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  1. National Anti-Vaccination League. "Death the Vaccinator", published by the London Society for the Abolition of Compulsory Vaccination in the late 1800s. The National Anti-Vaccination League (NAVL) was a British anti-vaccination organization that was formed in 1896 from earlier smaller organizations. Historically, the League had opposed ...

  2. As the oldest vaccine, the smallpox vaccine has gone through several generations of medical technology. From 1796 to the 1880s, the vaccine was transmitted from one person to another through arm-to-arm vaccination. Smallpox vaccine was successfully maintained in cattle starting in the 1840s, and calf lymph vaccine became the leading smallpox vaccine in the 1880s. First-generation vaccines ...

  3. Yakut revolt (1921) Categories: 1922 in military history. 20th-century conflicts by year. 1922 in international relations. 1920s conflicts. Hidden category: Commons category link is on Wikidata.

  4. Wikipedia is written by volunteer editors and hosted by the Wikimedia Foundation, a non-profit organization that also hosts a range of other volunteer projects : Commons. Free media repository. MediaWiki. Wiki software development. Meta-Wiki. Wikimedia project coordination. Wikibooks. Free textbooks and manuals.

    • February 2, 1922
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    • February 11, 1922
    The first complete printing of the controversial and groundbreaking modernist novel Ulysses, by Irish writer James Joyce, appeared in a bookshop window, printed by the French publisher Darantiere a...
    The Checker Cab Manufacturing Company was founded in Kalamazoo, Michigan by 28-year-old Russian immigrant Morris Markin through an acquisition by his own Markin Automobile Company of Commonwealth M...
    The papal conclave, to elect a successor to the late Pope Benedict XV, began in Rome as 53 of the 60 Roman Catholic cardinals assembled at the Sistine Chapel.
    The Soviet newspaper Pravda published the results of a survey among its readers, who opposed the decision by Vladimir Lenin to attend an economic conference in Genoain April. According to the poll,...
    The boundaries between the future republics of Israel, Syria and Lebanon were agreed upon by a French and British committee which recommended to their respective nations the areas for the League of...
    The second homicide trial of Fatty Arbuckle ended in a hung jury.
    The U.S. state of Alabama got its first licensed radio station, WGH in Montgomery.
    Born: Willi Reschke, German Luftwaffe flying ace with 27 aerial victories in World War II; in Mühlow, Brandenburg Province, Germany(now Miłów in Poland) (d. 2017)
    A mob in British India killed 22 policemen by setting fire to the police station in the town of Chauri Chaura and then trapping the men inside. The mob attack came after the police had fired on a c...
    The Ford Motor Company announced its purchase of the financially-ailing Lincoln Motor Company in "the most dramatic receiver's sale in the history of Detroit", as the mass producer of affordable au...
    At the Conference on the Limitation of Armament, Japan agreed to withdraw troops from Shandong, restore German interests in Qingdao and give the Jinanrailway back to China.
    Ford bought the Lincoln Motor Companyfor $8 million.
    The first issue of Reader's Digest, dated February 1922, was published by husband-and-wife team DeWitt Wallace and Lila Bell Wallacewith the objective of presenting humor and "condensed" versions o...
    The first round of voting was held for the 15-member Landtag of Liechtenstein. In previous years, the ruling monarch, the Prince, was allowed to appoint three members and the other 12 were elected....
    Born: Lafran Pane, Indonesian professor and founder of the Muslim Students' Association; in Padangsidempuan, North Sumatra, Dutch East Indies (d. 1991)
    Died: Frances Bowes-Lyon, 89, British noblewoman and grandmother of Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, fiancee of Albert, Duke of York, the future King George VI
    The papal conclave elected the Archbishop of Milan Achille Ratti as the new pope. He took the name Pius XI. At the close of voting the day before, Giovanni Tacci Porcelli had become the front runne...
    The Conference on the Limitation of Armament between the world's major nations ended in Washington, D.C., with the signing of the Washington Naval Treaty and the Nine-Power Treatyon China.
    For the eighth time in less than a year, the cabinet of Portugal was reorganized, with António Maria da Silva becoming Prime Ministerfor the second time.
    In Soviet Russia, the Cheka was dissolved and replaced by the State Political Directorate.
    El Salvador and Honduras quit the short-lived Federation of Central America.
    Marie Curie was elected to France's Académie Nationale de Médecine, marking the first time that a woman had been elevated to membership into any of the French Academy of Sciencesdisciplines.
    King George V opened a new session of British Parliament. In his speech from the thronehe welcomed the agreements reached in the Washington Conference.
    An attempt by aviator Ray Parer and co-pilot Mark Parer to make the first airplane flight around the perimeter of Australia ended less than four months after it began, when the Parers' Farman F.E.2...
    The Irish Republican Army kidnapped 42 prominent loyalists and Ulster Special Constabulary constables and held them hostage. On the orders of Free State Chairman Michael Collins, 26 of the men were...
    The former U.S. Army transport ship SS Northern Pacific, recently sold to the Pacific Steamship Company for conversion to a liner, caught fire shortly after midnight while at sea near Cape May, New...
    U.S. President Warren G. Harding acquired the first radio receiver to be installed in the White House.
    Born:
    The World War Foreign Debts Commission Act, also called the "Allied Debt Refunding Bill", was signed into law by U.S. President Warren G. Harding, providing for a Refunding Commission of five membe...
    Born:
    The value of the Soviet Union's currency, the rouble, dropped further on private currency exchanges by almost 50 percent, falling from the official exchange rate of 280,000 roubles per U.S. dollar...
    The science of polarography was invented by Czechoslovakian chemist Jaroslav Heyrovskýwith his successful test of a machine of his own design to analyze and measure electrochemical reactions.
    U.S. President Harding appeared in person at the United States Senate with the seven treaties signed at the disarmament conference and urged the Senate to take prompt action on ratifying them. In a...
    Irish Republican Army volunteers attacked an Ulster Special Constabulary patrol in Clady, County Tyrone. One constable was shot dead.
    The American Telephone & Telegraph Company (AT&T) announced its plan to create the first nationwide radio broadcasting network in the United States, installing additional telephone cables to its ne...
    Representatives of the United States and Japan signed a treaty defining American rights on the South Pacific island group of Yap, allowing the U.S. equal access to the use of cable and radio statio...
    There was an armed confrontation in the Irish town of Clones between the Irish Republican Army (IRA) and the Ulster Special Constabulary (USC). A unit of armed Special Constables were traveling fro...
  5. The establishment of Israel, and the war that followed and preceded it, led to the displacement of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians who became refugees, sparking a decades-long conflict between Israel and the Palestinian people. [5] The Palestinians seek to establish their own independent state in at least one part of historic Palestine. Israeli defense of its own borders, control over ...

  6. The president of the United States is the head of state and head of government of the United States, [1] indirectly elected to a four-year term via the Electoral College. [2] The officeholder leads the executive branch of the federal government and is the commander-in-chief of the United States Armed Forces. [3] Since the office was established in 1789, 45 men have served in 46 presidencies ...

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