tl19641030-000 "Johnson Over Goldwater, 5 to 2 Homecoming Court Plus Josh White, Equals Fun CLORIA MONACELLI, '64 Homecoming Picture, on page 4. Towson's Annual Homecoming ""eekend begins next Friday fivenntg, November 6, with a ow.- �11re on the athletic field at 7:30, .Owed at 8:30 by a jam session the gym featuring The Flamin-voe8. At 11:30 on Saturday morn- Queen Gloria Monacelli will honored with her court at t,he traditional Queens Luncheon the cafeteria. f�The usual float prade is slated ;"" gather at 1:30 Saturday on 1,41e gYrn parking lot prior to its way through the 1%vsno area. Georgetown 'Sty will be here at 230 to ,74).aeld the Tigers on the soccer . Long Saturday activities con- . iiucle with the Homecoming ance � from 9 'til 12 in the gym .,,%:ith the men of Note providing �qu aie. shil�rnecoming Weekend ends on Ii7htklay, November 7, with Josh Si-ehitke's 3 o'clock concert in aens Hall Auditorium fol- C,Ieu by a reception in the -""ege Centre. touj�Lsh White served a long, the-ku aPprenticeship learning 44-d tneaning of life and death th' how to interpret them r�Ngh song. Yet no one taught tau' "" ,11�Nv to sing and no one t him how to play tar. the Nijet0:41,4 father pastored a small f"",Odist. Church in Greenville, Wh-sul Carolina and his mother Ftr e.a 'leading singer in the con-or 7;:tion. They named the fifth eigth children Joshua. 14; ""le Biblical warrior. Yttlph('n Josh was but seven Ivithil Old, he found a blind inan guitar Standing on a Queen�See story and busy street corner, afraid to brave the traffic alone. Josh helped the old man across the street and the itinerant evange-list offered to take the child along on his travels. Josh's par-ents agreed to let him go, and during the next seven years, you might have seen Josh White in almost any town between the Atlantic Coast and the Missis-sippi River, one hand upon the sleeve of his blind master to guide him through the crowds. (Continued on Page s) 5 If the political tendencies of Towson's students have any re-lation to the national feeling, President Johnson and Hubert Humphrey should easily walk off with the Presidential election on Tuesday by an almost 3 to 1 margin. Balloting on Monday and Tues-day in Tower Light's ""Mock elec-tion"" gave the following results: Johnson: 1076 Goldwater: 411 Johnson's total vote was ap-proximately 66c,, of the total number of votes cast. The 1502 ballots that were marked repre-sented about a 60c,', student turnout. In the other areas, Josenh D. Tydings soundly defeated J. Glenn Beall 1,164 to 352, or by better than a 3-1 ratio. In the New York Senate con-test, Robert Kennedy came out on top of Kenneth Keating by a 21/2 to 1 ratio, Kennedy gather-ing 940 votes to Keating's 396. On the subject of Maryland public accomodations law. the vote was 998 in favor, 320 against, or a little better than a 3-1 ratio. The vote of 984 to 408 in favor of the feredal civil rights legislation was about a 2 to 1 ratio. WBAL-TV gave the election some coverage on its 7 o'clock report on Tuesday evening. corn-plete with films of the Stephens Hall balloting as well as results. The News American was also to have included a story in their Wednesday edition. Write-in votes for the Presi-dency included four each for Henry Cabot Lodge and Gov. George Wallace; three for Ric-hard Nixon; two each for Rocke-feller and Scranton; And one each for Margaret Chase Smith, George Romney, and Milton Eisenhower. The election committee thanks all students who participated for their cooperation in voting in the election. %.*:...�-.4% � ��:� WEEKLY `C. The Towson State College Weekly Towson, Maryland Vol. XVII, No. 6 October 30, 196-1 DONALD N. EMBINDER Embinder Fills New Post: 1st President's Assist. Donald N. Embinder, Towson's new public relations adminis-trator, commented that the most impressive aspect of Towson College, at least from his view-point as a new administrator, was the beauty of our campus. He thinks that this factor may be one of his most useful aids in trying to put a favorable im-age of the college in the minds of the public. Embinder's duties in the newly created post of first assistant to the President include any printed communications to the public, the development of public relations, and the solving of the parking problem. Embinder received a BA in economics from Hunter College, after study at the University of Rochester. Ile then studied for and got a Masters degree in Business Administration from the Wharton School of Business and the University of Pennsyl-vania. He has taught at La Salle College and at the University of Pennsylvania, and has been a PR man for the last five years. In college, Embinder was a letter man in football, baseball, soccer, and tennis. He places great emphasis on the necessity of an enlarged sports program as a cure for some of Towson's presteige ills. The twenty-nine year old bachelor lives at My Lady's Manor in Monkton, and says that he enjoys golf, fishing, and breeding irish setters. SGA Votes Yes On Budget $36,604. Apportioned As announced at Tuesday afternoon's SGA Senate meet-ing, a constitutional convention has been called for November 10, at 3:30 in the Library For-um for the purpose of adopting a new SGA constitution. All students, as members of the Student Government Associa-tion, are invited to attend. Any student interested in obtaining a copy af the new constitution should contact Michael Gordon, SGA Parliamentarian, in the. SGA office. In other Senate business, Shar-on Mulgrew. SGA Social Chair-man, announced that the follow-ing had been chosen as possible bands for the Sweetheart Dance in February: in order of prefer-ence, Maynard Ferguson, Llyod Price, Duke Ellington, Lester Lanin, and Lionel Hampton. One of these groups will be con-tracted. The freshmen elections will be held on November 9 and 10. In the event of a run-off, No-vember 11 will be used for the tie-breaking bolloting. Also presented to the Senate for its approval was the follow-ing SGA budget for the Novem-ber 1, 1964 to February 28. 1965 budget period. The budget was passed as stands with the single addition of $60 to the College Centre Board's request for a homecoming float and concession. The budget was passed in toto only after a lengthy debate over the Men's Choral Associa-tion request for $1280.00, $1200.00 of which is to be used tuxedos for use at concerts. for the purpose of purchasing It was the opinion of some senators that the amount was excessive. However, the majori-ty of the Senate voted for it and the money was allocated. Straw Vote Goes To LBJ CAMPAIGN, Ill. (CPS)� Lyndon Johnson beat Barry Goldwater by a margin of nearly 2 to 1 in mock elections held on the campuses of five Big Ten universities. Johnson was preferred by 14,111 students at the five schools, while Goldwater was the choice of 7,553. The straw vote was a striking reversal of the 1960 Big Ten mock election, which saw Richard Nixon trounce John Kennedy 21,034 to 15,058. Five schools�Michigan State, Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, and Northwestern� participated in the balloting. A sixth, Indiana, also took part, but the student council decided not to count the ballots because of ""election ir-rugularities."" Two other cam-puses� Ohio State and Wiscon-sin� will vote later in the month. Johnson piled up his biggest lead at Michigan State. where 9,432 students took part in the voting. The President got 6,610 votes to Goldwater's 2.822. The campus also overwhelmingly fa-vored the re-election of George Romney as Governor of Michi-gan. Romney, who has refused to endorse Goldwater. topped his Democratic rival, Neil Staebler, 6,824 to 1,299. Goldwater came closest to victory at Northwestern. where Johnson edged him out by a scant 98 votes 1,270 to 1,172. The only (Continued on Page 6) "