Crime in America Spoons of Mayonnaise

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Crime in America Spoons of Mayonnaise 'i ' v*\ THE DILLON EXAMINER - Salad Dressing Pretty Princess Jumper EASY! NodoDmdñg. A quick salad dressing can be “ Handles likepuny Practical to Care For made by blending two tablespoons RESET ...ta i halda» of tomato paste with* six table­ LOOSE „ into wood- Crime in America spoons of mayonnaise. Season this with grated onion, a dash qf chili HANDLES** By ESTES KEFAUVER powder, and a few drops of tabas­ United States Senator co sauce. This is very good with meat or fish salads. Three of a Series Chicago: The Heritage of Al Capone HEAD STUFFY If the Senate Crime Committee had gone no further than! Chi­ cago in its quest, it could have written a complete report-in-minia­ DUE TO COLDS ture on the picture of nationwide criminal and political corruption. For practically every example of rottenness found anywhere in the T A K E ^ ^ for fast S n u is to MIUI Ot VOOD United States was duplicated in the capital of the Capone mob. Chicago remains the jungle of criminals who walk in the foot­ ß ß / ; symptomatic On electric fans, lawn mowers steps of Al Capone. Virgil Peterson, operating director of the Chi­ roller skates 3 * IN * O N E O il cago crime commission and former FBI agent, traced the history of Ö Ö O RELIEF the Chicago mob from the days of Big Jim Colosimo, who “had risen to power and influence through the operation of a string of broth­ els.” On May II, 1920, Big Jim was bumped off. Peterson noted easy way to that there always had been sus­ NEW f YOUR CHILD needs I this safe, sure, fast-act- picion that the bodyguard imported the tax case was Eugene Bernstein. I ing “rub’' at the very by Colosimo from New York, John­ Many years ago. Bernstein-had been KILL RATS I first sign of a cold. ny Torrio, had engineered the kill­ with the Internal Revenue Bureau. CHEST COLD m isery ing. Torrio succeeded Colosimo as Simply pul Black l.eultt Wartarin Kai Is eased and warming When he obtained his law license comfort starts as you be­ Chicago’s underworld lord. Killei Bail in protected places where gin to rub with Penetro. and left the bureau, he specialized rals and mice can consume it regularly. He, in turn, imported as his body­ in tax cases. He accumulated a list guard a cold-blooded little killer I hey like it and literally eal themselves 2-WAY RELIEF! - of clients that read like .the blue to death Because other rodents are Penetro eases chest mus­ from New York's Five Point Gang, book of the Capone syndicate. not warned, entire colonies are easily cle tightness, aching a then obscure, scarfaced hood­ Jest loved Black 1 eal Warlarin Rat soreness. Medicated va­ With information obtained with pors clear head, loosen lum of 23 named Al Capone. For Killer Bait is the ama/mg new roden- phlegm, ease cough. Buy Tony Accardo’s help, he was able ticide WARFARIN machine-mixed a jar of Penetro today. four years. Torrio enjoyed a bloody wall special hail material thal never reign in Chicago, waxing high on to effect a settlement with the gov­ ernment. Campagna’s case was hecomes rancu) It's ready to use Get the profits of prostitution, gambling, il today and gel rid ot rats and mice beer and booze. But after Torrio settled for $90,371.49; Ricca’s, for the easy way Dtrecnom on package. Uick Acting Rub $36,146.50, and accumulated interest was the victim of an ambush which Princess Jumper almost cost his life, he lost his brought the total settlement for the nerve and abdicated in favor of Ca­ two cases to approximately $190,000. QO pretty for daughter to wear pone. This was approximately $322,000 so practical for mother to With Greasy Thumb Guzik as his less than the original deficiency care for! A pretty princess paymaster and business adviser, claims. Anyway, the next question jumper for young girls with a and such stalwarts as Frank Nitti, was how to raise the money. Bern­ Serve Baked Beans for Informal Suppers puffed sleeve blouse for a team ­ Paul (The Waiter) Ricca, Louis stein went back to the penitentiary (See Recipes Below) mate. (Little New York) Campagna and to talk with his clients about It. the Fischetti brothers as his lieu­ "They joth took the position they Festive Buffet Suppers LYNN CHAMBER’S MENU didn’t owe the money and wouldn’t Pattern No 12:t0- is a sew-rlte pcrfiv tenants, Capone was able to rule ef­ rated pattern in si/.va 2, 3. 4. 5, 0 years. pay it." THIS IS the season for a flurry Baked Beans with Tomato Sauce Size 3, Jumper. I5» vards of 39-inch, AUTO-LITE fectively. The infamous St. Valen­ blouse. 