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Sun, 29 Jun 2008 17:02:04 -0400
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*		    Today in Black History - June 29        *

1868 - The Louisiana legislature meets in New Orleans. The 
	temporary chairman of the house is an African American
	representative, R.H. Isabelle.  Oscar J. Dunn presides
	over the senate. Seven of the thirty-six senators are 
	African American. Thirty-five of the 101 
	representatives are African American.

1886 - James Van Der Zee is born in Lenox, Massachusetts.  He 
	will become one of America's foremost photographers and 
	a major chronicler of the visual history of the Harlem 
	Renaissance.  His photographic subjects will include 
	Marcus Garvey, Madame C.J. Walker, Bill "Bojangles" 
	Robinson, Countee Cullen, Daddy Grace and many others. 
	He will obtain national recognition at age 82 when his 
	collection of 75,000 photographs, spanning a period of 
	six decades of African American life, is discovered by 
	the Metropolitan Museum of Art. His photos will be 
	featured in 1969 as part of the "Harlem on my Mind" 
	exhibition. From the 1970s until he joins the ancestors
	on May 15, 1983, Van Der Zee will photograph many 
	celebrities who had come across his work and promoted 
	him throughout the country.

1923 - Lloyd Richards is born in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. His 
	family will move to Detroit, Michigan soon after he is 
	born.  After graduating from Wayne State University, he 
	will start a theater group in Detroit with a handful of 
	friends and classmates. At that time, the American theater
	will be entirely centered in New York City. Richards will
	move there in 1947 to pursue an acting career. Roles for 
	African American actors will be hard to come by, but he 
	will work on Broadway in "Freight and The Egghead" and on 
	radio throughout the 1950s. He will also teach acting and 
	direct off-Broadway productions. In 1958, he will become 
	the first person of African descent to direct a Broadway
	play in modern times when he galvanizes Broadway with his 
	production of Lorraine Hansberry's "A Raisin in the Sun." 
	This production, a realistic portrayal of a contemporary 
	Black working class family in Chicago, will begin a new era
	in the representation of African Americans on the American 
	stage. In the 1960s, he will direct the Broadway productions
	"The Long Dream," "The Moon Besieged," "I Had a Ball" and 
	"The Yearling." In 1966, he will become head of the actor 
	training program at New York University's School of the Arts.
	He will be Professor of Theater and Cinema at Hunter College
	in New York City when he is tapped to become dean of the 
	prestigious Yale University School of Drama in 1979. At the 
	same time he will become Artistic Director of the highly 
	influential Yale Repertory theater. Throughout his career, 
	he will seek to discover and develop new plays and 
	playwrights, as Artistic Director of the National Playwrights
	Conference at the Eugene O'Neill Memorial Theatre Center, as 
	a member of the Playwrights' selection committee of the 
	Rockefeller Foundation and of the New American Plays program
	of the Ford Foundation. His long search for a major new 
	American playwright will bear fruit with the 1984 production 
	of "Ma Rainey's Black Bottom" by August Wilson. Throughout 
	the 1980s and into the '90s, he will direct the Yale Rep and
	New York productions of the successive installments of August
	Wilson's multi-part chronicle of African American life. The 
	plays in this cycle will include "Fences," "Joe Turner's Come
	and Gone," "The Piano Lesson," "Two Trains Running" and "Seven
	Guitars." His productions for television include segments of 
	"Roots: The Next Generation," "Bill Moyers' Journal" and 
	"Robeson," a presentation on the life of the African American
	actor and activist Paul Robeson, who will be an early 
	inspiration for the young Lloyd Richards. He will also deal 
	with Robeson's life and legacy in the 1977 theatrical 
	production "Paul Robeson." He will be the recipient of the 
	Pioneer Award of AUDELCO, the Frederick Douglass Award and, 
	in 1993, will be awarded the National Medal of the Arts. He 
	will also serve as President of the Society of Stage Directors
	and Choreographers. In 1991, he will retire from his posts as
	Dean of the Yale University School of Drama and as Artistic 
	Director of Yale Rep, but he will remain Professor Emeritus at 
	Yale University, and continue to teach, direct, and search for 
	new plays and playwrights. He will be inducted into the Academy 
	of Achievement in 1987.

1943 - Eva Narcissus Boyd is born in Belhaven, North Carolina. She will
	move to Brighton Beach, New York at a young age. As a teenager, 
	she will work as a babysitter for songwriters Carole King and 
	Gerry Goffin. Amused by Eva's individual dancing style they 
	wrote "The Loco-Motion" with Dee Dee Sharp in mind. She
	will record it as a demo and music producer Don Kirshner will
	be impressed by the song and Eva's voice and will release it 
	as is. This will be the birth of "Little Eva". The song will 
	become an instant hit after Little Eva demonstrates the song 
	and dance steps on American Bandstand. It will reach #1 in the
	U.S. in 1962. After the success of "The Loco-Motion", Eva will
	be unfortunately stereotyped as a dance-craze singer and will
	be given limited material. The notorious 1962 single "He Hit Me
	(And It Felt Like a Kiss)" was inspired by the abuse Eva 
	suffered from her then-boyfriend. She will continued to tour and
	record throughout the sixties, but her commercial potential 
	will plummet after 1964. Little Eva's other hits will be "Keep 
	Your Hands Of My Baby", "Somekind Of Wonderful" and "Let's 
	Turkey Trot". She will retire from the music business in 1971. 
	She will return to live performing with other artists of her era
	on the cabaret and oldies circuits in the 1990's. She will 
	continue performing until cervical cancer stops her in October 
	of 2001. She will join the ancestors after succumbing to the 
	illness on April 10, 2003 in Kinston, North Carolina.

1949 - South Africa begins its apartheid policy of racial segregation.
	This includes a ban against racially-mixed marriages. 

1950 - Mabel Keaton Staupers of the National Association of Colored
	Graduate Nurses receives the Spingarn Medal in honor of her 
	advocacy of integration of African American graduate nurses 
	into the American workplace.

1964 - The Civil Rights Act of 1964 is passed.

1968 - Marlin Briscoe becomes the first African American quarterback 
	to play professional football in the modern NFL.

1970 - NAACP chairman Stephen Gill Spottswood tells the NAACP annual
	convention that the Nixon administration is "anti-Negro" and 
	is pressing "a calculated Policy" inimical to "the needs and 
	aspirations of the large majority" of citizens.

1972 - U.S. Supreme Court rules, in a five to four decision, that the
	death penalty is cruel and unusual punishment which violates 
	the Eighth Amendment.  African Americans and members of other 
	minority groups constitute 483 of the 600 persons awaiting
	execution.

1972 - The NAACP Annual Report states the unemployment of "urban Blacks 
	in 1971 was worse than at anytime since the great depression
	of the thirties." The report also says that more school
	desegregation occurred in 1971 than in any other year since 
	the 1954 school decision.

1983 - The Apollo Theatre, in Harlem, New York, is declared a cultural 
	landmark.

1988 - Motown Records is sold for $ 61 million to an investment group
	that includes a venture-capital firm, record executive Jheryl
	Busby, and others.  The company, which was founded by Berry 
	Gordy in 1959, produced some of the biggest rhythm and blues 
	performers of all time including the Supremes, the Temptations, 
	the Four Tops and Marvin Gaye.

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