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50 bizarre laws that have existed or still exist in America
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3 weeks agoon

The United States has had its fair share of strange legislation in its existence thus far.
This includes an age limit on those who use playgrounds in Kansas, a prohibition on masked groups in New York (until the COVID-19 pandemic changed life as we know it) and a ban on using ferrets as hunting animals in West Virginia.
Here’s part three of Fox News Digital’s list of the most bizarre and interesting laws in America — from Alabama to Wyoming.
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Many of the laws on this list have stood firm and are still in effect, while a few others have long since been repealed.
Also, some laws may not be exclusive to just one state.

The U.S. has had its fair share of weird laws, including a law against drunkenness at the airport, a hunting ferret ban and a rule against no gambling at the airport. Check out these and more odd, surprising laws! (iStock)
Continue reading to learn about an odd law in your home state!
Alabama: Don’t dress as a member of the clergy (unless you are one)
A criminal code in Alabama states that no person shall pretend to be a minister of religion or any other member of the clergy (nun, priest, rabbi).

In the state of Alabama, do not dress as a member of the clergy — unless you’re willing to break the law. (iStock)
If the law is broken, the person is guilty of a misdemeanor.
The punishment, according to Alabama code Title 13A, is “a fine not exceeding $500.00 or confinement in the county jail for not more than one year, or by both such fine and imprisonment.”
Alaska: Do not operate motorcycles or loud power tools at night
In Fairbanks, Alaska, it’s illegal to operate or use loud instruments between 11 p.m. and 7 a.m., according to the city’s code of ordinances Chapter 46, Article II, Sec. 46-42.

In Fairbanks, Alaska, think twice before you ride a motorcycle or operate a noisy power tool after 11 p.m. and before 7 a.m. (iStock)
This includes “a pile driver, pneumatic hammer, bulldozer, road grader, loader, power shovel, derrick, backhoe, power saw, manual hammer, motorcycle, snow machine or other instrument, appliance or vehicle which generates loud sounds or noise, after having been informed by another that such operation or use is disturbing the peace and privacy of others,” the city’s code on Offenses Against Public Peace and Order states.
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Arizona: Better not interfere with a claw machine or ‘crane game’
In Arizona, it is illegal to mess with a crane game, according to Title 13, Chapter 33.

In Arizona, you’d be wise not to “alter the game” so that the “claw is unable to grab prizes, display prizes” and more. (iStock)
“No person shall alter the game so the claw is unable to grab prizes, display prizes in a way where the claw is unable to grab those prizes, use money as prizes or award prizes in the game which are redeemable for cash or currency,” the law states.
It’s also against the law to misrepresent the value of prizes that a person may win in a crane game. Breaking this law is a class 1 misdemeanor.
Arkansas: Forget about beeping a horn after 9 p.m. at sandwich shops
In Arkansas, “no person shall sound the horn on a vehicle at any place where cold drinks or sandwiches are served after 9:00 p.m.,” according to Little Rock’s code of ordinances Chapter 18, Sec. 18-54.

In Arkansas, beeping the horn of a car after 9 p.m. at sandwich or soda shops is out of the question. (iStock)
In 2020, Reuters also reported on Arkansas Title 1 — which addresses the pronunciation of the state name.
General Provisions Chapter 4 on “State Symbols, Motto, Etc.” states that Arkansas “should be pronounced in three (3) syllables, with the final “s” silent, the “a” in each syllable with the Italian sound, and the accent on the first and last syllables.”

Arkansas is pronounced this way: AR-kən-saw. The final “s” in the state’s name is silent — and yes, there’s a law about that. (Fox News)
“The pronunciation with the accent on the second syllable with the sound of ‘a’ in ‘man’ and the sounding of the terminal ‘s’ is an innovation to be discouraged,” Reuters said on its FindLaw page.
California: You can’t eat frogs that have died in frog-jumping competitions
California’s Fish and Game Code, Article 2, Frog-Jumping Contests (6880-6885), states that any number of live frogs are allowed to be used in frog-jumping contests.

A tiny frog is held in little hands — but in California, eating the creature if it’s been used in a frog-jumping contest is against the law. (iStock)
Should one of the poor creatures pass on or be killed during the competition, however, “it must be destroyed as soon as possible, and may not be eaten or otherwise used for any purpose,” the law says.
Colorado: You may not use upholstered furniture outside
In the Centennial State, no person shall keep, use or store upholstered furniture outside unless that furniture is specifically manufactured for outdoor use.

A mattress and sofa should not be kept, used or stored outdoors in Colorado unless that furniture was originally manufactured for outdoor use. (iStock)
This may include upholstered chairs, upholstered couches and mattresses in the front, side or backyard.
If the furniture is temporarily placed in an outside location in the hope of selling it at a yard sale, however, that’s apparently a different story, according to Colorado’s “General Offenses” under Title 5, Chapter 4, 5-4-16.
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Connecticut: Don’t sell ‘silly string’ to a minor
In the city of Meriden, Connecticut, no person shall sell or offer silly string “or like products” to a minor unless that minor is accompanied by a parent or legal guardian, Chapter 175, 175-2 states.

Forget about selling “silly string” or similar products to a minor in the city of Meriden, Connecticut. (iStock)
If placed for sale, these products must be in a locked case or behind a store counter.
It’s also reportedly illegal to use “silly string” or like products on Halloween in Hollywood, California (Los Angeles, Article 6, Public Hazards SEC. 56.02.).
Delaware: You can’t whisper or use profane language in a place of worship
Under Rehoboth Beach, Delaware’s Article IV Offenses Against Public Peace and Safety 198-23, no person may disrupt religious worship “by noise, talking or whispering, or by rude or indecent behavior, or by profane language within their place of worship, or within 300 feet of the place of worship,” the law states.

