WESTERN MICHIGAN wo ladie head for Inaneial indep nd nee By DANNY COOK COI!!!IHIf!dMt On the comer of Walnut Street and Portage Road sits a cluster of stores and service agencies. Also, there's a beauty shop called Personal Touch, the focus Qf our attention. Behind this collection of chairs, dryers, curling irons, .and such are two young wives who dreamed of financial inde­ pendence. Dreams do come true--even in Kalamazoo. lola Burnett, a lifelong resi­ dent of Grand Rapids, graduated from Cre ton High School, mar­ ried her high school sweetheart, and moved to Ka amazoo. Al­ tbough she occasionally worked outside the home, she was content to be a wife and mother. As age thirty beat at her door lola became re tless. "I had always been interested in hair styling, ever since high school, but since all of my high school friends were pursuing it I decided to learn about health oc­ cupations, with intentions of be­ coming a nurse." Burnett had to forgo her plans when she got mar­ ried. Chic University, formerly Tracy's Beauty School, granted lola relief from her restlessness and put her on the path to finan­ cial independence. Four months after graduation, in May of 1986 she became a licensed beautician. "I WORKED AT 'F1ozella Beauty Salon on East Main fer one year. I managed it for another year, give or take a month or so. I met Rachel at my next place of employment, Hair Expose Beauty Salon, where we both rented booth. This was a couple of month after I had left Flozella' ." Hair Expo was located in the Kalamazoo Center. Rachel Smith remembers being glad to see lola, another Black face among the Center's mostly white entepreneurs and ellen . Al­ though they became friend their background had major differen­ ces. Rachel was born and raised in Chicago. She became a mother during high chool, and although she married the father of her child before graduation, they were oon divorced. Rachel' mother, also n med Rachel, had been in the hair tyl­ ing business for over twenty years when her daughter left home for a job at Kentucky Fried Chicken. Also, Rachel' older si ter, Cheri Marshall. had been in the busi­ ne s (or more than ten years. "I picked up a lot from my famjly being successful in the business, not so much because I was taught things but because I was expo ed to them and just picked them up." After seperating from her hus­ band, Rachel supplemented her KFC job by styling hair on the side. She eventually decided she needed to get serious and go to school. Aid To Familie With Dependent Children (AFDC) be­ came her ticket to financial inde­ pendence. "I used AFDC as a way up, not as a means of laying up." DURING HER year on AFDC she attended Debbie's School of Beauty Culture in Chicago. After graduation, R chel wor ed with her mother and ister. In August 1976, a few months after claiming financial inde­ pendence with a beautici n license, Rachel remarried, moving to Parkville, a small com­ munity outside of Three Rivers, Michigan. She ettled down to become a housewife and mother. Twelve years later, hen her son turned sixteen, she returned to the job market, beginning at Eula's Beauty Salon in Kalamazoo. Eight months later he left, going to Hair Expo e. As they look back over their houlders, remembering when they first beg n exploring the po - sibility of co-owning a busines • lola and Rachel knew the path they were choosing was speckled with disappointments. No bank or financial institution would bankroll their bu ine s with tart­ up capital. leaving them to make due With extending credit cards to the limit. And queezing a penny 'til Lincoln cried out in pain. While their husbands were very supportative, doing the plumbing and partition work in their business, mo t of the work fell to the ladle . "We laid carpet, hung wallpaper, did the painting, everything," lola remembers. NEITHER OWNER recalls any contlict between them, despite having more than four years behind them in their busi­ ness, 8S equal owner/operators. In a world where even husbands and wives have conflicts, they've ob­ viously found a formula for work­ ing together smoothly. This Is A New House Or a college education. Or a comfortable retirement. It's the secure feeling you get knowing that you're providing for your family and your future. It's a U.S. Savings Bond, and it pays competitive interest rates with a guaranteed minimum rate of return when held five years or more. For more information, pick up a free Buyer's Guide at your local bank and ask about the Payroll Savings Plan where you work. U. Savings Bon 'chur h' i word, Ie i • to call ut. "The church must pr ach the Word. We mu t plug into the plantation m n­ tality Iflictin lack in U IT ED EGRO COLLEGE FU D A ind Is A Terrible Thing To Waste.