Bronze Reporter [Volume: 8, Issue: 13]

ene eer Eg ED a THE BANNER LINE~ me, or do for me. I accept them worth of all the people in. Flint, These ~Penny Ante Boys _* ~they make sure they deal With their own deck! And not with ours. They always show us Our house As they hold four Aces. But don~t worry, We are not playing. for Pennies...-now... It is always amusing to me to be invited out to a ~tea,~ or a ~get. together~ to listen to the ~Penny Ante~ boys* make their spiel about what we, as a group of Negro citizens of Flint should do to gain respect from our ~Saltimbanco Brethren~ who are denying us many civil rights which our Federal Constitution guarantees us as American citizens.. But, it ceases to be amusing to ~te when these brown - haired boys from the party and city-hall try to ~talk a hole in my head~ as to what ~I can do for my people~ and never, never, mention what ~WE~ can ~do to improve things for all the people in this city of ours. For they come in the name of ~Friendship~ bringing with them a ~penny~s worth of peanuts~ and a nickles worth of tea, while presenting a smiling face, they sized up the opposition. Next they began to speak, or I should say, to play the same record they alway play. Then they squirm, and they wiggle, and they bellow and they whimper and they whine ~Get out and vote for me!~ They can cover up more quickly than Sally Rand ever could: ~But this is practical~ they told me. You see, I am not practical, I~m just honest with people. Civil Rights is more than just words to me. Respect and dignity of people is more than words to me. - By Melvin Banner They have forgotten all about the Human Relations bill that Floyd McCree was left holding in the bag of defeat. They helped defeat him. They have forgotten all about Roger Townsend~s fight with the State Highway department and the humiliation he bravely endured after this party heaped it upon him... But I haven~t. Many others haven~t forgotten either. The four aces, these ~Penny Ante~ boys are betting on is the Negro Belt that is forming from the city limits, north and south, straight down Saginaw Street. Our full house is our voting strength, but their -ace in the hole is their stringent control of the ~Party.~ So, they come to us to ~teas~ and to ~parties~ with a penny~s worth of peanuts and a nickles worth of tea. Then after this is over, they invite ~Uncle Tom~ over to Knob Hill. They understand him. They do not understand us for we are too much like them. You see, I am not practical. I am honest with people. But these boys are practical. There is nothing they can give Canaan Bapt. By Mr. James Buchannon. * Rev. Robbs' evidently ~ felt pretty good about his new constition. He reported to have said, ~Weather I stay at this Church or go, the day has passed when U-M Prepares e e e Pictorial List ANN ARBOR ~ A selected list, ~Free and Inexpensive Sources of Pictorial Maps Charts and Posters,~ has been prepared by The tension Service, I General Library, Extension, Service. The. lise -is a-revision of a source list first compiled in 1959 ference and is of special value to ference and is special value to librarians and _ teachers. A copy of the list may be re The list is a revision of a tension Servise, 1 General Library, The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Included are such subjects as child fantasy, children~s book week, health, industry, music natural resources and nature study. Melvin L. Moss Receives Award ANN ARBOR ~ University of Michigan junior Melvin L. Moss, Highland Park, is one of 77 US. students to receive 1961-62 awards from the National Scholarship Service and Fund for Negro Students. A student in the U-M College of Literature, Science and the Arts, Moss is a Highland Park School graduate. He is a son of Mr. and Mrs. James H. Moss, Sr., 358 Pilgrim, Highland Park. Established in 1948, the Fund helps talented Negroes get a college education. The 1961-62 winners attend 53 colleges across the nation. ATTEND CHURCH Church News fourth grade scholars can tell the preacher how to run his church.