1 yards ol sports activity such as football, •Molasses Brown Bread with tine’s day massacre of Feb. 14, 1929, Bernstein returned to Chicago. Al­ Cream Cheese was an example of how Capone in o s t immediately, he said, baseball and hockey. If there are teen-aged boys and girls in your Cabbage-Carrot Slaw SEWINO CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. dealt with opposition In 1931, how­ stranger;, started walking into his 3S7 W eil Adam* St. Chicago 6. III. SPARK PLUGS home, or if the man of the house Baked Apples Cream Cookies ever, Capone was cut down by office and leaving packages of bills, Beverage Enclose 30c tn coin for eech pat­ Uncle Sam on an income-tax eva­ usually wrapped in paper, In is an enthusiast of one of the sports, tern Add 5c for 1st Class Mall 11 RESISTOR TRANSPORT you’re in line to •Recipe Given desired sion charge and was sent to prison amounts varying between $10,000 Pattern No......................... S ir e ___ TYPE Frank Nitti succeeded him, but in and $20,000. When the first batch be asked to 1943, facing prosecution on an extor­ of bills came in, Bernstein told us serve a t least % cup boiling water Name (Please Print( (in what seemed to be a master­ 1 egg tion charge, Nitti was found dead v one ‘aiter Street Address or P O Box No under circumstances that indicated piece of understatement) he was game supper.” 1 cup sifted flour These are won­ 1 teaspoon baking soda he had committed suicide. Since "taken aback." The procession of City State then, the mob—known to this day strange men bearing currency con­ derful occasions \A teaspoon salt as the Capone syndicate—has been tinued until the needed total of because you need % teaspoon cinnamon run pretty much by a "corpora $190,000 had been brought in. food hearty and Measure bran, raisins, shortening tion,’’ in which Guzik, Ricca and Ac- Q. "Did you ask their names?” easy to prepare. The serving is even and molasses into mixing bowl. Add TO THE Lowest Cost Fat Mils ot cardo wield great influence. more simply done because the oc­ hot water and stir until shortening FIRST AID Greater Oat Savings— Unsurpassed Quality— A. "1 wouldn’t think of asking Auto-Lite Standard Spark •park plug operation • • • casion is so informal. Push the din­ is just melted. Add egg and beat Auto-Lit* Resistor Spark their names, because it made no dif­ AILING HOUSE Plug» offer car owner» new Plug» öfter outstanding Auto-Lite Transport Spark ing room table against the wall, well. Sift together quality and have long been Plugs have aircraft type A wave of suspensions and res­ ference to me . " BY ROGER C. WHITMAN advantage» tound only or use a large buffet. flour, soda, salt in automotive type »park recognized for their un­ insulator, heavy electrodes ignations by higher-ups in the po­ plug« with built-in re»i»tora. beatable performance and rugged construction, When all was settled, Bernstein A centerpiece set against the wall for heavy duty lice department followed our in­ a n d cinnamon; Walls Cracked by Earthquake Aoto Lit* tipark I'lu in — I’nlnntnd U S A went to Leavenworth again to see is nice, if it’s seasonal. Then plan add to molasses vestigation of great wealth accu­ the boys out of the penitentiary. At QUESTION : Aflei a recent SEE YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD AUTO-LITE SPARK PLUG DEALER NOW mulated by a number of Chicago to cover most of the table with food, mixture stirring the Kansas City airport, Tony Gizzo, and leave a bit of space for a stack only until just earthquake 1 noticed that the out police captains. the mobster and alleged Mafia side plaster of my house was The most highly publicized case of plates, napkins and usually, a combined. Fill chieftain, met them and drove them single fork for each person. Most two greased cans (the size used for cracked all over on all four -tides was that of Capt. Daniel A. Gilbert, to the penitentiary. Gizzo also ar­ of the house. What can 1 use to referred to by Chicago newspapers buffet suppers of this kind can be baked beans) about % full. Bake in ranged for airplane tickets and hotel eaten readily with a single fork a moderate (350°F.) oven for 45 Mi up these cracks? if Peter, Pain ewes you with as "the richest cop in the world." suites, as heeded, for the Chicago ANSWER: 1 suppose you mean Gilbert was serving as chief investi­ Another centerpiece uses a shal­ minutes. Remove from cans and contingent. low bowl of garden flowers in a “stucco” when you speak oi gator for the state attorney s office • • • serve while hot.
