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This is a fast me ssage
unl ess its deferred char~
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WE TERN UNION
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PRES IO CNT
LT _Intcrnnrional
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MAYOR OF ATLANTA GA
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CeTERE RN I TOYNI
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unless

 

   
 

 
  

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W. FP. MARSHALL T HRY] ] ) 2 (IR RA M R. W. McFALL
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535A | EST SEP 8 66 AA23E ppols aot
(4)cTa081

CT LLB4? NL PD RICHMOND VIR 7
MAYOR OF ATLANTA GA

ATLA
DEAR MAYOR I HOPE YOU AD MR LYNDON B JOHNSON ARE COMPLETELY

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•
san Fr ancisco, Cali f orni a ,
September 7, 1966
Mayor I van Allen, Jr . ,
City Hal l ,
Atlant a, Georgia.
Mayor Allen :
}
You have been play ing
"f ootsies •• wi t h t he Negroes possi bly in an
effort to gain nationwide accla im a s thei r
champion in one of the South ' s l argest citie s.
In fact, it appear s that you were on the verge
of becoming a renegade to t he white r ace .
..
It i s quite evident that y ou
have l i t tle or no knowledge of t he Negroes ' basic
char acter which has t raits reaching back t o t he
j ungl e t r ibal code . They are pr epared, at a
moment's whim, t o butcher every white man, woman,
and child.
You made of yourself a most
ridiculous figure running about in the crowd
shouting for the darkies to 11 go home" while a
pack of than were following on your heels advising them to stay put and shout "pol ice brutality11 .
t •
I
M ack H . Jones
520 Jones Street
San Francisco
California 94102
It is too bad that the Negroes,
after toppling you off the top of the car, didn ' t
initiate you into some of the tribal rites their
ancestors inflict upon helpless captives.
I think that a good many of the white people to
whom you have rendered so many disservices would
hearti~ approve of you being a sacrificial
victim of your beloved blacks. Perhaps you
should surrender yourself to "Black Power " and
let them make of you a martyr. Think of the
massive publicity you would receive - - your name
would go down in history!
NOT very truly yours,
143.215.248.55 o
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Mack H. J o ~ ~
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Mack H . Jones
520 Jones Street
San Francisco
California 94102
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              <text> 

Mack H. Jones
520 Jones Street
San Francisco

California

94102

San Francisco, California,

September 7, 1966

Mayor Ivan Allen, Jr.,
City Hall,
Atlanta, Georgia.

Mayor Allen:

You have been playing
'footsies" with the Negroes possibly in an
effort to gain nationwide acclaim as their
champion in one of the South's largest cities.
In fact, it appears that you were on the verge
of becoming a renegade to the white race.

It is quite evident that you
have little or no knowledge of the Negroes! basic
character which has traits reaching back to the
jungle tribal code. They are prepared, at a
moment's whim, to butcher every white man, woman,
and child.

You made of yourself a most
ridiculous figure running about in the crowd
shouting for the darkies to "go home" while a
pack of them were following on your heels ad-
vising them to stay put and shout "police bru-
tality".

It is too bad that the Negroes,
after toppling you off the top of the car, didn't
initiate you into some of the tribal rites their
ancestors inflict upon helpless captives.

I think that a good many of the white people to
whom you have rendered so many disservices would
heartily approve of you being a sacrificial
victim of your beloved blacks. Perhaps you
should surrender yourself to "Black Power" and
let them make of you a martyr. Think of the
massive publicity you would receive -—-- your name
would go down in history!

