w w V V I mm-94r, 'W- -W -w- -w- -V) THE POOR OF THE ALL-AMER/CAN CITY By MARK LEVIN / 1 '4'. /1 r Ira' t :/ /7 FL .'i "'-I " c~_.. 622J homes of the other half Ann Arbor is an All-American city, so the Junior Chamber of Commerce proclaims. It's also as American as cherry pie, as Rap Brown would put it. And in that All-American urban tradition, Ann Arbor has within its midst a densely-populated Negro ghetto rarely penetrated by the white community and composed largely of low-income families. And Ann Arbor's ghetto, like Detroit's 12th Street, jives at night as the bars, pool halls and rib shacks on Detroit and Ann Streets begin to fill up. Isolated slum districts, by-passed by modern thoroughfares and placed conveniently outside the city limits, also are found as one turns off Miller Road past a street ironically called Hatcher Crescent. The deserted shanties there stand in sharp con- trast to the new section of the I-94 freeway in the background. And in the style of American sum- mer fun, following the Detroit riots local residents were rudely awaken- ed to the harsh reality that their police force was on an around-the- clock alert. No one had to inform the Ann Arbor white community where the trouble was expected. Suddenly, they knew. As the bars on Ann Street were closed, tensions rose. Although a relatively small per- centage of the community's popula- tion, low-income families present a formidable problem about which a supposedly socially responsible and exemplary community has almost entirely forgotten. As one mother receiving Aid to Dependent Children (ADC) pay- ments acidly comments, "They over- look poverty in Ann Arbor because they think they're so cultured and intelligent. It simply can't happen around such people. Well, all they have to, go is go into the ghetto and see the tenements with the smelly toilets and the heat out of commis- sion. Go into the hills and the crev- ices outside the city and see the tar- paper shacks with pipes that freeze In the Winter and big gaping holes in the wall. Then they'll say, my goodness, what's happening to our community?' " Most of the houses of the Ann Arbor poor are found in the ghetto which branches out in both direc- tions from the railroad tracks on the north side of town. Many of these frame houses have foundations above the ground, a sign the house is at least 30 years old. The roofs are usually leaky and have been patch- ed over numerous times. Plumbing fixtures are a recurring problem due to the age of the pipes. Until recent- ly, the stench coming from a local packing house would cling in the air all afternoon. One resident reports that the house he lived in last win- ter was split down the middle so that there was a gorge between the two sections. "The winds would whip through our house every night. It was miserable." Out in the Foss-Fulmer area on the west, which the city line neatly skirts, knee-deep flooding is com- mon when the snow melts in the spring. Out-houses are still to be seen and there are times after heavy rains when waste can be seen run- ning in the streets. What one can't tell as you walk down the; streets of the ghetto or the dirt paths of Foss- Fulmer is the number of people liv- ing in each house. The families of the poor more than often average six or seven children. One dwelling consists of a frame house connected to a trailer, in which- the children- sleep. The yard of the local office of the State Highway Department serves as their playground. There are no recreational facili- ties for these children of the poor, either.. As one local poverty official explains, "For fun the kids steal bricks from the construction pro- jects and take crap from the junk piles around their homes, It's great fun." Housing is athe toughest problem for the Ann Arbor poor. Almost all the\ poor are working. But rents are high. Food costs eat up the rest of their paycheck. There is almost no way to save for the future. In Washtenaw County there are continually over 70 families waiting for emergency housing facilities. While waiting, many families have been split between different apart- ment buildings. In one case a woman lived with her daughter in a one- bedroom apartment while her sons were living at the 'Y.' They waited there for three months. The father has been gone for three years. The tightness of the housing market for both University faculty and students is ultimately respon- sible for the immobility and high rents found within the ghetto com- munity. The University has failed to meet the housing needs of an ex- ploding student population in the last ten years. Moreover it has failed to provide housing for its lower paid faculty and