A few hours after Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated at a Memphis motel, violent mobs had looted and burned several blocks of Washington a few miles north of the White House, centered around the U Street commercial district. Quick action by D.C. police quelled the violence, but shortly before noon the next day, looting and arson broke out anew -- not just along U Street, but in two other commercial districts as well.
Over the next several days, the immediate crisis of the riots was matched by an equally ominous sense among the nation's political leadership that they were watching the final dissolution of the 1960s liberal dream. For many whites who watched flames overtake city after city -- Washington, Chicago, Baltimore, Kansas City -- the April riots were an unfathomable and deeply troubling response during what should have been a time of national mourning. To them the rioters were little better than common criminals. But a look at the average rioter complicates such conclusions: they were primarily young (under 25) and male, but most made a decent salary, had a better than average education, and had no previous arrest record. In interviews and testimonies afterward, rioters recalled a sense of release, of striking back at the "system."
To say that the riots meant different things to different people would be exceedingly trite if it weren't also exceedingly true. In ways large and small, the King riots solidified attitudes and trends that destroyed the momentum behind racial progress, fatally wounded postwar domestic liberalism, created new divisions among blacks and whites, and condemned urban America to decades of poverty and crime. This book will explain why they occurred, how they played out, and what they meant.
FEDERAL: TOTAL: 3,515 REBEL COMBATANTS; TOTAL: 7,321 PW2 Joeg Warren SPCEarnest Stephens PW2 Hubert Fleming PWT Dwight Nichols SPL Taher Farsuum PFC Javier Greer PWTJordan Reges SGT Emmett Cole PW2 Andy Moon SFC George Bass PW2 Toby ...
As she suggests, if rebellion and the conditions that precipitated it never disappeared, the optimistic story of a post–Jim Crow United States no longer holds.
Though the story he tells is important in and of itself, it is rendered even more so because the interaction between New York and the Iroquois will surely affect the ways in which other states and the Natives who live in them address ...
"Between Two Fires relates the play-by-play of the fire revolution and its aftermath"--Provided by publisher.
The committee that prepared this report was charged with assessing the state of fire safety research and describing the potential role of the NSF in improving fire safety in the United States.
See also fire as fertilizer; fire practices, agriculture; shifting cultivation; swidden Smith, Capt. John, 74 Smith, Glenn, 372 Smith, William, 336 smoke, 338–339; as pollutant, 18, 122, 304, 335, 337, 342–343, 410, 506, 528; ...
Read letters from family, friends, and more in this special collection of mementos and keepsakes. Iroh has held many roles in his long life, including crown prince of the Fire Nation, mentor to Prince Zuko, and ally of Avatar Aang.
The Fire Next Time
Weaving the story into the history of arson in the United States, the critically acclaimed American Fire re-creates the anguished nights this quiet county lit up in flames, evoking a microcosm of rural America—a land half-gutted before ...
According to john Lloyd, there are allegations in Russian security agency dossiers that Friedman (“born in 1964. in the city of Lyov, former Ukrainian Republic, a jew”) along with Aven (“born 19;; in Moscow, a jew”) engaged in criminal ...