Bronze Reporter [Volume: 5, Issue: 51]
GARY. ind - ie Sh men, one yore enop ' Phe father of two children, Mr. Dansler is a: cornerstone member of the Galilee Raptist -| board cf deacons. scent. and has literally been -|reared in the tradition of steel Church. He ~teaches Sunday school for young adults, alon7! ~ -| with his wife who heads that department of the church~s work, | and serves as a member cf the Mr. Lumelia~ is of Italian de making. As was the case with his feliow-winner, he also began Works in cinders. During thej{ second world war, Mr. Lumella served in the European theater with the Third Army under the command of General George Patton. The sug~estion has to do with drawing cff iron from slag which would, ordinarily, be reccy:ro: only as scrap, The two imen, long-time friends, mesh te the idea after the thought ~had~ come initially to Dansler- Essentially, the idea revolves around the placement of a basin which catches iron before it cools. a ear ar \ RECEPTION GIVEN SATCHMO~Mr. and Mrs. Louis Armstrong and band were given a deception 1 af after the concert Wednesday night, November 19th, in the Sadler Room of the Pantlind Hotel, Grand Rapids, Michigan, by our local sponsor, Mr. Micheal Griffin, assisted by Mr. Ted Corson, hotel manager. Left to right: are: Mrs. Micheal Griffin, hostess, Louis Armstrong, Ted Carson, hotel manager, Joe ~J. J.~ Perue, radio announcer of Station WLAV, Ted Rasberry, owher of the Kansas City Monarchs and New York Harlem Satellites, Mrs. Louis Armstrong, Larry Tayler, circulation manager of the Grand Rapids Times, and Mrs. Joe ~J. J.~. Jerue. ( = PAY RISE EXCEEDS increced PRODUCTIVITY GAIN ae INCREASED PAY 50 INCREASED - PRODUCTIVITY 30 20 10 ~8 / "SB. ~my 5).152 153 1956 Gaceed id NAM from Gov't. Statistics ba or ~ a ~ ~~s, e He Gave Women Romance And Beauty | Since time began, the pearl has been a symbol of romance and riches, the most prized adornment of man and woman. At least this was the case until about fifty years ago, when Kokichi Mikimoto, a ct reo of noodles, succeeded in cultivating a pearl inside an oyster. Thus he confounded t one, and wrested from nature a secret oo apes a Ay fewer than one now the birthright of every American woman, thanks to th nuity and tenacity of this onee opts eine Cultured pearls are real pearls, find the most prized. examples are~ as rare and prétious as natural pearls of old. Téday, fine pearls are synonomous with Japan, where this new ters industry flourishes at which 100,000 people work and live. A representative of the Japan f ahoea 2 + t' the upan (i tha rade vok 2 desctibes a pres perfect Pearl as luster and nd spots. ~The 94 Oe the better. Dull, itrerulat pearls with many Bay on them are undesirable. is essential Hat pes.pearls, being precious gems, have beauty.~ He cautions against imperfect | pearls. ~The fiearl should not be sold casually. For this reason, I welcome Japan~s steps to forbid export of low-grade pearls.~ earls come in colors for every taste; pink is preferred by Americans, with ergam much in demand. The. color-varies with the water in. which the oyster is immersed. For this reason. and because @ variety of colors give a subtle shading to pearls, pear! owers draw the ittovable oyster Ber from one place to another, to three or four places a year. The natural life of an oyster is about ~eight years. By careful hurture, ~Mikimeto increased the life of oysters te ten yearr~long~ ~enough to prodyce a first-class pear]. The nucleys for a cultured pear] is. injected into the oyster when it ie two of. three years old The oyster covers the pear! inside it with a compléte laver of nacre every twenty-fotr hours Thousands of layers ~go into making e ped Rah who said it couldn~t be locked away since time began. in 100,000 oysters, the pearl pearl lover of Japan. ~ group created in 1955, suggested that a presidential committee be appointed to work for elimination of discrimination in federal housing programs. Republic, the commission made a three-year housing study. The study. The éommission anid about 27 million~ Americans ~ nearly one sixth cf the population ~ were not free to live where~ they chose beeause of race, Pore or ethnic ape nent. NEW YORK ~ The Commission on Race and Housing: has called for an end to housing discrimination ~which. it says affects about 27 million Americans. in a report yesterday, the commission urged govern 3-YEAR STUDY The ~commission, a private Financed by the Fund for the ~eport contained se a of the \ ~Housing.is:. the oue. commod! ty on the American mar ket that Negroes and persons ment, the housing industry and Civic groups to ~purge our national life of the evil of housing discrimination.