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Munirah Chronicle <[log in to unmask]>
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Tue, 22 Jun 2004 14:11:52 -0400
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*                   Today in Black History - June 22                    *

1772 - Slavery is outlawed in England.

1868 - Congress readmits the state of Arkansas on the condition that it 
        would never change its constitution to disenfranchise African 
        Americans.

1909 - Katherine Dunham is born in Glen Ellyn, Illinois (Dupage County).
        She will become one of the revolutionary forces in modern dance 
        through her introduction and use of African and Caribbean styles.  
        Successful on the stage and in movies, including "Stormy Weather",
in 
        the late 1960's, she will form the Katherine Dunham Center for the 
        Performing Arts and in 1983 will be awarded Kennedy Center honors. 
        "She will spend her later years residing in East St. Louis,
Illinois.

1937 - Joe Louis knocks out James Braddock to become the heavyweight boxing 
        champion of the world.  The fight is won in eight rounds before
45,000 
        fans, the largest audience, to date, to witness a fight.
         
1938 - Joe Louis defeats German boxer Max Schmeling in a rematch of their 
        1936 fight and retains his world heavyweight crown.  Because of the 
        Nazi persecution of Jews in Europe and Hitler's disdain for people
of 
        African descent, the fight will take on mythic proportion, with
Louis 
        seen by many as fighting to uphold democracy and the race.  He 
        succeeds convincingly, ending the fight in 2:04 of the first round
at 
        Yankee Stadium. 

1941 - Ed Bradley is born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.  A CBS 
        correspondent covering the Vietnam conflict, Bradley will become co-
        anchor of CBS' "60 Minutes" and win at least six Emmy awards.
	
1947 - Octavia Butler is born in Pasadena, California.  She will become a 
        science fiction writer and winner of the Hugo Award for excellence
in 
        science fiction writing in 1984.

1949 - Ezzard Charles defeats Jersey Joe Walcott to win the heavyweight 
        championship of the world.

1962 - Clyde 'The Glide' Drexler is born in Houston, Texas.  He will become 
        a basketball star at the University of Houston and will lead
Houston's 
        "Phi Slamma Jamma" team to the NCAA Final Four two years in a row, 
        1983 and 1984.  He will be drafted by the NBA Portland Trailblazers,

        where he will play twelve seasons, and will lead them to the NBA 
        Finals twice.  After being traded to the Houston Rockets, he will
join 
        his teammate from the University of Houston, Hakeem Olajuwon and
help 
        the Rockets win the NBA championship in 1995. After retiring from
the 
        NBA, he will become the head coach at his alma mater, the University

        of Houston.	

1963 - "Fingertips - Pt 2" by Little Stevie Wonder is released. It becomes 
        Wonder's first number one single on August 10th. Stevie Wonder will 
        have 46 hits on the pop and Rhythm & Blues music charts between 1963

        and 1987.  Eight of those hits will make it to number one. 

1989 - The government of Angola and the anti-Communist rebels of the UNITA 
        movement agree to a formal truce in their 14-year-old civil war.

1990 - African National Congress leader Nelson Mandela, speaking before the
        United Nations, states that a democratic, nonracial South Africa is 
        "within our grasp." 

1991 - "Kaleidoscope", an exhibit of the work of over 30 African American 
        photographers, opens at the Anacostia Museum in Washington, DC.
Among 
        those exhibited are masters Addison Scurlock and Robert Scurlock as 
        well as contemporary photographers Matthew Lewis, Sam Yette, Sharon 
        Farmer, and Brian Jones.

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