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Munirah Chronicle <[log in to unmask]>
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Sun, 26 Mar 2000 07:51:26 -0500
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*               Today in Black History - March 26               *

1831 - Richard Allen joins the ancestors at the age of 71.  He had been
        nominated by author Vernon Loggins for the title, "Father of
        the Negro."

1872 - Thomas J. Martin is awarded a patent for the fire extinguisher.

1910 - William H. Lewis is appointed assistant attorney general of the
        United States.

1937 - William Hastie is appointed to a federal judgeship in the Virgin
        Islands. With the appointment, Hastie becomes the first African
        American to serve on the federal bench in the U.S. or its
        territories.

1944 - Diana Ross is born in Detroit, Michigan.  Ross, with Mary Wilson
        and Florence Ballard, will form the Supremes in 1961 and have 15
        consecutive smash-hit singles with the group.  Ross will also
        pursue an acting career in such movies as "Lady Sings the Blues"
        and receive a Tony Award for her Broadway show, "An Evening with
        Diana Ross."  Both with the Supremes and as a solo artist, she
        will have more number-one records than any other artist in the
        history of the charts.

1950 - Theodore Pendergrass is born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He
        will become a lead singer for Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes
        in 1970 and will pursue an active solo career in 1976. His solo
        career will later be temporarily interrupted by an auto accident
        that will leave him paralyzed from the chest down. His debut
        album, "Teddy Pendergrass (1977)," struck Platinum, as did the
        next four albums - "Life Is A Song Worth Singing," "Teddy,"
        "Teddy Live" and "T.P." Other releases include "Love Language,"
        "Working It Back" and "Joy." He will be nominated for a Grammy
        more than three times and be the holder of a 1980 "Best Rhythm &
        Blues Artist" award from Billboard Magazine. The Philadelphia
        Music Foundation will honor him with a Philadelphia Music Award
        for "Best Urban Album" in 1989.

1991 - The Reverend Emanuel Cleaver becomes the first African American
        mayor of Kansas City, Missouri.  At this time, Kansas City is
        seventy percent white, but he will win the election with 53
        percent of the vote, while his opponent receives forty-seven
        percent.

1992 - A judge in Indianapolis sentences former heavyweight boxing
        champion Mike Tyson to six years in prison for raping a Miss
        Black America contestant.

1995 - Former diplomat-turned-radio talk show host Alan Keyes enters the
        race for the Republican presidential nomination.

1998 - President Clinton stands with President Nelson Mandela in a
        racially integrated South African parliament to salute a country
        that was "truly free and democratic at last."

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