Page 12 February 21,2001 Focus Black History In Print PR. SCUSS BlRthPOY PARTY ThURSPO Y. (DflRCh ) fROOl fc30Pm TO S:3OPfl) (U IThO ninT(R M TIV( PRtSWTATIOD BY tm Phoenix Theft TtRTOGO AOP STORYTCIUDG BY nuRroi BIRThBAY CAM FR« Atxnission 5736 NF. 33rd • Portland, Oregon (503) 249-3983 • www.mcmenamins.com ------------I he 'jfJprManb (Obseruer 1001 Things Everyone Should Know About African American History J effrey C, S tewart M ain S treet B ooks / D oublepay : 1996 by “ 1001 Things Everyone Should Know A bout A fri can A m erican H istory” presents the only com pre hensive, authoritative, and engaging account o f the most significant events, in dividuals, terms, ideas, and so cial m o v e m e n ts that m ake up the dazzling can vas o f A frican A m erican history - all told in concise and easily read entries, ac com panied by over 150 photographs. Here is a fact- filled trip through five hun d re d y e a rs o f A fric a n A m erican h isto ry from Scottsboro toCongo Square, from the Exodusters to the Edison Pioneers. So if you want to know who invented the gas mask (869), or domi nated college lacrosse in the m id-1950s (986), or be cam e the first Black cow boy to write his own autobi ography (151), or even who in- vented the disc jockey technique o f“scratching” (826),you’resure to find it in “ 1001 Things Everyone Should Know A bout African American History.” On Her Own Ground The Life and Times o f Madam C.J. Walker T L IP S P IZ Z A H a n d c r a f t e d P i j y a lU iM g L o c a l O r g a n i c I n g r c d i e n t A Proud Sponser of the Joyce Washington Scholarship Fund Downtown/PSU 1909 SW 6TH AVE 503/224-0311 Raleigh Hills 4825 SUU 76th 503/297-8424 “On Her Own Ground" is the first fiill-scale, definitive biography o f Madam C.J. Walker - the legendary African American entrepreneur and philanthropist - by her great- great-granddaughter, A ’LeliaBundles. The daughter o f slav es, M ad am Walker was orphaned at 7, married at 14 and widowed at 20. She spent the better part o f the next two de cades laboring as a w ash erw o m an for $ 1.50 a w eek Then - ( ) \\ \ with the discovery of a revolutionary hair care formula forblack >>,///< ~K ttd u n t ( women - everything ch an g ed . B y her deathin 1919, Walker managed to overcome astonishing odds: building a storied beaut} empire from the ground up, amassing wealth unprec edented among black women and devoting her life to philan thropy and social activism. Along the way, she formed friendships with great early-20th-century political figures.