Recommended publications
  • How the Mob and the Movie Studios Sold out the Hollywood Labor Movement and Set the Stage for the Blacklist
    TRUE-LIFE NOIR How the Mob and the movie studios sold out the Hollywood labor movement and set the THE CHICAGO WAY stage for the Blacklist Alan K. Rode n the early 1930s, Hollywood created an indelible image crooked law enforcement, infected numerous American shook down businesses to maintain labor peace. Resistance The hard-drinking Browne was vice president of the Local of the urban gangster. It is a pungent irony that, less than metropolises—but Chicago was singularly venal. Everything by union officials was futile and sometimes fatal. At least 13 2 Stagehands Union, operated under the umbrella of IATSE a decade later, the film industry would struggle to escape and everybody in the Windy City was seemingly for sale. Al prominent Chicago labor leaders were killed; and not a single (The International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees, the vise-like grip of actual gangsters who threatened to Capone’s 1931 federal tax case conviction may have ended his conviction for any criminals involved.Willie Bioff and George Moving Picture Technicians, Artists and Allied Crafts, here- bring the movie studios under its sinister control. reign as “Mr. Big,” but his Outfit continued to grow, exerting Browne were ambitious wannabes who vied for a place at after referred to as the IA). He had run unsuccessfully for the Criminal fiefdoms, created by an unholy trinity its dominion over various trade unions. Mobsters siphoned the union trough. Russian-born Bioff was a thug who served IA presidency in 1932. Bioff and Browne recognized in each Iof Prohibition-era gangsters, ward-heeling politicians, and off workers’ dues, set up their cohorts with no-show jobs, and the mob as a union slugger, pimp, and whorehouse operator.
    [Show full text]
  • Oak Park Area Visitor Guide
    OAK PARK AREA VISITOR GUIDE COMMUNITIES Bellwood Berkeley Broadview Brookfield Elmwood Park Forest Park Franklin Park Hillside Maywood Melrose Park Northlake North Riverside Oak Park River Forest River Grove Riverside Schiller Park Westchester www.visitoakpark.comvisitoakpark.com | 1 OAK PARK AREA VISITORS GUIDE Table of Contents WELCOME TO THE OAK PARK AREA ..................................... 4 COMMUNITIES ....................................................................... 6 5 WAYS TO EXPERIENCE THE OAK PARK AREA ..................... 8 BEST BETS FOR EVERY SEASON ........................................... 13 OAK PARK’S BUSINESS DISTRICTS ........................................ 15 ATTRACTIONS ...................................................................... 16 ACCOMMODATIONS ............................................................ 20 EATING & DRINKING ............................................................ 22 SHOPPING ............................................................................ 34 ARTS & CULTURE .................................................................. 36 EVENT SPACES & FACILITIES ................................................ 39 LOCAL RESOURCES .............................................................. 41 TRANSPORTATION ............................................................... 46 ADVERTISER INDEX .............................................................. 47 SPRING/SUMMER 2018 EDITION Compiled & Edited By: Kevin Kilbride & Valerie Revelle Medina Visit Oak Park
    [Show full text]
  • Nixon's Caribbean Milieu, 1950–1968
    Dark Quadrant: Organized Crime, Big Business, and the Corruption of American Democracy Online Appendix: Nixon’s Caribbean Milieu, 1950–1968 By Jonathan Marshall “Though his working life has been passed chiefly on the far shores of the continent, close by the Pacific and the Atlantic, some emotion always brings Richard Nixon back to the Caribbean waters off Key Biscayne and Florida.”—T. H. White, The Making of the President, 19681 Richard Nixon, like millions of other Americans, enjoyed Florida and the nearby islands of Cuba and the Bahamas as refuges where he could leave behind his many cares and inhibitions. But he also returned again and again to the region as an important ongoing source of political and financial support. In the process, the lax ethics of its shadier operators left its mark on his career. This Sunbelt frontier had long attracted more than its share of sleazy businessmen, promoters, and politicians who shared a get-rich-quick spirit. In Florida, hustlers made quick fortunes selling worthless land to gullible northerners and fleecing vacationers at illegal but wide-open gambling joints. Sheriffs and governors protected bookmakers and casino operators in return for campaign contributions and bribes. In nearby island nations, as described in chapter 4, dictators forged alliances with US mobsters to create havens for offshore gambling and to wield political influence in Washington. Nixon’s Caribbean milieu had roots in the mobster-infested Florida of the 1940s. He was introduced to that circle through banker and real estate investor Bebe Rebozo, lawyer Richard Danner, and Rep. George Smathers. Later this chapter will explore some of the diverse connections of this group by following the activities of Danner during the 1968 presidential campaign, as they touched on Nixon’s financial and political ties to Howard Hughes, the South Florida crime organization of Santo Trafficante, and mobbed-up hotels and casinos in Las Vegas and Miami.
