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  • , 1067, for a copy ot tho articles Louj.s g. I.,cw.r..x·regru·dint1 tho copy of his sorics of articles "Independent this month. Stn1' News, . The ltedernl s1on Qt no infori-~atiou lutivlHl17 orf;anuaticn 11 Detroit writtt,u on by riot,. l no cnclo
  • Detroit (Mich.)
  • Folder, "Detroit - FBI Reports, July 23, 1967," Records of the NACCD (Kerner Commission), Embargoed Series, Box 22
  • -Chair obert Piper, December 20, 1967 in Detroit. I called Lobsinger directly and he agreed to see ·me at the Greyhound Bus Terminal Cafeteria, Detroit, for lunch on De·cember 20, 1967. I met him there at 12~00 noon; he brought with him his Vice-chai~man
  • of persons "We are at War." Only ::ays before, in New York, Brown had descr-ibed the Detroit and Newark 'riots' as DRESS REHEARSALS for all-out violent revolution and armed warfare .• Since that time - though on a smaller scale - the arson con­ tinues
  • troop movements remainder of concerning support . rt Mon., 31 July 1200: Telephone discussion with Rep. Nedzi concerning support plans and seneral situation. 1230: Lunch at Detroit Detroit News. 1440: Discussion with Sen. Hart concerning
  • See all scanned items from file unit "Investigations - Detroit - General"
  • Detroit (Mich.)
  • Folder, "City of Detroit - Presentation," Records of the NACCD (Kerner Commission), Embargoed Series, Box 77
  • Black Natlonalist Movel"l'leMt, DeRvor Division C 1 1/30/68 A~ Black Nationalist Movement, Detroit Division NLll 11'2.A:.-\3-\~l ~·SON'\I ~u t=o I). \:4) C 80 1/31/68 -14r-(t~ utt»d ~'1/J./(3 .eaa repoll Black NationalistMovement
  • . Joyce needs goint. said that the hippies a sense of cooperation "Mao knew that and have taught the new left that it between members in order to keep so did George Washington." He said that the Negroes of Detroit were not completely united
  • Folder, "Interim Report - Office of Investigations - Reports of Investigators 1967-1968 [Cities]: Detroit [1 of 3]," Records of the NACCD (Kerner Commission), Embargoed Series, Box 2
  • in the license, and no renewal of such license shall be granted ex• cept upon the filing of a new application. Every li­ cense issued hereunder shall bear the imprint of the right thumb of the licensee, or, if that be not pos­ sible, of the left thumb or some
  • Detroit (Mich.)
  • Folder, "Interim Report - Office of Investigations - Reports of Investigations [Cities]: Detroit [3 of 3]," Records of the NACCD (Kerner Commission), Embargoed Series, Box 2
  • spelled waD backwards.) 1 I We engaged DJ'troit, in investigations Grand Rapids, inlOG!Ethe Newark, Plainfield, following cities: Elizabeth, Englewood, Jllrsey City, New Brunswdick, Old Taylor, and Cambridge, Md.Ji 1: . o r vast ~ and FAR
  • ' .... . .. _ I ... ., -. UNITED S'tiATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVES'l'IGATION Z.. !leJ,ly,_Pkaae Rf/er to n, l!o. ·. Detroit, MJ.chig~n December 7~ 1966 Re: Breakthrough The :inform~tion bereiruifit(f;;r set forth
  • be a diversionary tactic. Belle Isle, the recreation area in the Detroit River that had been the scene of the 1943 riot, was sealed off. In an effort not to attract people to the scene, _some broadcasters cooperated by reporting no news of the riot. As a · result
  • :attempti:n:g to recruit new members and expand its sphere of influenceo To d.~te RAM has orga.rdzed 9 according uni ts FD-323 (Rev. 11-29-61) UNITED STATES FEDERAL BUREAU Detroit, August Iri Reply, Please Refer to· FileNo. DEPARTMENT DE 157
  • Folder, "Revolutionary Action Movement (RAM) - FBI Reports - Detroit" Records of the NACCD (Kerner Commission), Embargoed Series, Box 18
  • no information as to the existence of a. Black Liberation Front organ­ ization in the New York area.. New York confidential sources advised in February, 1966,. that they could furnish no information reflecting the existence of an organization known as the Black
