The voice. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1946-195?, June 30, 1949, Page THREE, Image 3

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(Milan Uh»»ei A. M. E. Oharch
Bth and "C" Streets
Rev. J. B. Broogs, Pastor
9:45 a. m. Sunday School
10:45 a m Morning Worship
6:00 p m. Young Peoples fellowship
7:30 p. m. Evening eervlce
Tuesday. 8:00 p. no.. Prayer meeting
Northside Church at God
23rd and T Street
Robert o. Moody, Pastor.
10:00 a m. Church 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 ct meeting call 2-4673.
Alloa (J Impel
(Seventh-day adventist).
Urban Deague—2030 "T" Street.
LeCount Butler. Associate Pastor.
9:45 a m. Sabbath School.
10:45 a m. Missionary Meeting.
11:00 a. m. Morn ng Worship.
4:00 p. m. Young People's Society.
Christ Temple Chare* •/ Christ (Holiness)
2149 U Street
Rev. T. O. McWilliams, jr., Pastor.
7:00 a m Early Morning Prayer
10:00 A m. Sunday School.
11:00 A m. Moaning Worship
6:00 p. m. Service at Carver Dome
6:00 p. m. H.Y.F.U- Richard McWU
Bams, president.
7:45 p. m Evening Service
1st A 3rd Mondays, C.W.W.W. meets at
1:00 p. m., Mrs. Margie Turner, president.
Tuesday, Bible Study, 8:00.
Wednesday, Prayer and Praise, 2:00.
1st A 3I'd Friday. Jr. Choir rehearsal at
parsonage, 8 00,
2nd A 4th Friday, Young People’s
Prayer Band, 8:00. Kathryn King, presi
dent
You are always welcome to Christ
Temple Church.
Church of God in Chriet, 20th A C.
Rev. B. T. McDaniels, Pastor.
10:30 a. m. Sunday School.
12:00 Noon Morning Wotship.
7:00 p. m. Y.P.W.W.
8:00 p. m. Evening Worcr.lv
8:00 p. m. Tuesday and Friday, regula
service.
Thursday, 1 to 3 p. m., Sewing Circle.
Wednesday, & p. m.. Prayer Band.
Mt. Uw Baptist -hue*
Rev. W. 1. Monroe, Pastor.
Corner 12lh and F Streets
10:00 Sunday School
11:00 Morning Worship
6:30 Baptist Training Unioo
8:00 Evening Worship
Newman Methodist, 23rd A b.
Rev. William A. Greene, pastor.
9:45 a. m. Church School.
11:00 a. m. Morning Worship.
6:30 p. m. Methodist Youth Fellowship
CME Methodist Choreh.
2030 T Street.
First and Third Sundays,
ftev. G. E. hib?ns. Pastor.
9:30 A m.—Sunday School.
10:30 a m.—Methodist Training Unior.
11:00 a. m.—Morning Worship.
Mothers Diet
May Have Effect
On Intelligence
A study with far-reaching
implications with regard to racial
differences and consequent in
ternationjal problems won the
$1,500 Lester N. Hoffteimer Re
search award for outstanding
accomplishment in the field of
psychiatry and mental hygiene.
The award was given to Dr.
Benjamin Pasamanik, 34-year
old psychiatrist now in charge
of the children's service at Kings
County Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y.,
at the meeting of the American
Psychiatric Association in Mon
treal.
Dr. Pasamanik’s study shows
that the lower intelligence quo
tients scored by American Ne
groes in comparison with whites
is not a matter of racial differ
ence but of difference of en
vironment, especially in the diet
of the mothers before the babies
are born.
In 1944 and 1945 Dr. Pasa
manik studied a group of Negro
infants and three carefully con
trolled groups of white infants
in New Haven, using the methods
developed by Dr. Arnold Gesell
of the Yale Clinic of Child De
v velopment.
The Negro infants were found
to be fully equal to the white
infants in all respects, including
intelligence. These findings were
confirmed by later re-examina
tion.
Significantly, their weight and
length at birth and their growth
were also precisely similar to
white standards. This, Dr. Pass
Sunday School :
9 Lesson
SUNDAY, JULY 3, 1949.
Theme: Jesus Rises Fromthe
Dead. Mark 16:1-8; John 21:1-17;
I Cor. 15:12-19.
