ft k Volume 1, Number 47 Lincoln 3. Nebraska _August 28, 1947 . JOIN THE Ho* iOR ROLL - - SUBSCRIBE! Lincoln Urban League Host To Educational Caravan | An educational caravan com posed of 64 young women, 4 young men, and two couples tour ing the country by bus will arrive at the Lincoln Urban League Fri day, August 29, about 2 o’clock. The group is a part of the Na tional Associated Clubs organized by the National Urban League in Indianapolis two years ago, and • are returning from the coast. The young people left Indian apolis in July, and will also stop in Grand Island. Mr. Clyde W. Malone, Execu tive Secretary of the Urban Lea gue, stated that the young women would be housed at the Urban League, and places would be found in homes for others. i A tour will be conducted thru the city and a meeting will be held as a part of the Urban Lea gue’s program of research and ^ community planning. The group will leave Saturday morning. -o i . Prejudice may be considered as a continual false medium of view ing things, for prejudiced persons not only never speak well but also never think well, of those ‘whom they dislike and the whole character and conduct is consider ed with an eye to that particular thing which offends them. Butler. The following is a list of those who are New Subscribers or have Renewed their subscription to THE VOICE. How does your SUBSCRIPTION STAND? •: OUR HONOR ROLL :• Mrs. Atnensa White Mrs. Wayne Hassel Mrs. Lucille Bowman Mrs. Samuel Nevels Mrs. Evelyn Knowles, renewal Ed Smith Eugene Chinn Mrs. Geo. Triggs H. O. Stevens Mrs. Mildred Saunders Bethune Literary and Art Club Meets The Mary Bethune Literary and Art Club will meet at 7:30 p.m., Wednesday, at the home of Mrs. J. II. Dean. Hostesses were: Mesdames J. R. Edwards, Clyde Coulter, H. Co6ke, and James Dean. -o BELIEVE IT OR NOT By Ripley In Sunday’s World Herald the following report was given about an uncle of Mrs. Jennie R. Ed wards, 2420 P St. George Green, Lexington, Mo., has been teaching school 72 years and during all that time has never once been late or absent. MOTORS TO CALIFORNIA Rev. and Mrs. Trago O. McWilliams Jr., left Thursday, August 21 for Los Angeles, California where they wilLbe in attendance at 1 the annual convention of the Church of Christ (Holiness.) Motoring with them were their son Richard, Vernon Merrill and Mrs. Marge Turner, delegates of Christ Temple at 21st and U Streets of which the Rev. Mr. McWilliams is pastor. Miss Thompson To Pittsburg University Miss Katherine Thompson, Group Work Supervisor at the Lincoln Urban League since June 1944, will leave September 10, to enter Pittsburg University, where she will continue work on her Master’s degree in Group Work. Miss Thompson taught in Car rollton, Missouri, for 8 years fol lowing her graduation from the University of Nebraska. At the Urban League she was in charge of the 4-H girls, Brown ies, Girl Scouts, Teen-Agers, Rhy thm band, and assisted with the Y-Teens and adult programs. She is a member of Quinn Cha pel A.M.E. Church and equally active in church affairs. _*_JOE_ *r1$ $0 RACE ON EARTH | WVtP RAWER PE _ ^JUe Voice BcUutei . . . / The Merry Cookers, 4-H Club, who have completed plans for their yearbook, which includes the “hows and whys” of cooking. They are making plans for a membership drive to begin in September. Club members are especially grateful to Mrs. Jack Nelson, who has assisted so graciously in their recreation work. They regret the retiring of their leader, Miss Katherine Thomp son. Nebraska City News Little Johnny Moore, son of Mr. and Mrs. Marion Moore, has been ill but is improving. Mr. Thomas Mason of Nehawka Nebr., was in the city Sunday. He was accompanied by his neph ew, Boyd Mason. Mr. and Mrs. Luther D. Give hand and daughter Jane, and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Adams and daughter Jeannette, motored to Union, Nebr., Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Adams have returned to Lincoln. They had been in the city for a week. Hastings News Mr. and Mrs. Ted Smith re turned from a trip accompanying their guest Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Duncan and Stanley Duncan of Hiawatha, Kans., to North Platte, where they visited relatives. Mrs. Smith and Mr. Duncan are bro ther and sister. * * * * Mrs. E. Henderson was a recent visitor at the home of her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. S. V. Henderson of Ayr, Neb. ^ ^ ^ ^ -AS. 1^. ‘ Negro Piano Prodigy# 3# Plays Bach# Mozart Chicago, 111.—Margaret Rozar ian Harris, 3, made her debut Sunday as a classical pianist and drew prolonged applause from her audience. The tiny Negro girl, her favor ite doll perched in a chair next to her piano, played 14 serious selections from the works of Bach Schubert, Tschaikowsky, Mozart, Brahms and other composers. Just three weeks short of her fourth birthday and wearing a white satin dress with a pink ribbon in her hair, Margaret ap peared before an audience of more than one hundred persons in the Cary Temple Auditorium. She bowed from the waist as she calmly looked over the audi ence before seating herself at the piano, equipped with raised ped als for her little legs. | She plunked a few keys, then swung into Bach’s minuet. Play ing entirely from memory, she followed “The Magic Flute” by Mozart. She played Tschaikowsk’s “Song of Russia” to introduce the second half of her recital. In the midst of “Ave Maria,” she yawned audibly but never missed a note. She received a rousing ovation at the end of her recital. Then she picked up her doll and ran to her mother. Margaret showed a spark of temperament a few hours before her debut. She wasn’t nervous about the recital but was a little irritated because her mother wouldn’t let her play with the doll. She and the doll, Rozarian, were dressed alike for the con- ' cert. Her mother, Mrs. William Harris, said she didn’t want her daughter to get the doll “mussed.” “She just won’t play without Rozarian,” Mrs. Harris said. “SI— never does.”