The voice. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1946-195?, January 26, 1950, Page Three, Image 3

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    Quinn Chapel A. M. K. Chore*
8th and C Streets
Rev. J. B. Brooks, Pastor.
6:00 p. m. Young Peoples Fellowship
7:30 p. m. Evening Service
9:45 a. m. Sunday School
10:45 a. in. Morning Worship
Tuesday 8:00 p. m., Prayer meeting
N'orthside Church of God.
23rd and T Street.
Robert E Moody, Pastor.
10:00 a. m. Church School.
11:00 a. m. Morning Worship.
7:30 p. m. Evening Worship.
7:30 p. in. Midweek Prayer Meeting.
7:30 p. m. Friday Bible Study.
For place of meeting call 2-4673.
Alton Chapel.
(Seventh-day Adventist)
LeCount Butler, Associate Pastor.
9:45 a. m. Sabbath School.
10:45 a. m. Missionary Meeting.
11:00 a m. Morning Worship.
4:00 p. m. Young People's Society.
CHRIST TEMPER
Church of Christ (Holiness)
2149 U Street. Phone 2-3901
Rev. 7. O. McWilliams, Jr., ’astor.
Rev. T. T. McWilliams, Sr., Ass’t. Pastor.
Order of Worship.
Sunday School, 10 a. m.
Morning Worship, 11 a. m.
Service at Carver Nursing Home, 2001
Vine Street, 5 o’clock.
Evening Service. 7:30 p m.
First Monday Each Month
Monthly C. W. W. W. Meeting at 8
p. m.. Sister Margie Turner, president.
Second Monday Each Month
The Pastors Aid will meet at 8 o’clock.
Sister Georgia King, president.
Tuesday
Bible Study at the Parsonage. 20.5 U
Street at 8:00 p. m.
Wednesday t
Prayer and Praise Service at the par
sonage, 8:00 p. m.
Mt. Zion Baptist Church.
Rev. W. E. Monroe. Partor.
Corner 12th and F Streets.
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 Melhodist, 23rd A 8.
Rev. William A. Greene, Pastor.
9:15 a. m. Church School.
11 ;Q0 a. m. Morning Worship.
6:30 p. m. Methodist Youth Fellowship
(ME Methodist Church.
7030 T Street.
First and Third Sundays.
Rev. J W. Simpson, Pastor.
9:30 a. m. Sunday School.
10:30 a. m. Methodist Training Union.
11:00 a. m. Morning W’orship.
Church of (iod in Christ.
9:00 a. in. Sunday school.
11:00 Morning worship.
6:30 p. m. Y. P. W. W.
8:00 p. m. Evening worship.
8:00 p m. Tuesday and Friday regular
service.
band. 9:00 p. m Junior church service.
7:30 p. m. Thursday prayer and Bible
pastor. Rev. Charles Williams.
True Happiness
If you would know true happi
ness, never let the day end with
out seeking forgiveness of one
you have injured. Be big enough
VINE ST.
MARKET
GROCERIES & MEATS
22nd and Vine
2-6583 — 2-6584
| Sunday School \
Lesson
I m,,. j
SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 1950
THEME—Unto All Men. Acts
8:4-11:18.
Faithful Man of Prayer. Cor
nelius, a centurion, was a full
blooded Gentile having no con
nection with Judaism save that
he and his soldiers were sta
tioned among Jewish people and
also that he like many other
Gentiles worshiped Jehovah as
the one true God. He is described
as a devout man who feared God.
He was *also generous in alms
giving “and prayed to God al
ways.”
The important word here is
“always.” We can expect but
meager spiritual^ results if we
pray only occasionally or when
we get in a tight place.
To such a man as Cornelius,
God vouchsafed a vision. Pre
sumably He did this first because
Coinelius was the type of man
who would profit by a vision,
and again because of the tre
mendous issues involved in this
vision.
The angel of God assured Cor
nelius that his prayers and alms
had “gone up for a memorial be
fore God.”
Cornelius was not picked by
chance. He had sought God for
a long time; now God was to use
him to a great purpose.
Cornelius was simply told to
send to Joppa “and fetch one Si
mon, who is surnamed Peter; he
j lodgeth with one Simon a tanner,
whose house is by the sea side.”
Immediately Cornelius took steps
to carry out the instructions.
Meanwhile Peter in Joppa had
1 seen a vision. Going up on the
housetop to pray at noontime, “he
fell into a trance”—a state of
suspended animation following a
period of religious contemplation
and rapture.
God speaks great messages
only to people who are prepared
to receive such messages.
to say “I'm sorry,” to overlook
fancied wrongs, to extend a help
ing hand to a brother who has
strayed, to accept success and
praise without losing poise. Be
small enough to walk with the
lowly and not feel superior. Many
will agree with this, but few will
follow it. Those few will carry
the light of everlasting sunshine
on their countenance, and man
1 and God will walk with them.
