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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:
Tue, 29 May 2012 04:45:09 -0400
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*		  Today in Black History - May 29	      *

1938 - Ronald Milner is born in Detroit, Michigan. He will become 
	trained as a writer and will exhibit his skills as a 
	playwright when he produces his first play , "Who's Got 
	His Own" on Broadway in 1966. In 1969, he will help start 
	"The Black Theater Movement," which will promote plays in 
	which African Americans could represent their lives on 
	stage. His works will include "What The Wine-Sellers Buy," 
	"Jazz Set," "Don't Get God Started," and "Checkmates." He
	will join the ancestors on July 16, 2004 after succumbing
	to liver cancer.

1944 - Maurice Bishop is born in Aruba and will be raised in 
	Grenada. While attending college in England during the 
	early 1960s, he will become involved in the Black Power 
	Movement and be heavily influenced by Malcolm X, Martin 
	Luther King, Jr. Kwame Nkrumah, and Walter Rodney, the 
	Guyanese activist. After returning to Grenada in 1970, he 
	will cofound a political organization, "Movement for 
	Assemblies of the People." This organization will later 
	merge with another political group, forming the "New Jewel 
	Movement." After constant conflict with, and harassment by, 
	Grenada's ruling regime, Bishop will become the minority 
	leader in the Grenadian government in 1976. In 1979, Bishop
	will become the Prime Minister after leading a bloodless 
	coup. He will develop close ties with Castro's Cuba and 
	will obtain government funding from Cuba and the Soviet 
	Union. These relationships will cause the United States to 
	impose sanctions against Grenada which led to internal 
	turmoil in the Grenadian ruling party. After a party split, 
	he will join the ancestors on October 19, 1983 when he and 
	his primary supporters will be executed. Using this event 
	as an excuse to involve themselves in the politics of the 
	region, the United States will invade Grenada and keep a 
	"peacekeeping" mission on the island until 1985.	

1950 - Maureen "Rebbie" Jackson is born in Gary, Indiana.  Rebbie 
	will make her professional debut at the MGM Grand in Las 
	Vegas with her siblings, the Jackson's.  In the late 70s, 
	she will begin to consider a solo career.  Artists such as
	Betty Wright and Wanda Hutchinson of the Emotions will 
	mentor her, but it will be her brother Michael who pens 
	and produces her very first hit, "Centipede."  As the 
	title track of Rebbie's 1984 debut, "Centipede," introduces 
	the pop world to a Jackson most never knew existed. 		

1956 - La Toya Jackson is born in Gary, Indiana.  She will become a 
	singer and one of the most controversial members of the 
	Jackson family.  She will be referred to as "The Rebel With 
	A Cause." She will cause a big stir, when she poses for 
	Playboy Magazine. Her book, "La Toya: Growing Up in the 
	Jackson Family," will be on the New York Times Best Seller 
	List for nine weeks.  She will attract full capacity 
	audiences in her performances all over the world. 

1962 - Buck (John) O'Neil becomes the first African American coach 
	in major-league baseball.  He accepts the job with the 
	Chicago Cubs.  O'Neil had previously been a scout with the 
	Cubs organization. He had been a notable first baseman in 
	Black baseball.

1965 - Ralph Boston sets a world record in the broad jump at 27 
	feet, 4-3/4 inches, at a meet held in Modesto, California.

1969 - Artist and art educator James V. Herring joins the ancestors 
	in Washington, DC.  Herring organized the first American 
	art gallery to be directed and controlled by African 
	Americans on the Howard University campus in 1930, founded 
	and directed the university's art department and, with 
	Alonzo Aden, opened the famed Barnett-Aden Gallery in 
	Washington, DC, in 1943.

1973 - Tom Bradley is elected the first African American mayor of 
	Los Angeles, California.  Winning after a bitter defeat 
	four years earlier by incumbent mayor Sam Yorty, Bradley, 
	a Texas native and former Los Angeles Police Department 
	veteran, will serve an unprecedented five terms.

1980 - Vernon E. Jordan Jr., President of the National Urban League, 
	is critically injured in an attempted assassination in Fort
	Wayne, Indiana.

1999 - Olusegun Obasanjo becomes Nigeria's first civilian president 
	in 15 years, after a series of military regimes. 

2003 - Wallace Terry joins the ancestors at the age of 65 after 
	succumbing to inflammation of blood vessels. He was a 
	journalist and author of "Bloods: An Oral History of the 
	Vietnam War by Black Veterans."

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