Ok - so I read the following article 10 times. How has really changed 
in 36 years?

To the thousands who flock each summer weekend to its white sand 
beaches and boardwalk carnival rides, Asbury Park, N.J., seems a 
tidy, if somewhat faded haven of tranquillity. But it is also, like 
many American small towns, a community where "across the tracks" 
still has a vivid, invidious meaning. To the east of the Penn Central 
railroad line, where well-kept lawns sweep toward the Atlantic Ocean, 
live most of Asbury Park's 12,500 whites. On the West Side, in a 
ghetto of frame houses splaying out from Springwood Avenue, live most 
of Asbury Park's 8,500 blacks. Last week the tranquillity was 
shattered by four nights of black riots that began on the West Side 
but spilled briefly across the tracks to white Asbury Park as well. 
The toll was 190 injured, 174 arrested and some $4,000,000 in damages 
to stores and residences.

The trouble began with rock and bottle throwing following an 
Independence Day dance on the West Side. For two days the window-
smashing, fire-bombing and looting were confined to the black 
neighborhood, leaving it without power and short on food, and turning 
much of Springwood Avenue into a smoldering ruin. Though the town has 
a white mayor and a black police chief, efforts to negotiate a truce 
failed. Angry black teen-agers then led a charge across the Penn 
Central tracks into the fringe of the white business district. The 
litany of their grievances was reproachfully familiar: too little 
urban renewal, too few jobs, inadequate play areas, inadequate 
communication between black and white leaders. When the unemployed of 
Asbury Park look to the local welfare officer for help, they find her 
in the telephone directory under the listing Overseer of the Poor.

Giving a hard, immediate edge to the battle was the behavior of many 
of the 200-odd New Jersey state troopers called in to quell the 
rioting, a job some executed with zeal. Ninety-two blacks were 
wounded by police shotguns and pellet guns. But Asbury Park's black 
residents had smashed the town's complacency. After two days of 
rioting, but before the white district had been hit, Mayor Joseph F. 
Mattice had said: "We're very fortunate it occurred where it did. It 
didn't affect our business area."





 
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