ftanKlitt Witi4 and ?hr Higlilanite fflaruttiati WEIMAR JONES Editorial Page Editor THURSDAY. SEPT. IS. l?Ni? TIM I-. TO ACT A Gross Injustice This newspaper is in no position to pass on the acuracy or inacuracv of a report that links the proposed Xantahala-I )uke deal with prior approval of a power rate increase for this area. Nor do we know the reason for the long delay in seeking State Utilities Commission approval of the proposed sale by Nantahala Power and Light Company of its distribution system to Duke Power Company. What we do know is that the delay is doing a gross injustice to this whole region. Any uncer tainty always is demoralizing; uncertainty about so important a thing as power is seriously demoral izing. In view of that, the length of the delay seems both unreasonable and unconscionable. The delay has now stretched out to more than a year. Yet the people of this region are told it is still planned to go ahead with the deal, but they are left in the dark about when application for its ap proval will* be filed. It mav be another week or another month or another year. It is time for Nantahala and Duke either to tile their application, so the issue can be settled, or to publicly announce that the deal is being abandoned. Elementarv fairness demands that. Here's OUR Chance For vcais. a few ] )t*? >| >!?.? hi* re said, and kept oil saying, we otiyht to have a county lair. It was a loti^ time yettinji iroiii^, though, and there were two things that lield it hack: First, inertia; and, second, doubt that Macon ( ountv would support a fair. Finally, hack in 1 ' > 5 5 , the fair was established: rather, a fair was held that vear, as a sort <>i leeler to see if we could have one. Since then, the growth of Macon County's lair has been phenomenal. In 1 1 > 5 5> . for example, there were 31 Ml exhibitors: last \ ear, there were 1 , 5( K (. And this vear ? October FM5 ? the fair will be held in its ow n building ; a structure has been erect cd on a plot, at the old count v home, donated by the countv commissioners. The new building:, which is so constructed it can easilv be enlarged as the demand dictates and the monev makes it possible, will have cost, when the finishing touches are put on, close to $12,000. Where did the monev conic from? Well, it hasn't all conic vet : there is a debt o! close to $0,000 on the lair building. Much of the othet* $0.( HK) came from contributions, most oi them lairlv lari;e con tributions. W here is the rest to conic from? Well, the most likelv source is the small contributors, the men and women who can't ,urive S- r or $10 or even $.i. but can donate $2 or SI or 51) cents. l,incoln said the Ford must have loved the common people, he made so mam ol them; it also could be said lie must have loved those who can make onlv small contri hutions to wortln causes, for lie made a lot ol us like that'. There arc enough like' that, that ii even hall of them made their contributions, the lair building probable -would In- paid lor. Furthermore, those of lb who do uri\'e our S- or $1 or .ill cents will feel ini^htv j^ood about the fair. We can lion csth sav it is our fair. Want to help? Then set,' Mrs. (irate Tatham, Just The Thought Makes Us Drool -VIA A 1 1 1 l< \ 1.1) Thank.-; to a favorably se ason the busy little bees have produced the hi; *.est crop of sourwooti h n ?y in this section since 1947 ac cording to beekeepers. We b* \.v\ e the t:uth of the statement from the amount of this delicious h ,n ey now available As a usual thing good pure sourwood honey Ls about as hard to come by as m:n cy at income tax paying time. Not only is there a bin crop of sourwocd but other flavored h n ey too, say the beekeepers John Ford, down on Log Cabin Associa tion property, can scare up some 3.000 pounds of fine honey this ?eason Two of his colonies prod uced 300 pounds each. and others did almost as well. George Sher rtU Fred Hooper and Luther Deitz are ^mong beekeepers re porting outstanding honey prod uction this season. Mr. Deitz has one six-super hive producing 40 pounds per super. Some of this fine honey has been sought from as far away as Durham in this state and New York City The sad part of this story is that the men who have enjoyed working with bees are fast fading away and too few of our younger generation have tV courage and knowhow to grow and care for this little honey-maker. What is better for breakfast than hot biscuits, butter and good real honey0 We can hardly think of any food so good, and so healthful. Let's keep the bee> working. Fair Association treasurer, at the A. S. C. office in the Agricultural Building; or you can hand your donation to any agricultural worker. Less Than Convincing Voicing a pica i'or national unity, Vice President Nixon last week asked tor a moratorium on critii cism ?