NOT very truly yours,

ak We

3 -
Mack H. di :
  

Mack H. Jones On AIS ES
520 Jones Street

San Francisco
California 94102

   

«CORREO AEREO+

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Mayor Ivan Allen, Jr.,
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ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
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                  <elementText elementTextId="37520">
                    <text>N
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law? WMI loen? Do you want country, ln sp!te. of all tis ln• Anyone will have lo admit Iba~
Dear Sir:
Misguidedly some ·of these to revert to savagery? There ls equalities by t.Qday's standards it took a great deal of moral
If there was ever a race of white
peopl~
thought that no other answer. Either there is is still the 'country of the mo courage in this man ·who would
people in the history of man blacks living ~ savages and as law or there is savagery!
individual freedom and thereb !risk political defeat rather than
that should be thankfui°that their canni~ls, were animals, and so now you have set your• the best country 1n which to live 1surrender a shredofprinciple.
selves on a path of violence to then an e~ort on the part o
Mr. Bernard Baruch's father,
lot 1n life was improved by the they took them as slaves.
people of another race it is the Perhaps, that is the best thing take what you have been led that 0 1\8 will be made to pr Dr. Simon Baruch, addressing
American Negro,
that could have happened
to to believe by your power-hungry serve his po~ition 1n the world. the convention of the s. c. MedSome 250 years ago they were them, for otherwise, they, as a leaders belongs to you.
fter all, th.ere ls no other place cal Society, of which he was
savages in the jungles of Africa. race would never have known The first question of course is to go.
• resident, in 1873, quoted an ti
There were other civilizations the benefits of this great coun• how can you say that it belongs .
J. O. Allen -Arabian sage: "What good com- i
that had prospered on lands th_at try,
to you? Did you build it? Could
Orangeburg, S. C. es from All's sword, if it be
were far less fair to the provis- My colored friends, while your you build it? Could you run it?
sheathe~; What ~od from Sadi's
-ion of a livelihood for man than ancestors were savages and no It's just that simple; if you canThe Principles
_tongue, if lt be silent."
If we do not adhere to the printhe luscious and arable lands of doubt doing what was right by not answer yes to all three
Africa. Yet, while civilizl).tion their customs of the day, eating questions then the final question Dear.Sir:
ciple~, of this man, we can welll
was following its tortuous pace each other, the forefathers of is "How would you live • that It 1s most interesting to read say; Here lies a decent people
1n these countries, th.e savages this country were
preparing ls, if you had to depend on your- the statement that William M. .who wanted love, not empire,
- - - - - - - - - - - - those great documents of hu- self?"
Garrett, a Democratic candidate and got neither; who tried to
.·,
•••
man liberty, the Declaration of If you had no law as your for. the office of state treasurer, trade power for popularity and
Independence, the Constitution, . eaders are now tea~hlng you, sent to Governor McNair and lost both. "
and the Bill Of Rights.
do you intend to live in sava- ·the press on Friday. Garrett
We might also say that here ~
Does that mean anything to .gery? Shall you have cannibal· _urged the governor to use ev- lies a nation of advertisers who ,
you? Cannot you understand that ism? Maybe that is the way you ery means within your power to ·knew how to change the coothere is a path of history, the Intend to live, for · as long as _allow our Republican opposition _sumers taste in cigarettes, but
history of man's efforts to find the strong last. alter you have to I?lace a nominee on the gen- were themselves manipulated cm
a basis of law whereby one can jestroyed everything as you eral election ballot. Can we, as .all issues that really mattered
live in peace with the other? did in watts and ar~ doing in Democrats, say 'the people' had Ito their salvation.
Cannot you understand that the 'Chicago.
-an opportunity to choose? I feel , Every voter would do well to
documents mentioned above are Rather than face such a dis- every voter should be afforded read and reread this statement,
the nearest to perfection that heartening outlook 1 should treedom of choice at the polls." lt is not the statement of a pohave ever been achieved? Do think that it would 'be wise to be Prior to this statement we litician, but of a man of true l
1you not understand that to de- thankful for the prlviledge that have had no Wade Hampton, principle.
stroy these laws is to destroy you have to live 1n this great Ben Tillman, Cole Elease or
G. A. White
the very source of those things country • the only country 1n the "Cotton Ed" Smith to voice the
Spartanburg, S. C.
you say that you want • even ·world where a man has a freethose things that you are now dom of choice


&gt;eglnning to demand as belong· •


·
- :, - - - Ing to you.
True, the implementation of
the law is not perfect. There
are many Instances where people of all colors have been dealt
unfairly by the law - also by
ee men who administered the
egroes
ace .
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              <text>of
‘he

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puilt
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, the
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Negroes’ Place

Dear Sir:

If there was ever a race of
people in the history of man
that should be thankful that their
lot in life was improved by the
people of another race it is the
American Negro.

