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  • to Wayne Count Prosecuto~_William L. Cahalan on Augus~ 2, 1967. 48. 12:30 AM SGT. WILLIAMGERLACH,-· cut by falling glass from looted 7/24 building, .._Woodward & Henry. To Ford Hosp., FAO. , (Police) 49. 12:47 AM PVT~--MAVRIROSE, MNG, 26/W, (home
  • that by unity he could obtain power, he .acquired both self-respect and militancy • . A Negro janitor in .Montgomery told a reporter:: "We got out heads up now, and we won't ever bow down again -­ no, sir -- except before God!" Yet statutory equality more
  • skilled jobs. More than. half of the families h~d incomes· of less than $3,000 a year. The result was that 40 percent of the children lived in broken homes, and the city's crime rate was among the top 25 percent in the nation. Although the meeting
  • ~ ~ averted that evening. The police wanted to breb: e p Eli€! ~ w w~~..~1-r-~ eccwd. rr , 77 · The crowd was angry at the massive show of by the police. replied: Asked to return to their homes "we· will go home when you get the police out
  • ;.iuse it lowed in "· home o~· c1.n;i.part• The batt.le pfan._was simpfo: overlooki:!d th~ (net that ;in or• mcut, •tbr ''::;alr.snrnr.'.\\'l}Uld::ayremain as obscure as possible ~ahb:cd group, largely frnm out- th::1.lhe was from tJ1r ~oulh, th;ituntil
  • Robinson, a Negro, was in favor of the boycott during its early stages but is now opposed to the boycott and favors discontinuing it. Following the meeting on Janua~y 23, 1968, a shotgun blast was fired into his home. General Robinson's wife
  • AND TO THE HOMES OF EMPLOYEES!' PERIOD- PROCEDURES TRAINED PROPERLY II• POWER PERIODICALLY? A MEDICAL ARE EMPLOYEES P'IRST•AIDT THEY TRAINED IS THE CONSTRUCTION OF FALLOUT SHELTERS CONSIDERED DURING THE DESIGN•ENGINEERING PHASE OF NEW BUILDINGS
  • the country and the push for "open housing?" :?) Why were the hands of the police and National Guard tied? 3) What is the REAL reason behind the drive to register all firearms? 4) What wilJ the NEXT RIOT be like; and what can YOU do to defend your own home
  • · TO Their of ' -;- P;:; KNOVv -:- -. "' --- :._ ... ; ! "' · :. l ~ ..:: They '-._/I ave the C o u n t r y m e n· Following -is just one of many letters being sent home from Vie_tnam: R:cfaction From Vietnam ··· ··-·-First Lt. Ward S. Johnson, a U.S
  • game at D.C. Stadium. 1963 Birminghom, Alo., ~lay 12 -- Negroes rioted after a home and a mntel ownctl by Nc)!;roleadt•rs w,·rL·bombed. Lexington, N.C., June fj -- Negr~s and white persons battl,'{f; racial "high teu~ion" was rcp
  • executive action, we did' not go unnpticed. have kept the peace," he Neitl'\er d i d complaints hammers home. fr' om scores of Negro "... !'believe that every parents that their high reasonable citizen knows chool sons were being where the real crime­
  • fought in every major struggle ever carried. on by the United States Government. We have shed blood and d.ied irrespective of the cost to home and farnily. Today one of the black :revolutionaries who fought 1 "One tf 't}:g:'.! 1nost :f"f;,1
  • were thrown ·through ··window of home ·of Judge J . C. ADKINScausing an estimated $300.damage. Florida State Supreme Court on 1/16/68, denied a plea for appeal bond for DAWKINS and THOMAS. On 1/23/68, USDJ G. HARROLD CARSWELL, Tallahassee, Fla., denied
  • from the.area. Meanwhile' several. blo~ks from the scene pf the rally, two white youngsters w~lked up and down in front ~f predominantly ~ep,ro homes. One of thes~ boys carried a sign which stated "Whites for Whites." When they refused to ·stop
  • Geegorj-epoke next and stated that while you sit here and talk:., m~n or·action e.re at home ple.nming a.nd getting ready. He pointed out that one-action that the conference could take would bo to get Black people registered and recall the mayor of Newark
  • , New Jersey Press B. New~rk, New Jersey Star-Ledger C. New Brunswick, New Jersey Home News D. Newark, New Jersey News.· E. Perth-Amboy, New Jersey News F. Unidentified Art~cles .. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• INTERVIEWS Publie Sec
  • -91911 At the above rally JESSE GRAYstated that he wall opposed to Negroes being dratted to tight in Vietnam. He talked ab011t the percentage ot Negroes being dratted aa against Wh1tea. Be wanted the Begro aoldiera to come home and help tight the nan. He
  • is stj_ll affiliated with the America·n· Nazi Party (ANP) a.nd the Minutemen. Subject's car presently broken down and ) [ abandoned. He does not have a Pennsylvania drive:r 1 s license~ FRANKHOUSER h a s numerous weapons at his home, and makes statement
