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Page 2 text:
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HE VOICE FAYETTEVILIE STATE UNIVERSITY VOICE OF THE PEOPLE VOICE TO THE PEOPLE VOICE FOR THE PEOPLE VOICE ABOIT THE PEOPLE JUSTICE EQUALITY ing Set will he on ■ tie University 11-16 as it lost dynamic - The theme elebration is. Day . )L-auliful black ns with old friends. of a breathtakingly ?n, and all day, all only a few of the planned for the one of the most tlractions will be II. game where tale will play the State University rue battle of the If time ceremonies . Miss Delphine 1 senior business lose Hill, will be ■liss Homecoming ■ is the daughter of Charlie Robinson. .Miss Sophomore le competed in the ss Fayetteville Vt FSU, she is secretary of the Alpha Sorority, of the Voice Staff lenate. She enjoys ving. reading and meting and greeting A REAL LIVE BRONCO!! By John Mint«r The Student Senate has voted to obtain a live mascot for FSU. A Senate spokesman said, I feel that this venture Dr. Walter T. Pace, Chair- will help add a uniqueness to man, Department of Education FSU and will also help buildand Psychology, and Director school spirit. of Teacher Education, announc- An agre«ment was reacheded that FSU has been officially with the Administration selected as a cooperating insti- whereby the SGA willtution in the Student Interns Co- purchase the horse and tht operative Education Program of School will cover theexpenstNew York City. Confirmation of ofup-keep. FSU ' s selection was received The horse, a registereofrom Mr. James A. Watkins, Tenessee Walker, is namedCoordinator, Student Interns Co- Sun ' s Glory and is two yean operative Education Program , old. He is from .Community School District 13, championship bloodline and i: Brooklyn, New York, white in color. While the interns will be doing Arrangements are novstudent teaching in Brooklyn, they being completed for bringiniWiU also receive approximately the mascot home to FSU, an $l 05.00 per week or $840.00 while they should be complete! engaged in the experience, soon. f SU plans to place an as yet The Senate spokesman als. unspecified number of interns in said, This horse will be a ne Community School 13, Brooklyn, FSU Selected As Cooperating Institution In JN.Y. Intern Program beginning for FSU. The possibilities are numerous. Besides the possibility of the addition of horseback riding to the Physical Education curriculum, the possible addition of its as a regular student recreational activity is not a way out idea. Through breeding we hope to increase the numl)er of horses and really bring a new look to dear old FSU. reshman Program Student Centered ana relevant to me siuai ' iiis this system, the instructor realizes that his students have ideas of their own about life and its situations and may want to express them. He respects I he student and the student respects him. The classroom is student-centered. Therefore, the classes become more meaningful, and the students are totally involved in class, and they want New York during the ensuing Spring student teaching period, The placement of interns in this program will be of inestimable value in terms of providing first hand experience with problems of inner- city children as interns in- teract in the teaching-learning situations, Dr. Pace said. Dr. Pace also released the names of the following students who will be doing student teaching for the period beginning January 10 to March 10: Shirley McLean, Evelyn T. Barden, Vivian Has- sell, Frank Peyton, Gladys White, Gladys J. Green, Cynthia King, Charles Marable, Kennv Mcln. tyre, Darryl Fisher, Rose Eure, Dora Moore, Gwendolyn Wash- ington, Cleveland Graham, Dor- etha Underwood, Ella Armstrong, James Bullard. Aamn nonmaric Mary Scott, Catherine Williams, Jimmy Morton, Mary Colvin, El. lis Jones, Barbara Mills, Rhon- jjpjceo da Shivers, Marion Stevens, Sa- rah Gorman, Beatrice Robinson, Carlotta Vines, Earnstine Per guson, Viola Hammond, Jerry Herring, Eunice Simmons, Judy Swann, Walter Anderson, Ed- wards Banks, Ogden Batts, Sam- I uel Henderson, Lannie Paschall, David Walker, Bertha Harrison, Claudia McCrae, Dorothy Wat- |jj,j kins, Dora Carimchael, Mar- p garet McAllister, Joseph Gray, Hazel Hargrove, Annie Patick, Patricia Covington, Gerald Sul. livan, Elnora Hogan, Alma Reed, Lillie Stokes, Thelma Vann, Glo- ria Kirk, Herold Mincey, Sandra Taylor, Linda Watson, Stanley Blackmon, Perry Carlton, Melba if ' s 2 a.m. - I m Sick But The Injirmary IS Closetf Hi Mr Ma By JOSEPH HOLDEN Mclver .Uional project Five-College- ;ram began this iteville State (he direction of ng. The purpose urn is to help environment • • new effort. It iident re.sources ijueship with ilty at FSU and ons. lis program is to lis who will be h the world and (heir own t rms Quite a number of Black students have failed in school, or their SAT scores were not high enough to get into a college. This was not because they could not learn, but because the material and subject matter was not relevent to their backgrounds. As a result, some Black educators saw a need to establish a program for the Black society of tomorrow. Presently, this consortium program has been in operation for five years. There are three groups of colleges and