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Munirah Chronicle <[log in to unmask]>
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Mon, 5 Feb 2007 01:31:51 -0500
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*                       Today in Black History - February 5
*

 

***********************************************************************

* "Once a year we go through the charade of February being 'Black     *

* History Month.' Black History Month needs to be a 12-MONTH THING.   *

* When we all learn about our history, about how much we've           *

* accomplished while being handicapped with RACISM, it can only       *

* inspire us to greater heights, knowing we're on the giant shoulders *

* of our ANCESTORS." Subscribe to the Munirah Chronicle and receive   *

* Black Facts every day of the year.                                  *

*  To SUBSCRIBE send E-mail to: <[log in to unmask]>         *

*  In the E-mail body place:  Subscribe Munirah Your FULL Name        *

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1866 - The distribution of public land and confiscated land to freedmen 

            and loyal refugees in forty acre lots is offered in an 

            amendment to the Freedmen's Bureau bill by Congressman Thaddeus

            Stevens. The measure is defeated in the House by a vote of 126 

            to 37.  An African American delegation, led by Frederick 

            Douglass calls on President Johnson and urges ballots for 

            former slaves. The meeting ends in disagreement and controversy

            after Johnson reiterates his opposition to African American 

            suffrage.

 

1934 - Henry (Hank) Aaron is born in Mobile, Alabama.  After starting 

            his major league baseball career with the Milwaukee Braves in 

            1954, he will distinguish himself as a home-run specialist.  

            Aaron will be considered by some, the best baseball player in 

            history. Over his 23-year Major League Baseball career, he will

            compile more batting records than any other player in baseball 

            history. He will hold the record for runs batted in with 2297, 

            and will be a Gold Glove Winner in 1958, 1959, and 1960. His 

            most famous accomplishment will come on April 8, 1974, when at 

            the age of 40, he will hit a 385-foot home run against the Los 

            Angeles Dodgers, surpassing Babe Ruth's record of 714 career 

            home runs. He will end his career with 755 home runs. In 1982, 

            he will be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame. After his 

            retirement, he will return to the Atlanta Braves as a vice-

            president for player development, and will be promoted to 

            senior vice-president in 1989.

 

1941 - Barrett Strong is born in West Point, Mississippi.  He will 

            become a Rhythm and Blues singer best known for his recording 

            of "Money (That's What I Want)."  He will also be a prolific 

            songwriter, responsibile for hits such as "Just My 

            Imagination," "Papa Was A Rolling Stone," and "Ball of 

            Confusion." He will receive a Grammy Award for Best Rhythm &

            Blues Song for co-writing "Papa Was a Rollin' Stone".

 

1956 - L.R. Lautier becomes the first African American to be admitted

            to the National Press Club.

 

1958 - Clifton W. Wharton, Sr. becomes the first African American to 

            head an American diplomatic mission in Europe when he is 

            confirmed as minister to Romania. 

 

1962 - A suit seeking to bar Englewood, New Jersey, from maintaining 

            "racial segregated" elementary schools, is filed in United 

            States District Court.

 

1968 - Students in Orangeburg, South Carolina try to end the 

            discriminatory practices of a local bowling alley.  Their

            confrontation with police and the National Guard, and the

            subsequent death of three students, creates widespread

            outrage among students on campuses across the South.

 

1969 - Cinque Gallery is incorporated by African American artists 

            Romare Bearden, Ernest Crichlow, and Norman Lewis.  Located 

            in the SoHo district of New York City, the nonprofit gallery's 

            mission is to assist in the growth and development of minority  

            artists and to end the cycle of exclusion of their work from 

            the mainstream artistic community.

 

1972 - Robert Lewis Douglas, founder, owner and coach of the New York 

            Renaissance is the first African American inducted into the 

            Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Massachusetts.  The 

            New York Renaissance was an African American team that won 88 

            consecutive games in 1933.

 

1977 - Sugar Ray Leonard defeats Luis Vega in 6 rounds in his first 

            professional fight.

 

1989 - Kareem Abdul-Jabar becomes the first NBA player to score 38,000 

            points.

 

1994 - Avowed white supremacist Byron de la Beckwith is convicted of 

            Medger Evers' murder, more than thirty years after Evers was 

            shot in the back from ambush. After deliberating for seven 

            hours, a jury of eight African Americans and four whites 

            convicted 73-year-old De La Beckwith of Medgar Evers's murder,

            sentencing him to life in prison.  He died there seven years 

            later.  As a Mississippi State Supreme Court justice wrote 

            about the retrial: "Miscreants brought before the bar of 

            justice in this state must, sooner or later, face the cold 

            realization that justice, slow and plodding though she may be,

            is certain in the state of Mississippi."


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