SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1956 THE MICHIGAN DAILV PAGE TTIREE SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1956 TIER IIUCIEIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE NOT DEAD YET: Feikens Calls for More Ex-LYL Mu iemers Stl I L' Effort at 'Local Level' Maintain Minor Influence (COntinued from Page ) 4 i MUSKET PRESENTS BRIGADOON G I MONDAY and TUES7DAY (Continued from Page 1) Here at the University, there is currently an attempt to orga- nize a Socialist Club, although there has been no evidence so far that this group has any con- nection with either the LYL or the Party. The two kinds of people who! sent here from other places and those who become interested af: ter they get here-will continue to gain as much influence in res- pectable student groups as they can. They will continue to attempt bringing Communist speakers to campus under the banner of free speech, while the Lectures Com- mittee will continue to disappoint them, if they ever get as far asI the Lecture Committee again. Yet they will probably never gain any sizeable following. Even at .the University of Wisconsin, where the LYL was a recognized student organization, Leroy Lu- berg, assistant to the president at U-W, has said, "None of us felt the LYL had any notable follow- ing on this campus." Limits To Freedoms Probably the most convincing explanation for this is that, de- spite the abuses of Congressional investigating committees, even liberals are now accepting the proposition that there are limits to every freedom. including that of speech, arid that a democracy is not obliged to fan the fires of its own destruction. Neither the Communist Party nor the LYL has ever shown much real concern for any civil liber- ties other than their own. But there has been a preponderence of evidence indicating that, if they ever gained power here, they would still be concerned only with their own. Still, the LYL has served a worthwhile purpose on the cam- pus. For one thing, it gave stu- dents an opportunity to witness their activity, to get an idea of how it operates and what it is attempting to accomplish. Forced Students At the same time, it has faced students with . the problem of finding the right balance be-3 tween freedom and security on a local tangible basis. And students are probably better off for it. Many who were avid defenders of the Party's freedom when Con-f gressional committees made it a national issue, needed only to watch the LYL operate on the campus in order to cool down aI bit. Also, the LYL, despite whatf can and has been said against, it, has been instrumental in bi'ing- ing, continuing and exaggerating some local issues before the stu- dent body. Its excitability on the racial discrimination problem, for instance, has probably made some contribution to the present'con- cern of some student organiza- tions for it, even if only to avoid letting the LYL dominate the field. Radical groups have always been constructive in that they spur otherwise apathetic people to improvement in order to eliminate the dissatisfaction on which the radical groups feed, In retrospect, the LYL has not been a bad thing for the Uni- versity, although troublesome from time to time, and certainly inter- esting until last year. Its biggest fault was that it remained a sec- ret group, which captured every- one's suspicion, especially mine. For students ought to know the. facts about an organization which attepts or attempted to influence them-that's why this series. And he is not dubious about thej And he sees the .party as well- Vice-President's abilities as a vote- endowed with younger men, in- getter. He cites the Eisenhower- cluding Vice-President Richard M. Nixon victory margin of nearly ten Nixon, former New York Governor million votes and concludes, "by Thomas Dewey "who is still malli tes a olude "by: young man." Interior Secretary golly, if that's holding the ticket Fred Seaton, Deputy Attorney back I'd like to see more of it. General William Rogers, Ohio's "All I can do is look at election governor-elect William O'Neill; and statistics. I saw no evidence in Governor William Stratton of Illi- 1952 or 1956 that independent nois, although "I don't know about voters were scared away fromj Stratton. He's got some difficulties Nixon." with scandals in his administra- tion." Sees Young Men German' Group And in Michigan, younger men U are not lacking. "We sent four new guys to Congress all under 40." andT o ost aust young incumbent Congressman Gerald Ford he calls "an inter- The Deutsche Buhne of Detroit esting, scintillating personality." will present Part One of the play Another young man in the party, "Faust", by Johann Wolfgang von John Feikens, is planning to retire, Goethe, on Dec. 4 at the Ann however, though he hastens to add Arbor High School Auditorium. "as state chairman." He says he In cooperation with the local does not consider himself an "in- Deutscher Verin, the classic work dispensable man," and "two terms will be performed in the original are enough for any man." German. The .tragedy has been Having just finished one election, done in Detroit earlier this year. Feikens is "just not ready. for the next one" and is not anxious to discuss possible candidates. But Pirof. To Address any one of the men he mentioned would be a Presidential possibility.! Ann Arbor Church he said. i Sees Nixon Prof. Preston Slosson of the Vice-President Nixon is the history department will speak at strongest possibility. "His whole 10 a.m. today at the First Uni- position vis-a-vis the Republican tarian Church. party and the whole United States"' He will talk about "An Interpre- makes him the man to watch, tation of the Election Results" to Feikens said. an adult discussion group. 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