PAGE 2...THE VOICE...MAY 12, 1971
Mr. Donald Lee, author of this book review, cen
ter, is the Assistant Reference Librarian inChestnutt
Library. He also writes book reviews for the local
paper (Fayetteville Observer) under the pen name of
“Don Lee.”
THE
VIMVERSITY
STUDY
CEISTER
Mrs. Daisy W. Robe
son, Director of the Uni
versity Studies Center,
wishes to thank the many
individuals who have re
sponded to the staff’s plea
for assistance in updating
the Reading Center.
Books, periodicals,
newspapers, and various
other equipment have
been received, facilating
the needs of students us
ing the Center’s resourc
es.
Mrs. Robeson, while
pleased with the student
body’s participation in
the program, feels that
its fullest potential is not
being realized. Many stu
dents misunderstand the
purpose of the Reading
Center. The program is
designed for the individual
student who wishes to ex
cel, as well as for the
student who finds it
necessary to increase his
vocabulary and reading
comprehension.
The staff of the Uni
versity Studies Center
hopes to reach m ore stu
dents next semester.
Fayetteville State Uni
versity Studies Center
hopes to reach more stu
dents next semester.
Fayetteville State Uni
versity is a young and
thriving school. The Stu
dies Center plans to be a
part in this vital growth.
Patricia Crain
Broncos
on the
scene
Graduates who appear
ed on the program at
the 16th Annual Conven
tion of the International
Reading Association in
Atlantic City, New Jer
sey, April 20-23, 1971
are:
Dr. Marian Lee Vick,
North Carolina A & T Col
lege, Greensboro, North
Carolina, served as co-
chairman of the precon
vention institute on “The
Paraprofessional and the
Right to Read.”
Dr. Jane M. Harnbur-
MOTHER'S
DAY
May 9 is Mother’s Day,
a day when millions of
students will follow the
American tradition of
giving Mom something
special.
May 9 is also a day in
which half of the world’s
population will go to bed
hungry. A day in which
half of the 200 human be
ings born each minute are
destined to die before age
one.
It’s a day, too, when
American students can
pay tribute to their moth
ers in unique form. Bee
H. Brown, Atlanta Re
gional Director of CARE,
says that his organization
has a gift plan through
which students can give
their mothers something
special on May 9 and, at
the same time help the
world’s needy. The plan:
simply make a contribu
tion of one dollar or more
to Care in the name of
your mother.
ger, Wilmington, Dela
ware, Public Schools,
served as a symposium
chairman on “Developing
and Articulating an Early
Childhood Education Pro
gram.”
Dr. Vivian O. Windley,
City College of the City
University of New York,
delivered an address on
“Literature — A Uni-
News
& Views of
Chestnut
Library
By M. Kennedy
THE LOST REBELLION.
By James Wylie. Trident
Press, New York, 1971,
320 p., $6.95.
By Don Lee
The Lost Rebellion is
the story of three black
men.
Miles King, a one time
pimp and street hustler
who was sent to prison,
emerges later with a new
philosophy and a dream
uniting Negroes the world
over into the New Bro
therhood of Islam, until
he is murdered by Com
munists who want one of
his lieutenants — their
agent — to take over the
Brotherhood.
Brother James Fitz
gerald, black hero of the
Korean war, yet without
a future back home until
a Japanese professor
converts him into be
coming a Communist
agent, is the insider re
presenting the Reds in the
black movement. He is
owned, body and soul, fin
ally, by his Communist
mentors.
De Young, King’s other
lieutenant, is an Ameri
can intelligence man, who
informs on King and is
part of the network which
fights subversion at a
very high level in Am eri
ca.
The Brotherhood ends
in violence. The Commie
Black man has to die,
and the brotherhood’s
founder has to be assas
sinated in the struggle of
the two world powers’
intelligence systems to
take over the awakening
black masses, but not be
fore some three hundred
pages of intrigue, grip-
versal Language.”
