Dublin Core
Title
Box 21, Folder 35, Document 33
Text Item Type Metadata
Text
Clubs’ Aid |
Asked for
Recreation
Crime Panel Chief
Talks to Kiwanians
The executive director of the
Metropolitan Atlanta Crime
Comission appealed to Civic
“clubs Tuesday
equip
support
play lots and
; other summer
~ recreation pro-
grams for
youngsters in
7 slum areas.
iN James L,
A AN y McGovern, who
‘ ‘ 3 heads the
-siteettcm pe rmanent
metropolitan commission that
grew out of the Atlanta Crime
Commission's lengthy study and
report last year, said the City
Parks department will attempt
to operate the play lots out of
the regular budget if no fed-
eral funds can be found, but
said that city funds are not
adequate for the program.
He told the Atlanta Kiwanis
Club that Sears Roebuck and
Co. had donated four portable
pools for the summer program,
and urged them to consider fi-
nancing a $170 filter system for
one of the pools as a club proj-
ect.
McGovern said that if they
will support the program, there
are enough civic clubs in At-
lanta, if each took a small proj-
ect, to provide playground equip-
ment for some of the lots and
provide chartered buses for
special trips, such as to the
z00.
“We're entering the summer.
You are aware of the conditions
last summer, and the unrest,”
McGovern told the club. “You
have a vested interest in elim-
inating the conditions and. the
federal money that was made
available on an emergency
basis last year is not available
this year.”
The new crime commission
official, who was an agent of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation
for 26 years, added, “We tend
to think of crime only in terms
of the courts and law enforce-
ment agencies, rather than as a
portrait of the failure of society,
a lack of employment opportun-
ity and education, of disease and!
misery.”
“Every survey I've ever read |
recognizes crime breeds in de-|
pressed areas,’ he said. “To
eliminate it, we must eliminate |
depressed conditions. We must
also have adequate enforcement
by qualified personnel and we
must pay for it. Anything that
is going to bring crime under
control is going to cost money.
It’s a community problem and
every member of the communi-
ty must give his support—both
services and financial.”
He also urged the club mem-
bers as employers to consider
whether their employment prac-
tices should ‘arbitrarily’ elim-
inate all with past criminal rec-
ords and urged them to ‘“be-
come individual crime prevent-
ers.”
Asked for
Recreation
Crime Panel Chief
Talks to Kiwanians
The executive director of the
Metropolitan Atlanta Crime
Comission appealed to Civic
“clubs Tuesday
equip
support
play lots and
; other summer
~ recreation pro-
grams for
youngsters in
7 slum areas.
iN James L,
A AN y McGovern, who
‘ ‘ 3 heads the
-siteettcm pe rmanent
metropolitan commission that
grew out of the Atlanta Crime
Commission's lengthy study and
report last year, said the City
Parks department will attempt
to operate the play lots out of
the regular budget if no fed-
eral funds can be found, but
said that city funds are not
adequate for the program.
He told the Atlanta Kiwanis
Club that Sears Roebuck and
Co. had donated four portable
pools for the summer program,
and urged them to consider fi-
nancing a $170 filter system for
one of the pools as a club proj-
ect.
McGovern said that if they
will support the program, there
are enough civic clubs in At-
lanta, if each took a small proj-
ect, to provide playground equip-
ment for some of the lots and
provide chartered buses for
special trips, such as to the
z00.
“We're entering the summer.
You are aware of the conditions
last summer, and the unrest,”
McGovern told the club. “You
have a vested interest in elim-
inating the conditions and. the
federal money that was made
available on an emergency
basis last year is not available
this year.”
The new crime commission
official, who was an agent of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation
for 26 years, added, “We tend
to think of crime only in terms
of the courts and law enforce-
ment agencies, rather than as a
portrait of the failure of society,
a lack of employment opportun-
ity and education, of disease and!
misery.”
“Every survey I've ever read |
recognizes crime breeds in de-|
pressed areas,’ he said. “To
eliminate it, we must eliminate |
depressed conditions. We must
also have adequate enforcement
by qualified personnel and we
must pay for it. Anything that
is going to bring crime under
control is going to cost money.
It’s a community problem and
every member of the communi-
ty must give his support—both
services and financial.”
He also urged the club mem-
bers as employers to consider
whether their employment prac-
tices should ‘arbitrarily’ elim-
inate all with past criminal rec-
ords and urged them to ‘“be-
come individual crime prevent-
ers.”
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