>t" the present administration's foreign and defense policies, so lonjf as the Red dictators are gathered in New York at the United Nations. Why just while the dictators are in New York? Does anybody doubt that every word spoken in the campaign is reported to Mr. Khrushchev, wherever he may he? Mr. Kennedy, as a matter of fact, in an earlier statement, addressed directly to Khrushchev, made it completely clear that criticism by no means im plies disunity. As has always been true in this country, we Americans insist upon the rijjfht to criticize, but always politics stops at the water's edt|e. Since foreign policy and defense are generally conceded to be the major campaign issues, what Mr. Nixon really was asking for was a morator ium on Democratic politicking ? while the Re publican campaign proceeded apace. ... I In view ol the fact that whatever is said in the campaign is reported the world over, Mr. Nixon's argument against criticism while the dictators are in New York seems a bit thin. His political self seeking. in the name of national unity, seems more than a bit hypocritical. Why Not Act As One It's too late for this year. It's probably too late, even, for next year. Hut it's not too early to start .planning for the year after. Macon Count v is a unit. The needs of each part of tin- count y are much the same as those of every part, ll one area lags, it holds back all the rest of the county. 1 1 one area goes forward, it pulls all the rest of us forward. And so the future of every part of the county is tied in with the future of the count v ;is a whole; and the future of the w hole county is tied in with the future of every neigh In >rho< id. \\ liv. then, shouldn't we be working together as a single unit ? Win not a single chamber of commerce for the entire county a Macon Count\ Chamber of Com merce? Such an agency not only should and could pro mote the county as a whole: by adopting some long ran^e goals, it should and could make sure that the promotion would help build a better,, as well as a bigger, community: The letter from Mr. I -'red H. Stewart on this page indicates how ready people of one part of the county are to cooperate with the people of another. Decline And Fall (Chapel Hill Weekly i In lH7i! Gibbon completed his notable work. "The Decline and Fall oi the Roman Empire." Here is the way he accounted for til!- fall of t'le empire: ill The rapid increase in divorce; the undermining ol the dignity and sanctity of the home, which is the basis of human society. <2i Higher andt higher taxes and the spending of public monies for free bread and circuses for the populance. (3) The mad craze for pleasure; sports becoming every year more exciting and more brutal. 1 4 1 The building of gigantic armaments when the real enemy was within, in the decadence of the people, (5> The decay ol religion faith fading into mere torm, losing touch with life and becoming impotent to warn and guide the people. Productive (Asheville Citizen i Mountain farmers arent lacking In resourcefulness when It comes to making their farms more productive. Two years ago, due to a labor shortage, Maoon County 4-H'er Jimmy Taylor and his father collected pine cones. They processed, treated and then sowed seed from the cones on cutover woodland. Today the Taylors have a good stand ol young pines. In Swain County, R. Dan Morris converted a section of his poultry house to trout rearing pools, and now has about 30,000 fast -growing flngerllngs. Both are examples of what is being done in modern-day agriculture and what can be accomplished with Ingenuity. Is Foreign Policy THE Issue? (Ralph McGill In Atlanta Constitution) The presidential campaign so far has been a careful one of feeling out the country. Neither Nixon or Kennedy, nor their fellow citizens, for that matter, are sure about the mood of the country. There Is unanimous belief there are more undecided voters than at any time in history. The farmers are not yet en thusiastic about the agricultural plans announced by either candidate. The religious issue remains, although Dr, Peale Is presently lacking in peace of mind and condemns as "unwise" his participation In the statement against a Catholic for president. The effect of Sen. Kennedy's Houston statement is not yet possible of evaluation. There is a growing belief that foreign policy is more im portant than political strategists had anticipated. Both can didates find audiences most responsive to it. You can straighten a worm, but the orook is In him and only waiting. ? Mark Twain. DO YOU REMEMBER? Looking Backward Throagh the FHh ol The Pi m 65 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK (1895) H. G. Trotter left Monday with a drove of cattle for market. Mr, J. Lee Barnard sings "Rock-a-by-Baby" to a new boy. Major W. H. Higdon, of Ellijay, pressed our pavements with his brogans Saturday. Last Wednesday a party belonging to the U. S\ Geological Survey went into camp at the old Camp Ground one mile from town. The wire fence men left last Thursday, after selling the rights for all the townships in Macon. They carried away perhaps $500. Our people will soon be ready for the next patent fake that comes along. But we* are a progressive peo ple, you know, and bound to keep up with the procession. 