Be sure not to whisper to your neighbor or disturb the Sunday service in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware — it’s against the law. (iStock)
These rules also exist in reference to the disturbance of any lawful assembly and/or gathering of people in a public place.
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Florida: Please don’t feed the alligators
Under Florida Code Title XXVIII Chapter 372 under “Wildlife,” the law states that no person shall “intentionally feed, or entice with feed, any wild American alligator.”
This includes American crocodiles, the code states.

A large alligator crosses a Florida highway. In Florida, the law reportedly states that people, unless licensed to do so, cannot feed alligators or crocodiles. (iStock)
People who are allowed to feed the reptiles must be licensed and or do so for “educational, scientific, commercial or recreational purposes” and only while the creatures are in protected captivity.
Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission personnel, for example, can feed gators.
Georgia: You can’t have chickens crossing the road
Section 8-1 of Georgia law has rules against “domestic fowl running at large.”

Chickens, ducks, geese and other domestic fowl are not allowed to run at large in the streets of Georgia. (iStock)
“It shall be unlawful for any person owning or controlling chickens, ducks, geese or any other domestic fowl to allow the same to run at large upon the streets or alleys of the city or to be upon the premises of any other person, without the consent of such other person,” the law states.
Hawaii: You can’t post a billboard except in special cases
The Aloha State forbids outdoor advertising unless under special circumstances (Vol10, Chapter 0436-0474, 445-112).
Four states currently prohibit billboards:
Alaska, Hawaii, Maine, and Vermont.
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For example, Hawaii officials apparently will allow billboards only on the property that is actually selling the item or service that’s being advertised.

Hawaii officials apparently will allow billboards only on a property that is actually selling an item or service that’s being advertised.
Idaho: You can’t carry a red or white cane unless you’re fully or partially blind
Idaho’s Title 18 in Crime and Punishments, in Chapter 58 under Public Health and Safety, states that no persons unless completely blind or partially blind may use a red or white cane.

Unless you are fully or partially blind, you may not carry a cane of certain colors in Idaho. (iStock)
Only people who are blind may carry a cane in this color, according to the law.
In addition, no person who isn’t blind or partially blind is allowed to carry a cane that’s white tipped with red.
Illinois: You cannot dye a baby chick
It is against the law in the Prairie State to sell, offer to sell, trade or display “living baby chicks, ducklings, goslings, or other fowl or rabbits which have been dyed, colored or otherwise treated so as to impart to them an artificial color,” according to Chapter 7-12, Animal care and control.

It’s against the law in Illinois to dye a baby chick, among other animals. (iStock)
The law also states that the animals should not be given away as prizes.
Indiana: Don’t even think about catching a fish with your bare hands
Fishing is allowed in the Hoosier State — but the state prohibits people from taking fish from the water using “the hands alone.”

You’re welcome to fish in Indiana — just don’t think about pulling a fish out of the water with nothing but your bare hands. (iStock)
Title 14, Article 22 under Chapter 9 also states that a net, dynamite or explosives may not be used, among other methods.
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Iowa: Don’t pass off fake butter as real butter
In reference to imitation butter under Title V, Chapter 192, section 143, the product can only be sold under the name of “oleomargarine.”

“Imitation butter shall be sold only under the name of oleomargarine, and no person shall use in any way, in connection or association with the sale or exposure for sale or advertisement of any such product, the word butter, creamery, or dairy, or the name or representation of any breed of dairy cattle,” according to Iowa law, in part. (iStock)
Imitation butter also cannot be advertised under the words butter, creamery or dairy — among other terms.
Kansas: Don’t use playgrounds if you’re over age 14
In Wichita, Kansas, no person over the age of 14 — with some exceptions — may use playgrounds that are designed for children, “which deprives or prevents the use of such equipment by children” (Sec. 9.03.430).

If you are age 14 or over, you may not play on a playground in Kansas. Parents and caregivers are excluded from this rule, according to Kansas law. (iStock)
This law does not apply to parents and guardians who are participating with their children, by the way.
Kentucky: Do not use reptiles in religious services
In Kentucky under Chapter 208, Section 1, it’s against the law for a person to “display, handle or use” any breed of reptile in connection with religious services.

“Any person who displays, handles or uses any kind of reptile in connection with any religious service or gathering shall be fined not less than fifty dollars ($50) nor more than one hundred dollars ($100),” Kansas law states. (iStock)
This law, according to Kentucky Revised Statutes, has been in effect since 1942 — and those who break is will be fined anywhere from $50 to $100.
Louisiana: You may not have reptiles at or near Mardi Gras
Leave your snake at home.
Section 34-21 of the New Orleans Code of Ordinances states that no reptiles are allowed within 200 yards of a Mardi Gras parade and not less than two hours before the published start time of a parade.

A bull snake is seen slithering in the grass. No reptiles are reportedly allowed at Mardi Gras parades in New Orleans, Louisiana. (iStock)
The animals also must not be within 200 yards of the end of a parade “for not less than one hour after the actual end of the parade,” the law says.
Maine: You can’t gamble at the airport
In Biddeford, Maine, under Section 14-2, it’s illegal to engage in gambling at the airport.

There is no gambling permitted at Biddeford Municipal Airport in York County, Maine. (Loic Venance/AFP via Getty Images)
It’s also against the law to be intoxicated “or commit any act constituting a nuisance on the airport.”
Maryland: Forget about ‘stench bombs’
In Baltimore, Maryland, it’s illegal to manufacture, sell or trade a “stench bomb.”
Such “stench bomb” is defined as “any liquid, gaseous, or solid substance or matter of any kind which is intended to be thrown, dropped, poured, deposited, or discharged for the purpose of producing a noxious, nauseating, sickening, irritating, or offensive odor.”

“Stench bombs” are not permitted in Baltimore, Maryland. (iStock)
Anyone who violates this law is guilty of a misdemeanor and will be subjected to a fine, according to Article 19, 59-32.
Massachusetts: Be careful how you play the national anthem
In Massachusetts, whoever sings or plays “The Star-Spangled Banner” on an instrument in any public space “other than as a whole and separate composition or number” will be fined.
There are other stipulations to this rule as well (Section 264:9).

