Xpt JfeigblanDer
i i'
t Devoted to Promotion of the Highlands Area
j Thursday, August 6, 1970
H41en Hopper...... ..Editor
W|n. F. Harris.Advertising Salesman
Subscription Rates Outside Macon - Jackson
{ Highlands Area Counties
Onjp yea? S4 00
Six months $2 50
One year.$7.00
Six Months.4.00
Add -r tax for N. C. subscriptions
_ Second Class Postage Paid at Highlands. N C.
'* Published by Community Newspapers, Inc.
BLOCKING FREEDOM OF CHOICE
J
CLOSE THE LOOPHOLES
As a tonsiimer, do you like to be told where you
can shop? How do you react when an aggressive
picket tries to tell you, “Don’t buy here!”? As a
businessman would you like to be barred from de
livering; goods to a customer?
This'type of disruptive activity is prohibited in
theZnatfogj’s labor laws, but the National Labor Re
lations Board and some courts have punched large
loopholes in these laws.
Iw Example, it's an unfair labor practice under
the Taft-Hartley Act to force a store or a company to
stop selling the products of a company that’s in
volved in a labor-management dispute. When union
- pickets try to do this, it’s called an “illegal second
ary boycott.”
Yet, through tortured reasoning, the NLRB and
even the Supreme Court have ruled that certain
types of picketing and boycotts — intended to be
: barred by the law — are either merely “informa
tional ’ or for what the unions call “work preserva
tion,” and are therefore, protected actions.
Oil occasion, this has meant that picketing be
yond the limits specified by Congress has actually
been permitted by the Board and courts, thus inter
fering with peaceful shopping. Also employers not
involved in a labor dispute have been denied access
to a building site. Sometimes even newspapers have
conie under attack because they carried the adver
tising of a struck company.
Abo, the NLRB and the Supreme Court have
ruled that a union can refuse to install cost-saving
materials on a construction job. Such a decision
directly contributes to inflation and affects the
pockjetbooks of all of us. Since these misrepresen
tations of the law consistently ignore the intent of
Congress, the only recourse left to preserve realistic
laboc-management relations is to pass new laws.
...
Tte Iivo Aronj Us
^HE EAT /S MAM'S MOST PAMGEKOUS BHEMY - -
SCIENTISTS ESTIMATE THE DISEASES THAT RATS CARRY TO
HUflANS HAVE CAUSED MORE DEATH THAN ALL WARS
COMBINED. IN ADDITION TO TRANSMITTING SUCH DISEASES
AS TYPHUS AND SO SONIC PLAGUE, RATS DESTROY FOODSTUFFS
EAOl YEAR, EQUALING THE TOTAL PRODUCTION of
lOdjOOO AVERAGE FARMS.'
0 SINGLE NAT CAN CARRY
UNTO 10,000 LICE- pLus,
FLEfS AMP MITES.RATS HAVE
&E6M KNOWN TO GNAW AT
FURNITURE, EAT THROUGH THE
INFLATION IN ELECTRICAL
WIRING--CAUSING FIRES
EVEiJI TO SITE SLEEPING PEOPLE!
Cn recent year*,
CHEMICAL WEAPONS AbA!NET
RAT5 TMAT ARE COMPLETELY
SAFE AMP EFFECTIVE HAVE
0EEN PEVELOPEP AMP PUT
ON THE MARKET. THIS IS
JUST ONE OF THE PE
VELOPMENTS IN CHEMICAL
PESTICIPES THAT ARE HELPING
TO PROTECT MANKIND AGAINST—
THE SCOURGE Of PEST? Of AUTYPES.[
The People Speak
August 3, 1970
To The Editor
The Highlander
Highlands, N. C.
Following are some comments from our campers follow
ing a week at Camp Living Waters, July 27 - August 1, This
is a grateful "thank you” for all the generous support we
received through “Charlie” from the merchants and kind re
sidents of Highlands i
"I am going to learn to flot and the bed’s are soft and hard.
Dianne Beck, age 9”
“Best of ail is the food and 1 like the people. And it is
fun. . . Peggy Henry, Age 12”
“Swimming is the most fun to me. Mrs. Harris is learning
me to swim. I all ready know a little.
Mary Lue Railey, age 13”
“I like the pool, but I was afraid of it one time. Mrs.
Harris is going to teach me how to float.
