Thursday, September 9, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAIL'Y Page Eleven Thursday, September 9, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven otor City: Bea ting rhythm of cars and soul Ann Arbor has a reputation of being the Athens of the Mid- west and while its cultural achievements may not match those of the Age of Perciles, 4 there is an aura of self-centered- ness around the University com- munity Which rivals that of the ancient Greeks. Priding itself as a research in- stitution, the University endea- vors to solve the world's prob- lems. There are literally hun- dreds of projects under Univer- sity auspices exploring the phy- sical nature of this planet, delv- ing into the mysteries of the human mind, analyzing the dy- namics of social organizations and above all, training students for professional occupations. But when it comes to dealing with the problems of a city like Detroit, the University's re- searchers and problem solvers are no where to be found. Students, for their part will occasionally merge pnto those sordid forty miles of express- way and travel eastward to visit the Motor City, see a concert or just look around. But more of- ten than not, Detroit remains less than a curiosity for those of us who don't have parents there. For aside, from the small number of blacks now enrolled ii the University, we remain an institution populated by the children of white suburbia. Needless to say, having just left what they consider to be a dy- ing city, few "Detroiters" ac- tually care to go there. Thus, for most of the Univer- sity community, Detroit evokes images which can be described with words starting in the same letter, namely: dead, dull, dreary, dirty, and so on. And while some people at the University may be intellectually curious about Detroit and its - problems, the emotions which fall under the word "empathy" are rarely apparent among us. Which is unfortunate, for when we ignore the emotional quality of things happening beyond the shadow of academia, we really do deserve our reputation of be- ing ensconced in an ivory tower. 'Detroiters, as to be expected, return our high-handedness in kind. A relatively hip guidebook to the Motor City (written by Detroiters) offers this introduc- tion to its chapter on Ann Ar- "Ann Arbor, forty miles or so to the west of Detroit, is known as "The Research Cen- ter of the Midwest" and "The All-American City." Accord- ing to University of Michigan students, it is a small island of intellect bravely subsisting amid the cornfields of the Midwest. The city houses over 100,000 people, most attach- ed to Academe in one way or another. "Detroit, big and hairy- armed, looks boorish by com- parison. Detroit is working- class and sometimes speaks with a foreign accent. It sends its sons and daughters to Ann Arbor to get educated, to get the class that it doesn't have. Ann Arbor is petit and learn- ed..." As the sheriff in an old Paul T.V. RENTALS $10.50/mo. NEJAC T.V. 662-567 Newman movie once said: "What we have here is a fail- ure to communicate." Bridging this communications gap won't be easy but it is the necessary first step for coming to terms with Detroit. And more importantly, it would raise the 'curtain from one of the most moving, albeit depressing, hu- man dramas of our nation. Fortunately, a great impetus toward making our academic ex- perience more relevant to De- troit will come as a result of the University's commitment to increase black enrollment. For the next few years black students will probably demand that the University offer courses and programs which explore ur- ban problems, particularly those of Detroit. And hopefully, inter- est in Detroit will spread throughout the University com- munity until assuming its pro- per importance. But both in the short and long run, the key to really ap- preciating the richness of De- troit lies in becoming familiar with it on a personal level. This DETROIT: A special feature by STUART GANNES , Editorial Director 1970-71 stand them. A chapter in the guidebook quoted earlier on how to meet people begins: "As America's ugliest city Detroit runs East St. Louis a close second. As America's un- friendliest city, Detroit has no peer. One reason for this is , that no one in Detroit is out- side for any length of time. They are always inside: inside a home, an office, a car. If you don't know people to start with and are not willing to put out the extra effort it takes to make friends in De- troit, chances are you still won't know people when you finally decide this is not the town for you." Detroit is not a cosmopolitan city, it is not on display. In some ways there is a lot of small town sentiment in the Motor City and to really feel Detroit, you're going to have to be more sincere (and less of a tourist) than in other cities. For life in the Motor City can be luxurious and all the typical haunts of the beautiful people, exist some- 'where but more often it is harsh and people don't easily open up. Most of the people who have city's suburbs, leaving Detroit to the blacks and working class whites. Detroit, of course, is a major cultural and political center for black people in this country. Fifty or sixty years af- ter Henry Ford lured them from the oSuth with the promise of a $5 day, blacks now comprise the largest single group of people in the city. And in the interim, Detroit's blacks have developed their own culture, a culture growing