Massachusetts law says people must follow certain rules when playing “The Star-Spangled Banner.” (iStock)
The fine must not be more $100.
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Michigan: There is no drunkenness allowed on trains
Michigan law, Act 68 of 1913 (436.201, Section 1), states that no person shall ride any railway train if inebriated.

If you are under the influence of alcohol, Michigan law says you must stay off the trains. (iStock)
Minnesota: You can’t be charged with drunkenness
In Minnesota, it is noted in Section 340A.902 that no person “may be charged with or convicted of the offense of drunkenness or public drunkenness.”
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In Minnesota, no person can be charged for being drunk or for “public drunkenness.” (iStock)
Mississippi: Don’t use profanity
If you swear in Mississippi, you can be fined up to $100.

In the Magnolia State, you’re better off not cursing — or can be fined. (iStock)
This law, in Title 97, Chapter 29, also includes public drunkenness.
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Missouri: You can’t sell cars on Sundays
Just as in New Jersey and apparently in some other U.S. states, it is illegal to sell a vehicle on Sunday, according to Missouri’s code 578.120.

Used cars for sale are displayed on a lot. But in the state of Michigan (and a few other states), you can’t sell cars on Sundays. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
The law states that “no dealer, distributor or manufacturer” who isn’t licensed “may keep open, operate, or assist in keeping open or operating any established place of business for the purpose of buying, selling, bartering or exchanging, or offering for sale, any motor vehicle, whether new or used, on Sunday.”
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Montana: You can’t ‘drive’ animals on a railroad track
A livestock code in the Montana State legislature prohibits the “unlawful transporting or driving of livestock” upon a railroad track with the “intent to injure the corporation or persons owning the railroad.”

Cows graze in a field near Hardin, Montana, on Wed., Oct. 28, 2020. (Lynn Donaldson/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
The livestock code (title 81, chapter 5) says the unlawful act is punishable with a monetary fine of up to $50,000 or imprisonment in a state prison for up to five years or both.
The offender is also “liable for all injury or damage occasioned by reason of such act,” including animal injury or death.
Nebraska: You cannot marry if you have an STD
A marriage qualification code in the Nebraska State legislature prohibits residents with sexually transmitted diseases from marrying in the Cornhusker State.
“No person who is afflicted with a venereal disease shall marry in this state,” Nebraska’s Revised Statute Chapter 42-102 states, as of publication time.

Scientist holds blood samples tube for sexually transmitted diseases, including syphilis, HIV, HBV and HCV. (iStock)
Legislative Bill 882 (AKA LB745) attempted to revise the code to remove the marriage disqualification and instead tried to make “undisclosed [STDs] at the time of marriage” a qualifier for annulment — but the bill hasn’t been passed.
Nevada: Steer clear of the Powerball
Section 24 of the Constitution of the State of Nevada says that “no lottery may be authorized …nor may lottery tickets be sold” by state and political subdivisions in the Battle Born State.
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The constitution does give the Nevada legislature power to authorize and regulate lotteries (raffle or drawing) for organizations that are involved in charitable or not-for-profit activities.

Americans who live or visit Nevada are not permitted to play lottery games. (iStock)
“All proceeds of the lottery, less expenses directly related to the operation of the lottery, must be used only to benefit charitable or nonprofit activities in this State,” Nevada’s constitution says.
“A charitable or nonprofit organization shall not employ or otherwise engage any person to organize or operate its lottery for compensation.”
New Hampshire: Beware the collection of seaweed
New Hampshire Fish and Game Laws Title XVIII have a list of “general provisions” about seaweed collection, which are described in Section 207:48 to 207:54.

Landscape photo of the waters between Omaha, Nebraska, and Council Bluffs, Iowa. (iStock)
The seven sections prohibit activities such as nighttime seaweed and rockweed collecting from seashores “below high-water mark,” seaweed collecting from any salt marsh or flat “without leave of the owner,” piling seaweed below the high-water mark for the purpose of hauling away, selling seaweed outside the state — and uprooting and cutting live rockweed or sea moss from rocks, banks or shores.
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New Jersey: You can’t sell a car on Sunday
Section 2C:33-26 of the New Jersey Code of Criminal Justice prohibits people and places of business from “buying, selling, or exchanging motor vehicles” on Sunday.
Violating the code is considered a “disorderly persons offense.”

Cars for sale are shown at a dealership in Union City, New Jersey, on Friday, March 26, 2021. (Gabriela Bhaskar/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
Violation punishments escalate with each subsequent offense and can include monetary fines between $100 and $750, up to six months of imprisonment and suspension or revocation of a car dealership license.
An exemption exists for motorcycle sales (unless prohibited by county).
New Jersey is one of a number of other states that restrict or ban car sales on Sundays.
New Mexico: You can’t dance while wearing a sombrero
It’s reportedly illegal to dance in a sombrero in New Mexico, according to a report published by Tucker, Yoder & Associates, a law firm based in Farmington, New Mexico.
“There’s nothing illegal about wearing a sombrero in New Mexico, but start dancing in it and you’re breaking the law,” the law firm wrote in September 2021 in its roundup of 10 Odd New Mexico Laws.

Dancing in a sombrero is allegedly illegal in New Mexico. (iStock)
“It might not seem like dancing in a sombrero would cause any reason to be banned, but the state lawmakers certainly disagreed,” Tucker, Yoder & Associates also said.
New York: Be aware that wearing face masks in groups was once banned
Before the COVID-19 pandemic, it was illegal for groups of people to wear masks in public spaces throughout the state of New York.

People wear face masks in Times Square on Aug. 31, 2021, in New York City. (Noam Galai/Getty Images)
The law was repealed in May 2020 with N.Y. Penal Law 240.35(4), which ended the “nearly two-century-old statute” that made group mask wearing a “criminal violation,” according to the Office of the New York State Attorney General.
North Carolina: You cannot steal waste kitchen grease
The North Carolina General Assembly website has a criminal law outlined in chapter 14 of the North Carolina General Statutes (Section 14-79.2) that states it’s unlawful to steal waste kitchen grease.

