Bronze Reporter [Volume: 5, Issue: 54]
William Davis, Fort faudbrdale: @ATTLERS ORANGE BLOSSOM CLASSIC BOUN D~Transportation officer Tommy Gaines (R) loading the Florida A&M University Rattlers lettermen as they head for sunny Miami |and defense of their National Collegiate Football Championship. The Rattlers met, the strong Prairie View A&M ~ollege Panthers in the 26th annual Orange Blossom~ Classic in Miami~s Orange Bowi Stadium. Loading the Rattler Express are Willie Wyche (L), Willie Taylor, Tallahassee; Lewis Johnson, Bartow; ~~larence Childs, Lakeland; Lee Royster, Williamsburg, Va.; Noung, White Plains, N. Y; Eugene White, Miami; Lewis Rice, Fort Pierce; Leroy Hardee, Bartow;, Bartow; William Lee, Miami; and Mir. Gaines: (A&M Eddie Daniels Staff-Photo by Horace Jones, Jr). David Latimer, Fort Pierce; Charles cet. ~~ eo Pe. ees U.S. Funds Stopped ~or Closed Dixie Schools ~ ~: NEW YORK~Communities where racial tensions _exist rin be deprived of new federal or private investment, says U. S. Attorney General ogers. --. ~Private enterprise, in making new investments, will necessarily take into account the climate of local opinion and the public facilities that will be available to personnel,~ Rogers said Saturday. Suahwian Concern ~By the saitie token,~ he'\ continued, ~the Government, in determining the location of new or expanded federal facilities, will have to give consideration to the availability of public schools ~and other public conveniences as a matter of fairness and justice to its personnel who will be on duty there.~ Rogers addressed a luncheon of the Anti-Defamation League of B~nai B'rith, Jewish service organization. Rogers said the legal igsue of school integration has been settled permanently and that the Federal Government, through the Department of Justice, will take ~all necessary and appropriate measures to support and enforce the decrees of the federal courts.~ School Closings Marva Louis Protests Tax Claims of Gov~t. WASHINGTON ~ Joe Louis~ ex-wife told the U.S. Tax Court.Friday that the Government is trying to make her pay $152,499 of the former heavy-weight champion~s taxes. Mrs. Marva Trotter Spaulding, long divorced from Louis, asked the court for a finding that (1) she is not responsible for his debts to the Government, and (2) in Sny event, the Internal Revenue Service has waited too long under the statute of limitations to proceed against her.. Fights Lion Barehanded;. Saves Mother and Baby LONDON ~. An African who battled a lion with his hands to save a child being mauled, this week received Britain~s eae est. civilian decoration. The courage and bravery of Lilani Daka was set out in Britain~s official chronicle of awards, The London Zazette. The official atcount of his exploit said: Lilani Daka, who lives in the village of (Masake, Northern Rhodesia, woke in the night to hear the screams of a woman mingled with the roar of a lion. He. es Matos fits gun and dashed out.: He found the woman and her two-year-old daughter cowering before a full-grown lion that was trying to carry off the child. He raised his gun and pulled the trigger. The gun was not loaded. He flung it down and attacked the lion. When his son arrived minutes. later, Daka clung to the mane of the outraged animal and yelled to the boy to bring cartridges. When his son returned with the gun, Daka, by this time mauled on the arm, shoulder and leg, was hauling at the lion~s tail to keep it away from the child and her. mother. Daka~s ~ son killed the. beast. teh CITED FOR: 55 YEARS SERVICE iN. "EDUCATION~Mrs. E. P. Jones (R) -was cited for her 55 years of service in the field of ~ducation during a program ~held in connection with National Education~ Week at ~Florida A&M University last week. Making the presentation -is ~Mrs. Beulah R. Young, a senior elementary edtcation major~ at~ Florida A&M..The program was sponsored by the. Student NEA: and the school of education at A&M. (A&M mane = a Jones Jr.) a a ee ~BRONZE REPORTER, ~| ceived during other months. Mr..|Sahli attributes this sudden rise ~to the - Alien Address heer Fellowships Available _| study positions arre expected te Rogers noted that the education of about 16,400 children had been interrupted by the closing ef 13 public schools in four communities to avoid. compliance with court decrees requiring integration.: ~A grave consequence of attitudes of defiance is that they create an atmosphere in which extremists and fanatics are encouraged to take the law into their own hands,~ he said. He said bombings -in schools and houses of worship appeared to be retaliation against those who had not opposed integration. No Race Kids bn ie: i CHICAGO ~ No~~Negro children died or were involved in Chicago~s worst school fire which claimed 92 dead at Our Lady of the Angeles school last week. In addition to the 89 children and three nuns who died in the | inferno at the Roman Catholic parochial school, some 90 others were injured. The tragedy ~occurred about 15 minutes before classes were scheduled to end for the day. It was learned also that in the Roman. Cataholi~ parochial schools here children are not registered. by race or color. The