~ belonging to certain other minorities cannot purchase freely,~ the report said. STATE ACTION ASKED The commission~s recommendations included; Repeal of existing state laws enforcing segregation, State and municipal legisla |. discrimination any tion prohibiting in housing financed with. form of public, aid. Strong powers for state agencies set up to..enforce _antidiscrimination laws..., The; commission appealed: to | the. -housing.,industry.to open all housing developments to all qualified buyers.or tenants. Royal pearls are every woman~s birthright ~today scientific study of the oyster and the pearl. He discovéred that while a foreign substance had been considered necessary to the formation of a cultured pearl, the essential element in its formation was the pearl sac formed from an epidermis, and not from any foreign substance.. So far, pearls have been successfully cultivated only in Japan. Japanese cultured pearls are first-class, for Mikimoto insisted on maintaining superior quality. He buried second-rate pearls. U.S. Solon Sees Negro Pres. im Wear 2000 A Negro could be president of. the. United States by the year. 2000, according to U Jacob Javits. In the rew issue of Esquire magazine the New York Republican bases his conclusions on tions.~ S. Senator ~very. practical considera Writes Senator Javits: ~The solid progress we have made in achieving civil rights gives us ever these gains will accelerate the move to more progress. | reason to anticipate that ~Here in 1958,~ he continues, he said. for their quality.~ éach peerl. = Mikimoto was hot only the first to ~fren~ pearls; he made a the centuries. ~People laughed at me for not selling them at bargain prices,~ ~By destroying the inferior ones, I have made Japanese pearls known all over the world Scientific research in recent years has produced remarkable advances in the production of fine pearls that add to the lustrous glow and poetic mystery that have made pearls precious thronghmut ~we are seeking the beginning of the end for the hate mongers. One simple and persuasive reason is that prejudice has become bad politics. While bigotry and hate may have paid off a hundred years ago today they are a serious political liability.~ Senator Javits expresses the belief that once the fight has iwon for Negroes in the/| South their Constitutional right to vote and once they learn to take the ~ at RS Sy: b; ~NS *. pippLeasen WITH BACK-TO Se AFRICA MOVEMENTS, HE TRIED, IN THE 1920'8, TO FORM A WORLD-WIDE ~GONFERENGE.~ A UNION OF ALL NESRO ORGANIZATIONS ~~TO | BE CALLED THE NEGRO SANHEDRIN / ~ Y: _ AGAINST THE OPPOSITION OF FRIENDS as WELL a ENEMIES, HOWEVER, HE FAILED. Aes A Senet Fs You Should Kaow full responsibility of voting,. this country. may. well.witness, a. balict-box revolution in many southern states. Equal educational opportunities, population shifts cf minority groups to urban centers, increased voting power and stronger civil rights legislation are points -higlhighted in evidence that the tide.is changing and will continue to do so in the future. ~My deep belief,~ says Senator Javits, ~is that we can remove this roadblock to the. peaceful progress of all our citizens by exposing the pillars of prejudice for what they so often are~fear, ignorance, and greed,~ Banker's Son Entertainer Weds NEW. YORK~ Miss Josephine Premice, 32, Negro. entertainer, took wed-lock with. Mr. Timothy Fales, social register, and son of a prominent banker-lawyer. The wedding, performed by the Rev, Adam Clayton Powell, Baptist minister and Democratic Congressman, took place ~at her Greenwich apartment. Miss Prem }ice is a featured performer in 27 Million Americans Suffer From Housing Bias Take Care Of Your Garments In the long run good clothes pay off more to the pocket than cheaper clothes. ~They hold up under imnumerable dry cleaning, Keep their shape and stay in fashion year after year. So: ladies when you buy good clothes respect them, treat them kindly, and give them much attention. Never do your own dry clean ing, when a.dress become soiled, send it to} the cleaners pronto, and let the professionals take care of it. Perspiration and stains remaining in elcthes are vere difficult to remove. Don~t throw a:good..dress in the. back of: the)-elose. because you are tried cf it, spark it up with: new accessories. It~s sur prising what the addition of a fresh collar and ete. can do for 2 costume. | Occasionally take everythinc out~ cf your closots and give them the air, it is lethal to fabries to cut off their air supply for long periods of time. Always air your garments a day after wearing. Always shop.alone for your good clothes, not friends. Their taste may be good, but remember it is reflected in their advice and ideas, which may be entirely wrong for you. So give your woman~s intuition full sway. * Take Care Of Complexion Gals, this 1s the: season when you should really take care of your ~skin and give it special ~ttention. There are Bee good rea-|~ sons: stepping from cold air into a warm house, the average American home is over heated, and the autummal fiuctuation im both weather and temperatures. But gals, don~t just sit, do something about this problem, The moisturizers im cream~ or lotion form have no connection with the old, sticky night creams and dry skin creams that we -used to' use. So investigate and make use of them if you haven~t the sepa sh i 2 ~Jamaica.