_. . - . . .. n-American Activities Committee -Its Methods and Its Mandate Sarah Lawrence Continued from Page Six cit in separating the powers of government into executive, legis- lative and judicial branches. The reasoning behind the establish- ment of a system of checks and balances as a safeguard is known to most school-children. HAT THE EXISTENCE of guilt will not be determined by the body which defines guilt, and that guilt be determined by a court and jury employing the judicial safeguards constitutionally guar- anteed is the citizen's protection against the vicissitudes of an arbi- trary government. Legislative encroachment upon the judicial branch is consequent- ly to be viewed with alarm. And the Committee's hearings are, in effect, trials. The exposure tech- nique employed by the Commit- tee has been established as evoca- * tive of economic and social retalia- tion. "Such publicity is clearly punishment," says Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black, "and the Con- stitution allows only' one way in which people can be convicted and punished. "The crime of Communism, like all others, can be punished only by court and jury after a trial with all judicial safeguards," Justice Black continues. The practical ef- fects accruing from the Commit- tee's unconstitutional encroach- ment into the judicial realm are these: The Committee is not sub- ject to the rules of fairness and impartiality to which our courts are bound. It conducts trials un- der immunities unheard of in the courts. Under the guise of a leg- islative hearing, the Committee is snot compelled to allow its witness due process of law. He need not be granted the right to counsel. He has no right to confront and cross-examine his accuser. Guilt is, often assumed through associa- NO ATTEMPT is made here to belittle, or to determine the extent of the Comhmunist menace. This is simply to say that where the intent is opposition to the ex- pansion of Communism, the means of opposition is open to question. Can this democracy sanction a committee which,- by its actions, undermines the Bill of Rights, renders the concept of separation of powers mythical thereby creating ammunition for propagandists and yet, accom- plishes nothing positive? Does it wish to utilize Communistic meth- ods in protecting itself against Communism? Many Americans have answered this question. Eleanor Roosevelt said, "Let us rid ourselves of this agent of weakness and folly." Rep. James Roosevelt (D-Calif) said, "My conviction' is that the Com- mittee is closer to being danger- ous to America in its conception than most of what it investigates. My conviction is that it is a con- tinuing discredit to the country." John Fischer, editor of Har- per's Magazine, said, "The whole record of Congressional inquiries into un-American activities indi- cates that they have done the United States far more harm than good. They have turned up re- markably few subversives who had, not already been spotted by the FBI or other security agencies. But they have furnished moun-, tains of ammunition to hostile propagandists." SUPREME COURT Justice Wil- liam Brennan said, "An inves- tigation in which the processes of law-making and law-evaluating are submerged entirely in expos- ure of individual behavior -- in adjudication, of a sort, through the exposure process-is outside the constitutional pale of Con- gressional inquiry." Justice Black said, "Ultimately all the questions in this case real- ly boil down to one-whether we as a people will try fearfully .and futilely to preserve democracy by adopting totalitarian methods, or whether in accordance with our traditions and our Constitution we will have the confidence and cour- age to be free.". The Washington Post said, "This is not congressional inquiry; it is a stultification of the in- vestigating power." The New York Times said, "For- tified by ample appropriations al- most automatically renewed each year by the House, the committee pursues its heresy hunt, endan- gering Constitutional guarantees in the process, weakening at home and abroad America's reputation as the land of the free-and all to what avail? "There are dangers to the Unit- ed States, emanating directly from Russia; but their true meaning is obscured rather than illumined by the antics of un-American activi- ties committees. For such positive suh~version as exists, the FBI is sufficient. The United States no longer needs-if it ever did need --the aimless pursuit of heresy that has led to a present total of nearly forty 'First Amendment' cases." The New York Post termed thet Committee "one of the larger ir- relevancies and indecencies of our democratic system." Increasing numbers of Ameri- cans - conservatives concerned with preservation of the integrity of the Bill of Rights, the main- tenance of separation of powers, and a government of men rather than law, as well as liberals sen- sitive to the erosion of civil liber- ties-have answered these press- ing questions in letters to their Congressmen. It remains for the House of Representatives itself to answer the question. Continued from Page Two of the innumerable men's schools indigonous to the area. THE TOWN OF Bronxville, as conservative and sedentary as the school is liberal and progres- sive is both dumbfounded and annoyed at the Sarah Lawrence segment of its population. Resi- dents are greatly relieved to see the girls depart for the weekend, clearing the air of their radical