out of the ugliness of the ghetto but one whose music, among other things, has spread throughout America. Turn on Detroit Soul, and get into the funkiness of the black man's music. WJLB (1400 AM) features Martha Jean, the Queen - one of the most im- portant people in the city. A source of endless cracker barrel wisdom, she spins more reli- gious-moral philosophy than re- cords. Friend to the blue collar -- worker and mother to the black community, she preaches love, self-respect, and racial pride. Detroit is the home of Mo- town records, it was also the scene in 1967 of the most devas- tating indictment of this coun- try's racist treatment of its blacks. Ride down Twelfth street and see black rage in the making. Look at the untouched ruins of the '67 riots and ask yourself where this country is going. Drive up St. Auben or John R. on the east side of town and see the utter decay blacks are forced to live in and then look at the Wall of Respect on Grace Episcopal Church and try to imagine where blacks are heading. As for other ethnic groups, Detroit has always been a city of immigrants. Coming with a vision of the promised pot of gold, wave after wave of immi- grants flocked to Detroit to work in its factories. And they brought cultures with them which still survive in the neigh- borhoods of Detroit. But there are experiences Afterwards liLten to Detroit radio in your car and begin to understand Motor City Music. Listen to the blasting, driving charging, proletarian Detroit rock, filled with the kind of energy needed to wrench your mind free of the reality around you. It seems that all Detroiters eventually have something to do with automobiles, even if it on- ly involves owning one to drive. Having a car in Detroit is es- sential. They are the only effi- cient means of transportation around the city, but they are also a fundamental component of Motor City culture. You sim- ply need a "machine"' to tool up Woodward Ave. (Detroit's main street). For "Woodward- ing" is the ultimate trip for any proud young Detroiter off from work or out of school. If Detroit has transformed the nation with its cars, it has also transformed itself into a caricature of all that the car represents to America. Out by the city's northern limits stands a garish strip of buildings dedi- cated to letting young Detroit escape into the ultimate fan- tasies of horsepower and over- drive. Too intense? Then take things a little easier. Visit Belle Isle, Detroit's huge island park in the Detroit river, which can be peaceful and nature-filled at times, but which also incarcer- ated 4,000 angry black rioters in 1967 and which also is the site of Detroit's annual hydroplane races-where more than 250,000 Detroiters spend an afternoon watching thousands of horse- power unleashed on the river as reckless drivers push their screaming boats to the limit. At least one boat cracks-up each year. Can they keep it up forever? Of course not. Just walk through Cass Park the next time you see a concert at the Masonic Tem- ple and watch thie derelicts, the broken Detroiters as they stand ignored by the city they built, drowning their memories in cheap wine. If this isn't human drama then what is? which all Detroiters share, the most important of which is man- ufacturing automobiles. An au- tomobile assembly-line has to be experienced to be believed. Take a tour of the mammoth Ford River Rouge Plant, the largest automotive complex in the world. A completely self- sufficient city with its own tele- phones, hospitals and police, the power from its 345,000-kilo- watt generator could light up Dallas. Working on an assembly line or in an auto-related factory can be hell. While you watch, imagine the intense heat for for- ty hours a week, imagine work- ing among machines sliding in, stamping, welding together au- tomobiles and you can get a feeling for the heaviness, the rhythm and bluf s of Detroiters. We Want You to Hear More Music means getting =into the kinds of situations Detroiters experience every day as well as becoming acquainted with the few beau- tiful things which are unique to Detroit. For in addition to its simi- larities with other large (and especially Midwestern) Ameri- can cities there is a Motor City Culture, a thriving culture which isn't always beautiful but one which nevertheless demands more than a cursory glance. Again, this won't be easy. Ev- en Detroiters realize how diffi- cult it is for outsiders to under- 33 a AA l l The finest inyetsensibly priced. AVAILABLE AT Changers & Turntables Pioneer Empire Thorens AR Dual P. E. BSR Benjamin Miracord Speakers KLH Altec Pioneer J.B.L. Advent KI i psch Ambassador AR Empire rape Recorders & Decks Advent Concord Sony Teac Revox KLH Astrocom Marlux Harman Kardon Phono Cartridges Shure Pickering S. State Street at North University 663-4121 2355 East Stadium Blvd. 665-4471 2215 West Stadium Blvd. 665-8841 "a" I oi El Receivers & Amps Marantz Pioneer Sherwood Altec KLH Harman Kardon ..........Headphones Sharpe Koss Pioneer David Clark Sony Sennheiser Tape BASF Ampex TDK Irish Scotch Memorex Also large selection of - Patch cords, Record cleaning devices, Tape accessories and Speaker cloth. Come in and visit us at our NEW LOCATION FLORSIICI U walk~ big inl new bootb You're Sure to be Winner Buying Student Supplies at 0111 rTTC Stanton Empire Ortofon Bang & Olufsen * WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL * WE GIVE SYSTEM PRICES I NIOOIM I