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Thu, 12 Nov 2020 00:38:26 -0500
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*               Today in Black History - November 12          *

1775 - General George Washington issues an order forbidding 
	recruiting officers from enlisting African Americans.

1779 - Twenty slaves petition New Hampshire's legislature to 
	abolish slavery. They argue that "the god of nature 
	gave them life and freedom upon the terms of most 
	perfect equality with other men; that freedom is an 
	inherent right of the human species, not to be 
	surrendered but by consent." 

1882 - Lane College is founded in Jackson, Tennessee. 

1896 - 1st Sgt. Moses Williams (Ninth Calvary) is awarded the
	Congressional Medal of Honor for bravery in the Battle 
	of Cuchillo Negro Mountains, in New Mexico, fought on
	August 16, 1881. 

1922 - Sigma Gamma Rho sorority is founded in Indianapolis, 
	Indiana, by seven school teachers: Mary Lou Allison 
	(Gardner Little), Bessie Mae Downey (Martin), Hattie 
	Mae Annette Dulin (Redford), Nannie Mae Gahn (Johnson),
	Dorothy Hanley (Whiteside), Cubena McClure, and Vivian 
	White (Marbury). Founder Vivian White Marbury was able
	to witness the progress of the sisterhood she helped 
	create until she joins the ancestors on July 30, 2000.

1941 - Opera instructor Mary Cardwell Dawson and coloratura 
	Lillian Evanti establish the National Negro Opera 
	Company in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to provide more
	opportunities for African Americans to sing and study 
	opera. The company's first opera, Verdi's "Aida", will 
	be staged the following August at the annual meeting of 
	the National Association of Negro Musicians. In its 
	21-year history, its performers will include Evanti, 
	Minto Cato, and Robert McFerrin. 

1944 - Booker Taliaferro Jones Jr. is born in Memphis, Tennessee.
	He will become a multi-instrumentalist, songwriter, record 
	producer and arranger, best known as the frontman of the 
	band Booker T. & the M.G.'s. He will also work in the 
	studios with many well-known artists of the 20th and 21st 
	centuries, earning him a Grammy Award for lifetime 
	achievement. His entry into professional music will come at 
	the age of 16, when he plays baritone saxophone on 
	Satellite (soon to be Stax) Records' first hit, "Cause I 
	Love You", by Carla and Rufus Thomas. Willie Mitchell will
	hire him for his band, in which he starts on sax and later 
	will move to bass. It will be here that he meets Al 
	Jackson Jr., who he brings to Stax. Simultaneously, he will
	form a combo with Maurice White and David Porter, in which 
	he will play guitar. While hanging around the Satellite 
	Record Shop run by Estelle Axton, co-owner of Satellite 
	Records with her brother Jim Stewart, he will meet record 
	clerk Steve Cropper, who will become one of the MGs when 
	the group form in 1962. Besides Jones on organ and Cropper 
	on guitar, Booker T. and the MGs will feature Lewie 
	Steinberg on bass guitar and Al Jackson, Jr. on drums (Donald 
	"Duck" Dunn eventually replacing Steinberg on bass). While 
	still in high school, he will co-write the group's classic 
	instrumental "Green Onions", which will be a massive hit in 
	1962. Over the next few years, he will divide his time between 
	studying classical music composition, composing and 
	transposition at Indiana University, playing with the MGs on 
	the weekends back in Memphis, serving as a session musician 
	with other Stax acts, and writing songs that will become 
	widely regarded as classics. He will write, with Eddie Floyd, 
	"I've Never Found a Girl (To Love Me Like You Do)", Otis 
	Redding's "I Love You More Than Words Can Say", and, with 
	William Bell, bluesman Albert King's "Born Under a Bad Sign" 
	(later popularized by the cover version recorded by the 
	British power trio Cream). In 1970, he will move to California 
	and stop playing sessions for Stax after becoming frustrated 
	with Stax's treatment of the MGs as employees rather than 
	musicians. Even though he will be given the title of Vice 
	President at Stax before leaving, as he put it, "There were 
	titles given (to us) but we didn't actually make the decisions."
	While still under contract to Stax, he will appear on Stephen 
	Stills's eponymous album (1970). The 1971 album Melting Pot 
	will be the last Booker T. & the M.G.'s album issued on Stax. 
	On March 1, 1995, Booker T. & the MGs will win their first 
	Grammy Award for Best Pop Instrumental Performance for the song 
	"Cruisin'". He will still play with the MGs and his own small 
	combo called the Booker T. Jones Band. His touring group will
	include Vernon "Ice" Black (guitar), Darian Gray (drums), and 
	Melvin Brannon (bass). He will be inducted into The Rock and 
	Roll Hall of Fame in 1992, and will be honored with a Grammy 
	Award for Lifetime Achievement on February 11, 2007. In 2007, 
	Jones will be also inducted into the Musicians Hall of Fame and 
	Museum in Nashville, Tennessee. 