universities engaged in the program, making a total of 28 colleges and universitites. ' ' :i etteville State l.Iniversity is (he second group along with The place to depend on when o learn. The clas.ses are usually you are ill should be the infir- -ranged in a casual circle, and mary. It should be a place where the instructor is there only to people are polite and, most im- direct the di-scussions. portant, understanding. There will be problems in establishing any program, but a.s Here at Fayetteville State, the time goes on, problems will ' » ' s and procedures seem, decrease in number she said somewh.it, unjust. The infirmary This program is designed to is only open during certain hours, allow for flexibility, and it has Monday-Friday it is open from no set pattern. The teacher .se(s 8:00 until 11:00 a.m. and 1:00 up the cla.ssroom as he sees fit P- . until 4:00 p.m. If is closed for the learning situation. on Sundays and holidays, except A long range purpose of the for emergencies. If there is an project is to bring about changes emergency, the dormitory direc- in the regular college curriculum tor has to notify the Infirmary through the example of the before he can be taken to it. Is success of the project. 11 would this the insurance policy to take the form of changes in prove that one is sick, like the institutional structure to permit insurance policy the hospital uses students and teachers to to make surg it is going to get originate and carry forward its money? experimental educational programs as part of the regular business of the college. Such changes would include free time and special facilities for tt ' achers ly i ryfcf s, F Many students will not got infirmary unless it is absoli P ' necessary. They usually say it won ' t help because every no matter what his illness ceives the same medication. Ic ' The doctor is available » Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday | Friday from 9:00 a.m. to 1 a.m. There was at least onei this year when the doctor c not be reached during an en gency. It was left to the nui to do what they could for student. Since the doctor can nol o! ways be on duty, and one do know when he is going t fpi sick, why not have a 24 shift for the nurses? The infirmary is not all One can always go there t( jj relief from minor aches pains, if he doesn ' t get when it isn ' t open.
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Page 3 text:
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,4«8 Enrolled 488 students are enrolled at tteville State for the current 3 term. Of this amount, are new freshmen, 167 anced freshmen. 327 omores, 225 juniors, 299 ors, and 98 special, or ng students. egistration procedure; ig this semester had greatl; oved. The chairman of the istration Committee wa 1 R.L. Fields. It was wel inized and systematized ents registered according ti classification at a givei By using this procedure, i ened quite a number o •lems. is hoped that through th of the students.facult nbers, administration, an ,onnel that registratio cedures will cont-nue I 1 rove. Carter Heads Local Unit )f New Party rruinma i neia Serves Campus And Community The year 1971 proved to be very rewarding year for the wc meii of Gamma Sigina Servic Sorority, whose main purpose i service to the commundty, peopl and campus. Its first project was raisin money for St. Judes Children Hospital. The money raised aid ed in the research for muscula disorders affecting children.Du ring the Christmas and Thanks- giving seasons the soroity car- Julian Bond Advocates Black Political Involvement Julian Bond, the controversial Georgia state representative, spoke in Seabrook Auditorium recently and had some interesting observations to make on questions concerning politics and current w rld ried fruits and candies to senioi Pfotilems. ,., „ , . citizens at Glad Haven Rest Horn. Parapharsing W. E. Dubois on Murchinson Road. Presentlj | ' problems of the 20th Century are the problems of the color line. Crisis is the first order of business, with roots old as the world. These problems, he said, are a result of the failure of the world ' s minorities, the it is raising moiwy by selling at the m.ivies and in the dorm- itories. Gamma Sigma Sigma met -.ta. nuary 28 to olect new officers. They are as follows: President- Jacquelyn Tyler, 1st Vice- Pres- ident- Valinda Carter, 2nd Vice white peoples of the earth, to President - Deborah Knowels share the wealth and Ihypower Correspond. Sec. -Margie Smith, « ' ' i oit ers. And so the Recording Sec.-Ella Burney, struggles go on, on the Treasurer -Victoria Bradley, carnpuses, in the streets. Cuba Historian-Bebra Benett, Parlia mentarian- Vivian Hartsfield. Register and and Vietnam and the result of Dul You Know? domination by outsiders. Bond said that violence is having blacks go to school for 12 years while getting only six years od education, having 30 million hungry in a land of plenty, forcing blacks, as their disproportionate numbers in Viet Nam show, to be first in war, last in peace, and seldom in the hearts of their countrymen. He said it was calling those on welfare shiftless, while providing socialism for Lockhead, and paying 6,000 big farmers over .