In the state of North Carolina, it’s unlawful to steal waste kitchen grease. (iStock)
It’s illegal to “take and carry away, or aid in taking or carrying away” waste kitchen grease and the containers that hold the grease when there are labels that state “unauthorized removal is prohibited without written consent of the owner of the container.”
Adding a fraudulent ownership label on a waste kitchen grease container and intentional contamination is also against the law.
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Violators of North Carolina’s waste kitchen grease law can be subject to a Class 1 misdemeanor or Class H felony, depending on the monetary value of the stolen grease and/or grease container.
North Dakota: Watch your poker playing
The North Dakota Legislative Branch’s Administrative Code on Games of Chance (Section 99-01.3-09-01) says licensed organizations can conduct a maximum of two for-profit poker events in a fiscal year, and each poker event is limited to a 72-hour period.

Man holds poker playing cards. The state of North Dakota has specific laws about limits on poker playing at events. (iStock)
Organizations are allowed to run multiple poker tournaments “at each of its licensed sites” during this period.
“For a tournament, an organization shall charge each player an entry fee,” the code states.
“For each tournament conducted, the total fees cannot exceed three hundred dollars per player, which includes the buy-in or entry fee, plus rebuys, add-ons, and bounties. The total fees collected are considered gross proceeds.”
Ohio: Arrests cannot be made on Sundays or on July 4
Section 2331.12 of the Ohio Revised Code specifies the days that arrests cannot be made, which is available for viewing on the state’s Legislative Service Commission website.

The State Capitol of Ohio is shown in Columbus, Ohio. (Joe Sohm/Visions of America/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
“No person shall be arrested during a sitting of the Senate or House of Representatives, within the hall where such session is being held, or in any court of justice, during the sitting of such court, or on Sunday, or on the fourth day of July,” the code states.
Oklahoma: Know that tattoos were banned until 2006
The state of Oklahoma banned tattooing in 1963 — and lifted the ban in 2006 with Gov. Brad Henry’s signing of Senate Bill 806, according to a press release issued by the Oklahoma Senate.
The legislative decision granted the Oklahoma Department of Health regulation authority over commercial tattooing.

Dennis Tucker, owner of Kingtat Graphix Custom Tattoos, works on a tattoo on May 5, 2006, in Tulsa, Oklahoma. The Oklahoma Legislature gave final approval to a bill legalizing the tattoo industry in Oklahoma in 2006. It was the only state that still had a prohibition on the trade. (Brandi Simons/Getty Images)
“I’ve said all along, this is a public health issue,” said State Sen. Frank Shurden, in a statement issued on May 10, 2006.
“If these businesses fail to follow basic health guidelines, they could be spreading terrible diseases like Hepatitis or AIDs.”
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Oregon: You can’t leave your car door open
Chapter 811 of the Oregon legislature’s Rules of the Road for Drivers (Section 811.490) describes a legal penalty that can be applied to people who open a vehicle door improperly or leave a vehicle door open for an extended period.

Woman improperly opens a car door and puts a cyclist in great danger on the road. (iStock)
Opening a vehicle door when it’s unsafe to do so and/or interfering with traffic flow, pedestrian crossings and passing bicyclists can result in a Class D traffic violation.
The same applies to people who leave vehicle doors open on the side of traffic, busy sidewalks or shoulders “for a period of time longer than necessary to load or unload passengers.”
Pennsylvania: You can’t fire guns or set off explosives at weddings
A reckless endangerment code that was established to protect people during wedding festivities and similar gatherings was referenced in a Proposed Crimes Code for Pennsylvania document.
Submitted to the Keystone State’s General Assembly in 1967, it states that reckless acts like firing guns and explosives are against the law.

Dawn over the Gettysburg battlefield. In Pennsylvania, “it is a crime to serenade a wedding with guns or explosives,” a document states. (iStock)
The document can be viewed on the Pennsylvania General Assembly’s website.
“Under Section 623 of The Penal Code of 1939 (18 P. S.§ 4623), it is a crime to serenade a wedding with guns or explosives,” the document states.
Rhode Island: You cannot steal poultry or receive stolen poultry
Title 11 (chapter 41, section 9) of Rhode Island’s General Laws on Criminal Offenses state it’s against the law to steal or receive stolen poultry.

A person holds a free-range hen. It’s illegal in the state of Rhode Island to steal poultry or be in possession of stolen poultry. (iStock)
“Every person who steals poultry from any building or enclosure in which poultry are kept or confined, or whoever shall receive poultry, knowing it to have been stolen, shall be punished by imprisonment for not more than one year or by fine of not more than five hundred dollars ($500), or by both,” the legal code states.
The law says that one-half of the imposed fine “shall inure to the complainant.”
South Carolina: Males over age 16 can’t seduce someone ‘under the promise of marriage’
Title 16 on crimes and offenses (chapter 15, section 16-15-50) in the South Carolina Code of Laws characterizes seduction under the promise of marriage to be an offense against morality and decency — and male residents of a certain age aren’t allowed to do it.
“A male over the age of 16 years who by means of deception and promise of marriage seduces an unmarried woman in this State is guilty of a misdemeanor and, upon conviction, must be fined at the discretion of the court or imprisoned not more than one year,” the law states.

Seduction under the false promise of marriage is against the law in South Carolina. However, a man won’t be convicted if at trial it can be proven that “the woman was at the time of the alleged offense lewd and unchaste.” (iStock)
The law also says “there must not be a conviction … on the uncorroborated testimony of the woman upon whom the seduction is charged.”
A man won’t be convicted if at trial it can be proven that “the woman was at the time of the alleged offense lewd and unchaste.”
However, “if the defendant in any action brought under this section contracts marriage with the woman, either before or after the conviction, further proceedings of this section are stayed,” the law states.
South Dakota: You can’t use fireworks to protect sunflower crops from birds
Title 34 (chapter 36, section 7), a public health and safety law that has since been repealed from South Dakota’s Codified Laws, permitted the use of fireworks or explosives to protect sunflower crops from birds. The act is now prohibited.
The State of South Dakota repealed the agricultural-focused pyrotechnic law in 2018 with House Bill No. 1015 during its 93rd session of the Legislative Assembly.