~ Well lets take an inventory of | what an education means for the person who is bless to have it. Let~s see just what the resord shows. Those fourth grade schoAugust 18, 1961, have lived in Flint most of their lives, bought homes reared and gave their children at least a high school education They have carired insurance on their families, taught them to persons supported the church; person~s supported tie church; and lived as God fearing people. They have married off their sons and daughter and watched them | Start their own families. During all this time they have been carrying on their church work. They have purchased land and built the largest church in Flint for our people. They have struggle through the years to pay for that church, so when the evening of their lives will have come and they can~t work in the church like they want, they will feel free to make their way to the house of God for worship. The house that they have buit. Well that seems to be a very good job for fourth graders. That is until Rev. Robbs came along. Who is this man? Just what has he accomplished? With all of his education, those fourth graders told me that they, as representatives of the Canaan Baptist Church, had to send for him to come to Flint. He hasn~t bought a home for his family to live in. He has never built a church. From our careful investegation of this whole question we found that his whole record is one of confusion, trouble, and just about any thing but progress. Yet he points with scorn to those honorable men who have given him everything for three long years. They refused to let him sign for the church as if he was a trustee. They refused to permit him to open charge. account all over town in the name of the church. They refused to give him all the power and authority that he wanted. That is why he wanted to get rid of them. ROOM HOUSE FOR RENT NORTH END Call CE. REASONABLE 2-7298 HELP WANTED Advertising Salesman GOOD COMMISSIONS INSURANCE or SALES EXPERIENCE HELPFUL. philosophically, or I reject them intellectually. To, me, they are an insult. to the intelligence of | every thinking person who wants. to see the City of Flint advance, toward better Human relations.! But, as I said before, they | say I am not practical. For I) believe in the dignity and the the Jewish, the Greek, the Polish, the Italian, the Negro, the Ukranian, the Syrian. If this is being impractical then I am not practical. But I am not playing for pennies, I am playing for people. Just give me some more | tee es THE SCENE... By CHARLES GILLESPIE..events of vital interest in the fields of literature and the arts * co * ~A RAISIN IN THE SUN~ by Lorraine Hansberry ~ a Columbia Motion Picture starring Sidnéy Poitier. Signet Books 1961 ~ 50c ~A RAISIN IN THE SUN~ tells a story too familiar to us all. It shows with warmth, humanness, and a touch of bitterness the plight of a Negro and ~his family in Chicago~s South Side. Many phases of Negro life are realistically portrayed. Walter Lee Younger, played by Sidney Poitier in the filmed version,~ wants a good life for himself and his family, but is frustrated in his attempts to untie himself from: his financial ghetto. His old, wise mother portrayed ~by Claudia McNeil realizes her: son~s trouble and decides to use an inheritance to move the family from their tenement apartment to a home in a nicer white neighborhood. Walter~s wife, played by Ruby Dee, also feels that her hands are tied, but is at a loss for a way to help her husband and to keep his- love. Walteér~s sister, a medical student, creates jealousy by her advanced education. Her boy friends are an African nationalist and an extremely rich Negro who seems ~to think only of his money, his importance, and how best to ~act ' white.