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<text>
<title>
(1960s) Newark:Sparks & Tinder
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1960s Highlights
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
July 21, 1967
RACES
Sparks & Tinder
</hdr>
<body>
<p> The Los Angeles ghetto of Watts went berserk in 1965 after
an unemployed high school dropout named Marquette Frye was
arrested for drunken driving. In six days of rioting, 35 died,
900 were injured. In 1966, the Cleveland ghetto of Hough erupted
when a white bartender denied a glass of ice water to a Negro
patron. And in Newark, N.J., a trumpet-playing Negro cab driver
by the name of John Smith last week became the random spark that
ignited the latest--and one of the most violent--of U.S. race
riots.
</p>
<p> Smith was driving his cab through winding, brick-paved
streets in Newark just after dusk one evening. Ahead of him,
moving at a maddeningly slow pace, was a prowl car manned by
Officers John DeSimone and Vito Pontrelli, on the lookout for
traffic violators, drunks, and the angry brawls that often mar
a summer's night in a Negro neighborhood. In the stifling heat,
Smith grew impatient and imprudent. Alternately flicking his
headlights on and off, Smith tailgated the police car. Finally,
after a quarter-mile of tailgating, Smith tried to swing past
the police. They cut him off. Who the hell?...Goddam...Son
of a bitch! There was a short scuffle, and Smith was trundled
into the squad car.
</p>
<p> It might have ended there, like any one of a thousand
police-blotter items. But Smith's arrival at the station house
happened to be seen by scores of Negro residents of the red brick
Hayes Homes housing development across the street and by other
cab drivers as well. Out over the cabbies' crackling VHF radio
band went the rumor that white cops had killed a Negro driver.
Within minutes, cabs and crowds were converging on the grey stone
headquarters of the Fourth Precinct in the heart of Newark's
overcrowded, overwhelmingly Negro Central Ward. By midnight, the
first rocks and bottles were clattering against the station-house
walls; by the next day, the tinkle of broken glass was
counterpointed by cries of "Beat drums, not heads!" Out charged a
phalanx of police to break up the crowds. After three long hours
calm returned, but not for long. Along the ghetto grapevine, the
word was passed: "You ain't seen nothin' yet." By that evening,
New Jersey's largest city (pop. 405,000) was caught up in the
fiercest race riot since Watts.
</p>
<p> Four nights running, and even during the heat of the day,
snipers' bullets spanged off sidewalks, night sticks crunched on
skulls, and looters made off with the entire inventory of scores
of stores (one small Negro boy was seen carrying table lamps his
own size). New Jersey's Governor Richard Hughes proclaimed Newark
a "city in open rebellion," declared a state of emergency, and
called out the National Guard. More than 4,000 city police, state
troopers and Guardsmen patrolled the city's debris-littered
streets.
</p>
<p> The toll in human suffering mounted hourly. Before the week
was out, at least 21 people were dead, more than 1,000 injured,
another 1,600 arrested. Property damage soared into the millions.
</p>
<p> No Call for it. The very triviality of the riot's
immediate cause made the Newark outburst particularly terrifying.
It seemed to say that a dozen or so people could be killed in
almost any city, any night, by the purest chance. In the past
three years, racial riots have flared in some 50 U.S. cities,
from Harlem to Hough, Chicago to Cincinnati, Boston to Buffalo,
Watts to Waukega. Most began with a vagrant spark, and often it
takes nothing more than that.
</p>
<p> In Hartford, Conn., last week, a Negro luncheonette owner
threw out a Negro customer for getting fresh with a waitress--and the upshot was two days of violence. What began as a dispute
between Negroes ended in damage to 14 shops, a few of which were
white-owned; it also brought injuries to 14 of both races. Police
in Erie, Pa., broke up a sidewalk crap game among Negro youths--and the result was two days of stonings and stickwork. Officials
in Cincinnati, Tampa and Buffalo, where ghetto dwellers rampaged
earlier this summer, nervously sought ways to avert fresh flare-
ups. Racial disturbances also occurred in Plainfield, N.J.,
Laurel, Md., Kansas City, Mo., and Miami.
