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Date:
Mon, 7 Jun 2021 17:30:27 -0400
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*                  Today in Black History - June 7                    *

1863 - Three African American regiments and small detachment of white 
	troops repulse a division of Texans in a hand-to-hand battle 
	at Milliken's Bend, Louisiana.

1917 - Gwendolyn Brooks is born in Topeka, Kansas. She will become the 
	first African American to win the Pulitzer Prize (1950). She 
	will win this award for "Annie Allen," which is about the coming 
	of age of a young African American and her feelings of loneliness, 
	loss, death and poverty. In 1963-1969 she will teach poetry and 
	fiction workshops and also freshman English and 20th century 
	literature. In 1967, she will organize a poetry writing workshop 
	for a gang, and her home soon became a meeting place for young
	people interested in arts and politics. In 1985, she will become 
	the first African American woman to take the position of Poetry 
	Consultant to the Library of Congress. Her job will be to give a 
	lecture in autumn and a poetry reading in the spring. She will
	be the 29th and last Poetry Consultant. In 1988, she will become 
	the second Poet Laureate of Illinois. She also will be inducted 
	into the National Women's Hall of Fame. She will join the ancestors
	on December 3, 2000.

1931 - David C. Driskell is born in Eatonton, Georgia. An artist and 
	professor of art at several universities, Driskell will be acclaimed 
	as one of the foremost art historians and curators of African 
	American art exhibits. He will hold a Master of Fine Arts degree from 
	Catholic University and nine Honorary Doctoral degrees. In 2000, he 
	will be honored by President Bill Clinton as one of 12 recipients of 
	the National Humanities Medal. A publication, "David C. Driskell: 
	Artist and Scholar" by Julie L. McGee, will detail Driskell's life 
	and work, wand will be published in 2006. He will be represented by 
	DC Moore Gallery. His first exhibition at the gallery will be held in 
	October 2006. He is a scholar in the field of African American art 
	and is an emeritus professor at the University of Maryland, College 
	Park.

1941 - The War Department approves a contract that establishes a primary flying
	school at Tuskegee Institute.

1943 - Yolande Cornelia Giovanni, Jr. is born in Knoxville, Tennessee. She will 
	become a poet and author that will be known for her books "Black Feeling", 
	"Black Talk", and "Black Judgment," and the name "Nikki." In 1973, she 
	will establish NikTom, Ltd., a communications company that will edit and 
	publish "Night Comes Softly," an anthology of poetry by Black women, 
	"Re: Creation," "Poem of Angela Yvonne Davis," and her other prominent 
	works. In the mid 1980's, her opposition to the boycott of South Africa 
	will lead to her being Blacklisted by TransAfrica and subsequently to 
	bomb and death threats. She will receive at least six honorary doctorate 
	degrees and a myriad of literary awards.

1946 - U.S. Supreme Court bans discrimination in interstate travel.

1950 - U.S. Supreme Court avoids a general ruling on "separate but equal" 
	doctrine.

1956 - Antonio Marquis "L.A." Reid is born in Cincinnati, Ohio. He will become
	a record executive, record producer, A&R representative, and panelist. 
	He will be founder and current co-chairman of Hitco Entertainment. He 
	will previously serve as the chairman and CEO of Epic Records and The 
	Island Def Jam Music Group and the president and CEO of Arista Records. 
	He will be the founder and CEO of Hitco Music Publishing and the co-
	founder of LaFace Records with producing partner Kenneth "Babyface" 
	Edmonds. He will win three Grammy Awards, picking up awards as a 
	songwriter for songs such as Boyz II Men's "End Of The Road." Over the 
	course of his career, he will write and produce for many artists 
	including Bobby Brown, Johnny Gill, Outkast, Toni Braxton, TLC, Mariah 
	Carey, Avril Lavigne, Paula Abdul, Pink, Justin Bieber, Meghan Trainor, 
	Rihanna, Kanye West, Usher, Ne-Yo, 21 Savage, Young Jeezy, Ciara, Zara 
	Larsson, Jidenna, Jennifer Lopez, Future, Travis Scott, Fifth Harmony, 
	DJ Khaled, Rick Ross, Delacey, and The Jacksons. He will appear as a 
	judge on the first two seasons of the U.S. version of the television 
	show The X Factor, but will leave the show in December, 2012 to focus 
	on his leadership at Epic Records. One of the major projects that he will
	embark on following his stint on The X Factor, will be the remaking of 
	Michael Jackson songs after his death, with the May 13, 2014 release of 
	the album XScape. In 2016, he will publish the New York Times bestselling 
	memoir "Sing to Me: My Story of Making Music, Finding Magic, and 
	Searching for Who's Next."