35 YEARS AGO I (1925) Headline: ANOTHER GREAT DEVELOPMENT IN PROSPECT FOR FRANKLIN ? Mr. W. D. Almazov and Miss Sophie Albert Pur chase from Loneir Heirs 2,300 Acres Five Miles West of Franklin on Siler Mill Creek ? Plan Magnificent Development ? Work to Start at an Early Date. The new addition to the General Mica and Clay Company's plant at Iotla Bridge is now running on a part-time basis. 15 YEARS AGO (1945) Officials of the Snow llill Methodist Church have been elected as follows: Carl T. Sorrells, charge lay leader; Clyde N West, Sunday school superintendent; and Mr. West, Mr. Sorrells, Joel Dalton, Ernest Cabe, Lee Hurst, Mrs. J. L. West, Jr., and J. L. Brogden, stewards. 5 YEARS AGO (1955) The FYanklin Lions Club this week is taking another step toward obtaining house delivery of mail here. Teams from the club are measuring 25-foot lots on each side of all streets within the corporate limits. ./ m/.yoi;j /?)? nuronr Have Schools Shifted Too Much Emphasis To Math And Science? Reprinted from XORTII CARdUJV.I EDUCATION (EDITOR'S NOTE: l)r. Gray is dirwtor of the Department of Art. East Carolina College. Greenville, N. C.> By WELLINGTON B GKAY The nation's press has recently been jammed to overfl wing with articles having to do with the need for more education in math ematics and the sciences. This hue and cry from all quarters is the result of inc: eases being made in these two fields, particularly by countries having different poli tical ideologies from that of the United States, notably Russia. To those of u.s in the field of educa tion but not particularly in the areas of mathematics and the sciences, this tune is beginning to grow monotonous. While we are the last to say that these two areas are not very important, we do say that there are other areas of learning in the educational world which arc just a.s imp:r tant to the individual, to his country, and to the free world. We are living in a very techni cal age. an age in which distance* have shrunk to the point where we are no longer Isolated, regard less, of where we live in the w rid. Transportation and communica tions have thus made us nil neigh bors in the real sense of the word Because of this fact alone, we must now understand zur neigh bors just as we understand people in our own towns and cities, even though these newer neighbors have different customs, languages, religions, etc. In these areas, there fore, we need more understand ing rather than in the fields cf mathematics and the sciences, important though they are. There is a very real danger in propagandizing any special aspect of a curriculum be it in high school, in college, or in university In zealously pushing any specific field we often train individuals in that field to the detriment of ctl> er areas in which they need to oe educated In the high school situ ation. for instance, when we in sist on increased courses in mathematics and science, what is taken out of the present pro gram? There is just so much time available. Do we eliminate English or American history? If we do that, we soon will incur the wrath of educators who can tell us all too emphatically that the usual student coming to the col lege today can neither read nor write well ? in some instances not well enough to communicate intelligently with others. Of a certainty the D.A.Rli and other worthy groups will become more disturbed than they are today if we reduce the Ameiican history which is offered in the high school . There are some courses, how ever, which could be cut from the curriculum for some students. All boys do not have to have indus trial arts; nor do all girls have to have home economics, as these courses are taught all too often in the high school today. All stu dents in the high school do net have to have art or music, of course, but if we want to continue to educate intelligent citizens for the United States and for the world, we shall need to expose our students to these areas. In the college situation, promi nent educators have gone on : record as stating that from one third to one-half of the courses which the student pursues in col- I lege should be those of the "gen. eral education" variety. In the ? recently-dead past we have called this educating the "whole per son." Educators take the tack that in this fast-moving world to day