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The MUNIRAH Chronicle of Black Historical Events & Facts <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 23 Mar 2017 05:38:08 -0400
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*		Today in Black History - March 23		  *

1784 - Tom Molineaux, who will become America's most celebrated 
	early boxing success, is born into slavery in Virginia. 
	He will emigrate to London after winning money to purchase 
	his freedom in a fight. He will challenge champion Tom 
	Cribb in a fight attended by 10,000 spectators in 1810, 
	which he will apparently win but is ruled against, by a 
	partisan referee. After a subsequent loss to Cribb in 
	1811, he will sink into alcoholism and will join the
	ancestors penniless in Galway, Ireland, in 1818 at the age 
	of 34.

1867 - Congress passes 2nd Reconstruction Act over President Andrew 
	Johnson's veto.

1938 - Maynard Holbrook Jackson, Jr. is born in Dallas, Texas. He will 
	be elected  the first African American mayor of Atlanta, 
	Georgia for two terms, 1974 to 1982, and be re-elected in 1989 
	for an unprecedented third term. During his first term as the 
	mayor, much progress will be made in improving race relations 
	in and around Atlanta. As mayor, he will lead the beginnings 
	and much of the progress on several huge public-works projects 
	in Atlanta and its region. He will help arrange for the 
	rebuilding of the then-William B. Hartsfield Atlanta 
	International Airport's huge terminal (now Domestic Terminal) 
	to modern standards, and this airport will be renamed the 
	Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport in his honor, 
	shortly after his transition. Also named after him will be the 
	new international terminal at Hartsfield-Jackson Airport called 
	the Maynard Holbrook Jackson, Jr. International Terminal, which 
	will open in May 2012. He will also fight against the construction 
	of freeways through intown neighborhoods. He will be mayor when 
	the Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority (MARTA) obtains 
	a large amount of Federal funding for a rapid-transit rail-line 
	system when its construction began. He will also be in office when 
	MARTA begins its first rail transit service in Atlanta and in 
	DeKalb County in 1979, and during its continual expansion thereafter. 
	He will also be mayor when Atlanta is selected as the host city for 
	the 1996 Summer Olympic Games, when the decision is made in September 
	1990. As mayor, he will accept the Olympic flag at the 1992 closing 
	ceremonies in Barcelona, Spain. Many planned public works projects, 
	such as improvements to freeways and parks, and the completion of 
	Freedom Parkway, will be expedited from 1990 to 1996 in preparation 
	for the Olympic Games that will begin in August 1996. His first term 
	as mayor will also coincide with the Atlanta Child Murders case 
	between 1979 and 1981. He will play a prominent role in resolving, 
	both in supporting the Atlanta Police and other police forces in the 
	area, but also by endeavoring to calm the huge amount of public 
	tension that arises because of these serial killings. The murderer, 
	Wayne Williams, will be caught in 1981, tried, convicted, and 
	sentenced to serve two consecutive life sentences in prison. In 1974, 
	he will receive the Samuel S. Beard Award for Greatest Public Service 
	by an Individual 35 Years or Under, an award given out annually by 
	Jefferson Awards He will join the ancestors on June 23, 2003, after
	succumbing to a cardiac arrest in Washington, DC.

1953 - Yvette Marie Stevens is born in Great Lakes, Illinois. She will become 
	better known as Chaka Khan, lead singer of the rock group Rufus 
	(winner of a 1974 Grammy) and a three-time Grammy-winning soloist. Her 
	career will span over four decades, beginning in the 1970s as the 
	frontwoman and focal point of the funk band Rufus. Widely known as the 
	Queen of Funk, she will win ten Grammys and sell an estimated 70 
	million records worldwide. She will be ranked at number 17 in VH1's 
	original list of the 100 Greatest Women of Rock & Roll. In 2015, she 
	will be nominated for induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame for 
	the second time. She will be previously nominated as member of Rufus in 
	2011. She will be the first Rhythm & Blues artist to feature a rapper 
	with "I Feel for You" in 1984. In the course of her solo career, she 
	will achieve three gold singles, three gold albums and one platinum 
	album with "I Feel for You." With Rufus, she will achieve four gold 
	singles, four gold albums, and two platinum albums.

1955 - Moses Eugene Malone is born in Petersburg, Virginia.  He will begin 
	his career in professional basketball in 1974 when he becomes the 
	first player in modern basketball history to make the move directly 
	from high school ball to playing in a professional league. He will 
	join the now-defunct American Basketball Association's Utah Stars.  
	His career will peak during his seasons with the Philadelphia 76ers. 
	Matched with Julius Erving, Maurice Cheeks, Bobby Jones and Andrew 
	Toney in the 1982-83 season, the 76ers will lead the league with a 
	65-17 regular-season record and win the championship. He will win 
	both NBA MVP and NBA Finals MVP that year. His other achievements 
	will include NBA MVP (1979, '82), All-NBA first team (1979, '82, 
	'85), All-NBA second team (1980, '81, '84, '87), NBA All-Defensive 
	first team (1983) and NBA All-Defensive second team (1979). He will 
	also hold career records for the most consecutive games without a 
	disqualification (1,212), most free throws made (8,531), most 
	offensive rebounds (6,731) and most turnovers (3,804). He will 
	achieve the milestone of playing his 45,000th minute, on Dec. 14, 
	1994, against the Boston Celtics. He will be recognized not only 
	for greatness as an all-around player, but also for his longevity, 
	as he will play for two	ABA teams and eight NBA teams over 22 years. 
	He will be inducted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in 
	2001. He will join the ancestors on September 13, 2015, after
	succumbing to hypertensive and atherosclerotic heart disease.

1968 - Rev. Walter Fauntroy, a former aide of Martin Luther King Jr., becomes 
	the first non-voting congressional delegate from the District of 
	Columbia since the Reconstruction period.

1985 - Patricia Roberts Harris, Cabinet Member, ambassador and first African 
	American woman to head a law school, joins the ancestors in 
	Washington, DC.

1985 - "We Are The World", by USA for Africa, a group of 46 pop stars, enters 
	the music charts for the first time at number 21.

1998 - President Bill Clinton hails "the new face of Africa" as he opens a 
	historic six-nation tour in Ghana.

2012 - African Union suspends Mali's membership following a coup.

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