DICE
OF COLLEGE COMPOSITION
Volume 16, Number 1
Inside this issue:
Did You See the
Show Today?
By Karen Barber
My Life with Mark
By Kami Maertz
Family: Lost and
Found
By John Hays
Nature Against
Man
By Julio Rodriguez
Why"To Build
Fire IS an Example
of Literary Natu-
ralism
By Josh Lawrence
The Literary Natu-
ralism of"To Build
a Fire"
By Tatjana Lugo
An Explication of a
Passage: Faulk-
ner's Barn Burning
By Valerie Coch-
rane
Prize Winning
Composition B
Writing
A publication of
Florida Community College at
Jacksonville
2005-2006
A Morning 's Run
By Wayne Smith
The old door 's hinges creak as it
pushes the newly fallen snow out of its
way. I poke my head out and,inhale the
icy 15° air. It causes my lungs to constrict
and cough it back up. Do I really want to
go jogging on this cold Sunday morning?
8 My lazy side wants to go saw some more
logs, but my healthy side overrules it. Hopefully, I have clean jogging clothes.
Up the stairs I go to see what I can muster.
Dressing for winter runs is a chore in itself. First, I put on my long cotton
underwear,over which goes my cotton lined, polyesterjogging suit. For my
feet, I wear my L.L. Bean winter running boots, and for outerwear, I don my fa-
10 vorite brown wool scarf, my black cotton hat with pull down face mask,and my
fleece-lined black leather gloves. When dressed, I feel like an Eskimo.
Out the door I go, heading for my truck. The new snow squeaks as it
compresses under my boots, sending shivers up my spine. My truck windows
hide below a six-inch layer of the snow, which will need to be scraped off. I try
to unlock the door to get the scraper, but the lock has frozen , and my key will
not turn. I keep working it back and forth, and finally, with a thud, it unlocks. The
door is also frozen, and when I give it a yank, my feet slide out from under me,
and down I go in the snow. My jacket and shirt slide up, exposing my skin to the
snow. I clinch my teeth and wince in pain as it slowly melts on my back. After
the initial shock, I waste no time getting back on my feet. I re-position myself
and take another yank on the door. This time it breaks free. I grab my scraper
and make quick work of clearing the windows
By the time I reach my jogging spot, the truck heater is just starting to
2
4
6
9
11
13
, OCR Text: DICE
OF COLLEGE COMPOSITION
Volume 16, Number 1
Inside this issue:
Did You See the
Show Today?
By Karen Barber
My Life with Mark
By Kami Maertz
Family: Lost and
Found
By John Hays
Nature Against
Man
By Julio Rodriguez
Why"To Build
Fire IS an Example
of Literary Natu-
ralism
By Josh Lawrence
The Literary Natu-
ralism of"To Build
a Fire"
By Tatjana Lugo
An Explication of a
Passage: Faulk-
ner's Barn Burning
By Valerie Coch-
rane
Prize Winning
Composition B
Writing
A publication of
Florida Community College at
Jacksonville
2005-2006
A Morning 's Run
By Wayne Smith
The old door 's hinges creak as it
pushes the newly fallen snow out of its
way. I poke my head out and,inhale the
icy 15° air. It causes my lungs to constrict
and cough it back up. Do I really want to
go jogging on this cold Sunday morning?
8 My lazy side wants to go saw some more
logs, but my healthy side overrules it. Hopefully, I have clean jogging clothes.
Up the stairs I go to see what I can muster.
Dressing for winter runs is a chore in itself. First, I put on my long cotton
underwear,over which goes my cotton lined, polyesterjogging suit. For my
feet, I wear my L.L. Bean winter running boots, and for outerwear, I don my fa-
10 vorite brown wool scarf, my black cotton hat with pull down face mask,and my
fleece-lined black leather gloves. When dressed, I feel like an Eskimo.
Out the door I go, heading for my truck. The new snow squeaks as it
compresses under my boots, sending shivers up my spine. My truck windows
hide below a six-inch layer of the snow, which will need to be scraped off. I try
to unlock the door to get the scraper, but the lock has frozen , and my key will
not turn. I keep working it back and forth, and finally, with a thud, it unlocks. The
door is also frozen, and when I give it a yank, my feet slide out from under me,
and down I go in the snow. My jacket and shirt slide up, exposing my skin to the
snow. I clinch my teeth and wince in pain as it slowly melts on my back. After
the initial shock, I waste no time getting back on my feet. I re-position myself
and take another yank on the door. This time it breaks free. I grab my scraper
and make quick work of clearing the windows
By the time I reach my jogging spot, the truck heater is just starting to
2
4
6
9
11
13
, Z ArchiveInABox,JAX,Voices of College Composition,Scans,2005-2006,2005-2006 1 Page 1, 2005-2006 1 Page 1