Bronze Reporter [Volume: 5, Issue: 22]

A tas ~OOS a Eyer CeeMT Re hoe Ree ty twee More Sales ~Mean | i 4 | More Jobs BRONZE REPORTER, SATURDAY, RiAY 10, 1958 5 yen = Gifts For need not be expensive! Any of these items can be purchased from KELLOGG~S for the price of $3.98 Check This List Nightgown Pajamas Dusters Slips A ber guleet ses r Shrugs Baby Dolls ~ We Have Sizes i SR v = pas pCoreees Shop Mother PB ga e 8 toa Wy $F Talented Kids Should Tackle Social Problems |. ANN ARBOR ~ Teachers of! gifted children should encourage them to use their superior talent in the solution of the world~s mast pressing problems, says Edgar B. Wesley, visiting professor of education at The University of Michigan. Wesley is the author of ~NEA: The First Hundred Years,~ Harper, 1957. According to the educator, ~These problems are social, covering such areas as freedom and authority,- law and liberty, war and peace, nationalism and world* order. ~At present, our society is oriented toward the solution of scientific problems. Speed and power are not urgent. - Even space~ navigation can wait but our enemies may not wait. Of the utmost importance to our society right now is the study of.social relationships, the solution of problems of diplomacy, the lessen: ing of nationalism. ~Our best hope is to enlist the talents of our gifted children in the solution of these préblems. | This isn~t going to be easy, be~cause in many cases gifted chil{dren tend to avoid ~social pro while way at the bottom~ of the list, are those who plan; to go into the more vital. reas~ of political science, sociology and teaching... biG ~We inust get ~our brightest high ' ~school students to~ feel a real~ Te: isibility to ~work on the hardest~ ' epee gre Ose: involving~ pedce ~and war, * legislation ~and law, and fi~ ~réconciling ~of freedom and~ authority. - i e885; A professor from India and a Jewish Rabbi set forth ~articles of faith and tenets of'their respective religions at a joint meeting of the~ local Laymen~s League and.-Women~s Auxiliary which was held in the Cheshire Building lounge at St. Augustine~s College. Monday, Apri: 28th. The meeting was. attended by members of the Woman's: Auxiliary and Laymen~s League of St. Ambrose Episcopal. Church. and St. Augunine~s pair ite respectively; Moody Said: blems because ~they see theni sats ced th $id ede abet Cod to a ~dead end.~ The gifted strongly desire a sense of accomplishment, the satisfaction of having completed something.. The. problem in mathematics ean ~be solv: ed, the art object can be breugh to completion: But when the~ chi with superior talents tangles with, a social problem, he~s incline to say, ~I can~t see any end to that,~ and he. shies ~away from it,|.. leaving the ~legislature ad the} university of the future: open ito quacks. and chaxjataas: as 10] 4 -10l@ a1, | aes } ee ae | REVOLVING. CHARGE sUST rin LN SRE A TE ETN ES CL NE IR RIS SIE ~ REGULAR CHARGE ACCOUNT! All the advantages of a \ regular charge account ~ do things you can do yourself. If you are jealoug the only: man that you can hurt ih ar f. Christ nity) isn~t orth a~snap bf +o "hin r if it doesn~t stra hte Nou your scharactér. + is fitted for all people. So- long as men sin, ~there will need to be ~sermons of re that here: pentance, L have) al vps 16) go toiisave men~s bales, I could do te save fe ~eve sido ors }} Alls the option to spread y payments over several AG YOU DETERMINE YOUR OWN CREDIT BUDGET! Buy ateording to that amount. eer what you want when you want it! ij TAKE MONTHS TOPAY! Je yourlbal ance dceveases your payments. decrease. Payments~ore flatts~ y your balance! Small service charge. > YOU SAVE SERVICE CHARGES when you poy)~, for your purchases within 15 days after recei Ae your monthly statement. This flexibility makes your SRC c just like a REGULAR Se acco! a iol Sor 2 SR ae ~oP & + 4 ~fdown. Officers {-sdred~s) pocket, (If you don~t ake ~gossip, don~t read this column) ~ HAVE YOU HEARD ABOUT | ~ | ~THAT Southside woman who went for broke... Mrs. (Censored), a ~good church worker,~ told a cancer Arive solicitor that she didn~t have any money. However, later, she reported that she went outside to burn some} papers... that upon her return, J she discovered that, someone had | entered her~ room and took $84 from a purse under. her pillow, She wishes now that she had given to the drive. ~362 - 292~... THAT rough and tumble between man and wife..... Mr. (Censored) of - Austin,St., went to His ex-wife~s residence. They got into an argument... he hit her-in the jaw and knocked her over the bed. She attempted to kick him... he gave her leg a twist, breaking jit. She will be confined in a hospital until she is well. CAR ou~ Sema | Wonderland Travel Service _ 344 South Saginaw Street, Flint Tlephone CL 20101 JOHN A. WATSON Mother~s Day Is MAY 11TH ~658- 891~. THAT man who sent his wife dut- of-town. overnight.. while she was gone, Mr. (Censored). moved. all the furniture and belongings out. When she returned the next day, she was ~surpriséd~ to find everything gone. She threatens bodily harm. if she eatches him. Mean while, he ts in hiding. ~307 +~ 729~. THAT. colored fellow who failed as a short change artist. |. Out on Dort Highway in a service station Mr. (Censored) came into the Station and made a 35 cent purchase. He gave the attendant a $10 bill. He was given change. Then: he-returned $9 and Wanted his ~$10 bill back. He then gayectha Sesshdd. sin, two.-$5 and a Smart ~a~ Comfortable. Woven Stripe | Seersucker ~. TH me sade attack made ri Q > Tilden: St.*woman...'. Mrs! (Censored) was onvekened: by a ew en her rivht. forearm by her irate hu sband He threatened to blow her~ brains Ott... 2 ane wanted to~ know where she had been all nicht..She called police and ran. upstairs. He took out a t6-gvaze shet gun and wert upstairs and brotight her back arrived in time to ~confiscate the shot~ gun and shells, taken from Mr. (Cen MAKE THE COMPARISON-~~SHOP ON HARRISON ~ The original, and only true wash and wear, little or no ironing fabric~woven seersucker in a most becoming Nancy Wayne coat dress. Circle collar, bias band to waist. Black tipped self arrows trim the waist. Self belt. Self buckle. Two hip pockets. Two inch hem. Four gore skirt, Sanforized. Vat. dyed colors. Glas HIDES WALKERS slo-Down ' bles ge ~ First Quality All Stretch Hose ON SALE ~|Savings and Loan Asseciation 100% washable. Sec pr 51 and 60-Gauge ES yisalh ont, HOSIERY a irnsT ON SALE IN PRICE Knee-Hi~First Quality NYLONS Parakeet ~ Posteript HOSIERY: Seamless ~ First Quality. Reg. $1.25 FEDERAL Reg. 99c 6% = 505 72: JOHN A. WATSON QUALITY SHOP. 521.~ ~ 523~ HARRISON STREET Black or Plain Seams Proportioned ~~~ on insured ~SAV INGS. _Binst FEDERAL a

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Title
Bronze Reporter [Volume: 5, Issue: 22]
Canvas
Page 3
Publication
Flint, MI
May 10, 1958
Subject terms
African Americans -- Michigan -- Flint -- Newspapers
Flint (Mich.) -- Newspapers
Genesee County (Mich.) -- Newspapers

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"Bronze Reporter [Volume: 5, Issue: 22]." In the digital collection Black Community Newspapers of Flint. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/35177303.0005.022. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 4, 2025.
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