Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - (Page 100)

ies with a blunt refusal, even though less than two years earlier a three-year-old boy named Donald Hastie, whose parents were denied aid by the poormaster, had died of starvation. This morning was no different; within fifteen minutes he had already dismissed six applicants, sending them off with a booming “Next case!” The seventh supplication took a little longer, and ended more dramatically, with a young dark-haired woman named Lena Fusco, whose three children had rickets, running out in tears, followed by a stormy Barck, wiping her spit off his face. “Lock her up!” he bellowed. “I won’t give her any more [bread] tickets!” The encounter with Lena Fusco, as it would turn out, was just the undercard to what would prove to be the main event of Harry Barck’s life: a meeting with Joseph Scutellaro, a thirty-six-year-old construction worker and father of two who had been out of work for more than six months. The shrunken Scutellaro—he had lost a visible amount of weight during his unemployment, and now carried less than 120 pounds—had not always had difficulty finding work. His father, Frank, an immigrant, had built a prosperous construction business, and had even benefited from a cordial relationship with the McFeely regime. But Frank made the crucial mistake of supporting an Italian candidate against McFeely one year, and although he made a public show of fealty and abasement after his man lost, the Scutellaros had no friends at city hall. When the economy collapsed, Barck made the terms of estrangement clear. Although Joe Scutellaro’s family received some relief from the poormaster, help was inconsistent and meager; the last check he’d been given, four weeks before, had been for $5.70. A month later, down to a handful of pennies, with fuel cut off, the food gone, and the children ill, Scutellaro was reaching the end of his rope. As Metz tells it, Scutellaro began politely enough, but grew angry as Barck’s response escalated in insolence. “Watch the mail,” a gruff Barck initially said, an answer that had proved unreliable in the past. No, Scutellaro insisted, his children were sick and hungry, to which the self-satisfied Barck responded, “What’s the matter with your wife? Can’t she go down and swing her bag 100 September/October 2012 along Washington Street?” Scutellaro, not irrationally, inferred this as a suggestion that his wife take up prostitution. In very short order, voices were raised, punches thrown, and the junior featherweight Scutellaro clocked the heavyweight Barck right in the face. The poormaster may have acted a tough guy, but he apparently had a glass jaw, for he fell face-first across his desk. Unluckily, he landed on the spot where he kept a metal spindle on which he neatly spiked rejected applications. The hole in his chest was so small and tidy that for a while it went unnoticed, and at 10:25 he was pronounced dead without the wound being attended. So fast had been the police to arrest Scutellaro for assaulting Barck that they had already finished booking him for simple assault; Barck’s death forced the cops to amend the charges to murder in the first degree. Irony of ironies, at the exact time of the fight, a mailman had delivered to the Scutellaro home an $8 relief check and thirty coupons each good for a loaf of bread. Before these items could be used by Scutellaro’s wife and kids, however, they were seized as evidence by the police. Scutellaro became a cause célèbre, particularly in the Italian community, which saw his treatment as emblematic of the routine discrimination that group suffered. In time, the woebegone carpenter attracted two staunch champions: Samuel Leibowitz, one of the sharpest attorneys in America, who had acquired a national reputation with his historic defense of the Scottsboro boys; and Herman Matson, a thirty-seven-year-old father of six, WPA laborer, and leader in the local Workers Defense League. While Leibowitz maneuvered against the machinations of a McFeely prosecutor who aimed to tag Scutellaro with a death sentence, Matson, working quite independently of the defense team, agitated with his wife Elizabeth on the streets against the corrupt practices and cruel relief policies of the McFeely administration. When Matson attempted to speak at a rally in a park one evening, McFeely goons battered him and beat his wife, causing her to suffer a miscarriage. After the beating, McFeely police arrested Matson for inciting to riot, and he ended up with his own headline trial full of famous lawyers and McFeely hacks. poiler alert: the good guys don’t win, or not exactly. Scutellaro escaped a murder rap and a death sentence but was convicted of manslaughter, the compromise verdict of a jury that initially polled eleven to one for acquittal. He was given a sentence of two to five years, and served eighteen months. Matson was convicted of being a disorderly person, and though he served no jail time, he was blackballed from WPA jobs in New Jersey and had to relocate his family to the Bronx. Although McFeely remained in office for nine more years, the trials marked a turning point, after which he faced more criticism of his administration, a federal probe into the distribution of relief and accusations against the police department over civil rights violations, and the disgruntlement of key voting blocs. In 1949, he lost the support of the police department, and he was voted out of office. A year later, the new mayor dumped the title poormaster in favor of director of welfare. Holly Metz deserves tremendous praise for accomplishing the difficult task of evoking the pain and pathos of a long-forgotten incident, and allowing it to illuminate our own problems involving wealth and work and unemployment. We may not be seeing Scutellaro-like need on a massive scale, yet we still see unemployment mostly as a matter of individual initiative and skills, and not as a matter of justice. We are still in thrall of the power and might of the tycoon, and if we do not accept McFeely-class corruption in our city halls, we tolerate it among the financial class. The SimpsonBowles plan, widely heralded as centrist, cuts benefits for the middle and working classes while protecting the interests of the rich. The New York Fed all but ignores LIBOR rate rigging, while the Federal Reserve Board, which is legally required to minimize unemployment, continues to study a festering 8 percent unemployment rate. Any effort to discuss inequality is labeled as an attempt to wage class warfare. Killing the Poormaster shows that it took a spindle through a man’s heart to set a movement toward justice in motion; one hopes that it will be something less lethal that pricks the consciences of today’s moneyed elite. Jamie Malanowski is a New York writer. S