The Alumni Associa
tion of F.S.U. will con
duct its annual Alumni
Day Convocation on Sat
urday, May 15,intheSea-
brook Auditorium at 12:00
noon. All of the Univer
sity family is urged to
attend, particularly the
local students who are the
future alumni.
ping mass exhortation
and its psychology
through the use of press
and TV, and attention
holding explorations of
these three black men not
so much as representa
tive types of Negroes, but
as black individuals, who
are neither cliches nor
“Oreo” cookies.
James Wylie writes
like a novelist far be
yond his years (born
1938), and with a sophis
tication of racial intent
and a straightforward
ness that makes this a
vigorous, and for me, en
lightening novel. He is as
timely and real as today’s
headlines, and his title
seems to be a comment
on a particular avenue of
revolution for Negroes, a
lost one in several ways.
Research paper time is ending, but Mrs. Nettie
Thigpen, Reference Librarian, despite finding the go
ing rough, manages a smile in spite of the late, late
comers.
Communicative Arts
Department
Mr. Edward Clark, former Head of the English
Department at Fayetteville State University, will be
returning as of the beginning of the Summer School
Session. Mr. Clark left Fayetteville State University
in 1969; afterwhich he continued his studies at Sy
racuse University in Syracuse, New York. There
he is working on his PhD.
The Department of Communicative Arts is happily
awaiting his return. We know that the students and
faculty are most enthusiastic that Mr. Clark is com
ing back to Fayetteville State to contribute his learn
ings and teaching ability to the Department of Com
municative Arts.
For those students that will be in summer school
Department of Communicative Arts summer school
program is as follows:
Comm. Skis. Ill - Grammar/Comp. - Cox
Com. Skis. 112 - Grammar/Comp. - George
English 211 - World Literature - George
English 212 - World Literature - Clark
English 231 - Advanced Grammar/Comp. - Cox
English 312 - English Literature - TBA
English 311 - English Literature - Corbett
English 321 - American Literature - Clark
English 322 - American Literature - Turner
English 410 - Organization and Adm. of School
Libraries - T.B.A. 2’nd 6 weeks
English 411 - Teaching Reading - Davis
English 420 - Reference Work and Their Uses -
T.V.A. 2’nd 6 weeks
English 421 - Shakespeare - Corbett
Education 351 - Methods and Materials of Teach
ing English - Davis
Comm. Skis. 221 - Intro, to Speech - Slott
Sp. 332 - Oral Interpretation - Slott
STAND - IN - Mrs. Stein, Mr. Gringle
College Student's Poetry
Anthology
The NATIONAL POETRY PRESS
announces its
SPRING COMPETITION
The closing date for the submission of manuscripts
by College Students is
APRIL in
ANY STUDENT attending either junior or senior
college is eligible to submit his verse. There is no
limitation as to form or theme. Shorter works are pre
ferred by the Board of Judges, because of space
limitations.
Fach poem must be TYPED or PRINTED on a separate
sheet, and must bear the NAME and HOME ADDRESS
of the student, and the COLLEGE ADDRESS as well.
MANUSCRIPTS should be sent to the OFFICE OF THE
PRESS
NATIONAL POETRY PRESS
3210 Selby Avenue Los Angeles, Calif. 9003^
Your mother will then receive a special Mother’s
Day card notifying her that needy people overseas
have been aided by you in her name.
For example, money contributed to last year's
honoring of American mothers helps support mother
and preschool feeding programs in Colombia. CARE
feeds 132,585 mothers and preschool children each
day in Colombia - a land where the total income of
many, many families is less than $200 per year.
The preschoolers are part of 900,000 children re
ceiving CARE food in Colombia.
Last year’s Mother’s Day funds also were used
in Ecuador. Here some 300,000 school children eag
erly drink the CARE milk so vital to their meager
diets. About 290,000 of them also are fed a highly
nutritious bread made of wheat flour and vegetable
oil. Another 55,000 preschool children also are fed
by CARE.
Funds from 1970’s Mother’s Day also are helping
to provide food for 155,927 school children in far
away Tunisia and in other countries around the world.
As Americans honor their mothers in this meaning
ful way, there is a new life and hope, and many are
blessed.
May 9 is Mother’s Day, a day on which you can
both 'do your own thing’ and ‘do a world of good.’
Students. should be sure to include their mother’s
name and address with all contributions.