Debbie Green, Age 10”
“I like the pool the best of all. Mrs. Harris is learning
me to flot. I have learned a hole lot at camp.
Sheila Barnes, Age 11”
“1 like the camp and I like my counselor and the girls in
my cabin and I like to swim. I like to sing.
Betty Jane Wood, Age 9”
“I like this camp we go to church every night and sing.
Lillian Speed, Age 8”
“Best of all the things that I liked at camp, was swimming.
I always looked forward to our swim period. Everyone and
everything was just great.
Betty Sue Railey, Age 16”
“Best of all I liked to swimmed. 1 look forward to our
swim period. Everyone thank you very much.
Charles Hensley, Age 12”
“Best of all I like is camp and swimming. . .
Roberta Beck, Age 11”
“1 liked the swimming, and the people. (Dictated)
Donna Sue Speed, Age 7
“I like camp very much. I loved swimming. I entered
in every activity. I’ve been to other camps before but never
as much fun as this one.
Willy Brooks. Age 13”
Again, a heartfelt “thank you” to all who made this mem
orable week possible.
Sincerely,
Mrs. W. F. Harris
Director,
Community Children’s
Choir
July 29, 1970
The Editor
The Highlander
Highlands, North Carolina
Dear Editor: l
Last Thursday evening we stood helplessly by watching our
car go up in flames. This was just ten miles down the road
from Highlands in Rabun County, Georgia. We wish to express
our appreciation to all the local people as well as the travellers
who had their plans and aflairs so abruptly interrupted because
of our misfortune. Traffic could not move either up nor down
the mountain for about two hours. There was not one disgruntl
ed soul.
It takes such an experience for us to realize how truly
wonderful people are. There were so many instances of fine
character displayed that we want to express our gratitude to
all those who helped and yet continued on their way without
our noting their names. There were the young men who cut
down trees with which to remove the charred body from the
roadway as it stood a terrible hazard in the line of traffic;
the two gentlemen from First Union National Bank, Charlotte,
who transported some members of our group with the luggage
to King’s Inn and Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Doughty of Augusta,
Georgia who likewise volunteered to do the same for others.
There were so many offering their assistance to be of any help
possible. And when all the immediate danger was gone and the
matter of public safety precautions had to be met and handled, a
special note of appreciation goes to Mr. Fred Bowers, Clayton,
Georgia and Mr. Bradford Picklesimer, Highlands.
One can meaningly say that this unpleasant experience yet
proved rewarding in bringing into realization the genuine worth
of man in these materialistic times in which we live. Though
we may never and certainly we would not want of need to re
ciprocate in a like situation — let our reward be one remem
bered that to another in need we can extend our hand.
Sincerely,
(Miss) M. Mellanay Delhom, Curator
Delhom Gallery and Institute
Charlotte. N. C.
r . —- — ■■ ■ ■■ ■ i
The Logic of Investing
No formula yet devised has been a!)It* to tu n the stock
market into a neat package of logic. The reason is simply
that conditions affecting the economy, ind idual com
panies and stock values generally, are in a constant state
of flux.
Just to stay abreast of these changes requires broad
facilities, numerous sources of reliable information, the
ability to evaluate the effects of change and. of course,
the time necessary to give to the job.
For instance, in a single
week recently, there were
headlines regarding the gold
situation. federal budget
cuts, dollar deficits, a tax
increase, and peace negoti
ations vs. escalation. The-,
average reader barely has
the'time to rend.aid the news;
let alone the experience to
determine the impact of each
new development upon the
market and the securities
traded there.
That may be why over
four million investors today
have chosen mutual funds;
Mutual funds, which have
been a part of the American
investment scene since
1924, provide a pooled, long
term, diversified investment
account under the constant
supervision of professionals.
Thus, with an investment
of, let’s say, SI 00 in one
popular mutual fund, the* in
vestor receives a piece of
as many as a hundred or
more securities, or as many
of the stocks and bonds rep
resented in the fund’s, port
folio at the time.
Mutual lun*i nmn;i'»cr.< as
•'unui the task of selecting
individual securities, keep
ing up-to-date on changes
in the status of these se
curities. and handling all
the details of buying and
selling, collecting and dis
tributing income, tax .anal
ysis. and so on.
