Bronze Reporter [Volume: 4, Issue: 23]
BALTIMORE, Md:~A threeway battle will be fought with a diadeém at stake when the ~tenth annual Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association Swimming and Diving Championships are held February 28- | March 2 at Morgan State Col-' le ge. - Howard University, Hampfon and Morgan will compete for the crown in the annual event, wifh Howard defending the title it won last year by a scle point over the host school. Morgan, boasting the top record in the conference, is favored te capture the championships, paced by the strong swimming of seniors Landis Lée of New York, and William Brown of Washington, D.~C., and freshman Reginald Holt of Baltimore. Lee, a 21-year old from Boys High in South Ozone Park, N. Y., will be defending the ~200 yard backstroke championship he~s held for the past three years. Just this weekend, Lee set a new Morgan pool and CIAA record in this event, when he turned in a 2:40.2 effort to erase the old mark of 2:41 held by Leroy Brown of Tennesse A. and I. State University. Brown, a product of D. C.~s Cardozo High School, is the Appointed To Nat'l Committee Dr. Norman L. Allinger, 29, assistant professor of chemistry at Wayne State University, was recently awarded a $6,000 grant * from the Alfred P. Sloan. Foun-, datignwdnes se Botsri~ ~_<-. se Check Page Seven For The Best USED CAR VALUES _IN TOWN fell Them That John Bronze Sent You In~They Will Treat You Right. Columbia TRU-FIT | QUARDIAN ANGEL - @IFETIME PROTECTION F--MOST PRECIOUS GIFT OF ALL~ Henry's Camera & Jewelry Shop 1640 S. Saginaw. St. 3-Way Tie |the team wili - ~nitrogen crop food | Looms CIAA~s 200 yard breaststroke champion and shares the honor of co-captaining the ~56-57 Bears with Martin Jones, 19-year-old sophomore from Douglass here and another strong swimmer. Holt, an 18-year-old. from Douglass High, is considered by Morgan |swimming coach Stewart A.) Brooks to be one of the best recruits the squad has had. A versatile swimmer, already this year he~s set a new pool record, swimming the 200 yard butterfly.. Sports Briefs Coach Holmes~ runners will travel to Souh Bend; Ind. to meet the Mid-West~s major independent track powers in the CCC meet on aSturday, March 2 at Notre Dame. Wayne State, Central) Michigan and Eastern Michigan are exjected to send teams from this area. Basketball The basketball squad faces iis showdown meeting with John Carroll|in a Friday,| March 1 game with the Blue Streaks at 8:15 pim. at Pershing High School, E. Seven Mile and Ryan Road. The game should determine this year~s PAC champion. If the Tartars win |they will share the title with John Carroll while the Blue Streaks need a victory to win it. -Swimming The swimming team has two local dates. Coach Leo Maas~ team entertains Bowling Green State University on Wednesday, |~:: Feb. 27 at 7 p.m. at Patton Pool and then meets Albion College at 2 pim. on aSturday, March |: 2 at Patton Pool... W; meet of the séason wil urday, Mafch 9 at the University. of |Cincinnati. | Four Wayne State University |: squads will see action within}? ne~s final be Sat the same two days. Coach Holmes~ travel to South Bend, Ind. tof CCC meet on Saturday, March 2 at Nore. Dame. FAMU PRACTICES TALLAHASSEE ~ Twentyfive prospects have reported for positions on the 1957 Florida A. and M. University track and field team, according to track coach Pete Griffin. Griffin also announced that participate in meets this season. The A and M* cindermen will open the season here in the: seventh annual Florida A and M Relays on Saturday., March 23. March 23~Florida A & M Relays, Tallahassee. Invitational Track and Field Meet, Orangeburg, S. C. April 23~Alabama |State Relays, Montgomery. ' May 4~Tuskegee Relays,:Tuskegee Institute. May 11~Southern| Intercollegiate Athletic Vonterene Track and Field Meet, Atlanta. The schedule is: is Big Pay from your Soil Bank NITRAGIN INOCULATION helps legumes en- | rich your land with {made from air. Get | ~NITRAGIN in the bright orange pack age at sac stores. | Ph. |CE. 5-1934 runners will} meet the Mid-West~s major in- | dependent track powers in the}! April 6~South Carolina Siate| * Holland > Pontiac, Mich~ It has just been announced by, George Mosley, executive sec-, retary of the Downtown branch! of the Young Men~s Christian | Associaton of Metropolitan. Detroit that he accepts with regret, the resignation of Hubert G. Locke, who has just accepted a position on the Wayne State University staff of Dr. Virgil Lougheed, and will ~assist in feligious and foreign student counseling, as well as served with administrative responsibilities SIMMIE P. HOLLAND * * & on the University Panel of Americans, He will be succeeded by i ie P, Holland, a former Army Chaplain, A graduate ~of Northwestern High School, Locke received his A. B. degree from Wayne State University in 1955. He completed a year~s graduate study at the University of Chicago, where he is a candidate for the B. D. degree and has pursued his po graduate studies at the Univer *HUBERT G. LOCKE ssGitad ag! sity of Michigan. ie While at Wayne, he was presiden of the freshman class (1950), president of the University Student Council (1953-54) and graduate assistant for the Panel of Americans (1954-55). He is a member of Omicron Del ta Kappa Honorary Fraternity Check-In for A and Check Car WILLIAMS AUTO CLINIC 3800 St. John St. With Plenty of rugged winter driving behind your cer (and more still ahead) better stop in ~now for a check-up, tune-up or whatever it takes to keep you driving smoothly, safely. The time to stop trouble is before it starts.. Check-Up Trouble ~Phone: SU. 7-2941 i poterg he holds-@ B.'D..-degree> |p from> ~Fheological ~ Sethihnary,: arid~ Kus~ completed of Staff of the Veterans of For | Washington. Beaufort, 8. C. and Named To Downtown ~Y~ ' MacKenzie Union Honor Society | ~and was recipent of the 1955. {Howard Donnelly Award as the/! Outstanding Male Graduate of the year. While in Chicago, he served. as adult advisor for youth activ-| ities at the South Park Congregational ~Church. He joined the Downtown staff. of the De-| troit Young Men~s Christian) Association in June, 1956 as Associate Youth Work Secretary. Locke is an ordained minister of ~the Church of; Christ: He and his wife live at 1690 Calvert. Locke~s successor, Simmie P. ~Holland, is a nativé of South. ~Carolina, He received his B. A.!) degree from: Johnson C.. Smith. University in. South ~Carolina..An ordained minis ~additional studly ~at: ~Bible Institute,~ -). In~1953 he left a pastorate in Canton} Mississippi, to enter the armed ~forces as a chaplain. He was: honorably~ discharged in 1946 with the rank of Major, and accepted the position of Chief Moody eign Wars in Kansas City, Mo. He was recalled to military, service in 1952. His our of duty) has taken him overseas twice; to the South Pacific and to) Korea. Holland was separated from the U. S. Army in 1956. He will take up his new duties és Associate Youth Work Secretary for the Downtown YMCA immediately. Holland lives with his wife and three children: at 7710 Wykes. Exchenge Students GREENSBORO, N. C.~Three Bennett College students left' here Sunday for Sarah Law-| rence College, Bronxville, N. Y.. where they will spend two) weeks as a part of an exchange| program between the two col-. leges. At the same time, three Sarah Lawrence students left their institution to spend a similar period at ~ Bennett. The Bennett students, all juniors, are: Misses Veronica Shipley, Baltimore; Carolyn~ Brown, Johnson City., Tenn. and Shirley Mae Moore, Camden, N. J. They will attend classes. and engage in all other campus activities while there. Leaving the campus at the same time were seven other student leaders who are making a tour of six Eastern colleges, from February.24 to March 5, to observe campus life and to ers. They will visit Goucher College and Morgan State College in Baltimore; Hunter