Sunflowers are shown as far as the eye can see in a field in South Dakota. (iStock)
Before the repeal, farmers were allowed to use fireworks and explosives to scare off birds as long as they weren’t used with 660 feet of an occupied dwelling, church or schoolhouse — and as long as the action wasn’t done without written permission from an adjoining landowner.
Tennessee: You cannot import or possess a skunk (in most cases)
Unlawful importing of a skunk can result in a legal penalty, according to the Title 70 of the Tennessee Code’s Wildlife Resources (chapter 4, part 2) section.

Skunk ownership and trading is illegal in Tennessee, with some exceptions. (iStock)
The law prohibits “any person” from importing, possessing or causing the importation of a live skunk in the state of Tennessee. Selling, bartering, exchanging and transferring a skunk is not allowed.
There are certain exceptions for “bona fide zoological parks and research institutions” and people who have “a valid wildlife rehabilitation permit issued by the agency.”
Violators of the law will receive a Class C misdemeanor.
Texas: You can’t ‘solicit’ professional employment
In the Lone Star State, “soliciting” professional employment is an unlawful offense, according to Title 8 – Offenses Against Public Administration (section 38.12) of the Texas Statutes Penal Code.

Violators of the law in Texas that prohibits soliciting professional employment can receive a misdemeanor or felony. (iStock)
“A person commits an offense if, with intent to obtain an economic benefit the person: (1) knowingly institutes a suit or claim that the person has not been authorized to pursue; (2) solicits employment, either in person or by telephone, for himself or for another,” the section states.
Violators of the law can receive a misdemeanor or felony.
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Utah: Make sure you know the beer limit
Chapter four of the Utah Code’s Title 32B Alcoholic Beverage Control Act (section 32B-4-406.) sets a beer purchase limit for the public, which is outlined on the Utah State Legislature website.
“(A) a person may not sell, offer for sale, or furnish beer to the general public in a container that exceeds two liters; and (b) a person may not purchase or possess beer in a container that exceeds two liters,” the law states.

A glass of beer sits on a picnic table at Capitol Reef National Park. (iStock)
Container-size exceptions exist for retail licensees that are dispensing beer for consumption and beer wholesale licensees that are selling beer to a licensed retailer.
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Vermont: Be aware that imitation butter once had to be pink
On Nov. 13, 1890, the General Assembly of the State of Vermont passed a law that required margarine and all other forms of imitation butter and cheese to be dyed pink.
The law applied to dairy companies and keepers of hotels and restaurants.
“Whoever by himself, his agents or servants, shall sell, expose for sale, or have in his possession with intent to sell, any article or compound made in imitation of butter, and not wholly made from milk or cream and that is of any other color than pink, shall, for every package that he or they sell or expose for sale, be fined the sum of fifty dollars, and for each subsequent offense shall be fined the sum of one hundred dollars. Half of the fine shall go to the complainant,” the law stated.
The Supreme Court struck down all pink dye mandates for imitation butter, which had been enacted in other states, on May 23, 1898.

Pink imitation butter laws might have been repealed in the U.S., but strawberry cream cheese (pictured here) remains a popular food spread. (iStock)
“Pink is not the color of oleomargarine in its natural state,” the court wrote in its ruling.
“To color the substance as provided for in the statute naturally excites a prejudice and strengthens a repugnance up to the point of a positive and absolute refusal to purchase the article at any price.”
Virginia: You can’t hunt near a place of worship on Sunday
Hunting on Sundays near a place of worship in Virginia is against the law.
The restriction is noted in the Code of Virginia’s Title 29.1. on Wildlife, Inland Fisheries and Boating, which is viewable on the state’s Legislative Information System.
Chapter five, article two of the law (section 29.1-521) specifies the animals that can’t be hunted on Sunday near a place of worship, in addition to what distance and weaponry types are acceptable for Sunday hunters.

A roe deer stands in a suburban meadow. Violators of the hunting restriction in Virginia are punished with a Class 3 misdemeanor. (iStock)
“To hunt or kill on Sunday (i) any wild bird or wild animal, including any nuisance species, with a gun, firearm, or other weapon, within 200 yards of a place of worship or any accessory structure thereof or (ii) any deer or bear with a gun, firearm, or other weapon with the aid or assistance of dogs,” the law says.
Violators of the hunting restriction are punished with a Class 3 misdemeanor.
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Washington: Don’t use X-rays as shoe-fitting devices (unless you’re a podiatrist)
Section 70A.388.190 of the Revised Code of Washington prohibits the use of X-ray machines for nonmedical foot measuring in shoe sales or otherwise.

Detailed X-ray image of two feet. In Washington state, the use of X-ray machines for nonmedical foot measuring in shoe sales or otherwise is prohibited. (iStock)
“The operation or maintenance of any X-ray, fluoroscopic, or other equipment or apparatus employing roentgen rays, in the fitting of shoes or other footwear or in the viewing of bones in the feet is prohibited,” the law states.
“This prohibition does not apply to any licensed physician, surgeon, *podiatrist, or any person practicing a licensed healing art, or any technician working under the direct and immediate supervision of such persons.”
West Virginia: You can’t use ferrets as hunting animals
The West Virginia Legislature bans residents from using ferrets as hunting animals, according to chapter 20 of the state’s code on natural resources.

