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MAYOR OF ATLANTA CITY HALL CG ATLA::
I WISH TO COMMEND YOU FOR YOUR COURAGEOUS AND
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A LLU137 PD=ATLANTA GA 29 147P EST=
sHON IVAN ALLEN=

MAYOR OF ATLANTA CITY HALL CG@ ATLA

 

 

 

| WISH TO COMMEND YOU FOR YOUR COURAGEOUS AND
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COMMITTEE FRIDAY 1 CAN ASSURE YOU THAT | EXPRESS THE
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B NVA121 PD:NEW HAVEN CONN 30 936A EDT:
MAYOR IVAN ALLEN JR=
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              <text>Archbishep Faw) 3%. Hall tine, Nn
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                    <text>HARRISON JONES
1609-10 CANDLER BUILDING
ATLANTA 3, GEORGIA
July 30, 1963
Dear Ivan:
I wish to say to you that I feel
that you handled yourself splendidly
before the Senate Committee. What
you said and how you said it should
have made all of us here proud. I
saw that part which was on television
and the s calawag Senator from South Carolina
was put in his place by the Chairman of
the Committee, which pleased me as much
as seeing Georgia whip Tech.
"Keep on keeping on .. "
Mos
Mr. Ivan Allen, Jr ..
City Hall
Atlanta, Georgia
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              <text>HARRISON JONES
1609-10 CANDLER BUILDING
ATLANTA 3, GEORGIA

July 30, 1963

Dear Ivan:

I wish to say to you that I feel

that you handled yourself splendidly

before the Senate Committee. What

you said and how you said it should

have made all of us here proud. I

saw that part which was on television

and the scalawag Senator from South Carolina
was put in his place by the Chairman of

the Committee, which pleased me as much

as seeing Georgia whip Tech.

"Keep on keeping on."

Os cordially,

Hiner

Mr. Ivan Allen, Jr.
City Hall

Atlanta, Geo rgia
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                    <text>BROAD MARGIN
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              <text>BIROAD MARGIN
9IW. AVONDALE DRIVE
GIREENVILLE S&amp;C.

  

 

 

ches 2 1963

Le. Veen Ahlen , ge.
PO.By i772

Crkarite, 4) Stenvgia, ;
Dear Ube. Cthen.
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                    <text>Cabin Road,


Conley, Ga.,
August 1, 196;5.
Mayor Ivam Allen,
Atlanta, Ga.
Dear ~ay or Allen:
Thank you for your right, and forthright
stand ~ t h e public accomodations act.
It willjf15a'frence and some political risk
to bring equal justice to our Negro citizens,
but we are a hundred years late already,
and every forthright stand by a respected
public officia l counts.
s~~
(Miss ) Lor etto Chappell
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              <text>5 Cabin Road,
Conley, Gaes
August 1, 19656

Mayor Ivan Allen,
Atlanta, Gaoe

Dear Mayor Allen:

Thank you for your right, and forthright
stand on the public accomodations acte

It willjPdtience and some political risk

to bring equal justice to our Negro citizens,
but we are a hundred years late already,

and every forthright stand by a respected

public official countse
Sincerely, _, Lis y

(Miss) Loretto Chappell
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                    <text>INVESTMENTS
WEBSTER 3 • 5797
MILTON CRANE
627 SOUTH LORRAINE BLVO.
Los ANGELES 5, CALIF"ORNIA
July
29, 1963
Mayor Ivan Allen, Jr.
Atlanta, Geer gia
Dear Mayor:
I have read an account of your testimoey befcre
the Senate Conmerce Committee and write to tell
you bow much I admire your courage and sense of
justice.
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MILTON GRANE
627 SOUTH LORRAINE BLvbD.
Los ANGELES 5, CALIFORNIA

July 29, 1963

Mayor Iven Allen, Jre
Atlanta, Gea gia

Dear Mayor:

I have read an account of your testimony befare
the Senate Commerce Committee and write to tell

you how much I admire your courage and sense of
justicee

Very truly _youw's ,

ort

Milt Crane
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              <text>enon, He Ts Serene

