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  • cown to 11 or 12 million. They can speak better about that than I can, although I had a detailed report from the A~bassador last night that I reviewed with the Congress, ·_ Is there anything else? sub ⇒ ects, QUESTIONa sir? /· ~ Will you take
  • November 18, 1991 MEMO FOR THE FILE From: Re: Claudia Anderson, Archivist Processing Note In his book, Douglas MacArthur: The Far Eastern General, Michael Schaller attributed this report to Robert Sherrod. In a phone conversation, November 18
  • 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
  • efforts. One group of needy teenagers has been given employment in landscaping school grounds and participated in cultural activities not available in their home environments. An older group of hard-core dropouts have formed a successful land­ scaping
  • · 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
  • must soon find permanent homes in Executive Departments. A number already have. In the Judgment of the task force, the Community Action Programs are vital to the performance of the new Department's total responsibilities ·and should be transferred
  • ' . . TRANSFERS TO DEPARTl\lENT • 21 SEC. 5. (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection 22 ( b) of this section, there are hereby transferred to and 23 vested in the Secretary all of the functious, powers, :uwJ------+ 24 duties of the Housing and Home
  • . There is a new modem belt- 1:-:: j •~.,_ :~•·~. · '"··. • . • • •. ,.. .-::: ·_-'.N .. 1 handsome young Rep. Lindsay has just way around it. .11is lined with homes (·~ .-_\ ::::_·:. ~ .:···!:_-. ' . , '-"1' . . been elected mayor of New York. The and new facton
  • for the aged • . These programs would permit public or nonprofit agencies to effectively enter the field that is currently dominated by proprietary nursing homes. The program would not, however, detract from the opportunities for private profit making
  • ) Further construction of offsetting scattered-site exploration of "turnkey" and rehabilitation as a means the possibly higher costs of development. 8. Home ownership incentives and assistance should be provided for central-city ghetto residents
  • 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
  • organizations. PL 89-174 provided for the establishment of HUD under a Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, appointed by the President with Senate confirmation. The Secretary was given all the powers, fWlctions and duties of the Housing and Home Finance
  • degree of home-ownership, although the ratio of owners to renters was considerably smaller · than in the rest of the City. Since 1960, the trend · has probably been toward owner-occupancy. This trend is evident even in Watts, despite the heavy
  • 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
  • and Home Finance Agency, its constituent agencies, in the Secretary Development. positions will be transferred Under Section 9 of the.Act, and agencies within some action that will officers of and to and vested of the Department of Housing
  • 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
  • ,/'ft.in this way has been done many times before. They were the subject of last year's Task Force report that traced Al ---the great dimensions of unmet housing needs: some 7 ~illion urban families live in homes of such disrepair as to violate housing
  • - 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • construction. 14 While these redevelopment projects have been both dramatic valuable, their limitation~ have become .increasingly evident: - After 30 years, public housing has contributed 1ess than 1 percent of the stock of homes, and has never achieved
  • in the Housing and Home Finance Agency. Corps of Engineers continues to exert an important influence on transportation through its rivers and harbors program, and the Department of Defense, as the largest Federal user of transportation, has a vast influence
  • ~sewhere. In all fifteen cities·_, police over-reacted to· violence at home. An extreme example is . Milwaukee, which mobilized 4,800 National Guard­ men, 800 policemen, and 200 state police after about 150 youths broke windows and looted after a dance
  • ~~- 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
  • . The proposals, out by the House With the following this bill and urge its prompt First, is urgently two additions, enactment: guarantees program of taxable local should be supported.; The Housing and Home Finance Agency shortly for carrying out
  • of a , long-iteim dep_endent of the United ; States. , And this at ,a time when our . surplus stocks of food are declining · and we have discove,red that we have 1 a good .many needy here at home, 1 as well as abroad, who. need U. S. economic aid
  • -of tb11 peptl-u of the continuing of urbanization to upgrade construct the technology urban ma•• transit and responsive .J the automobile. a host of human problem■, of home bui14in9, systems that to de■ ign are economically how to become
  • president of Pennsylvania New York City home RR Thomas Rice president of Atlantic Coastline RR 1500 Water St., Jacksonville, Fla. 8739 Riverside Dr., Richmond, Va. B. F. Biaggini president of Southern Pacific 65 Market St. San Francisco, Calif. Heineman
  • officers in their homes and foment disorder in other New Jersey ·communities. Jersey . city , Newark , and Elizabeth were said to have "Triple A" ratings for violence over the summer. Plans to coordinate control efforts were established , and the chiefs
  • ·· On F1ebruary 25, 1966, the source advis~d that . FREE:M'AN was a.t home, on or about the ni.gb.t · of February · 20, 1966. Source ~t}vi~~ed ·that he had conve:rsation with FB.EElvLAN at thattime anQ/~RE:EM..41~- did. not indica/ce that he v:ras