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  • 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
  • . • A source of this Bureau who has furnished reliable information in the past advised that James Haughton, Director of the Harlem Unemployment Center in New York City, at a press conference.on February 18, 1968, called for "rebellion or jobs'.' and announced
  • been associated with SNCC since then. He had been active in civil rights activities during the latter part of his college years. He was elected National Chairman of SNCC in 1966 and became famous for his chanting use of the phrase "Black Power. His
  • .'' The Chicago Pol ice Department has established extra patrols in the vicinity of the school. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People branch at Kankakee, Illinois, met with the St. Anne, Illinois, School Board on the night of January 29
  • , stating,_ "there are enough Negroeswho know enough Red history, and He said • this ~ a phase in the development of revolution." the "reactionary press" has been pictun;tng Ne~roesas "barbarians" all through the Harlem rioting. 'We have had enough
  • in Detroit VISTA Volunteers VISTA Volunteers VISTA Volunteers VISTA Volunteers VISTA Associates • 215 Volunteer Total Volunteers were lodged in the Tuller and Strathmore Hotels near the target areas and moved immediately into special VISTA briefing
  • , was reliability reported to be a member of RAMand an associate of MAXSTANFORD,its leader. STANFORDvisited AZALEEat her home in Monroe, North Carolina, during the week of October 5 and 6, 1963, for the purpose of helping her organize a group of Black Nationalist
  • in seeing the Assistant Attorney Generalship filled promptly with a competent person. In December of 1965 I went to a meeting of the American Law School Association in Chicago to talk with LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY
  • , advised that on that date SMCChad called a press conference at Paschals' Brothers Restaurant on Hunter Street, in Atlanta, Georgia, for the purpose of announcing the results of the Central co-ittee election of SMCCofficers for 1967. During
  • - - ,.. • • Dr. Wright, ~s con:ve:..:1.01"' also served as chaiman until a militant aection of th~ ccnference objected to his moderate position &nd :moderate atatEaments to the press ·.L'ld successt'ully inst&Uee more mli~ant chairmen including Ron Karenga
  • /loh/oh 10 people concerned, was that the Secret Service people who had supervision over the White House police tried several times to get people from the Metropolitan Police Department assigned into the White House. Of course we were pressed
  • , Fla., PD. DAWKINS and CAROLTHOMAS,white female associate of DAWKINS,sentenced on 12/27/67 ·to serve six and four month~ respectively, in County Jail for contempt of court in connection with ~id~culing Grand Jury. Appeal bond for both individuals denied
  • , 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
  • of overpowering when you see him coming up from that 4 or 5 o'clock nap. He was looking ruddy and like he'd been out of the sauna and sunbathed --freshly pressed clothes and a folder in his hand. how are you, John? Good to see you. He said, '~ell, Come over
  • criminal anarchy during the Harlem riots of 1964. On May 16, 1967, Associate Judge JOHN SCILIPPI of the New York Court of Appeals said "the evidence adduced by the people was more than sufficient to sustain a finding of clear and present danger of rioting
  • were in a po~ition to protest the war. One ..itc1ell Goodman, a New York writer, v,as - 3 - ..CQNE Tj)ENT JAI \ ANTI-VIETNA 1 WAR DE110NS1 RATION 1 WASHINGTON,·D. C. OCTOBER20-22, 1967 at a press conference held at New York City on October 2, 1967
  • £ FIRST E ECUTIV~ COM JTTEE MEET! G SEP,EM~~R 23 WM~N, ACCORD! GT PRESS OTE WHICH WE HAVE OeT 1 o, AUPTUC DECIDED TO "JOIN OCTOBE 21ST I TE NATtONA U IT~D CTI M AGAI S !ET-NAM • AR"• t..50 AGREED IT~ VlC: 3 OF GTUCJ THAT BIGGE T ER!CAN NUCLEAR BA C: !. Q
  • of the people o'f t·.:0 area against the or-mer of the Fore..iost Liquor Store, one ::.:ch~el La Pot a, who is of the white race. He has been clos~:.y associated with the hoodlu,il element of the Chicago area. Local authorities as we].l .~s leaders of the racial
  • Negroes "to take to the streets and force the police department to work until they fall in their tracks," the response was tumultuous. The press quoted him as continuing: question of law and order. "It's not a We are not concerned with peace • . We
  • of the kk ghetto. Upon arrival at Cit¥ llall, the state and city officials attempted to devise a sxx statement ~ c for the press. At this point one of the leaders of the Plainfield Negro community came into the room aaax in which they were meeting
  • to work until they fall in their tracks," the response was tumul­ tuous. . . S ~ -: The press quoted him as •• I • • g • question of law and order. peace. "It's not a We are not concerned with We . are concerned with the liberation of black people
  • ·of. t7.~c area against the ovmer of the Foremost Liquor Store, one :,7.:.chF.elLa Pot a, who is of the white race.. He has been · _ closc:.y associated \'Iith the hoodlu~1 element of the Chicago area. Local au.thori ties -as we],1 .as leaders
  • department to work until they fall in their tracks," . the response was tumultuous. The press quoted him as continuing: ·question of law and order. "It's hot a We are not concerned with peace. We are concerned with the liberation of black people. We
  • that require exposure to the press, exposure to the people. A lot of foreign service work is not public work and doesn't necessarily produce people that do such work well. I think that they cross their fingers, no matter who gets that job, in hopes
  • believe we shall press forward, through times that strain our unity and disturb our confidence, to a better America for all the races that history has brought together on this continent. I ·­ 33 HOUSING One day shortly after I had taken office, I
  • could talk to Thieu arid get the corruption cleaned up. The President also said we are mishandling our information from Vietnam. He said Sigard Larmon has just come back from Vietnam and he is violently upset with the way the press is handling
  • Press relations
  • and Pat Nugent to swimming pool with guests; lunch on the terrace; naps; Johnsons watch "Meet The Press;" LBJ praises telephone operator; integration at University of Alabama; article about White House renovations
  • Press relations
  • LBJ & Lady Bird to Hemis Fair, San Antonio; gun control legislation; ceremony at Hemis Fair; speeches by Ed Clark, Guillermo Sevilla-Sacasa, John Connally & LBJ; LBJ & Lady Bird tour exhibits; LBJ receives questions from the press; painting for LBJ
  • on the general investigation? F: Yes. S: Oh, no, there was something coming up all the time, somebody coming and going. F: Of course, the press played it up pretty pointedly. You must have had a lot of trouble, as so many people did, in their wanting
  • directly involved in that? That is, did you get any word from the President to press this case? V: I didn't. I'm sure that the Attorney General kept the President fully advised as to our involvement. You'll recall the tragic aftermath of that killing