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Munirah Chronicle <[log in to unmask]>
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Thu, 25 Jan 2007 09:33:00 -0500
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*                  Today in Black History - January 25                *

 

1851 - Sojourner Truth addresses the first African American Women's 

            Rights Convention in Akron, Ohio.

 

1890 - The National Afro-American League is founded at an organizing

            meeting in Chicago, Illinois.  Joseph Price, the president of

            Livingston College, is elected the first president of what 

            will come to be considered a pioneering African American 

            protest organization.

            

1938 - Jamesetta Hawkins is born in Los Angeles, California.  She will

            become a rhythm and blues singer known as "Etta James." She 

            will be described as "one of the great forces in American 

            Music."  She will become a star scoring her first national pop

            hit, "Roll With Me, Henry", at age sixteen, and be recognized 

            as a master in the fields of blues, R&B, jazz, and pop, 

            crossing genres time and again.  Between 1955 and 1975, Etta 

            will create a dozen Top-10 Rhythm & Blues hits and more than 

            25 chart hits. They will include such soulful performances as 

            "All I Could Do Was Cry" (1960), "At Last" (1961), "Trust in 

            Me" (1961), "Stop the Wedding" (1962), "Tell Mama" (1967), and

            "Security" (1968).  She will be inducted into the Rock and Roll

            Hall of Fame in 1993.  She will be nominated for six Grammy 

            Awards and will win the award for her 1994 recording of 

            "Mystery Lady," saluting Billie Holiday.

 

1942 - Carl Eller is born.  He will become a professional football

            player, spending many of his years with the Minnesota Vikings.

            On the Vikings team, he will play in four Super Bowl games 

            (IV, VIII, IX, XI), in losing efforts. 

 

1944 - Eugene Washington is born.  He will become a professional 

            football player and go to Super Bowl IV with the Minnesota 

            Vikings. 

 

1950 - Gloria Naylor is born in New York City.  She will become a 

            Jehovah Witnesses minister and 'pioneer' over a period of 

            seven years.  After leaving the Witnesses and suffering a 

            nervous breakdown, she will read Toni Morrison's "The Bluest 

            Eye", and be inspired to become a writer.  She will complete 

            her Bachelor's and Master's degrees and become a major writer 

            and is best known for her work, "The Women of Brewster Place."

            

1966 - Constance Baker Motley becomes the first African American woman

            to be appointed to a federal judgeship.  

 

1972 - Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm begins her campaign for 

            President of the United States.  Although she will ultimately 

            be unsuccessful, she will make known the concerns of African

            Americans across the country.

 

1980 - Black Entertainment Television, better known as BET, begins

            broadcasting from Washington, DC.  Robert L. Johnson, who

            established the company with a $ 15,000 personal loan, will 

            make BET one of the most successful cable television networks,

            with 25 million subscribers by its tenth anniversary and, in 

            1991, the first African American-owned company to be listed on

            the New York Stock Exchange.

 

1989 - Michael Jordan scores his 10,000th NBA point in his 5th season,

            the second fastest NBA climb to that position behind Wilt

            Chamberlain.

 

1999 - Jury selection begins in Jasper, Texas, in the trial of white 

            supremacist John William King, charged in the dragging death 

            of African American James Byrd Jr.


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