Western Carolina University (21)
View all
- Canton Champion Fibre Company (2308)
- Cherokee Traditions (291)
- Civil War in Southern Appalachia (165)
- Craft Revival (1942)
- George Masa Collection (137)
- Great Smoky Mountains - A Park for America (3080)
- Highlights from Western Carolina University (422)
- Horace Kephart (973)
- Journeys Through Jackson (159)
- LGBTQIA+ Archive of Jackson County (89)
- Oral Histories of Western North Carolina (318)
- Picturing Appalachia (6617)
- Stories of Mountain Folk (413)
- Travel Western North Carolina (153)
- Western Carolina University Fine Art Museum Vitreograph Collection (129)
- Western Carolina University Herbarium (92)
- Western Carolina University: Making Memories (738)
- Western Carolina University Publications (2491)
- Western Carolina University Restricted Electronic Theses and Dissertations (146)
- Western North Carolina Regional Maps (71)
- World War II in Southern Appalachia (131)
University of North Carolina Asheville (6)
View all
- Allanstand Cottage Industries (62)
- Appalachian National Park Association (53)
- Bennett, Kelly, 1890-1974 (1463)
- Berry, Walter (76)
- Brasstown Carvers (40)
- Carver, George Washington, 1864?-1943 (26)
- Cathey, Joseph, 1803-1874 (1)
- Champion Fibre Company (233)
- Champion Paper and Fibre Company (297)
- Cherokee Indian Fair Association (16)
- Cherokee Language Program (22)
- Crowe, Amanda (40)
- Edmonston, Thomas Benton, 1842-1907 (7)
- Ensley, A. L. (Abraham Lincoln), 1865-1948 (275)
- Fromer, Irving Rhodes, 1913-1994 (70)
- George Butz (BFS 1907) (46)
- Goodrich, Frances Louisa (120)
- Grant, George Alexander, 1891-1964 (96)
- Heard, Marian Gladys (60)
- Kephart, Calvin, 1883-1969 (15)
- Kephart, Horace, 1862-1931 (313)
- Kephart, Laura, 1862-1954 (67)
- Laney, Gideon Thomas, 1889-1976 (439)
- Masa, George, 1881-1933 (61)
- McElhinney, William Julian, 1896-1953 (44)
- Niggli, Josephina, 1910-1983 (10)
- North Carolina Park Commission (105)
- Osborne, Kezia Stradley (9)
- Owens, Samuel Robert, 1918-1995 (11)
- Penland Weavers and Potters (36)
- Roberts, Vivienne (15)
- Roth, Albert, 1890-1974 (142)
- Schenck, Carl Alwin, 1868-1955 (1)
- Sherrill's Photography Studio (2565)
- Southern Highland Handicraft Guild (127)
- Southern Highlanders, Inc. (71)
- Stalcup, Jesse Bryson (46)
- Stearns, I. K. (213)
- Thompson, James Edward, 1880-1976 (226)
- United States. Indian Arts and Crafts Board (130)
- USFS (683)
- Vance, Zebulon Baird, 1830-1894 (1)
- Weaver, Zebulon, 1872-1948 (58)
- Western Carolina College (230)
- Western Carolina Teachers College (282)
- Western Carolina University (2008)
- Western Carolina University. Mountain Heritage Center (18)
- Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892 (10)
- Wilburn, Hiram Coleman, 1880-1967 (73)
- Williams, Isadora (3)
- Cain, Doreyl Ammons (0)
- Crittenden, Lorraine (0)
- Rhodes, Judy (0)
- Smith, Edward Clark (0)
- Appalachian Region, Southern (3032)
- Asheville (N.C.) (1945)
- Avery County (N.C.) (26)
- Blount County (Tenn.) (195)
- Buncombe County (N.C.) (1680)
- Cherokee County (N.C.) (283)
- Clay County (N.C.) (556)
- Graham County (N.C.) (238)
- Great Smoky Mountains National Park (N.C. and Tenn.) (525)
- Haywood County (N.C.) (3573)
- Henderson County (N.C.) (70)
- Jackson County (N.C.) (4925)
- Knox County (Tenn.) (35)
- Knoxville (Tenn.) (13)
- Lake Santeetlah (N.C.) (10)
- Macon County (N.C.) (421)
- Madison County (N.C.) (216)
- McDowell County (N.C.) (39)
- Mitchell County (N.C.) (135)
- Polk County (N.C.) (35)
- Qualla Boundary (982)
- Rutherford County (N.C.) (78)
- Swain County (N.C.) (2185)
- Transylvania County (N.C.) (270)
- Watauga County (N.C.) (12)
- Waynesville (N.C.) (86)
- Yancey County (N.C.) (72)
- Aerial Photographs (3)
- Aerial Views (60)
- Albums (books) (4)
- Articles (1)
- Artifacts (object Genre) (228)
- Bibliographies (1)
- Biography (general Genre) (2)
- Cards (information Artifacts) (38)
- Clippings (information Artifacts) (192)
- Copybooks (instructional Materials) (3)
- Crafts (art Genres) (622)
- Depictions (visual Works) (21)
- Design Drawings (1)
- Digital Moving Image Formats (2)
- Drawings (visual Works) (185)
- Envelopes (101)
- Exhibitions (events) (1)
- Facsimiles (reproductions) (1)
- Fiction (general Genre) (4)
- Financial Records (12)
- Fliers (printed Matter) (67)
- Glass Plate Negatives (381)
- Guidebooks (2)
- Internegatives (10)
- Interviews (823)
- Land Surveys (102)