According to the Invest
ment Company Institute, the
fund shareholder bust year
bought nearly So billion
worth of mutual fund shares,
and today has some SIJ bil
lion at work for him in the
stock market.
We Are Young
i
By Jimmy Valentine
We are on a journey, sensing
and discovering pristine nature
on a wilderness trail of silence.
We are inwardly shroud by
nature’s great storehouse of
intrinsic values that move us
ever deeper and more rev
erently into Mother Earth’s
womb.
At least we are one with the
Life Force, onward into a pri
meval glen jeweled with an in
finite and harmonious tapestry
of light, enveloping trees, and
rich, balmy earth. The air that
reaches every cell in our body
has been filtered through a
multi-green blanket overhead.
The newance of air seemingly
breathes by itself. The water
that quenches our thirst in a
crystalline brook soon is off,
tumbling freely downward, to
form the headwaters of the Tal
lulah River.
The sustenance that is har
vested from the forest floor and
walls of green is fresh, pure,
and completely sustaining to all
men and beasts. Man’s contem
porary noises are left far
behind in his cities. WE ARE
WHOLE AGAIN.
ies, we are one wiui me yuuui
of America celebrating the joys
of winderness camping, explor
ing and nature study within one
of the most diverse natural
areas left in the Southeastern
United States -- the Standing
Indian Natural Area.
This natural area was estab
lished in 1961 by the Dorothy
Thomas Foundation and includ
ed in a nationwide system of
natural areas. The rugged 1500
acre tract in Clay County, North
Carolina, just 2 miles north of
the Georgia State line (acces
sible only from Georgia) is pro
grammed for educational ex
periences in field biology, geo
logy and the ecology of" man
ana nature in me souinern Ap
palachians. The area and the
Tallulah headwaters are en
closed by an especially scenic
loop of the Appalachian Trail.
AH of the Tallulah Valley ex
cept about 600 acres adjacent to
the natural area have been
logged within recent years. The
Forest Service now proposes
to log the wild buffer zone
around the natural area, (in
cluding pockets untouched by an
ax) and building roads (two of
them new crossings of the Ap
palachian Trail) in the face of
a program which depends upon
the wild and roadless character
of this enclosing terrain. The
roads, with the possibility of a
later thoroughfare between US
64 anlf 76, will <£stroy the mag
nificent setting, the safety and
control necessary for the area’s
quality experience provided
Girl Scouts, school and other
groups, both young and adult.
In this steep, highly scenic
terrain, the water, soil, wild
life, recreational and edu
cational values should take pre
cedence over timber yield, if
the Forest Service multiple use
policy is to fulfill the need for
providing a quality life exper
ience for present and future
generations. The MULTIPLE
USE SUSTAINED YIELD ACT
OF 1960 directs that the nation
al forests “shall be administer
ed for outdoor recreation,
range, timber, watershed, wild
life and fish purposes,” with
“due consideration given to the
relative values of the various
resources in a particular
area.” The Forest Service
contends that this area has very
little “multiple use factor” and
is determined to sacrifice “for
a few thousand board feet” the
wise use of the other resources.
The Girl Scouts of America
are prepared to take legal ac
tion against the Forest Service
in the event they decide to follow
the single usage factor of “tim
ber management only.”
As usual, time is of the es
sence in this age of environ
mental crisis. The final de
cision will be forthcoming at
the Atlanta Regional Forest
Service office Tuesday, August
11, after two fact-finding teams
together explore the area this
week, one from the Forest Ser
vice and one from the Girl
Scout, scientific and conser
vation communities.
It is suggested that in the
name of YOUNG AMERICA the
Forest Service withdraw from
public sale all Comparment 118
units of the Tusquitee Ranger
District in Clay County, N.C.
so that this small tip of valley
and its enclosing segment of
Appalachian Trail can be set
aside as a special management
area. Immediate and direct
action is needed before August
11.
riea&e leiegrapu aiiu call
your Congressman and Senators
PLUS immediately notify Mr.
Edward P. Cliff, Chief, United
States Forest Service, Depart
ment of Agriculture, South
Building, 12th and independent
Ave., SW, Washington, D. C.‘
20250; Mr. T. A. Schlapfer,
Regional Forester, United
States Forest Service, 1720
Peachtree Rd. NW, Altanta, Ga.
30309.