ideas on. dress and education. New York is only one half hour from Sarah Lawrence by train and the train station :nly a ten minute walk from the campus. Despite the proximity, however, many girls, especially those who have suitcases to carry, prefer to take a cab to the station than walk. Taxi service is provided by ,an agency called "Brettel" which con- sists of a fleet of black cars and black-clad chauffeurs who go out of their way to make themselves surlyhand see to it, according to Sarah Lawrence acomplaintants, that they miss as many trains as possible. The half hour train trip, they point out with quiet irony, is about equal in length to the time one waits after having called Bret- tel, assuming of course that the cab comes at all. Other paradoxes, these again sumably stemming from the com- mendable sacrifice of the material to. the intellectual, result from a refreshingly complacent attitude toward the construction work go- ing on now in the new dorms. Made of the most expensive ma- terials arid decorated in harmon- ious shades, the new fixtures being put in do not seem likely to last long. HIIE BEDROOMS in the new dorms are big, bright and beautifully wood paneled, but no one remembered to put any in- sulation in the walls and the whimpers of the girls in the next room which echo through the pa- per thin plartitions of the entire corridor while the newly applied paint peels from the walls if any- one stares at it long enough. The greatestunexplained mys- tery is an automatic washer and dryer combination in the new dor- mitory. The machines have been there since September, but as yet no one has come to install them. Last week a man who looked as though he might know how to in- stall the machines caused a great furor as he strode through the halls, but it turned out he had only come to put a new hair-dryer in the lavatory. The Sarah Lawrence girls love their school and all it stands for. None of them would leave it for the world, yet occasionally these inconveniences seem to get the best of them. EVERY NOW and then on a par- ticularly cold night, a few resi- dents of the new dormitory get a car, huddle together and despond- ently sing a few verses of the clos- est thing Sarah Lawrence has to an anthem, "The Sarah Lawrence Blues": I called Brettel 'bout an hour ago But I missed my train, they're a little slow Got the Sarah Lawrence Blues, Lord, Lord, I got the Sarah Lawrence Blues. We've all got calcium defiiciency now 'Cause Weismueller (the dieti- cian) bought a mechanical cow Got the Sarah Lawrence Blues, Lord, Lord, I got the Sarah Lawrence Blues. Well, my underwear's dirty and it won't get clean Till they plug in that Goddam wash machine Got the Sarah Lawrence Blues, Lord, Lord, I got the Sarah Lawrence Blues. MDAILY MAGAZ IN' VOL. VII Sunday, February 26, 1961 ion,. There is lack of a specific indictment. He is not protected " r YY:. against self-incrimination or dou- ble jeopardy. He is at the mercy of arbitrary legislators while being tried and punished for an offense against which there is no law. FURTHERMORE, as witnesses testify and retestify, their past beliefs, expressions or associa- tions are often judged by current standards rather than by those contemporary with the matter ex- posed. And the Committee, far from denying this role, admittedly as- cribes to it: "There are many phases of un-American activities that cannot be reached by legisla- tion or administrative action. We I believe that the Committee has shown that fearless exposure is the s answer." However, enumeration of the lack of judicial safeguards in the phenomenon of "legislative trials" is not to say that were these safe- guards incorporated there would be no objection to the concept. The term "legislative trial" in the con- text of the existing form of gov- ernment is an apparent internal contradiction. The separation of powers and the system of checks and balances contained therein constructsa governmental frame- work which cannot accommodate the "legislative trial." NOT ONLY does the Committee4 does the Committee usurp ju- dicial functions; it- is also making inroads into the executive domain.: The apprehension of criminals, and of Communists, is being le- gally and, to an extent, scientifi- cally dealt with by the police, counter - espionage agencies and, most specifically, by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The Committee, viewed pr ag matically, is valueless in the con- text of any assistance it might provide to these agencies equipped * to perform the function decently, legally and efficiently. The Com- mittee, were it legal and compati- ble with democracy, would con- stitute no more than a needless expense and a duplication in func-e two on the aisle , fi ONE IN T HE f ;. P O T L I Gam H T The gentleman here T upstaged his lady friend, capturing the first-nighters' attention with his suit, another command performance by Saffell & Bush. Saffell & Bush clothing demands the spotlight amidst elegant settings everywhere. Saffell& Bush has a certain knack with fine fabrics and a sense of style that imparts an unassuming graciousness to the wearer. All of which creates a profound difference .that wonderful difference found only in the feel of - Saffell & Bush Clothes. $6500 u :.d'" ' Ne y S : C.." ./ a t« ' .. . I' Is .,t i _ i oo , Sarah Lawrence An 1875 Scandal } There's a "WonderfJul Difference" in the Feel of Saffell & Bush Clothes. 'I AFF[LL & BUSH 310 South State 1K!'