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Munirah Chronicle <[log in to unmask]>
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The MUNIRAH Chronicle of Black Historical Events & Facts <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Tue, 14 Jul 2009 09:22:09 -0400
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*		Today in Black History - July 13	        *

1787 - The Continental Congress passes the Northwest Ordinance,
	which, in addition to providing for a government and 
	civil liberties for the new territory, excludes slavery 
	northwest of the Ohio River except as punishment for a 
	crime.

1863 - Over 1,200 people, mostly African Americans, are killed in
	anti-draft rioting in New York City.  Rioting begins, in 
	part, when poor whites revolt against military service 
	exemptions that allow for a payment of $ 300 in lieu of 
	being drafted, a price that they cannot afford. The 
	"Draft Riots" also reflect a growing hostility toward 
	African Americans, who are seen as the cause of the war.

1868 - Oscar J. Dunn, a former slave, is installed as Lieutenant 
	Governor of Louisiana.

1919 - Race riots break out in Longview & Gregg counties in Texas. 

1928 - Robert N.C. Nix, Jr. is born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
	In 1971, he will be the first African American to serve on
	the Pennsylvania Supreme Court and, in 1984, the first 
	African American chief justice of a state supreme court.
	Chief Justice Nix will be further honored when he is named
	president of the Conference of Chief Justices, a national
	organization of judges and justices in the U.S. 

1948 - Daphne Maxwell (later Reid) is born in Manhattan, New York.
	While pursuing a major in Interior Design and Architecture 
	at Northwestern University, an English teacher from her 
	high school will submit her photograph to a magazine editor
	and friend who was preparing an article on college women. 
	The result will be a trip to New York and her first full-
	page photograph in Seventeen magazine. Quickly signed by 
	the Eileen Ford Agency, she will appear in many magazines,
	and will also become the first Afican American woman to 
	grace the cover of Glamour magazine. She will transition
	into the acting field. She will have the opportunity to 
	audition for a part in the series "The Duke" starring 
	Robert Conrad, who will promise her a continuing role, and
	keep his word. In 1979, she will go to Los Angeles where 
	she will continue to work with Robert Conrad, who enlists 
	her as the villainess in his series, "A Man Called Sloane,"
	and subsequently her first movie of the week, "The Coach of
	the Year." She will meet her husband, Tim Reid, who she had
	previously known in Chicago. She is most widely recognized 
	for her role as Aunt Viv on NBC's hit comedy "The Fresh 
	Prince of Bel Air." She is also known for her role on the 
	CBS comedy series "Frank's Place," in which she co-starred
	with her husband, Tim. The couple will team up again when 
	she stars as Mickie Dennis on CBS' "Snoops," and also on 
	the King World syndicated talk show, "The Tim and Daphne 
	Show" for 76 1-hour episodes. She will also star as Eartha
	on the Showtime series, "Linc's." She and Tim will 
	establish New Millennium Studios in Petersburg, Virginia 
	in 1997. It will be Virginia's only full-service film 
	production studio.

1954 - David Thompson is born in Boiling Springs, North Carolina.  
	He will become a college and professional all-star 
	basketball player. At North Carolina State in the mid-1970s,
	he will be a three-time All-American and two-time College 
	Player of the Year. It was he who popularized the 
	"alley-oop." He will bring his explosive game to the 
	professional level in 1975 when he is drafted by both the 
	NBA's Atlanta Hawks and the ABA's Virginia Squires. He will
	opt for the ABA with the Denver Nuggets, who acquire his 
	rights in a trade with the Virginia Squires. In the first of
	nine professional seasons (Denver Nuggets 1975-82, Seattle 
	Supersonics 1982-84), he will average 26.0 points per game, 
	be chosen MVP in the ABA All-Star Game and the ABA's Rookie
	of the Year. He will enjoy similar success in the NBA. He 
	will be a four-time NBA All-Star and win the MVP Award in 
	the 1979 All-Star Game. A two-time First Team All-NBA 
	selection in 1977 and 1978, he will average 22.1 ppg in the
	regular season and 22.9 ppg in the playoffs during his NBA
	career. His prolific scoring career will be remembered most
	for the 73-point outburst he had in the final game of the
	1978 season. In what will be the closest race for the NBA 
	scoring title, his outburst (third highest in NBA history) 
	will leave him just .06 points behind George Gervin. The 
	Denver Nuggets will honor him for his career achievements 
	when they retire his number 33 jersey on Nov. 12, 1992. 

1963 - Anthony Jerome "Spud" Webb is born in Dallas, Texas. He will
	become one of the shortest players in NBA history but with 
	a vertical jump of 44" (112 cm). Webb is most famous for 
	his performance in the 1986 NBA Slam Dunk Contest. He will 
	surprise teammate and defending dunk champion Dominique 
	Wilkins by entering the contest. He made history that day 
	not only because of his size, but also because he will win 
	by defeating Wilkins with 2 perfect 50 scores in the final 
	round. He is the shortest player ever to have competed in 
	the NBA Slam Dunk competition. He will play most of his NBA
	career with the Atlanta Hawks, but will also have stints 
	with the Sacramento Kings, Minnesota Timberwolves and 
	Orlando Magic. He will retire from basketball in 1998 with a
	9.9 points per game average over his 12 year NBA career. He,
	along with Greg Grant and Keith Jennings, is the third-
	shortest player in NBA history. Only Earl Boykins (5'5") and
	Muggsy Bogues (5'3") are shorter.

1965 - Thurgood Marshall, an Appeals Court judge for three years, 
	is appointed Solicitor General of the United States, the 
	first African American to hold the office.

1985 - Arthur Ashe, the first African American male to win 
	Wimbledon, is inducted into the International Tennis Hall
	of Fame.

1985 - The first "Live Aid", an international rock concert in 
	London, Philadelphia, Moscow and Sydney, takes place to 
	raise money for Africa's starving people.  Over $70 
	million is collected for African famine relief.

1998 - A jury in Poughkeepsie, New York, rules that the Rev. Al 
	Sharpton and two others had defamed a former prosecutor 
	by accusing him of raping Tawana Brawley.

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