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Forty years ago, after a 12-hour standoff between police and members of the Black-led, back-to-nature group MOVE, the city of ...
Longtime NBC10 photojournalist Pete Kane was only hundreds of feet away from the shootout and deadly bombing of the MOVE headquarters in Philadelphia in 1985. For the 40-year anniversary of that ...
Actions by the city before, during, and after May 13, 1985, still loom large. In fact, one could argue MOVE is a microcosm ...
This week marked the 40th anniversary of one of the worst tragedies in Philadelphia’s history. In May 1985, the city’s police ...
In addition to starring in a documentary, Mike Africa Jr. penned a book in 2024. "On a Move" traces the history of MOVE from ...
Tuesday, May 13, 2025, marks the 40th anniversary of the 1985 police bombing on the headquarters of the Philadelphia Black liberation group, MOVE.
MOVE supporters also took the opportunity to argue that the group should be remembered for its role as a Black liberation ...
Driving the news: The Community College of Philadelphia is hosting a daylong symposium on the 40th anniversary of the bombing ...
The ongoing struggle over the meaning of the MOVE bombing Forty years after the city bombed the MOVE compound on Osage Avenue ...
Forty years after the MOVE bombing on Osage Avenue in Philadelphia, members of the community gathered at the site to remember ...
Mike Africa Jr. was only 6 years old when Philadelphia police dropped a bomb on 6221 Osage Avenue. But he remembers everything. Mourners of MOVE members killed in the bombing by the Philadelphia ...
Philadelphia Police dropped a bomb on a house on Osage Avenue, a reckless attack that took the lives of 11 people.