4 4,4F ;_ . 411, 4 I/ Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE Tuesday, April 9, 1968. Tuesday, April 9, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE "Bay City has no race pol . No hinghasgevergotten out of hand" By HOWARD KOHN Bob McDaniels was the first Negro elected president of Bay City Central High School's student council. . Flashing his bright smile, McDaniels won over Central's largely white student body. "He was the happiest-looking .per- son in the world," recalled Ellen Kist, one of his classmates in 1962-1963. "You couldn't help but like him."- As drum major of the band, McDan- lels was a key figure at pep rall-ies. And in the era of the Four Seasons and the Beachboys, -he was a popular man at dances. "He was a swinger. He was a guy with real rhythm . . . a natural musi- cian," said Fred Smith, student council vice-president with McDaniels. McDaniels' election surprised many of Bay City's residents. "I'd never really thought about a colored boy becoming president; I sort of wondered who he was when I heard about it," remem- bered Mrs. W. G. Wacker, whose two daughters attended Central. "But I'm sure that no mother really minded. I mean, he always looked like a good boy," she added. McDaniels' picture appeared in the Bay City Times, the only daily newspaper in town, as he won repeated honors in music and took part in several activi- ties during his four years in high school. He marched sprightly in the phalanx of All-American boys. A local Negro's nicture seldom runs in the Times. In a city of 55.000, there are lpcs than 1.000 Negroes. Few receive even token recognition. Bay City is predom- ingntly white middle-class with strong German and Polish birthmarks. An unaspiring city in Northeastern Michigan, 100 miles north of Detroit, Bay City reached a tenuous pinnacle of 40,000 souls at the height of Michigan's lumber boom in the 1880's. Since then, its population has increased at a rate of less than 200 a year. Although it is the main port city on the Saginaw River, it has remained vir- tually landlocked for decades, smaller in population and industry than sister city Saginaw upriver. Until the St. Law- rence Seaway freight lines reached Bay City at the start of the decade, Bay City's shipping tonnage was minimal. double or quad rooms, however:The main- area of the ward was a large dayroom, half of which was divided by partitions out from the walls into sleeping cubicles, with two beds and dressers in each. I learned later that the private rooms were saved -for girls who had shown progress or were not in need of special supervision. My immediate assignment to a private room was not as luxurious as might seem, however, since the rooms were kept locked during the day. This was done' for two reasons. It would not be fair to allow the girls with private rooms to lie down during the day, when this was, forbidden to everyone else. And more important, the rooms were locked to pre- vent recurrence of an attempted escape last year in which two girls broke their room window. Being locked out of one's room is notr such an unpleasant experience. Similarly, safety measures which p>rohibited doors on the toilet stalls seemed only to en- courage-a jovial exchange of vulgarities and made the bathroom a main center of social contact. - Step One also included familiarizing oneself with the centers of ward ac- tivity. There were three: the nursing station, which offered the girls oppor- tunities for contact with non-patients, and was the complaint center and dis- tributor of medication and information as well; the 'TV and record player room at the end of the main hall; and the central, glassed-in dayroom adjacent to the sleeping partitions. This dayroom "was a warm, drowsy place. Yellow sunlight filtered in the windows on three sides, and in it time passed slowly. A large portion of each day was devoted to waiting: waiting for meals, waiting for therapy, waiting for a music lesson - waiting for the day when Northville would be only a memory. It w'As in the dayroom that camara- derie between patients was most felt, the real purpose of Step One most demon- strated. In psychological terms, the day- room provided an area for prolonged contact with a peer group, and this served two important functions. The group would inform the patient about "the system" and the ways of gaining privileges and skirting regulations - an important way of reserving for the pa- tient some vestige of personal autonomy. Also, this situation fostered a sense of belonging to a group, a special group that shares problems and can offer sup- port and understanding.. In the dayroom that afternoon I had my first glimpse of the special courage exhibited by these young adults. As a new girl I underwent a probing con- ,cerning my particular disorder. Was I here on my own initiative? Had I been in any other psychiatric hospital? Was I suicidal? Having