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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, 25 Sep 2014 05:50:27 -0400
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*	      Today in Black History - September 25           *

1861 - The Secretary of the Navy authorizes the enlistment of 
	African Americans in the Union Navy. The enlistees could
	achieve no rank higher than "boys" and receive pay of 
	one ration per day and $10 per month.

1886 - Peter "The Black Prince" Jackson wins the Australian 
	heavyweight title, becoming the very first man of 
	African descent to win a national boxing crown. 

1911 - Dr. Eric Williams, former prime minister of Trinidad and 
	Tobago, is born.

1924 - In a letter to his friend Alain Locke, Langston Hughes 
	writes "I've done a couple of new poems. I have no more 
	paper, so I'm sending you one on the back of this 
	letter."  The poem, "I, Too", will be published two years
	later and be among his most famous.

1951 - Robert Allen "Bob" McAdoo, Jr. is born in Greensboro, North
	Carolina.  He will become a one of the best-shooting big 
	men of all time in professional basketball. He will win 
	Rookie of the Year, a Most Valuable Player Award and three 
	consecutive scoring championships, all in his first four 
	years in the NBA. Over fourteen seasons, He will score 
	18,787 points and average 22.1 point per game. A five-time 
	NBA All Star, he will shoot .503 from the field and .754 
	from the line, scoring in double figures in all but one 
	season.

1957 - With 300 U.S. Army troops standing guard, nine African 
	American children forced to withdraw the previous day 
	from Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas, 
	because of unruly white crowds, are escorted to back to 
	class. 

1962 - Sonny Liston knocks out Floyd Patterson in the first round 
	to become the world heavyweight boxing champion.

1962 - An African American church is destroyed by fire in Macon, 
	Georgia. This is the eighth African American church 
	burned in Georgia in one month.

1962 - Governor Ross Barnett again defies court orders and 
	personally denies James Meredith admission to the 
	University of Mississippi.

1965 - Willie Mays hits his fiftieth home run of the baseball 
	season, making him the oldest player to accomplish this.  
	He was 34 years old.  Ten years before this, at the age 
	of 24, he was the youngest man to accomplish the same 
	feat. 
	
1965 - Scottie Maurice Pippen is born in Hamburg, Arkansas. He 
	will become a professional basketball player and will be 
	traded to the Houston Rockets in 1998 after 11 
	distinguished seasons with the Chicago Bulls, for whom he 
	averaged 18.0 points, 6.8 rebounds and 5.3 assists in 833 
	NBA games. He will earn All-NBA First Team honors three 
	times in his career and All-Defensive First Team honors in 
	each of seven seasons (1992-1999. In addition, he will 
	earn NBA World Championships in six of the eight years and 
	Olympic gold medals in 1992 and 1996. He will be selected 
	as one of the 50 Greatest Players in NBA History in 1996.
	He will be inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball 
	Hall of Fame on August 13, 2010.

1968 - Will Smith is born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.  He 
	will become a rapper at the age of 12 and will be known
	for his hits "Nightmare on My Street" and "Parents Just 
	Don't Understand." In 1990 he will start his acting 
	career with a six-year run as the "Fresh Prince of Bel 
	Air."  He will go to become a major motion picture box 
	office attraction, starring in "Six Degrees of 
	Separation," "Made in America," "Independence Day," 
	"Men In Black," and "Wild, Wild West."

1974 - Barbara W. Hancock is the first African American woman 
	to be named a White House Fellow.

1988 - Florence Griffith Joyner runs 100 meters in record 
	Olympic time of 10.54 seconds. 

1991 - Pioneer filmmaker Spencer Williams's 1942 movie "Blood 
	of Jesus", a story of the African American religious 
	experience, is among the third group of twenty-five 
	films added to the Library of Congress's National Film 
	Registry.  Williams, best known for his role of Andy in 
	the television series "Amos 'n' Andy", was more 
	importantly, an innovative film director and a 
	contemporary of Oscar Micheaux. Williams's film joins 
	other classics like "Lawrence of Arabia" and "2001: A 
	Space Odyssey".

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