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Western Carolinian Volume 30 Number 06

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  • Editorial Page Our Political Choice The Western Carolinian supports the national and local Democratic ticket. We are the voice of the students and the students have chosen the Democratic Party to govern our country and our state throughout the next four years. We feel that President Johnson's record of service during his year in the White House has been a good one. We have watched him grow into a strong and dynamic world leader. And we want him to continue. He has earned his own term as President of the United States. He has earned it by his stand on foreign policies. He has earned it by his keen awareness and ability to supervise our domestic problems. Johnson has smoothly transferred us from the "new frontier" into the beginnings of what he calls the Great Society which, the President states, ". . . demands an end to poverty and racial injustice—to which we are totally committed in our time." We feel that Lyndon Johnson and Hubert Humphrey are the ones to lead our nation in peace and prosperity. On the state level, we support Dan K. Moore for Governor and Lacy Thornburg for Representative from Jackson County. Moore is in a position to do a great amount of good for Western North Carolina. He understands the needs of the people in the western counties, and he knows the problems confronted by Western Carolina College. Thornburg as incumbent Representative has consistently worked to better both Jackson County and WCC. He has constantly strived to fulfill our wants. He has represented us faithfully and excellently. We want him to continue to do so. We look to the Democratise ticket to "keep this country prosperous, to keep this country progressive, to keep this country and all the world at peace." Coming Home Tomorrow is a very special day for Western Carolina. Not only does it celebrate the return of our college alumni, but it also, in a way, salutes seventy-five years of progress, progress which began as Cullowhee Normal and Industrial School. The week-end will be filled with activities designed to crowd our every moment. Parades and games and decorations and dances will keep us occupied and excited. This is right. It is the biggest event of our academic year. But perhaps we cnnM in our own individual way, pause for a moment during the week-end and remind ourselves of the work and sweat and love that has gone into building our alma mater. We will be exuding school spirit. But let us think also of the spirit of the past. The spirit of those men and women who dreamed and dared mold their dream into a reality. It is our school now, but only because others churned mud into cement, and molded a college out of the wilderness. Western Carolina College is the product of seventy- five years of labor and devotion. THE WESTERN CAROLINIAN is published weekly by the students of Western Carolina College, Cullowhee, N. C. Represented for National Advertising by National Advertising Service, Inc. A member of the Intercollegiate Press Association and the Carolina Press Association. Offices are located on the second floor of Joyner Building. Telephone 293-2312. Subscription rate — $2.00 per year. BILL SHAWN SMITH FRED R. WRIGHT Editor Business Manager Managing Editor Jerry Chambers News Editors Nick Taylor, Betty Sprung Feature Editor Charles Stephens Sports Editor John Reid Copy Editor Joan Burnett Photographer Jack Stevenson, Jr. Cartoonist Mitchell Flinchum Columnist: Neal Evans, Joan Burnett, Jerry Chambers, Bill Melton, Gary Carden, Thad Roberts Writers: Kathy Abbott, John Keeler, Burt King, Eddie Wood- ard, Joe Wray, Charlotte Wise. Cindy Borden, Vernon Abernethy, Marcia Huntsman, David Walker, Ted Whisnant, Francis Vaitekunas. Typists: Margaret Cooke, Carla Warner, Sheryl Burton, Ann Ramsey, Carolyn Allen, Rosemary Cameron, Gloria Moody. Secretary Jane Souther Circulation Managers Hines Hunt, Ronnie Robbins Sponsor Henry G. Morgan The National Scene Johnson Unanimously By Neal Evans Four weeks from now it will all be over. The 1964 presidential, congressional, gubernatorial, and all sorts of other elections wlil be completed. All ballots will have been counted and we will have a whole new slate of officials-elect. On the national level, one of our two major political parties will quietly hide its political banners and go into the background for a few years. The other will get out the champagne, and between toasts, its leaders will try to figure out which campaign promises are really feasible for the next four years. It may be by just a few votes, or it may be by millions that one party will be placed under the yoke of leadership and the second will fall back into the ranks of the loyal Student Government From The President's Desk By Bill Melton Last year, when I was preparing to run for this office, I put a point in my platform pertaining to a bigger and better Homecoming for Western Carolina. I'm