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About The voice. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1946-195? | View Entire Issue (April 17, 1952)
Oulu Chapel A. M. K. Church th hod C Streets, xv. J. B. Brooks, Pastor. 9:45 a. m. Sunday School. 10:45 a. m. Morning Worship. 6:00 p. m. Young People’s Fellowship. 7:30 p. m. Evening Worship. Tuesday 8:00 o m. Prayer Meeting. Northsidc Church of God 3rd and T Street. Mrs. Alice Britt. 10:00 a. m. Jhurch School. 11:00 a. m. Morning Worship. 7:30 p. m. Evening Worship. 7:30 p. m Midweek Prayer Meeting. 7:30 P. m. Friday Bible Study. For place of meeting call 2-4673. Alien Chapel (Seventh-day Adventist) LeCouni Butler, Associate Pastor 9:45 a. m. Sabbotb School. 10:45 a. ra. Missionary Meeting. 11:00 a. ra. Morning Worship. 4:00 p. ra. Young People’s Sosiety. CHRIST TEMPLE 2149 U Street. Phone 2-3901. Rev. T. O. McWilliams. Jr.. Pastor. Order of Worship Sunday School. 10 a. m. Morning Worship. 11 a.m. Service at Carver Nursing Home. 2001 Tne Street. 5 o'clock. Evening Service. 7:30 p. OS. ML Zion Baptist Church Corner 12th and F Streets; Rev. Wm. I. Monroe, pastor. 10:00 a.m., Sunday school. 11:00 a.m.. Morning worship. 6:30 p.m.. Baptist Training Union. 8:00 p.m.. Evening worship. Newman Methodist 23rd and S: Ralph G. Nahan. pastor. SUNDAY—Church at study. 10; church SI worship. 11 S.O. MONDAY—Trustee board meeting. WEDNESDAY—Gladstone service. 7 to S P.m. FRIDAY—Ministry of music, 8 P.m. , CME Church 2030 T Street; Rev. W. M. Johnson, pastor. 9:30 a.m., Sunday school. 10:30 a.m., Methodist Training Union. 11:00 a m.. Morning worship. Church of God in Christ 9:00 a.m.. Sunday school. 11:00 a.m., Morning worship. 6:30 p.m.. I.P.W.W, 8:00 p.m.. Evening worship. 8:00 p.m., Tuesday and Friday, regular service. • , 7:30 P.m. Thursday, prayer and Bible Pastor Rev Charles Williams. Notice to Contractors Sealed bids will be received at the office of the Department oi Roads and Irrigation in the State Capitol at Lincoln, Nebraska, on April 24, 1952, until 10:00 o’clock A.M., and at that time publicly opened and read for • SAND GRAVEL FOR SUR FACING and incidental work on the WAVERLY NORTH Patrol No. 11082 State Road. The approximate quantity is: 510 Cu. Yds. Sand Gravel Sur face Course Material. The attention of bidders is di rected to the Special Provisions cohering subletting or assigning the contract. , Compliance by the contractor with the standards as to hours of labor prescribed by the “Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938,” ap proved June 25, 1938 (Public No. 718, 75th Congress), will be re quired in the performance of the rork under this contract. The minimum wage paid to all jskilled labor employed on this contract shall be one dollar and (five cents ($1.05) per hour, ex cept that a minimum wage ot one dollar and twenty-five cents !($1.25) per hour shall be paid to: Crane Operators, Power Shovel Operators, Dragline Operators. The minimum wake paid to all intermediate labor employed on this contract shall be ninety-five <95) cents per hour, i The minimum wage paid to all unskilled labor employed on this contract shall be seventy-five (75) cents per hour. Plans and specifications for the work may be seen and informa tion secured at the office of the County Clerk aat Lincoln, Ne braska, or at the office of the De partment of Roads and Irrigation at Lincoln, Nebraska. I The successful bidder will be Required to furnish bond in an amount equal to 100% of his con tract. As an evidence of good faith in submitting a proposal for this work, the bidder must file, with his proposal, a certified check made payable to the Department Df Roads and Irrigation and in an amount not less than fifty (50) dollars. The right is reserved to waive all technicalities and reject any or all bids. DEPARTMENT OF ROADS AND IRRIGATION H. L. Aitken, State Engineer J. B. Morgan, County Clerk Lancaster County Sunday School JESUS AND THE LAW Scripture . . . Matthew 5:17-20; Mark 10:17-22; Luke 16:16-17; John 1:17. Memory Selection . . . The Law was given through Moses: grace and truth came through Jesus Christ. John 1:17. Present-Day Application By Frederick D. Jordan Los Angeles, Calif. Every Christian should know from memory the classic laws of the Bible which are the subject of our studies for the rest of this quarter. We will study them in dividually in the light of Jesus’ attitude toward them. His inter pretation is our guide as Chris tians. Jesus sought to give the law everyday meaning for us in terms that all could understand. He had reverence for all the basic moral laws, but emphasized the need of going beyond “the letter.” Jesus’ teaching of love is para mount, it is the same that was given in the Old Testament when the plan of salvation was first out lined. Getting right with God, the change in the heart, first, is neces sary. We are not saved simply by the adherence to a law. this point Jesus stressed many times. Our Methodist belief is firm in the doctrine of grace, grace which cannot be acquired by obedience to law. (Ed. Note—Friends of the Jor dan for Bishop Movement are using Friday, April 25th, as a Day of Prayer for the success of their cause. Meetings are being ar ranged quietly in several cities.) Notice to Contractors Sealed bids will be received at the office of the Department ofj Roads and Irrigation in the State Capitol at Lincoln, Nebraska, on April 24, 1952, until 10:00 o’clock A.M., and at that time publicly opened and read for SAND GRAVEL ’IFOR SURFACING and incidental work on the LIN COLN-ADAMS Patrol No. 11045 