- Letters (correspondence) (1045)
- Manuscripts (documents) (618)
- Maps (documents) (177)
- Memorandums (25)
- Minutes (administrative Records) (59)
- Negatives (photographs) (6090)
- Newsletters (1290)
- Newspapers (2)
- Notebooks (8)
- Occupation Currency (1)
- Paintings (visual Works) (1)
- Pen And Ink Drawings (1)
- Periodicals (194)
- Personal Narratives (10)
- Photographs (12977)
- Plans (maps) (1)
- Poetry (6)
- Portraits (4568)
- Postcards (329)
- Programs (documents) (181)
- Publications (documents) (2444)
- Questionnaires (65)
- Relief Prints (26)
- Sayings (literary Genre) (1)
- Scrapbooks (282)
- Sheet Music (2)
- Slides (photographs) (402)
- Songs (musical Compositions) (2)
- Sound Recordings (802)
- Specimens (92)
- Speeches (documents) (18)
- Tintypes (photographs) (8)
- Transcripts (329)
- Text Messages (0)
- A.L. Ensley Collection (275)
- Appalachian Industrial School Records (7)
- Appalachian National Park Association Records (336)
- Axley-Meroney Collection (2)
- Bayard Wootten Photograph Collection (20)
- Bethel Rural Community Organization Collection (7)
- Blumer Collection (5)
- C.W. Slagle Collection (20)
- Canton Area Historical Museum (2110)
- Carlos C. Campbell Collection (462)
- Cataloochee History Project (64)
- Cherokee Studies Collection (4)
- Daisy Dame Photograph Album (5)
- Daniel Boone VI Collection (1)
- Doris Ulmann Photograph Collection (112)
- Elizabeth H. Lasley Collection (1)
- Elizabeth Woolworth Szold Fleharty Collection (4)
- Frank Fry Collection (95)
- George Masa Collection (173)
- Gideon Laney Collection (452)
- Hazel Scarborough Collection (2)
- Hiram C. Wilburn Papers (28)
- Historic Photographs Collection (236)
- Horace Kephart Collection (861)
- Humbard Collection (33)
- Hunter and Weaver Families Collection (1)
- I. D. Blumenthal Collection (4)
- Isadora Williams Collection (4)
- Jesse Bryson Stalcup Collection (47)
- Jim Thompson Collection (224)
- John B. Battle Collection (7)
- John C. Campbell Folk School Records (80)
- John Parris Collection (6)
- Judaculla Rock project (2)
- Kelly Bennett Collection (1482)
- Love Family Papers (11)
- Major Wiley Parris Civil War Letters (3)
- Map Collection (12)
- McFee-Misemer Civil War Letters (34)
- Mountain Heritage Center Collection (4)
- Norburn - Robertson - Thomson Families Collection (44)
- Pauline Hood Collection (7)
- Pre-Guild Collection (2)
- Qualla Arts and Crafts Mutual Collection (12)
- R.A. Romanes Collection (681)
- Rosser H. Taylor Collection (1)
- Samuel Robert Owens Collection (94)
- Sara Madison Collection (144)
- Sherrill Studio Photo Collection (2558)
- Smoky Mountains Hiking Club Collection (616)
- Stories of Mountain Folk - Radio Programs (374)
- The Reporter, Western Carolina University (510)
- Venoy and Elizabeth Reed Collection (16)
- WCU Gender and Sexuality Oral History Project (36)
- WCU Mountain Heritage Center Oral Histories (25)
- WCU Oral History Collection - Mountain People, Mountain Lives (71)
- WCU Students Newspapers Collection (1923)
- Western North Carolina Tomorrow Black Oral History Project (69)
- William Williams Stringfield Collection (2)
- Zebulon Weaver Collection (109)
- African Americans (390)
- Appalachian Trail (35)
- Artisans (521)
- Cherokee art (84)
- Cherokee artists -- North Carolina (10)
- Cherokee language (21)
- Cherokee pottery (101)
- Cherokee women (208)
- Church buildings (190)
- Civilian Conservation Corps (U.S.) (111)
- College student newspapers and periodicals (2012)
- Dams (108)
- Dance (1023)
- Education (222)
- Floods (63)
- Folk music (1015)
- Forced removal, 1813-1903 (2)
- Forest conservation (220)
- Forests and forestry (1198)
- Gender nonconformity (4)
- Great Smoky Mountains National Park (N.C. and Tenn.) (181)
- Hunting (47)
- Landscape photography (25)
- Logging (122)
- Maps (83)
- Mines and mineral resources (9)
- North Carolina -- Maps (18)
- Paper industry (38)
- Postcards (255)
- Pottery (135)
- Railroad trains (72)
- Rural electrification -- North Carolina, Western (3)
- School integration -- Southern States (2)
- Segregation -- North Carolina, Western (5)
- Slavery (5)
- Sports (452)
- Storytelling (243)
- Waterfalls -- Great Smoky Mountains (N.C. and Tenn.) (66)
- Weaving -- Appalachian Region, Southern (280)
- Wood-carving -- Appalachian Region, Southern (328)
- World War, 1939-1945 (173)
Western Carolinian Volume 59 Number 23 (22)
Item
