Newspapers / Fayetteville State University Student … / May 1, 1964, edition 1 / Page 3
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( May, 1964 The Voice . m IM- Student Govt. Officers In Spring Elections— Vi lic.i cue campus polls closed on iiiuaj, iviay i, caucliaates anu eiigiuie voters awaited the results ox oue 01 tne hottest elections in lecent FSC liistory. Emerging vic tors were Hayves Streeter, presi- aent ot 6tuaent Government; Gene ±"oweli, vice - president; Mary I'readwell, secretary; Harold Fill- yaw, judiciary judge. Streeter, a junior from Kinston, is a mathematics major with a minor m pnysics. Among his extra-cur ricular activities are ;members of tne football team and Varsity uiub, Student Government, Young Democratic Club; Hood Hall Dorm itory Counselor, BasUeus of the ^uuege ciiapter of Omega Psi Phi i'raternity. Inc., and 2nd vice-dis trict representative of the same fraternity. Powell, a junior mathematics and English major, is from Whitakers. He is active in many of the campus organizations, including Student Government, Yearbook Staff, Al pha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc., and the Young Democratic Club. He is also listed in “Who’s Who Among American Universities and Col leges.” Mary is from Garland, North Carolina, and is a junior business education major. She lists among her affiliations Future Alumni As sociation, Alpha Kappa Alpha ity National A. the Adv; ncement of Colored Peo ple, and the Young Democratic Club. Fillyaw, a native of Wilmington, is a junior majoring in elementary education and minoring in music education. Fillyaw is associated with several other groups on cam pus. He holds membership in the College Choir, the CoUege Band, College Marshals, Future Alumni Association, Wilmington Student Club, and the Alpha Phi Alpha Fra ternity, Inc. Student Government Officers , :, Miss F. S. C. “Miss Fayetteville State College” for the next school term is Gwendolyn Peaten. The new Miss ESC is a junior elementary education major from Fayetteville. “Gwen,” whose parents are S/Sgt. and Mrs. J. L. Peaten, has traveled rather extensively in the eastern and south eastern part of the United States. She is an honor student who has re ceived a scholarship each year since entering the college. She is a member of the Day Student Organization and the Zeta Phi Beta Sorority. .in t • M- GWENDOLYN PEATEN Editor Of Fayettevillian The present editor of the FAY ETTEVILLIAN, FSC yearbook, ran unopposed for the position for 1964-1965. Minnie Stevens, who comes from Goldsboro, N. C., finds her name among those listed in “Who’s Who in American Univer- mM Editor Of Fayettevillian sities and Colleges.” In addition to her work as yearbook editor, she is a College Marshal, and member of Beta Kappa Chi Honor Society. Future Alumni Association and Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority. Min nie is a mathematics major work ing toward a minor in English. i The Recession JAMES A. SUTTON If only tne Recession were really the world in which we live! You will probably ask yourself, just v,'hat does he mean? i will io my utmost to explain. As the close of the Founders’ Da> program, when the band start ed playing Elgar’s “Pomp and Cir cumstance,” the thing that im pressed me most was the interrac ial group that rose to leave the Sea- brook Auditorium. For on their faces one could see no looks of bigotry or prejudice, but only a look of security. Everyone who marched in that Recession can work against poverty, bigotry and hate all over the world. They pos sess the one weapon that can com bat all of these evils — an educa tion. This is the one thing all men should strive to attain, the one thinc! that can make me equal to all the rest, an education. As I looked at the many faces file by, I could only speculate as to what the world would be like if it followed the example set by our Recession. One people working to gether for the benefit of ALL.,This ■part of our Founders’ Day program made a lasting impression onlme. School Examinations cc'Jege student while taking an examination was asked to com pose one verse of poetry including the words “analyze” and “anato my.” This is what he wrote: My Anaylze over the ocean My Analyze over the sea Oh, who will go over the ocean And bring back my Anatomy. • >* 4> » « “Mother, what does ‘apt’ mean?” inquired Dot, returning home from school. “Why, my dear, it means ‘smart — quick to learn. Why?” “Oh, nothing much,” said Dot airily. “The teacher told me today I was apt to fltmk.” « « * * « An interjection is a sudden ex plosion of mind. * * « « * A myth is a female moth. * A spinster is a bachelor’s wife. The Pilgrim Fathers were Adam and Eve. Water is melted steam. « * * 4> 4i An oasis is a futile spot in a des sert. A Goblet is a male turkey. Paraffin is the next order of angels above the Seraphim. Blizzard is the inside of a fowl. Extempore is a disease in dogs. An epicure is a poet who write epics. Nearly at the bottom of Lake iMichigan is Chicago. Photographer Floyd Woodard, Jr., who works closely with Mr. H. C. Jenkins in handling photography about cam pus, joined the VOICE staff the second semester. Woodard is a bus iness education student from Wil son, N. C. He brings vwth him a rich background in photography in tliat he learned the art while work ing after school at Jim’s Camera Center in Wilson. To further his experience, Woodard worked as school photographer while a stu dent of the Charles H. Darden High School. Prior to entering Fayette ville this semester, he also worked as part-time sports photographer for the Wilson Daily Times. Daniels And Vinson To ROOSEVELT L. DANIEL, JR. A native of Fayetteville, Roose velt L. Daniels, Jr., has been elect- fd cditor-in-chief of the VOICE for the 1964-65 school year. Roosevelt is a junior mathematics major min oring in chemistry. He is at present Exchange Editor of the VOICE and has worked with the school paper since his freshman year. He is ac tive in several other organizations on campus. Among these are presi dent of the junior class; vice-presi- dent of Pan-Hellenic Council; member of the Day Student Organ ization, College Marshals, Phi 3eta Sigma Fraternity, Inc., and Yotmg Democratic Club. Page 3 MARY VIRGINIA RAY Queen Mary In the recent campus elections Mary Virginia Ray, attractive coed from the Capital City — Raleigh — won the coveted position of 1964 Homecoming Queen. Our new Miss Homecoming is a graduate of the Berry O’Kelly High School of Ra leigh. She is an elementary educa tion major of sophomore classifi cation and has been a Dean’s list Honor Student each semester since entering FSC. Had you guessed the hobbies of this extremely poised Queen? They are dancing, reading and cooking. A BIG HAND The Staff offers thanks to Mr. Harvey C. Jenkins for his very fine cooperation in handling of photography during the 1963-1964 term. Edit Voice Next Year BEVERLY A. VINSON The associate editor of the VOICE for the 1964-65 school year is Beverly A. Vinson, a graduate of J. W. Ligon High School in her hometown, Raleigh, N. C. Beverly is a sophomore English major minoring in sociology. Beverly has an unsual flare for writing and her articles have appeared in the VOICE since she became a fresh man here at FSC. In addition to working with the VOICE, her other extra-curricular activities include membership in the College Choir, on the Cheering Squad, and in the Delta Alpha Chapter of the .". p.ia Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc.
Fayetteville State University Student Newspaper
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May 1, 1964, edition 1
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