reason there were no Negro children enrolled at the school, it was believed, was because of its location. In order to attend the school, a Negro pupil would have to travel miles and bypass schools more convenient to his home, Aliens Must Report DETROIT ~ District Director Walter A. Sahli of the Immigration and Naturalization Service states that the annual alien address report program usually Causes a sharp rise in the number of applications for naturdlization. The law requires all. aliens~ in the United States, with few exceptions, to report their address each January. Throughout the United States, almost thirty percent more applications. for: naturalization are received during the: months of January, February and March than are re Prrogram. - Applications ~are being acceppted until March 1 for fellowships and ~ assistant-ships during the " 1859-60 school year at Wayne |: | State University's F of English. Department About 112 of the teaching and be open. They involve study toward the Ph.D. in English and teaching half-time. The grants range from $2200 to $2800 a year and pay tuition. Assistantships suse halftithe. fora master~s de <, 3 a SATURDAY, DEC. 20, 1958 a4 fe ae le tamale s ps SB og Rs Now ~that the biggest ~toy time~ is here, if. you ir ~| te-give toys; know: what the child can use before. yee: them, Dr. Joseph~ G. Molner, ~| Commissioner, advises. Adults ~must watch that they do 3 not. buy gifts to * aun themselves. rarther ~than to give pl e to the chil ake sure one of ~your first considerations, is the child~s happiness, but-remember ~that safety and, suitability for age are im | portrant if ~they-are to,bring this happiness. Wise selection of toys as gifts. by aunts. and-other relatives will help to~ give. the child~s parents an enjoyayble Christmas~ in,addition to delighting the child. Seiect toys that are durable to give to young children. They should be easily cleaned. and not have removable parts | small-enough to be swallowed. Each toy should stimulate its owner to. some activity, either mental or physical. Some of: the longtime. favorites which meet this requirement -include _ dolls, wagons which have pull strings or round. handles and blocks with rounded. corners. These are. universal favorites with children, because they can be used by. youngsters of different ages and under almost all circumstances. Instead of buying toys which do things, it is. well to remember that children need to do things with their toys. Activity. should come from the child not from the toy. Normal physical growth and personality development require opportunity for wholesome play and toys are the tools of play. Take into consideration the age and living conditions of the child before you buy toys. -A sled or skates given to a boy who has no place to use them only tempts hi. mto ~take unnecessary. risks and to use them in unsafe places excitement. ifor Xmas Is Important | a e Detroit City-County Heal or else they make him feel frustrated because he~ Conapt enjoy | them. | The tiny | baby~s first toy shdould be a bright one to hang -where he.can' follow it with his eyes, but not grab it. When he is-three to four months o!d, he can grasp and hold a rattle. A child between one and two ~years is learning fast and he treeds toys to push and pull, to lead and unload, to pile up and knock down again: A- young. child: will be: -happier ~fy his: holiday celebration is} 2 spread: over~ several days. if he4 is given too many toys at once, |: he.is merely confused. and bewildered ~and _ his enjoyment di minishes by. the confusion. Make |. sure the toys you give him do not have sharp. points and: that they will not break or splinter. Avoid stuffed- animals with glass or button eyes which a child might breathe into his windpipe | - or shove into his ear. Young children and babies are | - sensitive to the emotions of those closest. to them. If there is a baby or young child in your family, surround him with the feel- } ing of securirty and: warmth of a happy family holiday and try not to:make it too different from the experience he is accustomed | to on other days. Don~t overwhelm him with too many: visitors, too many toys, or too. much excitement. If you expect him to have a happy Christmas, make sure sure that he has enough rest by~ preventing over SEEIN~ By Dolores Calvin, for Calvin NEW YORK.~THINKING licity Miss Rose Morgan~the former Mrs. Joe Louis~received, didn~t help her business! that much. Even the additional | new batch now that the annulment is in its final stage~-made few additional customers to her beauty salon. In fact,~ as she puts it, business has not been~ sO good. ~ ~Miss Morgan is' now settling down td going out again incidentally, and has been seen constantly 8 the companion of Frenchman, ~Joseph LaRiviere. She calls him a ~nice guy~ but nothing, more for the present. Meanwhile, Joe~s officially back in Chicago~runs into New York occasionally but the Joe-Rose phase of his: life is all behind him. 4 All we wondur is aie that host of publié~ity and ~limelight didn~t mean more money to the Morgan enterprisés? Could it be that maybe she didn~t need their business and therefore stayed away from the salon? % % Co The Tommy Fales are having their own troubles. He was asked to leave his job at a mid-town shipping firm in New York after the news of his marriage to Josephine.Prermice hit the headlines. Unusual couples have to expect those things. They.go through tests that are almost superhuman to bear. The point us~can they take it? If they can, they know more how to build.a true marrirage. better than most of us out here.