San Antonio Register (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 41, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 3, 1980 Page: 2 of 11
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PASTOR WM. A. [UIS AMD
GRIATIR LINCPARK
TtlRPU FAMILY
The Music Department
PROUDLY PRESENTS
Recital
CLARA
GASKIN
<|| HUft VOW FAVORITES
Amazinft (trace, (treat In Thy
Faithfulness, Walk & Talk With
Jesus und many more!!!
Sunday, Evening, April 13, 19S0,
4:00 P.M.
Antioch Missionary Baptist
Church
1001 North Walters Stieet
San Antonio, Texas
Reverend John Joseph Rector
Sr., D. D. (Pastor)
Admission Is Free
PAGE 2
SAN ANTONIO REGISTER
THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 1980
TODAYS'
SERMONETTE
He Has Risen, Did He Rise in
You?
Rev. ELMYRA WlLLIS
The Easter Message
BOOK: St. Matthew
CHAPTER 28
VERSES: 2-5-6
2 And behold, there was a
great earthquake; for the Angel
of the Lord descended from hea-
ven and came and rolled back
the stone from the door, and sat
upon it. I
5 And the Angel answered and
said unto the woman, fearno)
ye; for I know that ye seek
Jesus, which was crucified. )
6 He is not here; for He j
risen...... -s
For the proof of Christ’s re-
surrection we have the testi-
mony of an Angel.
In the foregoing verses we
saw the captain of our salva-
tion engaged with the powers
of darkness; victory seemed to
be given to the enemy and our
champion fell before them. But
not so, our Lord awaked as one
out of sleep. The Prince of
our peace is in this chapter
rallying again, coming out of the
grave, a conqueror.1'
There was a peat eathquake.
When he died, the earth that re-
ceived him, shook for fear;
now that he arose, the earth that
i signed him. leaped for joy In
his exaltation. It was the signal
of Christ’s victory.
Those who are sanctified, and
thereby raised to a spiritual
life, while it is in the doing
find an earthquake in their
bosoms.
When he rises in you there
will be an earthquake inside,
and, you can’t keep it to your-
self, you must tell it. Like an
earthquake we won’t and we
can’t keep quiet.
He has risen and is alive for-
evermore. Blessed be the
name of the Lord!
Jehovah's
Witnesses
meet Apr3,6
San Antonio area Jehovah’s
Witnesses will meet April 5 and
€ in the Convention Center
Arena to consider the impor-
tance of continued obedience to
God’s word.
Safeguarding die family ar-
rangement wiU be stressed to the
assembly in a series of talks and
demonstrations. Highlighting the
' program Sunday at 2:00 p.m.
will be die keynote address en-
titled “To Whom Does the Obe-
dience of the People Belong?”
Speaker will be Eugene R.
Brandt, formerly of San An-
tonio, who now travels the
south-central states as district
overseer and representative of
die world headquarters of Je-
hovah’s Witnesses in Brooklyn,
New York.
' Another feature of interest
will be Saturday’s baptism of
individuals dedicating their lives
consistent obedience and ad-
Easter Cantata,
concert at
First Baptist
On Sunday evening, at six
o’clock, April 6, Mt. Zion First
Baptist Church Chorale will pre-
sent “The Crucifixion” by John
Stainer under the direction of
Nelson Ray Armstrong. The
Prairie View A&M University
Chorale will also render excerpts
from Handel’s “Messiah,” under
the direction of Robert Henry.
Special guests will be Shelbi
Stone, organist, and William
Lewis, tenor, UTSA (San An-
tonio); and Carl Alston of Mt.
Zion Chorale featured bass solo-
ist. This promises to be an un-
forgetable experience. The pubr
lie is invited. Rev. Claude W.
Black, minister at Mt. Zion
First Baptist Church, and Rev
George W. Reece, assistant tc
the minister.
Easter Parade
of Songs at
Seguin Church
New St. James Baptist Church,
302 West Rosemary street, Se-
guin, will present its 12th annual
Easter Parade of Songs on Fri-
day evening, April 4, at 8
o'clock.
• Featured will be soloists from
San Antonio and Seguin. along
with the Easter Parade of
Songs’s Singing Chorus. Rev.
David Porter, director.
The public is invited.
30000000000
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o
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m
The public t* welcome at ail
sessions which will begin Satur-
day at 9: S3 a m.
Keepthe
force with
you.
Read
theBfcte.
O
O
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
O O
ooooooooooo
SECOND BAPTIST CHURCH CORDIALLY
MYITES YOU TO WORSHP
EASTER
>-a.Tt*e£*6» ‘Rqjoice-q-
7:00
EARLY MORNING SERVICE
Music by The Sanctuary Tones
OUR INCOMPLETENESS AND THE
MESSAGE OF EASTER”
This sermon by the Pastor
11:00 A.M.
