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Sun, 27 Jun 2004 18:19:24 -0400
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*                   Today in Black History - June 27                    *

1833 - The operator of an academy for African American females in 
        Canterbury, Connecticut, Prudence Crandall - a white woman, is 
        arrested for providing this service.

1872 - Paul Laurence Dunbar, short story writer, is born in Dayton, Ohio.
        He will be so talented and versatile that he will succeed in two
        worlds.  He will be so adept at writing verse in Black English that
        he will become known as the "poet of his people," while also
        cultivating a white audience that appreciated the brilliance and
        value of his work.  "Majors and Minors" (1895), Dunbar's second
        collection of verse, will be a remarkable work containing some of
        his best poems in both Black and standard English.  When the
        country's reigning literary critic, William Dean Howells reviews
        "Majors and Minors" favorably, Dunbar becomes famous.  And Howells'
        introduction in "Lyric of Lowly Life" (1896) will help make Dunbar
        the most popular African American writer in America at the time.
        Dunbar will join the ancestors after succumbing to tuberculosis 
        in 1906.  The U.S. Postal Service will issue a commemorative 
        stamp in his honor on May 1, 1975. 

1890 - George Dixon, a Canadian, becomes the first person of African descent
        to win a world boxing championship.  He defeats Nunc Wallace to win 
        the bantamweight title.  He will also become the first person of 
        African descent to win an American title in any sport, when he
knocks 
        out Cal McCarthy in 1891.  
 
1914 - The United States signs a treaty of commerce with Ethiopia.

1919 - Archibald H. Grimke', noted lawyer and civil rights advocate who had 
        served as U.S. Consul in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic and 
        president of the American Negro Academy among his accomplishments, 
        receives the NAACP's Spingarn Medal.  An original member of the 
        "Committee of Forty" that helped establish the NAACP, Grimke' is 
        honored for his "years of distinguished service to his race and 
        country."

1941 - Richard Wright is awarded the Spingarn Medal.  He is cited for the 
        power of his books "Uncle Tom's Children" and "Native Son" in 
        depicting "the effects of proscription, segregation and denial of 
        opportunities on the American Negro."

1960 - British Somaliland becomes part of Somalia.

1967 - A racially motivated disturbance occurs in Buffalo, New York.  200 
        persons are arrested.  The disturbance will last four days.

1970 - The Jackson Five: Marlon, Tito, Jackie, Jermaine and Michael, jump
        to number one on the music charts with "The Love You Save".  The
song 
        will stay at the top of the charts for a two week run. It will be
the 
        third of four number-one hits in a row for the group. The other
three 
        are: "I Want You Back", "ABC" and "I'll Be There".   In 15 years, 
        from 1969 to 1984, The Jackson Five/Jacksons will have 23 hits,
score 
        two platinum singles ("Enjoy Yourself" and "Shake Your Body [Down To

        The Ground]") and one gold record ("State of Shock"). 

1972 - Patricia Roberts Harris, the first African American U.S. Ambassador, 
        is named permanent chairman of the Democratic National Convention.  
        The Mattoon, Illinois native will later break new ground as
Secretary 
        of Health and Human Services and Secretary of Housing and Urban 
        Development.

1977 - Djibouti gains independence from France.  Djibouti is located in East

        Africa, bordered by Eritrea, Ethiopia, Somalia, and the Gulf of
Aden.

1978 - Henry Rono of Kenya sets a world record for 3,000 meters, running in 
        7 minutes 32 and 1/10 seconds.

1979 - The U.S. Supreme Court rules, in Weber v. Kaiser Aluminum and 
        Chemical Corporation, that employers and unions can establish 
        voluntary programs, including the use of quotas, to aid minorities
in 
        employment.

1988 - Mike Tyson knocks out Michael Spinks in 91 seconds of the first 
        round, in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

1989 - The Baltimore Orioles beat the Toronto Blue Jays 16-6.  Each team is 
        coached by an African American, Frank Robinson of the Orioles and
Cito 
        Gaston of the Blue Jays.  Robinson, who will direct his team to an
87-
        75 season, will be named manager of the year by both the Associated 
        Press and the United Press International.

1991 - Justice Thurgood Marshall, 82, the first African American on the U.S.

        Supreme Court, announces his retirement after 24 years service,
citing 
        "advancing age and medical condition." As chief counsel for the
NAACP, 
        Marshall had played a major role in the legal fight that led to the 
        Brown v. Board of Education decision, overturning legal segregation.

        In his final dissent on the court on June 27, Marshall says that the

        court's conservative majority was recklessly overturning decisions 
        protecting the right of African Americans and minorities.

1994 - U.S. Coast Guard cutters intercept 1,330 Haitian boat people on the 
        high seas in one of the busiest days since refugees began leaving 
        Haiti following a 1991 military coup.

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