February 9, 2000 (Tbv in d ia n i» (Sbeetwr lack H M ¡story onth l>. for Inventions The follow ing in v en tio n s and in n o v a tio n s w ere by A fric a n Americans from 1900 to 1950: Contribution to mathematical probability and decision theory by David H. Blackwell Asphalt emulsion, puncture­ sealing composition, stable dry papain ingredient used in meat tenderizer by Lloyd A. Hall E lectric hair treatm ent by Solomon Harper Ticket dispensing machine, air c o n d itio n in g u n it, and thermostat by Frederick M. Jones Gas mask and helmet, traffic signal by Garrett A. Morgan Airship by J.F. Pickering Automatic gear shift, multiple- b a rre l m a c h in e g u n by R.B.Spikes K IL for King o f Jazz T onya B olden Duke Ellington ( 1899-1974), bom in Washington, D.C., and named Edward Kennedy, came into the nickname Duke when he was young because o f his penchant for carrying him self as if he were royalty. He became a musical monarch - “ King o f Swing,” “The King of Jazz” - because o f his genius as a pianist, as a composer, and as a manager of aw esom e talents, am ong them bassist Jimmy Blanton, saxophonist Harry Carney, trumpeter William “Cat” Anderson, drummer Sonny Greer, and composer and arranger Billy Strayhom, whose most memorable composition for the Duke E llington O rchestra is “ Take the ‘A ’ T rain.” E llin g to n , w ho w rote scores for several films and musicals, composed ro u g h ly one thousand songs. His greatest hits include “Black and Tan Fantasy,” “ Mood Indigo,” “ Satin Doll,” “It D on’t Mean a Thing If It A in’t Got That Swing” and the fifty-minute tribute to the African American will to triu m p h o v er tragedy, Black, Brown and Beige, the work his orchestra played at the 1943 debut o f the annual concerts Ellington held at New York City’s Carnegie Hall u n til th e m id -1 9 5 0 s. E llin g to n ’s n u m erous a w a rd s in c lu d e the P resid en tial M edal o f Freedom , aw arded by Richard Nixon in 1970. for Lynching Lynching was no isolated act o f a few lawless men, it was the shame of the nation. Between the years 1878 and 1898, no fewer than ten th o u san d had been ly n ch ed . Presidents Rutherford B. Hayes to Woodrow WiIson had turned a blind eye to the problem. On July 28, 1917, people took to the streets ofNew York City for the Negro Silent Protest Parade. An estimated twenty thousand stood stunned on the sidelines as ten thousand African American men, women, and children walked to the beat o f muffled drums down historic Fifth Avenue. Unwilling to wait for th e favor o f no tice in a Page 5 semisympathetic press, the event was organized by James Weldon Johnson, then executive secretary of the NAACP, and promoted and funded, in large part, through the network established by Madam C .J.W a lk e r and her ag en ts. M axim izing our n etw o rk s, foreshadowing theCivil Rights era, a powerful image was telegraphed worldwide. What power is in our midst. * A composer and big-band leader equally at home in the Colton Club and Carnegie Hall, ■‘Duke " Ellington ranks as one o f Am erica's musical giants. Within his lifetime, he had created over 2,000 compositions. AMERICAN FAM IÜT t = t A U T O H O M E B U SIN E S S H EALTH U F E insu ^ e ^ ©2000 American Family Mutual Insurance Company and its Subsidiaries. Home Office - Madison, Wl 53783-0001 www amfam com