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November 2008

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From:
"Coates, Rodney D. Dr." <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Coates, Rodney D. Dr.
Date:
Sun, 9 Nov 2008 17:00:13 -0500
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*              Today in Black History - November 9           *

1731 - Benjamin Banneker is born free in Ellicott Mills (now
        Ellicott City), Maryland.  He will become the builder
        of the first clock made in America.  He also will
        become the key figure in the design of Washington, DC
        after Pierre L'Enfant quit and took his plans for DC
        with him.  Banneker was able to save the project by
        reproducing the plans from memory, in two days, a
        complete layout of the streets, parks, and major
        buildings.  From 1792 to 1802, Banneker will publish
        an annual Farmer's Almanac, for which he did all the
        calculations himself.  He will join the ancestors in
        1806.

1868 - The Howard University Medical School opens with eight
        students.

1868 - Arkansas Governor Powell Clayton, declares martial law
        in ten  counties and mobilizes the state militia in a
        Ku Klux Klan crisis.

1923 - Dorothy Dandridge is born in Cleveland, Ohio.  She will
        try vaudeville and a stint at the Cotton Club before
        finding her most noteworthy success as an actress.
        She will appear in such works as "Porgy and Bess" and
        minor movie roles before her big break in a series of
        low-budget movies including "Tarzan's Perils".  While
        simultaneously maintaining a singing career, Dandridge
        will have her greatest success in "Carmen Jones"
        opposite Harry Belafonte, Pearl Bailey, Diahann
        Carroll, and Brock Peters, which will earn her an
        Academy Award nomination, a first for an African
        American actress. She will join the ancestors on
        September 8, 1965.

1925 - Oscar Micheaux's movie "Body and Soul" is released. It
        marks the film debut of Paul Robeson.

1931 - Eugene "Big Daddy" Lipscomb is born.  He will become a
        professional football star with the old Baltimore
        Colts.  He will enter the NFL without ever playing
        college football. He will be considered one of the
        greatest defensive tackles in NFL history.  He will
        join the ancestors in May, 1963.

1935 - Robert "Bob" Gibson is born in Omaha, Nebraska.  He will
        become a professional baseball player and pitcher for
        the St. Louis Cardinals.  He will be the National
        League MVP in 1968.  During his career, he will amass
        3,000 career strike-outs, win the Cy Young Award in
        1968 and 1970, win the Baseball Writers Award in 1968,
        pitch in the 1964, 1967, and 1968 World Series, and win
        Nine Gold Glove Awards.  He will enter the National
        Baseball Hall of Fame in 1981.

1961 - The Professional Golfers Association eliminates their
        Caucasians only rule.

1965 - Willie Mays is named the National League's Most Valuable
        Player.

1970 - William L. Dawson, Democratic congressman and party
        leader, in Chicago, Illinois, joins the ancestors at
        the age of 84.

1976 - The United Nations General Assembly endorses 10
        resolutions condemning apartheid in South Africa,
        including one that says the white-only government is
        "illegitimate."

1982 - Sugar Ray Leonard retires from professional boxing for
        the first time, because of a recurring eye problem
        sustained in a welterweight title match.

1990 - Freedom Bank in New York City, one of the largest
        African American-owned banks in the nation, is
        declared insolvent.  Its losses in 1988-1989 totaled
        $4.7 million, and it was expected to lose $2 million
        in 1990.  A last-minute effort to revive the bank by
        raising funds from the local Harlem community will
        fail to meet the government-imposed deadline.

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