</p>
<p> As unlikely a place as Waterloo, a nice, small city of
75,000 in northeast Iowa' dairy area, was touched, too, by the
madness. Waterloo's Negroes make up only 8% of the population,
are well integrated into the schools, and enjoy an unemployment
rate of a minimal 2.3% (well below the current national average
of 4%). But trouble exploded anyway. A young Negro, in full view
of a prowl car, deliberately knocked down an old white man who
was sweeping the sidewalk in front of a tavern. His arrest
touched off yet another 48 hours of rioting by Negro youths--to the perplexity of their elders. Said Albert Morehead, 68, a
Mississippi-reared Negro who takes pride in the symbols of his
success in the North--a neat frame house and around it
flourishing patches of greens and flowers,: "I can't see no call
for it."
</p>
<p> Preferred Brands. There seemed to be little call for the
explosion in Newark, either. Nevertheless, after building up
slowly, it spewed violence in all directions. After the first
pop bottles and bricks were heaved the looters moved in. Harry's
Liquor Store, a fueling stop about a block from the precinct
house where Cabby Smith was booked, became the first target. A
brick smashed the unprotected display window; gallons of liquor
poured out--into throats, not gutters. From other liquor
stores, Negro looters formed human chains that reached clear
around corners. They went first for the imported Scotch (Chivas
Regal and Johnny Walker Red Label were the preferred brands),
then for the bourbons and gins, next for vodka and champagne and--when everything else ran out--for cheap muscatels and
cordials. TV stores were hard-hit. "I can get $500 for this
color set," exulted one looter. "It's got a $1,000 price tag on
it."
</p>
<p> Negro youths clambered onto the iron grilles shielding
store fronts and, straining in unison, ripped them free. They
sometimes spared stores whose windows bore the crayoned legend
"Soul Brother," a sign of Negro ownership. In stores owned by
"Whitey," clothing was stripped from mannequins, and the
headless, pale pink forms soon dotted the length of Springfield
Avenue, one of Newark's shopping streets, along with a fine
crunchy layer of window glass. Women pranced through supermarkets
with shopping carts, picking and choosing with unwonted
indifference to price tags. One young Negro mother was stopped by
cops as she exited from a bicycle shop, her four children riding
on shiny new tricycles. She was arrested, along with 350 other
looters; countless others got away with the swag.
</p>
<p> Springfield Rifles. One ransacked store near Springfield
Avenue yielded rifles, shotguns and pistols. Soon shots were
snapping from windows and rooftops, aimed at police patrols and
firemen en route to battle the dozens of blazes that broke out.
Over the police radio came cries of alarm. "We're sitting ducks
out here--give us the word. Let us shoot." As Molotov cocktails
exploded in stores and around police cars, one radio bleated:
"We're getting bombed here. What should we do?" Replied the
dispatcher, laconically: "Leave."
</p>
<p> But it soon became clear that--as in Watts--leaving
would only feed the mob's appetite for destruction and loot.
Soon after midnight on the second night of rioting, the police
were finally given the word: "Use your weapons." As could have
been expected, police guns proved much more lethal than those in
the hands of Negro rioters. Of those dead by racial violence in
Newark last week, only two were white. Plainclothes Patrolman
Frederick Toto, 34, a police hero cited for saving a drowning
child in 1964, was shot through the chest by a sniper and died
two hours later, despite heart surgery. A fireman was later
shot in the back and killed. Among the Negro dead were children
and women, looters and gunmen.
</p>
<p> Fixed Bayonets. In response to an appeal from Newark Mayor
Hugh Addonizio, Governor Hughes called up 2,600 National
Guardsmen. Soon Jeeps, trucks and a clanking eleven-ton armored
personnel carrier mounting machine guns roared into the ghetto.