the student has t> know much ab:ut many different, things. It is good that a college student studies a so-called "foreign language": the literature of the world: economic political, and sociological courses. especially concerning geography: the fine aits courses in art. music, anc literature. The?e offerings give the student the tool.' with which he can understand other peoples of the world. These courses offer the armaments by which we can win friends w.thout having to go to war. In the recent past. too. we have had shortages in many fields in the United States. Since the be ginning of worlH War I \v? have had a teacher shortage, especially in the elementary school. No*' this shortage is creeping into the high school and the college as a result of the increasing enroll ment. Just after World War I we had a shortage of physicians In the United States. We still have , this shortage with us. a shortage i which is a comparative thing: and I can remember net too many years ago when we had a shortage of linguists. We still have all these short ages and more Teachers and physicians are just as important '?> ou1' national defense as are ? dentists and mathematicians. I.st. u- not lose our heads and Mv,ir..p th.' boat just because at this present time perhaps we need particular kinds of people in oc cupations or professions a bit more than we did yesterday, and more than we might need them < tomorrow. Let us not put all our . cuss in the one basket and neglect other areas of our educational pattern to the detriment of the individuals whom we are attempts < ins to educate. Let us teach art. mi:?ic. literature, language, econ omic-. sociology, and history, a* , 'vr" as mathematics and the i sciences. Ab: ve all. we need to educate people to think in many fields rather than in narrow, ' highly specialized fields from the 1 rradle through the university. 1 Because I hold to these con vie- 1 tions. I herewith submit a minor- ' Ity report ? a report favcrlng < courses which help an adult en |oy the living he earns! i STRICTLY PERSONAL By WEIMAR JONES These are the opinion* and con clusions of one man ? and he may be wrong. They were arrived at, though, over a period of years, after much reading, much thought, much conversation (with Catholics as well as Protestants), and after much honest effort to be objec tive. Some people thought, this time, there'd be no "religious question", as there was In 192S. Many peo ple have hoped the Issue would just go away. Most people are sur prised that. Instead, it has assum ed a bigger and bigger role in the campaign, more and more loaded with emotion ? emotion, incident ally. that is not confined to the partisans of just one side. Why has It happened? I think a major part of the ex planation lies In a mistaken ef fort to over-simplify the situation. We've either said. "The reli gious question is THE issue". Or we've said: "There IS no religious issue." We've either said: "NO Re-man Catholic should ever be elected President". Or we've said: "EV ERY person who even raises the question is a bigot". Is it as simple as that? I don't think so. I don't think it's a sim ple question at all. but a complex one. To analyze the two opposing statements. two paragraphs above: Suppose it were possible to prove that their religion un fitted 99 out of every 100 Cath olics. Would it follow that the 100th Catholic was unfit? On the other hand, does any body honestly believe that all who have reservations about a Cath olic for President fit Webster's definition of the word "bigot" ? "One obstinately, irrationally, of ten intolerantly, devoted to his own church, party, belief or opin ion"? Because partisans on both sides assume it is a simple question ? or maybe because they want it to be a simple question, so it can be simply disposed of ? many people proceed from premises that I think are inaccurate, if not down right false. Am:ng the premises that 1, per sonally, reject are these: 1. The Roman Catholic Church is an evil and designing institu tion. consciously plotting to cap ture this and all other govern ments. I know too many good Cath olics who are patriotic enough to oppose such a plot, if they knew about it, and are intelligent enough to know about it, if it ex isted ? I know too many such Catholics to swallow that one: 2. The Catholic Church and clergy never will try to influence government in this country. I think they will try to influ ence government in this country ? with or without a Catholic President. They will if they're as honest in their convictions as I think they are; they will, certain ly. whenever what they consider moral issues get over into the political sphere. After all. Protestant churches and clergy seek to influence gov ernment. Some cf them tried, on the prohibition question. And some of them are t ying, righi now, on a question they may con sider a moral one, but which has become a distinctly political ques tion ? racial integration. While I have my own reservations about the advisability of churches, as churches, taking part in politics, there is no question in my mind about their right to do so. That rights of course, would apply to the Catholic as well as to Protes tant churches. 