March 1966
THE VOICE
Page Five
STUDENT BODY CONFERS WITH PRESIDENT DURING DEMONSTRATION
DROWNED IN THE RIVER
by Laura Gilmore
I’d seen the river before
And I’d almost sailed from shore to shore
But never had I a feeling like this
Which sent me into a bright vi^orld of bliss.
My hair was blown forward, around, and backward by the wind
And not even noticing, my face took on a grin
The people around me began to spin and spin
And before I knew it, I was there alone.
Two swan-like birds flew in the air
And I suppose that’s what caused me to stir
Finding myself sitting there looking out at the river
Being drowned by her charm and beauty.
?
MODELS FROM SOPHOMORE FASHION SHOW
Ellen Ray and Bernard Webb
EXPERIENCING NO EXPERIENCE
by Laura Gilmore
A young, innocent mind
Grew up protected, safe from undesirable grime
But the veil lifted as the changing times
Put the rare, unspoiled treasure in a bind.
Dents yes, but no holes yet
Had gotten into the masterpiece
Any peculiar happening wouldn’t let
The mind’s cheerful attitude cease.
When ugliness squeezed in
Through a pin’s hole
It spread to the size of a bowl
Taking with it a larger role
To learn and much later to discern.
A college mathematics teacher was struck by a hit-and-run driver,
and the policeman asked him whether he got the license number. “No,”
the professor replied, “but I did notice that if it were doubled and then
multiplied by itself, the square root of the product would be the original
number with the integers reversed.” —John Shotwell
CIAA PRESIDENTS' COUNCIL MEETS AT FSC
Whafs New In
Spring Factions
By Barbara Weeks
Once again the time has come
for students to get the feeling of
dressing accordingly with the sea
son. Now that spring is in the air,
women as well as men are busily
trying to decide what they will
wear next. This fashion trend has
really captivated the secene as far
as Fayetteville State College is con
cerned. Students have acquired that
feeling of spring and the fashions
displayed on the campus are mag-
nificient.
In our last issues of the Voice,
more emphasis was placed upon
the fashions of our women on cam
pus. This time the trend has de
viated a little and our men have
come on the scene. Men’s fashions
have a tendency to change q”ite
slowly, but a new look has defin
itely taken place within the last
20 years. Double - breasted and
patch-pocket suits were the latest
fashions in men’s wear back in
1948. Lapels were huge, pants were
baggy, ties were wide, and hats
sported wide brims. Today a more
conservative style has captivated
the scene. Suits of todav feature
the matching vest, slender pants,
and L-shaped lapels. “Neither of
these styles is guilty of too much
originality, but then men’s fash
ions seldom are. They simply make
the man.”
The eager athlete was in a hos
pital and the doctor was taking his
temperature.
“My, my,” the doctor said, “you
have a temperature of 102.”
Said the athlete weakly: “What’s
the world’s record, doc’”—Oay-
lords’ Triangle, hm, Gaylord Bros,
Inc.
PUBLIC RELATIONS DIRECTOR, Dr. I. Cheroff sees Commanding Officer
Stapleton and President Jones off to U. S. Military Academy.
All the way from St. Thomas, Virgin Island, comes Avril O'Reilly to
matriculate here at FSC. Her brother, Alaric, also a freshman, was a
member of the 1965-66 Bronco Basketball squad.