The disciples could not quickly
accept the marvel of the Resur
rection. There is one element
in the resurrection stories which
is often over looked. That is
the fact that the disciples did
not at once or easily accept as
real the return of Jesus to them,
or comprehend its full meaning.
All the Gospels note this. In
telling of the appearance to the
eleven disciples in Galilee, Mat
thew says “but some doubted”
(Matt. 28:17). In Luke’s account
of the two disciples meeting the
risen Lord on the road to Emmaus
it is noted that they had already
heard of the visit of the women
to the tomb and of a« anfklic
announcement of the resurrec
tion. But it had not relieved
their sadness (Luke 24:17). When
directly after Jesus had revealed
Himself to them, they return to
the eleven disciples, they are
told that the Lord had indeed
risen and had appeared to Peter.
Nevertheless, when he is seen
standing in their midst, they are
frightened, supposing that they
are seeing a ghost (Luke 24:36-37).
In the Fourth Gospel is the fa
miliar story of Thomas’ doubt,
and in chapter 21 Peter and his
compauions return to their work
as fishermen after two appear
ances of their Master have, ap
parentyq failed to open their
eyes to the meaning for their
own lives and work of His
resurrection from the dead.
Now this is exactly what we
should expect if we were not so
much inclined to underestimate
the marvel of the resurrection
and the consequent difficulty
which the disciples must neces
sarily have had in fitting so
amazing an event into their lives.
To be sure, they had known
Jesus and had come to see Him
as the Messiah. They had heard
His prediction of His death and
resurrection. But the circum
stances of His death had had a
devastating terror for which the
predictors only half understood,
could be no adequate prepara
tion. And the prophecy of a
resurrection could hardly be ex
pected to have much power oyer
minds reeling under the dread
ful impact of the cross.
It took time for the actual ex
periences of contact with the
risen Master to lead them
manik thinks, means that the
diet of the Negro mothers before
the babies were born may have
played a very important role in
the development of their babies.
The children in this study
were conceived and born during
the war years when, probably
for the first time, due to im
proved economic conditions and
rationing, Negroes had a diet
about equal to that of whites.
—Science Newsletter, June 11. 1949.
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Summer Sends
Allianeiles To
Parks, Ili-Koads
BY BEATRICE MOTLEY
ALLIANCE, Neb.—Mr. and Mrs.
Forrest Shores or Greeley, Colo.,
and son John motored to Indian
apolis, Ind., and have returned to
Alliance for an extended visit.
They are stopping at the home of
i Mrs. Shores' sister, Mrs. Ernest
Nickens. Miss Myrtle Floreta
Chandler accompanied the Sho
reses to Indiana.
Mr. and Mrs. Freeman McGuire
of Indianapolis and children, Free
man, jr., and Marsha are visiting
at the home of Mrs. McGuire’s
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hayes
Chandler, sr. The McGuires mo
tored to Alliance from Indianapo
lis with Mr. and Mrs. Forrest
Shores.
Mrs. Mills Lear accompanied
Miss Barbara Sue Butler to her
home in Canton, Mo. Mrs. Lear
and Barbara Sue plan to remain
in Missouri until September.
Picnickning in the park Sun
day and enjoying local scenery
were Deleores Young, Hershal
Oliver, Teresa Motley, Jackie Mc
Phearson, Beatrice Motley and
Robert Luve.
Sunday motorists to nearby
towns included Max Woodlee, Ob
bie Waring, Ella Evans, Ed But
ler, Bill Darnell, Teresa Motley
and Beatrice Motley.
through the jungle of confusion
and terror in which whey were
wandering. Only real and per
sistent contacts could do it at all.
The resurrection of Jesus was a
great fact which fought and
vanquished the deadening de
spair of men who saw in the un
speakable horror of their Mas
ter’s death the final extinction
of their hopes.
Of itself the emptiness of the
tomb meant only bewilderment
and fear which not even the
angelic reassurances could calm.
But when the disciples again say
the beloved face and heard the
well-remembered voice, they
came to know that the empty
tomb meant that death had no
power to hold their Master, and
then there dawned upon them
the realization of the great truth
that the terrible death on Calvary
was he revelation of God’s love
to sinfeul men. They had come to
know that on the cross Jesus had
given his life indeed for the ran
som of many. They came to
know that they had a gospel to
preach, that out of their dead
hopes was springing a living
certainty.
Foreman—“What’s the big
;1ea of quitting?”
