- w ' 1 .xyai',lw'IIB,lj CHRISTIANITY and fcX The Christian View of Morality and Marriage to be discussed at weekend conference, Polk, Nebraska October 23-25 For information, fill out and send to: Bob Pohlman, Selleck 5215 NAME - 1 k II MM M I (I HE ADDRESS Sponsored by Inter Varsity Christian Fellowihip 8 2 1 1 n Si if '-'. if; I' 1' 9 ;4 V Page 2 ' Wednesday, October 14, 1964 iiiiiiiiiiiiniiiwiwiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiw Good Heavens RAM Council took the bull by the horns Monday and considered a motion to investigate the possibility of allow-' ing visiting hours during which women would be allowed in men's rooms. The first thought is, "Good Heavens, what do they need them in their rooms for?" A negative reaction. But just where are the residents of Selleck Quadrangle to take their girls? Fraternities and sororities have living rooms, Cather Hall has a lounge with a homey atmosphere, television and other facilities. There is a limited amount of privacy in all of these places. But Selleck Quad has only a cold, impersonal hall at the entrance, and an equally cold, impersonal television lounge in the basement usually occupied to capacity by boistrous men of the Quad. There are small lounges in each hall containing two chairs, a table and again the impersonal atmosphere. They are also cold and noisy. Women in the rooms might not be the best answer, but lacking other facilities, it may be the only answer. The visiting hours may also give men encouragement to socialize with women on the campus more. Dorm per sons do not have the opportunity at the beginning of the school year to meet other persons that the frat men have. If the men know that they have a place where they may entertain a young lady, a place where they may exchange common interests in a home atmosphere, they would be able to enjoy more fully the social graces, which should be considered a part of the development of the total student. At least it is a proposal worth considering. SUSAN SMITHBERGER Hlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll'.llllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllH mmm rnmm Passing Through 1 Time Fleein9 W W 5 Dear Krlitnr! What engenders extrem ist political behavior among college students in times of general political and social stress? Surely extensive po litical extremism occurs among college students dur ing those periods when the old order is being chal lenged and perhaps even being displaced when ra pid change causes wide spread dissatisfaction with the status quo. A notable example of po litical extremism among college students occurred during the 1930's when many were attracted to the ban ner of the Communist Par ty or to fellow-travelling or ganizations closely identi fied with the party line. Of course, the environmental crisis of the age was the Great Depression. To many young people it stood to reason that in times of extreme difficulty the proper response was some form of political ex tremism. The student ex tremism of the Thirties ex aggerated the predominant adult commitment which at that time was to the mod erate liberalism of the New Deal the moderate liberal ism of Franklin Roosevelt or George Norris. Had the adult population been committed to moder ate conservatism it follows that the students would have tended to political reaction. What kinds of students were attracted to left-wing radicalism in the Thirties? What motives led them into the way-out movements of the day? Of course, a smail percentage of the movement was made up of those who found excitement and en thusiasm in the enterprise and joined just for the fun of it. But certainly the great majority was composed of those who were especially confused and frightened by the complexities around them and who found appar ently adequate solutions to political and social prob lems in the deceptively sim ple programs of the radical left. Extremist groups al ways pose simplistic solu tions to complex problems. A third element small in number but exceedingly dangerous was those who lusted for power power for the sake of power and who latched on to radicalism as a vehicle for its acquisi tion. Most student manipu lators of this sort were cer tainly authoritarians and would have established a dictatorial regime, had they managed to seize power through radical politics. Finally, of course, many members of radical organi zation simply didn't realize what they were getting into. They thought that being in the Young Communist League or something of the sort was like being in the student YMCA or the Young Republicans just