K - -~ I/ If 41 A local boy moves to the City and makes good. Continued from Page 9 xx hands up in the air. He take off for the other end of the platform, and this New Yorker-this New Yorker-follows him, still shouting. A week later, she is on the platform again, and she does the same to another man. * * * A First Avenue bar. Packed with young execs and stewardesses, a few secretaries in from Queens. One particular girl has been there for three hours, sitting alone at the bar, talking with the bartender, who is a swinger wearing art director glasses and a silk scarf around his neck. Abruptly, she turns to a fellow sitting next to her who, with a friend, is trying to hustle another girl. She turns to him, and she says, "Let's go home." "What? Do I know you?" "No," she answers. He smiles uneasily, goes back to his previous diversion, and she bites her lip and orders another drink. * * * A meeting at a church on the West Side. It is a group called the New York Project, a collection of radicals with jobs in the media pro- fessions. Fred Hampton was murdered in Chicago the day before; one guy, a young editor at McGraw-Hill says, "I wanna kill a cop. I do. I really wanna kill a cop." The room is filled with "Right on!" and applause. The next evening, the young editor from McGraw-Hill is back at a party to honor publication of a famous writer's book, justifying the radical bombings of the previous month, scotch and water in hand. A Monday night, very late. The subway is virtually empty; there are three people on this particular car. One of them is a black man, drunk, passed out and sprawled half on his seat, half on the floor. Another black man enters from the car ahead, and walks up to the drunk. He attempts to rouse him. Failing, he then explores the drunk's coat pockets, takes a pack of cigarettes and a couple of subway tokens, and moves on to the next car. Arriving in New York almost a year ago with a job already planned, I move into the YMCA. I have an offer to stay at the apartment of an Ann Arbor friend who has lived in New York for a year, but there seems a certain classical American truth in staying at the Y. The next day- two days after completing my last undergraduate task, a Spanish final- I begin work. Career. I am the only person in my office, including secre- taries and accountants, who went to a public university. 1 am one of two who did not grow up in either Boston or New York. It does not take too long to acculturate. Soon, I learn that the Broadway theater stinks, that the people who shell out 12 bucks for a seat at the Metropolitan Opera don't know Verdi from Gilbert & Sullivan. I am in a bookstore on East Eighth Street, and a girl, approximately 15, asks me where St. Mark's Place is. She is less than two blocks away. She will get there, she will sit on a stoop for two hours insulting tourists and panhandling anyone with a coat and tie, and then return to the suburban womb in New Jersey. New York. I am one of its children, I tell myself. Sure, I have forced it to adopt me. People told me, beforeI came, that to tolerate it, I would have to tell myself to love it; so, I told myself to love it, though I had spent perhaps 15 days here in my entire life. And, quickly, I did love it. I no more belonged to the midwest than I did to Yucatan. New York. At my office, I am quickly laden with expense account,' with invitations to publication parties, with an in at ................ (fill in whatever you wish) who can get me good tickets to ............ For the first six weeks, even the soot I breathe-they say inhaling it is equivalent to two packs of cigarettes daily-is divine. Cramped on to the subway on the way to work, I carry a briefcase in one hand, the Times in the other, neatly folded lengthwise in half. After another six weeks, I am finally able to turn the pages without putting down the briefcase. Then, after another month, I am able to finish the crossword puzzle before the train gets to Grand Central Station. If I fail, I charge myself a good, middle-class penance: No cabs for a week. 4 1 .., rl l i k 1 The mayor called a town meeting. One resident showed. up wearing the "new c of white m loose. The m MDCDA fo ette with a the "news developers One r( wearing a cil decided gation pla Opposi has provid most every The whole tition is, w "Why Mrs. Alice the road." a sheet. Novi, it would have stores, playgrounds, day- the "new c care centers, schools, and libraries within the She a housing project. Families would not need to moderates own cars: One could be pooled for driving to mother an work until.bus lines, and finally rapid transit, got marrie arrived. Families wouldn't be stuck with shop- Now s ping at the corner market and kids wouldn't superinten be playing basketball on broken glass. Wixom. " But perhaps most important, the plan has ments on crucial social consequences-because integrat- "We can't ing American white suburbs with people from be on welf the black inner city may be the only way to Sever avoid a modern civil war. neighbors Dr. Sam Bass Warner, professor of urban threat. At history at the University, makes the point land to sq bluntly: "It is socially desirable to give poor MDCD people the same chance to move into the sub-, ify for H urbs as middle-class people have. That reduces Director R the geographic tension between the two. We for the res have to get off our ass and see that it is done "Mayo properly." the land, But the people in Novi don't see it that one wome: way. "No,1 The farmers who used to live there had money. A no contact with black people-except for those replied an who knew about nearby Salem Township, once