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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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • of S. 3010 as amended, is to centr~lize in one new Cabinet-level department the responsibility for leadership in the development, direction, and coordination of the principal transporta­ tion policies, functionsJ .and operations of the Federal
  • 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
  • • , • :.•.••.•·.•.--~·,·:~._;.=, ...·•·•.··.· it will s.ay things that people already around it. It is a new version of the =•.:::.>·:....:::··:,.. ·, .'\ . ·; •· · • ·. . " ·~•. •. '. •·f •...: ··:·know; things they know, but haven't Bible story: Jonah has the comfortable-~::•-:,• .. ·i'.i
  • ,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
  • 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
  • , 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 the activities of each Wtit, seep. 365) PL89-174 transferred the FHA as an entity to HUD. The legislation basically upgraded the existing HHFA (established in 1947) to Cabinet-level status. The new agency was not to administer all federal programs relating
  • ...... ' .. ... OctQber 25, 1965 t .... ~ .FOR THE PBESIDENT .. FBOM Joe Calua.no There are two ways to move forward on equal opportunity in housing: 1. By extending the Executive Order to cover all new housing. o£ which is financed by any institutions supervised
  • the foregoing proviso shall cease to be 4 controlling upon tho establishment of a new rate of com- 5 pensation for such positions by or pursuant to the provisions 6 of .any law hereafter enacted. 7 8 ( d) The Secretary may delegate any of his functions
  • bis Committee. Senator McClellan told Alan Boyd and me that he will hold the hearings himself on the Department of Transportation bill and will "expedite" the matter. His first question concerned what functions if any the new Department would take from
  • . Ervin Non-coinm.ittal. Gruening Okay. Muskie Sounds pretty go6d, but warns that Scn~tors will bo conce1·ned ahout rol of cc1·tain existing agencies such as FA.A, after trans!e1· to new Dopt,.2/: All the way with us I •Ribicoff Harris Open mind
  • beset the advantageous are steps for the new Depart­ that can and should be taken immediately: 1. Maritime I am today issuing Labor Management difficult manning, • - have hampered the Secretary program order Commission to aid in resolving
  • to the same effect could be included in Section 3 either as a part of or as a new subsection following Sub~ection (d), with the succeeding Subsections to be renum• bered as required. In either event, Section 8(1) should be amended to insert the following
  • in the White House, their bus tours and award ceremonies, have flowed the plans, incentives, donations, and inspiration that have brought a new look to the city. They operated without by-laws or organization chart and became a rallying point for everything from
  • 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
  • . ' NEW YORK. N. Y. DeOClllber Twenty-fourth 1965 .... Dear Bobs Ma7I first ' take this opportunity to express the unprecedented pleasure I have experienced 1n working w1th this •secret" task force. Having bad a mmber ot assignnents ot similar nature
  • , limitations of resources and authority have prevented a comprehensive, consistent attack on major urban problems. (4) New Federal efforts action are, therefore• to reinforce· and support State and local nec_essi ties of modern community building
  • and provide the required number of new hospital beds. The first proposal is essentially an expansion of the present Hill-Burton program of grants for construction of facilities. The second proposal would abolish the existing program and replace it with a new
  • a picture 10 miles by 80 miles). (Their They can climb to 40,000 feet in eight minute s, but they rarely come back with more than one engine working . I don 1 t know how many P38 1 s are left. New Guinea. I know one was shot down over The pilot had
  • 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
  • by the Indian government, and details of the interim Food - for - Peace agreement are being negotiated . · in New Delhi. · Behind the Indian annoyance is a feeling that the United : States is being niggardly in its · off er, which is on_ly enough to ·. meet
  • , can add a significant new dir.ccension to social policy. It is clear that all three approaches need to be expanded simulta­ neously. ADiviINISTR.I~ TIVELY CONFIDENTU, L ...ADMINISTRATIVELY CONFIDENTIAL - 4 The Federal Govermr1ent as a Source
  • and the advisors . -- Emphasize increased researchand . 0 committee would . development. • - - Develop a modern dry bulk carrier fleet (Bulk carri~s ·are the ·ships we now need in view of our growing b~k .trade .. The tastforce . recommends 5 sucij new ships
  • , was decision that the contribution of transportation to our economy and way the creation of a new Cabinet-level "Department of Transportation." . The following figures serve as examples to bring the importance of transporta­ tion irito focus. America spent
  • piecemeal and on a small scale, but ~ave never been really pulled together for lack of an appropriate focus fo;: doing so. Now that the Department of Housing and Urban Affairs has come into being, it seems to me to be an opportune time to assure that the new
  • , 1959 and stated citizenship, Oswald was a Private Corps. ment any information right in New Orleans passport, he had been contemplating time, Reserve Squadrons that American born Texas. that He told on a tourist in Moscow for Soviet He
  • ' of Housing and Urban Plan I2epartment Development \ Cone1us10ns andRecommendations .... A. TheOrganization l .i Basic Obiectives I The establishment of a new Department provides an unique opportunity to create an organizational structure specially de­
  • . C. .. N. Ylvi~ker l MEMBERS or THE TASK FORCEON CITIES Paul N. Ylvisaker State of New Jersey Chairman Julian Levi University of Chicago Vice Chairman Anthony Downs Real Estate Research Honorable Ivan Allen Mayor Atl~nta, Georgia John
  • shall be renumbered and a new Section~ inserted as follows, "THE'tNATIONAL OFFICEOF TRANSPORTATION SERVICE" "Section 5(a). There is hereby established within the Department a \ N3tional Office of Transportation Service at the head of'cy'hich shall
  • this outline could be prepared very easily. Therefore, I patterned my draft 'more along the lines of the Budget outline, which contains a number of new proposals. I have also added a few proposals of my own. If there is to be no Transportation Message, I would
  • . Alternative torms ot truck taxes should be developed. Wapill taxes on the shipper 11181' be teasible. •• 2. ~ster excise tax on new automobiles to the Highway Trust Flmd. Comment: 'l'o~ Recommendation: ~ ignores the problem. ot tax equity among highvq
  • 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