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2636 DELLWOOD DRIVE,N.W.
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                    <text>HOTEL WILLIA~ BAKER
on the Lake Shote at
Chautauqua, New York
100 Rooms
Phone
75 Baths
Chautauqua 2-805
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              <text>HOTEL WILLIAM BAKER

on the Lake Shore at
Chautauqua, New York

100 Rooms Phone
75 Baths Chautauqua 2-805

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£ \1',C&lt;:!L_'""~'--\ '
~JvviCV
~ ~ {miss)
/a ,., H,·Nr 1e.1 Q,·re..-le, /U,E,
A+ ! Q ~-•t G. ~ $-e. o re,,' a...,
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              <text>Vala Bi, \Al 4

SNauer “vavw A\ew
Cry ral\
ANA wo | Georgia

Deas Mauer A\eL

Nour ~ereseak Stand own “Presideur
Kennedy's pullic accom mMadakiowns Wil) Nas

Wied out ANY Error Cu May have_
Mode Concer mig “he “ AS\aUtTa Wall,”

My Conquavulotions Ye you,
Vored Bre. “Pu Ww Woe e\ecs tow AWA
Loi RrOPAS\Y Ao So Aaqain.

SS wocmee\ 4

\
Ama R Srude (mss)
lay riwgs lee Creole, l1E,
Atlanta Ss; Georgia
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                <text>Box 19, Folder 17, Document 94</text>
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        <name>Folder topic: Letters expressing appreciation for Ivan Allen's stand on the public accommodations bill | 1963</name>
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                    <text>THE NEW YORK TIMES, SUNDAY, · JULY
SE
~ht Ntnr f grk ~imts.
\
s.
ADOLP H
0 CH S, Publisher 1896-1935
O RV IL E. DR YF OO S , Publisher 1961-1963
P UBLISHED EVERY DAY IN THE YEAR BY THE NEW YORK TIMES COMPANY
ARTH UR H AY S SULZB E RGER_, Chairman of the Board
AR T HUR OC H S S U LZBERG·ER, President and. Publisher
HA RDI N G F . B AN CRO FT, "Vice President and Secretary
FR AN CIS A. Co x,
After t he Treaty
'1:
v
··
4
.,.
... ~
•
The historic t reaty between the United States,
Britain and Soviet Russia banning all nuclear
weapons tests in the atmosphere, under water
and in outer space is being hailed throughout
the world as a promising beginning of a new
epoch in E ast-West r elations. After all the bleak
years of cold war and the recurring crises that
found their climax in the near-collision over
Cuba, the world breathes easier t oday and there
is new hope that it can banish the threat of
nuclear holocaust.
But, important as the treaty is for what it
11ays and what it may portend, it · is at best
only a start toward larger goals. President
Kennedy rightly warns that it is not t he millennium and that the r oad ahead is still long and
rocky. As he pointed out, it is a limited treaty
which does not even stop all tests; though it
would stop further lethal fallout. Both real disarmament and the political settlements that
must go hand in hand with it remain far off.
The key to a solution of these problems is
largely in Soviet hands. Premier Khrushchev
agreed t o the t est-ban t reaty be had previoUBly
rejected because, as Under Secretary of State
Harriman says, he "very much wanted one at
thiJI t ime." The Soviet ruler says he wants more
agreements. If so, the West will do its utmost
t o reach t hem. But will Khrushchev? And on
what terms ?
The hard fac t is that Soviet Russia's signat ure on t he t reaty does not mark the end of
·it s drive t oward .a. Communist world t riumph,
though it may 110w pursue that goal by means
short of nuclear war. In faC'I:, both the treaty
and the "nonaggressipn pact " Russia wants may
become weapons in the Soviet "peace" arsenal
- to line up Asia and Africa against the "warmongering" Chinese Communists and to soften
up the West for political settlements t hat would
impair its alliances. As Mr. Khrushchev told the
Chinese: "The struggle for peace, for peaceful
coexistence, is organically bound up with the
revolutionary struggle against imperialism. It
weakens the front of imperialism, isolates its
more aggressive circles from the masses of the
people and helps in the struggle for national
liberation," The West is warned.
Furthermore, the treaty itself can be abrogated if "extraordinary events" jeopardize "the
supreme interests" of any of its signatories. The
Russians insisted on this reservation, over a
narrower definition proposed by the West, as
an obvious safeguard against nuclear armament
by other powers. They · may have Germany in
mind and certainly they are concerned about
Communist China, which boasts that it will soon
break the "white" nuclear monopoly. They may
Trea$urer
to very little ? Is it not a game that every country
is playing with every other ? A game that nobody
can win? A game that isn't worth the effort?
Adjusting to Automation
The United Steelworkers of America and the
employers with whom it deals have again demonstrated that collective bargaining can produce
constructive answers to the problems of technological change without tests of economic muscle
or Government coercion. The contracts just
reached by the union and the major aluminum
producers r epresent an imaginative extension of
the progress-sharing principles embodied in the
union's agreements with the steel and can
companies.
All the aluminum workers-not just those
with long seniority-will qualify for 10 weeks
of vacation every five years, with 13 weeks' pay
to help them en joy their sabbatical. Fringe benefits will also be liberalized, but there will be
no increase· in direct money wages. The changes
are designed to give the workers a share in the
benefits of increased productivity on a basis that
will expand total employment opportunities and
avoid any increase in aluminum prices.
The new contracts, coupled with those already
signed by the union through its joint Human
Relations Committee in basic steel and its longrange committee in Kaiser Steel, ought to serve
as a spur to the deadlocked negotiators in the
nation's railroads. The guidelines for a sound
agreement have been laid down by two Presidential commissions, created only because of the
atrophy of the bargaining process in this piv~tal
industry.
Any formula Congress approves for barring
a rail strike through legislative compulsion will
set a damaging precedent. The month-long truce
agreed to by the railroads provides a last opportunity for the unions t o demonstrate that their
concept of bargaining is not summed up in the
single word "no."
Up t o now they have been gambling on the
proposition t hat the Government will continue
t o retreat in t he face of their obduracy, and that
finally they can extort a settlement that will
saddle the carriers with t housands of unneeded
jobs. The trouble with t his venture in brinkmanship is not only that t he gamble involves
a strike in which the economy would be the
chief victim but that a "victory" for the unions
would jeopardize all job security by' pushing the
railroads closer to bankruptcy.
This is the lesson the disastrous 116-day strike
of 1959 taught both sides in steel. Unfortunately,
there is no sign yet that the railroad unions
have achieved comparable enlightenment.
,...------11_ _;---:
�a/SO mean .l'Tance, OU S II T UUIIUlll l:, H ::! U W ll -:11U \Olt:C1L'
., force u
.
President Kennedy is trying to persuade Pres1• dent de Gaulle to adhere to the treaty, but
- success is unlikely unless France, an acknowledged nuclear power, is put on a par with Britain
and supplied with the same nuclear information
we now give the British. If we did so, the pur... pose would not be to "cause, encourage or partic-~- ipate in" further French tests, which is forbid= den by the treaty, but to make such tests


