February 28, 2001 (Ebc ;|Jtfrilattò (Observer During a nosedive from 3500 feet at one hundred and ten m iles an hours her plane could not come out o f the turn, leading to a fatal crash. She was hailed as a heroine who taught black wom en to n e v e r g iv e up th e ir dream s. Every M emorial Day, pilots fly over the p la c e w h e re B e ssie C olem an had died and th ro w flo w e rs to the ground in her memory. Bessie Coleman was trained and licensed to pilot a plane in France in '1921. She established a flight school fo r blacks, raising money fo r the venture by performing aviation stunts. She bought three airplanes and began touring the country. She tragically died on April 30, 1926 in a plane crash. the coveted 1983 Pulitzer Prize for Literature. Although the youngest o f eight children and the daughter o f G eorgia share­ croppers, her literary focus has been on her good experiences as a black w om an in America. Alice W alker’s efforts in litera­ ture have d raw n h er p ra ise throughout the world as a loyal readership patiently aw aits her next novel. Toni Morrison T ony M orrison once said, “My world did not shrink because I was a black female. It just got bigger.” A fter a divorce, Toni M orrison once said it was in her tim es o f sad­ ness, loneliness and de­ pression that got her w rit­ ing as a form o f healing. Late at night when the kids were asleep in their beds, a young woman bom Chloe Anthony W oford be­ gan putting the ink on the paper. These dark and lonely nights as she described them helped trans­ form this single parent into what many consider the best black female w riter o f all times. Toni has written num erous books and even shocked the world as the first black woman to win the Nobel Prize for Literature. Her accom plishm ents as a w riter and an educator highlight her not only as a tribute to her race, but also as a role m odel for aspiring young authors across all m inority “plains.” From her first novel, The Bluest Eye, to her prize-w inning Beloved, and beyond, one can only guess what she will com e up with next. The breadth and depth o f her writing truly does show her world getting bigger all the time. P ill 'ARM iMiURAMCt STATE FARM IN S U R A N C E C O M P A N IE S Madam C.J. Walker If you could invest one d ay ’s wages to becom e the richest person in the world, would you do it? That was the risk that Madam C.J. W alker took in the very early 1900’s. Her invest­ ment o f a single day’s wages to try an experiment made her the richest Black woman in the world in her time. Before this, Madam Walker suffered from too much bad luck. She lost both her par­ ents at the age o f six, was married by the time she was 14, bore a daughter and became a widow before she was twenty. This was all followed by eighteen years of Page 7 back breaking, dirty laundry work that paid her only $ 1.50 per day. Fed up, she risked a little money on an experiment that revolution­ ized the hair care industry. Her “solutions” would soften a Black woman’s hair and her specialized curling iron could straighten it. Black women could finally have long, silky, smooth hair. These items along with a line ofW alker’s designer toiletries made her the first African American millionaire in the world. Shirley Chisholm Staring at a large crowd of white m en, Shirley Chisholm Off.: (503) 286-1103 Fax: (503) 286-1146 HOME OFFICES: BLOOMINGTON, ILLINOIS ERNEST J. HILL, JR. Agent 6527 NE MLK, Jr. Boulevard Suite A Portland, OR 97217 Bessie Coleman Have you ever dream ed o f being a pilot? Born in 1922, this Black wom an w ould show us all how to m anifest that dream , no m atter what the odds. As the twelfth o f thirteen children bom to poor and illiterate parents, Bessie C olem an grew up with a .passion for learning. Two times a year, a traveling library wagon would pass though their little ’town. H er m other bought what few books her m eager earnings could afford. Bessie would learn how to read and later finished highschool. W orking as a m ani­ curist by day and m anaging a chili parlor at night, she saved her m oney. She wanted to learn how to fly. As a black wom an, Am erica refused her this right. Not willing to give up, she earned enough m oney to go to France. When she returned, she was the w orld’s first black woman pi­ lot. From 1922 to 1926 she flew exhibitions, saving every nickel she could to open up a school for black pilots. Her plans were suddenly cut short when she had a fatal accident. AFFORDABLE A " LOCK & KE 503-284-9582 FULL LOCKSMITH-SERVICE RE-KEY AND INSTALL LOCKS LOCKED OUT7-WE MAKE KEYS FROM SCRATCH HOUSE,OFFICEOR CAR H onors B lack H istory M onth 445 NE Killingsworth • 503.288.9367 CLASS BEGINS W ITH A HEARTY BREAKFAST Monday through Saturday: 7am to 10:30ani Sunday: 7am to 11:30am 5756 NE 33rd • Portland, Oregon (505) 249-3985 • wivw.mcmcnamins.com