-If they aren~t strong, public opinion will tear them asunder.:, * *# # Pert Ruby Dee, whom. we re- 4 member last in the. ~Jackie Robinson Story,~ has been signed opposite Sidney. Poitier for a drama,.Raisin in the. Sun,~ which is scheduled to open in New York on February: 10th. Now, why does Hollywood. al low good: talent to rot after it develops it? Many.a.good Negro player who has clawed his or her way to a point, gets dropped from the roster after one good ~each role he can command more like to have because his name STARS ews Service OUT LOUD... All the pub star conscious that once they~ve built a name, they will spend thousands, sometimes millions, to raid that pape before the pub Glark Gable is as old as the hills~but there~s so much money invested in his name as the dashing heror~the guy who conquers all, dangers ~ that commercial Hollywood has no intention of letting a thing like age~sagging cheek lines~slow him down. But a Negro name~if it gets anywherer, will be lost forever if they can do it. For no Negro seemingly, is allowed to take a hold on a studio so that with money. Sidney Poitier is one of your few exceptions, and that~s |. why he gets the credit and deserves it so~for he can demand of Hollywood the money he wc4.d means something. ~ wid lant ~~ o ~and Abs 2m Te gue ~ ee or! ee Me vill b ae or puppy b A ike que. t squeals this Christmas id aire who find a playful kitten ~ A pup Dy oF it Ds ces food each feeding. ili e ehaec: mas gi t not. only thrills but esra), but a pine may ~be given sino child special: io nay ma the ~~~ to faba ends sng gg for pup. meal, or pellet form) soft ~ened to a thin gruel with part warm milk tating ta aw Bra. Lhe older puppy or adele a dog will re ceive a ced diet from either pas s- et Seine Fels pak toed.: goed. When a. cat of d a year ~fed card cored in Pols Eee Agiven soeies n Sanat come or the wrong foods will lower re. soe Det foods ce to diséase and can cause children las oe tht orm pt paige and ~actually shorten a ~Small es should zg |b life as much as five years, be fed lens Pet Food Institute warns, until Hore orf wb foe mo nt With love, neg dae a balpigs gen hap Nav iced dint regular ig and number pea Por ere riodie med oe c he o day by about ths. | Christmas gift tat lbea ould | healthy ~member of the family~ A be fed about a stalin of cat 'for many years. Citizens, To Study An: intensive study of the need for community colleges in the sixcounty metropolitaan Detroit area has been launched by a Citizens Adyisory Committee under the leadership. of Wayne State University. Dr. Gerald W. Boicourt, director of community college services at. Wayne State; said that 85 leading figures in business, community planning, education and labor-have been appointed to the committee. Generally, the advisory com- | mittee~s goal.is twofold: to prpepare reports on the ~ommunity~s college situation as if now stands in the metropolitan area; and to | develop. recommendations on how higher education can be made available to the greatest number. of people at. the lowest cost. Thomas S. Nurnberger, vice president of the Michigan Bell Telephone Co., has been named general chairman. Dr. Boicourt will direct the committee~s overall acativities. Join The NAACP Klansmen Convicted In Birmingham, Ala., an admitted Ku Klux Klansman~Hubert Wileutt~has been convicted. of bombing a Negro home. A jury sentenced him; to 10: years in prison, but recommended probation..The. judge;,who will. announce. the sentence later, is not bound by the jury recommendation for leniency; The rich and the poor meet together: the Lord -is the Maker of them all.~(Proverbs 22, 2.) Sometimes, some of us will - look upon other people in the street as if they were not there. at all~they,' those others, who were created by Our Heavenly Father in His own' image, loved by Him (even the least and the lowliest). They are worthy in His sight, if not in ours!. etary: ikece Dy. Jackson of Selma, Ala., hands back registration paper after looking it over to Vice Chairman Robert Storey. The Civil Rights Commission is meeting here to investigate role. And yet Hollywood is so alleged discrimination of Negro voting rights. (UP IT)
About this Item
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- Bronze Reporter [Volume: 5, Issue: 54]
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- Page 6
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- Flint, MI
- December 20, 1958
- Subject terms
- 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: 54]." In the digital collection Black Community Newspapers of Flint. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/35177303.0005.054. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 3, 2025.