DAVID SPURR Long In SI Summer Nights Pokes r Cleveland (A Reminiscence for December) FROM THE ;NEWSPAPERS one learns that the Glenville area in Cleveland is quiet now. But the Glenville area is never quiet. Superior, Euclid, Hough Avenues -- they are the pulse of this. tired old lakefront city. At night, especially, when a secure and casual calm falls over downtown and the suburbs, the streets in Glenville come alive, like ser- pents waking. Glenville is a place for groovin' down a crowded avenue, as the Young Rascals would say, where cats in, iridescent suits bop in and out of Leo's Casino, where soul music floats out the door. And so. it was the night of Tuesday, July 23. I sat in a bleak United Press International newsroom banging out news blurbs for radio announcers. And then over the police radio: "A gun bat- tle on the East Side." That was all, but it was ' enough to send me onto the freeway and into the ghetto. Crowds were already in the streets. But I was an alien - being white, a curious creature, almost some sort of freak, especially being without a gun. I made my way d o w n narrow streets of tightly packed brick and wooden houses - not too different from the suburbs, only all black. There were little patches of struggling grass in and between the yards, 4nd some of the frame houses were freshly whitewashed. It was a. subtle ghetto - not like Harlem or Roxbury - but a place where ghettoness existed mainly in people's minds and prejudices, and in the fact that very few black could get out. Its ghettoness existed in statistics as well - po- lice crime statistics, insurance claim statistics, demographic statistics. The old rambling wooden shells lining the # dark streets had once been the fashionable homes of turn-of-the-century Cleveland. Then' Poles, Jews, and Italians had moved in, and slowly, as Negroes kept coming from the South during the 30's and 40's, immigrants had got- ten out, too. S O THAT NIGHT a black man lay in the gut- ter. It had come to this. All the decades of struggling against policemen, the absentee landlords, the storekeepers . . . th e decades of moving in droves from the South . . . the tension, the whites moving out of the o 1 d neighborhoods . . . It was all to come to this on the night of July 23 - a black man lay in the gutter, and nobody quite yet gave a damn. The damn was just beginning. ' He lay motionless in his blood, and I won- dered if he were dead. The thought never be- fore occurred to me. I had never before seen a dead man. My thoughts were broken by a volley of gunfire down the street. I became part of a moving crowd which ran for cover, each run- ning only for himself. The gunshots sounded from down the street, where cops were shoot- ing it out, western-style, with a gang of mill- tant black' nationalists. They were more militant than ever that night. A dying cop ~lay in the street below a house where the snipers were entrenched. He was yelling, "Help me, please, somebody help' me!" / Another cop ran -to his side, and a dark figure in a second story window pumped a round of machine gun shells into his back and head. Two lay there now, and the gun battle would leave eight more dead and several injured before dawn, when the house w a s burned down. ThenJI only wanted to watch. I walked down the street, away f r o m the shooting, where crowds were gathering at a commercial intersection. God, but they hated me. I jumped into a police car, my only sanctuary, as a barrage of bottles, stones, and bricks fired from a crowd of about 200 youths. I crouched on the floor of the car, and prayed it wouldn't explode in the next minute with a firebomb. DOWN THE STREET, white motorists were being dragged from their cars and beaten. Only a handful of policemen w e r e on the scene; and as they hurried in one direction drawing their pistols a n d brandishing the butts of their rifles, something violent would take place in the other direction. Two cars were set on fire and a third, a newscar, exploded as I was trying to read the call letters painted on its side. A building burst into flames. A bloody white boy was led up the street after being rescued from a gang which rolled his car over; one of his eyes was missing. Store windows were smashed all around. There is something about the shattering of glass which makes it a perfect outlet for pent- up frustrations. As a brick is hurled through a storefront plate glass window, there is a fan- tastic, crashing noise that reverberates up and down a street. Then the glass is still, spilled over the' sidewalk in millions of tiny, spark- ling pieces that reflect a mosiac of