    [Show full text]
  • Società E Cultura 65
    Società e Cultura Collana promossa dalla Fondazione di studi storici “Filippo Turati” diretta da Maurizio Degl’Innocenti 65 1 Manica.indd 1 19-11-2010 12:16:48 2 Manica.indd 2 19-11-2010 12:16:48 Giustina Manica 3 Manica.indd 3 19-11-2010 12:16:53 Questo volume è stato pubblicato grazie al contributo di fondi di ricerca del Dipartimento di studi sullo stato dell’Università de- gli Studi di Firenze. © Piero Lacaita Editore - Manduria-Bari-Roma - 2010 Sede legale: Manduria - Vico degli Albanesi, 4 - Tel.-Fax 099/9711124 www.lacaita.com - [email protected] 4 Manica.indd 4 19-11-2010 12:16:54 La mafia non è affatto invincibile; è un fatto uma- no e come tutti i fatti umani ha un inizio e avrà anche una fine. Piuttosto, bisogna rendersi conto che è un fe- nomeno terribilmente serio e molto grave; e che si può vincere non pretendendo l’eroismo da inermi cittadini, ma impegnando in questa battaglia tutte le forze mi- gliori delle istituzioni. Giovanni Falcone La lotta alla mafia deve essere innanzitutto un mo- vimento culturale che abitui tutti a sentire la bellezza del fresco profumo della libertà che si oppone al puzzo del compromesso, dell’indifferenza, della contiguità e quindi della complicità… Paolo Borsellino 5 Manica.indd 5 19-11-2010 12:16:54 6 Manica.indd 6 19-11-2010 12:16:54 Alla mia famiglia 7 Manica.indd 7 19-11-2010 12:16:54 Leggenda Archivio centrale dello stato: Acs Archivio di stato di Palermo: Asp Public record office, Foreign office: Pro, Fo Gabinetto prefettura: Gab.
    [Show full text]
  • Rackets in America Virgil W
    Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology Volume 49 | Issue 6 Article 11 1959 Rackets in America Virgil W. Peterson Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarlycommons.law.northwestern.edu/jclc Part of the Criminal Law Commons, Criminology Commons, and the Criminology and Criminal Justice Commons Recommended Citation Virgil W. Peterson, Rackets in America, 49 J. Crim. L. Criminology & Police Sci. 583 (1958-1959) This Criminology is brought to you for free and open access by Northwestern University School of Law Scholarly Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology by an authorized editor of Northwestern University School of Law Scholarly Commons. POLICE SCIENCE RACKETS IN AMERICA VIRGIL W. PETERSON The author has been Operating Director of the Chicago Crime Commission since April 1942. The Chicago Crime Commission is a non-political, non-partisan, private-citizen organization of Chicago professional and business men who are interested in better law enforcement in the metropolitan Chicago area. Prior to his appointment as Operating Director of the Commission Mr. Peterson was a special agent of the F.B.I. for over 11 years and was in charge of offices in Milwaukee, St. Louis, and Boston. He is the author of two books; Barbariansin Our Midsi, which deals with the history of crime and politics in Chicago, and Gambling: Shmuld It Be Legalized. All of Mr. Peterson's career since his graduation from Northwestern University Law School has been in the field of law enforcement and criminology. His present article was originally prepared as an address delivered before the Rotary Club of Chicago in September of 1958.-EDITOR.