Special Music by the Choirs
“CHRIST AND THE FU-
TURE LIFE”
(This sermon by the Pastor ana
this service is broadcast “live’’
over radio station KM AC -
630 on your dial.)
6:00 PM.
THE SERVICE OF THE HOLY
KMUNION. Music by The
Contemporaries.
Kindly bring a friend with you
> to worship Easter Sunday!
3310 E.
COMMERCE
KEV.&H MMES
MILTON ADAMS. SR
AGENT OF THE DECADE-
Universal Life Insurance Com-
pany has chosen Milton Adams,
Sr. as agent of decade in the
San Antonio area, announced
district manager Robert Yancy.
Adams began his career in
January of 1966.
During those 14 years, Adams
increased his debit by $1,500
weekly premium. Adams n
married to Mrs. Minnie Lee
Adams and they have three
children and two grandchildren.
Black business
directory for
San Antonio
As the 1980 census gets under-
way during the month of April
so does an accounting of The
Black Business of San Antonio
A Black Business Directory is
being developed by advertising
consultant Victor C. Wright for
distribution by the Delta Rho
Lambda Chapter of Alpha Phi
1507 E. Commerce.
Since the distribution of 8,000
copies of the directory is slated
for Alpha's Business Encour-
agement Week, May 4-10, all
Businesses which have not been
contacted are asked to get in
touch with Victor Wright at
1507 E. Commerce.
Clydesdale
paraderFriday,
April 11
Program offers HS dropouts
second chance for diploma
High school drop-outs are re-
ceiving a “second chance” for a
diploma through a joint effort
of the Bexar County OIC, Con-
cerned Athletes In Action, Ella
Austin Community Center and
Project FREE Coalition. And
even better, they are getting
paid to do it.
The four agencies are conduc-
ting a Youth Employment Train-
Victor Wright 0) with Brodes
Hartley, president of local APA
Alpha.
TT»e listing of all black busi-
nesses and related businesses will
be compiled and printed from
the office of J S Enterprises,
The City of San Antonio,
Market Square Department, an-
nounces that the winners of the
Budweiser Clydesdale Essay
Contest will be riding the C
Contest will be riding the
Clydesdale Wagon in a down-
town parade on Friday, April
11th. Mayor Lila Cockrell, Bill
Crain (owner - local Crain Dis-
tributorship Inc. for Budwei
ser), Miss San Antonio, and
Miss Latin Budweiser along with
the Budweiser Hydro-plane will
also participate. The parade is
scheduled to begin at 11 a.m
from Market Square.
The parade route begins from
Market Square at Dolorosa St.,
to Flores St, in front of City
Hall, to Houston St., to the
front of the Alamo, down Com-
merce St., and back to Market
Square.
Award-winning
film shows
at UT/ITC
A Tint-place winner at film
festivals throughout the coun-
try, USAart-The Gift of Our-
selves, will be shown during
April in the dome theater of
The University of Texas Insti-
tute of Texan Cultures at San
Antonio.
Show times are 2:30 and 4 00,
Tuesday through Sunday.
This film presents 18,200 sep-
arate images and works codec-
mg Program which provides in-
structions leading to GED certi-
fication for young adults who
did not complete their school-
ing, and which provides work
experience for high school
graduates and those with a GED
who do not have bask skills
for entry into the labor
market.
The federally funded YETP
Program is geared for low-
come young adults and pays
a minimum wage stipend of
S3.10 per hour for those in
the instruction courses or in
the work experience programs.
The instruction courses pro-
vide pre-GED instruction and
GED preparation leading to
certification, and the work ex-
perience programs place parti-
cipants on the job to undergo
a variety of job related exper
iences so they can become quali-
fied for future employment.
Among those eligible to apply
for these programs are young
adults 17 years of age who have
been out of school at least a
year, and young adults 18
through 21 years of age who
are out of school either because
they have graduated or have
dropped out, regardless of the
length of time. This includes
AFDC or SSI recipients, single
Energy and the
Future of Marks
By MARK HYMAN
PHILADELPHIA, Pa. -The availability of sufficient energy sources
in America will determine the future of Blacks in the vital areas of
education, employment, income and overall upward mobility.
The youth of Black people in America is a basis for future accom-
plishments. Forty-seven percent of Blacks are under twenty years of
age. The median age of Black males and Black females is consider-
ably lower than that of whites. The families of Blacks continue to
be larger and younger than
thing to do with how wisely
and how well America uses
its energy resources to in-
crease production, to protect
the environment, and at the
same time meet the needs of
the people.
young adults who earn below
minimum wage or who have not
worked a full year, and single
or married parents in the lower
income bracket.
