Sa enantaniginllised emai. Sais nikon ~| Next Door To Bryn Mawr P.O. Page Six THE COLLEGE NEWS Wednesday, January 18, 1961 HUAC Continued from Page 1, Col. 4 es; though not to convict, the Com- - mitteé has succeeded in perpetuat- ing the atmosphere of the “witch- hunt” and creating a “community of fear.” Public Pressures Illustrating the unfair tactics employed by the Committee in its examinations throughout the coun- _ try, Mr. Walters cited imstances of subpoenas being delivered to teach- ers in classrooms and lists of the accused being released to newspa- pers for publication before hear- ings were even begun, In~ such cases, he said, public pressure built up against innocent individ- uals can be tremendous, Although the National Student Association, which he was repre- senting, has passed a resolution fa- voring reform of the controversial | . committee, Mr. Waters ~ himself sees such reform as unfeasible and is personally in favor of abolition. The fact that it is individual mem- bers of the Committee who are evil, rather than the Committee itself, is, he says, no coincidence; the committee attracts a certain type of Congressman, and so even with new membership it could not change appreciably in nature. “A Bastion to Democracy” Although many Congressmen per- sonally oppose the Committee, its abolition is not immediately fore- seeable. Groups like the American Legion and Daughters of the American Revolution, who consid- er the Committee a bastion of Democrocy, hold too many votes for any Congressman to risk alien- ating them. Liberal organizations, like N. S. A. and the American Civil Liberties Union, are there- fore launching campaigns of “ed- ucation”, to encourage opponents of the HUA to write their con- gressmen letting them know of support for abolition of the com- mittee. Representative James Roosevelt is going to spearhead the attack on it by asking for a cut in its current appropriation. Such a cut would considerably cur- tail its power, and Walters strong- ly advises that Congressmen be made aware of public feeling against the HUAC, so that they fee] they can safely support this move to ‘weaken it. BEAU and BELLE Breakfast — Lunch — Dinner Late Snacks Excellent Banquet Facilities Open Seven Days Gibbs-trained college women are in demand to assist executives in every field. Write College Dean about Special Course for College Women. Ask for GIBBS GIRLS AT WORK. KATHARINE GIBBS SECRETARIAL BOSTON 16, MASS. . . 21 Marlborough Street NEW YORK 17, N.Y. . . . 230 Park Avenue MONTCLAIR, N. J. . . . 33 Plymouth Street PROVIDENCE 6, R. 1. . . _ Mallory Lecture _Continued. from. Page-1,-Col.-5 molecule will absorb light which is vibrating at idential frequencies he determined the structure, first of the chloro-substituted dimers, then of the original dimer postu- lated previously. Plotting the fre- quency of light against the per- cent absorbed.by each dimer, he found that all had similar absorp- tion peaks; therefore, that the proper structure of the original was indeed the dimer. Then Mr. Mallory proved the ex- ustence of the. sturcture he had postulated. The chloro-substitut- ed dimers are dissolved in a high- boiling-point solvent, and ‘then heated until the equilibrium reac- tion produces the momomers, When the solvent has evaported and the residual solid is examined, t is found to contain one-half dim- er and one-half of the other. What the observed, Mr. Mallory decided, was that one monomer converted to the other by passing through an intermediate which had to have the double ring dioxide structure he postulated. Thus, he proved the existence of the diox- ide compound he had suggested. It’s Not Spring Yet! Get Your Wnter Clothes At JOYCE LEWIS 839 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr Poetry Reading Continued from Page 1, Col. 2 Born in’ Urugiiay on January 16, 1884 he always retained a sort of double nationality. He often treat- ed the subject of Europe and Am- erica. His happy childhood, however, hid an ill body. His concern with the physical body and heart is translated into his poetry by a fear that everything may break when touched. This feeling leads him to avoid any extremes. He is, for example, neither really a pes- simist.nor really an optimist, M. Maurin closed the reading with a few remarks about M. Char- pier who will be visiting lecturer in French next semester, M. Char- pier is a young French poet. His early work is clearly marked by the influence of St. John Perse who recently won the Nobel Prize for literature. M. Maurin also read. from some of M. Chanpier’s poems, ~ Answers! Questions from eT 5, Col. 3 1. H. L. Mencken, The New W;-b- ster International Dictionary, 1934 2. 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