 unnecessary without hampering France's nuclear


development.
French adherence to the new pact might prove
"~ a preliminary to agreement by France to join
~ ·'fn building a NATO nuclear force and to restore
..... Western solidarity. That is still an essential
~ : safeguard of peace.
,,
-·, .


, 

The Art of Spying




~:
4.&amp;."'JI,"" .. ..... ,.,,.,
-
... , _ _ J
- ·
-r-----
On rare occasions the oratorical fog on
Capitol Hill is pierced by a voice resonant with
courage and dignity. Such a voice was heard
when Mayor Ivan Allen Jr. of Atlanta testified
before the Senate Commerce Committee in support of President Kennedy's bill to prohibit
racial discrimination in stores, restaurants and
other public accommodations.
on · the basis of the very substantial accomplishments that his city of a half-million, the
largest in the Southeast, has made in desegregating publicly owned and privately owned facilities, be might have come as a champion of
"states' rights" and of the ability of localities
to banish discrimination without Federal law.
Certainly, be would have had much more warrant to espouse that view than the Barretts, the
Wallaces and the other arch-segregationists
who raise the specter of Federal "usurpation"
as a device for keeping Southern Negroes in
subjection.
But Mr. Allen was not in Washington to boast.
He was there to warn that even in cities .like
Atlanta the progress that had been made might
be wiped out if Congress turned its back on the
Kennedy proposal and thus gave implied endorsement to the concept that private businesses
were free to discriminate. He left behind this
charge to finish the job started with the Emancipation Proclamation a century ago: "Now the
elimination of segregation, which is slavery's
stepchild, is a challenge to all of us to make
every American free in fact as well as in theory
-and again to establish our nation as the true
champion of the free world."
' Do not implicitly trust anything you read
about spies and spying even if the source is im. peccabiy official. By the accepted rules of the
..:.. game, government statements may be deliber·:. , ately false in order to mislead "the enemy." But,
c of course, they may be true. Naturally, truth is
often very confusing.
The layman can be excused for ruminating in


 this fashion as he reads his morning newspaper.