Riveter—“Oh, I don’t mind
hammering rivets all day long,
but the man who works with me
hums incessantly.” '
Divines Threat
Fails To
Magazine Expose
NEW YORK. (ANP). Despite!
the mounting pressure from fol
lowers of Father Divine and even
a threat from the religious leader
himself that he was “doomed to
destruction,” Publisher John
Davis of Our World magazine an
nounced last week that he
wouldn’t suppress an expose
article of the Divine kingdom in
the August issue of his publica
tion.
Davis said that never in the
history of the four years that he’s
been publishing the magazine has
such pressure been brought to
bear on him in the way of phone
calls and letters. Last Sunday at
Divine’s peace mission in Harlem
he was summoned to talk with
the bald-headed cult leader, at
the latter’s request, and during
the two hour discussion Divine
kept making indirect threats on
Davis’ life and visualized all sorts
of retribution if the magazine hit
the stands with the story.
Written by John Hunt, who was
a Divinite for 13 years and served
in the capacity of official photo
grapher, now bitterly denied by
Father Divine and his flock, the
sensational expose article says
that the Divine movement is
rapidly crumbling and the cult
leader is fighting to stave off the
revolt.
When even the offer of money
to kill the story failed to sway
Davis, who told Father Divine
that “journalistic integrity was
involved,” the religious one arose
from his chair as the publisher
prepared to depart and said:
“If you print what is antag
onistic or derogatory to me or
prejudicial to me, then you are
among those in the category of
Bilbo, Hitler and Mussolini.”
It will be remembered that he
has ofttimes said it was at his
direction that the above trio, all
dead now, ceased to live.
Davis offered him and his fol
lowers an equal amount of space
to reply to the story by Hunt,
which they refused.
Robinson Shelved
On June 16, the Massachusetts
State Boxing commission created
quite a stir in fistic circles when
it announced the indefinite sus
pension of Welterweight Cham
pion Ray Robinson and his
Manager George, Gainsford for
failure to co-operate with the
Texas boxing commission merely
said for “failure to fulfill contract.
To Wed
MISS DONNA WASHINGTON
—Oale Photo, Beatrice,
Mr. and Mrs. Otis P. Washing
ton announce the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter, Donna Marie to Mr,
Samuel H. Wyatt, son of Mrs.
Thomas H. Wyatt, and the late
Dr. Wyatt, trustee board president
of Samuel Houston college, Aus
tin, Tex.
Miss Washington is a graduate
of Drake university where she
was a member of Collegiate Who’s
Who, Sieve and Shears, Kappa
Delta Pi, and Alpha Kappa Alpha.
She has been a piano instructor
at Tuskegee Institute for the past
two years.
Mr. Wyatt holds degrees from
Samuel Houston college, City col
lege of New York, and New York
university. At the present time
he is engaged in work toward a
Doctor of Philosophy degree at
New York university in New York
City where they will reside.
The wedding is planned for
July 31.
Landlord—“What’s your com
plaint?”
Tenant—“The bathroom faucet
won’t run; would you mind hav
ing the hole in the roof shifted
over the tub?”
46 Years
13th“& O
National Bank
of Commerce
Lincoln, Nebraska
Member F.D.I.C.
------- ■ '
.Hand Crafts
SUPPLIES
211 North 13th at.
2-4452
—
CLEANING and SANITATION
SUPPLIES
All Types v
Brooms—Furniture Polishes
Mops- Floor Seal and Wax
Sweeping Compounds
Mopping Equipment
I Kelso Chemical
117 North 9th St 2-3434
PIANOS RADIOS *
SEWING MACHINES
WASHERS SWEEPERS
i Gourlay Bros. Piano Co. j
212 So. 12 2-1636 |
Arthur Griswold Co.1
Inlaid Linoleum,
Gold Seal Congoleum
1426 "O'* 2-5606 ||
Jess
Williams
Springs
Van Sickle
Quality Paints
Manufactured in Lincoln
Van Sickle has had the pri
vilege to serve you for over 46
years.
143 So. 10 2-6931
10«-25«- 39*
Lincoln* Favorite Potato Chip
' VINE ST.
MARKET
GROCERIES & MEATS
22nd and Vine
2-6583 — 2-6584
ROSE MANOR
STUDIO {
1029 Rose Street
Phone 3-2046
Portraits by Appointment
George Randol, P. A. of A
Prices reasonable
Work guaranteed
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