Some 250 years ago they were
savages in the jungles of Africa.
There were other civilizations
that had prospered on lands that
were far less fair to the provis-
on of a livelihood for man than
the luscious and arable lands of
Africa. Yet, while civilization
was following its tortuous pace
in these countries, the savages

 

 

*rett

   

fin the Dark Continent were prac-
ticing cannibalism.

Misguidedly, some of these
white people, thought that
blacks, living as savages and as
cannibals, were animals, and
they took them as slaves,

Perhaps, that is the best thing
that could have happened to
them, for otherwise, they, as a
race would never have known
ne benefits of this great coun-

y.

My colored friends, while your
ancestors were savages and no
doubt doing what was right by
their customs of the day, eating
each other, the forefathers of
this country were preparing
those great documents of hu-

man liberty, the Declaration of).

Independence, the Constitution,
and the Bill Of Rights,

Does that mean anything to
you? Cannot you understand that
there is a path of history, the
history of man’s efforts to find
a basis of law whereby one can
live in peace with the other?
Cannot you understand that the
documents mentioned above are
the nearest to perfection that
have ever been achieved? Do
you not understand that to de-
stroy these laws is to destroy
the very source of those things
you say that you want - even
those things that you are now
oeginning to demand as belong-
Ing to you.

True, the implementation of

the law is not perfect, There
are many instances where peo-
ple of all colors have been dealt
unfairly by the law — also by

The Readers’ Forum

law. But, what if there were no
law? What then? Do you want
to revert to savagery? There is

law or there is savagery]

So now you have set yours
selves on a path of violence to
take what you have been led
to believe by your power-hungry
leaders belongs to you.

The first question of course is

to you? Did you build it? Could
you build it? Could you run it?
Its just that simple; if you can-
not answer yes to all _ three
questions then the final quesHon
is “How would you live - that
is, if you had to depend on your-
self?”’

If you had no law, as your
Jeaders are now teaching you,
do you intend to live in sava-
gery? Shall you have cannibal-
ism? Maybe that is the way you
intend to live, for-as long as
the strong last, after you have
destroyed everything, as you
did in Watts and are doing in
Chicago.

Rather than face such a dis-
heartening outlook, I should
think that it would be wise to be
thankful for the priviledge that
you have to live in this great
country - the only country in the
world where a man has a free-|

no other answer, Either there isj{s still the country of the mo

how can you say that it belongs):

   

Once one recognizes that this
country, in spite of all its in-
equalities by today’s standards,

individual freedom and there
the best country in which to live
then an effort on the part o:
that one will be made to pr
serve his position in the world,
fter all, there is no other place
to go.

Orangeburg, S. C.

The Principles

Dear Sir:

It is most interesting to read
the statement that William M.
Garrett, a Democratic candidate
for. the office of state treasurer,
sent to Governor McNair and
ithe press on Friday. Garrett
urged the governor to use “‘ev-
ery means within your power to
allow our Republican opposition
to place a nominee on the gen-
eral election ballot. Can we, as
Democrats, say “the people’ had
.an opportunity to choose? I feel
every voter should be afforded
freedom of choice at the polls.’’

Prior to this statement we
have had no Wade Hampton,
Ben Tillman, Cole Blease or
“Cotton Ed’’ Smith to voice the

 

dom of choice,

 

a wrreans

 

 

 

 

- men who administered the

 
 
 

J. 0, Allen]

Gq F0lu yee F:

sentiment of the people.
Anyone will have to admit that
it took a great deal of moral
courage in this man who mag
‘risk political defeat rather than
‘surrender a shredofprinciple.
Mr, Bernard Baruch’s father, .