The cast of characters needs a Dickens or a
Dostoievsky (not a historian, of course ) to do
•.- justice to the parade of diplomats, scientists,
journalists, homosexuals, prostitutes and- best
of all- intelligence agents who betray t heir outfits and their fellow spies. Nothing could be
- more devious or fascinating than a double agent.
At least, it is comforting for the layman to
• contemplate the bungling and blindnesses of the
The Fiddlers
" professionals. Devotees of the whodunits surely
The long-legged, rasp-winged insects now come
could do better. Trained by Eric Ambler, Georges into t heir own, and we won't hear the last of
Simenon a nd Ian Fleming, they would never have them till hard frost arrives. They are the leaping
permitted a Bay of Pigs invasion; a successful fiddlers, the grasshoppers, the crickets and the
Christine Keeler; a fantastic 10-year career of katydids.
· ex-Nazi German intelligence officers providing
Grasshoppers are spoken of in the Bible as
the Russians with 15,000 photographs, 20 spools "locusts," and their hordes have contributed in
of tape and many a secret of the West Germans many lands, including our own West, to the long
and NATO. Not that the Russians should boast;
hi11tory of insect devastation and human famine.
· they had Penkovsky.
Walk through any meadow now, or along any
- Even though the real spy cases may be weedv roadside. and vou will see them leaning


 stranger than fiction, you don't get the solutions ahe;d of you, hear the rasping rattle of their

 as you do in the t hrillers. Nothing could be harsh wings in brief flight. But they do little real


· more fascinating than the stories of the British fiddling. The fiddlers now are the crickets.
journalist H. A. R. Philby, or the Swedish Air
Listen on any hot afti!rnoon or warm evening,
. Force Col. Stig Wennerstrom; but at their most particu larly in the country, and you will hear
· interesting points the volumes are snapped shut the crickets even though you seldom see them.
and put away in secret places where even in- In the afternoon you will hear the black field
telligence chiefs, like characters in a Kafkaesque
crickets, chirping as we say, and often into the
tale, probably cannot find them.
warm evening. But in the evening, from dusk on
'The outsider must be forgiven for believing
through the warm night, the more insistent sound
that any time any government wants to arrest will be the trilling of the pale green tree crickets .
• and/or expel X-number of spies, it digs into its Individually the tree cricket's trill is not so loud,
files and comes up with the requisite quantity.
but because all those in the neighborhood
· When spies are under surveillance they are, synchronize their trills the sound can be as
unbeknownst, spying for the country they are insistent as were the calls of the spring peepers
spying on. The most dangerous spies of all are,
back in April.
to be sure, the ones who are never caught. There
The loudest fiddlers of all are the katydids,
is nothing that the C.I.A., MI-5, K.B.G., Surete
which look like green, hunch-backed grasshopand all the other intelligence and counter-intelpers. Night after night they rasp wing on wing
ligence organizations can do about them.
and make that monotonous call, shrill and seemIs it not possible, in fact, that all this es- ingly endless. But the katydids won't be heard
pionage and counter-espionage ; all these agents for another two weeks or so. Meanwhile the
and double agents, intelligence officers, counter- crickets possess late July, chirping and trilling
intelligence officers, plots and paraphernalia the warm hours away as though summer endured
from infinitesimal microphones to beds, add up forever.
~:1\H
1'1(
A'J
l
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              <text> 

 

f

  
 
 

After the Treaty
The historic treaty between the United States,

' Britain and Soviet Russia banning all nuclear

ae

weapons tests in the atmosphere, under water
and in outer space is being hailed throughout
the world as a promising beginning of a new
epoch in Hast-West relations. After all the bleak
years of cold war and the recurring crises that
found their climax in the near-collision over
Cuba, the world breathes easier today and there
is new hope that it can banish the threat of
nuclear holocaust.