Washington Monthly - September/October 2012

Table of Contents for the Digital Edition of Washington Monthly - September/October 2012

Washington Monthly - September/October 2012
Contents
Editor’s Note: Where Credit Is Due
Letters
Tilting at Windmills
Do Presidential Debates Really Matter?
The Clintonites’ Beef With Obama
Party Animals
Introduction: A Different Kind of College Ranking
America’s Best-Bang-for-the-Buck Colleges
The Siege of Academe
Getting Rid of the College Loan Repo Man
Got Student Debt?
Answering the Critics of “Pay As You Earn” Plans
National University Rankings
Liberal Arts College Rankings
Top 100 Master’s Universities
Top 100 Baccalaureate Colleges
A Note on Methodology: 4-Year Colleges and Universities
Why Aren’t Conservatives Funny?
First-Rate Temperaments
A Malevolent Forrest Gump
Broken in Hoboken
Identity Politics Revisited
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - Washington Monthly - September/October 2012
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - Cover2
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 1
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 2
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 3
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 4
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 5
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 6
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - Contents
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 8
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 9
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - Editor’s Note: Where Credit Is Due
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 11
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - Letters
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 13
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - Tilting at Windmills
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 15
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 16
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 17
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 18
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - Do Presidential Debates Really Matter?
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 20
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 21
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - The Clintonites’ Beef With Obama
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 23
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - Party Animals
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 25
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 26
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - Introduction: A Different Kind of College Ranking
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 28
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 29
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 30
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - America’s Best-Bang-for-the-Buck Colleges
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 32
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 33
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 34
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - The Siege of Academe
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 36
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 37
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 38
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 39
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 40
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 41
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 42
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 43
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 44
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - Getting Rid of the College Loan Repo Man
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 46
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 47
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 48
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - Got Student Debt?
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 50
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 51
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - Answering the Critics of “Pay As You Earn” Plans
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 53
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - National University Rankings
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 55
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 56
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 57
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 58
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 59
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 60
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 61
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 62
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 63
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 64
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 65
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 66
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 67
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - Liberal Arts College Rankings
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 69
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 70
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 71
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 72
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 73
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 74
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 75
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 76
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 77
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 78
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 79
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - Top 100 Master’s Universities
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 81
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 82
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 83
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - Top 100 Baccalaureate Colleges
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 85
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 86
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 87
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - A Note on Methodology: 4-Year Colleges and Universities
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 89
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - Why Aren’t Conservatives Funny?
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 91
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 92
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - First-Rate Temperaments
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 94
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 95
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - A Malevolent Forrest Gump
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 97
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 98
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - Broken in Hoboken
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 100
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - Identity Politics Revisited
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 102
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 103
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - 104
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - Cover3
Washington Monthly - September/October 2012 - Cover4
https://www.nxtbook.com/nxtbooks/washingtonmonthly/20230910
https://www.nxtbook.com/nxtbooks/washingtonmonthly/20220910
https://www.nxtbook.com/nxtbooks/washingtonmonthly/20210910
https://www.nxtbook.com/nxtbooks/washingtonmonthly/20200910
https://www.nxtbook.com/nxtbooks/washingtonmonthly/20190910
https://www.nxtbook.com/nxtbooks/washingtonmonthly/20180910
https://www.nxtbook.com/nxtbooks/washingtonmonthly/20160910
https://www.nxtbook.com/nxtbooks/washingtonmonthly/20150910
https://www.nxtbook.com/nxtbooks/washingtonmonthly/20140910
https://www.nxtbook.com/nxtbooks/washingtonmonthly/20120910
https://www.nxtbookmedia.com