchants, Spanish Influenza
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