But, important as the treaty is for what it

‘ says and what it may portend, it is at best

only a start toward larger goals. President
Kennedy rightly warns that it is not the millen-
nium and that the road ahead is still long and
rocky, As he pointed out, it is a limited treaty

_ ‘which does not even stop all tests, though it.

would stop further lethal fallout. Both real dis-
armament and the political settlements that
must go hand in hand with it remain far off.

The key to a solution of these problems is
largely in Soviet hands, Premier Khrushchev

agreed to the test-ban treaty he had previously

rejected because, as Under Secretary of State
_ Harriman says, he “very much wanted one at
thia time.” The Soviet ruler says he wants more
agreements, If so, the West will do its utmost

’ to reach them. But will Khrushchev? And on

what terms?
The hard fact is that Soviet Russia’s signa-

' ture on the treaty does not mark the end of

‘its drive toward a Communist world triumph,

_ though it may now pursue that goal by means

*

teehee gas

4g

short of nuclear war. In fact, both the treaty
and the “nonaggression pact” Russia wants may
bécome weapons in the Soviet “peace” arsenal
—to line up Asia and Africa against the “war-
mongering” Chinese Communists and to soften
up the West for political settlements that would
» impair itg alliances. As Mr. Khrushchev told the
Chinese: “The struggle for peace, for peaceful
coexistence, is organically bound up with the

olutionary struggle against imperialism. It
Piskent the front of imperialism, isolates its
more aggressive circles from the masses of the
“ people and helps in the struggle for national
liberation,” The West is warned.

Furthermore, the treaty itself can be abro-
gated if “extraordinary events” jeopardize “the
supreme interests” of any of its signatories. The
Russians insisted on this reservation, over a
narrower definition proposed by the West, as
an obvious safeguard against nuclear armament
’ ‘by other powers. They may have Germany in
mind and certainly they are eoncerned about
Communist China, which boasts that it will soon
break the “white” nuclear monopoly. They may

_THE NEW YORK TIMES, SUNDAY, JULY 28, 1963)

Che New Vork Cimes.

ApoLpH S. Ocus, Publisher 1896-1935
Orvis E. Drrroos, Publisher 1961-1963

PUBLISHED EVERY DAY IN THE YEAR BY THE NEW YORK TIMES COMPANY

ARTHUR Hays SULZBERGER, Chairman of the Board
ARTHUR OcHS SULZBERGER, President and. Publisher
HARDING F, BANCROFT, Vice President and Secretary

FrAnNcrIs A, Cox, Treasurer

to very little? Is it not a game that every country
is playing with every other? A game that nobody
can win? A game that isn’t worth the effort?

Adjusting to Automation

The United Steelworkers of America and the
employers with whom it deals have again dem-
onstrated that collective bargaining can produce
constructive answers to the problems of techno-
logical change without tests of economic muscle
or Government coercion. The contracts just
reached by the union and the major aluminum
producers represent an imaginative extension of
the progress-sharing principles embodied in the
union’s agreements with the steel and can
companies.

All the aluminum workers—not just those
with long seniority—will qualify for 10 weeks
of vacation every five years, with 13 weeks’ pay
to help them enjoy their sabbatical. Fringe bene-
fits will also be liberalized, but there will be
no increase in direct money wages. The changes
are designed to give the workers a share in the
benefits of increased productivity on a basis that
will expand total employment opportunities and
avoid any increase in aluminum prices.

The new contracts, coupled with those already
signed by the union through its joint Human
Relations Committee in basic steel and its long-
range committee in Kaiser Steel, ought to serve
as a spur to the deadlocked negotiators in the
nation’s railroads. The guidelines for a sound
agreement have been laid down by two Presi-
dential commissions, created only because of the
atrophy of the bargaining process in this pivotal
industry.

Any formula Congress approves for barring
a rail strike through legislative compulsion will
set a damaging precedent. The month-long truce
agreed to by the railroads provides a last oppor-
tunity for the unions to demonstrate that their

concept of bargaining is not summed up in the
single word “no.”

Up to now they have been gambling on the
proposition that the Government will continue
to retreat in the face of their obduracy, and that
finally they can extort a settlement that will
saddle the carriers with thousands of unneeded
jobs. The trouble with this venture in brink-
manship is not only that the gamble involves
a strike in which the economy would be the
chief victim but that a “victory” for the unions
would jeopardize all job security by pushing the
railroads closer to bankruptey.