All young adults classified
handicapped may apply for the
pre-GED, GED instruction or
work experience program with
no consideration of income.
To applv, visit Bexar Countv
OIC at 1931 East Houston
Street between 8 a.m. and 4
p.m. or call the Center at 225-
6291
Applicants must present their
social security card, a birth cer-
tificate (or other legal proof
of age I and an income verifi-
cation (a check stub, income
tax statement, AFDC or SSI
statement).
The next YETP program
through the four agency coali-
tion will begin in April.
whites which make future jobs
vital and future energy sources'
necessary to support these jobs.
As for income. Blacks spent
approximately 150 billion
approximately 150 billion dol-
lars in America last year. This
makes the American Black com-
munity the seventh richest coun-
try on earth. By 1985 Blacks
spending b expected to rbe to
200 Billion Dollars. This tre-
mendous buying power can dic-
tate the direction of any major
American corporation. Including
ted from more than 50 major
libraries and museums Ameri-
can music, painting, sculpture,
dance. architecture, poetry,
photography, cinema, writing,
theater, radio and television are
featured in the 27-minute film.
Each period in the country's
history-from colonial dav*.
through the Civil War and indus-
trial resolution, world wars, and
the calm 50’s to the energetic
60’*~is examined through the
art that period produced.
“A painting from the past can
help us imagine what is was Ike
to live 200 years ago. A dancer
or poet can put us in touch with
the joy of being alive. A phrase
of music can reach our inner
world and somehow bring our
own feelings to the surface,
leaving us with a richer senar
of who we arc. And that b the
moat wonderful gift an artist
has to offer-the gift of our-
selves." j
The Institute of Texan Cul-
tures a located at 801 South
Bowie at Durango, in Hemb-
Fair Plaza Admission b free
For more information, call 226-
7651
automobile manufacturers, food
producers, drug and coametic
firms.
The field of education n es-
pecially sensitive to the avail-
ability of energy sources. Be-
fore World War II Black College
enrollment was 30.000 students.
Today there are more than a
million Blacks in America’s
Colleges. This can become para-
dox: If energy sources are low,
where will students go for jobs
after graduation? If energy sour
ces do not increase, they wll be
victims of no-growth and the
trainining process itself wfl be
impeded. Therefore, increased
energy and accelerated growth
wil move college enrollment
upward with comparable future
job availability.
Almost everything in the com
munity rests on the shoulders of
employment.
Writing in the February issue
of CrWs magazine, Margaret
Bush Wilton. NAACP National
chairperson, spoke of dm pro-
phecy of energy. She mid, “It
would appear that a whole new
era b about to open before us
invoking the expanding subject
of energy technologies and e»-
eegy natural * flu also mid.
dial Stacks may be on the
threshold of a new dimension
of life which hat nothing to
dow Ith going back to simple
things But it does have
Black youth and Black women,
20 yean and older, have felt
more keenly the damaging brunt
of unemployment. White women
and retired people continue to
pour into the labor market.
This makes working possible
ties for Blacks more dim. With
thb subsequent, almost auto-
matic, increase in the future
labor market there must be more
energy for growth to effect
a balance in the labor market
for Blacks.
^***************
JR.O. WOODARD S
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♦ MORTICIAN AND IN- «
♦8URANCS AGENT. *
*480 CHERRY STREET *
J 22* 72*3 5
****************
SUTTON-SUTTOH
MORTUARY
|d30 N. CHtrry Slj
226-72*2
Mil.
t«w Nulla Sun
Own*.
M.O. Wright, Jrj
Monogrr
■mg mWKBM
Ote.Ua rat Mrs Wm A i
Ml
737 W. Hrgniit at Grant
INVITES YOU TO WORSHIP
WITH US ON EASTER SUNDA Y
SCHEDULE
8:00 A.M. * 9:00 A.M...........................breakfast
-*L— *30 A M.............. .............E-tof Pagnnt
SERVICES: 11:00 A.M............... ..............Morning Worship
4:00 P.M.............. ............Easter Concert Mimical
_•• ■ ___ ■ uti ra M
rear tiring oa. anaroti j
MmWukip ItSvsGE-
EBmt P&s!
6:30 P.M............................live Radio Broadumt,
»™AC MO
FOR CHILD CARF, INFORMATION CALL. 733-6221 Mtarl
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San Antonio Register (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 41, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 3, 1980, newspaper, April 3, 1980; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1059979/m1/2/?rotate=270: accessed June 23, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting UT San Antonio Libraries Special Collections.