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  • their more conservative elders, a tension that ~ad been brewing for some time within the Cincinnati Negro community. The importance ·-t .o militants of blocked political access was evident. For three straight days selective violence by youths
  • a small fire that fin a lly spread into a blaze con­ suming a block of Negro businesses , Their -inaction sten~ed in part from a fear of a plot to trap fir e department equip­ ment in the Negro area thus leaving the downtown area . to be burned
  • operating up to now in the field of technical assistance. The building in which it is located was not among those razed during the course of the riots although almost the [2 of 5] ­ - 3 - entire block around the ARA office was demolished. ARA has been
  • . This turned out to be acceptable to the local groups, and freed the funds. Whether it will really work in practice remains to be seen. Again Yorty was the stumbling block. It took all of Collins z skill and finally discussions with Jesse Unruh (Yorty 1 s man
  • WAIBIMOTOK ~/ 11: 10 pm. Tuesday March 15, 1966 MR. PRESIDENT: Watts Hale ~hampion, Pat ~i:own's man in Sacramento confirmed Ramsey X Clark's report that the situation in Watts now looks "fairly encouraging." The troublemakers are confined to a 3-6 block