Pablo Escobar and his wife, Victoria Henao, in a police file photograph from the early eighties. They were married in 1976, when Henao was fifteen years old. “His visual record is composed only of fragments,” writes James Mollison in his essay “Bandit,” “and the collection of photographs and documents that remain have the quality of a forensic dossier.”
Bedroom design from Woman’s Day, 1974.
(Source: flickr.com, via superseventies)
Willa Brown Chappell (1906-1992) was a pioneering aviator who co-founded the National Airmen’s Association of America, an organization whose mission was to get African Americans into the United States Air Force. Inspired by Bessie Coleman, Chappell (then known as Willa Beatrice Brown) started taking flying lessons in 1934 at Chicago’s Aeronautical University. She earned her pilot’s license in 1937, making her the first African-American woman to be licensed to fly in the United States. In 1940, she and her first husband, Lieutenant Cornelius R. Coffey started the Coffey School of Aeronautics, where some of the approximately 200 pilots who trained there eventually became “Tuskegee Airmen.” Born in Glasgow, Kentucky on January 22, 1906, she died on July 18, 1992 at the age of 86. Photo: Kentucky.gov
(Source: mrharristweed)