neon lights. It is a cymbal's crash accompanied by the wail of a siren and the pitiful weeping of a young white man . . . gunshots out of the street's neon haze .: . the hoarse roar of a fire that lights up the sky. There is sweetness about it all. The shat- tering of glass is like shattering the icy veneer a white man huts on in front of a Negro. We watched a gas main catch on fire and a sens- ual blue billow of flame lept up and sent us ducking for cover. When Ahmed Evans and his gang of black nationalists ran into that house on Lake- view, just up the street from the corner of Superior, someone heard them say, as they began to fortress themselves for their own little war against the Cleveland Police De- partment,"We'll shoot !at anything white." Evans and his gang of deadly militants: Martyrs, perhaps, the vangard which died faithful to whatever cause they held dear. Word had been around that the cops had been intimidating Evans and his crowd. This was more than anything else, a violent and terrible revenge, not the beginning of a rev- olution. In frustrating situations it is true that the cops get out of hand. And they hassle people, especially those people, like the black nation- alists, who openly show their hatred of the cops. But then again the cop on the beat is just a man. If he is white, he is afraid, like me, and an alien in the black ghetto. He does the white man's dirty work; his job is coping with all the insanity and absurdity of modern man that the ghetto is a monument to. It is perhaps too much to expect the cop to con- duct his own self in a sane manner all the time, when all around him is insanity. FOUR BLACK DAYS gutted the east side of Cleveland that week. I spent most of those hundreds of hours a haggard rider in press cars, riding endlessly around and around, fol- lowing police calls, talking, asking, asking, always listening, watching for facial expres- sions that revealed what a man was really thinking . . . watching for those little things that are really at the root of all the tear gas and the smoke. Midnight or later on one of those nights when the burning and shooting had subsid- ed, and the city was tense and harrowed. We were inspecting a smoldering f i r e some- where deep in the ghetto, and a little cop came waddling up to us, his nightstick wag- ging behind like a dog's tail.; He was one of those friendly cops who liked to talk more than anything else. I liked him. He seemed very hurt that all this was going on in his city. He said he lived on the Eat ide_- come to seeking the Promised Land. Dreams passed from father to son were going up in smoke all over his city. Early the next morning, in the post-mid- night darkness, whole blocks were in blazes. In hell people are genuine. In hell, there is nothing to be afraid of. The worst has al- ready come. Death and suffering are just another black body lying in a stove-in door- way. WITH A PHOTOGRAPHER I toured the 105th St. area. 105th St. runs perpendicular to Superior Ave. in the black heart of the East Side, and its intersection with the avenue is a noisy, flashing, exciting corner where gangs keep watch over the street in clusters huddled in doorways, and strains of a half- dozen soul juke-boxes keep bodies writhing. All this on any night but July 23. That night my photographer was black, named Chandu. rHe knew the ghetto and its, ways. Better, he knew the cops, and could slap each one on the back with a hearty laugh. They all liked him., Good nigger. But he was hardened, too, like the cops - from the streets and the grimey emotion of Glenville and the Hough area. One of several gun battles had just ended when we came to the corner of 105th and Superior. Firetrucks crawled against a sky of flames, looking like red ants on a burning log. I began to hurry, almost running toward the scene, and Chandu grabbed my a r m. "Buddie," he said, "in a riot you never run, okay?" The gun battle had only stopped when the brownstone building harboring the snipers had exploded in fire. One black sniper, in African dress had rushed screaming out onto the street and was gunned down. The other stayed in, as the building sucked and heaved onto itself under the flames. He never came out. THE STORM had subsided when daylight came July 24. Scores of on-call cops sat around in the police garage, talking about wives, bowling, "those people," and the Na- tional Guard. Yes, the National Guard had been called in early in the morning. They had set up a com- mand post at a municipal garage in a grassy park that was bordered on all sides by the ghetto. I drove by the place and saw the stiff