~ A white representative of the neighborhood to which the Youngers are to move offers, as chairman of the ~New Neighbors Welcoming Committee,~ to buy the ~new neighbors~ out in the interest of ~happier~ Negro families and ~understanding the other guy~s point, of view~. Almost tempted to accept the offer, Walter realizes that his son will have no chance for a better life while living in a slim, and moves his family-to the new home. Perhaps ~A RAISIN IN THE SUN~ was written with two purposes in mind. It vividly shows whites the humiliating conditions into which the American Negro has been forced. The effects of the Uncle TOM-ISM, poverty, lack of education, and white bigotry would leave a lasting impression in the memory of the most uninterested white. The message for. Negroes, though,. is perhaps more important. There is nothing special about Walter Lee Younger; he might be the fellow who lives next door to you. Yet Walter has done. something which few of his neighbors have had the courage to do ~ he has had the strength to. stand up to segregation, and most certainly - to defeat it. Walter~s story is one which any Flint Negro might do well to\.study. ~Charles Gillespie and the editors of the BRONZE REPORTER would appreciate any comments on or criticisms of ~The Scene~, and will carefully consider any books suggested. Witnesses Representing 181 Lands At Meet ~The loving unity of Jehovah~s Witnesses, now represented in 181 lands, will hold despite the increasing disunity of this world, even when the whole worldly system of things crumbles in disunity at its Armageddon in the ~war of the great day of God the Al ~mighty.~~ These words brought thunderous applause at the United Worshipers District Assembly of Jehovah~s Witnesses in Milwaukee, last week, according to returning delegates from Detroit, Michigan. ~This world entered its ~time of the end~ in 1914,~ Nathan H. Knorr, the leading minister of Jehovah~s Witnesses, declared. ~Since then Jehovah~s Witnesses have been established as the visible nucleus of a new _ world, attracting growing multitudes from all parts of the earth who are preparing to enter a global paradise of God~s making.~ Donald Miller, Sr., presiding minister of the East Warren congreation of Jehovah~s Witnesses, reported that Knorr~s talk was the climax of the six-day gather Literature On TV Detroit~s award-winning television discussion series ~ this area~s only program to combine the. ~no-time-limit~ and ~~~telephone-talk-back~ features. ~ return to the~ air Wednesday, September 20, at 8:30 p.m. on WTVS, channel 56. The program is CONVERSATIONS ABOUT LITERATURE, and the new 13-] week series will bring articulate librarians, educators, authors, and booklovers together with home viewers (via telephone) in an uninterrupted round-table discussion of current books their authors and their readers. Conversations~ moderator, Seymour Riklin of the Division of Adult Education, WSU-UM, received an ~Outstanding Teacher of Adults~ award from the Adult Education Association of Michigan at its 1961 Convention; the same organization gave a ~~Creativity~ award to CONVERSATIONS ABOUT LITERATURE as an outstanding television series. The opening Conversation, September 20, will deal with Bestsellers and Prize-Winners; join ing Seymour Riklin to discuss} these status symbols of the publishing industry will be book reviewer Eileen Berris, WSU professor Ala Gay, and librarian Harriet Goode. Viewers may participate by phoning TEmple 3-1270 while the program is on the air with their questions for the panel. A brochure of program topics and suggested readings is available free for the asking; write Community ~& Group Services. Detroit Main Library, Detroit 2, Michigan. CONVERSATION ABOUT LITERATURE, is jointly produced by the Detroit Public Library, | | Wayne State University Tele CALL - CE. 8-766 FOR AN APPOINTMENT vision, the Detroit Historical Museum, and the Division of Adult Education, WSU-UM; it is a Detroit Adventure activity. ing in Milwaukee~s Arena- Auditorium. Knorr assured an audience of 40,552 persons that while leading members of the 99-nation