Item’s are ‘child’ level descriptions to ‘parent’ objects, (e.g. one page of a whole book).
-
-
Western Carolinian March 24, 1994 Opinion Western Carolinian Editor: Danell Moses Ad Design: Amy Moss Ad Mgn Christa Humphrey Associate Editors: Leanne Doerner - Sports Blake Frizzell - Features Rachel Ramsey - News Hayley Nicholas - Copy Jon Patty - Classified/ Events Layout Editors: Dianne Burnette - News Steve Cheyney - Features Derek Smolik - Sports Stephanie Trammel - Classifieds Office Assk Kristin Dumas Office Manager. Julie Morris Production: Tressa Haswell Jon Horstman Ted Meier Freda Woodard Reporters: Bridget Anderson Jamie Baize Neal Braswell April Brendle Shelley Eller Brett Ferguson James Gray Jeff Leatherwood Jennifer Martin Curtis Metzger Jafaar Nyang'oro Rob Owen Jim Phillips Caroline Roper Joseph Shiver Ree Soesbee Jordana Stephens Colleen Vasconcellos Christin Weaver Earle Wheeler Dave Williams Photographers: Aaron Brunck Justin Menickelli Adviser John Moore The Western Carolinian is the student newspaperof WestemCarolina University. The Western Carolinian is produced entirely by students and is published 12 times per semester. The opinions expressed on the editorial page are not the opinions of the Western Carolinian or Western Carolina University. The Western Carolinian welcomes editorial input, news tips, article ideas, etc. Correspondence should be addressed to: Editor, Western Carolinian PO Box 66, Cullowhee, NC 28723 or sent through campus mail to The Old Student Union. M submissions will be considered, but the Western Carolinian reserves the right to refuse publkationof unsuitable material and the right to edit forbrevity and clarity. Sectiondeadlines for Features, Classifieds, and Editorials a re (he Thursday preceding publication. Allothersectionshavea Friday deadline preceding publication Hours for the Western Carolinian are from 10am to 3pm Monday through Friday. The office is located in the Old StudentUnionBuildingbetweenMoore and Buchanan Office personnel may be reachedat227-7267orbyfaxat227-7361. In an effort to save natural resources, tine Western Carolinian is printed on recycled paper. — ■J Wi 11 there be d rive-by shootings on the information superhighway? Everywhere you turn these days you hear about the information superhighway. It has been a hot topic in all the periodicals that I read (like Home magazine and The Wall Street Journal) and even at a marketing conference I went to in Atlanta recently. In case you haven't heard, the future holds in store some new ideas about using your TV. You can go mall shopping, solve a mystery murder, talk to your friends or play a video game -- all of this and more without leaving the comforts of your own home. All of this is not coming in the next few months, though. Some things are available that provide interactive entertainment now, but the article, "TV for the 21st Century" (pg. 64 in the March issue of Home) suggests that it could even be decades before this is prevalent in our society. There is a great wealth of information out there in the airwaves. Newsweek says in an aritcle (March 28,1994 pg. 39.), "A vast and exciting new world 1 ies virtually at ou r fingertips." I don't take issue with that, but I worry about society as a whole trying to get into this wave of interactive TV. What will the world come to when this does become prevalent? If you want to go to the video mall and buy your new spring wardrobe, you just push some buttons on your TV. If you want to see that movie you've been wai ting for at the video store, you don't have to wait now. You can push some buttons, or AT&T suggests that you will be able to do it by touch, and, poof, there it is. If you want to talk to your friend while you're eating dinner, just get her / him on the phone through your TV. Do you see the common thread here? With all of this information available in our homes, why would we ever leave? When we cannot only go shopping but also do basically anything else from our living room chair, including interacting with our friends, performing our work, "attending" class, where would we have to go? Think about it. If you go to the local bar, you run the risk if you want to drink that you might get a DWI on your way home. If you go anywhere, you run the risk that you may get involved in a wreck, or (especially if you're going to Greenville, SC, or down I- 95 in Florida) of being shot! If we can do our work at home, who wants to deal with rush