3. A candidate's religion is a purely personal matter? it Is none of the voters' business. Religion is a purely personal matter, for the private citizen. But when a man seeks public of fice, he forfeits many of the rights of privacy that go with pri vate citizenship. And when the highest office in the land is In volved. the voters have not only the right to know everything pos sible about the candidate, but the duty to consider its Influence on him In the past and its possible influence in the future. And since nothing influences most men more than religion, a candidate's religion ? or lack of religion? de finitely Is a proper matter for the voters' consideration. 4. The Roman Catholic Church is "just another sect", differing no more from Protestant churches than one Protestant denomina tion differs from another. Ask any Cathclic about that! If he's a good Catholic, and if he's honest, he'll be the first to say that the Catholic Church is whol ly different from Protestant sects. There is one fundamental differ ence, as I see it. That difference is this: Among Protestants, the final decision and the final responsi bility, even on spiritual and moral questions, rest with the indivi dual ? that is the whole basis of Protestatism. The individual may. and often does, disagree with his church's teaching ? usually, he may disagree and still stay in the church. No Catholic, on the other hand, is permitted by his church to make major decisions, on spirit ual and moral matters. The deci sion, and the responsibility for making it, lies with the church. And Catholics are taught it is their duty to accept their church's decisions as law and as the ulti mate truth. ? * * 1 "Ah! but Senator Kennedy" says a pro-Kennedy partisan, "has explicitly said he will not permit his church to influence him in political affairs. Do you think he is a liar"? No, I don't think he is a liar. I believe he is honest in that state ment. I believe he is determined that his political decisions shall be completely free of church in fluence. , I think there is a legitimate question,* though, as |to how suc cessful a Catholic may be in carrying out that determination. Not because I think the Pope will give him orders. But because it is impossible for a man to escape the effect of religious training he has had from the cradle: and because a Catholic's training from the cradle has been that, in spir itual and moral matters, he has no right to make his own deci sions; and because what are pure ly moral matters today often are political matters tomorrow. I do not say that no Catholic could be objective, in the politi cal realm, on such matters as divorce and birth control. But because all Catholics have been taught that divorce and birth control are sinful, and taught that the church's pronouncements on such matters aie the law and the truth, I think it would be harder for a Catholic to be ob jective on such issues. ? ? ? That brings me to my own, personal conclusion: I do not rule out Mr. Kennedy, just because he is a Catholic. But in this and future elections, I'll lake a hard, second look at a Catholic before voting for him. I feel about a Roman Catholic for Fiesident much as I do about a professional military man for that office. *< Whether General Eisenhower, a professional sol dier, has made a good or a poor President it is much too early to say > Both are conditioned by authoritarian philosophies ? the decisions come down from the top. to (^accepted and obeyed without question. Theo retically at least, that is in direct opp:sition to the democratic con cept. where decisions come up from the bottom. Either a Catholic or a profes sional military man. it seems to me, has one strike ? mnybe two ? against him. But not three! His assets, as a man. and as a political leader, should be care fully balanced against that one or those two strikes. Furthermore, after a balance has been struck there, the net result should be as carefully compared with the assets vs. liabilities of his oppon ent. Kennedy's Catholicism. in short, is AN issue, but not the only issue. Nor. to my mind, is it the chief issue. If we could get away from the two conflicting extremes ? "no Catholic ever" and "only bigots -aise questions" ? if we could get (may from those attitudes. I be leve much of the emotion on this juestion would evaporate. Unfortunately. I fear that is ict likely to happen.