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.