  
  
 

Dr, Simon Baruch, addressing
the convention of the S, C. Med-
cal Society, of which he was
resident, in 1873, quoted an
yArabian sage: ‘What good coms
es from Ali’s sword, if it be ~
sheathed; What good from Sadi’s 5
tongue, if it be silent.’’

If we do not adhere to theprine *
ciples of this man, we can well
say; ‘Here lies a decent people s
‘who wanted love, not empire, —
and got neither; who tried to \
trade power for popularity and
lost both.”’

We might also say that here :
lies a nation of advertisers who -
‘knew how to change the cone &gt;
sumers taste in cigarettes, but
‘were themselves manipulated on T
.all issues that really mattered
ito their salvation.
| Every voter would do well to
read and reread this statement,
it is not the statement of a po- .?
litician, but of a man of true ,
principle. , \-

G. A White —

 

Spartanburg, S. C,

iT APFN HOUSE TODAY 1
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              <text>J

K cated Me |. O. Bibs.
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I·
W;th Sunday Morning
Edition





Published by THE EVENING STAR NEWSPAPER CO., Washington, D. C.
I
I
i
SAMUEL H. KAUFFMANN, Chairman of the Board
CROSBY N. BOYD, President
NEWBOLD NOYES, Editor
BENJAMIN M. McKELWAY, Editorial Chairmar&gt;
A-12
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1966








Rioting In Atlanta
The most surprising thing about the
riot in Atlanta is that it should have
happened there. For Atlanta, by general
agreement, has been a model for southern cities in its race relations.
Mayor Ivan Allen Jr. has walked the
last mile in search of racial peace. He
had almost solid Negro support when
elected. He was one of the few southerners to testify in support of the 1964 civil
rights bill. He has added Negroes t o the
police force. Atlanta's schools and city
facilities are totally integrated. Many
Negroes are employed by business establishments an,d the city has sent eight
Negroes to the state legislature.
All of this counted for nothing,
however, when a suspected Negro car
thief was wounded while trying to
escape from arresting police officers.
When some 500 or more Negroes took to
the streets the mayor climbed on top of
an automobile and tried to reason with
them. He was shouted down. Taunts of
"white devil" and "black power" greeted
him. Finally the mob surged around the
car and the mayor was jarred loose from
his perch and fell to the street.
No, this didn't happen in a Birm-
ingham or a Selma. It happened in
Atlanta. Little wonder that the Rev.
Martin Luther King Sr., who lives in
Atlanta, was heard to ask: "What do
they want? The mayor came down. He
tried to speak to them and they
wouldn't listen. What do they want?"
It was a good question, but hard to
answer. For most of the members of the
mob may .n ot have known themselves
what they wanted-unless it was an
excuse to throw rocks and rant about
police brutality.
The mayor says the riot was deliberately caused by some of Stately Carmichael's SNCC henchmen, and he may be
right. For the mob began shouting "kill
the white cops" after SNCC representatives, according to the police, spread the
false word that the suspected car thief
"had been shot while h andcuffed and
that he was murdered."
Whatever may have been the case i
with the rioters, it seems clear that what
the SNCC people want is trouble, trou-,
ble, trouble. And that ts what they arr
going to get, though not 1n the for(
they want, if this sort of madness kee ,
up.
.
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              <text>Che Lvening StaP

With Sunday Merning Edition
Published by THE EVENING STAR NEWSPAPER CO., Washington, D. C.
SAMUEL H. KAUFFMANN, Chairman of the Board

CROSBY N, BOYD, President

NEWBOLD NOYES, Editor

BENJAMIN M. McKELWAY, Editorial Chairman

A-12 Ke

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1966

 

Rioting In Atlanta

The most surprising thing about the
riot in Atlanta is that it should have
happened there. For Atlanta, by general
agreement, has been a model for south-
ern cities in its race relations.