Their a depot on the Underground Railroad. When Novi started opening to development the farmers sold out to thenhighest bidders, often speculators who resold the land to de- jive bul velopers. They brought in people who make money: white people getting away from the urbs. city, away from poverty, and away from black than th people. MDCDA first 'iappened to pick Novi as the .:m:: target community last year. Two speculators, They're 3 Marc Allen and George Haggerty of Detroit, and give had bought up large parcels of farmland. Allen "I'mr wanted to build apartments on his property but here and the city council stopped him. said one The disgruntled Allen-who swore at a anonymo council meeting that he would get even with much." the city-and Haggerty approached MDCDA The fi with their holdings. At that time, MDCDA was much fro: negotiating for land at three other sites in the racism," s same suburban corridor. But this offer sounded visor for best and MDCDA shelled out $1.5 million of Five hun New Detroit Committee's money (which h a s ing, accor been funding most MDCDA projects) for 562 white nigh acres, closing the deal last September. familiesc MDCDA postponed plans on the other three over-price sites in Oakland County, though they're still lords. being considered for other future "new com- "The munities," and decided to concentrate on Novi. tend the In November word leaked out to the local Edwards. newspapers that a "model city" with some low- "They cost housing might be coming to Novi. There because t was some stirring by Novi folk. Then in Feb- bunches a ruary a confidential report prepared by MDCDA their kids was exposed in the Detroit metros, noting that Novi Their frustration and bitterness are real. They're 35 years old and they're ready to relax, and give their kids what they never had. ommunity" would not be an "enclave iddle class people." All hell b r o k e ayor called a town meeting, blasting r "making Novi play Russian roul- a double-barrelled shotgun." He said community" would scare high-price away. esident showed up at the meeting sheet. One candidate for city coun- to base his campaign on a pro-segre- tform. itiou to the new community, in fact, ed the sole political stand which al- yone in the community can support. town is against it. The only compe- ho is against it most. can't they go someplace else?" asks Durling. "There's plenty of land down Mrs. Durling lives across from where ommunity" would be. nd her husband consider themselves She was the daughter of an ADC d he was a factory worker when they d. he's a registered nurse and he's a ident at the Ford plant in nearby Ve both have to work to make pay- everything," Mrs. Durling explains. afford to support people who might are." al weeks ago Mrs. Durling and her got together over coffee to discuss the one point they suggested buying up ueeze MDCDA out. )A needs about 500 acres more to qual- UD money. According to Executive obinson, it's close to completing a deal t of the land. e if we talked to the people who own they wouldn't sell to MDCDA," said n. they're just holding out for more nd we could never outbid MDCDA," other. frustration and bitterness is r e a 1. "Black brothers are tired of Ishit about living in the sub- We want something better at, and we'll get it." 5 years old and they're ready to relax, their kids what they never had. not going to move. I'm going to stay fight it, even if it means a civil war," woman, who preferred to remain is. "White people can only stand so ears of Novi residents may stem not as m "racial racism" as from "economic suggests Leona Edwards, local super- the Office of Economic Opportunity. Ired people in Novi need better hous- ding to Mrs. Edwards. These are the gers: retirees, and the many-children who cluster around Walled Lake in d shanties owned by absentee land- people who live in the subdivisions pre- poverty isn't here," contends M r s. "It's here just like any other place. y're afraid of the 'new community' hey'd have to look at poverty in big nd they'd have to explain poverty to . And they're afraid of doing that.", residents also fear the effects the "new community" will ha and farmland. MDC] handedly plague No "It's going to ki giving green life," s mand Jake would 11 homes on half-acre brush and pheasants parks. To house thei ings suggest tall h: ground complexes b "Something like Robinson replies. " People need housing And besides, sa predict 125,000 peop by 1990. That won't the birds and the be "People have b Robinson. "You can But do inner-c ones to move in? widows who are ter and the struggling want to live with t want to leave and m But not everyo friends in the in spokesman for the ment in the auto wants to undercut power. "The man is aft going to take ove we're going to tak him out," Watson s sciousness emergin and he's afraid of t "We black brot shit about living something better t to get what we wa The Democratic on the solid suppo voters, is protecti against black mili argues. By shipping urbs, he says, the1 from the energy o available again fo Whoever want parently has only council to deny the land. Novi's counc sometime next fall. But even if t certain to do, MD( community after a court, MDCDA co overturned on the and discriminatory timate property o: "Many legal exp use zoning laws sp ple out," explains the University Law tendency to be cri Even Richard N favor using federa laws and building ance continues. "This I don't u Remney can be foi an exasperated No "Hell, they're i swers another. "T Novi realizes t style will live on, a bably not in Novi. Page Ten THE DAILY MAGAZINE Sunday, April 12, 1970 Sunday, April 12, 1970