Skip to main content
-
Tag >
Digital item
(remove)
-
Subject >
Civil disorders
(remove)
-
Type >
Text
(remove)
-
Specific Item Type >
Folder
(remove)
Limit your search
Tag
Contributor
-
Johnson, W. Thomas, 1941-
(5)
-
Shellow, Robert Scott, 1929
(2)
-
Califano, Joseph A., 1931-
(1)
-
Christian, George E. (George Eastland), 1927-2002
(1)
-
Clark, Ramsey, 1927-
(1)
-
Fleming, Bob
(1)
-
Okun, Arthur M., 1928-1980
(1)
-
Robert, Juanita
(1)
-
White, Lee Calvin, 1923-2013
(1)
Date
Subject
Type
Collection
Series
Specific Item Type
Time Period
16 results
- during the New Deal. He said he thought that perhaps. the most
significant development in the past generatioJJ was the new social conscious
ness of business. Who could have imagined their leaving their own work
behind to get into cities efforts? Who
- ),
then the r1.ot coverage in the surrounding area (incl\ltling, for
example, Newark ncwspeperf distributed in P'la1nf1eld) > encl finally
the content o'£ national cove·r age (£or example Time, Life, Newstreek,
the New York TimEu~, the Associated Press
- Director Hoover, General Johnson,
Secretary of the Army Reior, Mr. Marvin Watson, Mr. Abe Fortas,
and Mr. George Christian. The President was reading the June 22,
1943, issue of the New York Times concerning President Roosevelt's
actions in Detroit
- .
The police crack down; massive firebombing follows.
With a major p·o lice effort in the late morning to re- .
e stablish control of the streets , violence entered a new and
ominous phase .
An elite riot squad, equipped with bayonetted
r ifles, was brought
- appreciation to all of the members for their
accepting his request that they serve on this Commission. The President
then reviewed his statement with the members. That statement follows:
"This morning I have welcomed the members of the Commission
on Civil
- Christian. The Presiden t was reading the J une 22,
1943, issue of the New York Tin-ies concerning President Roose v elt 1 s
actions in Detroit. The Presid~nt read aloud excerpts of. an articl e
entitled 1 'Rayburn assails Roosevelt critics. 11 The President
- -
l
August 5, 1967
NOTES OF MEETING OF PRESIDENT WITH MEL ELFIN,
NEWSWEEK: JOHN STEELE OF TIME: JACK SUTHERLAND
OF U.S. NEWS, JULY 28, 1967
The President had a general discussion with these three magazine
writers on the Detroit riot and civil
- with m.atiagement
and other assistance aimed at giving the beneficiary a fair cha.nee to
compete.
There is no precedent in existing law for non-interest bearing working
capital loans to domestic, private businesses. They have not been provided
in New York, where
- of 4]
TO: Honorable LeRoy Collins
Under Secretary of Commerce
Sheraton West Hotel
Los Angeles, Califonnia
The agreement on a new community action agency for Los Angeles
and Los Angeles County outlined in your telegram to me meets
the requirements
- 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
- conclusions drawn from it.
II.
NARRATION OF MISSION
After receiving the assignment the afternoon of
August 17, the next morning I conferred with Mr. Joe
C~lifano and Mr. Lee White in the White House.
There
the nature of the mission was established.
Two major
- ... maybe Ramsey
Clark who was out here before or someone else.
As an example, the city and county and state are willing to do
a lot of things but they need to be worked into existing measures
The morning papers carry a statement that the City of Beverley
- to be among the oldest in the
City, but there has been a considerable amount
of new construction. Over three-quarters of
the housing ·in the cur-few area was built before
1939; about three-fifths of the housing in
Watts was in this category. This lower age
- that police had uncovered 'factories for
the manufacture of Molotiv cocktails,' but the location
of such places was not given.
At a news conference at which the statement was released,
Senate GOP leader Everett Dirksen refused to identify
the locations
- . Head Start
la the only real breakthrough. There au.·~\ . "er hopeful signs on the
horizon - • new faellltl•• planned and the gr:owlng role of Skill Trauuag
Centers.. But Negro patience grew thin long ago. u Futuree , u a. . promt1,ee
.a re no longer
-
~blication
car tFUGtiTEP
Ruqolrsr
Perm1ss1on of Copyr1gnr
t=4e!der. W. Thomes Jola1110"
60NFIDE:MTIA L
- 9 Of 12, 148 Community Action Program workers, only 6 have
been booked.
Of 35, 000 ghetto workers in New York only 4 have been
picked up