Mayor Ivan Allen Jr. has walked the
last mile in search of racial peace. He
had almost solid Negro support when
elected. He was one of the few southern-
ers to testify in support of the 1964 civil
rights bill. He has added Negroes to the
police force. Atlanta’s schools and city
facilities are totally integrated. Many
Negroes are employed by business estab-
lishments and the city has sent eight
Negroes to the state legislature.

All of this counted for nothing,
however, when a suspected Negro car
thief was wounded while trying to
escape from arresting police officers,
When some 500 or more Negroes took to
the streets the mayor climbed on top of
an automobile and tried to reason with
them. He was shouted down. Taunts of
“white devil” and “black power” greeted
him. Finally the mob surged around the
car and the mayor was jarred loose from
his perch and fell to the street.

No, this didn’t happen in a Birm-

ingham or a Selma. It happened in
Atlanta. Little wonder that the Rev.
Martin Luther King Sr., who lives in
Atlanta, was heard to ask: “What do
they want? The mayor came down. He
tried to speak to them and they
wouldn’t listen. What do they want?”

It was a good question, but hard to
answer. For most of the members of the
mob may not have known themselves
what they wanted—unless it was an
excuse to throw rocks and rant about
police brutality.

The mayor says the riot was deliber-
ately caused by some of Stokely Carmi-
chael’s SNCC henchmen, and he may be
right. For the mob began shouting “Kill
the white cops” after SNCC representa-
tives, according to the police, spread the
false word that the suspected car thief
“had been shot while handcuffed and
that he was murdered,”

Whatever may have been the case ;

with the rioters, it seems clear that what 4
the SNCC people want is trouble, trou-:
ble, trouble. And that is what they are
going to get, though not in the fore
they want, if this sort of madness kee\\
up. ,

 
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                    <text>i
-
THOUGHTS AFTER A RIOT
So We Are a City of La.w and Order?
By REESE CLEGHORN
ON TUESDAY, trouble came to Summerhill, near the Atlanta Stadium. Police shot a man in an arrest. The
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Commi~tee then s e i z e d
the oppor tunity to whip tempers and frustrations to an explosive point. In the danger-filled
hours that followed, hundreds of Negroes
gathered and many attacked the police with
~tones, sticks and bottles.
Our riot, even so, was limited . The next
day, property damage was seen to be light.
As dangerous as the situation had been, only
a small number of about 3..(l..QQO people who
live in slum conditions close to the stadium
had been involved.







,.No one who had bothered to look into Atlanta slum conditions was surprised much by the event or the location.












Summerhill and the adjacent neighborhood 0£ Mechanicsville
long since had been pinpointed as among our W.Qr,S.t..,slums.
The Community Council of the Atlanta Area told us last
FebruaD' how bad conditions are there. (And how much has
been done since then?) ::,
.
-
no one has insisted that it be done. When we have bond issues
for urban renewal, the amounts proposed and approved are
pittances in comparison with the need.
What happens in the meantime in such an ar ea-Summer hill, Mechanicsville, Vine City or Plunkettown? What happens
is that the city simply does not do ITs job. Why is the housing
code not fully enforced? How c an it be done, some officials ask
in r eply, wn en houses already are too dilapidated to be r ehabilitated, or why should it be done when an area already has
been proposed for urban r enewal and perhaps alr eady has
been zoned for future industrial use? So it goes.













WE ARE HEARING a lot about the lfil!.:... After a riot,
everybody talks about law and order . Those believed fo have
provoked crowds into violent action are hustled off to jail,
charged with inciting to riot , put under bonds totaling thousands
of dollars each.
The prosecution of anyone really guilty of inciting alreadywretched people into eating tear gas and otherwise increasing
their wretchedness, knowing that this kind of demagoguery
puts murder in the air, is absolutely right.
Yet it is interesting to compare what is happenin!! on


