Kinzie/King
Breakfast to Feature Chair of Black Chamber of Commerce
African-American Business Leader Frank
Bass is Speaker for Annual Lincoln College Event
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[January 17, 2019]
LINCOLN
- Frank Bass, the Chair of the Black Chamber of Commerce of Illinois
will be the featured speaker for the 11th annual Joyce Kinzie/Martin
Luther King, Jr. Breakfast at Lincoln College, set for Monday, Jan.
21. Tickets are now available for the event, which will be held in
the Davidson-Sheffer Gymnasium on the Lincoln College campus. The
doors will open at 7:00 a.m. with the program beginning at 7:30 a.m.
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The annual event raises funds exclusively for the
Martin Luther King, Jr. Minority Student Scholarship. It was
co-founded in 2009 by Rev. Glenn Shelton and Lincoln businesswoman
Joyce Kinzie, who passed away in 2010. The scholarship assists a
Logan County minority student while attending Lincoln College. Since
Ms. Kinzie’s death, the annual breakfast has continued at Lincoln
College, honoring her accomplishments and wishes to provide academic
assistance to students.
The event features a buffet breakfast and remarks by this year’s MLK
Scholarship recipients, Jessica Jackson and Aurora Board, as well as
keynote speaker Frank Bass.
Bass is a member of a family that has been active in Chicago
African-American businesses since the mid-1960s. The family is known
for its business acumen, owning an array of businesses including
real estate, grocery stores, dry cleaners and laundromats, funeral
homes, and more. His uncle, Rev. James Bass, once had one of the
largest churches on the west side of Chicago at 700 S. Pulaski Road
and was instrumental in bringing Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. to the
west side of Chicago.
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In keeping with the Bass family legacy, Frank Bass is a small
business owner based in Chicago. He owns a political consulting/government
affairs firm and has been involved in politics and government in Illinois and
Georgia since 1984, and has over 20 years of campaign and public policy
experience at the local, county, state, and federal levels. Bass is also the
Chairman of Strategic Human Services, a not-for-profit that produces the North
Lawndale Newspaper in Chicago and provides services such as job training for
Veterans and mentoring to at-risk youth.
Tickets are $10; seating is limited so reservations are recommended. Call Jen
McMillin at Lincoln College (217-735-7210 or jmcmillin@lincolncollege.edu) to
reserve tickets to pick up at the door. Tickets for the event are also available
at the Lincoln Heritage Museum (1115 Nicholson Rd, Lincoln, IL 62656), or from
committee member Rev. Glenn Shelton. Tickets will be sold at the door if seating
is still available.
[Mark Gordon
Public Relations and Media Manager
Lincoln College] |