U.S. Problems: Through A European Eye 0 li 4 . i ".. J V- . - ' . :hi : s . t V 5 1 ' , " . , " : 4 i J 4 This column I want as means of contact between the U.S. and Europe by way of a Mid-West University and Swedish University. In general I intend to bring up current topics, politics mostly maybe, but also any thing else that is worth chatting about go pc-iiaps- Wednesday, iU nAFr1 ITHMK JU AW TO flMA. fcWJT TRK TO SW ME The Right Way YDs Go Leff? Kesume diplomatic rela tions with Cuba! NATO should have a non-aggression treaty with the War saw Pact nations! We should withdraw our troops from South Viet Nam! Abolish the House Un-American Activities Committee! Re peal the McCarren Internal Security Act! Recognize East Germany! At first glance, you might suppose that these incredu lous statements came from a Young Socialist meeting. Wrong. This scene was a Berkeley, California, meet ing of Young Democrats from thirteen western States. The date was Sunday, August 18, 1963. The above resolutions were passed by these Young Democrats at this time. $ According to these radical resolutions, it appears that The Far Left" is In control of a great part of the Young Democrat organization. These "extremists" consti tute a great danger to the security and freedom of our country since ifiiey control as organization which has a strong voice in the present administration. How can this group call for negotiation leading to "normalization of diplo matic and trade relations with Cuba when less than ten days before Castro had kidnapped Cuban refugees? How can this group call for a non-aggression treaty between NATO and the Com munist Warsaw Pact Na tions, when it would serious ly weaken NATO and be come one of the greatest ap peasements since Munich? How can this group call for withdrawal of U.S. troops from South Viet Nam The Daily Nebraskan JOHN MOERTS, Trmnafflnc aditor; SITE FOVIK, new editor; STEVE SY W. SUSIE SMTTHBEKGER, GRANT PETERSON, xrruar ftaff writers; RV ASM AN. MAKV McNEFF, GARY MILLER, FRANK PARTSCH. SHARI JOHNSON, tanior taff writers; PATTY KNAPP. ARNTE GARSON. cow dtton; HAL FOSTER, photographer. MICK ROOD, mil d jt; MIKE JEF rftt'V, circulation manancr, JIM DICK, Mibacrtption lruuiuer; BILL GUN LlckS, BOB CUNNINGHAM. PETE LAGE. biulnea aauitaiite. SirtMCrtptlom ratei (3 9m eroter or 5 per rear. ,T , . Entered as aecand claa matter at the aot otiwe la I.iamln. Nabraaka. ander tbe act ol Aunuat . 1B12. Tha Daily Nebraakui I published at Room BL Nebraska Union, en Monday. Wednesdss'. Thursday, Friday by University of Nebraska students under th Jul isdiction ol the Faculty Subcommittee on Student Publications, publications shall be tree trom cen ji'Ship by the Subcommittee or any person outiude the University Members of the Nebraskan are responsible ior what tber cans to be prima. ing about, as Robert Frost said), and I want to try to bring you the views of Eur opeans. I read the most import ant European newspapers; I have friends who do like wise and we discuss. In fact I have an old-fashioned open house every Sunday evening Oct. 9, 1963 By Sfeve Stastny when doing so would crush our entire Far East de fense structure? This would result in our surrender of South Viet Nam and the rest of Southeast Asia to Com munist control. How can this group call for the abolishment of the House Un-American Activi ties Committee when it has proven itself so necessary to guard against internal Communist subversion? California GOP Chairman Cas Weinberger has termed , the YD policy statement as "dangerously irresponsible and fantastic laughable if we did not remember that this represents the thinking of a great many people actively working for the election of a Democratic U.S. Senator and more Democratic congress men and legislators." Republican National Chair man BOl Miller has chal lenged John Bailey, tbe Democratic national chair man, to explain these resolu tions to the American peo ple. Up to this moment, Mr. Bailey has remained "curi ously" silent. Instead of ranting and raving about the ex treme right, the Democrats " should tend to tbe weeds in their own back yard. Cali fornia Assembly speaker Jesse Unruh, Democrat, has shown his distaste of this weed-filled yard by stating, ' . . . I have no intention of criticizing them even though I disagree ve hemently with the content of the resolutions." I am sure that many stu dents would like to know if the YD's on this campus support the fanatical resolu tions of their Western counterparts. j- r?'. when any of my frknds wha feel like it buy a bottle of cheap Spanish wine or a package of California ra5s- ins and come up here to talk. You will get their opin ions as much as my own, and also those of my friends all over Europe, mostly former AFS-ers but also others I have met travel ing and now keep up cor respondence with. In this way I hope to be able to give you varied aspects of each problem. And there is no lack of problems'! The overall dominating one right now is the race question and not only that of the USA. The South Afri ca question will be brought up in the UN again, al though I am rather rtain that nothing will come of it The U, of S.A. says the UN has no right to meddle in the internal affairs of a member country, and the UN majority claims the gov ernment of South Africa is committing a crime against mankind and they are both right. Sweden is one of the countries almost ene mies of South Africa; we boycott all we can on the consumer level. In the liq uor stores Cap Constantia stands on a special shelf marked ""South African goods'" and everybody is self conscious about asking for it; we have had trouble with harbor workers refus ing to unload South African ships. Here in Lund the stu dent committee on the boy cott has been rather active, printing big posters that can be seen all over Southern Sweden and in Lund in al most every grocery store, listing South African goods that we should not buy. Nat urally a small