1958 - Prince Rogers Nelson is born in Minneapolis, Minnesota. He will become a 
  	singer and prolific songwriter and producer known to the public as 
	"Prince." An incurable movie fan, he will have a passion for drama (and 
	comedy). His own films will include "Purple Rain," "Under the Cherry 
	Moon," and "Grafitti Bridge." "Purple Rain" (1984) will be hailed by some 
	critics as the best rock movie ever made and earn Prince an Oscar for 
	best original song score and soundtrack album. Because of his desire to 
	have complete artistic control over his music, he will endure several 
	years of a contract dispute with his label, Warner Brothers, which results 
	in him appearing in public with the word SLAVE written on his face. In 
	1993, he will change his name to "The Artist Formerly Known As Prince" 
	(TAFKAP or The Artist). He will come out of the Warner Brothers conflict 
	happily. He will establish a new relationship with EMI Records that will 
	allow him to record and produce whatever he wants to release. He will join 
	the ancestors on April 21, 2016 after succumbing to a fentanyl overdose at 
	his Paisley Park recording studio and home in Chanhassen, Minnesota.

1964 - John "Ecstasy" Fletcher is born in Brooklyn, New York. Ecstasy will form 
	the rap group Whodini with Jalil Hutchins in 1982. Whodini's first LP, 
	"Magic's Wand," will be a tribute to the New York DJ who fosters the 
	group's early career. The title track will be one of the first rap singles 
	to be accompanied by a video. Whodini will also become one of the first 
	rap acts to perform with their own dancers. Succeeding hits will include 
	"The Haunted House of Rock," "Friends," "Freaks Come Out at Night" and "Be 
	Yourself," featuring Millie Jackson. In 1986, the year DJ Grandmaster Dee 
	begins working with the group, Whodini will issue "Growing Up," an anti-
	drug video financed by the New York State Division Of Substance Abuse. 
	After a quiet period in the late '80s, Whodini will issue "Bag-A-Trix" in 
	1991. The following year, the group will contribute "It All Comes Down to 
	Money" to Terminator X's "The Godfathers of Threat compilation," which 
	will also feature Kool Herc and Cold Crush Brothers.

1966 - The voter registration march from Memphis, Tennessee to Jackson, Mississippi 
	is continued by Martin Luther King, Jr. and other civil rights groups and 
	will register almost 4,000 African Americans. The march had been interrupted 
	the previous day by the shooting of James Meredith, by a white sniper.

1987 - Mae Jemison, becomes the first African American woman astronaut. Jemison 
	entered Stanford University as a 16-year-old National Achievement 
	Scholarship student. She will major in Chemical Engineering and Afro-
	American Studies, graduating in 1977. She will then go on to Cornell 
	University to get a medical degree in 1981. She will work as a medical 
	intern in Los Angeles, California in 1981. After her internship, she will 
	join the Peace Corps for two years in West Africa giving medical attention 
	to Peace Corps volunteers and State Department employees in Sierra Leone 
	and Liberia from 1983 to 1985. She will then work as a general practitioner 
	for CIGNA Health Plans of California in Los Angeles from 1985 to 1987. She 
	will the apply and get accepted as an astronaut for the National Aeronautics 
	and Space Administration (NASA) in Houston, Texas in 1987.

1987 - Lloyd Richards wins a Tony as best director for the August Wilson play "Fences". 
	The play wins three other Tony awards, for best play, best performance by an 
	actor (James Earl Jones), and best performance by a featured actress (Mary 
	Alice).

1991 - Willie Maxwell II is born in Paterson, New Jersey. He will be known 
	professionally as Fetty Wap and will become a singer, rapper, and songwriter. 
	He will rise to prominence after his debut single "Trap Queen" reaches number 
	two on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart in May, 2015. This will help him secure 
	a record deal with 300 Entertainment. He will subsequently release two Top 10 
	singles in the U.S., "679" and "My Way". His eponymously titled debut album 
	will be released in September, 2015 and will reach number one on the U.S. 
	Billboard 200 chart. On February 5, 2016, he will release a new single titled 
	"Jimmy Choo". On April 26, 2016, it will be announced that he would be getting 
	his own mobile racing game available on phone, tablet, and Apple TV starting on 
	May 3. The game is offshoot of mobile game Nitro Nation Stories. A street racing 
	game, it will have multi-player, car customization, and different storylines to 
	choose. It will partner with automotive brands like BMW, Nissan, and Cadillac. 
	The Fetty Wap version will include Fetty Wap and Monty into the storyline. He 
	will be featured on the Fifth Harmony 2016 single "All in My Head (Flex)". He 
	will release the single "Wake Up" in April, 2016. The official music video for 
	the song will be filmed at his alma mater, Eastside High School. His single "Make 
	You Feel Good" will be released in August 2016. On November 21, 2016, he will 
	release a 19 track mixtape titled "Zoovier." His song "Like a Star" will feature 
	Nicki Minaj and be released in December, 2016. On January 4, 2017, he will 
	release the song "Way You Are" featuring Monty, and the song "Flip Phone" on 
	February 10, 2017. He will release the single "Aye" on May 12, 2017. He will 
	release the mixtape Lucky No. 7 on June 7, 2017. On August 18, 2017, the single 
	"There She Go" featuring Monty will be released.

1998 - In a crime that shocks the nation, James Byrd Jr., a 49-year-old African American 
	man, joins the ancestors after being chained to a pickup truck and dragged to 
	his death in Jasper, Texas. Three men, white supremacists, are arrested in the 
	case. The atrocity will prompt President Clinton to issue a press release 
	condemning the act. Two of the killers will be sentenced to death for the crime, 
	a third to life in prison.

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