  • of: WILLIAMC. KASH Date: New York, New York Offke1 AUG3 1 1967 Fleld Office FIie I: 100-138651 Title: WILLIAMLEO EP.rON, JR. Character: INTERNALSECURITY-PROGRESSIVE LABOR PARTY Bureau File l:100-432251 Subject resides at Apartment ~, 1470 Amsterdam
  • to be desegregated with all deliberate speed. On December 1, 1955, a Negro seamstress named Rosa Parks was arrested when she refused to give up her seat to a white man on a M~ntgomery, Alabama, bus. When the news spread through the community, a young Negro minister
  • . Preliminary inquiries in Milwaukee and Detroit met with little response. This was thought to be unusual in view of the fact that these cities would be likely to have had large representations at such a meeting. It appears that the meeting was scrubbed because
  • ATLAN'l'A 0 BRIDGE'l'ON. . CAMBRIDGE CINCINNATI DAYTON DET~OIT ELIZABETH ENGLEWOOD .. GRANDRAPIDS . I JERSEY CITY .. MILWAUKEE NEW BRUNSWICK. .. NEWHAVEN . NEWARK PATERSON. .... PHOENIX PLAINFIELD ROCKFORD TAMPA TUCSON •. , ) - 121
  • Date: Returned to Mr. George Trask December 4, 1967 on December 4, 1967 the following: 1. FBI Report on Detroit, Detroit, Re: Rioting, July 23, 1967 Michigan, dated July Michigan, Beginning (CONFIDENTIAL) 24, 1967 2. FBI Report on Detroit
  • in the aOllmlWlity which does IQOst of the riotinq. Again, experience in such cities aa New York and St. Louis suggest ■ that theae step• are bot.b feasible and important. But the experience of Detroit •uggesta that these efforts by themaelves, without effort
  • content• are not to be dlatrtbuted outatd~ your aqency. QOllPIBlll4'IA'1 UN ------------:o STATES DEPARTMENT - OF JI 'ICE FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION Copy loa l - Secret Service, New York City (.RM) 3 - 108th MI Group, New York City (RM
  • . Rap Brown, National Chairman of the.Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, who is in prison in New Orleans, Louisiana. In the letter Brown said that for every Orangeburg there would be ten Detroits. He urged revenge for the shedding of Negro blood
  • than 25 percent of the guns taken by authorities in Detroit were legally registered. A general discussion of the cities experiencing the most trouble recently showed that one third were cities and towns in New Jersey. cities (attached). . Mr. Scales
  • and promote Malcolm X objectives, also to sponsor Black Power conferences. STOKELY CARMICHAEL rally · in Cincinnati 4/29/67. Memorial . -­ for Malcolm ·x on 5/20/67, with visitors from Detroit, including GRACE BOGGS, ·who with husband JAME8i, is Marxist
  • map across the room. Curvin 10 & 11 p. 40 - Last paragraph. The carloads of police officers were not reinforcements; they were officers reporting in for a new shift. Melchior 8 p. 41 - First full paragraph. The molotov cocktails were thrown just
  • the document. (Cl Closed In accordance with ntstrtctiona contained in the donor'• dead of gift. 11/1/2007 --UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION In &ply, PleaaeReferSO FU.No. Newark, New Jersey August 31, 1967 NATIOrTAL
  • , is also in charge of the Temple Luncheonette on South McDowell Street (new address Belmont and Davidson Streets, supra), Charlotte, which is owned by the mosque. In addition to this cafe, the mosque rents farm land near Mint Hill, North Carolina
  • • a.re aot to be diatrlbuted out•td■ you 1111•ncr,. UN.iTED STATES DEPARTMENT ()F J"'.;iflCE FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION 1 1 1 1 Copy~: Reportof: Date, - OSI, GAFB - NIC, New Yor~, N. Y. • 108th MIG, Albany, N. Y. - u. s. Secret Service
  • Shop. To DGH (CB). 1:25 PM 7/24 (Looter) ROBERT BEAL, 49/N/M of.8857 Treadwell, a looter, shot_by Detroit Police Patr. ERNEST GILBERT, #2 Task Force, at the Oakland Auto Parts, 9325 Oakland. Homicide File #71! Assigned to - Bowron. Report on Case
  • See all scanned items from file unit "Investigations - Detroit - General"
  • Detroit (Mich.)