May the immense potential
of the Tallulah watershed be so
recognized so that it may con
tinue to provide an environ
mental experience of quality
that will in future years be
seldom equalled. MAY WE
SEE THE FOREST FOR THE
TREES.
(Editor’s Note: Mr. Valen
tin^, of Highlands, is an in
ternational conservationist and
photographer. His book
“Gaule-the Golden Coast of
Georgia’’ with conservation
text and illustrations of photo
graphic art is expected to be
off the press in March, 1971.)
Hitchhiking,Too,Has Its Hazards
For traveling long distances in a short time, nothing is
cheaper than hitchhiking. Few other modes of transportation
are as risky, either, as both hitchhikers and drivers often
discover.
A year-long study of hitchhikers on the New Jersey Turn
pike turned up 162 runaways, 98 military men absent without
leave, seven escapees from mental institutions, five escaped
convicts, and 501 people with criminal fingerprint records.
The upraised thumb appears beside the highway in profusion
as soon as the weather invites casual travel, and to many
motorists it works as well as a stop sign.
Capt. J. L. Lance, commander of State High Patrol Troop
F at Asheville, said that a man reported stopping for a middle
aged white woman on 1-40 west of Canton. Hardly had she
gotten in the car than she told him she had a gun and was going
to rob him. He stopped the car and managed to push her out.
Another man called the SHP to report that a young woman he
had picked up at KnoxvUle refused to get out of his car in
AshevUle. He was afraid to try to force her out. By the
time a patrolman arrived, however, she had departed.
A motorist recently stopped to help two men who seemed to
be having car trouble on 1-26, near HendersonviUe. For his
thoughtfulness he was robbed and beaten. One souvenir of the
occasion was a broken nose.
There is no law forbidding hitchhiking in North Carolina,
only a prohibition against standing on the traveled portion of
the highway, although interstate highways are marked with
signs saying pedestrians and hitchhikers are not allowed.
Most hitchhikers, of course, are college youths or service
men or simply adventurous young men out to cover the country
on a dime. But motorists should remember they are finan
cially liable for all their passengers in case of injury or
death.
And anyone thinking of traveling by thumb ought to realize
that there are probably as many criminals or psychos driving
cars or trucks as there are standing beside the highway. An
honest hitchhiker is sticking his neck out as well as his thumb.
-The Asheville Citizen
Those Chain Letters Again
As if the Post Office Department doesn’t have enough
troubles these days, it now has to pause and issue another
warning about chain letters.
It appears the public will never learn that there is no such
thing as getting rich overnight. The chain letters are cir
culating again.
One that has been widely circulated offers a reward of $8,000,
an indication of these inflationary times. Back during earlier
recessions the promise of $500 or $600 was enough to get the
letters flitting around over the country. —
Chief Postal Inspector William J. Cotter said the Post Office
Department has recorded a 476 per cent increase in these chain
letters. >
A letter requiring a purchaser to sell, or mail, six copies,
more or less, with each of these selling six or more, would
theoretically reach the entire literate population on the earth
if it were followed through only to the 11th level, he says.
Chain letters are a .violation of the federal lottery and fraud
laws, the postal officials warn.
Besides being a violation of the law, there is a risk involved
in falling for this gimmick. . .the risk of losing a dollar, or
whatever remittance it sought.
It is best to recall that no acquaintance of yours who has
fallen for the chain letter idea has ever gotten rich.
-Anderson Independent
Education
Board Meets
The meeting of the Macon
County Board of Education
Tuesday morning was unique
in several respects.
First, the meeting was at
tended by the Macon County
Board of Commissioners and
the County Manager in a group.
They gave as their express
purpose in attending the meet
ing the welcoming of the new
County Superintendent of Public
Schools. Mr. Kenneth Barker,
and to pledge their whole
hearted cooperation in working
with the Superintendent and the
Board of Education for thegood
of Macon County.
Secondly, this was the first
regular monthly Board of Edu
cation covered by the news
media in sometime.
The Board accepted a bid by
Greenville Roofing Company for
the roofing of the Highlands
School. The bid was in the
amount of $14,605. The Sup
erintendent was instructed to
set up a meeting at which the
final details would be worked
out.
After some discussion the
Board set Friday as a time to
meet a group of citizens from
Highlands who are consider
ing the possibilities of merg
ing the Highlands High School
with the one at Cashiers.
Discussion revealed that the
new Vocational Industrial Arts
Building was still in the plan
ning stages.