Leashed ferret looks at something while outdoors in grassy area. Using a ferret to hunt is considered an unlawful way to hunt in the Mountain State. (iStock)
You cannot “hunt, catch, take, kill, injure, or pursue a wild animal or wild bird with the use of a ferret,” the chapter’s section 20-2-5 (subsection 10) states.
Using a ferret to hunt is considered an unlawful method of hunting in the Mountain State.
Wisconsin: You must have cheeses of a ‘fairly pleasing’ flavor
An administrative code in the Wisconsin Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection specifies that certain cheeses made in America’s Dairyland should be “fairly pleasing” in flavor.
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Chapter ATCP 81 on Cheese Grading, Packaging and Labeling states that Wisconsin grade B cheeses, such as cheddar, granular, washed curd cheese, Colby, Monterey Jack, brick and muenster cheese must have “a fairly pleasing characteristic cheese flavor,” as noted in sections ATCP 81.42, ATCP 81.52 and ATCP 81.62.

Wheels of various cheeses sits on a deli counter. Certain cheeses made in America’s Dairyland should be “fairly pleasing” in flavor. (iStock)
The code says the aforementioned cheeses may also possess “undesirable flavors to a slight or very slight degree.”
Wyoming: You must have works of art for display on newly constructed public buildings
Title 16 (chapter 6, section 802) of the Wyoming Statutes describes “city, county, state and local powers” and “intergovernmental cooperation” laws for newly constructed public buildings.

This view looking downtown on one of the main streets in Cheyenne, Wyoming, takes in the business district with a variety of architectural styles. (iStock)
A new building that uses state funds “shall include works of art for public display,” the law states.
The artwork mandate requires builders to allocate “an amount equal to one percent (1%) of total costs but not to exceed one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000.00) on any one (1) project.”
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New construction projects that cost less than $100,000 are reportedly “exempt from this subsection.”
Missed parts 1 and 2 of our earlier crazy laws roundups? Check these articles out!
Part 1: America’s oddest laws include rules against dressing as nuns, eating frogs and more
Part 2: These odd laws in America address banned tattoes, pink butter, poker playing and more
Cortney Moore is an associate lifestyle writer on the Lifestyle team at Fox News Digital.
Source: https://www.foxnews.com/lifestyle/50-bizarre-laws-existed-or-still-exist-america
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Lifestyle
On this day in history, March 21, 1952, first rock concert held in Cleveland, ends in chaos, conflict
Published
4 hours agoon
March 22, 2023
The first rock ‘n’ roll concert, the ill-fated yet legendary Moondog Coronation Ball, pulsed from the stage of the former Cleveland Arena amid chaos and controversy on this day in history, March 21, 1952.
“There was a sense of dynamite going off,” Indiana University professor emeritus and rock ‘n’ roll historian Glenn Gass told Fox News Digital.
“Right from the start, it was seen as dangerous music. Kids loved it. Parents hated it. Great. What a way for rock ‘n’ roll to get its start.”
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The oversold show ended early and, fittingly, in a conflict with authorities — which quickly became a hallmark of the explosive, controversial and bawdy new musical art form.
“Described as the ‘Big Bang of rock ‘n’ roll,’ the concert was organized by DJ Alan Freed and music store owner Leo Mintz and was headlined by saxophonist Paul Williams and his Hucklebuckers,” writes Guinness World Records in its confirmation of the show’s pioneering status in live-music history.

R&B pianist and singer Amos Milburn with Paul Williams (baritone sax, center), Eddie Silver (tenor sax, left), Jimmy Brown (trumpet), Belton Evans (drums), and Steve Cooper (bass), circa 1950. Paul Williams, performing with the Hucklebuckers, co-headlined with guitarist Tiny Grimes the first rock concert in Cleveland on March 21, 1952. (Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)
“The event was credited with ‘bringing Black and White kids together to dance in post-war America, but was abandoned after approximately 30 minutes due to overcrowding and rioting after more than 20,000 revelers stormed the 9,950-seat venue.”
The concert was co-headlined by guitarist Tiny Grimes, according to promotional posters from the landmark event.
“Described as the ‘Big Bang of rock ‘n’ roll,’ the concert was organized by DJ Alan Freed and music store owner Leo Mintz.” — Guinness World Records
Apparently only Williams, the opening act, got to perform before the show was cut short in haste by local officials as crowds of ticket holders gathered on Euclid Avenue were unable to get into the arena.
“In 1948, at the age of 33, Williams recorded ‘The Hucklebuck,’ an instrumental considered by many music historians to be an important precursor to rock ‘n’ roll,” writes Blackpast.org.

Moondog Coronation Ball in Cleveland, March 21, 1952, organized by DJ Alan Freed and record-store owner Leo Mintz, is regarded as the first-ever rock ‘n’ roll concert. (y GAB Archive/Redferns)
“At a time when record companies promoted ‘race’ records only among African Americans, Williams’ song became a major crossover hit among both Black and White audiences.”
Fellow headliner Grimes recorded with artists such as Charlie Parker and Billie Holiday and pioneered rock sound with his up-tempo jazz-guitar style, according to various sources.
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DJ Freed proved the real breakout star of the first rock concert.
He was “the boundary-smashing, trend-setting evangelist of rock ‘n’ roll,” writes the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, which made him a member of its charter class of 1986, alongside the genre’s greatest early icons, including Chuck Berry, Buddy Holly, Elvis Presley and Little Richard.
“Freed was the most effective proselytizer rock and roll has ever known.” — Rock & Roll Hall of Fame
Freed, among other claims to fame, is credited with popularizing the phrase rock ‘n’ roll as its aggressive beats and sexually suggestive lyrics swept over American radio in the 1950s and soon conquered pop culture.
“Freed was the most effective proselytizer rock ‘n’ roll has ever known,” writes the Rock Hall.

American disc jockey and radio performer Alan Freed (1921-1965), who popularized the term rock ‘n’ roll, sits in a 1010 WINS sound studio during a radio broadcast, 1950s. (Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
“Spreading the word from a radio pulpit that kicked off nightly to the strains of Freddie Mitchell’s ‘Moondog Boogie,’ Freed kept time to the music by smashing his hand on a telephone book. He first conquered Cleveland over WJW, and then moved his show to New York’s flagship WINS.”
Freed’s celebrity soon extended far beyond the radio studio.
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He appeared in numerous movies that popularized rock’s earliest stars, including “Go, Johnny, Go,” alongside American music icons Berry, Jackie Wilson and Ritchie Valens.
The movie was released in June 1959, four months after Valens was killed in a plane crash with Buddy Holly and the Big Bopper.