This is the lesson the disastrous 116-day strike
of 1959 taught both sides in steel. Unfortunately,
there is no sign yet that the railroad unions
have achieved comparable enlightenment.

samc aml a a A I a La

 

|

 

 
- @I5U Itai DLaAUCE, VUBILY VULIUIIE ILS UW WuuicaL

force,,
President Kennedy is trying to persuade Presi-

= dent de Gaulle to adhere to the treaty, but
-- success is unlikely unless France, an acknowl-

edged nuclear power, is put on a par with Britain

_. and supplied with the same nuclear information

we now give the British. If we did so, the pur-
. pose would not be to “cause, encourage or partic-

-- ipate in’ further French tests, which is forbid-
= den by the treaty, but to make such tests

unnecessary without hampering France’s nuclear
development.
French adherence to the new pact might prove

“* a preliminary to agreement by France to join

Peete. F

ri ies

s @

‘in building a NATO nuclear force and to restore
‘Western solidarity. That is still an essential
safeguard of peace.

The Art of Spying

Do not implicitly trust anything you read
about spies and spying even if the source is im-
_ peceably official. By the accepted rules of the
. game, government statements may be deliber-
ately false in order to mislead “the enemy.” But,
of course, they may be true. Naturally, truth is
- often very confusing.
The layman can be excused for ruminating in
* this fashion as he reads his morning newspaper.
The cast of characters needs a Dickens or a
_ Dostoievsky (not a historian, of course) to do
- justice to the parade of diplomats, scientists,
- journalists, homosexuals, prostitutes and—best
of all—intelligence agents who betray their out-

“. fits and their fellow spies. Nothing could be
'— more devious or fascinating than a double agent.
~ At least, it is comforting for the layman to
~ contemplate the bungling and blindnesses of the
.. professionals, Devotees of the whodunits surely
.. could do better. Trained by Eric Ambler, Georges
» Simenon and Jan Fleming, they would never have

' permitted a Bay of Pigs invasion; a successful
' Christine Keeler; a fantastic 10-year career of
- ex-Nazi German intelligence officers providing
. the Russians with 15,000 photographs, 20 spools
of tape and many a secret of the West Germans
and NATO. Not that the Russians should boast;
- they had Penkovsky.
. Even though the real spy cases may he
: stranger than fiction, you don’t get the solutions
: as you do in the thrillers. Nothing could be
-more fascinating than the stories of the British
journalist H. A. R. Philby, or the Swedish Air
- Force Col. Stig Wennerstrom; but at their most
“interesting points the volumes are snapped shut
and put away in secret places where even in-
_telligence chiefs, like characters in a Kafkaesque
‘tale, probably cannot find them.
The outsider must be forgiven for believing
_ that any time any government wants to arrest
- and/or expel X-number of spies, it digs into its
' files and comes up with the requisite quantity.
- When spies are under surveillance they are,
’ * unbeknownst, spying for the country they are
spying on. The most dangerous spies of all are,
to be sure, the ones who are never caught. There
is nothing that the C.I.A., MI-5, K.B.G., Sureté
and all the other intelligence and counter-intel-
ligence organizations can do about them.
_ Is it not possible, in fact, that all this es-
pionage and counter-espionage; all these agents
and double agents, intelligence officers, counter-
intelligence officers, plots and paraphernalia
from infinitesimal microphones to beds, add up

ADEA We are we

On. rare occasions the oratorical fog on
Capitol Hill is pierced by a voice resonant with
courage and dignity. Such a voice was heard
when Mayor Ivan Allen Jr. of Atlanta testified
before the Senate Commerce Committee in sup-
port of President Kennedy's bill to prohibit
racial discrimination in stores, restaurants and
other public accommodations.

On the basis of the very substantial accom-
plishments that his city of a half-million, the
largest in the Southeast, has made in desegre-
gating publicly owned and privately owned facili-
ties, he might have come as a champion of
“states’ rights’ and of the ability of localities
to banish discrimination without Federal law.
Certainly, he would have had much more war-
rant to espouse that view than the Barretts, the
Wallaces and the other arch-segregationists
who raise the specter of Federal “usurpation”
as a device for keeping Southern Negroes in
subjection.

