By JERYL BARGINEAR Mlchlll.n Citizen DE'IROIT - Over a half-cen­ tury ago, jazz masters recorded hi tory in mall, dim-Iitted, moke-filled rooms crowded with critics and genteel gentries, furloughed sailors with dallied dam els, all bearing witness to an unprecedented art form that would inscribe the scrolls of jazz and influence postwar musi­ cians for generations to come. Dizzy and Bird were at the helm, Minton's and Birdland were the workshops of the day, and Har­ lem the mecca for jazz prodigies compelled to make the pilgrim­ age. Today, jazz is still alive and well.in the city of Detroit and convicted to its viability is trum­ peter Dwight Adams, who' making a monumental mark on t jazz ne, In n in+-'tri6