1974 - South Africa is suspended from the U.N. General Assembly over its 
	racial policies.

1974 - Tamala R. Jones is born in Pasadena, California. She will become
	an actress. She will be best known for her roles in the movies 
	Booty Call, The Wood, Kingdom Come, The Brothers, and Two Can 
	Play That Game. She will also be known for television roles as 
	Tina, the recurring character on Veronica's Closet, Bobbi 
	Seawright on For Your Love and Lanie Parish on the ABC crime 
	drama Castle, which will first run from 2009 to 2016. Her first 
	acting role will be a guest appearance on the teen sitcom 
	California Dreams. She will go on to play a student in the short-
	lived ABC drama Dangerous Minds. She will have co-starring roles 
	on the 1998-2002 series For Your Love and the short-lived The 
	Tracy Morgan Show. She will have a recurring role as Tonya, an 
	old girlfriend of Flex's (seasons one and five) on One on One. 
	She will guest-star on other television series, including The 
	Parent 'Hood, The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, Veronica's Closet, My 
	Name Is Earl, Studio 60 On The Sunset Strip, and Malcolm & Eddie.
	In 1993, she will appear in the music video for "Give It Up, Turn 
	It Loose" by En Vogue. In 2001, she will be in the music video 
	for "Girls, Girls, Girls" by rapper Jay Z with fellow actresses 
	Paula Jai Parker and Carmen Electra. Also that year, she will be
	featured in the music video for "Gravel Pit" by Wu-Tang Clan. She 
	will also appear in Will Smith's video "Im looking for the one".
	She will appear in the music video for the song "Independent" by 
	rapper Webbie as a female black President of the United States. 

1976 - Tevin Jermod Campbell is born in Waxahachie, Texs. He will become
	a singer, songwriter and actor. He will perform gospel in his 
	local church from an early age. Following an audition for jazz 
	musician, Bobbi Humphrey, in 1988, he will be signed to Warner 
	Bros. Records. In 1989, he will collaborate with Quincy Jones 
	performing lead vocals for "Tomorrow" on Jones' album "Back on the 
	Block" and will release his Platinum-selling debut album, T.E.V.I.N.. 
	The album will include his highest-charting single to date, "Tell 
	Me What You Want Me to Do", peaking at number 6 on the Billboard 
	Hot 100. The debut album will also include the singles "Alone With 
	You" (produced by Al B. Sure and Kyle West, with background vocals 
	by K-Ci and JoJo from Jodeci), and "Goodbye". His double-Platinum 
	selling second album, I'm Ready, released in 1993, will include two 
	songs penned by Babyface; "Can We Talk" which will peak at number 9 
	on the Hot 100 and number 1 on the Billboard R&B charts, and the 
	album's title track "I'm Ready", will also peak at number 9 on the 
	Hot 100. In 1996, he will release his third album, Back to the 
	World, which will not be as commercially or critically successful 
	as his first two releases. His fourth and most recent album, Tevin 
	Campbell, will be released in 1999, but will perform poorly on 
	Billboard's album charts. Apart from music, he will commence an 
	acting career, by appearing in the sequel to Prince's Purple Rain 
	named Graffiti Bridge and will make guest appearances on The Fresh 
	Prince of Bel-Air and Moesha television programs, voice fictional 
	pop star Powerline in Disney's A Goofy Movie and will be cast as 
	Seaweed in the Broadway musical Hairspray in 2005. He will earn 5 
	Grammy Award nominations, and will have certified sales of 4.5 
	million records in the United States, according to the Recording 
	Industry Association of America. 

1977 - Ernest N. (Dutch) Morial is elected mayor of New Orleans, 
	Louisiana. He is the first African American to hold that 
	post.

1977 - The NAACP's Spingarn Medal is awarded to Alexander P. 
	Haley "for his unsurpassed effectiveness in portraying 
	the legendary story of an American of African descent."

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