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  • the interior pages a re beililg printed on the Klan press in Tuscaloosa. The c ost of the new magazine will be $3.00 per year, and there will be 12 copies issued per year. On September 6, 1967, Birmingham Confidential Source 23 advised that U M:.i UKA held
  • (particularly Cong. Gonzales of Texas), etc. B. Misc. Publications - "Underground News Bulletins", anti-semetism, "Network Bulletins" (training pamphlets, reaction to gun control, letters from members, etc.), "What Chance for the Minutemen?", training program
  • 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
  • s 1967, S'TOXER w~ts one of thos;e ~ttetud tlrl: g '.il p1":i.VJ1\t.e meeting of klan members held at Bogalusa~ Louisi2ns, the purpose of which meeting was to try to form 3nother kl~n group 9 the new group to be compos,e d of the G-rJf.:r11d Dr
  • • 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
  • the address of the headquarters of the NSRP had been changed from Jeffersonville, Indiana, to Post Office Box 783, Birmingham, Alabama. Issue No. 69, dated July, 1965, of "The Thunderbolt" announced the address of the new headquarters df the NSRP as Post
  • Coordinating Committee, a militant black nationalist organization, stated, ''New Orleans was ready to go:•and that''Baton Rouge, particularly Southern University there, was hot." Brown stated that only time was necessary to mobilize forces and has requested his
  • was a Negro. Picketing the construction site of a new city conven­ tion hall, to protest lack of Negro membership in building ' - trades unions, produ_c ed no results. When the Reverend Fred Shuttlesworth, who had led the Negroes in the Birmingham march
  • 9 Wo SUMPTER MC -INTOSH, JR ·· and JOHN .HULETT, latter being founder of Black Panther Party. Tri-State Black Power Conclave scheduled for 10/14~15/67, cancelled; ·but Dr. · NATltAN WRIGHT of Newark, New Jersey, scheduled ' to· speak 2/16/68
  • and eoul , / considered a factor in kee i ·n racial un~est }?j:j_._bigh .l?.~t:!1· .At Bridgeton, New Jersey, for example, a cross was burned approximately two hours before the riot took place. Responsibility for the cross burning has not been established
  • . )l.Yl''t \~ -~ e turning point was reached in the summer of 1963. ~ ~ -Yl·~-(, ("(,") The most massive demonstrations the South had seen .,_'-' 4 . ~ Cur~ . ""' - l.e - , ~t~le;('I-began in Birmingham, Alabama. The white response was a series
  • July 15., 1967, Darbytown Road., Richmond., V:h ginla Henrico Coun ty Police have released auto confiscated on July 4, 1 19670 RH T-1., July 19, 1967 Richmond., Virgini.a. July 16., 1967, Critical of news media since it turned Kl an information
  • 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
  • for August 6 and 7, 1966, in :New York City, Birmingham and Phoenix., Several state conventions are reportedly scheduled for September 10 and 11, 1956. Everet·t; Moore, acting chairman of the Patriotic Party in Arizona, said after the conven-t;ion that 1,000
  • anticipation of Negro violenc e l ed to heavy- handed uses of official for ce that provoked violence which might not have othe~wi~e occurred , The news media , for their part , sometimes shared in c r e atine a c limate in which viol ence could be expected
  • dominant motives . As Negro vi6l~nce begins to abate, a new phase of dis­ order is inaugurated . . Thi$ is the period in which control authorities begin to re-asserttheir dominance. It is also a _period in wh.;i.ch much of the la,vlessness comes from
  • will do so. .... S.., U.S. Sllfli•t,s BtmJs R11,tJMly tm tb, Pdpoll SMmt,s Pl1111 I 75 NEW BRUNSWICK All during the weekend that violence sputtered, · flared, subsided, then flared again in Plainfield, in New Brunswick, less than 10 miles away
  • ) Oklahoaa (RM) 1- NISO, New Orleans, Louisiana (RM) GERALDLEWISGEARY OfflCII: Dallas, Texas 1/31/68 FlelclOffice FIieNo., 100-11486 Titles BLACKNATIONALISTIIOVEIIENT DALLASDIVISIOH Chaiacten INTERN.AL SECURITY- BLACKN.ATIONALIS~ 2- Copyto, 2- Repo
  • ,A.,KKICK., for Pennsylvania·. _This article quoted DESMOMD as saying that ROY :V,RIU·OOI0USER. had been kick ed out of the Klan because he was too nueh an :American Nazi. · ~e "Reading Fagle," :tn its issue of April 11, 1966., carried a news item denying
  • , 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
  • and days after the news came, it must be pierced or hurt. Envy reaches out to have made countless people feel that pull them down. So there are causes, a there is nothing to count on, nothing pattern of explanation, that can be of­ secure enough to make
  • from Jeffersonville, Indiana, to Post Office Box 783, Birmingham, Alabama. · · Issue No. 69, dated July, 1965-, of "The Thunder-b olt" announced the address of the new headquarters ot the NSRP as Post Office Box 184, Augusta, · Georgia. Issue No. 88
  • 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
  • in the @on!hpan:,ot ·BAKER or an, other loo.al RAM meambers few an appreciable peri-i()d of ti11me,, DE Te=il advised that .KENNETHJOHN WATSON9 along wit-Ji ·o.U1er l·ocal nntlitant Negroes~ is attempt.in.g· to. publish a Blac-k .Power type :new~paper
  • the name of it. While we waited for the garage to put some new tires on, we discussed how important words were. I had commented on the - 3 word "rebellion" as opposed to "riot" Joyce said, is more positive historically the master slave-concept. In Joyce's
  • . To New Grace Hosp._ Shot in front of 19218 Livernois. JOHNSONis a private guard. 1:26 AM 7/25 (Prsnr) ??/N. Shot r,un pellets upper portion of RONALDPOWh""LL, To DGF (CB). Refused to halt body & face, also rt hip. at Lycaste .& Goethe on orders
  • , 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
  • 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
  • ; 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • ATTORNEY G~NERAL STATE OF NEW YORK TO HON. NELSON A. ROCKEFELLER GOVERNOR STATE OF NE,W YORK October 18, 1967 Pursuant to your directive of January 3, 1967 ( annexed hereto as "Appendix A"), under the authority of Executive Law, Section 63, subd. 8, I
  • Attached are editorials on a recently published SNCC News­ letter which urged that President Johnson be spit upon. Oneedition is from the New York Times; the other is from the Washington Post. ~ We will ~7 Hanoi show that this year. The Atlanta
  • SIMULMATICS Corporation THE SIMULMATICS CORPORATION Cambridge/New York/Washington [1 of 52] News Media Coverage of the 1967 Urban Riots a study prepared for the NATIONAL ADVISORY COMMISSION ON CIVIL DISORDERS by The Simulmatics Corporation
  • 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_
  • , 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
  • 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
  • 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