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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:
Sat, 8 Sep 2018 00:12:31 -0400
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*		Today in Black History - September 8           *

1866 - Charles Harrison Mason is born on the Prior Farm near 
	Memphis, Tennessee. He will be inspired by the 
	autobiography of evangelist Amanda Berry Smith in 1893.
	He and Charles Price Jones will form a fellowship of
	churches, named "Church of God." He will rename the
	group the "Church of God in Christ," to distinguish the
	group from the other "Church of God" forming around that
	time. After attending the "Azusa Street Revival" in Los
	Angeles, California, he will adopt the new Pentecostal
	teachings of Elder William Seymour, such as 'speaking in 
	tongues.' After the opposition of Charles Jones in these
	new beliefs, they will split and he will win the legal 
	rights to the "Church of God in Christ" name. He will be
	elected General Overseer of the Church in Memphis, 
	Tennessee in 1907, later becoming the Senior Bishop (now
	referred to as Presiding Bishop). He will lead the COGIC
	group of churches until he joins the ancestors on November 
	17, 1961. At that time, the Church membership totals
	around 400,000. Afterwards, the Church will grow 
	exponentially. As of 2016, Church of God In Christ will
	have over 12,000 churches in the United States with over 
	5 million members. Internationally, COGIC can be found in 
	60 nations on five continents including Jamaica, Cuba, 
	Mexico, Belize, Brazil, Chile, Argentina, United Kingdom, 
	South Africa, Liberia, Nigeria, Germany, Pakistan, India, 
	Japan, South Korea, and Australia. Its worldwide membership
	is estimated to be between six and eight million, comprising 
	more than 15,000 congregations throughout the world.
 
1875 - The governor of Mississippi requests federal troops to 
	protect African American voters. Attorney General Edward
	Pierrepont refuses the request and says "the whole 
	public are tired of these annual autumnal outbreaks in 
	the South..."

1925 - Ossian Sweet, a prominent Detroit doctor, is arrested on 
	murder charges after shots are fired into a mob in front 
	of the Sweet home in a previously all-white area. Sweet 
	is defended by Clarence Darrow, who won an acquittal in 
	the second trial.

1940 - Willie Tyler is born in Red Level, Alabama. He will 
	become a ventriloquist, comedian and actor. Most of the 
	time, he is credited as Willie Tyler and Lester or Willie 
	Tyler & Lester. He will appear in many television 
	commercials, sitcoms, and movies. He will get his first 
	big break in 1972 on Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In. He will
	serve as host of the popular Saturday morning children's 
	anthology series The ABC Weekend Special throughout the 
	early 1980s. He will appear in the 1978 film "Coming Home." 
	In addition, he will appear in television commercials in 
	the 1980s for McDonald's and Toyota. He will appear as 
	himself in the 2004 BET Comedy Awards, Frank McKlusky, 
	C.I., For Da Love of Money, In the House, the 4th Annual 
	Black Gold Awards, The 1st Annual Soul Train Music Awards, 
	Motown Returns to the Apollo, Lou Rawls Parade of Stars, 
	Powerhouse, The White Shadow, American Bandstand, 
	Vegetable Soup, The Flip Wilson Show, The Statler Brothers 
	Show, The Hollywood Palace, Match Game and Family Feud. On 
	September 18, 2006, he will be the first ventriloquist to 
	appear on the Late Show with David Letterman's 
	Ventriloquist Week.

1956 - Maurice Edward "Mo" Cheeks is born in Chicago, Illinois and 
	will attend DuSable High School. He will attend West Texas 
	State University from 1974 to 1978. He will be an all-
	Missouri Valley Conference player for three straight seasons, 
	as he averages 16.8 points per game and shoots nearly 57% for 
	his collegiate career. He is currently the third leading 
	scorer in WTSU/WTAM history. After college, he will be 
	selected as the 36th pick in the second round of the 1978 NBA 
	draft by the Philadelphia 76ers. He will play 15 years as a 
	point guard in the NBA, including 11 with the Philadelphia 
	76ers, earning four trips to the NBA All-Star Game, and helping 
	the 76ers earn three trips to the NBA Finals in a four-year 
	span in the early 1980s (1980, 1982, and 1983), including one 
	NBA championship in 1983. While starting at point guard for a 
	Sixers team that at times included stars such as Julius Erving, 
	Moses Malone, Andrew Toney, and Charles Barkley, he will be well 
	regarded for his unselfish team play and excellent defensive 
	skills. As a result, he will be named to four straight NBA All-
	Defensive squads from 1983 to 1986, and earn a spot on the second 
	team in 1987. In NBA history, he will rank fifth all-time in 
	steals and eleventh all-time in assists. At the time of his 
	retirement from the NBA in 1993, he will be the NBA all-time 
	leader in steals and ranked fifth all-time in assists. He will 
	average 11.7 points per game for his career and notch over 2 steals 
	per contest. Since 1994, he has been an assistant coach and head 
	coach of various NBA teams. On March 31, 2018, he will be inducted 
	into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame as a player. 

1957 - Tennis champion, Althea Gibson, becomes the first African American 
	athlete to win a U.S. national tennis championship.

1965 - Dorothy Dandridge, nominated for an Oscar for her performance in 
	"Carmen Jones," joins the ancestors at the age of 41 in Hollywood, 
	California.

1968 - Black Panther Huey Newton is convicted of voluntary manslaughter in 
	the fatal shooting of an Oakland policeman. He will later begin a 
	2 to l5-year jail sentence.

1968 - Saundra Williams is crowned the first Miss Black America in a contest 
	held exclusively for African American women in Atlantic City, New 
	Jersey.

1973 - Hank Aaron sets the record for most Home Runs in 1 league (709). 

1975 - The city of Boston begins court ordered citywide busing of public 
	schools amid scattered incidents of violence. 
	
1981 - Roy Wilkins, longtime and second executive director of the NAACP, joins 
	the ancestors.

1990 - Marjorie Judith Vincent of Illinois is selected as Miss America in Atlantic 
	City, New Jersey. The Haitian native, a third-year law student at Duke 
	University, is the fourth woman of African descent to become Miss America.

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