Tib® V®n®@ PUBLISHED WEEKLY _ “Dedicated to the promotion of the cultural, social and spiritual bfe of a great people "__ Melvin L. Shakespeare Publisher and Editor Business Address 2225 S Btreet Pbone 2-4085 11 No Answer Call 5-7500 Ruble W Shakespeare . Advertising and Business Manager Dorothy Green..... Office Secretary Mrs. Joe Green . ..Circulation Manager Member of the Associated Negro Press and Nebraska Press Association ~ Entered as Second Class Matter June 8. 1847 at teh Post Office at Lincoln Nebraska under the Act of March 3. 1879. 1 year subscription.$2.50 Single copy.lOc Out-ot-State 1 Year Subscription $2.50—Single Copy lOe in msskh s— 7 TrLfiAA / \ EDITORIAL. / » • m m rho views expressed in these columns L _m ■ necessarily a reflection of the policy J t/W/W T! On §j 9 | »re those of the writer and not af The Voice.—Putt a # mwonh frh>+* D toiTCfiiAi I f wvrnAf&L—r assocutic* A Lot of Sioux Cities Last week the nation was shocked to learn that the Me morial Park Cemetery association in Sioux City, Iowa, had refused to permit the remains of a war casualty, a Winnebago Indian, from -being buried in one of its plots. | A wave of indignation swept over thv# land and President Tru man, as outraged as anybody else, ordered that the Indian, Sgt. John R. Rice, be buried in the Arlington National cemetery; which was done with full military honors. We were as indignant as any other Americans over this out rageous incident but our indigna tion was somewhat tempered by the knowledge that there are hundreds, perhaps thousands, of Sioux Cities in .he United States. Indeed, segregation of graves along the color line was the rule at Arlington National cemetery until 1947, and had Sergeant Rice died for his country before that year his remains would have been/ Jim Crowed. ‘ The length and breadth of this , land, North and South (but j thousands of lily-white cemeteries especially in the South), there are J in hundreds of Sioux Cities which are no better nor worse than the 1 one in Iowa. Indeed, there are few unsegre gated cemeteries in Dixie and there are plenty of lily-white' burial places outside the South. I We haven’t checked on it but we are willing to wager that the1 cemeteries in Independence, Mo., the president’s home town, bar the bodies of Negroes. There is probably more wide spread segregation in the dead in this country than there is of the living, because there is no consti tutional or legal provision pro tecting the rights of cadavers. We do not know the exact ex tent of this practice of separating in death those who have worked and fought side by side to build 'and preserve the nation. Pittsburgh Courier But we do know that it exists; ithroughout the nation. Here in! our own Lincoln we find segre gated policies in all of our burial grounds, Fairview, - Wyuka and Lincoln Memorial Park. The lat ter permitting burial to those of African descent only if they are a servant of some prominent 'j white who would desire that they be buried there. Student To Study NEW YORK—(ANP)—Joseph Delvalle Jr., of this city recently received a Fulbright Grant to study for one year at the Uni versity of Paris, School of Fine Arts. Delvalle has also earned a scholarship from the committee for the Negro in the Arts for one year’s study at the Hans Hoffman School of Fine Arts, New York. Delvalle is the son of Joseph Delvalle Sr., a postal employe. ply has been sold to pharmaceuti cal manufacturers for processing into a form to be used by hos pitals and doctors. I Join Tenn. Slate Faculty NASHVILLE — (ANP) — Two new instructors have been added to the faculty at Tennessee State college for the fall term. The new faculty members are Dr. Hillard A. Bowen, former registrar at Fort Valley State college, instructor in education, and Dr. Frederick D. Smith, for merly v/ith the Daily Poultry de partment of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. NEW YORK — (ANP) — Sports | commentators made much last week of the clutch pitching of old Satchel Paige for the St. Louis i Browns against the Cleveland In dians. They said two years ago, Satch helped pitch the Indians into a pennant, but it looks like this year, he might help pitch them out of a pennant as his relief stint shut the door in the Indians’ faces with the tieing and winning runs on bases. CLYDE’S DAIRY STORE Hamburger and Cold Lunches Also Groceries ICE CREAM 25c and 27c 2230 R St. ■ ■ ■. SiiiiiiiiiiiB « p " II. O. McFiold I Cleaners A Tailors ■ Specialise In FlamS-Weavinp ■ 301 No. 9th Phone 2-5441 y ■ ■ ■ SMITH Pharmacy 2146 Vine n Prescriptions — Drnrs Fountain — Sundries Phone 2-1958 Hodgman-Splain MORTUARY 1335 L Street Lincoln, Nebraska , - , FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION I Oth ond 0 St. Since 1871 ~ ' ' .. " " . ,.,.pep— PARRISH MOTOR CO. Tb* home ot clean used cars. 120 No. 19 St. h MMES C. OLSON, Superintends • TATI BISTOAICAL SOCIITV Delegates to Congress Bird B. Chapman, Nebraska territory’s second delegate to Congress, was, like his predeces sor, only a transitory Nebraskan. The charge of “carpet-bagger” was levelled at him by his ene mies, and, in a large measure, it appears to have been true. It should be remembered, though, that he was but one of a large class of enterprising young men who came to Nebraska territory to make their fortunes—political or otherwise—and who had no reason to stay in the territory when they failed. Little is known of Mr. Chap man’s early life—we do not even have the exact date of his birth. We do know, however, that he was born about 1821, and in 1843 he was practicing law in Elyria, Ohio. In 1852, he purchased the Lorain (Ohio) Argus, editing that paper until 1854 when he closed, shop and moved his equipment: to umana to start the Nebraskan. The newly-arrived editor ran for the post of delegate to Con gress in 1854, being third in a field of six. The next year, though, there was another elec tion (required under a territorial law enacted in March, 1855), and this time Chapman was successful, receiving 380 votes to 202 for Hiram P. Bennet. In what was to establish a precedent for a num ber of other delegate elections, Mr. Bennet contested the results of the election. The contest failed, and Mr. Chapman was allowed to take his seat in the House of Rep resentatives. * Chapman’s efforts to seek a sec ond term in 1857 were opposed by Fenner Ferguson, chief justice of the territorial supreme court; B. P. Rankin; and John M. Thayer. When the votes were counted, Ferguson was found to be the winner, with Chapman running a fairly close second. This time Chapman contested the election, although like Bennet the term before, unsuccessfully. The question was not resolved, how ever, until February 10,' 1869, with the term half gone. It - was frequently remarked— and the foregoing gives it va lidity—that one reason the terri torial delegate was able to do so SKYLINE ] ICE CREAM STORES 1433 South St Phone 3-8118 1417 N St Phone 2-4074 All Product* Manufactured At Main Plant Skyline Farms So. 14th St Tlialheimer Essay Winners NEW YORK—Prize winners in the Thaleimer Essay Contest for 1951 were announced last night (September 5th) at the 41st an nual conference of the National Urban League held in St. Paul, Minnesota (September 3-7). Made possible by a gift from Dr. Ross Thalheimer, the essays highlight the league’s Vocational Opportu nity Campaign (VOC) held each spring. The essays dealing with the subject “What It Means to Me” pointed up the value of the VOC. The contestants told how they had been helped through Urban League clinics, career conferences and vocational counseling to be come acquainted with various occupations and to make wise choice of useful careers. The league is the oldest and largest national interracial social service agency to promote equal economic ■ opportunity. Winner of the $15CV first prize j is Marvin Douglass Mack, 18, of, 618 Tenth street, Laurel, Mary land. A graduate of Fairmont Heights High in Washington, D.C., he will enter Howard University this month. *~ Second prize of $100 cash went to Lucy Mae Madison, 18 of 526 Denny Avenue, Birmingham, Ala little for Nebraska was that he had to spend most of his time and energy defending his seat in Con gress. The Ferguson - Chapman contest also helps to illustrate the bitter sectional strife that racked the territory. Chapman, an Omaha man, was vigorously op posed by the South Platte people, and particularly by J. Sterling Morton, whose vitriolic pen casti-! gated Chapman regularly in the columns of the Nebraska City News. Following his failure to be seated as a delegate, Chapman returned to Elyria, Ohio, where he remained until 1862, when he removed to Put-in-Bay Island. There, September 12, 1871, he died. j bama. A graduate of Birming ham’s Parker High school, she probably will not enter college until next September. In that event, her award money will be held and presented to her at that time. Third prize winner of $75 cash is William Charles Brown, 18, of 2813 Norton street, Kansas City, Missouri. A Lincoln high school graduate, he will enter the Uni versity of Kansas City later this month Honorable mentions went to the following: Ernest York, 22, of Morgan State College, Baltimore, Md.; Anne Parsons, 18, of 749 Dennison Avenue, Dayton, Ohio; Rosa Maye Dwyer, 17, of 27 Sec ond Avenue, Sumter, S. C.; and Verona Evangeline Nelson, 17, of 204 “E” street, N. E., Washington, D C. The Essay Contest is open to any youth who has taken part in the VOC either through a school, local league, or any other community agency. Contestants muri be enrolled in the last year of study in a second ary school or enrolled in the first year of study beyond secondary school in a course that requires not less than two years to com plete, or else they must have com pleted high school on or before January first. You Should Patronize Our Advertisers School Supply Specials Rtf. NOW 2- Ring Notebooks 65c, 39c 3- Ring Noteboks 1.95, 98c OTIIEB ITEMS Fountain Pens — Pencils Dictionaries — Globes Artist Supplies [ atscliRrolhers JL^SYATIONERS JJ PRINTERS 1124 O St. 2-6838 ---— I ' »* Mrpfcw * Tfl^raph