hour traffic for two hours a day? And if you have children, you don't have to pay for a baby sitter. You let your kids stay home with you while you do your work. There is such prevalent violence in our society that it is scary to go out in certain areas anyway. What causes this violence? I think that one of the main reasons is that we don't know how to interact with one another. If people could learn to tolerate the differences in others, there would be far less crime. How many people are there in your classes that you've never talked to? How many study groups or other types of organizations have you belonged to where all the people could get along for an extended period of time? So, if we become hermits in this new age of the information superhighway, what will be the outcome? What is this going to do to future generations? Will they still go to the malls on Friday nights to hang with their buddies? What will happen to colleges and universities, if they start offering class over the concert net? Students will still have to pay tuition, but they wouldn't have to move to a certain area, pay for room and board or worry about meal plans. They will also not experience working in groups, competing in intramural sports, working at the radio station or the newspaper, and other such activities where we learn to deal with other people. I'm not afraid of technology. I actually think it's exciting and challenging. However, I don't think it should be all-consuming and take t\. our lives. I think the information superhighway is leading a path into overpowering consumption. I just hope there ..are-nodrive -by-shootings!-- -- DANELL MOSES Editor Everson rues losing his snooze Dear Western Carolina Students: I'm not really sure when the majority of students here like going to bed. Ipreferhittingthesackaround 11:00 pm or midnight, especially on the nights before my eight o'clock classes. I sometimes stay up later when I feel like it or when I'm worried over a test that I know I'm going to fail the next day anyway. However, I try to be as quiet as possible so that those around me can sleep if they so desire. My complaint, in short, is the noise level I am experiencing when I'm wanting to be sound asleep in my Leatherwood dorm room. The windows are tightly closed, my door locked and my answering machine on in hopes that I will get very few disturbances. However, some strange things have happened in Cullowhee during the past couple weeks that have affected my sleep. TwoThursdaysago, someone three times my size was running up and down the hall from about 11:00 to 3:30 in the morning chanting: "Nobody's going to stop my mother f a—." I mink the guy was drunk, but I'm not positive, because I didn't stick my head out to look. I unconsciously left my ball bat at home, and state laws prohibit us from carrying fire arms on campus. And to beat it all, when I awoke at abo\rt'7i00 the next mdri-iihg, I found where cheese cracker crumbs had been wedged underneath my door. How strange? This past Thursday, Delta Chi Fraternity, so I art told, were the loud mouths playing the music where it could be heard virtually everywhere on campus until one o'clock in the rriorning. I'm not complaining about the type of music. At least it wasn't Led Zeppelin or Two Live Crew. It would have been better if it was country though, because I might have fallen asleep faster. But the type of music is not really the point. I'm complaining about the principle of the fact... music being played in a frat house about a half mile off campus, in such a manner that you could hear it in Leather- wood dorm with the windows closed after midnight. ParamountCarowindsislook- ing for such enthusiasm to place into their theme park to make tourists' visits more enjoyable. I like such enthusiasm when I'm on Thunder Road or the Frenzoid but not when I'm asleep in hopes that I have a good following day. I would suggest to Delta Chi members to inquire atCarowinds about how they could perform there. But please, student body, I'm asking softly, gently, calmly, courteously and diplomatically, please LET ME GET MY SLEEP! John Everson
Object
Object’s are ‘parent’ level descriptions to ‘children’ items, (e.g. a book with pages).
-
The Western Carolinian is Western Carolina University's student-run newspaper. The paper was published as the Cullowhee Yodel from 1924 to 1931 before changing its name to The Western Carolinian in 1933.
-