®l|p ^ktrl A STUDENT PUBLICATION OF FLORA MACDONALD COLLEGE Volume No. 9 Flora Macdonald College, October, 1960 No. Z First Dance Of This Year To Be Exciting Event 1960 Presidential Campaign To Be The Host Unpredictable Ever Held In U.SA by Prof. Carol Robertson The oubstanding features of ithis preaidenitail camipaign are that the two presidenltiial camdidaltes Nixon lamd Kenmedy, aile mirming neck aind meek amd Uiait ithere is great sdmilajity between liem in persomaliity amd policy. On the T.V. debaittes itlhe two candidaibes found a surpriisaingly large area of agreemeait when tihiey oultJined their objectives for 'this oaitlion. They agreled 1. Tlhait the U.S. cainnot afford to stand stiM in thie eoanoxniic iiaoe wWh Russia. 2. Thait sonie kind of federal aid to eduicaitiian is needed. 3. That the pneslenit farm policy is not workiing and must be dhainged. 4. That the miiindmum wage would be incrteaised. 5. That it would be desiraWe to have a baiainced budgiet. During the oext four yeans the power and range of ithe federal government is (going to become bagger. Beginming nextt Jaouary, there iis going to be more federal activiity wtoertiher tlhe winner is Nixon or KenUedy. Bath inomi- mees are activists. Botti are com- mdtted to the mobilizaitaon of re- sauroes behaod winning ithe odd war. There can be only onie re- saillt— larger and more pervasive feder.al ispiending. Therefore Ithe issule which wiU divide Kennedy and Nixon will be, not whietther the role of the federal govem- menlt wSU be inoreased, but how much. The democraitSc platform which Senator Kennedy sinoerely em- hnaoes, ptxwnised to go farthier and faster than ithie Republicans. The choice then is whetther to eledt a Nixon who will go about enlarging the federal role with greater reluctance or to elect a Kennedy who will do the same thing wiith greater relish. The Candidabes Chief Themies: NdxKMi ^ateis that he Ihas seven and one-half years of experience as Preaident ESsenhower’s depu ty in dealing with foreign affairs He largues itihat he wil be the safer man tfor ithe country be cause of his "maturity” in di- Hecting to Cold War. Kennedy meets this argumenit head on wiilli the counter change that the Republicans have allowed the coumltry to become soft in its maliibary posture and ineffectual in its foreign policy. He also Mds con^antly in focus before has campaigD audiences the un popular farm policies of BJsein- howter’s Secneftary of A^ctditure, Elzra Taft Benson. Both Kennedy and Ndxon have sincerely tried to keep the relig ion iisisue out of ithle plctume but like Banquio’s ghost, it wil not lie buried. P'ear od a CJatJiolic hierarchy is a very real dihing among millions of people in (this country. Not by any means are aJl thiese people ignorant or bigoted. Many of them are highly inltelMgent and exitremely iboteranit. Their fear dis grounded largely upon the blalfcant mixture of church and state in countries where OathoJdcs are in the vast majority. In Spain, for instance, no one can hold a job in civil govemmlent unlesis he is a Cdtflro- lic. In some of the Latin Ameri can staltes, no one can to elect ed to Ithe 'pi’esidlenicy unless he is a Oatlhalic. These dlhdngis distiuirfe many peo ple, and it is only natural that they do. They lare not easily ex- plainled, for in a centrally direct ed church it ils less than satisfac tory to say that one prirKsiple is pursued in one country and a contrary jHiinciple in andth/er. iAaother disquieting thou^t for many people is this: If Kennedy is etected president, Lyndon B. Johnson, forraerly majority lead er of Ithe Senate, will be vice- president. This woifld mean thart Senatxxr Mike Mansfidd, Demo crat form Montana, a Roman Catiholic, would be in Mne to be come teadier of the Senate. We al ready haive aniother Roman Catho lic, Representativ© John McOor- mack, Democrat from Massa chusetts as majority leader of ithe House of Repaiesentatives. With our president a Catholic and with the most powerful of fices in the Senalte and in the House of Representatives hiead- ed by Oathodics, our top political leadership would be in the hands of men of one church. The Demo crats try to meutralize the relig- M)Us issue by pointing out Kenne dy’s voting record in tlhe Senate. Kennedy has voted to supjdy American foreign aid to the Com munist countries of Poland and Yugoslavia. The official Catholic posdition has been that no such add should go to any Communist staibe. Kennedy has also voted aigainst spending pubMc funds for parochial education. The official CatihoHc position faivors sudh spenddng. 'Even though both candddaites try to suppress the HeOdgious issue it cannott be kept under winaps. The phrase “Solid South refers to the fact that the South has voted soldily democriatdc. Bat now it is the “Muid South”. Kennedy is going to have Itrouble in the South. The eleven states of the Old Confederacy together havfe 128 votes in the etectoral coliegc. There are 537 votes in ithle eilec- toral coOlege. A candidate must have 269 to win. With the ex ception of the two Elisenhower landsiiles to 19^ and 1956, ail of these 128 votes have been safe ly in the democratic fold. It will be interesting to see when the votes are coimted if Nixon cap tures any of (these stebes. In New York, Califomia, Penn sylvania, minoSs, Michigan, and Ohio, there are 181 electoral votes In each of these states there is a concentration of urbanized Ne- (Continued on Page 4) Have you heard about the Stu dent Council dance ito be held on