    [Show full text]
  • 005. Relazione Pisano
    CAMERA DEI DEPurATI SENATO DELLA REPUBBLICA IX LEGISLATURA Doc. XXIII D. 2-bis/2 COMMISSIONE PARLAMENTARE D'INCHIESTA SULLA LOGGIA MASSONICA P2 (Legge 23 settembre 1981, n. 527) RELAZIONE DI MINORANZA dell'onorevole GIORGIO PISANÒ ROMA 1984 PREMESSA L'articolo I della Legge istitutiva della "Commissione Parlamentare di Inchiesta sulla Loggia Massonica P2» recita: «È istituita una Commissione Parlamentare di Inchiesta per accerta­ re l'origine, la natura, l'organizzazione e la consistenza dell'associazine massonica denominata Loggia P2, le finalità perseguite, le attività svol­ te, i mezzi impiegati per lo svolgimento di dette attività e per la pene­ trazione negli apparati pubblici e in quelli di interesse pubblico, gli eventuali collegamenti interni ed internazionali, le influenze tentate o esercitate sullo svolgimento di funzioni pubbliche, di interesse pubblico e di attività comunque rilevanti per l'interesse della collettività, nonché le eventuali deviazioni dall'esercizio delle competenze istituzionali di or­ gani dello Stato, di enti pubblici e di enti sottoposti al controllo dello Stato». Ebbene, al termine dei trenta mesi di attività che hanno contrasse­ gnato i lavori della Commissione, noi riteniamo che la relazione con­ clusiva di maggioranza, fatta eccezione per le parti dedicate alla "Au­ tenticità e attendibilità delle liste », alla "Struttura associativa della Loggia P2» e alla "Posizione personale degli iscritti», non abbia fornito al Parlamento le risposte che l'imponente documentazione raccolta con­ sentiva invece di dare. La relazione conclusiva di maggioranza è, in definitiva, un docu­ mento deviante, perché vuole accreditare delle tesi invece di stabilire dei fatti. È un documento che tende a imporre aprioristicamente delle conclusioni, quasi sempre senza confortarle con prove certe.
    [Show full text]
  • HSCA Volume V: 9/28/78
    378 Obviously, the possibility cannot be dismissed, although it can hardly be said to have been established. At this point, it is, in your words, Mr. Chairman, perhaps only a little more than a "suspicion suspected," not a "fact found." The committee decided early in its investigation, as soon as it realized that a Mafia plot to assassinate the President warranted serious consideration, to assemble the most reliable information available on organized crime in the United States. The details of this phase of the committee's investigation will, of course, appear, hopefully in full, in its final report, a report that will consider the background of organized crime in America, the structure o£ the Mafia in the early 1960's, the effort by the Kennedy administration to suppress the mob, and the evidence that the assassination might have been undertaken in retaliation for those efforts. To scrutinize the possible role of organized crime in the assassi- nation, the committee early brought on one of the country's lead- ing experts on the subject. He is Ralph Salerno, whose career as an organized crime investigator with the New York City Police De- partment goes back to 1946. Mr. Salerno has since retired from the New York City Police Department and I would note that on the day of his retirement, the New York Times was moved to comment that he perhaps knew more about the Mafia than any nonmember in the United States. It would be appropriate at this time, Mr. Chairman, to call Ralph Salerno. Chairman STOKES . The committee calls Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • CONTENTS INTRODUCTION by JOHN CORBETT MOBSTERS Tony Accardo Jimmy Adduci Jakie Adler Sylvester Agoglia the Aiello Brothers Louis