~ tried them Senay ae ie | ganized appeal with = girl} College Fund is dictribut'n? UNCE aorropristions to $2,575.07 for the current caien Say yoo.~ Mr. Treot said. ~These unrestricted fonds are _ used by the member colleges | for current operating ex: " penses.~ ~The pioneer in. cooperative fund raising for institutions of ~higher learning, the UNCF co_grdinates ~the ~efforts of its inde dent, accredited member col, ~pee in "wectind ion witie pub lic and corporate suppoft. ~Beginning with its first orin ~1944, the College Fund has raised approximately 10 per cert of the annual academic budg:cts cf its member schools each year,~ ~NEW. ~YORK~The United Ne 060 to its 33~imember col~legss and uhiversittés today, ac _Cordiaz te W. J. Trent, jr., Fund fexeerf -2 director. - ~Tedzys aiocations bring Me. Trent wa inthe~ foint f. ne -raising A lb ~set ty the ~UNCE- oe - followed * by some A eisantitlecs! sulicitiny support fer gteurs of America's private eailesas."* Stanléy C. are. pres donti:of Sound-Scriber. Carporation and ret'red president ~f Ssso- Standard. Oil: Cemwany, ig. notional campaign caine, for. 0. ICz"s Georze A. Henvers. +e board chairman cf Golden Stite Mutual L:f2 Insuranes. Company, -.and Basil O~Connor, president of -the Netional Feundstion and -chairman cf the board. cf trustees of Tuskegee; In:titute, one of UNCk~s member Sie Say @re natienal vice ehai Johr. J. MeCley, chairman of the board cf, The Chase. Manyhaitan Bank, is treasurer. John D. Rockefeller. Jr., is: chairman {of the UNC _gampaign~s nation al advisory.council. SEEIN~ By Dolores Calvin New York.... (CNS). POWELL IS OFF AGAIN. Unless Adam Clayton Powel~ can really turn on the charm, he~s. out in the cold again. At the last moment in the recent election, he pulled a real desperation act, we think. He struck some pretty foul balls by declaring he was offered a bribe to turn Executives Now Earn $80 Week On February 2, 1959, a new salary requirements for the exemption of executive, administrative and professional employees from the Fair, Labor Standards Act will go into effect, it was announced by William S. Singley, Regional Director of the U- S. Department of Labor, Wage and Hour Division, for the OhioMichigan region. Tnder*thée revised salary: tests. an executiye employee, to be exempt from the Act~s minimum wage and overtime provisions nust be paid a salary of at ~aast $80 a week instead of the 355 -now required. Administrative. and professional employees, to Be so exempt, must be paid t least $95 a week instead cf 3156. as at present, This amended xealé will apply in the continental) United.~ barat -Alaska, Hawail, the Canal Zone, Guam and \metican Samoa. STARS, Republican: and then naming.|~mind you ~ cal;ing nantes.. of prominent. peopte ~who ~witnessed. it. Well, of course, they~ ve had to deny it ~ though he prcbably expected his charm to Keep them going. along with him, And on top of that, one socialite -newspaperwoman is suing. So_Powell is back in the ~doghouse~ seemingly and what a pity~ when it looked as if he held. all the winning cards, ~: Takes Life Membership NEW YORK~The Brooks Memorial, Methodist Church of Jamaica, L.,L, has joined the growing list cf churches enrolled, as Yj ife members: of the National Association for. the Advancement of Colored. People- The, $500 for purchase of the memberst ip was raised by Methodist Men, a church- club of which Cleo Green is president. _ Attendings ceremonies marking the event on Nov. 9, NAACP Execitive Secretary, Roy: Wikins, expressed the Association~s ~ap- ~ nreciation ~cf the role: -ef the church in the support.of civil richts..He felicitated the pastor, Rev. Charles. Carrin ~ton, and the club for tiking a part in. efforts to eliminate ~racial Aiserimination and segregati~n. Mus~c was nrovided by tie Gardnor, C. Tayler Glee Cu cf Cc al Baptist Church in| Brook ~ ~5
About this Item
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- Bronze Reporter [Volume: 5, Issue: 51]
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- Page 5
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- Flint, MI
- November 29, 1958
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- African Americans -- Michigan -- Flint -- Newspapers
- Flint (Mich.) -- Newspapers
- Genesee County (Mich.) -- Newspapers
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- Black Community Newspapers of Flint
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"Bronze Reporter [Volume: 5, Issue: 51]." In the digital collection Black Community Newspapers of Flint. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/35177303.0005.051. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 1, 2025.