But Mr. Allen was not in Washington to boast.
He was there to warn that even in cities like
Atlanta the progress that had been made might
be wiped out if Congress turned its back on the
Kennedy proposal and thus gave implied en-
dorsement to the concept that private businesses
were free to discriminate. He left behind this
charge to finish the job started with the Emanci-
pation Proclamation a century ago: “Now the
elimination of segregation, which is slavery’s
stepchild, is a challenge to all of us to make
every American free in fact as well as in theory
—and again to establish our nation as the true
champion of the free world.”

The Fiddlers

The long-legged, rasp-winged insects now come

into their own, and we won't hear the last of
them till hard frost arrives. They are the leaping

fiddlers, the grasshoppers, the crickets and the
katydids.

Grasshoppers are spoken of in the Bible as
“locusts,” and their hordes have contributed in
many lands, including our own West, to the long
history of insect devastation and human famine.
Walk through any meadow now, or along any
weedy roadside. and you will see them leaping
ahead of you, hear the rasping rattle of their
harsh wings in brief flight. But they do little real
fiddling. The fiddlers now are the crickets.

Listen on any hot afternoon or warm evening,
particularly in the country, and you will hear
the crickets even though you seldom see them.
In the afternoon you will hear the black field
crickets, chirping as we say, and often into the
warm evening, But in the evening, from dusk on
through the warm night, the more insistent sound
will be the trilling of the pale green tree crickets.
Individually the tree cricket's trill is not so loud,
but because all those in the neighborhood
synchronize their trills the sound can be as
insistent as were the calls of the spring peepers
back in April.

The loudest fiddlers of all are the katydids,
which look like green, hunch-backed grasshop-

pers. Night after night they rasp wing on wing

and make that monotonous call, shrill and seem-
ingly endless, But the katydids won't be heard
for another two weeks or so. Meanwhile the

crickets possess late July, chirping and trilling —
the warm hours away as though summer endured |

forever.

 
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                    <text>y Jo · -


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The House Appropriations Committee cut $250,000
from Jekyll Island budget requests Tuesday, bringing
t he total bite into Gov. Carl Sanders' pr oposed two-year
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . budget to $527,900.
Panel Puts
Execution
Age at 16
The Jekyll Committee had asked
for $750,000 for each of the next
two years to operate the island
resort.
SECOND-YEAR CUT
After intense questioning of
Jekyll's resident manager, A. J.
Hartley, the committee voted to
leave the first-year request intact,
but cut $250,000 from the second,
witl1 U1e tt·ong implication that it
was lime the state-nm re ort began paying for its operation out
of it own profits.
Hartley told the· commmce he
thought Jekyll would reach that
point in about five years.
A bill to aboli h teen-age electrocutions in Georgia got a quick
and drastic alteration job and then
a blessing from the Hou e Judiciary Committee Tuesday.
A Committee a m e n d m e n l
changed the miniumum age for
"Ben Fortson told us two years
electrocution from 21 to 16.
ago that Jekyll would be selfUnder present Georgia law the sustaining in two years," a comdeath penalty can be given a child mittee member said later in the
as young as 10.
hearing. Secretary of State FortRep. John Bell of Richmond son is chairman of the Jekyll
uthorihi. - - - - - - - - -u
County and Re . J
�TS •PROD UCT OF FINLAND • CUSENIER, N. Y,
ATLANTA HELL-BENT
FOR CULTURE,
SAYS POST WRITER
y
For years, Atlanta has been the business capital of the whole Southeast. And now, according to author Ben Hibbs, it's the culture capital, too.
In this week's Saturday Evening Post, Hibbs
reports on the showcase city of the South. He
tells how the culture craze has hit Atlantabut hard! How Atlanta eating places stack up
against those of Northern cities. And why
Atlantans are actually lucky that their business boom came so late.
Be sure to read the picture-studded article
"Progress Goes Marching Through Georgia"exclusive in this week's Saturday Evening
Post. Pick up your copy today.
Pos'f
A CURTIS MAGAZIN&amp;
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99 Peacl1tr~e !Battle Avenue, N . W .
Atlanta 5, Georgia
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Ongust 4 1967
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