Chuck Berry performs his “duck walk” as he plays his electric hollowbody guitar at the TAMI Show on Dec. 29, 1964 at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium in Santa Monica, California. Rock promoter and DJ Alan Freed appeared with Berry and other rock icons in the 1959 movie “Go, Johnny Go” — the title taken from the lyrics of Berry’s rock hit “Johnny B. Goode.” (Photo by Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)
Freed has also been celebrated on TV and in various rock songs.
“He had an amazing ability to find new music and new artists,” Jason Hanley, vice president of education for the Rock Hall, told Fox New Digital.
“He got rock ‘n’ roll to reach a much bigger audience than it would have otherwise.”
“There was a sense of dynamite going off.” — Glenn Gass, rock ‘n’ roll historian
Freed’s career ended in disgrace, however.
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He was indicted on charges of tax fraud in 1964 and became the center of the “Payola” scandal in which radio stations were accused of taking money from record labels to play their music.
The legend of the Moondog Coronation Ball, and Freed’s ability to see the future of music, changed global pop culture forever.

Photo of marquee at unspecified theater promoting a rock ‘n’ roll concert hosted by DJ and early rock figure Alan Freed. The marquee also highlights “Don’t Knock the Rock,” a 1956 movie about a town that bans rock ‘n’ roll. (Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)
Metallica, Motley Crue and AC/DC, among others, played before 1.6 million people in Moscow in 1991, in what’s widely proclaimed the largest rock ‘n’ roll concert in history.
“Crocodile Rock” crooner Elton John is in the midst of his COVID-interrupted global Farewell Yellow Brick Road tour.
Billboard in January proclaimed it the biggest selling concert tour of all time. It’s netted $818 million across 278 concerts with dates still on the docket.
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Cleveland rose to prominence as a birthplace of rock ‘n’ roll, and became home of Rock Hall of Fame in 1995, thanks largely to Freed’s impact, said Hanley.
“Cleveland has always been a rock ‘n’ roll town, and a gospel town, an R&B town and one of the great music towns,” he said.
Kerry J. Byrne is a lifestyle reporter with Fox News Digital.
Lifestyle
TikTok duo goes viral for their dating tips: ‘Excuse My Grandma’ explores changing relationship ideals
Published
4 hours agoon
March 22, 2023
The dating scene today often involves social media, apps and more — making the generation gap even more stark when examining how previous generations met, fell in love and got married.
One East Coast family is talking about those differences and using social media to share smart life tips that may never go out of style.
Kim Murstein is a 27-year-old New York native who went to live with her “Grandma Gail” — Gail Rudnick, 80 — in Palm Beach, Florida, during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Rudnick and her husband of 60 years, known to the family as Poppy, moved from New York City to Florida upon retiring.
While in Florida, Murstein continued to date as she had been doing in the city.

Murstein was 24 and living in New York City when the pandemic hit. She decided to spend more time in Florida with her grandparents. (Kim Murstein)
In an interview with Fox News Digital, Murstein recalled realizing that she and her grandmother, who has been married for 60 years, had very different dating rules. (SEE the duo discuss their very different views in the video at the top of this article.)
“We realized all the generational differences from the last time she was single, in the ‘50s and ’60s,” she said.
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Together, they started a podcast — “Excuse My Grandma.”
The pair discuss various dating differences, with Grandma Gail sharing the ideas and values she feels stand the test of time.

“Excuse My Grandma” has over 400,000 followers on TikTok and over 170,000 followers on Instagram. (Kim Murstein)
Soon after, the duo’s social media platforms took off. They now have over 400,000 TikTok followers and 170,000 Instagram followers.
“I think sometimes you’ve just got to give it a little time.”
One of the things the two women disagree on is how many dates a person should go on with the same companion before making a judgment call about the partner.
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While Murstein has an estimated two-to-three date rule, Grandma Gail believes a person should go on about 10 dates before deciding whether or not to pursue a serious relationship.
“You don’t even know what the guy is like on the first, second or even third date because everybody’s on their best behavior,” the grandmother of four said.

Murstein (left) and Grandma Gail have a special bond — one they say has only grown since they started doing a podcast together. (Kim Murstein)
“I think sometimes you’ve just got to give it a little time,” she suggested.
But what’s Grandma Gail’s biggest piece of dating advice?
Don’t look for perfection.
“Perfection is an idealized thing … but that’s not reality,” she said. She pointed out that this realization comes with maturity.
Murstein, however, calls herself “a dreamer” — and spends time idealizing romantic comedies from the 1950s.
“I have my own idea of what that [perfection] is, and I don’t think I want to settle for something less than that,” she said.

Grandmother and granddaughter share dating tips and other advice on their social media accounts. (Kim Murstein)
Although Murstein has taught Grandma Gail about modern dating apps and terms such as “ghosting,” Grandma Gail still doesn’t like some of the dating choices that her granddaughter makes.
Grandma Gail thinks young people today overthink and overcomplicate dating, she said. Instead, she recommends that single people go out and have fun without the stress of having a serious relationship.
The two have always had a close relationship, they noted. They lived near each other when Grandma Gail and her husband were still in Manhattan.

