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Sun, 25 Apr 2004 23:28:21 -0400
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*               Today in Black History - April 24               *

1867 - The first national meeting of the Ku Klux Klan is held at the
        Maxwell House in Nashville, Tennessee.

1867 - African American demonstrators stage ride-ins on Richmond,
        Virginia streetcars.  Troops were mobilized to restore order.

1884 - The Medico-Chirurgical Society of the District of Columbia is
        founded.  It is the first African American medical society.

1886 - Augustine Tolton is ordained as a Catholic priest after studying
        at the College of the Propagation of the Faith in Rome for five
        years.  Tolton will distinguish himself as a speaker and a pastor
        at Catholic churches in New Jersey, New York City, Chicago, and
        Quincy, Illinois.

1895 - The National Association of Colored Physicians, Dentists and
        Pharmacists is organized at the First Congregational Church in
        Atlanta, Georgia.  It will change its name to the National
        Medical Association in 1903.

1937 - Joseph "Joe" Henderson is born in Lima, Ohio. He will make his
        initial reputation in what might be called Blue Note Records'
        second classic phase in the early 1960s, when a new generation of
        young musicians began to extend the basic hard bop framework of
        the label's seminal 1950s output in more experimental directions.
        He will be one of the players at the core of that development,
        both as a leader and in recordings as a sideman with artists like
        Kenny Dorham, Lee Morgan, Andrew Hill, McCoy Tyner, Larry Young
        and Horace Silver, among others. His firm grasp of the root idiom
        combined with his experimental nature made him an ideal exponent
        of the new style, which did not abandon jazz structures in as
        radical a fashion as the free jazz movement. He will join the
        ancestors on June 30, 2001 in San Francisco.

1943 - Speaking on race relations and racial equality at Wayne State
        University, Langston Hughes says, "I am for the Christianity that
        fights poll tax, race discrimination, lynching, injustice and
        inequality of the masses. I don't feel that religion should be
        used to beat down Jews [and] Negroes, and to persecute other
        minority groups.

1944 - In Smith v. Allwright, the Supreme Court rules that a "white
        primary" law that excludes African Americans from voting is a
        violation of the 15th Amendment and thus unconstitutional.

1944 - George Herriman joins the ancestors in Los Angeles, California.
        He had been a successful cartoonist who was the author of the
        comic strip "Krazy Kat."  The comic strip ran successfully from
        1913 until Herriman's death.

1948 - James Melvin Washington is born in Knoxville, Tennessee.  He will
        become a leading theologian whose emphasis was the African
        American religious experience.  He will be a professor at the
        Union Theological Seminary in New York from 1975 until he joins
        the ancestors in 1997. His published works will include
        "Frustrated Fellowship: The Black Baptist Quest for Social Power"
        (1986), "A Testament of Hope: The Essential Writings of Martin
        Luther King Jr." (1986), and "Conversations with God: Two
        Centuries of Prayers by African Americans" (1994).

1954 - Wesley Cook is born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.  He will become
        an activist during his teenage years and will be arrested and
        beaten for demonstrating against presidential candidate governor
        George Wallace of Alabama. He will be a founding member of the
        Philadelphia chapter of the Black Panther Party in 1968 and will
        be known as Mumia Abu-Jamal. After spending the summer months in
        1970 working on the BPP newspaper in California, he will return
        to Philadelphia to work as a radio journalist with the Corporation
        for Public Broadcasting and will have his own talk show on station
        WUHY. He will lose his position as a radio journalist after his
        continual criticism of mayor Frank Rizzo and specifically his
        coverage of the police treatment of the militant organization MOVE.
        While working as a taxicab driver, he will be accused of killing
        a Philadelphia policeman, Daniel Faulkner, in 1981.  Faulkner is
        killed in an altercation with Mumia's brother, after wounding
        Mumia. Mumia is presumed to be the shooter and will be convicted
        of first-degree murder and sentenced to death.  This verdict is
        handed down ignoring testimony of witnesses who saw the killer
        flee and irregularities during the trial.  On death row since the
        trial, Mumia will have numerous appeals turned down. His case will
        attract worldwide attention as a racist miscarriage of justice.

1965 - An armed revolt against the dictatorship in the Dominican Republic is
        ended with an invasion by United States troops.  Participating in the
        revolt is Maximiliano Gomez Horatio, the leader of the Dominican
        Popular Movement.

1972 - James M. Rodger, Jr., of Durham, North Carolina, is honored in a
        White House ceremony as National Teacher of the Year.  He is the
        first African American to receive the honor.

1972 - Robert Wedgeworth is named director of the American Library
        Association. He is the first African American to head the
        organization.

1993 - Oliver Tambo joins the ancestors in Johannesburg, South Africa at
        the age of 75.  He was the former president of the African National
        Congress (ANC), law partner of Nelson Mandela and an important
        anti-apartheid leader.

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