College, New York City; Brooklyn College, Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, N. Y., and Mt. Holyoke College South Hadley, Mass. i. In this group are: Misses Mary Yvonne Wynne, Jamaica, N. Y~. juniors, and Betty East, Pilot Mountain. and Barbara Hickman, Freeport, Ill., seniors, _ Bennett College has also entered into a student-exchange agreement with Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, Ohio, in: which ~six students of each ins; titution are wai ae from Mar, 52~ to 16. |sitory of Egypt from prehistoric | civilization. It uses the monu | British work starring Alan BadEuropean. film festivals for: its confer with other student lead-|~ Jane Williams, Winston-Salem: Fine Arts Film To Be Shown The Film as an. Art series of the Detroit Institute of Arts beg present two unusual mov s, ~The Ancient World: Egypt~ cae ~The Stranger Left No | Card~ on Tuesday evening, Mar. 5, at 8 o~clock in the auditorium. A The first is ah archaeological study,-in color, tracing the times through the full development of the great Egyptian ments of Egypt without the intrusion of modern life in illustration..It..was.filmed..by archaeological photographers a Ray and Virginia Garner and is accompanied by music by the Athens Symphony Orchestra & narration by Michael Kane. The second movie is a short el, a: prize-winner in several subtle building of suspense. The fiims are free but tickets should be secured during the week in advance at the Publications Deck in the Institute lobby. WSCS Elects | New President MIAMI,. Fla~Mrs, Louis H.' Fields of Frankfort, Ky., was elected president of the Woman~s Society of Christian Service of the Central Jurisdiction of the Methodist Church at the body~s annual conclave here iast week. ' She is a member of the faculty a former president of the Wo |man~s Society of Christian Serv| ice of the Lexington Conference. | Other officers elected were: | vice president, Mrs, O. B. Coe |, of Waco, Texas; recording secretary, Mrs, W. Wad Graves of Texas; treasurer, Mrs. William H. Henry of Wilmington, Del.; secretary of promotion, Mrs. George. W. Carter, the | retiring president of New.Orleans; secretary of Student Work, Mrs. Hilda Thomas of Washington, D. C. Mrs. W. F. Colbert of Mississippi was chosen secretary of Youth Work; Mrs, W. C. Strother of Philadelphia, secretary of Children~s Work (re-elected); Miss Grace Arnold of Atlanta, secretary of Missionary Personnel; Mrs. J. W. Golden of Memphis, Tenn., secretary of Foreign | Work; Mrs. Harriet Israel of Baton Rouge, La., secretary of Literature and _ Publications; Mrs. M. M: Drake of Nashville, | Tenn., secretary of. Missionary Education; Mrs. Thelma Dixon, New Orleans, secretary of Supply ~Work, and Mrs. E. T. Taylor, Chattanooga, Tenn., secretary, of Status of Women, it Detroit, Mich~ | Fast breaks and~ clever ball | handing sparked the play with both teams last night as North-. western won its second City title, in three. years over a stubborn Cass Tech quintet. The game played at U. of D. Memorial Stadium before a crowd of 7,000 fans, was one of the most exciting contests in local prep history. The Technicians showed brilliant defense and passing throughout the contest behind their brilliant guard, Randolph Zeigler Northwestern, rated fifth, a netch behind Cass ~among the state~s powers, earned its 12th victory in-a row, Friday it will play All Saints for the metropolitan Detroit title. Charley North, rugged, hardworking senior forwatd, was the boy who won this one for the Colts. He gave North comeback. That was | Western. control of the boards ~and plenty more, Without | him the Colts would have on doomed. He also gave them 28 points ~the gdme~s best individual scoring effort. Jordan collected - 16 for the losers. Two of North~s 11 goals came in the last two minutes and four seconds to stymie a frantic Cass shortly after the Colts seemingly were ready to give the game away. Rando~ yh Ziegler set