country can never harm the South Afri can economy substantially mi Volvo businessmen claim that a response boy cott would hurt us much more but we have formed a strong opinion, which is worth a lot, and more and more countries are follow ing. India just decided on an official boycott, and In dia is important. The largest newspaper of Sweden was criticized re cently for running ad vertisements on South Afri can fruit, and the big strong newspaper apologized! Why is Sweden so anxious to correct the wrongs of South Africa? Honestly, I think jt is pure idealism. South African fruit is the cheapest we can get and often the only one; grapes in the winter for example. But we dont buy. We have a genuine heart-felt horror of the crimes that are com mitted down there. It may seem easy for us we dont have a Negro problem ourselves. We have it even less than other European countries (exclud ing Norway, Finland and Iceland), because we are relatively isolated. Not many tourists bother to Jul Jaffliaail"" OPEN EVENINGS FOR YOUR CONYCKIQICE Monday Thrragh Friday 9:30 tun. U J:30 p-m. Saturday 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 fM. Why Wait? Get Your Hair Cut By Appointment. 920 North 48th 434-J4H la The Hollywood Bowling Alley I j October 18th is the " "J deadline for "Rag" tfiflQs : ? AH MA,L : Subscriptions Okv 1 DA,LY NEBRASKAN a L U ' R00M 51 I If " NEBRASKA UNION J I VI y 1 UNIVERSITY of NEBRASKA . tfAs LET YOUR PARENTS j UNC0LN NEBRAS I Q,Q)r READ ALL ABOUT YOUR j I ,1 WNIVERSITTIN THE STUDENTS J per &C Pr j TIldTlk YOU1. $3 Semester School Year come here and students ev en more seldom. I remem ber very well the first time in my life I saw a Negro it was an American jazz musician; 1 was 13 years old and I thought he be haved like any foreiper, so I did what I always did to foreigners stared and tried to listen to the lang uage. Colored people visiting Sweden sometimes say we don't discriminate officially, but deep down we are the same as everybody else, we stare anfriendly-like. No wonder we tare at such dif ferent persons and no won der we dont smile. Swedes dont smile unless they have a reason. So this, I would say, is a misunderstanding. But we have similar prob lems. We have Gypsies and Laps, two odd groups of peo ple, of & different race, with their own languages, with their own very special ways of living. But they are two small groups and so special it is more of a cultural ques tion: is it worth the trouble saving their uncomfort ble ) way of living or should they be encouraged to as similate -(which they could, rather easily, I think)? Gyp sies are often called thieves; Laps are considered back ward, but they are so few that people don't stop to ask whether a person is a Gypsy or mot So the Swedes can afford to look down on racists. Lund, by the way, is the nlv town of Sweden where Negroes are a regular part of the city's looks. The nni versitv dominates Lund completely, one-fourth of the population being stu dents, and we have lots of scholarships; especial ly those which the students themselves pay for and which are given to Asians and Africans, right now IS persons on that type alone. One of my girl friends is go ing steady with a Northern Rhodcsian. Another one is married to an Indian. No one thinks bad of that But there are racists in Sweden, too, even among university students. Talking about the race ri ots in southern USA recent ly, some of the comments were: "'I guess we have to try to understand them, civil war and everything. Poor stupids. Just Arrived! H. I. S. Corduroy Jeans The Jeans You ve Been Asking For! STREET FLOOR Will. i . I ill "Cannot help thinking of what happens to those stu dents after they get in to their schools escorted by police. What a gay life! They certainly have some- . thing to give their life for though, something to fight for." "It seems to me they would not have to make such a big deal out of it. They have their own uni versities." "Who they? Do yon want to divide humanity into arti ficial groups? Are you a racist?" "Of course not. But it does not seem to be worth all the tearshed. Sooner or later integration would come naturally." "Would it? All he people teach their children hatred and fear. And in South Afri ca the development now goes in the other direction." "And you would have to take the consequences. Dif ferent universities, differ ent types of general educa tion, different types of peo ple. So that way the actual differences would grow!" "That is another thing. What do you say, Britt Marie, you have been there?" "Not in the South." "Is that so different?" "I once had an offer to go to the USA on a very Veil paid job but I would not ac cept for anything, Ameri cans don't know how to en joy life." i(Spaniard) : I ft mp" - ' ; I i 1 COKD HOC 40 M H j 11 23jB-- The Daily Nebraskan has added a Swedish col- BSttSlSe T& 21-yearld Spanish major at the of Lund, in Sweden, is the new add-on. Miss Thuren describes herself as 121 American becausl she spent 1 of her 21 years m Los Angeles, California, as an ex- change student in the American new ser vice program. Miss Thuren returned to her native country with very pro-American feelings, but when she encountered anti American attitudes she became very confused. Now she reflects on our c ountry as "a strange country of dreams, a country of incredible successes and cruel disappoint ments, the hope of the future and also very dangerous." Included in Miss Thuren's forthcoming columns will be topics such as Swedish and European attitudes to ward political situa tions, modem race problems, sex, and others. "Californians do, I think" (me) ""On, come on, always California!" There I had better stop. My coming back to Cali- "a" ( J OPEN 10 cm. DAILY I JfcM fc f mill BRITT-MARIE THUREN fornian topics all the tima may not be any more pop. alar in Nebraska than it is in Sweden. That might al so be a clue to why I al- continued a page 3 fJiajHII-.'v-womi ' X -