F ollowing the regular meet
ing the Board went into execu
tive session.
VETERANS
NEWS.
EDITOR’S NOTE: Below are
authoritative answers by the
Veterans Administration to
some of the many current ques
tions from former servicemen
and their families. Further
information on veterans bene
fits may be obtained at any
VA office.
Q - Following dlschargefrom
the Armed Forces, I received
dental treatment from the VA.
Later, I needed further treat
ment, but was denied. Why?
A - A veteran is entitled to
one-time dental treatment if he
applies within one year of dis
charge. If he applies within six
months, it is presumed that
certain of his dental conditions
are service connected, and may
be treated without a review of
service records.
The following categories of
veterans are entitled to repeat
dental treatment: those whose
service-connected noncompen
sable dental conditions or dis
abilities resulted from combat
wounds or service Injuries {for
mer prisoners of war with ser
vice - connected noncompen
sable dental conditions may
have repeat treatment for the
service-connected dental con
dition; veterans receiving com
pensation for a service-con
nected condition or disability
may receive treatment for those
dental conditions which the VA
finds directly related to ag
gravating the service-con
nected condition or disability;
disabled veterans receiving
training under the Vocational
Rehabilitation Act who need
dental treatment to prevent in
terruption of their training.
Thoughts Before Breakfast
Or From Bed To Verse
By - S. T. Capps
Now the young men who have been at camp with the army
reserves are coming home, and getting the royal welcome they
deserve. They have really had it rough, as army training is
getting to be more and more sophisticated:
Hush, little fellow, don’t you cry -
Daddy’s in the calvarye. i
(Or the great big bang artillery, or the slide-rule engineers,
Or the weary footsore infantry with the dirt behind their ears;
But whatever branch he’s serving in this military spasm,
He served with great distinction and with much enthusiasm)
He climbs the mountains, swims the lakes,
And checks the lining in the brakes,
Teaches his troops to swim and dive
And operate the four-wheel drive,
And when to shoot, or hold their fire, ;
And with dispatch to change a tire,
And late at night when he needs sleep
Waxes the saddle for his jeep.
When he returns he well deserves
Hot biscuits spread with plum preserves,
And mamma, too, will proudly bake
A large and luscious layer cake.
Found: The Missing Day
Did you know that the space program is busy proving that
what has been called “myth” in the Bible is true? Mr. Harold
Hill, president of the Curtis Engine Company in Baltimore,
Maryland, and a consultant in the space program, relates the •
following development:
I think the most amazing thing that God has for us today hap
pened recently to our astronauts and space scientists at Green
Belt, Maryland. '
They were checking the position of the sun, moon, and planets
out in space as to where they would be 100 and 1000 years from
now. We have to know this so we don’t send up a satellite and
have it bump into something later on in its orbit. We have to lay
out the orbit in terms of the life of the satellite, and where the
planets will be so the whole thing wiU not bog down!
They ran the computer measurements back and forth over
the centuries and it came to a halt. The computer stopped and
put up a red signal, which meant that something was' wrong
either with the information fed into it or with the results as
compared to the standards.
They called in the service department to check it out and
they said, “It’s perfect.”
The IBM head of operations said, “What’s wrong?” “Well, .
we have found there is a day missing in space in elapsed time.” .
They scratched their heads and tore their hair. There was
no answer!
Then a religious fellow on the team said, “You know, one
time I was in Sunday School and they talked about the sun stand
ing still.” They didn’t believe him, but they didn’t have any
other answer so they said, “Show us."
So he got a Bible and went back to the book of Joshua where
they found a pretty ridiculous statement for anybody who has
“good common sense.” There they found the Lord saying to
Joshua, “Fear them not, I have delivered them into thy hand, .
there shall not a man of them stand before thee” (Josh. 10:
12-14).
Joshua was concerned because he was surrounded by the
enemy and if darkness fell they would overpower them, so
Joshua asked the Lord to make the sun stand still! -That’s
right! The sun stood stiU and the moon stayed and did not go
down for about a day. )
The space men said, “There is the missing day!” Well,
they checked the computer going back into time to the time it
was written and found it was close but not close enough. The ,
elapsed time that was missing back in Joshua’s day was 23
hours and 20 minutes, not a whole day. They read the Bible
and there it was, about (approximately) a day.
