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  • ". "The New York Post", an NYCdaily newspaper Late City Edition, Mc1y 17, 1967. The subject waste> surrender to the NYC Police authorities on May 2$, 1967, to complete serving his jail sentence from which he had previously been released, pending the above
  • in the world Trotskyist movement. The ACFI's bi-weekly publication is known as th£ "Bulletin or International Socialism", Post Office Box 721, Ansonia Station, New York, New York. On February 25, 1966, the same source advised that ACFI headquarters is located
  • content• are not to be dlatrtbuted outatd~ your aqency. QOllPIBlll4'IA'1 UN ------------:o STATES DEPARTMENT - OF JI 'ICE FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION Copy loa l - Secret Service, New York City (.RM) 3 - 108th MI Group, New York City (RM
  • and is unable to furnish any information concerning suspects or motives for the incident. SCHEDULED DEMONSTRATION AT THE HOMEOF UNITEDSTATES REPRESENTATIVE JONATIIAN B. BINGHAM,NEWYORKCITY A spokesman for the New York City.Police Department advised
  • Attached are editorials on a recently published SNCC News­ letter which urged that President Johnson be spit upon. Oneedition is from the New York Times; the other is from the Washington Post. ~ We will ~7 Hanoi show that this year. The Atlanta
  • ..·e.ssocia.tions from Brooklyn, New ·York; Iic!wark., Mississippi, and the At,ro American Missionary Workers Inc. . It was cnnott21ce~ that to registered d~leg&tas follow up plans ~s so~n &s -~hey - 8 - will are published. be mailed coN.iJ·n,EH!.fAL- Im
  • , Kenya, and Uganda where he was fre­ quently received as a guest by the heads of state. In Ghana he was received by the Cuban and Communist-Chinese Ambassadors. In June, 1964, he announced the formation in New York City of a militant blac~ nationalist
  • 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
  • . C. OC'IOBER 20-22, 1967 in Vietnam, anti-Vietnam Octo er he National Mobilization Committee to Ed the hea quartered at New York City, is organizing ar emon tration to be hel in Washinrton, War the D. C., 20-22, 1967. The primary goal
  • from New York City. On May 15, 1963, T-2 advised that a large number of people in Monroe, both white and Negro, received a letter from Havana, Cuba, dated on or about April 30, 1963, enclosing a copy of the monthly newsletter entitled "The Crusader
  • , 1964 . 'SUl~JARY_ANALYSI~ OF THE RACIAL : DISTURBANCES ANDRIOTING DURING : THE PERIOD FROMJULY 17, 1964, THROUGH AUGUST31, 1964, AND YOUTHDISTURBANCES SEPTEMBER 4, 1964 1 THROUGH SEPTEMBER 7, 1964 STATEOF NEWYORK New York City ~uly 17, 1964, through
  • , THROUGH AUGUST31, 1964, AND YOUTHDISTURBANCES SEPTEMBER 4, 1964 1 THROUGH SEPTEUBER7, 1964 STA'£E OF NEW YORK New York City July 17 2 1964, through July 31, 1964 • Following the shooting of fifteen-year-old James :>owell, a Negro, in New York City
  • from the salt marshes of New Jersey where the Passaic River · opens into Newark Bay, - 31 - a part of the Greater New York City port complex . Although its population of 400,000 still ranked it 30th among American municipalities, for the past 20
  • Committee, a militant black nationalist organization, drove from Washington, D. C., to New York City. A confidential source who has furnished reliable information in the past advised that while in Washington, D. C., on December 15, 1967, Carmichael
  • Jersey communities, Jersey City and ! Elizabeth, had had disturbances in 1964. ·The view from Jersey City is that of the New York skyline. Except for a few im­ posing buildings; ; such as those of . the high-rise New Jersey ~edical Center, much
  • appointment to the Redevelopment Land Agency? H: I remember that I was driving back from New England and that I stopped in New York to see my wife's parents, Mr. and Mrs. N.A. Ross. We were on the beach in Long Island when I got a call to call the White
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • to full strength when you left to take the new post? M: Yes. As we brought it up to full strength, then President Johnson proposed an increase in the department of a thousand new positions approximately. Congress approved that so we have brought it up
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • to some of his aides that he may travel to New York City and meet with H. Rap Brown, present National Chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, to solicit his cooperation. Several of King's aides feel that the Student Nonviolent
