Discover Our Collections


  • Tag > Digital item (remove)
  • Subject > Crime and law enforcement (remove)
  • Specific Item Type > Folder (remove)

26 results

  • at the Pentagon captioned demonstration. Edward Fields - Fields resides at Five Beacon Street, New York, New York. Fields in 1966 was a member of or attended meetings of the Students for a Democratic Society Chapter at Cornell University, Ithaca, New York
  • in America. Ch~'s death means that we must all become ChE!'s, not idolize him ... " (Suggest short description of Chambers' testimony) - 3 Essentially this is the voice of the Students for a Democratic Society {SDS) with echoes of the Progressive Labor
  • Prison, New Orleans, in lieu of bond awaiting action by the United States District Court. CONPIDENI'L\l. -3- • QQHPIDHH'Hitis SELECTED RACIALDEVELOPMENTS ANDDISTIJRBANCES Southern University and Agricultural and Mechanical College is located at Baton
  • 1, 1967 39205 PAULBENJAMIN BOUTELLE SECURITY MA'lTERSOCIALISTWORKERS PARTY On October 5, 1967, confidential source number one advised that a meeting sponsored by the Tougaloo College Political Action Committee, Tougaloo, Mississippi, was held
  • · -~·- . •.:. ,' ~ . -Yi..J.r ·­ No-vrore !;o-r~;=l~{,.& 7)0tv1ES71G • ScG·r101.J Quality of Life When America celebrated her first hundred years, the fireworks that lit the skies revealed a nation confident it had been blessed by Providence. .i I .I The great
  • Association were planning to bomb several puhlic huildings in that city, including the police department headquarters. The Hill P~~iation ts a militant Negro action group in the predominantly Negro Hill section of New Haven. On Novemher 23, 1967, police
  • , MCMILLANhad recently been active with the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS (see appendix) group in Dallas and pointing out things an individual can in passing out literature do to avoid the draft. The article described MCMILLANas "a 23 year old Negro
  • disobedience or assume responsibility for the destruction of private o~r public property. The NMC will guarantee that no action will be taken against police if they arrest persons for civil disobedience. The march from the Lincoln Memorial to the Pentagon
  • Bois Clubs of America (DBA) W.E.B. Du Bois Clubs of Chicago (DCC) Revolutionary Action Movement 3 (SSOC). (SCEF) (RAM) -- • CE 157-5490 I. EXTREMISTBLACKNATIONALISTORGANIZATIONS 4 --GONFIBEN CE 157-5490 z NORTHCAROLINA NATIONOF ISLAM
  • that it is today. The SNCC is n-:>wmotivated by a revolutionary direct-action, ant iw hite ideology that places no faith in normal democratic procedures. It.follows the Communist Party line in its criticism of United States policy in Vietnam and in its recent
  • , NJ, 4730/66. Ccmmnmist attiliation ot associates and/or, contacts set torth. Evidence set forth ot JESSB GRAY's opposition to US involvement in Vietnam. Activity in behalf ot Revolutionary Action Movement, Black Panther Party and Coordinating Council
  • will not 'willingly' yield to the democratic concept . of 'majority rule'." lJ)e
  • at Valparaiso University today. Brown is an outspoken militant who in the past has advocated the use of dynamite to bomb the Democratic National Convention to be held in Chicago du in the Sun.1~r.of 1968. The Valparaiso Police Departmen and the Indiana State
  • this way: the place of Black Power in " •·slack Power in reference to whi tc America will not be lilte White Po-:.-er in. l"eference to blacl~-­ America nor to America as a whole. White Power -­ in its varied segments (for it is not whol~) -has failed us
  • leadership that counseled moderation and a legalistic, non-violent approach was challenged to demonstrate how that approach had led to social and economic improvement for the Negro. In the South, non-violent action frequently engendered a violent response
  • self­ defense wu.s to attack. Many· speakers, however, ·warned that N~groes were not yet ready to confront the 11 \•1hi te power structur~." - Even _Rap Brown warned that it would be"self­ genocide" to challenge whitci America to physical
  • . advises just enough ·moderate violence to get twenty million niggers the hell .out of America." CONNIELYNCHthen S?Oke. In opening his remarks he greeted everyone· in the name of JESUS CHRIST. He said "We want to briefly introduce ourselves to you, well
  • often than not by some quite ordi11ary and proper action by a policeman. Thry were dclihcralc in the sense that they were dirceted, lo an extent that varied From city to city, against specific targets." J. Edgar Hoo,·cr, director or the Federal Bureau
  • may not ne~d o~ may consider it up reports self to go beyond.Jaffee. • '. B. Requirements with respect to Groups. SDS (S'l'UDENTSFOR A DEMOCRATIC SOCIETY) 1. Headquarters 2. Officers - Chicago, - President Illinois. Where
  • ) in New York City (NYC). A euitable pretext by an SA of the FBI August 14, 1967. A characterization of the PLP appears in the appcndtx atached hereto. C. Legal Action The New York Court of Appeals upheld the conviction of the subject for advocating
  • of the Secret Service Advisory Commission. The President went over the lists of legislation on which action is needed and emphasized particularly Foreign Aid and Housing. I provided the Leadership with copies of these lists. The meeting broke up about
  • --- . - judgment required here is that there is a definite need for • the assistance of Federal troops; taking into account the re­ maining time needed to move them into action at the scene of violence. (3) That the legislature or the governor requests
  • then asked Secretary McNamara what can he do to solve crime in the District of Columbia. The President said he asked Wirtz the same thing. "Crime will be the principal problem, even more so than Vietnam. We've got to show some progress and action. Perhaps
  • that, if the disorder followed the pattern of p st disturbances in Elizabeth and elsewhere, the following day ld see an i ntensification of action on the part of the youths. patrolled» the 36 square blocks with more than 100 , some of them stationed o n rooftops