U. N. hasten the world toward the brink of a third global conflict, the planet-wide society of Jehovah~s has become cemented in unbreakable bonds of peace and unity which nothing can disrupt. Not only have the Witnesses come away from all the political elements and wranglings of this world, but they have also broken away from all the variety of ~gods~ they once worshiped. They have come away from the thousand or more religious sects of Christendom, Donald Miller, Sr. pointed out. He continued by saying, ~They have united in the worship of the one God, the Most High and Almighty God, the Creator of all things good, Jehovah.~ Donald ~Miller, Sr. said that Knorr~s talk, ~When all. Nations Unite Under God~s Kingdom,~ stressed the conviction of Jehovah~s Witnesses that the year 1914 marked the end of the Biblical ~Gentile times~ and the Divinely appointed year to ~establish the kingdom of god over the earth,~ with Christ invisibly enthroned ~to rule mankind and to destroy the enemies of God and man.~ All Nations Ruining The Earth: ~These enemies,~ Knorr told the mixed audience of Varied races, ~include. all political nations and powers and their supporters, East, West and neutrals. ~Since 1914 they have been ruining the earth for mankind as never before. ~They need to be ruined themselves; and God Almighty will do it by his King, Jesus Christ. ~When God does so, that will mean the end of this system of things to be followed by God~s New World system of things.~ DRIVE SAFELY 7 ROOM HOUSE FOR RENT SOUTH SIDE NEAR SCHOOL 7:30 Almanac ogram Schedule ~ Sept. 16 ~ Sept. 22. Boe SATURDAY ~1:45 Yesterday's Newareat 1:08 Late News, Weather 1:55 Sign On 8:00 Almanae 1:65 Sign OF, ~ 8:00 U = 8:30 Goverment and National Anthem ate dice ec see WEDNESDAY EVENING 9:00 Light 9:30 Rae Deane and 4:38 Se 9:15 pene with sina may ates PP Gun the S Little Margie Lene 10:00 Adven Time 11:00 The Texan 6:09 # Blooges ar. Magte 11:30 Laurel & Hardy 11:30 Leve That Beb 6:15 Dick 7 12:30 W: Champions 12:00 C 6:20 News 1-00 Tiger 12:30 Number Please 6:30 Matty~s Funday New York at Detroit 1:00 One O~Cleck Show ab mor te: 4:00 NCAA Football _ Mon: ~Three 3:00 Navy is ittsburg at Miami Sundays te Live~ 7:30 Hong Kong 6:15 College Football Tue: ~Strange 8:89 Oxsie & Harriet Scoreboard Holiday~ 9:00 Hawalian Eye - 6:30 Award Theatre ~The Wed: Cabin in the 10:00 Naked. City Shores of Tripoli~ Cotten~ (Pt 1) 11:08 News,. Skinner 8:00 Lawrence W Thur: Cabin in the 11:16 Sports & Weather 9:00 Fight of the Week Cotten~ (Pt 2) ~On 11:28 FesteSeg'a Neweredt 9.45 Make That Spare Your Toes (Pt 1) 11:30 Showtime ~I Like 10:00 Roaring 20~s. Fri: ~On Your Tees~ Your aan~ w. 11:00 Silents Please (Pt 2) 1:00 Late News, Weather 11:20 11th Hour Theatre 2:00 Dey in Court Se ee 11:30 ~The Killing~ 2:30 Seven Keys ational Anthem 1:00 i pe ges Weather oo pope coh a Day THURSDAY EVENING 1:05 Sign and: Who ~ou Trust - ~ National Anthem 4:00 Mr. Magic Show ea in oo MONDAY EVENING 5:30 Recky & Bile Friends 8:30 Thoughts For 4:30 Early Showtime $80 5 Stooges, Mr. Magic eer th 6:30 Vikings - 8:45 Sacred Heart 5:30 Rin Tin Tin | 7:00 Jim Backus Program mas a pe 1:30 Guestward Ho! 9:00 Chapel Volces ts toe 8:00 Donna Reed Show 9:30 The Christophers 6:15 Dick Tracy _ 8:30 Real McCoys. - 10:00 This is the Life 6:20 News, Frank Benesh 9:00 My Three Sons. 10:30 Contrails 6:30 Annexation 9:38 Untouchables 11:00 Travel Documentary 7:00 Brothers 10:30 Dangerous Robin 12:00 hasaar ot the Jungle He Che: ide 6 11:03 News, Dave Skinner #2:30 Issues & Answers é:. Weather Cao Eand'we tave'~~ hae Adventures ta HEAR Speria 204 Rost 2:00 Life in Other Peter 11:0 Theatre of Thrills piggy gerare yeep sendy: neon 1:00 Late News, Weather 2:30 Life of Riley 11:00 News, Dave Skinner 1:05 Sign Of and 3:00 Stage 12 wal 120 Yesterday's Newsreel ~-~-=_-Nationall Anthem 3:30 Family Fun Festiv: 5 Captain January~ 30 8 oo crt FRIDAY EVENING 5:00 Matty~s Funday 1:08 See's ie Navy~ = nig gang Funnies. abt 5:30 Award Theatre ~Con- N Anthem \ ~ 6:00 3 Stooges, Mr, Magie _tennial Summer~ eae ben gr hh ag ~ Dick Tracy: 7:30 Follow the Sun riy owtime:20 News ~ 8:30 Lawman ~Blind Spot~ 6:30 Disney. Presents 9:00 The Rebel 5:30 Rocky & His Friends Bien Man From Cochise 9:30 The Asphalt Jungle 6:00. 