  • College, and former resident of the Bronx, New York City, New York. IIARIONERNESTMCMILLAN,II conducted the meeting and advised that he had just returned from Atlanta, Georgia, where he had spoken with R. RAP BROWN. MCMILLANstated he went to Atlanta
  • and the organizations they represcpted were . unified by only one clement: race. most rnili tant cmc.1 extrerae whi t c s were barred. The 'l'wo Negro officers of the New York Police Department were admitted. The organizer of the conference, Dr. Nathan Wright Jr
  • Brunswick 2 · Jersey City is that of the New York skyline. Except ' for a few imposing buildings, such as tho~e of the . • high-rise New Jersey Medical Center, much of Jersey City is a collection of nondescript and deteriorating houses, fleshed out
  • opportunities to learn sort of a post-graduate degree. In 1958 I came into government and was quite a-political. In 1961, when I became Assistant to the Commissioner, I became privy to many of the policy and political problems of the day. I wasn't
  • failures, of the kind that have already struck New York ~ity. and th~ Eastern states. . . Looking further apead, it is time to recognize that services are playing a bigger and bigger role in our economy and in our da~ly lives. We must examine our whole
  • deal. Of course, the FBI was here, and they We examined various items and questioned where certain things happened and all that sort of thing. I'll get to Warren now. He had a very brilliant lawyer from New York that he was fond of, and he made him
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • on that o F: Can you think of anything specific? S: I guess I really can't. There was something about some deal in New York, but I'm dadgummed if I can remember what it was. I remember the President had me talk to Shriver, and then Shriver came back
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • of criticism as well as hope, and I gave it to Nick [Katzenbach]. It was just at that time, around March of 1966, that the President called me up in New York, where I was attending a Columbia Law School Board of Visitors seminar, and asked me to serve as chief
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • did learn, indirectly, that our names had been mentioned earlier. That had totally escaped my mind when the call came from the President--I was in New York at this judges conference--that [Lloyd] Hand had left and would I take his place
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • . To New Grace Hosp._ Shot in front of 19218 Livernois. JOHNSONis a private guard. 1:26 AM 7/25 (Prsnr) ??/N. Shot r,un pellets upper portion of RONALDPOWh""LL, To DGF (CB). Refused to halt body & face, also rt hip. at Lycaste .& Goethe on orders
  • new major policy decisions made that affected the department. B: But this is only a natural development. During these years in which there were three Attorney Generals--from Robert Kennedy to Nicholas Katzenbach to Ramsey Clark--did there occur under
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • if the proposal on the U. N. was a new one and what is the major departure from the Administration policy. The President told him "it represents neither a major nor a minor departure of this government's policy. 11 Secretary Rusk said he asked Bill Bundy, in front
  • . by no means unique in that attitude . Oral history is really fairly new, and we are just sort of relying on the intelligence of the future scholars to be well aware that that kind of circumstance does develop . And indeed I think perhaps the purpose
  • believe Paul Ylvisaker was the principal spokesman for the state of New Jersey at which there were also representatives from the city of Newark, I continued to play a coordinating role for the goods and services that were made available by the federal
  • this--in order to get to MAAG, we had to go by this big Binh Xuyen post that's right in back of what was then MAAG headquarters, which was down in the middle of Cholon. Xuyen were, manning the ramparts there. Here all the Binh We went in and we started
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • call from Senator Mike r.t>nroney relative to meeting of the Senate Appropriations Committee to amend the Treasury Post Office . and Executive Offices Appropriation Bill, wlich includes the Secret Service. ..( ~ ;j ,• .. . •'• . Pit 1 I I . I
  • of forty lawyers committed to that--the planning and then the post-arrest process. In the urban disorders several years ago--I guess three years ago--we created a special unit in the Criminal Division. We called it our "Summer Project." To gather