—A. D. Addis.
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v || Archie Furr ||
El wood, Kansas
By Wilberta Brady.
Hello folks:
Here I am this week bringing
you news of this city.
The Baptist Women’s Auxiliary
gave a splendid program at the
church Sunday afternoon. The
program was as follows: Solos,
Mrs. Mable Tapp, Mr. William
Ewing, Mrs. Hattie Ewing, Mrs.
Edith Brown; Readings, Mrs. :
Sydney Wilson, Mrs. Hester Hog
gatt; The Mozee Quartet: Ralph,
Thomas, Kathryn and Marvin;
Duet: Mrs. Ruth Butcher, Mrs.
Hoggatt. The guest speaker was
Mrs. Sykes of Trinity Church in
St. Joseph.
Mrs. Mary Hayes and Willa Mae
spent Saturday in Kansas City,
Mo.
Miss Delphinia McKinney spent
last week in Kansas City, Mo.,
visiting relatives and friends.
Lincoln School basketball team
played White Cloud team Friday
afternoon.
The El wood High Seniors went
to St. Joseph, Wednesday to have
their graduation pictures. They
also took in a movie to make it a
day.
Elwood High Glee Club sang at
Troy Christian Church Thursday
(January 19).
Well folks that is all the news
for now. See you next week.
Bye now!
Frat Group Asks 12
NE Schools to
Drop Race Bias
HANOVER, N. H. (ANP). The
Dartmouth College Interfraternity
council dispatched a letter to the
12-member Northeastern Inter
fraternity conference last week
urging the latter group to support
‘‘a real step” toward eliminating
racial and religious bias in fra
ternal organizations. The let
ter specifically asked that the
northeastern colleges and univer
sities strike out restrictive clauses
in college fraternity charters
when the conference meets
Thanksgiving day in Washing
ton.
Members of the NIC had urged
a b o 1 i t io n of discriminatory
clauses in a meeting at Amherst
college last Oct. 17. The Dart
mouth student body has voted
1,754 for the discarding of dis
criminatory clauses, 373 against,
and 230 undecided. About 80 per
| yent of the student body partic
! ipated in the voting.
The Dartmouth letter went to
Amherst, Massachusetts Institute
of technology, Cornell,** Middle
b u r y, Rensselaer Polytechnic
institute, St. Lawrence, Syracuse,
Union, Worchester Polytechnic
institute and the state universities
of Maine, New Hampshire and
| Vermont.
Scarlet [
ports
By Leo E. Geier
Not often do we find a good
athlete achieving fame as a
scholar, but this year the Univer
sity of Nebraska can boast a
basketball player who has at
tained even more than a good
scholastic report. He is Dick Srb,
who has been selected from stu
dents in six midwestern states to
receive a Rhodes scholarship. The
scholarship assures him two to
three years of school at Oxford
university in England.
The six-foot-three, 170-pound ;
forward of the Husker cage team !
is one of the hardest workers on
the Scarlet squad. He has earned
two varsity letters at Nebraska
and is playing his fourth year of
varsity basketball. Dick, a clutch
player, was the hero of several
last minute victories won by last
year’s Big Seven conference
championship team.
To me, Dick’s is a real success
story.
Friends who can remember him
as a lad in junior high school re
call that he was a thin, quiet kid
who played clarinet in the Lin
coln all-city boys’ band. The cas
ual observer would never have
guessed that he would some day
star on the Nebraska maples. His
bandmaster at the time was Lyle
Welch, a young man who had
been a great athlete himself and
was an outstanding musician.
Welch, now director of the Lin
coln high school band, was a
firm believer that a man did not
have to be a “sissy” to be a good
scholar or musician, and he
stressed the point frequently.
Dick seems to have approved of
his teacher’s convictions.
Welch recalls today that Srb
was an “unobtrusive, quiet kid
who was studious and liked to
do things right. He was well
mannered and a good student.”
What he did not know at the time
was that Srb would become a
fine basketball player.
Even before his high school
days, Dick played basketball in
the city church league. At Lin
coln high school he played one
year or sophomore basketball and
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a year on the reserves before he
made the varsity. He spent 13
months in the navy before enter
ing the university.
Srb is still quiet, unobtrusive
and a good student. But he is
popular with his fellow athletes
and students, having been a mem
ber of the Student Council- and
secretary of the ,‘N” club.
Dick will begin his study at
Oxford under the Rhodes scholar
ship in October. A history majo*
at the University of Nebraska,
Dick will study political science,
economics and philosophy in Eng
land. He plans either to teach
or to enter the diplomatic service
after completing his course.
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