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The Muniah Chronicle <[log in to unmask]>
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The MUNIRAH Chronicle of Black Historical Events & Facts <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 21 May 2012 17:49:24 -0400
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*		Today in Black History - May 21		*

1833 - Oberlin College is founded in Ohio "to train teachers and other 
	Christian leaders for the boundless most desolate fields in the
	West."  After almost going bankrupt in 1835, Oberlin will become 
	one of the first colleges in the United States to admit African 
	Americans. Arthur and Lewis Tappan, wealthy New York merchants 
	and abolitionists, will insist that Oberlin admit students 
	regardless of their color, as a condition of their financial 
	support.  As a result of this decision, by 1900, nearly half of 
	all the African American college graduates in the United States 
	-- 128 to be exact -- will be graduated from Oberlin.

1862 - Mary Jane Patterson becomes the first African American woman to 
	earn an B.A degree from the four-year gentleman's course at 
	Oberlin College in Ohio.

1904 - Thomas "Fats" Waller, is born in New York City.  He will become a 
	celebrated jazz pianist, organist, and composer.  Early in the 
	1920s, Waller will become the protege of the famous pianist James 
	P. Johnson and later will accompany such important vocalists as 
	Florence Mills and Bessie Smith.  His hundreds of recordings, 
	including some early piano rolls, encompass ragtime, boogie 
	woogie, dixieland, and swing, although in his hands these styles 
	are deftly recomposed into a unique Waller sound that will 
	influence most of the jazz pianists of the following generation.  
	His appearances on radio and in several motion pictures (notably 
	"Stormy Weather," 1943) will bring Waller's talents to a wide 
	audience.  A major jazz creator, he will write complete scores 
	for such all-African-American shows as "Keep Shufflin'" (1928) 
	and "Hot Chocolates" (1929) as well as many single pieces, 
	especially the now-classic "Honeysuckle Rose," "Ain't 
	Misbehavin'," and "Black and Blue." He will join the ancestors in
	1943.

1921 - Christopher Perry, who founded the Philadelphia Tribune in 1884, 
	joins the ancestors in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, at the age of 
	65.

1941 - Ronald Isley is born in Cincinnati, Ohio.  He will become a singer
	and with his brothers O'Kelly, Rudolph and Vernon Isley will form 
	the group, The Isley Brothers.  They will leave Cincinnati in 
	1956 and go to New York City to pursue their musical career.  
	Ronald and his brothers will obtain fame and success nationally 
	and internationally earning numerous platinum and gold albums 
	which contain such classic hits as "Shout," "Twist and Shout," 
	"It's Your Thing," "Who's That Lady," "Fight the Power," "For the
	Love of You," "Harvest For The World," "Live It Up," "Footsteps 
	in the Dark," "Work to Do," "Don't Say Good Night" and many 
	others.

1955 - After being introduced to Leonard Chess, by bluesman Muddy Waters,
	Chuck Berry goes into a recording session for Chess Records, 
	performing a restyled version of his song "Ida Red".  What comes 
	out of that hot session will be Ida Red's new name and Chuck 
	Berry's first hit, "Maybellene".  "Maybellene" will top the 
	Rhythm & Blues charts at #1, and the pop charts at #5. 

1961 - Freedom Riders are attacked in Montgomery, Alabama.  The third 
	city in which the CORE-sponsored group is attacked, the incident 
	prompts Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy to send U.S. marshals 
	to keep the peace while Governor Patterson of Alabama declares 
	martial law and dispatches the National Guard to the troubled 
	area.

1964 - Elder Garnet Hawkins is elected by the 176th General Assembly and
	becomes the first African American moderator of the United 
	Presbyterian Church.  Born in New York City on June 13, 1908, he 
	received his bachelor's degree in 1935 at Bloomfield College in 
	Bloomfield, New Jersey and his Bachelor of Divinity degree from 
	Union Theological Seminary in 1938.  He built his church from 
	nine African American members to an integrated congregation of 
	more than 1,000.  He also became the first moderator of the 
	Presbyterian Church to visit the Roman Catholic Pope. He will 
	join the ancestors in 1977.

1969 - Police and National Guardsmen fire on demonstrators at North 
	Carolina A&T College.  One student is killed and five policemen 
	are injured.

1970 - The National Guard is mobilized to stop widespread demonstrations 
	and violence at Ohio State University. The interracial student 
	demonstrators demand an end to ROTC programs and greater 
	admissions for African-American students.

1971 - Riots in Chattanooga, Tennessee, result in one death and 400 
	arrests as National Guard troops are called to put down the 
	racially motivated disturbances.

1973 - The sensual, "Pillow Talk", by Sylvia (Sylvia Vanderpool), earns a
	gold record.  The artist first recorded with Hot Lips Page for 
	Columbia Records back in 1950 and was known as Little Sylvia.  
	She was also half of the singing duo Mickey & Sylvia, who 
	recorded "Love Is Strange" in 1957.  "Pillow Talk" is her only 
	solo major hit and will make it to number three on the pop music 
	charts. 

1975 - Lowell W. Perry is confirmed as chairman of the Equal Opportunity 
	Commission (EEOC).

1985 - Marvin Gaye's last album is released.  "Dream of a Lifetime" 
	features songs that critics consider too offensive such as the 
	controversial, pop version of "The Lord's Prayer".  Three of the 
	songs from the album are completed after Gaye's joins the 
	ancestors.  Marvin Gaye will be inducted into the Rock and Roll 
	Hall of Fame in 1987.

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