expected' a strong taboo on such topics, I was even more surprised to hear these same girls dis- cussing with amazing candor their own problems of breakdowns. intense feelings- of inferiority, inability to cope with stresses. Thus freed to ask questions myself, I learned much about the daily task which faced the inhabitants of B1-2. The im- mensity of their task consisted not only of rebuilding themselves, but also of - coming to believe that the outside world is worth regaining. For many of the pa- tients in the young adult unit, the outer world evokes bitter memories. A profile of the Young Adult Unit taken last year after its first six months of operation showed that. 70 per cent come from broken families, 60 per cent were termed "lower class," meaning largely inner-city residents. But it is most meaningful to translate these statistics into descriptions of some Northville patients. Several girls on the ward had known a version of the world that could provide little incentive for return. Their experiences in urban ghettos had exposed them to- promiscu- ity, drug addiction, indifferent parents and simple poverty itself. In addition, there is always fear of rejection by the newly-won world. One upper middle-class girl returned to her neighborhood from a stay at Northville only to encounter the subtle withdrawal of people avoiding contact with a person once mentally ill. She returned to North- vile for more treatment. Amazingly, however, the patients' re- action to such rejection is a compassion- ate mixture of sympathy and humor. There is much joking about meeting Y c. . rV. Driving west up the gentle slope of Seven Mile Northville State Hospital looms without warmth acr of weeds and broken glass. That Northville rises so uncompromisingly over help to banish one's feeling that all those old horr hospitals are only too true. Low-lying, flat-roofed buildings obediently clust tower-like building..No mliving or man-made thing is radius. The signs are that unmentionable experienc( Even if after a peek inside the main lobby, one ist's desk, lounge chairs, magazines and wall-plaques were comfortingly like the trappings of any large hosi dispel the uneasy feeling that just behind any door could be found a cruel tyranny over the mad and de But if -one walked down the main, well-lighted at the end of the hall, continued through a glassed glass doors with-the letters "C Building" over them, more left turn past several small offices to find hin nocuous door. Windowless, and with the stencil "B1-2" in blacl small, confined society of 30 twentieth century girl 17 and 21, who lived in a mental hospital not repre archetypes of one's morbid imagination. 3JV yN"1 J}':X k, 1S p 'f...hryH f'. 41S t 1r rV ,ti ti>+ ,} r. 'k '". S' 6.s r. r1 r. rr .. '.. a \ 4' " ...... A-..: rR.rv.'+'yu,.".'. ''"'+" . rr ..{. . h{... rrrrn.:' e 'ri t~r6 a M sr ? .: ' ..............n..%r$ Ir....r......i.....s...........as.aii.....::.........,..............}:i si;.; .4:......,."........... -Dick Van Nostrand The General Motors Chevrolet plant, the largest employer in the city today, expanded from a smalltime small parts supplier to a major industry only five years ago. For the most part, though, downtown businessmen effectively strangled the advance of assembly-line industry and still hold a tight grip today. The McDaniels family came to Bay City in 1940 as the Depression was re- ceding. "Bay City didn't- want anybody new because it was hard enough to make a buck the way it was," admitted W. R. Knepp, a department store pioneer who now owns a million-dollar business. "We hired the type of person we wanted in the community." Downtown Bay City still remains the center of commerce-. Many residents commute to Saginaw and Midland where larger industries have located. But today, a second and third gener- ation of Bay City pioneers does not sup- What's good in Bay City port suggestion that bigger and better industries be lured to their town. For example, five years ago, when the Ford Motor Co. considered building in Bay City five years ago, there were more negative than positive voices raised. "I have a lot of pride in this city. It's a nice place to raise a family. I'm satis- fied," says Charles Ford, whose father founded a clothing store. Ford is now secretary-treasurer and expects to in- herit the business. McDaniels did little of his shopping at Ford Clothiers. He lived with his mother, a widow, under less than well- to-do conditions. But he was able to start college in the fall of 1963 at Central Michigan University. As he grappled with a num- ber of career choices, he switched his major from music to English to so- ciology. "Even being in college created some sort of illusion. I didn't have to make as many compromises with myself to be accepted," McDaniels said. In his sophomore year he married a pretty honey-blonde named Loretta, a white girl. When his son