    CONTENTS 9 INTRODUCTION BY JOHN CORBETT 70 Vincent (Schemer) Drucci 71 George Druggan MOBSTERS 72 Terry Druggan and Frankie Lake 17 Tony Accardo 75 Maxie Eisen, nee Eisenstein 18 Jimmy Adduci 77 Maurice (“Mossy”) Enright 19 Jakie Adler 78 Giuseppe (“Diamond Joe”) Esposito 20 Sylvester Agoglia 80 The Everleigh Sisters 21 The Aiello Brothers 81 Rocco Fanelli 22 Louis Alterie 82 Charles Fischetti 24 Samuzzo (Samoots) Amatuna 83 Frankie Foster 25 Albert Anselmi—John Scalise 84 Joe Fusco 26 Nicky Arnstein 85 Giuseppe Genaro 27 George (“Red”) Barker 87 (“Monkey Face”) Charley Genker 29 (West Side) Jack Barry 88 Genna 30 Morris Becker 91 Chicago Annie Gleason 31 James Belcastro 93 Joseph (“Jew Kid”) Grabiner 32 Dominic Bello—Dominic Brancato 94 Octavius Granady (Negro) 33 Christian P. “Barney” Bertsche 95 Marty Guilfoyle 35 Joseph Bertsche 96 Frank and Peter Gusenberg 36 Frank Biege 97 Harry (“Greasy Thumb”) Gusick 37 Willie Bioff 98 Little Jack Gusick 38 Joseph (Red) Bolton 99 Charles (“Chick”) Hadesman 39 “Dynamite” Joe Brooks 100 Sam Hare 40 Tough Tony Capezio 101 William (“Willie”) Heeney 41 Al Capone 102 Jack Heinan 44 Frank Capone 103 Michael (“Mike De Pike”) Heitler 45 John Capone 104 Murray (“The Camel”) Humphreys 46 Ralph J. (“Bottles”) Capone 107 Sam Hunt 47 Michael (“Dago Mike”) Carozzo 108 Fat Tony Jerfita 48 Cosmana Chiaravalotti 109 Nick Juffra 49 Margaret Mary Martha Collins alias Mary Hamilton and Fay Sullivan 110 Julian (“Potatoes”) Kaufman 51 Big Jim Colosimo 111 Anthony (“Red”) Kissane 52 Dennis (The Duke) Cooney 112 Matt Kolb
    [Show full text]
  • U.S. Department of Justice Federal Bureau of Investigation Washington, D.C. 20535 August 24, 2020 MR. JOHN GREENEWALD JR. SUITE
    U.S. Department of Justice Federal Bureau of Investigation Washington, D.C. 20535 August 24, 2020 MR. JOHN GREENEWALD JR. SUITE 1203 27305 WEST LIVE OAK ROAD CASTAIC, CA 91384-4520 FOIPA Request No.: 1374338-000 Subject: List of FBI Pre-Processed Files/Database Dear Mr. Greenewald: This is in response to your Freedom of Information/Privacy Acts (FOIPA) request. The FBI has completed its search for records responsive to your request. Please see the paragraphs below for relevant information specific to your request as well as the enclosed FBI FOIPA Addendum for standard responses applicable to all requests. Material consisting of 192 pages has been reviewed pursuant to Title 5, U.S. Code § 552/552a, and this material is being released to you in its entirety with no excisions of information. Please refer to the enclosed FBI FOIPA Addendum for additional standard responses applicable to your request. “Part 1” of the Addendum includes standard responses that apply to all requests. “Part 2” includes additional standard responses that apply to all requests for records about yourself or any third party individuals. “Part 3” includes general information about FBI records that you may find useful. Also enclosed is our Explanation of Exemptions. For questions regarding our determinations, visit the www.fbi.gov/foia website under “Contact Us.” The FOIPA Request number listed above has been assigned to your request. Please use this number in all correspondence concerning your request. If you are not satisfied with the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s determination in response to this request, you may administratively appeal by writing to the Director, Office of Information Policy (OIP), United States Department of Justice, 441 G Street, NW, 6th Floor, Washington, D.C.
    [Show full text]
  • Copy of Italdiaspora Studies Bib 06 05 2020
    Author Title Publisher ISBN Year Subject Abbot, Edith Immigration: Select Documents and Case Records Ayer Co Publsihers, North Stratford 978-0405005015 1969 History Abbot, Edith The Delinquent Child and the Home Forgotten Books 978-0282917722 2017 Sociology Abbot, Edith The Tenements of Chicago 1908 - 1935 University of Chicago Press, Chicago n/a 1936 Sociology Abbot, Edith Women in Industry Bibliographical Center for Research 978-1117869964 2010 Sociology Accolla, Paolini; d'Aquino, Niccolo Italici: An Encounter With Piero Bassetti Bordighera Press, New York 978-1599540016 2008 Philosophy Airos, Letizia, Ottorino Cappelli Guido Italian/American Youth and Identity Politics Bordighera Press, New York 978-1599540269 2011 Sociology Alaya, Flavia Under the Rose: A Confession The Feminist Press, New York 978-1558612709 2001 Memoir Alba, Richard D Blurring the Color Line: The New Chance for a More Integrated America Harvard University Press, Cambridge 978-0674064706 2012 Sociology, Race Alba, Richard D Ethnic Identity: The Transformation of White America Yale University Press, New Haven 978-0300052213 1990 Sociology, Race Alba, Richard D Italian Americans: Into the Twilight of Ethnicity Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River 978-0135066768 1985 Sociology, Race Alba, Richard D, DeWind, Josh, Raboteau, Albert J Immigration and Religion in America: Comparative and Historical Perspectives New York University Press, New York 978-0814705056 2008 Sociology, Religion Alba, Richard D; Foner, Nancy Strangers No More: Immigration and The Challenges of Integration
