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- <text id=93HT1320>
- <title>
- King: New Script In Newark
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--King Portrait
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- April 26, 1968
- New Script in Newark
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Not the least surprise of the spring has been the readiness
- of some black firebrands to preach peace and "Realpolitik" in the
- ghettos. In the fearful days after Martin Luther King's
- assassination, Mau Mau Chieftain Charles Kenyatta joined with New
- York's Mayor John Lindsay in lowering Harlem's temperature. In
- Los Angeles' Watts, Black Nationalist Ron Karenga and other
- militants passed the word: no riots, at least for the present.
- </p>
- <p> On paper, few black separatists have sounded more
- intractable in the past than Playwright LeRoi Jones, 33, who was
- found guilty in October of having prowled through Newark's riot
- area last summer armed with a brace of revolvers. "We must make
- our own world, man," he wrote recently, "and we cannot do this
- unless the white man is dead. Let's get together and kill him."
- Yet when the fires started up this month in Newark, Jones got
- together with Mayor Hugh Addonizio and city leaders of both races
- to search for peaceful political solutions.
- </p>
- <p> Behind Jones's and other black zealots' "volte-face" is a
- hard-won awareness that Negroes themselves take the heaviest
- casualties in any riot. Though he still promises to lash back
- with vigor if attacked by whites, Jones, currently appealing his
- conviction for possession of deadly weapons, is more interested
- now in achieving black power politically in his native city,
- where 52% of the 410,000 residents are Negro. As head of the new
- United Brothers of Newark, Jones said last week: We are out to
- bring black self-government to this city by 1970, and the ballot
- seems to be the most advantageous way. We are educating the Negro
- masses that this city can be taken without a shot being fired."
- </p>
- <p> Back in the Framework. In June, the United Brothers will
- hold a convention to nominate black candidates for two city
- council seats. With voter-registration drives, Jones and other
- militants predict that a Negro will occupy Addonizio's office two
- years hence, though LeRoi himself disavows any interest in the
- job. "I'm a communications specialist," he grins. Admits an
- Addonizio aide: "The argument isn't whether a Negro is going to
- take over, but which Negro. With that, you're right back in the
- framework of American politics." Another question is whether
- Negroes, along with Newark's white ethnic-minority groups, can
- keep their tempers long enough for the peaceful change to occur.
- </p>
- <p> One promising sign is that Jones has already met three times
- with Contractor Anthony Imperiale, leader of a vociferous group
- of angry whites who have been arming themselves and patrolling
- Newark in "jungle cruisers" in order to "repel an invasion".
- Surprisingly, the black militant and the white vigilante have
- reached an understanding. "I respect him," says Jones. "He
- doesn't lie like white liberals. He knows exactly what I'm trying
- to do, and I know right were he's at."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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