 *


that front with what happens regularly to the w·1ite"MUCH of the housing . .. around the stadium is beyond
r e ~ and the interviewers could find very few c a s ~ collar landlords who fatten themselves on the misery of the
shun dwellers'.'"":
of even minimal m aintenance," the report saM. "As i£ in
How many major slum landlords of th kind who make a
deliberate harmony with housing conditions, the streets commonly have br oken pavement and holes ; many are not paved
habit of defying the law. and refusing to abide by the city
housing code, adding to the bitterness that comes to violenceat all. Si~
lks are brokl)n and unex..en and, with occasional
how m any of them currently are in jai! serving time or awaitexceptions, grass is nonexistent. At night, the absence of street
ing trial under $10,000 bond?
lights makes the area very dar k and dangerous . ...
None. _,.
.."This deterioration has been accentuated through clearance
by reducing the available low-income housing units . . "


 * *


EVEN WHEN THE city takes them to court, what does
Why does Summerhill exist, then?
the Housing CourL of Atlanta do? Here is what it can do : It
~ * *
can fine
violator $500 and send him to jail for six months,
MOST OF THE area has passed the point of rehabilitaand if there are 20 cases against him it can repeat that
tion. So Summerhill has been designated for a future ur ban
penalty in each. And here is what, by contrast, the Housing
renewal site. Certainly that will not solve all or even the
Court commonly does do: It finPs a mass violator $22 or $27,
main problems of those who live ther e, but done properly
and accompanied by the r ight moves for the people now or $50 and a suspended sentence. It is barg_ain.
Even this is only after tenacious evasion of the law; n&amp;
ther e, it would r elieve many of the conditions.
Why hasn't urban renewal begun? Summerhill is one of one is brought into Housing Court except as a last resort.
In Atlanta, as in -most big cities, we do not seem to be
eight areas proposed for urban • renewal ::::-- eight in which
able to enforce laws against those who ill~all prgfil: from
Atlanta has not moved because it would not raise the money
the miser y of the slums, and who create the conditions that
for the task.
give us violence.
Most of the CQSt of these renewal operations would be paid
But we surely can be effective in enforcing the law
by the federal ...government; but Atlanta has oot been willing
19 spend the money. The city government has not had it ; and against the trouble-m akers. We are a city of law and order.
I*
a
-
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              <text>THOUGHTS AFTER A RIOT

 

So We Are a City of Law and Order? &gt;

By REESE CLEGHORN é

ON TUESDAY, trouble came to Summerhill, near the At-
lanta Stadium. Police shot a man in an arrest. The
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee then seized
the opportunity to whip tempers and frustra-
tions to an explosive point. In the danger-filled
hours that followed, hundreds of Negroes
gathered and many attacked the police with
stones, sticks and bottles.
Our riot, even so, Was limited. The next
day, property damage was seen to be light.
As dangerous as the situation had been, only
a small number of about 30,000 people who
live in slum conditions close to the stadium
had been involved. —_—
No one who had bothered to look into Atlanta slum con-
ditions was surprised miich by the event or the location.
Summerhill and the adjacent neighborhood of Mechanicsville
long since had been pinpointed as among our worst slums. _
The Community Council of the Atlanta Area told us Jast
February how bad conditions are there. (And how much has
been done since then?) ae

 

* *
“MUCH of the housing . around the stadium is beyond

repair, and the interviewers could find very few cases

of even minimal maintenance,” the report said. “‘As if in
deliberate harmony with housing conditions, the streets com-
monly have broken pavement and holes; many are not paved
at all. Sidewalks are broken and uneven and, with occasional
exceptions, grass is nonexistent. At night, the absence of street
lights makes the area very dark and dangerous. .

“This deterioration has been accentuated through clearance
by reducing the available low-income housing units .. .’

Why does | Summerhill Bie mrs i

ce aa

MOST OF THE area has raed the point of rehabilita-
tion. So Summerhill has been designated for a future urban
renewal site. Certainly that will not solve all or even the
main problems of those who live there, but done properly
and accompanied by the right moves for the people now
there, it would relieve many of the conditions.