State Road. The approximate quantity is: 3,255 Cu. Yds. Sand Gravel Surface Course Material. The attention of bidders is di rected to the Special Provisions covering .subletting or assigning the contract. Compliance by the contractor with the standards as to hours of labor prescribed by the “Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938,” ap proved June 25, 1938 (Public No. 718, 75th Congress), will be re quired in the performance of the work under this contract. The minimum wage paid to all skilled •labor employed on thisj contract shall be one dollar and five cents ($1.05) per hour, ex cept that a minimum wage of one dollar and twenty-five cents ($1.25) per hour shall be paid to: , Crane Operators Dragline Operators Power Shovel Operators The minimum wage paid to all intermediate labor employed on this contract shall be ninety-five (95) cents per hour. TTie minimum wage paid to all unskilled labor employed on this contract shall be seventy-five (75) cents per hour. Plans and specifications for the work may be seen and informa tion secured at the office of the County Clerk at Lincoln, Ne braska, at the office of the County Clerk at Beatrice, Ne braska, or at the office of the Department of Roads and Irriga tion at Lincoln, Nebraska. The successful bidder will be required to furnish bond in an amount equal to 100% of his con tract. As an evidence of good faith in submitting a proposal for this work, the bidder must file, with his proposal, a certified check made payable to the Department of Roads and Irrigation and in an amount not less than four hun dred (400) dollars. The right is reserved to waive all technicalities and reject any or all bids. DEPARTMENT OF ROADS AND IRRIGATION H. L. Aitken, State Engineer J. B. Morgan, County Clerk Lancaster County C. E. Dedrick, County Clerk Gage County Campus Round-Up By ANP Negro schools lose only 3 per cent while white schools lose 8 per cent enrollment in Negro in titutions declined only 3 per cent last fall as compared to 8 per cent for other colleges and universities. That fact was revealed in a re port by Dr. Martin D. Jenkins, president of Morgan Sate college, in his annual survey. — “Current Trends and Events of National Importance in Negro Education” —in the Journal of Negro Educa tion. Some 107 schools reported a totaled enrollment of 60,801 for the fall term of 1951-52. The re ported decline probably would have been greater, Dr. Jenkins said, had it not been for an in crease in the enrollment of women while male enrollment showed a marked drop. Historically, women students have constituted about 60 per cent of the total enrollment in Negro colleges and universities, an al most exact reversal of the situa tion in American institutions gen erally. Of the total undergraduate en rollment reported, there are 35,541 males and 34,260 females. Pu blicly-controlled institutions ac count for 55.8 per cent of the total, >r 33,921, while private schools have 44.2 per cent or 26.880. As to the size of institutions re porting, Howard university is the largest with an enrollment of 3,761 students. The median in stitution has an enrollment of 475 students. The following table gives a fuller picture of this situation: ENROLLMENT NUMBPER OF INSTITUTIONS 2,000 and over 7 1,500-1,999 3 1,000-1,499 7 500-999 32 250-499 26 100-249 14 1-99 18 Study did not include the non segregated colleges and universi ties in northern states. Despite an acute shortage of some 60,000 registered nurses, there was a drop of 5.7 per cent i;. the number of young women entering nursing schools in 1951 as compared to 1950, the American Hospital association reported re cently. . . The Northwestern Institute of Foot Surgery & Chiropdy, Chi cago, is one of few schools of its kind to admit Negroes without restrictions. About 40 per cent of^ its students are colored. The hour from six to seven p.m. s the most dangerous of the day or night in traffic. Ninety-seven per cent of driv ers involved in 1951 auto acci lents had at least one year of ex perience behind the wheel. Saturday is the most dangerous Jay of the week in traffic. [1 FOR SICK-A'BEPS I cJlMMy IS CUTTING A PICTURE ALPHABET OUT OF AN OLP MAGAZINE. HE HAS ALREAPy cutoutan"®nimaiT. HE IS LOOKING FOR A"®EP* 430THER HAS PUT PIME-STORE SURPRISES IN PAPER BAGS, PINNEP THEM TO SUSIES BEP. SUSIE IS PLAYING WITH THE FIRST SURPRISE - CRAYOMS/ ^F YOU CUTOUT A CAR I S? PRAWN ON A FOLPEP PIECE OF PAPER LIKE THIS, IT WILLSTANPUP PRAW MANY CARS STANP THEM ON A TRAY THE CHILP CAN PLAY "TRAFFIC* | (§RAPE JUICE IS AN APPETIZING ANP PELICIOUS FRUIT JUICE FOR SICK-ABEPS. THE FROZEN CONCENTRATE IS VITAMIN t ENRICHEP. CHILPREN LOVE IT/ DM • © 19)2, The Welch Crape Juice Company (Teachers Union Honors Dr. DuBois NEW YORK— (ANP)—Dr. W. F. B. DuBois, well known anthro pologist author and speaker, re jceived the annual award of the I Teachers Union for “distinguished service in the cause of education' (for peace and freedom” at the an nual TU educational conference1 and luncheon last week at the Commerce Hotel. The award was presented Dr.! DuBois by Mrs. Rose V. Russell, legislative representative of the union. She declared that it was made to “one who is a great scholar, a great Negro, a great American and a great man.” IDEAL Grocery and Market Lots of Parking 27th and F Streets Twenty-five per cent of all drivers involved in fatal automo bile accidents in the U.S. last year were under 25 years old. Jess Williams Spring Service 2215 O Street Lincoln 8, Nebraska Phone 2-3633 Every Item in Our Entire EAST WINDOW CHEAPPER DRUG STORE 1325 “O” St. i I1