    [Show full text]
  • IIS Windows Server
    Nevada Historical Society Quarterly FALL 1995 NEVADA HISTORICAL SOCIETY QUARTERLY EDITORIAL BOARD Eugene Moehring, Chairman, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Marie Boutte, University of Nevada, Reno Robert Davenpo'rt, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Doris Dwyer, Western Nevada Community College Jerome E. Edwards, University of Nevada, Reno Candace C. Kant, Community College of Southern Nevada Guy Louis Rocha, Nevada State Library and Archives Willard H. Rollings, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Hal K. Rothman, University of Nevada, Las Vegas The Nevada Historical Society Quarterly solicits contributions of scholarly or popular interest dealing with the following subjects: the general (e.g., the political, social, economic, constitutional) or the natural history of Nevada and the Great Basin; the literature, languages, anthropology, and archaeology of these areas; reprints of historic documents; reviews and essays concerning the historical literature of Nevada, the Great Basin, and the West. Prospective authors should send their work to The Editor, Nevada Historical Society Quarterly, 1650 N. Virginia St., Reno, Nevada 89503. Papers should be typed double-spaced and sent in duplicate. All manuscripts, whether articles, edited documents, or essays, should conform to the most recent edition of the University of Chicago Press Manual of Style. Footnotes should be typed double-spaced on separate pages and numbered consecutively. Correspondence concerning articles and essays is welcomed, and should be addressed to The Editor. © Copyright Nevada Historical Society, 1995. The Nevada Historical Society Quarterly (ISSN 0047-9462) is published quarterly by the Nevada Historical Society. The Quarterly is sent to all members of the Society. Membership dues are: Student, $15; Senior Citizen without Quan !rly, $15; Regular, $25; Family, $35; Sustaining, $50; Contributing, $100; Departmental Fellow, $250; Patron, $500; Benefactor, $1,000.
    [Show full text]
  • Docid-32260782.Pdf
    This document is made available through the declassification efforts and research of John Greenewald, Jr., creator of: The Black Vault The Black Vault is the largest online Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) document clearinghouse in the world. The research efforts here are responsible for the declassification of hundreds of thousands of pages released by the U.S. Government & Military. Discover the Truth at: http://www.theblackvault.com JFK Assassination'System Date: 10/14/20 Identification Fonn Agency Infonnation AGENCY : HSCA RECORD NUMBER : 180-10104-10340 RECORD SERIES : NUMBERED FILES. AGENCY FILE NUMBER: 009378 Document Infonnation ORIGINATOR: HSCA FROM: LOUISANA METRO. CRIME COMMISSION. TO: TITLE: METROPOLITAN CRIME COMMISSION. DATE: 04/11/1978 PAGES: 18 SUBJECTS: ORGANIZED CRIME. LOUISANA METRO PO LIT AN CRIME COMMISSION, FILES. DOCUMENT TYPE: SUMMARY. CLASSIFICATION : Unclassified RESTRICTIONS : 3 CURRENT STATUS: Redact DATEOFLASTREVIEW: 11/20/1997 OPENING CRITERIA : COMMENTS: Box 172. v9.l NW 55923 Docld: 32260782 Page 1 ! METROPOLITAN CRIME COMMISSION FILE California - criminal organizatiQns: ~ Elaces. For references to: D'Alton Smith Jim Braden Article - date uncertain in file as of 9/1/74 Bill Ha~lett - author; "San Diego - It's a New Mother Lode to Mafia Bosses" - Los Angeles Times. Article names Mafia members operating in the San Diego area. This includes: Allan M. Dorfman - Teamster ties Louis f chow the Tailor)' Rosanora Anthony Spilatro John (Jackie the Lackey) Cerone Harry Hall, 55, AKA Harry Helfgot and Harry Haler. L.A. Consultant for Hoover Gorin, a small Las Vegas PR o~tfit which. won a $1.3 million-a-year contract to improve image of Teamster's Union.
    [Show full text]