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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:
Sun, 15 Oct 2017 03:29:46 -0400
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*		 Today in Black History - October 15          *

1877 - Jackson College in Jackson, Mississippi is established.

1883 - The U.S. Supreme Court declares that The Civil Rights Act
	of 1875 is unconstitutional. The Civil Rights Act of 
	1875 stated that "All persons within the jurisdiction of
	the United States shall be entitled to the full and 
	equal enjoyment of the accomodations, advantages, 
	facilities, and privileges of inns, public conveyances
	on land or water, theaters, and other places of public 
	amusement; subject only to the conditions and 
	limitations established by law and applicable alike to 
	citizens of every race and color, regardless of any 
	previous condition of servitude."

1890 - Savannah State College in Savannah, Georgia is 
	established.

1890 - The Alabama Penny Savings Bank is founded in Birmingham,
	Alabama by Reverend William Reuben Pettiford with $2,000 
	in capital. Although, so strapped for funds in its initial 
	months that its officers will not draw salaries, the bank 
	will prosper so well that during the panic of 1893, it will 
	remain open when larger, white banks in Birmingham fail.  

1917 - The first significant group of African American officers 
	is commissioned by the U.S. Army.

1949 - William Hastie is nominated for the U.S. Circuit Court 
	of Appeals. He will be the first African American to 
	sit on the court.

1953 - Toriano Adaryll Jackson is born in Gary, Indiana. He 
	will better known as Tito and will become a singer and 
	guitarist and original member of The Jackson 5 and The 
	Jacksons, who will rise to fame in the late 1960s with 
	the Motown label, later finding success under the Epic 
	label in the 1970s and 1980s. He will begin a solo 
	career in 2003 performing as a blues musician in various 
	clubs with his band, which will include producer and 
	guitarist Angelo Earl and a management team that 
	includes Ed Tate. In 2007, in the United Kingdom, he will
	appear as a judge on the BBC celebrity singing 
	competition "Just the Two of Us" for series two of the 
	show. He will replace singer Lulu, a judge on series one. 
	His co-judges will be vocal coach CeCe Sammy, musician 
	Stewart Copeland and radio DJ Trevor Nelson. During the 
	tenure of his brothers' reality series, 2009's "The 
	Jacksons: A Family Dynasty," he will serve as one of the 
	executive producers alongside his other brothers. During 
	the summer of 2012, he will reunite with brothers Jackie, 
	Marlon, and Jermaine by going on tour.

1957 - The Sickle Cell Disease Research Foundation opens in Los
	Angeles, California. It is the forerunner to a national
	association and over 50 local chapters dedicated to 
	providing education, screening, counseling, and research
	in the genetic disease that affects over 50,000 
	individuals, mostly African Americans.

1964 - Bob Hayes wins a gold medal for the 100-meter dash in the
	1964 Olympic Games in Tokyo with a time of ten seconds, 
	equaling the world record. 

1968 - Wyomia Tyus becomes the first person to win a gold medal 
	in the 100-meter race in consecutive Olympic games. 

1969 - Abdi Rashid Ali Shermarke, President of Somalia, joins the
	ancestors after being assassinated.

1974 - The National Guard is mobilized to restore order in the 
	Boston school busing crisis.

1989 - South African officials release eight prominent political 
	prisoners, including Walter Sisulu, a leader of the 
	African National Congress. 

1991 - Judge Clarence Thomas is confirmed as the 106th associate
	justice of the United States Supreme Court, despite 
	sexual harassment allegations by Anita Hill, with a 
	Senate vote of 52-48. He becomes the second African 
	American to sit on the Supreme Court.

1993 - African National Congress leader Nelson Mandela and South
	African President F.W. de Klerk are awarded the Nobel 
	Peace Prize for their work to end apartheid and laying 
	the foundations for a democratic South Africa.

1994 - Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide returns to his 
	country, three years after being overthrown by army 
	rulers. The U.N. Security Council welcomes Aristide's 
	return by voting to lift stifling trade sanctions 
	imposed against Haiti. 

2005 - The Million More Movement convenes on the National Mall 
	in Washington, DC. In addition to celebrating the 10th
	anniversary of the Million Man March, there is a call 
	for an end to the war in Iraq, and pointed criticism of
	the federal response to Hurricane Katrina.

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