sure the students who were here last year and the year before strongly agree with me that more overall emphasis should be placed on the homecoming weekend. After many meetings and much planning, I hope that the Homecoming weekend a- bout to be presented will be the best ever at this college. In today's paper you will read much about the various festivities. I hope that you are planning to attend all of them. In my platform I stated that we extend our events to include Friday night before our Homecoming. This year for the first time since I've been at Western, and I understand the first time in many years, we will have a Pre-Homecoming dance on Friday niqht. Many will agree that this night should have been utilized long ago. Practically every college I know of has some form of social highlight on Friday preceding Saturday's events. Under normal circumstances most colleges have another big social on Saturday evening. As the case Is here at Western, we have our ballgame on Saturday evening instead of the usual procedure of having the game in the afternoon. Recently in The Carolinian, articles have been written encouraging the possibility of having afternoon contests at Western. Since I also stressed this point strongly in my presidential platform, let me say that some action will be taken by your Student Senate in the near future to look into ihc proper areas and talk to the proper people about this possibility. We like for our college days to be memorable socially, as well as academcially b e n e f i cial. Homecoming is an opportune time to gain fond memories of wonderful times. First, we must have something presented before we can gain. I hope that in some way you will remember this year's Homecoming. If you take advantage of the events offered, I'm sure you will have an enjoyable time and cherish for a long time, memories of the 1964-65 Homecoming. I feel that we have definitely opened up a new area for the future by having the Pre-Homecoming dance tonight. This year we have established a beginning. If you participate and make it successful, I'm sure the people who take up our work after this year's administration of student government will be I very enthusiastic and strongly encouraged to make the events even blqqer and better next year and the years after. Your Student Senate is sponsoring this event tonight. If you enjoy yourself and have a pleasant time, please, by all means, let us hear a- bout it. It's for you, and in order to know if our endeavors were accomplished, we must hear from you. By all means don't end your weekend tonight. Check the calendar of events for all day Saturday. Be at the stadium Saturday evening and watch the Catamounts defeat Mars Hill. Then, wrap up your weekend by attending the informal dance at Reid Gym immediately after the game. We have good bands this year. Hear them! Remember! It's your Homecoming. So, above everything. Please enjoy it. opposition. But this year, a clear trend seems to be forming, and one of the candidates will receive the most overwhelming victory that any presidential candidate has ever received. Lyndon Johnson can expect to get a resounding vote of confidence, a vote that has never been equaled nor ever will be again in American history. We say never again because we have a great respect for the two-party system, and we would hope that the second major party in this country will never again come so close to being completely eradicated. The figures in the polls are increasing every day in favor of President Johnson. Thousands of Goldwater supporters are leaving the ranks, from his top aides to his ground roots following. Dividing the country up into sections, we find that they will all go for L. B. J. New England, every state, including the ' traditionally Republican Maine and Vermont, will reject the extremism of Senator Goldwater. In the East, where a large number of the Republican party's extreme leaders support the party's candidate, Johnson can expect to carry every state and, on his coattails, a good percentage of state and local officials. Civil Rights is the only problem that the South gives the President. By election day, this should be set aside and the traditional Democratic South will continue. He may lose a few of the more backward states, but victory in his home state of Texas will more than cover any electoral votes he would lose in the South. The Midwest looks almost safe for the Democratic Party. A fear of Goldwater combined with the pressing needs in agricultural areas should bring another Johnson sweep in this section of the country. Turning to the West, where we find the largest portion of Goldwater supporters, the Republicans will probably capture the majority of their electoral votes in the smaller Western states. California and Oregon, of course, will turn their large number of votes over to Johnson. The decision will be clear: a repudiation of Goldwater and a victory for "LBJ for the USA."
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