  • , 1967, LARRYLIGHTNER urged all those present to pay particular attention to courses in self-defense since these were considered extremely important. He stated it is every Muslim's duty to be able to defend himself, his wife, his home and his mosque. He
  • by the National Coordinator in a simple pse_udo-home-spun style. For example, the definition of sabotage: '' Ever hear of the 'great American sense of humor' 1 In no other country is the 'practical joke' so widely appreciated or so ingeniously applied
  • found guilty of setting fire to the home of a Lau.r el, Maryland, Negro. one of the men testified that shortly after getting KKK membership cards they decided the house-burning was "a sure way to get accepted by the Klan." The report. on the present-day
  • officer. UKA chapters -lo­ cated in Caldwell and Bridgeton, N. J., areas. Closed meet­ ings held at home of BEHRINGER in December, 1966, and January, Synopsis: 1967. - p - DETAILS: A characterization of the UNITED KLANS OF AMERICA, INC., KNIGHTS
  • - where the action ls. We1re 10 years ahead of the rest ol the nation." Want To Uve." ----------Fr. Geary said that home. , ~, _. ~ owners groups had campalgned for hll nm.oval long ~ --H - - - - - - - before Breakthrough began. IIJ-Z""As!!E J.t
  • police . . were continually on the alert to keep marches and counter- . .·'' marches of civil rights and -white supremacist organ1z.ations · * A block is considered to have been "busted" when one Negro family has been sold a home . in a previously
  • that the Committee for a Winter Confrontation with Congress plans to picket the home of United States Representative Jonathan B. Bingham in New York City on March 4, 1968. -e8HFIQENTIA1. -3- _ ,,QQHP:EBENTI.Al. .. SELECTED RACIALDEVEI.DPMENTS ANDDISTURBANCES
  • playing chess at· the Motel ·and was on his way home. (Patr. Jones thinks • he gave an address of· 121·w. Euclid) Patr. Jones turned him over to several National Guardsmen and went to the Manor house and entered via the rear door. a, series of shots·coming
  • Corporation also show his employment as being with the Carolina Insurance Agency. Records of the Nbrth Carolina Insurance Commission reflect the subject, doing business as Carolina Insurance Agency, is an agent for the American Bankers Insurance Company, home
  • or container in the trunk - 18 - of his vehicle or while carrying a pistol unloaded and in a wrapper from the place of purchase to his home or place of business or to a place of repair or back to his home or place of business, or in moving goods from 1 place
  • SHELTON, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, ·was re­ elected Imperial Wizard of the UKA. SHELTON- resides at #18 Lake Sherwood, Star Route, Northport, A.labam·a , and maintains the National Headquarters of ·the UKA ._ at his home. Sources report the activities of SHELT
  • ~~- 455 Whitridge Ave., Baltimore 18, lli. (20 miles fro-m the range tnere are shooting ranges closer to Geigan's home). GEIGAN is a barber (one of the last few whites in a rapidly changing to Negro aikx area) who participated last summer on the side
  • and killing black people at home; and ••• we are going to screw up this society. "• .• The white rebellion is on ••• what we need is not a peace movement., but a movement for liberation. • • "• •. The goal? A massive white revolutionary youth movement which
  • fight at home ? 11 NYT-3 March 28, 1966 NYT-10 April 6., 1966 NYT-15 '\:pril 6., 1966 NYT-16· April 12, 1966 -11- r NY100-146275 PAULBOUTELLE participated in an anti-Viet Nam march which was held in New York City on March 26, 1966, sponsored
  • both at home and abroad. He denounced United States Imperialisffi through the world and United States support of "racist" governments in Rhod~sia and South Africa. Subject stated that his political views are pro-Red China. NYT-6 February 23, 1967
  • the proper military authorities. You can reach me at my office, my home, or through the White House switchboard at any h"our:" ~-~--- - l - • I .• • • • • ..•. ' . ' Enclosed are copies o{ the relevant constitutional and statutory provisions
  • marchers, under. pol ice escort, through the downtown business district of Peoria yesterday. Yesterday's march was a continuation of that organization's drive for total school integration. As the marchers passed near the Taft Homes, a housing develop­ ment
  • . Officers a. - 132 Nassau Street, newspaper. their homes, government on 5. Objectives of a militant - The PLP's working 6. Statements 7. Written 8. Incorporation advised Evidence 9. 10. 15-18, Appeal the Movement" Finances based