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The Munirah Chronicle <[log in to unmask]>
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The MUNIRAH Chronicle of Black Historical Events & Facts <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 27 Jan 2011 02:14:52 -0500
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*                 Today in Black History - January 27                *

1869 - Will Marion Cook, who will become a noted composer and 
	conductor, is born in Washington, DC.  Studying the violin 
	at age 13, at 15 he will win a scholarship to study at 
	the Berlin Conservatory. Among other accomplishments, he 
	will introduce syncopated ragtime to New York City 
	theatergoers in his operetta "Clorinda." Duke Ellington 
	will call him the "master of all masters of our people."
	He will join the ancestors in New York in 1944.

1894 - Frederick Douglass 'Fritz' Pollard is born in Chicago, 
	Illinois. He will become a football star at Brown 
	University in 1915 and lead them to the first Rose Bowl 
	game, played on January 1, 1916. This will make him the 
	first African American to play in the Rose Bowl.  He will
	become the first African American named an All-American.  
	After leaving Brown University, he will become one of the 
	first African Americans to play professional football and 
	will become the first African American quarterback and the
	first African American head coach, both with the NFL Akron 
	Indians.  When the NFL bans African American players from 
	its ranks in 1933, Pollard will organize the first African 
	American professional football team, the Brown Bombers of 
	Harlem. After fifteen years in professional football, 
	Pollard will establish the first all African American 
	investment company in the country, and run New York City's 
	first African American tabloid newspaper.  He will also be 
	involved in the production of some of America's first 
	all-African American movies. He will join the ancestors on 
	May 11,1986.

1915 - The United States Marines occupy Haiti.  This occupation 
	will continue until 1934.  Americans will serve as officials 
	of the Haitian government and control its finances, police 
	force, and public works. 

1930 - Bobby 'Blue' Bland is born in Rosemark, Tennessee.  He will 
	become a singer and start his career as a member of The 
	Beale Streeters with Johnny Ace.  He will become a solo 
	artist with the Malaco label and record "That's the Way Love
	Is," "Call on Me," "Turn on Your Love Light," and "Ain't 
	Nothin' You Can Do." 

1952 - Ralph Ellison's powerful novel "Invisible Man" wins the 
	National Book Award.

1961 - Leontyne Price makes her debut at the Metropolitan Opera 
	House in New York City.  She sings in the role of Leonora 
	in "Il Trovatore".  Price is the seventh African American 
	singer to make a debut at the Met.  Marian Anderson was the 
	first in 1955.

1972 - Mahalia Jackson, gospel singer, joins the ancestors in 
	Evergreen Park, Illinois at the age of 60.  Born in New 
	Orleans, Louisiana, she began her singing career with the 
	Salem Baptist Choir in Chicago, Illinois.  She achieved 
	national fame with her recording of "Move on Up A Little 
	Higher," which sold over a million copies. Many considered 
	her rich contralto voice the best in gospel music.

1972 - In Columbia, South Carolina, the white and African American 
	United Methodist conferences of South Carolina -- separated 
	since the Civil War -- vote in their respective meetings to 
	adopt a plan of union. 

1984 - Carl Lewis betters his own two-year-old record by 9-1/4 
	inches when he sets a new, world, indoor-record with a long 
	jump mark of 28 feet, 10-1/4 inches in New York City. 

1984 - Singer Michael Jackson's hair catches on fire during the 
	filming of a Pepsi commercial in Los Angeles at the Shrine 
	Auditorium. Pyrotechnics did not operate on cue, injuring 
	the singer. Jackson is hospitalized for a few days and fans 
	from around the world send messages of concern.

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