When several police were pinned down by Negro sniper fire, the
APC rumbled up and began blazing away with its .30-cal. guns:
unknown to the mob, they were loaded with blanks. The police
got away. Simultaneously, Guardsmen and police patrols coursed
through the streets--often behind fixed bayonets--picking up
every Negro in reach. Black-Power Playwright LeRoi Jones, 32,
was snatched from a Volkswagen with two loaded .32-cal. pistols
in his pockets. Jones, who once urged Negroes to handle white
men by smashing their "jelly white faces," ended up beat-up
himself: a blunt weapon split his scalp, and he required seven
stitches.
</p>
<p> Governor Hughes pretty much took over. Besides calling up
the Guard, he closed all of Newark's liquor stores ("We'll dry
this city out"), ordered all guns and ammunition confiscated
from the stores that were selling them, imposed a curfew that
advanced from midnight to 11 p.m., and finally to 10. He also
worked long hours touring the riot area, and his task force
arrested some 50 looters. Still the mob reveled in the curious
exultation of the explosion. "Was the Harlem riot worse than
this?" a Negro girl asked a reporter. When he assured her that
it was not, she cried: "That's good; that's great!"
</p>
<p> Harmony. John William Smith, the chance actor who started
it all, grew up some years ago when many whites thought of
Negroes (if at all) in Amos-`n'-Andy stereotypes. Smith was no
Kingfish. He had a year of college (a predominantly Negro
school: North Carolina A. & T.), where he studied music and
played the trumpet. Then came the post-World War II Army, in
which he served as an enlisted infantryman in Japan, Korea
(where he won a combat infantryman's badge) and the
Philippines. But this was still the segregated Army and, for the
Negro G.I., a discouraging morass of minor humiliations and
kitchen routine.
</p>
<p> A short (5 ft. 7 in.), stocky man with a mustache and
goatee, Smith has been a cab driver for the past five years,
paying a daily fee of $16.50 to use a "rent-a-cab." From that
investment he can expect $100 a week--in a good week--as
personal profit. He is unmarried ("I'm all alone in this
jungle," Smith told his lawyer, Oliver Lofton, a former aide to
Under Secretary of State Nicholas DeB. Katzenbach). He rents a
one-room apartment in Newark's "Ironbound" district (so named
for its wrap-around railroad lines), has a collection of 25
"cool" jazz records, and is saving for a plate to replace his
missing front teeth (lost in an accident years ago). Says
Smith, a quiet and articulate man: "I got to tighten up my
upper register and study a little harmony." Before last week he
had been ticketed five times--not much by cabby standards--for minor traffic violations.
</p>
<p> Smith came up against a police force commanded by a tough,
no-nonsense Italian-American named Dominick A. Spina, 56, who
won repute on the virtues that mark the best of American law-
enforcement officers: personal courage and political neutrality.
A stocky, cigar-chomping man with steely grey hair and
temperament, he heads a 1,400-man force that is heavily Italian,
but--according to city officials--includes some 400 Negroes
as well. Until last week, Spina could claim the ultimate
satisfaction in police work: without undue harshness or
permissiveness, merely by enforcing the law as it is written,
his cops had kept the peace in a potentially turbulent city.
Even when the Harlem riots of 1964 set off secondary explosions
of racial strife in the neighboring cities of Jersey City,
Paterson and Elizabeth, Newark managed to keep its cool.
</p>
<p> Treat's Trick. It was not an easy place to keep chilled.
Bounded on the east by the waste-grey waters of the Passaic
River and shrouded by a chronic cloud of yellow industrial
smog, Newark's black enclave is a grassless realm of rotting
brick and crumbling concrete: no less than 32.6% of the city's
housing, according to a 1963 study, is substandard. Newark was
founded 301 years ago by a dissident Connecticut Puritan named
Robert Treat, who, by current standards at least, tricked the
Indians into selling him a site including most of what is today,
in all its greenery, Essex County for $700 worth of gunpowder,
lead, axes, kettles, pistols, swords, beer and a number of
other items. As recently as 1950, Negroes constituted a scant
17% of Newark's population. With the rush to the suburbs by
whites in the affluent era that followed, and the northward
hegira of Negro refugees from Dixie, the black population is now
estimated at 50% to 55% and even more, making Newark the only
major city in the North, except for Washington, with a Negro
majority.
