(Ehe |í]nrUanh (Ohseruer _____________________ B la c k H M istorv onth continued yet history nonetheless; people who knew o f black valor in World War I, o f droves trekking North for opportunity, o f m ore than ten thousand protesting white violence in that Silent March down New York C ity’s Fifth Avenue. They w ere folks possessed w ith, as Rampersad wrote, “a growing sense o f certainty that black America was on the verge o f something like a second Emancipation.” for Porgy and Bess Bv J anus A dams On October 10,1935, the curtain o f Broadway’s Alvin Theatre ran up on George Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess. The sh ow ’s success was shared by two African American women in leading roles - Anne Brown as “Bess” and Eva Jessye behind the scenes as the show ’s choral director. So arresting was the voice o f Anne Wiggins Brown that the folk opera based on the novel Porgy made room in its Broadway title for Bess. Significantly, as culturally Black as Porgy and Bess was, with its story o f life on Catfish Row, all o f the sh o w ’s creative credits (contracts and royalties, too) went to whites: Du Bose and Dorothy Heyward for the novel and the show 's book; George Gershwin for the musical score; his brother, Ira Gershwin, and Du Bose Heyward for the 1 ibretto. But the authenticity o f he voices, sonorous and rich, came from the choral arrangements by African American composer Eva Jessy e- the same woman o f African descent. 1 am a Black woman. And Annnie Wiggins B row n and Todd Duncan in “P o rg y and Bess, ” 1935. FOCUS I am happy to be exactly as God made me.” p for Press (Black) B y T onya B olden B la c k D isp a tc h . T his firecracker was launched in 1915 by o n e o f O k la h o m a ’s m ost indefatigable civil-rights leaders. Roscoe Dunjee, brotherofhistorian D ru silla D unjee H ouston. By midcentury. Black Dispatch had n a tio n a l re a d e rsh ip , and its publisher was well-known for his stinging, winning editorials. Chicago Defender. This was the brainchild o f Robert Sengstacke A bbott, who was born on St. Sim on’s Island. Georgia. Abbott, who had a trade (printing) and a professional degree (law), started the new spaper in 1905 in his in Selma, Alabama she posed for this photo at approximately 2 0 years of age in 1947. Mrs. Cain was the proud mother of seven children. All of her children migrated west to Oregon One of her daughters, Christina Cain, celebrates 23 years working for the Portland Development Commission. Christina is, in turn, passing along her family history to her own young daughter, Adriana. Onnie Mae would have wanted it that way. Throughout the month of February, PDC employees will remember the rich heritage of African-Americans. The Commission is dedicated to working with the community to make our city a better place to, live and work for all citizens. PORTLAND DEVELOPMENT (X)M MISSION Page 7 landlady’s kitchen with twenty cents and a little credit. A decade later, the paper had a circulation o f about 250,000 with deep readership in the South. New Amsterdam News. It was founded in 1909 by James H. Anderson, and in 1936, it was purchased by two doctors, Philip M.H. Savory and Clilan Bethany Powell (New Y ork's first black radiologist), who became its editor- in-chief and the force behind the Onnie Mae Cain kin hd f°r the i°ve °f ^azz 89.1 ____________________February 9,2000