October 22? The doors of the dining ball will be open at ieight to our first dance of the year. It will be a gay event with girls all decked oiit in ttieir evening best (and boys so neat and trim. Evleryone is going to enjoy danc ing to the music of “Rudy La- rnone and the Keynotes.” “Harvest Moon” has been chos en as tlie theme fior the dance and is very appropriaftfe for itliis time of year. Decorations and Unusual Home- Coming Plans For October 29 No coUege year at Flora Mac donald is complete without a Scottdsh cektoation, and as the opening note of the Alumnae ac- tivdties the Association has plan- tied an adl-Scottish Homecomflng Day, to be heUd on Saturday, Oc tober 29. The program will be presented by DonaM Macdonald of Ohar- lofitje and his Soottish faride, Mairi MacLeod Macdonald, whose home I a dance never to be forgotten. refreshments will be used to car ry out the theme. A lovely backdrop centetOed Etpwoid a covered bridge with fall scenery wiH provide a beau tiful setting for the dancing coup les. The tables wi'H be decorated with owls, made of pinie cones, sitting in a cluster of fall color ed leaves. Around ithe poles ia the dining room wil be corn shocks and orange pumpkins. Go ing into the dining room one will see a boy and girl scarecrow with com shocks around them. From the rotunda a big yieUow harvest moon will be hanging, thus car rying out the theme. The refreshments Wiill also be centered around the harvest theme, but what will be served is to remain a siurprise. The dance commiibbeie is work ing dilSgenltly to m.£dce this dance enjoyable for everyone. Heading the committee is EUainie Evans. The decorastion chairmcin is Lucy White, Ithe chadimjan of the imvi- tatixjn committee. Chase Colliiis, and the reSreshxn&at commiWee ' chairman. Lab Baxley. At the stroke of twelve, he doors will dose leaving behind the havest moon and memories of UNICEF Drive To Be Conducted You can help feed and care for children all over the world. Did you know that a twenty cent snack would pay for a year’s supply of aujieomujcin to trieat a child with itradboma? Onie dol lar will eithier protect a hun*- dred children from tuberculosis, pay for a day’s supply of vita mins for four hundred children, or buy five hundred glassies of milk for straviing youngsters. Th^ stalfdstics wiere codecfted by UNICEiF (United Nations Inter national Childrens, E m e r gency Fund.) The facts are sihocking and the dmstian Assoc. Gabdnet reaHzes the desperate need of finandal help and clothinig. On October 29, laU of you who are iritenested can join students in the fiJty states and foreign coun tries and “trick or trteat” for donations of money or clothing to be sent to UNICEF. This Hal loween doorbell ringing project began -in 1950 in a smaU Sunday School Class and has grown to extraordinary proportions. Last year students raised $1,500,000 for &e fund. Won’t, you Jilei^ us alleviate the isuffering of little war orphans afld under nourished diseased children in other countries? P^ih- dicity in “The Red Springs Citi- aen” wdU make th(e Ifcown aware of the need and prepare (hem for our coming before her marriage in August was on the IsIe-of-Le\^ in Scot land. Many alumnae will re member the colorful personality >f Mr. Macdonald, who has vdsat- ed the collegie frequently, his most vivid!^ remembered visit having Ibeen in 1954 when he came to the campus ito organize the Clan Donald Society of the OaroJinas wdHih a delightful pro gram. In addition to the songs by Mr. and Mrs. Macdonald and songs in gaeliie by Mrs. Mac- donaW, with jriano accompani ments by another talented Mac donald, Robert, the program will feaiture Scottish folk dances by a group of CJharlofite fiifth-igraders in costume. As Khe crowning touch, he will have Scoftrtash bag pipes and a drummer on hand to ‘make music the Scottish way’. The day wdl begin with a cof fee hour in the pallors ait ten- fifteen (bo welcome the homecom ing alumnae, the business m^- ing dn ifihe auditorium at eleven o’clock, the program at 12 noon, and luncheon alt one o’clock. The -business meeting of the alumnae wdH open with a de votional in song by the members of Miss Schober’s Choral En semble. Come One, Come All to Home coming! No one will want to mass being at this “Harvest Dance.” Some folks don’t put itheir best foot forward until they get ■the other one in hot water. New Marshals To Assume Work During ithe year Flora Mac donald College has an outstand ing concert-lecture sieries. At these canOerts it is a tradition tor the marshals in ifheir white formlails to usher; the marshals also usher at all school functions. The new marshals for 1960-1961 ane Frances Gibson, Chief, sillon Chi Society; Dorcas Cox, Vioilat Culler, Magie Fishbumte, and Barbaira Somers, all of Ep- salon Chi Socd^y; Betty Lock- nidge, Marglaret Ann Martin, M«- ry Ne^y, and Jean Pigoti of Zeta Thieta Psi Society. The qualities for which the mar^ials aaie chosen include poise, grace, chaim, refinement, comeihness, serenity, elegance, and liveliness. These girls are chosen from the junior class and have to rank acadlemically as juniors. They -are chosen from Zeta Theta Psd and Epsilon Cbi» Societies with each society elee- Itdng four marshals The choosing of chief mianshal is attemabed from year to y^. She is chosen from E^ksdlon Chi one year and ZetesSan the next year. Our chief marshal for this year is Prances Gibson who works dosely with leach. penformer to assure them and the audience a smooth pr#- (Contintied on Page 2)