3 Stooges, Mr. Magic 8:00 Harrigan & Son 10:30 Editor~s Choice 6:20 News 8:30 Flintstenes. 11:00 News. Dave Skinner 6:30 Bugs Bunny 9:00 77. Sunset Strip 11:15 11th Hour Theatre 7:00 Lock-Up 10:00 Rebert Taylor & ~My Girl Tisa~ 7:30 Two- Faces West Detectives ' 12:45. Late News, Weather 8:00 Rifleman 10:38 Leck Up. 12:50 Sign Off 8:30 Wyatt Earp 11:00 News, Dave Skinner National Anthem 9:00 S ach West 11:15 be and, Weather MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 Close Up 11:20 | esterd iay~s Newsree! DAYTIME 11:00 News, Dave Skinner 11;30 Showtime ~Tomorrow 6:45 Sign On~Almanae 11:15 Sports & Weather ~ the World 7:00 Weather. 11:20 Yesterday's Newsreel 1:09 Late News, Weather:05 Cartoon pers ~ orei; 3 Sign Off 7:90 A rae rs ~National Anthem RS PROGRAM SCHEDULE Sept. 16 ~ Sept. 22 SATURDAY, SEPT. 16 7:20 News 7:30 Farm Show 8:00 Red Ryder + ~Homesteaders of Paradise Valley~ * 9:00 Cartoon. Time 9:30 Pip the Piper~ 10:00 Shari Lewis Show (Color)* 10:30 King Leonardo and His Short Subjects 12:00 Up Date* 12:30 Gene Autry ~The Poisoned Waterhole~ 1:00 Wrestling ey Mover to 2:30 9 mos Andy 4:30 Saturday Startime ~State Secret~ a Fairbanks, 7:00 Boia Journey ~~Honeymoon Voyage~ 7:30 Bonansa (Color)~ 8:30 The Tall Man* 9:00 The Deputy* (Last) 9:30 The Nation~s Future~ 10:00 Open Camera (Last - 10:30 Blue Angels ~~~The Jarheads~ (Last) Moves to 1 p.m. 9/28 11:00 News 11:15 Fabulous 52 ~Baby Face Nelson~ Mickey Rooney 1:00 News Digest SUNDAY, SEPT. 17 7:50 News 8:00 Mass for Shut-ins 8:30 Faith for Today 9:00 Understanding Our World 9:30 Church in the Home 10:00 This is the Life 10:30 Big Picture 11:00 The Pioneers Big Liz~ 11:36 Cartoon Capers 12:00 House Detective 1:00 This Week in ~ History 1:30 Catholic.-Hour~ -_ 2:00 Cimmaron City ~The Evil One~ 3:00 Riverboat ~The Faithless~ 4:00 Overland Trail ~Vigilantes of Montana~ 5:00 Sunday Startime ~About Face~ Gordon MacRae 7:00 Shirley Temple Show (Color)*~ 8:00 National Velvet* (Last) 8:30 Car 54, Where Are You?* 9:00. Sunday Mystery ~Hour* (Last) 10:00' Dupont Show of the ~Week (Color)* "11:00, News 11:15 Sunday Show ~Hell on Devil~s Island~ -Helmut Dantine 1:00 Nightcap ~Death Rides a Wildcat~ 1:30 News Digest MONDAY THRU FRIDAY D. SEPT. 18 SEPT. 22 7:00 The Today Shew~ 9:00 pono For You (Color) 11:00 The Price ts Right (Coler)~ 11:30 Concen e 12:00 Truth or 12:30 It Could Be You* ing sig ooh Mon member Last Night? (Pt 1) Robert Young Tue: Beme Last Night? (Pt 2) Wed: ik Coney Island (Pt 1) Betty Grable 3:30 From These Roots 4:30 Here~s Hollywood? 5:00 Seachest MONDAY, SEPT. 18 6:30 Yogi Bear 6:00 Top of the News 6:10 Weatherman 6:15 Highway Patrol 6:45 Huntley-Brinkley s Report 7:00 Manhunt ~The 8:00 National Velvet~ 8:30 Premier ~Montana~ 10:00 Thriller* 11:00 Five Star Final pte Weatherman 20 Sports Final i::30 Jack Paar Show TUESDAY, SEPT. 19 5:30 Superman ~The Big. Forgot~~ 6:00 Top of the News 6:10 Weatherman 6:15 Rescue 8 ~Backfire~ 6:45 Huntiey-Brinkley rt?. nae Bat th Valley Da 7:30 Laramie~ ~ 8:30 Alfred Hitchcock Presents* ofl 9:60 NBC White. Paper No. 7 Angola: Journey Ava. War, Chet re:ee Cain~s eee ~ 1:69 Five Star Fina} ii We over 11:28 Spo 11:30 Jack ~ Paar shew ~Ceto Freese~ 6:00 Top of the News pert 3 Weatherman 6:15 Broken Arrow ~Broken Wire~ > 6:45 Huntiey-Brinkley Me ee Michigan Outdoors 3: ro} Bat ~masintese~. (Last) 9:00 Bachelor Father~ (Last) 9:30 oe Ghost Tales* ) 10:00 Groucho Show* (Last ~; 10:30 Fashion Show (VTR) 11:00 Five Star Fina) 11:15 Weatherman 11:20 Sports Final 11:30 Jack Paar Show (Color)* 1:00 News Digest - FRIDAY, SEPT, 22 6:30 Huckleberry Bound 00 Top of the News 6:10 Weatherman 6:15 Highway Patroi 6:45 pwecmotr -Brinkley