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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:
Wed, 17 Sep 2014 00:36:14 -0400
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*		Today in Black History - September 17         *

1787 - The U.S. Constitution is approved at the Constitutional 
	Convention in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, with three 
	clauses protecting slavery.

1861 - The first day-school for ex-slaves is opened in Fortress 
	Monroe, Virginia under the tutelage of an African 
	American schoolteacher, Mary S. Peake.  The school will 
	later become Hampton Institute (now University) in 1868.

1879 - Andrew "Rube" Foster is born in Calvert, Texas. He will
	become an American baseball player, manager, and 
	executive in the Negro Leagues. He will be considered by
	historians to have been perhaps the best African American
	pitcher of the 1900s. He will also found and manage the 
	Chicago American Giants, one of the most successful Black
	baseball teams of the pre-integration era. Most notably, 
	he will organize the Negro National League, the first 
	lasting professional league for African American ball
	players, which will operate from 1920 to 1931. He will 
	adopted his longtime nickname "Rube" as his official 
	middle name later in life. He will join the ancestors on
	December 9, 1930 and will be posthumously elected to the
	Baseball Hall of Fame in 1981.

1953 - Ernie Banks becomes the first African American baseball 
	player to wear a Chicago Cubs uniform.  Banks is also 
	quick to say "Let's play two!"  Banks will be the Cubs' 
	outstanding shortstop from 1954 to 1960.  In 1961 he will
	be moved to left field, then to first base, where he will
	spend the rest of his career. In 1969, Ernie Banks will 
	be voted the Cub's best player ever by Chicago fans. 'Mr.
	Cub' will retire in 1971. He will elected to the Baseball
	Hall of Fame in 1977, the first year of his eligibility.

1956 - African American students are admitted to a Clay, Kentucky 
	elementary school under National Guard protection. They 
	had previously been barred by local authorities on 
	September 12.

1962 - The Justice Department files the first suit to end racial 
	segregation in public schools. The fourth African American
	church is burned near Dawson, Georgia. Three white men 
	later admitted burning the church. They were sentenced to
	seven year prison terms.

1967 - Abdul-Malik Kashie Yoba is born in the Bronx, New York. He
	will become an actor best known for his role as the star 
	of the popular Fox Television police drama "New York 
	Undercover" from 1994 to 1998. He will also appear in 
	films such as "Cool Runnings" and "Criminal." He will 
	make appearances on the Fox television series "Arrested
	Development" as Ice, a bounty hunter and party planner. 
	He will also be a recurring character, Brock Harris, on 
	the UPN sitcom "Girlfriends." He will also appear in the 
	FX Networks crime drama "Thief." In 2007, he will appear
	in NBC's crime drama "Raines" alongside Jeff Goldblum.

1968 - "Julia" premieres on NBC with Diahann Carroll in the title
	role. It is the first television show to star an African 
	American woman since "Beulah" in the 1950's.

1970 - "The Flip Wilson Show" premieres on NBC.  Starring the New 
	Jersey comedian born as Clerow Wilson, it is the first 
	prime-time variety show starring an African American male 
	since "The Nat King Cole Show".

1973 - Illinois becomes the first state to honor Dr. Martin Luther
	King, Jr.'s birthday as a holiday.

1983 - Vanessa Williams, Miss New York State, is named Miss 
	America in Atlantic City, New Jersey, the first African 
	American winner in the history of the pageant. Williams 
	will relinquish her crown after a 1984 scandal and later 
	stage a remarkable comeback through a stellar recording 
	career, which will include her multimillion-selling album,
	"The Right Stuff".

1984 - New York Met's, Dwight Goodin, becomes the 2nd person to 
	strike out 32 batters over 2 consecutive games.

1990 - "The Content of Our Character" is published by San Jose 
	State University professor Shelby Steele. The book will 
	attract controversy because of its provocative positions
	on affirmative action and race relations and win a 1992
	National Book Award.

1991 - Ground is broken for the Harold Washington wing of the 
	DuSable Museum in Chicago, Illinois. Founded by artist 
	and poet Margaret T. Burroughs in 1961, the DuSable is 
	one of the oldest African American museums in the United
	States.

1994 - As some 20 warships sit off the coast of Haiti, former 
	President Jimmy Carter, Sen. Sam Nunn (D-Ga.) and 
	retired Gen. Colin Powell arrive in the Caribbean nation
	in an 11th-hour bid to avert a U.S.-led invasion. 

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