guards, standing as if someone were, about to raid the empty garage. Rows of jeeps and ar- mored personnel carriers lined the expansive lawn, and the eyes of excited, nervous sold- iers followed every car as it went by. They were country and small town boys, most of them, from places like Ravenna and Plainesville and North Canton. The ghetto Negro was something they read about through .wire service reports. in the newspapers. They knew the quiet country niggers who lived in corrugated iron shacks and plywood houses on the bumpy old roads leading away from town. Those blacks had never hurt any- body . .. nobody had ever called out the Na- tional Guard on the old nigger who scratched his meager living from the Ohio clay. And his kids, well, 'his kids were content to just play in the rusted-out skeletons of junk cars that lay in his yard, and they didn't bother nobody neither. The city nigger was somethin'else, wasn't he. At the barricaded intersection which swarmed with soldiers and jeeps a corporal checked for press passes. He said, "Go on, I've checked you many times before," but in- stead I stopped to talk. "Yep, them boonies are really gettin' riled," he answered. "They just need somebody to show 'em who's boss, all right."I chuckled a distant, forced chuckle and said I'd better be gettin' on - got a job to do, y' know. HE WAS the country boy standing, incon- gruously, here in the middle of the city slum with a combat rifle slung over his shoul- der. It didn't matter. It could have been down at the dry goods store in Ravenna, and that shotgun hight have been for shootin' geese. The city is not a good place to be if one loves the dawn. In the city, dawn does not break triumphant golden fusing sunlight with everything. Instead, it creeps and steals among. the concrete and steel, and day has come long before you see the sun . . . as if it were afraid to begin another day of inferno. The policemen began to show little signs of fatigue and frustration they had dragged f-^s i r . - ~ " 4 S-.-C. .. tT ... .1,. a... J . . .. porches when the colored garbage men came by. Not for any reason, really, just that, well you know all that's been happening down there, down in Glenville and the East side. Early that morning an extraordinary man met long hours with generals and police- men and black militants and Slavic politic- ians. Early that afternoon Mayor Carl Stokes announced his decision. It was a monumen- tal decision; no other mayor of a riot-torn city had ever made one like it, and it .was a decision that was to stir a lasting and bitter controversy in Cleveland, to alienate Stokes from his own police department, the National Guard, and white America ih general for some time. That night the order gurbled out over po- lice district teletype machines all over 'the city: white persons, including white policemen and National Guardsmen, were not to go in- to the riot area, which would be cordoned off. Only black policemen would be allowed in. side the barricades.1 THE COPS at the 5th district were furious: "He oughtta have his head examined!" Stokes appeared on television and t h e whites on the West Side, the poor white, and the whites in the suburbs, were all incred- ulous. Stokes had actually gotten up in front of the cameras and announced that the po- lice were not to police, that the whites were not to fight against the black violence. Stokes at other times had stood in front of the lights and cameras in the ornate Tap- estry Room at City Hall. He always arrived from his inner office immaculately groomed, white paper in hand, then stepped before the rostrum as he greeted the reporters and cam- eramen. And he always spoke very carefully. So it was this time. In defiance against the whites whom he had defeated for his office. Calm, subtle defiance. The white man was losing at his own game. After the order the cops became belliger- ent. Reporters were no longer free to roam at will aboututhe police station. One was shov- ed by a burly officer as he tried to get into the door, and an angry envoy of newsmen complained to Inspector Patrick Gerity, who was in charge of the nth district headquarters. Now Inspector Gerity is and was a rather very special man. Although fif tyish with thin-' ning gray hair, there is not that ai1~of stale, Geritol-saturated denture - clenched middle- agedness about him. Gerity has heavy brows and the street-hardened face- of a real vet- eran cop. Yet, soft-spoken, unassuming. DURING THOSE tension-wrenched hours his face was a picture of calm and reflection, while those around him were losing their heads. He fielded the anger of