became public last year, are still consider- ing options. A decision, already postponed a year, is now scheduled for this fall, after several committees have reviewed the is- sues. Meanwhile, university president H. Keith H. Brodie has taken to reassuringly calling the forest a "sacred trust," which makes Save the Forest activists very proud. "It doesn't seem like all of these committees would have been working so extensively if we hadn't gotten up and said, 'Whoa, you need to think again'," says Nock. At the University of Texas at Austin, the Earth First! club is a small but vocal arm of a nationwide group trying to preserve na- ture and animals. A current project re- volves around the black-capped vireo, a protected species of bird whose nesting and mating areas are threatened by develop- ers, according to Earth First! members. The group also recently protested the an- nual "rattlesnake roundups" in nearby towns. These charity fund-raisers feature fried rattlesnake meat and a demonstra- tion in which a handler is zipped into a sleeping bag with 20 snakes and tries to emerge unbitten-usually successfully. "Everything is centered around the cap- ture, torture and killing of rattlesnakes," says Barbara Dugelby, state coordinator for Earth First! and a 1987 Texas graduate. Members locked themselves to a roundup fence and to two poles holding a banner which read, "Animal torture is no way to run a charity." The roundup, however, went on as scheduled. CHRISTOPHER M. BELLITTO with NANCY KLINGENER inAmherst, JOSEPH GALARNEAUin Raleigh, LAUREEN LAZAROVICI in LosAngeles, MICHAELMILSTEINinDurham, ADAM NAJBERG in Brunswick, STEVEN ELZER in Santa Barbara, M I C H A E L M E H L E in Boulder, JAMES CAGE in Atlanta, ELLEN WILLIAMS in Austin and bureau reports COURTESY OF THE PEACE CORPS Once, a paradigm for the socially concious student: Peace Corpsman in Botswana Activism Lives, But Quietly M ore than half of all college students say they feel strongly enough about a political issue to risk arrest at a demonstration. But fewer than one in five has ever participated in a protest. And not many students look with envy on the activist days of the '60s. Can you imagine feeling so strong- ly about a political issue that you would participate in a protest which put you at risk of being arrest- ed and booked by the police? 54% Yes 40% No Have you ever participated in a po- litical protest? 17% Yes 83% No Political protest and activism were, in general, far more common in the 1960s. Does this make you wish you could have been in college during the '60s? 17% Yes 79% No Do you think that, in general, you are more likely to participate in a political protest now than when you were in high school? Compared with your parents' gen- eration, do you think college stu- dents today are more or less in- volved in volunteer activities? 26% More 36% Less 31% Same Have you ever considered joining the Peace Corps, Vista or some oth- er full-time volunteer program af- ter finishing college? 31%Yes 66% No Which of these reasons comes closest to why you do volun- teer work? 57% Want to do something useful; help others; do good deeds for others 31% Enjoy doing work; feel needed 63% Yes 34% No How do you feel about the amount of government spending on social- welfare programs, such things as care for the homeless, for children of poverty, for the elderly? 11 % Too much 56% Too little 24% About right amount Are you involved in any charity or social-service activities such as working in a soup kitchen, helping retarded children, working in a hospital? 28% Want to learn and get experience; work experience; help get a job 25% Have an interest in the activity or work 15% Religious concerns Which of these reasons comes closest to why you do not do any volunteer work on a regular basis? 72% Too busy; don't have the time 16% No one ever asked me; no one approached me 13% Can't afford to; have to earn money 12% Not interested; in school to study (MULTIPLE ANSWERS ACCEPTED. For this NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS Poll, The Gallup Organi- cation conducted 542 face-to-face interviews with college students sn 100 campuses nationwide during the period Nov. 2-13,1987. The margin of error is plus or minus 6 points. "Don't know" responses are eliminated. The NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS Poll © 1988 by NEWSWEEK, Inc. J 35% Yes 65% No LOU JOST Saving snakes: Student at Texas roundup 30 NEWSWEEKONCAMPUS i MAY 1988