Why hasn’t urban renewal begun? Summerhill is one of
eight areas propésed for urban “Yrefiewal = "eight in which
Atlanta has not moved because it would not raise the money
for the task. ~

Most of the cost of these renewal operations would be paid
by the federal government; but Atlanta has not been willing
to ie the Toney. The a Se digas has not had it; and

 

no one has insisted that it be done. When we have bond issues
for urban renewal, the amounts proposed and approved are
pittances in comparison with the need.

What happens in the meantime in such an area—Summer-
hill, Mechanicsville, Vine City or Plunkettown? What happens
is that the city simply does not do its job. Why is the housing
code not fully enforced? How can it be done, some officials ask
in feply, When houses already are too dilapidated to be re-
habilitated, or why should it be done when an area already has

been proposed for urban renewal and perhaps already has

been zoned for future industrial use? So it goes.
ae Eo te ae

WE ARE HEARING a lot about the law.. After a riot,
everybody talks about law and order. Those believed to have
provoked crowds into violent action are hustled off to jail,
charged with inciting to riot, put under bonds totaling thousands
of dollars each.

The prosecution of anyone really guilty of inciting already-
wretched people into eating tear gas and otherwise increasing
their wretchedness, knowing that this kind of demagoguery
puts murder in the air, is absolutely right.

Yet it is interesting to compare what is happening on
that front with what happens regularly to the w ‘ite-
collar landlords who fatten themselves on the TEED of the
slum dwellers, . -—~ at

How many major slum landlords of th kind who make a
habit of defying the law, and refusing to abide by the city
housing. code, adding to the bitterness that comes fo violence—
how many of them currently are in jai! serving time or await-
ing trial under $10,000 b bond?

None.

eee * * *

EVEN WHEN THE city takes them to court, what does
the Housing Court of Atlanta do? Here is what it can do: It
can fine a violator $500_ - and send him to jail for six months,
and if there are 20 cases against him it can repeat that
penalty in each. And here is what, by contrast, the Housing
Court commonly does do: It fines a mass. Violator $22 or $27,
or $50 and a suspended sentence. It is Sa

Even this is only after tenacious evasion of the law; ne
one is brought into Housing Cou Court except as a last resort.

In Atlanta, as in most big cities, we do not seem to be

able to enforce laws against those who illegally profit from
the misery of the slums, and who create the conditions that

= -

give us violence.
But we surely can be effective in enforcing the

Beas the trouble-makers. We are a city of law and order,

(
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                    <text>Mayor Ivan Alle9 ,Jr .
At l ant a ,
Mayor J f At l ant a
Ga .
�I


--
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= —
—

 
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                    <text>I
Be t h e Boss of At la.'1t a. , zt anc up f or your ri gnt s . Thi s i s t he be st pi cture l nave seen
o Carmchea l - he has bi s mouth ' SHUT ' f or a cnange .
They need him ba ck ir T r ini a.ad
~
~
CONSTITUTION
South's Standard Newspape r
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1966
Mild
HOURLY TEl\tPERATURES
a.m. 63
Noon 77
8 n.m. 71
a.m. 62
1 p.m. 79
9 p.m. 70
2 p.m. 80
a.m. 62
10 p.m. 68
11 p .m. 67
3 p.m . 79
a.m. 62
4 p.m. 80
8 a.m. 64
12 l\t 65
5 p .m . 78
9 a.m. 69
• 1 a.m. 63
6 p.m . 77
10 a.m. 73
• 2 a.m. 61
7 p.m . .?4
•unofftoial
11 a .m. 75
4
5
6
7
60 PAGES, 3 SECTIONS