the haggard reporters, and 'with that special trait of the Irish politician, was able to slip through the most inflammatory questions. He finally gave the journalists their way - they could stay at the police station. Later he came out of hisoffice to talk with whoever felt like talking to him. You didn't have to ask Inspector Gerity many questions. He wanted to talk, perhaps. to ease the agony out of his system. He leaned on the police desk and rambled on and on about Cleveland-"My town"-about his own men and about the people. "I can't stand to see this happen," he spoke to me softly, almost secretly. "I have an in- vestment in this town - I've put 37 years in- to it - 37 years on the force. Sometimes I feel like those years are wasted." A bit of the old fire stirred in him as he raised his voice, "And people are telling me the Negroes, who are the people of this town, are rioting. Well, it just isn't so. Do you realize what would happen if the people of Cleveland really wanted to start a riot? If even five thousand people decided they were going to riot? We couldn't do a thing if that hap- "The people out there throwing bombs and burning and looting are just kids. A few kids, and lunatics with rifles. You-can't tell me my town is rioting," he fairly shouted. ' He spoke with almostdesperate conviction. Iliked him, and felt sorry for him. He knew a lot of his cops were bullies, but he wasnt going to admit it to,,the press. THEY LOOTED and burned more that night in Glenville, but not nearly as much as the night before; but this time the police weren't there, and nobody was killed. The mayor had agreed to let black neighborhood leaders try to control the violence in their own way. A Cavanagh, or even a Lindsay, would n e v e r have had the courage. And afterwards, the blacks called it a suc- cess,. pointing to the lives that were saved; and the whites said Stokes was a failure, pointing to the stores that were leoted. At the dawn hour of the third day I stole past the barricades intoo the cordoned-off sec- tion of Glenville, and saw the gutted store windows and the black gangs still roaming the streets. A small group of black men stood with two black policemen, looking at the ruins of art appliance store. I approached a thin man who wore an arm band proclaiming, "Mayor's Com'- mittee." They all stopped talking and stared at me. "Boy" said the man in the armband, "How old are you?" I told him and he answered back, "Well, I thought so because you got to be young to be so goddam foolish!" and he spat the words at me. "Lemme see your credentials. I thought no white press was gonna be allowed in ,here," he said in a friendlier manner. I stammered, "Well the mayor s a i d we could come in at daylight." The mayor hadn't really said any such thing. I showed the man my credentials. "Well, now, what can I- do for you," he challenged. "First o all, tell me hqw long this looting has been going on here," I demanded,,and gestured toward the smashed windows, the } rubble and ashes all around. It was definitely not the right question to ask at that moment. The thin man's brown face blackened with rage. He stood twvo inches from my- face and screamed, "Howl long has the looting gone on? Why the hell don't you ask how many lives were saved? Why don't you ask what we've been doing all night here, when we've been running up and down this damned street imploring our brothers and sis- ters to go home; when we've sweated all night to stop the violence and the shodting and the killing, and we've done it, man, we've done it! He smiled a furious smile .and his eyes blazed at me. "Now you white people come i' here and ask about the looting! Well, man, we don't want you around here so why don't you just get into your car and go. I mean go! Now leave us alone!" I stared for a long time into his xface, star- ing a don't-tell-me-where-to-go stare, but I knew I had to go. The others shared his rage. As I turned and walked back across the street I, wanted to beg them to talk to me as one of their own. I understood, I thought, and I sympathized and I wanted to listen to them. But there are always times when pride triumphs over reason. The white liberal is everyone's whipping post, including his own. I wanted merely to see - to, see everything and understand all the agony and hatred of the black soul. I resented their not letting me \into their tortured world. I drove away quietly and shut off the soul music when it came blaring over the radio Only another dawn maybe. The sun was creeping up now and spilling in bits and pieces of rays over the tarred ! h ? '0.rY.a. I 4i":v w.. .....