up many except. ~al plays for the losers. This was the Technicians~ first loss in 21 games while the Colts won their 12th straight in the 57 campaign, In the preliminary, Central topped Miller 62-61 in a hard ~fought contest which was. de cided in the closing seconds of the game. ~Wayne State Sport Briefs Pontiac, Mich~ Five members of Coach Joe] Mason~s successful Wayne State University basketball squad will graduate in June. Those who will play their last game against John Carroll on Friday, March 1 are forwards Mark Wittock George Brown and Tarpon Lonand Larry Gualtieri,~ centers don and guard Uysses. Harvey. Brown, Wittock and Harvey are all regulars. *~ Wayne State University will host intramural championship teams from the four member President Athletic Conference teams on Friday and Saturday, March 15 and 16. Competition | P John Carroll in a a Friday, Mar. 1 game with the Blue Streaks at 8:15 p.m. at Pershing High School. If the Tartars win they will share the PAC title with John Carroll while the Blue Streaks need a victory to win it. The fencing team entertains the University ~of Detroit in a 1 p.m. meet in Old Main on Saturday, March 2, It will ~be the final dual action of the season for the Tartars who next will compete in the NCAA Fencing Tournament at the University of Detroit-on Friday and Saturday, March 29-30. The swimming team entertains Albion College at 2 p.m. on Saturday, March 2, at Patton Pool. _ Baseball Coach a Try ~ ail for) March ndinaies * rrang 20 game schedule ibe his 1957 squad, Hartford Willing Workers Club Sth Anniversary Pontiac, Mich~~Wanted, A Christian,~ was the well-delivered speech made by Mrs. Maggie Matthews, guest speaker on Sunday aftern Feb. 24. The affair was the 8tht. anniversary of the Willing Workers of Hartford Avenue Baptist Church, Mrs, Charles A, Hill introduced Mrs, Matthews with words fitted for the occasion. Mrs, Elizabeth Ellington, manajing editor and general manager of the Detroit Tribune was guest mistress of ceremony. The program was well presented and all present expressed joy and inspiration for having a the ~privilege of attending the well balanced group. Mrs. Ruth Zeigler, program chairman, spared no pains in her. preparation of the very inspirational program, and she looked very charming in a black new fashioned dress with light accessories, She introduced the puent commentator with grace and beauty. She also presented the president of the Willing Workers. The program of the evening was as follows: Selection, Inspirational Chorus;.prayer, Rev. Hill; solo, Mrs. Grace Cobb (interviewed by Arthur Godfrey); history of club, Mrs. Gertrude Coleman; reading, Miss Barbara Harrison; offering; selection, The Andantes; Introduction of Speaker, Mrs. Charles A. Hill; guest speaker, Mrs. Maggie Mathews; remarks by president, Mrs. Sadie Turner; remarks by pastor, Rev. Charles Till. A, ee ner
About this Item
- Title
- Bronze Reporter [Volume: 4, Issue: 23]
- Canvas
- Page 3
- Publication
- Flint, MI
- March 2, 1957
- Subject terms
- African Americans -- Michigan -- Flint -- Newspapers
- Flint (Mich.) -- Newspapers
- Genesee County (Mich.) -- Newspapers
Technical Details
- Collection
- Black Community Newspapers of Flint
- Link to this Item
-
https://name.umdl.umich.edu/35177303.0004.023
- Link to this scan
-
https://quod.lib.umich.edu/b/blackcommunitynews/35177303.0004.023/3
Rights and Permissions
The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. Some materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission.
Related Links
IIIF
- Manifest
-
https://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/t/text/api/manifest/blackcommunitynews:35177303.0004.023
Cite this Item
- Full citation
-
"Bronze Reporter [Volume: 4, Issue: 23]." In the digital collection Black Community Newspapers of Flint. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/35177303.0004.023. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 7, 2025.