Robert was Another Bay City OEO is the main federal agency in Lyndon Johnson's War on Poverty. It is organized at the local level, although money and guidelines come from Wash- ington. Among its goals are retraining of unemployed- poor and tutoring disadvan- taged children who seem destined to fu- ture poverty. "I felt that your hometown ought to be the best place to start helping. Be- sides, I'd always been accepted in Bay City," McDaniels explained. But McDaniels found antipathy and skepticism from many Bay City resi- dents. "We don't have any crime or race problems, and I don't think we- have many poverty cases," noted Ivan String- er, Central High counselor. "Nothing has ever gotten out of hand," commented Ben Boutell Sr., director of Ben Boutell & Sons Enterprises - a rental and investment agency. "Big metropolitan cities have made their own bed and they're going to have to lie in it. The Negroes here aren't complaining," he continued. Bay.City was one of the few-Michigan cities of 50,000-plus not hit or even threatened by rioting in the wake of De- troit's outbreak last summer, "We've worked hard to make this a decent place to live," said Joe Hirsch- field, a scrap-metal industrialist- who began as a driver of horse-drawn wagons. But Bay City's First Ward belies the mask of decency. Cluttered with old homes reeking filth and despair, it houses nearly -every Negro in the city. McDaniels' OEO office is only a few blocks from the heart of the ghetto microcosm. "Nobody likes to admit it, but it is a slum," says Negro lawyer James Baker, who lives outside the ghetto. "There are places there that everyone refuses to be- lieve exist . . . vermin under the dinner table . . Baker is one of the most prominent Negroes in Bay City, -usually, the only one in the city's high-status organiza- tions. He has been one of the few Ne- groes active in the Bay City chapter of the NAACP. But he admitted that he confines most of his civil rights fighting to telling serv- ice clubs that one Jewish member does not constitute integration. One of the few civil rights radicals in Bay City was the Rev. Theodore LaMarr, priest of Visitation parish, an all-white congregation. As a member of the Hu- what is NE WPOLITICS? Electoral activity to provide a vehicle for dissent and discussion and a context for community ORGANIZING at the grass roots level toward the elimination of racism and poverty, imperialism and the draft; toward better schools and a revitalized labor movement. .. We can make it on the '68 ballot with a little HE LP from our friends:. .. 1) meet at our office, 109 Miller, Saturdays at 10:30 and Sundays at 11:30 A.M. 2) call 761-0059 for rides and weekday or evening petitioning 3) if you have signatures please mail them or turn them in at 109 Miller as soon as possible and pick up blank petitions i r iri. rir ww u i people who expected them to "act crazy". A standard joke in the ward is to say to someone, with sarcastic irony, "What's. the matter, you crazy or something?" Couched in its lightness, this was the crucial question. It hung in the air when we stood in line at meal times waiting quietly for the nurse to unlock the door and lead us down the hall to the cafe- teria. It flew into everyone's mind the morning the jolly fat girl on the ward suddenly exploded and threw a pail of soapy water on the floor during her ward duty and was put in "seclusion" for an hour. While I was in Northville, I felt that this crucial question - "Am I crazy or something" - is answered in part out- side the institution.. Society makes de- mands on those who beg its acceptance, and many whose life styles aren't cap- able of meeting those demands are re- jected. One girl at Northville exhibited feelings of extreme persecution, some- thing she may have derived from early childhood. Above all she felt that re- jection was the only treatment she could ever expect from society. What concrete help does the "team treatment" method at Northville give to the patient who fears reality? How does it help him re-structure his mental world? This is manifest in Step Two in the treatment process. Here the patient's daily activity is scheduled with an array of supervised activities and therapies to suit his indi- vidual needs. These include ward work, which must be completed after break- fast by each person before he can go to any other c include an h or psychiatri noon of rec basketball, a There is a cil which i projects. It and incident ward may us The Targe collection of news contril: by a patient ward a day capable of "t "Total fu phrase. The a scale deri possibilities bilities. How society that alities, or en black -and w When a r to its pati exist, it giv education th schools. The ciety, tend giving the il reality is th is available I leads to fru Northville. Dr. Gokna to understar says that it need to be ti Zen -Tarot-Alchem Parapsychology - Theosophy -Palmistry m-_