</p>
<p> Under Mayor Addonizio, 53, a bulky, balding liberal
Democrat who once quarterbacked for Fordham behind the "Seven
Blocks of Granite" and served as an infantry office from
Algiers to the Bulge, Newark until recently was considered a
city in control of its problems. Addonizio, who served 14 years
in the U.S. House of Representatives before his election as
mayor in 1962--largely on the strength of Negro and Italian
votes--outlined an ambitious urban-renewal program. Newark
today spends $277 per capita on repairing urban blight--the
highest annual figure for the nation's 50 biggest cities.
Newark officials claim an overall unemployment rate of 7%--down from 14% when Addonizio took over city hall--and Newark
has 125 federal poverty workers who spent $2,000,000 last year
on community-action projects. But the funds face a cut because
of the war, and the number of workers will be scaled down to 30
by September.
</p>
<p> Dead-End Street. Newark's Negroes find plenty wrong with
the city. Although Newark has two Negroes on its nine-man city
council, neither was on hand to fill the ghetto's leadership
vacuum during the riots: Councilman Irvine Turner was ill;
Councilman Calvin West was in Boston for a convention of the
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. The
city has no civilian review board (Mayor Addonizio refers all
charges of police brutality to the FBI). Nor did it have any
Negro police officers above the rank of lieutenant before last
week (when Addonizio hastily ordered a Negro officer promoted to
captain, and the city council later showed its good will by
authorizing the move).
</p>
<p> To many Negroes, the gravest grievance is one engendered by
somebody's idea of an urban improvement. Last year Addonizio
designated 46 acres of the Central Ward as the new campus for
the New Jersey State College of Medicine and Dentistry--a
move that would force some 3,500 Negroes out of their homes.
However dilapidated those dwellings might be, the threat raised
hackles throughout the city. A subsequent proposal to extend
two interstate highways that pass near Newark through the
downtown area might displace 20,000 more Negroes. The resolution
of these problems is not yet clear.
</p>
<p> When displaced, the Newark Negroes, as in other Northern
cities, generally move to another part of the slums. Rarely do
they escape into the suburban communities that ring the
city, nor are they very welcome in most of the Italian,
Ukrainian, Irish and Jewish communities in other parts of the
city itself. For John Smith and the rest of Newark's Negroes, a
current "soul music" hit called On a Dead-End Street summarizes
the Negro's plight all too aptly. "They say this is a big rich
town,/ but I live in the poorest part;/ I know I'm on a dead end
street, on/ a city without a heart."
</p>
<p> "Criminal Insurrection." Real as the grievances may be
last week's outburst was violently out of proportion to the
provocation--as many of Newark's Negroes realized. "Oh,
Alice," said one elderly man to his wife, "this is a terrible
day for our people." A young Negro woman with two small sons
snapped: "They ought to shoot all them rioters. Who do they
think they are anyway?" "We need the police," said another
woman. "All of this mess about police brutality is nonsense."
Clearly, the gravest suffering was endured by the Negroes
themselves, though scores of white-owned shops in the Central
Ward were gutted by fire or stripped by looters. The direst
damage, on all sides, was psychological.
</p>
<p> "The line between the jungle and the law might as well be
drawn here as any place in America," said Governor Hughes after a
motor tour of the riot-blighted streets. The thing that repelled
him was the "holiday atmosphere" that he implied he had seen
with his own eyes. Said he subsequently: "It's like laughing at
a funeral." Hughes, whose record in civil rights support and
anti-discrimination legislation is among the most generous in
U.S. politics, could not bring himself to believe that the
Newark nightmare was purely racial. Unshaven, sleepless for 25
hours, he said at one point: "This is not a Negro rebellion.