port 7:00 en ~The 7:30 International Showtime~ 8:30 Five Star veemer (Last) 9:00 The Lawless Years* (Last) 9: 30 io a Pre view Theatre* (Last) | e* 11:00 Five Star Fina) 11:15 Weatherman 11:20 Sports Fina) 11:30 Jack Paar Show (Color)*~ 1:00 News Digest ~First in Eastern Michigan With VHF~ ~SERVING FLINT - SAGINAW - BAY CITY - MIDLAND, AND ALL EASTERN MICHIGAN~ * Denotes NBC NETWORK PROGRAMS. SINGER SEWING MACHINE With Zig-Zag in:Lovely Console Makes Decorative Designs, Button Holes, etc. Will Sell For $31.10 or Take Over Payments of $4.00 per month CE. 5-3591 CE. 2-7298 ATTENTION! SCHOOL TEACHERS ATTRACTIVE 3 ROOM APARTMENT, Good Neighborhood ~- = Privetp Entrance a Furnished ~ Newly Decorated ~ BILLS PAID ~ $18 wk. Call CE. 2-7298 ~SATURDAY, SEPFEMBEN 16, BAPTIST: SERVICES. ~~] Canaan Baptist Church 910 E. Gillispie Street Rev. Alfred L: C. Robbs, Pastor Antioch Missionary Baptist ~Church ~ 1083 Stewart Ave Rev. L. W. Pryor, Pastor eee ss 8 Foss Avenue Raptist 1159 Foss Avenue Rev. A. Aldridge, vue ' s & Galilee Baptist Church 4418 Indrustrial Ave. Rev. Henry Royster: 48 ~@ Greater Harvest Baptist Church 3434 St. John Street Rev. Nathaniel Calhoun ~ _s. & Macedonia Baptist Church 1116 Hickory St. dev. J. C. Curry a | >: s 8 Metropolitan Baptist Church 3939 Industrial Ave.. Or. S. D. Edwards, Pastor s te * Mt. Calvary Baptist Church 3019 Industrial Ave. Rev. Matthew Montgomery, Pastor * ~ s. Mt. Olive Baptist Church Liberty and Kennelworth Sts, Rev. R. R. Turpin, Pastor Shiloh - hassel Chick St. John. at Massachusetts Ave. Rev. E: Beverly Allen, Pastor * oe * St. Paul: Baptist Church 1073 E. Pierson Rd. Rev. R. R. Gordon, Pastor ~ * 2 Trinity Baptist Church 1601 Clifford St. Rev. A. F. Thomas, Pastor s* 8s ~ Temple Missionary Baptist Church 2014 Dwight Rev. L. Owens =; Sunday School:: 9:30 a.m. Morning Worse: Jt 00 a.m, New Zien. hivite ~Khoreh } 1337 Nevada Ave. Rev. W. G. Terry, Pastor * * CATHOLIC SERVICES ~| Church of Christ the King Thirteenth and Cliffori Sts. Father Norman Dukette Sunday Services: 8:30 and 11:00 a.m. Public is Welcome: A e P CHURCH OF GOD | IN~CHRIST Church of God 12th and Harrison Sts. _ Rev,.G. ~ Williams,. Pastor * ~ 8 Church of God 2801 North St. ~. Pastor, Elder J. S. Lester Sunday School; 10:00 a.m. Morning Worship: 11 a.m. s * s Church of God In Christ 1518% Industrial Ave. Elder H. Gulley, Pastor Sunday School: 10:00 a.m. Morning Worship: 12:00 p.m. Public is welcome s ~s 8 Church of God In Christ 3020. St, John St. ~ Rev. John er Pastor St. James Chesah ~e God in Christ 3613 St. John St. ~.&v. S. C. Coles, Pastor i Sunday School: 9:30 a.m. Services: 12:00 noon s s # DISCIPLES OF CHRIST "s SERVICES Vermont Christian Church 1201 Lippincott Blvd. Rev. Thomas Coyrts, Pastor s+ ss i METHODIST SERVICES * ~ 8 Bethel Methodist Church Liberty at Twelfth Sts, Rev. Donald Morris, Pastor: s ae s Blackwell A.M.E. Zion 1234 Central, Avenue Rev. Henry E. Banks, Pastor ~s * s St. James C.M.E. Church 1142 Campau Rev. T: R. Taylor, Pastor Sunday Services: es a.m. Quinn cehaii Ame 2101 Lippincott Blvd, Rev. James S. A. Mitcham, Pastor s s&s # St. Luke A.M.E. Zion North at Addison Rev. D. Baldwin, Pastor Service: 11:45 a.m. * a s - St. Peter C.M.E. Church 225 E. Ninth Street Rev. Pelvin T. Riley, Pastor ~ UNITARIAN SERVICES ~ Church of Flint - 2474 S. Ballenger Hwy. DRIVE SAFELY

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Title
Bronze Reporter [Volume: 8, Issue: 13]
Canvas
Page 6
Publication
Flint, MI
September 16, 1961
Subject terms
African Americans -- Michigan -- Flint -- Newspapers
Flint (Mich.) -- Newspapers
Genesee County (Mich.) -- Newspapers

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"Bronze Reporter [Volume: 8, Issue: 13]." In the digital collection Black Community Newspapers of Flint. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/35177303.0008.013. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 4, 2025.
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