  • Detroit Police Department
  • that the solutions must be worked out over a period of time by individual communities and, since this is a new problem, the solutions will take new forms. Nevertheless, I believe one makes 1 one s points better by giving examples of the kinds of solutions one
  • ::for theDl to be fair and i mprirt ial · bee.a .use of opinions al.r eady . formed, primarily from -.news .accounts about . Freeman's~ association with the Revolutionary Action Movement (RAM),· a Negro nationalist groupD . _ ... . · . vvc.ommon Pleas Judge
  • dcmonslrJtors. wl Henderson, N.C., July 12 •· Ncgnlt'S and white perst>ns fought when Nl'gmes sought Sl'rvicc at a truck-stop restaurant. New York City (Harlem and Brooklyn), N.Y., July IB-23. After a police lieutenant shot to death a Negro who attacked him
  • , THROUGH AUGUST31, 1964, AND YOUTHDISTURBANCES SEPTEMBER 4, 1964 1 THROUGH SEPTEUBER7, 1964 STA'£E OF NEW YORK New York City July 17 2 1964, through July 31, 1964 • Following the shooting of fifteen-year-old James :>owell, a Negro, in New York City
  • boxes of new pistols, one case of hand grenades, which ,, in his own ·words.. ,-1ere;·enough to fight However, the room, we finally the ,-1ar in Vietnam for two days; agreed, was approxi~~tely 10 by 12 feet ~ and ~tacked some eight feet high_
  • . At least one lock will fasten each door. All new oonstruction for arms storage rooms will specify hinges that have ooncealed hinge pins or pre­ scribe that hinge pins be located on the in­ ward side of the arms storage room or require the use of safety stud
  • of the organiza­ in a perio4;t of g}:letto the Ph_!}adelph1a Pohce tion exist in New York, violence· arid;,. discontent Depart~~t · w h a t Yaz~ Detroit, eh i c a go a n d over Vietna~-:- ,; trzemsk1_ 1s to the Boston c t e veland. Philadelphia , .. has
  • SELECTEDRACIAL DEVELOPMENTS AND DISTURBANCES FIVE PERSONSARRESTED,NEWHAVEN, CONNECTICUT,IN PLOT TO BOMBPUBLIC BUILDINGS Since November, 1967, the New Haven, Connecticut, Police Department had under investigation a report that members of the Hill Parents
  • of the Liuzzo home in Detroito A fiery cross burns in Detroit. Congressional Record, House Un-American Activities Committee and the Klan. Extension of remarks of Hon. William F. Ryan. Congressional Record, 4/5/65, p. A1649-Al650. Reprinting editorial from New
  • , 1964 . 'SUl~JARY_ANALYSI~ OF THE RACIAL : DISTURBANCES ANDRIOTING DURING : THE PERIOD FROMJULY 17, 1964, THROUGH AUGUST31, 1964, AND YOUTHDISTURBANCES SEPTEMBER 4, 1964 1 THROUGH SEPTEMBER 7, 1964 STATEOF NEWYORK New York City ~uly 17, 1964, through
  • , Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, Realm of New Jersey C 06a report United Klans of America, Incorporated, Knights of the Ku Klux Klan , Realm of New Jersey C 11 14 Restriction 7/13/67 A 7/13/67 A 1/18/66 A 1/18/66 A Collection Title Federal
  • ; approximately twenty-five white persons were present during this meeting. Howard Spencer, Leader of the Political Action Committee at Tougaloo introduced the principal speaker, one Paul Boutelle from Harlem, New York, who is seeking the office of Vice President
  • the document. (C) Closed In accordance with restrictions contained In the donor's deed of gift. Initials ., ·s. V"TJTED STATES DEPARTM'ENT 0-%STICE • FEDERAL /11R~ply.PkaH Refer io FU. No. BURE A U OF INVEST i'GAT ION Buffalo, New York 14202 July 27
  • New York