-I-- Aw- r 4 I -w -W A Newpor A lbum by, .ndrew acks and Thomtas R. Copi C ~f f- ,.. f E ^ THE CHAMBERS BROTHERS t a-n L } iA~c : %r" ," :.h t. { , .F::} 'Y~f:. ,i .t.'t"N B A E Z: play, U. Despite plans for the creation of 200 low-income housing units, there are many in the ghetto who feel the social conscience of Ann Arbor and its University community has abdicated its responsibility. this kind of housing possible," he concludes. A large number of Ann Arbor resi- dents simply don't know the severity. of the local problem. Many more don't care. They know local Negroes hang around the bars on Ann Street, but they have never seen the slums of the ghetto or of the Foss-Fulmer area. Those who have are either in- different or have commitments else- where. 'Tb.he comments of one University research administrator seem to ex- press the attitude of this largely apathetic community. "Ann Arbor is a great place to live. I know there are poor Negroes living here. I lived here all my life. But somebody al- ways has to be poor in a commun- ity. Someone has to take the low paying jobs." As a former poverty program offi- cial explains, "Student blindness is conceivable, for they never get off the campus area, except maybe to go to Weber's with their parents. What is unbelieveable is commun- ity blindness. Our citizens go out to Dexter Road near the township slum, but they drive straight ahead, never turning right or left." ' An ADC mother sizes up the situa- tion similarly. "Those high-brows over at the University think we don't have poverty in Ann Arbor. All we have is a lack of initiative. Let them come and live in our housing. They play this old patronizing Lady Do- wager role. On Christmas they real- ize there are poor people in Ann Arbor. We -got seven different Christmas dinners last year. It's like old Scrooge. They don't want to think about us any other day except Christmas." The shirking of social responsibil- ity by Ann Arbor's citizens is even more disheartening than the apathy found in a big city like Detroit where the problem of poverty be- comes overwhelming. As Dr. Wheeler says, "With all the brains accumu- lated in this city, we ought to be able to solve the. stinking little problems we have. "To a degree there is a fallacy in the approach to poverty which says a person can only help by working in a big city with large concentra- tions of the poor." Wheeler con- tinues. "There is only one Detroit, but there are dozens of other cities in the middle population grouping in Michigan which have a substan- tial number of poor people. With a relatively small Negro population, Ann Arbor is a place where one can find a feasible solution to the prob- lem of poverty without having to disjoint the whole community. Sim- ply because the problems are not so massive, practical solutions may be easily accomplished." Another worker among the Ann Arbor poor explains, "The white liberal community in Ann Arbor is more concerned with nationwide problems on a theoretical level, rather than simply working in their own backyards. When they do haz- ard a glance, they suddenly feel other things are more important. Among the non-University affiliated people of Ann Arbor there is a built- in blindness to the problems of the poor. They have the self-righteous feeling that if you haven't made it, you're either stupid or incompetent. "Poverty here in Ann Arbor is a tangling web you just can't escape from and they don't realize it. Every minute of the day is related to one's economic status. You wash cars, you're an orderly at the hospital, your wife does day work at Barton Hills. It's a real thing here." Much of the criticism for the apathy of the Ann Arbor community is leveled at the University. "A University which is trying to instill social responsibility in its stu- dents should show some social re- sponsibility of its own," says David Cowlie, recently departed director of the Ann Arbor Human Relations Commission." "It is inevitable we are going to have trouble," Wheeler predicts. "The University must spearhead these inevitable changes and direct- ing this change in a productive way. There is an obligation for the Uni- versity to do moreathan articulate social problems in a classroom set- ting.", g But the poor themselves have little to say about the University. "The poor have little contact with the University. It's like watching TV. They just don't care," comments one long-time Negro social worker, "In general it has little or no rele- vance to their lives." The ghetto community is becom- ing increas: than a few p Ann Arbor pc ghetto. Most they feel is Arbor power political orgy ed completel: needs. And a it, "The nat way out." The major City Council, gent open-oc little effect c "We don't ing. We wan plains an A shack, it's a living with a not." What few are existing featist. "The people humb] Wheeler. "Wi putting banc need painful large the Anr ignores the p The status port from the nothing as fi oppose social a situation v of one's eyes excuse for inG The combi University a wealthy Ann not in all goo problems of t problems are dent as in t squalid and c indeed exist MARK LEVIN, an honors history major, is from Detroit. The junior editor of The Daily has reported and written on both state and local government. HOME TOWN HOSPITALITY JUDY COLLINS. 4 WI4 ate. Mr t W W.V4