“Excuse My Grandma” is a podcast and social media brand that Murstein and Grandma Gail created from real-life events in Murstein’s dating life. (Kim Murstein)
“We lived very close to each other in Manhattan, and I saw her in all stages of growing up,” she recalled.
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The grandmother said that working together now has only deepened the bond that the two share.
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“She’s a terrific young woman, great head on her shoulders, and she knows who to date and not to date,” said her grandmother.
Brittany Kasko is a lifestyle production assistant with Fox News Digital.
Lifestyle
On this day in history, March 20, 1854, Republican Party founded to oppose expansion of slavery
Published
2 days agoon
March 20, 2023
Brit Hume previews new Fox Nation show
Fox News senior political analyst Brit Hume weighs in on President Biden and Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s meeting to discuss the debt ceiling and shares his new Fox Nation show ‘American Presidents’ on ‘Special Report.’
The Republican Party, forged from of a coalition of political forces to oppose the advance of slavery in the American west, was created in Ripon, Wisconsin, on this day in history, March 20, 1854.
“The Republican Party grew out of resistance to the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854, which overrode the Missouri Compromise and allowed slavery to spread into Western territory by popular sovereignty,” writes PBS American Experience in its history of political parties in the United States.
“‘Anti-Nebraska’ men included anti-slavery Whigs, Democrats, Free Soilers, reformers, and abolitionists.”
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Alvin Earle Bovay, an attorney and co-founder of Ripon College, was incensed by the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act in the Senate in March and led a meeting at the town’s Congregational Church.
“This group, considering possible passage of the Kansas-Nebraska bill then being debated in Congress, resolved that steps should be taken to form a new Republican Party to appeal to all those who opposed slavery in the territories,” writes the Wisconsin Historical Society.

The birthplace of the Republican Party in Ripon, Wisconsin. The movement that would create the anti-slavery party first met here on March 20, 1854. (MPI/Getty Images)
“Cries of ‘Repeal! Repeal!’ resounded throughout the nation, following the Ripon, Wisconsin meeting of March 20, 1854 in demonstration against the ‘Kansas-Nebraska Swindle,’” The Jefferson Banner of Jefferson Co., Wisconsin wrote years later of the transformative moment in American political history.
Bovay was reportedly the first to call the assembly the “Republican” party.
“Cries of ‘Repeal! Repeal!’ resounded throughout the nation, following the Ripon, Wisconsin meeting of March 20, 1854.” — The Jefferson Banner
His moniker found a powerful ally in influential newspaper publisher Horace Greeley.
“We should not care much whether those thus united against slavery were designated ‘Whig,’ ‘Free Democrat’ or something else,” Greeley wrote in his New-York Tribune in June 1854.
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“Though we think some simple name like ‘Republican’ would more fitly designate those who had united to restore the Union to its true mission of champion and promulgator of Liberty rather than propagandist of slavery.”
The Kansas-Nebraska Act was signed into law by President Franklin Pierce on May 30 amid increasing hostility in the halls of power in Washington, D.C., and amid increasing groundswell of opposition.

Horace Greeley, American newspaper editor known especially for his vigorous articulation of the North’s antislavery sentiments during the 1850s. He is remembered often for his quote, “Go West, Young Man.” (Getty Images)
“Local meetings were held throughout the North in 1854 and 1855. The first national convention of the new party was held in Pittsburgh on Feb. 22, 1856,” writes the Wisconsin Republican Party in its online history.
The party held its first nominating convention in Philadelphia in July 1856. It selected California explorer John C. Fremont as the first Republican to run for president.
“‘Republican’ would more fitly designate those who had united to restore the Union to its true mission of champion and promulgator of Liberty” — Horace Greeley
He lost to Pennsylvania Democrat James Buchanan, but made an impressive showing for the upstart party founded only two years earlier.
Fremont won 11 of 31 states and earned 33% of the popular vote, finishing ahead of former President Millard Fillmore of New York, who represented the short-lived Know Nothing Party.

Campaign banner for presidential candidate Abraham Lincoln and running mate Hannibal Hamlin. (VCG Wilson/Corbis via Getty Images)
The true impact of the Republican earthquake was felt when the party’s candidate, Abraham Lincoln, won the presidency in the hotly contested four-man race of 1860.
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Democrat-led pro-slavery states quickly seceded from the Union in response to the Republican victory, launching the nation into the Civil War.
Republicans after the war pushed through in rapid order the 13th, 14th and 15th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution. Collectively known as the Reconstruction Amendments, they abolished slavery, provided equal protection under the law and guaranteed voting rights.

Titled “Scene at the polls in Cheyenne,” this colorized engraving shows a group of women as they line up on the sidewalk to cast their ballots through an open window, in Cheyenne, Wyoming Territory, 1888. (Stock Montage/Getty Images)
Democrats regained power in the years after the Civil War.
The Republicans reportedly earned the name Grand Old Party in 1888, after winning back the White House from Democrat Grover Cleveland.
“Let us be thankful that under the rule of the Grand Old Party … these United States will resume the onward and upward march which the election of Grover Cleveland in 1884 partially arrested,” the Chicago Tribune wrote in what some sources say is the first use of the GOP label.
The Republican Party led the fight for woman’s suffrage, first in the Wyoming Territories in 1869 and then pushing through the 19th Amendment after sweeping to power in both houses of Congress in November 1918.
The newly Republican-led Senate approved the amendment in June 1919 and sent it on the states “after 41 years of debate,” notes the chamber’s official history.
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The Republican Party later pushed through the Civil Rights Acts of 1964 in alliance with Democrat President Lyndon B. Johnson, who split with his own party to support the bill.

Illustration entitled “THE CRADLE OF THE G.O.P.,” depicting the first Republican convention held at Lafayette Hall in Pittsburgh on Feb. 22, 1856. Shows two views: one of hall’s exterior, one of interior during proceedings. (Getty Images)
The Civil Rights Act passed despite a ferocious 72-day filibuster in the Senate led by a collection of Democrat icons.
Among those senators who staunchly opposed the Civil Rights Act: Al Gore Sr. of Tennessee (father of the future vice president), J. William Fulbright of Arkansas (mentor of future president Bill Clinton), Strom Thurmond of South Carolina and Robert Byrd of West Virginia.
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“The Republican Party has a rich history of fighting for the rights of all Americans, from opposing slavery to giving women the right to vote to fostering individual rights across every group in our nation today,” A.J. Catsimatidis, vice chairperson of the New York State Republican Party, told Fox News Digital.
Kerry J. Byrne is a lifestyle reporter with Fox News Digital.

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