Newspapers / Fayetteville State University Student … / Jan. 11, 1968, edition 1 / Page 1
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"archives hi February Edition Of THE VOICE - Student Teachers’ Feature With Pictures THE VOICE FAYETTEVILLE STATE COLLEGE VOL. 21 NO. Fayetteville, N. C. JAN. 11, 1968 They Come By The Numbers PROSPECTIVE EMPLOYERS FREQUENT FAYETTEVILLE STATE By BETTY COOPER Dear Fellow Seniors, The time approaches that we have long awaited- - college graduation. As usual, many prospective em ployers will be on our campus interviewing us as prospective employees. The members of our active placement bureau are asking your cooperation in meeting these interviewers on the dates they are on our campus. On January 15, a respresentative from the Cleve land, Ohio publi c schools system will be here to in- i.erview prospective employees. On February 8, an interviewer from Ceril County, Maryland will be hereto interview seniors in all areas. On February 13, interviewers will be on our campus from Duval County, Florida and Snow Hill, Maryland. On February 16, an interviewer from Washington, D.C. will be here to interview prospective teachers in all areas. On February 22, a representative from Valnsia County, Florida will be on our campus to interview prospective graduates in all areas. On February 26, an interviewer from Carteret County Public Schools system will be here to interview px’o- spective graduates. On March 5, a representative from Carthage, N.C. will be here to interview prospective teachers. On March 20, an interviewer from Richmond, Vir ginia will be on our campus to interview prospective graduates in all fields. On March 22, the Dade County, Florida school system will have a representative on our campus to interview ■'ospcctive graduate in ail fifclds. Please watch bulletin bbards and the college news paper for other listings. Sincerely Yours, Betty L. Cooper Dunham Shows The Way By Mattie Cogdell Ann Carter, Donna Newman TwoF.S.C. ^68 Grads Already Employed By Ethelene Hall Misses Anne Carter and Donna Newman have already received notice of employment in The Raleigh Public School system. The develop ments were the results of quickly filed applications. It all started when Mr, H. E. Brown, principal of Ligon High School paid a pre-Christmas visit to FSC and stated that FSC graduates were welcomed and wanted in the Raleigh System. Miss Carter, a Math major, is a native of Ral eigh. Miss Newman,from Clinton is also a Math major. Mr. Edward McDonald, a 1967 F.S.C, gradi'are, works with Mr, Brown at Ligon. A coterie of F. S.C. grads is employed throughout the Raleigh System. In an effort to bring more F.S.C. graduates into the system, Mr, Brown showed and ex plained the salary sche dule to the group and cited the Metropolitan Aura of Raleigh. JOSEPH DUNHAM Silhouetted Senorita: wondrously robed Sandra Bazemore See pictorial on page eight. Joseph M. Dunham, a native of Fayetteville, is doing a splendid job as president of the Day Student’s Organization. He has put a lot of time and energy in the activities of this organization. During the Home coming exercises, he was always available to do his part to promote participation of the day students in the Homecoming affair. He also provided for some type of Christmas activity. He has a tremendous job because it is a task to in form all of the day students of meetings and activi ties that are occurring. It is an even greater task to get them involved and to find an hour that is suitable for all of us. He does, however, have some help. Others helping him are John Pone, Vice President; Delores Purdie, Secretary; Shirley McLean, Assistant Secretary; Al fred Ferguson, Treasurer; Frieda Truitt, Reporter, HAVE A HAPPY NEW YEAR ANYWAY Christmas In Retrospect Frieda L. Truitt Christmas is gone. We, as a whole race, have stood that holiday, which has such a beautiful spiritual back ground, up against a wall of modern times and cold- heartedly executed it. Strangely enough, a ghost has arisen from the grave of the sacred Christmas and calls itself Christmas also, I have witnessed the re birth of Christmas. The new Christmas is much dif ferent from the one that I knew as a child. Most of the things that Christmas meant to me are now gone. A little change here and a little change there have made Christmas a ghost of its former self. A noticeable change has taken place in the tree. Our tree, which is considered old-fashioned, is always green, a green that can not only be seen but smelled. The FSC FROSH COED MOTHER OF FOUR By Cornel Davis Mrs. McQuire has little difficulty huddling the wee, anxious clan. Up the ladder left to right, Tracey liypnutizes, Jefirey Lynn teases, Lester charms, while Michael regales. Mrs. Eva McGuire of Godwin, North Carolina, twenty- six year old Mother of four, is currently enrolled as a freshman at F.S.C. The children are Tracey, four; Jeffrey Lynn, five; Lester, six; and Michael, seven. Their father is Sgt. Lester L. McGuire, Sr., now stationed with the United States Air Force in Thailand, who saw the kids last in May 1967, Mrs, McGuire, shown below with books underarms and tots in tow, said she chose F.S.C. because her oldest sister, Melba Lindsey, attended F.S.C. for two years in 1954-55, and because several relatives also attended F.S.C. The mother of four is a graduate of Armstrong High School in Fayetteville. She is an elementary education major who plans to teach for several years and then to become a social worker. She said the children present no major problem to her study. Her aunt and mother take care of Tracey and Jeffrey Lynn in Godwin, alternating between Monday and Friday. Lester and Michael are in school at Wade Elementary School in Wade. They ride the school bus from home. Mrs. McGuire takes Tracey and Jeffrey Lynn to her aunt by auto. The radiant Mrs. McGuire said of F.S.C., "I think F.S.C. is a wonderful college. Of all the colleges I have ever seen, 1 like it best, mainly because it offers everything I need, but also, because it is convenient and fits my situation economically.” The freshman mother added, “When I finish here, I hope I’ll be able to send my kids here, because F.S.C. has one of the best college presidents and some of the best teachers in the nation.” ornaments are bright, but not gaudy. The lights are few and plain. At the top of the tree is placed a bright twinkling light in the shape of a star. Tears fill my eyes every Christmas when I look at the star. 1 guess all this sentiment is old-fashioned and America is progressive. Manufacturers are constantly telling us that we must always be modern and unique. It is now no longer fashionable to have a green tree. One must have a silver one, a white one, a pink one, or a blue one. One must have music tinkling from a hid den music box. The ornaments are no longer simple. They are now all hideous sizes and shapes, splashed with colors, signifying nothing. They are all silver and sparkle, and no sentiment. The lights must bubble, flash, blink, glimmer, and do a million other things. The Christmas tree is an over glorified monstrosity that smells suspiciously like machine oil. Christmas songs have likewise undergone a dis astrous change. It seems that no one is satisfied with (CONTINUED ON PAGE 8)
Fayetteville State University Student Newspaper
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Jan. 11, 1968, edition 1
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