staff whose stay in Ann Arbor may -be only temporary. Because many of these persons will advance to other colleges and universities shortly, they don't wish to invest in building a house. Most of them can't afford to contract with local build- ers even if they wish to invest in the short run, so they take whatever housing is available. Thus, private sources have failed to build the nec- essary amount if low-income hous- ing. Construction has been -geared largely to student apartments and middle-income housing. More important, it is the housing that the transient faculty members and the overflow of students finally choose that in a normal housing market would be taken by a low-in- come family. Therefore, those poor Negroes living in the ghetto or in the Foss-Fulmer area o, Ann Arbor township are forced to stay put. Whereas older dwellings in Detroit or Chicago are taken by the poor, here they are taken by students. Many of the Ann Arbor poor make no bones about who is to blame for the desperate situation in housing. As one ADC mother put it, "So many of the people in Ann Arbor living in. Barton Hills have made their money renting to us. They've made a for- tune off the fact that there is no housing and they don't want to change the situation. You have to pay their price or sit in the street." Another Negro mother with six children explained, "Landlords in Ann Arbor are bastards and plenty of them are colored bastards. If you are a low-income person you have no protection from them. They can cheat you because there is no 'place to live. You can't fight them or the police will put you right into the street." OEO officials report that plans made by the Ann Arbor Housing Commission to build 200 units will only meet the emergency needs of the community. Prof. Albert Wheeler, a microbio-. logist in the Medical School and president of the Michigan chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of- Colored People sees another reason behind the fact the poor in Ann Arbor have few places to live. "Lots of the poor folk work here at the University but can't even live here in Ann Arbor. The mechanism of not providing housing makes the problem appear less severe. Hell, these ,people live in the slums of other cities pandcome to Ann Arbor to work. The poorest end up spend- ing the longest time coming to work." About the plans of the Ann Arbor -Housing Commission Wheeler is skeptical: "The Commission eventu- ally plans to build 200 units, which is a step in the right direction. But there is a stipulation that the occu- pant must have lived in Ann Arbor for at least a year. Most of the poor haven't been . able to live in this stinking town, even though they have worked here for 10 to 15 years. Everything seems to conspire to keep these people out of the com- munity. "If -there were any desire on the part of the community, there are enough. federal programs to -make Even though Folk Music itself has seen better days in terms of record sales and mass audience appeal, there-is still a place where its fans can":y ,g . gather to relax and listen to the best of the new and the traditional sounds. This place is Newport, Rhode Island, where each summer the Folk Foundation presents the Festival. No matter who they are or where they're from, everyone ending up in Newport .the week of the Folk Festival finds something they like. The Festival was bothered this year by rain, which threatened all week and actually did wash out Saturday morning's program. But no one's spirits were dampened, as favo- rites like Theo Bikel and Judy .Collins put in sparkling performances both in their evening con- certs and in the afternoon- workshops. And theser- informal afternoon sessions are what really make the Folk Festival. For a fan can attend all the evening concerts and hear all the music, but only at the afternoon events can he swap stories with Pete Seeger or sing a duet with Joan Baez. 4 Even though the threatening weather madew accommodations available without reservations for the first time in years, many of the festival fans still chose to crash outdoors after the eve ning concerts,. or on the festival grounds during the afternoon sessions. Both the Festival Field's specal police and the Newport gendarmes, touched perhaps by the spirit of the summer of love, were 4 quite lenient this year with -people sleeping in off-limits areas. (Some of the formerly "brutal" police were even seen wearing flowers during this Newport Festival week.) MUDDY WATERS' BAND AT A WORKSH( isa FRIDAY NIGHT CONCEI - - THE NEW LOST CITY RAM z..5 yY MUDDY WATERS ON STAGE AN AFTERNOON ON THE 5t6/i-1 OCTOBER'67 THE DAILY MAGAZINE OCTOBER'67 THE DAILY MAGAZINE