This is a criminal insurrection."
</p>
<p> Once it flared, the most striking feature of Newark's riot--like those in a score of other cities--was that the young
Negroes took it over. Some were seekers of kicks. Some, still in
their teen's were already infected with hate. And some were, in
an extreme fashion, reflecting a yawning generation gap--the
sort of thing that high school student Byron Washington, 16, was
talking about when he said in Waterloo, Iowa: "The whites got
to face it, man. This is a new generation. We aren't going to
stand for the stuff our mas and fathers stood for."
</p>
<p> Atmosphere for Violence. The outbursts of violence focused
attention on an "anti-riot bill" that reached the floor of the
House last week and is expected to be passed before the month is
out. Aimed principally at curbing the firebrand incendiarism of
Black-Power Advocates Stokely Carmichael and H. Rap Brown, the
bill prohibits crossing state lines and using the mails or other
interstate facilities to incite, organize, promote or carry out
a riot.
</p>
<p> But moderate civil rights leaders think the anti-riot bill
is likely to deepen pessimism among Negroes. "Too many people,"
said Roy Wilkins, executive director of the National Association
for the Advancement of Colored People, at its annual meeting in
Boston last week, "want to make the Negro `behave' but do not
want to give him justice. They think that riot prevention
consists of crackdown laws and crackdown police."
</p>
<p> Of the bill's author, Florida's Republican Representative
William Cramer, Wilkins said with scorn: "He and his colleagues
have great wrestlings with their souls and wordy parliamentary
debates in considering, trimming, altering or rejecting a civil
rights bill. But they have no trouble lining out punishment for
alleged rioting. When they refuse to enact legislation such as
the civil rights bill of 1967, they are creating the atmosphere
in which an outbreak of violence can occur."
</p>
<p> Addressing the N.A.A.C.P. convention in a similar vein,
Massachusetts' Republican Senator Edward Brooke held that ghetto
violence can be traced to the failure at all levels of
government to respond to the aspirations of moderates. "More
and more Negroes," said Brooke, "have come to believe that
progress is possible only through militant action, that
moderation has failed to accomplish enough to satisfy the
objectives of the civil rights movement. Black Power is a
response to white irresponsibility."
</p>
<p> Many whites have argues that enough civil rights
legislation has been enacted for now, and that the time has
come to digest it and try to make it work effectively. Brooke
disagrees. "To stand still is to regress," he warned. "The word
`wait' engenders hate. If Congress, out of fear or anger,
continues to choose the path of inaction, the lightning of
violence will strike again and again."
</p>
<p> Long Haunt. A hyperactive Congress is of course no
guarantee against the sort of violence that Brooke was talking
about. Watts blew sky-high in the midst of the greatest
legislative activity in a century. City after city has become
the scene of rioting after--not before--the enactment of a
whole spate of Great Society programs. To a degree, the programs
themselves are to blame; they have awakened the Negro to what
is available in America's opulent society and whetted his
appetite for more. And, as Charles Silberman noted in his Crisis
in Black and White: "The Negroes' impatience, bitterness, and
anger are likely to increase the closer they come to full
equality." In his desire for "more," the Negro has joined the
rest of the crowd. But in his realization that he has a
terribly long way to go before he will have as much as most
whites--in jobs, in homes and in schooling he has become social
tinder, easily kindled.
</p>
<p> Last week the spark just happened to alight on Newark, for
reasons that were not fully foreseeable beforehand nor easily
explicable afterward. The city had seemed to be coping
reasonably well with its problems. No objective analysis would
have justified a prediction that Newark would be the scene of
one of the biggest, bloodiest race riots of U.S. history. The
event will--and should--haunt Newark, New Jersey, and the
United States for a long time to come.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>