another activity. In our own time we are confronted by a quite paral lel form of student extrem ismthis time of a right reactionary stripe. Gone are the left-wing radicals of yore and in their places one finds right-wing reac tionaries. For these students the stimulus ' to extremes has been the Cold War. The responsible political phe nomi 'on among the adult population has been moder ate conservatism repre sented ably by Lyndon B. Johnson and Kenneth Keat ing. The moderation of the re sponsibles is distorted into right extremism by the stu dent echelon. One wonders if the motives which once led students into the radical movements of the Thirties are not the same motives which now lead students into the reactionary move ments of the Sixties. Perhaps the Birchite stu dent of today would have been a Young Communist in the Thirties. Is it a crav ing for excitement, or a re sponse to fear, or an urge to power, or just plain care lessness which attracts stu dents to collegiate right ex tremism today? I conclude on an opti mistic note. Not surprising ly, most of those students who found a temporary home in left-wing radical ism during the Thirties turned into responsible mod erates during the Fifties and Sixties. Many of them function as parents of the present stu dent generation. It seems highly probably that a dom inant majority of those stu dents who now flirt with right-wing reaction will be the responsible moderates of the Eighties the sup porters of those who then will fill the roles previously held by a Wendell Willkie or a John F. Kennedy. Perhaps we have here some additional support for that old adage that the more things change, the more they remain the same. DAVID F. TRASK Dear Editor: Time is running out for the liberals and the screams of panic are heard across the campus. Climbing out of their shells, they are quick to air their unenlightened opinions. But the loud liberals of the Democratic Party have shown by their highly "in tellectual" criticisms that they have no political con cept, no convictions and no conscience to write about. Prof. T r a s k, addressing the meeting of the Young Democrats, came up w i t h some of the most fantastic drivel ever concocted. In surely twisted semantics Mr. Trask attacked Senator Goldwater as being, among other things, "anti-intellectual." Since he is speaking as a Democrat, he is in fact in tellectually defending infla tionary deficit spending. He is intellectually defending bailing out Communism. He is intellectually defending the slide into socialism, which is incompatable with the c o n c e p t of Freedom. Standing in defense of all this, Mr. Trask steps furth er out on that dead tree's limb by saying "But in reality Goldwater as a man is ignorant and anti-intellectual." Was Mr. Trask referring to the expediancy of declar ing Communism the enemy of Freedom in the world? of the expediancy of nam ing victory the goal of the war in Viet Nam? of the ex pediancy of the govern ment's non-intervention into the laws of economics? Was Mr. Trask branding as ig norant and intellectual the refusal to unilaterally dis arm this nation in the face of the enemy? The answer to all this is probably yes, but that doesn't matter right now. Mr. Trask also wishes to indict Senator Goldwater with not thinking about people. However, a totally isolated mind could miss Barry Goldwater's call for the development of the whole man. It is Mr. Trask who is unaware of the deli cacy and scope of the whole man. Vic Aufdemberge Traffic Troubles Dear Editor: I am a freshman living in Piper Hall. Just a moment ago, I saw a car run into the one in front of it. The first car had to stop suddenly for some students crossing the street. Perhaps the second car was going too fast or maybe the students decided to cross the street without waiting. At any rate, I think the crosswalks at 16th and S streets should have a light or a "walk-wait" light or both. The haphazard crossing of 16th street is a hazard to both the students and the drivers. I sincerely hope something can be done about it. Sincerely, Carol Mudgett TODAY! . 140 NO. I3TH . 412-1485 GUNNFDRD NANCY M OPEN 12:45 $1 TIL 6! SUSPENSE SETTLES IN AS YOU PROBE THE LIFE OF A HIGH-FLYING AIRLINE PILOTI jf"- ITS 10 TUB WE NEVER CLOSE All Cigarettes DIVIDEND BONDED GAS 16th b P Sts. Downtown Lincoln Starring IN PERSON mtm rivers , CHAD 0 JEREMY STEWAIT CLYOC ', -usmwrs sor " sbmmep " RO&T&E DAYTORIAS . e.T.a- ' piut SPGCtAL WEST STMM JHE VENTURES TIIURS. rVICIIT OCT. 15th Pershing Municipal Auditorium 7:30-10:00 P.M. 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