$25,000 a year each not to farm. He urged black to get involved in politics as politics are ' ' people and their problems. He said that the only way they can gain power in 1972 is to make sure they ha ' Check up Congressmen, for all I kn they may be perfect, hes£ But if they are not perf you ought not just check th out; you ought to throw th . out. For those who say it ' s i important who the pTeside is; Bond said that who I president is will dec whether we progress, run place, or keep slidi backwards as we have sir 1968. He pointed out tha was Richard Nixon who h nominated Haynesworth a Cars well, placed I Minnesota Twins on t Supreme Court, and nan- John Mitchell the Attorn General. , The youthful Bond, w seldom raises his voice, s that I ' m working to ma sure that the black people w go to the Democratic Natioi Convention in 1972 are r like those who went in 196( He explained that they h been black only by t accident of their birth, a had rubber stamped the issi Bond was speaking Fayelteville Stale on t Vote The Lycemn Whose Programs Are They Anyway? Did you know that the average life span of man is approximately 70 years? Did you know that if one segregated and evenly divided his time, during that span, one would find that 1 3 of his !ife would be spent in bed, approxi- mately 4-5 years spent eating approximately 4-5 years spent relaxmg, etc. Come on Black folks, your time is shorter than you think. he formation of a new litical party. The Black ' i)le ' s Union Party, with twenty cities in rth Carolina was in| unced last Monday at an m. press conference at the Vljcan Art Center in Raleigh, rank Ballance, Warrenton orney, made the liuncement, while Howard i ;r. Malcolm X Liberation uersity head fielded tions from the press. he major reason for ejining a new political party la nee said, . . . is because flijes are in omplete control e two major parties in this e, and are mainly ofemed with white votere. purpose of this party is to 5C de persons from all walks ack life. . .to bring about ngful change in orlitions underwhich we are ,„„,., jving Students, who plans the them? Can ' t we have a change illance said tht the party y eum programs? Who sometimes? A change in pace i use a variety of meaii decides what guests are to is way overdue. Why do you ng proper pressures We ' °°° ' ■ P sence ? ' ' ' ' ■ provide food services for nyone knows, please say. eople, and proper health y ° • ' or Blacks. He also said ° ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ° ' ° - ' ' ■resent by-lays require 40 y « faculty committee, a rjns to make up a chapter student committee, or a faculty-student committee? Why don ' t we ever have any lyceum guests like the Temptations? Does somebody have something against their icteivaWe at this time that °f music? Why must it THE ARTS, A REFLECTIO DAY STUDENTS PLAN INVOLVEMENT •Party. ' len a newsman asked if the Party would rt a white candidate in , he replied. It is ill back any white- a ' w vs some classical or renowned pianis ' or politician? We should have the opportunity to experience both kinds of music (classical and rock), and our appreciation should be given a broader scope. Sure we have rock singers during n iate for any political in the state of North ardna. J urice Carter, member of Student Government iation at Fayetteville heads the Fayetteville If anyone knows who plans the lyceum, who decided upon the guests, please send in answers to this letter. We would like your opinions. Why should our appreciation be narrowed to only one side of the musical, political, or social scene? Why can ' t we be honored with one classical guest and one rock guest as well. It ' s just not fair to us as students and its time somebody spoke out! WHOSE LYCEUM PROGRAMS? WHOSE LYCEUM PROGRAMS? WHOSE LYCEUM PROGRAMS? THEIRS! (Please send in letters in The Day-Student Association, off and running this semester, has planned several projects of both campus and community cope, and hopes that other organizat- ions will join it in becoming more active. John Minte, president of the Association says, ' ' We must learn to use our time, energy, and knowledge to bring about effective change in the conditions of ourselves and our brothers and sisters not within the college community. No longer can we hide behind the doors of our clas- srooms and the pages of our te. t- books. We must begin now to be involved in that world out there, which isn ' t sofar aw.iyaftera1I. The Association plans first to get involved with young persons who have committed offenses ag- ainst established laws. It hopes to show these persons that some- one really cares what happens to is planed for the 14th of : ary in cooperation with th campus leaders and group seminar is to be followe trip to the tiasketball g-. South Carolina State that e The Association will pa;, to one or two of the local ti schools. Here they hope to the world to those whoarh lowed to participate in it. ' They aso an to aid needy members of the commu: collecting and listributir clothing and other nece.- Minter added, We feel oppressed need help yea. not just atChristmas and! giving. I hope that other zations feel as we do. The Association ' s Clean-Up Drive is slated off in April and it hopes t out another form of beaut) '
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