These little words in the Bible are important, but they were
still in trouble because if you cannot account for 40 minutes
you’ll be in trouble 1000 years from now. Forty minutes had
to be found because it can be multiplied many times over in
orbits.
WeU, this religious fellow also remembered somewhere
in the Bible where it said the sun went backwards.
The space men told him he was out of his mind. But they
got out the Book and read these words in U Kings 20: 8-10.
Hezekiah, on his death bed, was visited by the prophet Isaiah
who told him that he was not going to die. Hezekiah did not
believe him and asked for a sign as proof. Isaiah said, “Do
you want the sun to go ahead ten degrees?” Hezekiah said,
“It is nothing for the sun to go ahead ten degrees, but let the
shadow return backward ten degrees.”
Ten degrees is actly 40 minutes. Twenty-three hours and
20 minutes in Joshua plus 40 minutes in II Kings make the
missing twenty-four hours the space travelers had to log
in the log book as the missing day in the universe.
Isn’t it amazing how our God reveals His truths through
modern man? — An editorial in The Evening World, Spencer,
Ind.
SENATOR
WASHINGTON - - There has
been increased public concern
over the wisdom and legality
of some of the data banks which
are being constructed by Fed
eral departments and agencies.
On the basis of a study which
the Constitutional Rights Sub
committee has undertaken, I
am convinced that this public
concern is caused by the fail
ure of some agencies to limit
their information activities to
those reasonably necessary for
administration of the laws they
are charged by Congress with
administering. It is also caused
by the failure of responsible
officials to inform the public
and Congress honestly and squ
arely just why the information
is needed and what will be
done with it, and it is caused
by their frequent failure to
assure due process to indivi
duals who might be involved with
the program or placed in a
data bank. Consequently, many
wothwhile data programs which
are necessary for good govern
ment come under criticism for
lack of public information and
for lack of government candor.
One of the Federal depart
ments which has recently been
guilty of incursions into die con
stitutionally protected san
ctuaries of individual rights
is the Department of Defense.
A branch of this mammoth De
partment, the Army, has ad
mittedly engaged in the collect
SAM ERVIN
ion and data banking of per
sonal information about civil
ians who are active in politics
or who belong to organizations
which are or might be active.
In response to public reaction
to this program, the Army
pleaded that it needed to do
these things in the interest of
being prepared to deal with
civil disturbances. It finally
agreed to cut back on its pro
gram. However,from thelatest
policy statement which I have
received, it is clear that the
Army has maintained its de
terrent power over the indivi
dual rights of American citi
zens.
When I first learned about
these activities, I asked the
Secretary of the Army for a
full report because I thought
the Army has no business med
dling in civilian politics, or
conducting surveillance of law
abiding American citizens or
maintaining data banks on civil
ians who had no business with
the Department of Defense.
Moreover, the Army’s data
banks appear to be a part of a
vast network of intelligence
oriented systems which are
being developed willy-nilly
throughout our land, by gov
ernment and by private indus
tries. I believe that in these
systems, where they contain the
record of the individual’s
thoughts, beliefs, habits, atti
tudes, and personal activities,
there may well rest a potential
for political control and for
intimidation which is '.alien to
a society of free men. :
In March 1970,1 was informed
that the Army had unplugged one.
of its computerized data banks
on civilians which it maintained
at Fort Holabird and that it
would discontinue a blacklist of
citizens which it distributed
widely. However, my Concern
about the Army's surveillance
of civilian programs has been
renewed following the publica
tion of an article in the: July
issue of the Washington Mcftthly
of Christopher Pyle,; a layyer I
and former Army intelligence :
officer. Mr. Pyle concludes
that the Army has resumed
this surveillance program Jin
some quarters and h4s con
tinued it In others.
Since the courts have not
yet provided a remedy for cit- .
izen complaints about sudisur- -
veillance programs >nd- there :
are many questions about'the
constitutionality of such prac
tices, I have invited the Sec
retary of the Army to. appear
as one of the witnesses before
the Constitutional Rights Sub
committee, of which I am Chair
man, at its forthcoming hear
ings on Federal data banks and ;
constitutional rights.;' 1 am •
hopeful that his testimony will •
answer the questions which
have been raised in tbe Con
gress relative to surveillance
of our citizens and Federal data
banks, and the needs'of our:
Government for such informa
tion.