Ten Cents
Snicl{ Asl{s U.S. Court
To Rule State's Laws
Against Riots Illegal
Also Wants Allen
njoined from Actin.g
By BILL SHIPP
·,, Carmichael and Snick late Friday asked the federal
~1are unconstitutional Georgia 's anti-riot and insur,d the city's disorderly conduct ordinance.
behalf of the
'or and his city's disorderly conduct ordithat a nance.
, ointed
It said these statutes are
c;e.
" void and illegal on their face"
a in that they viol ate the " funda' &lt;:- mental
guar antees of fr e e
peech, press, assembly, and the
· &lt;rht to petition the government
~dress of grievances."
&lt;l Moore Jr . of Atlan' counsel for Snick,
-\NTS
other de'l Sol.
Associated Press Wire photo
SNICK CHAIRMAN ENTERS MUNICIPAL COURT
Stokely Carmichael Was Bound Over to Grand Jury
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              <text>Be tne Boss of Atlante, stanc up for your rights. This is the best picture 1 have seen

oi Carmicheal - he has his mouth 'SHUT' for a Change. They need him back in Trinigad

\ CONSTITUTION 2%:

7am, 62 3 p.m. 79 Vi p.m. 67°

8 a.m. 64 4np.m. 80 eee 65

» South’s Standard Newspaper emcns coal” Aereueal

; Ham. 75 7 p.m. 74 * Unofficial
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1966 60 PAGES, 3 SECTIONS x*kkx — Ten Cents

 

 

Snick Asks U.S. Court

 

=
=
D
GQ
eral

Against Riots
Also Wants Allen Pea

“njoined from Acting

By BILL SHIPP

‘» Carmichael and Snick late Friday asked the federal
*lare unconstitutional Georgia’s anti-riot and insur-
‘d the city’s disorderly conduct ordinance.

a re ra city’s disorderly conduct ordi-
that “a | RACE, ae
spointed |, It said these statutes are

se, | Void and illegal on their face’
~ g|in that they violate the “funda-
-.|mental guarantees of free
speech, press, assembly, and the
“wht to petition the government

adress of grievances,”
‘d Moore Jr, of Atlan-
"counsel for Snick, |

 

Sol,

n Sol.

To Rule State’s Laws

 

A
a

 
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                    <text>SYMBOLS
DL =Day Lctrer
NL = N i~ht Lerre r
R . W. McFAL L
PRESIDENT
·
LT _Intcrn~tiona l
-Letter Telegram
cime shown in che date line on domestic telegrams is LQCAL TIME ar point of origin. Time of receipt is LOCAL TIME at point of descin&gt;&lt;ion
1110
E T SEP 9 66 AC572 CTA977
MA128 NL PD CLARKSVILLE TENN 9
HON IVAN ALLEN JR
CITY HALL ATL A
CO~RULATIONS QN YOUR ACTION AGAINST CARMICHAEL. THIS CHARACTER
COULD BE a: TREMENDOUS VALUE TO OUR WAR EFFORT IF HE WERE ALLOWED
TO VOLUNTEER AID AI\O COMFORT TO OUR SNSMY
WM HQ~ARO W LEWIS
SFI201(R2-65)
PO BOX 104
ST BETHLEHEM TENN.
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ECTRDP NI T TRITON
f= eek YR } IN | { )) | on
VV It ce Bes INL Woes AN IAS L
W. Ps MARSH 1B) "A R McFALL
CHAIRMA S be EGRA VA PRES C
R

 

     

The #ige time shownlin the date line on domestic telegrams is a TIME at point of origin, Time of receipt is E OCT Tih gs ar pointe of destinatior

 

1910 T aie 9 66 AC572 CTASTT
MA128 NL PD CLARKSVILLE TENN 9

HON IVAN ALLEN JR

CITY HALL ATLA

CONGRULATIONS ON YOUR ACTION AGAINST CARMICHAEL. THIS CHARACTER
COULD BE OF TREMENDOUS VALUE TO OUR WAR EFFORT IF HE WERE ALLOWED
TO VOLUNTEER AID AND COMFORT TO OUR SNSMY

WM HOWARD W LEWIS PO BOX 104 ST BETHLEHEM TENNe

Wt 0 ay UY Op

F ak oy kt? MRS ANI DRUMMOND 688—2659 = DAFSTIZ5A SEP 10=DAI~,
one (2) MRS BETTY ROBINSON PL 5=3383 = DAFS1130A SEP Tne naved
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