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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
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- Early last Wednesday evening the phone rang in the home of
- our Los Angeles correspondent James Willwerth. On the line was
- bureau chief Jordan Bonfante with urgency in his voice. "Are you
- aware that rioting and gunfire have broken out over the Rodney
- King verdict?" he asked.
-
- Throughout that evening and during the next 48 hours,
- Bonfante, Willwerth and seven other TIME correspondents,
- reporters and photographers spread out across Los Angeles to
- record what would become the worst U.S. rioting since the 1965
- Watts disturbances. Their reporting, most of it gathered under
- high-adrenaline conditions, is the basis for our cover stories
- this week. Correspondent Jeanne McDowell, covering the antiriot
- mobilization at city hall, managed to grab a personal interview
- with Mayor Tom Bradley by posting herself near the entrance to
- his office there. Correspondent Sylvester Monroe, who has
- covered the Rodney King story throughout, was one of the first
- journalists to witness the early arson and looting. As Monroe
- was driving through South Central -- the focal point of the riot
- -- looters who noticed him would flash the black-power sign, a
- clenched fist, and he would flash it back. Says Monroe: "That's
- how I managed to move through the community that night without
- being attacked or shot as some reporters were."
-
- Others had equally harrowing experiences. Reporter Sally
- Donnelly, emerging from a rally at a neighborhood church, had
- to be smuggled out by black colleagues and driven away lying on
- the backseat of a car to avoid clusters of young men positioned
- around intersections hurling rocks and setting fires.
- Photographer Roger Sandler, roaming through a newly burned-out
- section of the city's Crenshaw district, had the business end
- of a pistol suddenly thrust in his face by one of a gang of
- teenagers bristling with weapons. Just as he lowered his camera,
- certain that they would fire, they quickly jumped back into
- their car and drove off. Jim Willwerth was watching a group of
- looters empty a sporting-goods store when one punched him in the
- head and tried to seize his notebook. He fled to a nearby
- minimall, where the merchants had set up a fortress of their
- own. Willwerth, who has covered wars and insurrections on two
- continents in his 25 years at TIME, says simply, "If there is
- a hell, it must look something like L.A. did that night."
-
- -- Elizabeth P. Valk
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