magazine editors: tony schwartz marty porter contributing editor: laura berman inside: Sunday magcazlfle Books in review-page 4 Man and his dog-page 5 Looking Back-page 5 Number5 Page Three October 14, 1973 uising the forgotten parts of town 'Somehow the image Ann Arbor casts is larger than life; cleaner than clean ... my cab had taken me to people and places that had been all but swept under the rug and ig- nored. I found a totally different world in Ann Arbor and it bothered me that more people didn't know about it.' By JOHN PAPANEK THE EIGHT HUNDRED block of South. Maple might just as well be in Mississippi; that's how conspic- uous it is in the context of Ann Arbor. The Burma Road was probably smoother and the bombed out ruins of Dresden may have looked more ap- pealing. The thirty or so low income units there probably looked fresh and modern when they were built some eight or nine years ago, but now doors hang on single hinges, dirty canvasses cover broken windows and bony dogs forage through festering garbage dumps. The project parking lot has ten or twelve cars, all but one or two stripped or sitting on flat tires. Sev- eral dozen adults and children occupy various corners of the parched, grass- less courtyard. I wheeled my red, white and blue Veterans Cab into the lot and sound- ed my horn once, then several more times, until my passenger emerged and approached my cab. He was dud- ed up: shades, leather jacket, spiked heels and a wide-brimmed black hat studded with silver bullets. His face looked menacing. "HOW YOU DOING?" I smiled and chose my words carefully. "Ann Street." That was all he said, with a long Aaannnnnn, and a short Street. job, intent on making money and not' expecting to make any startling so- cial revelations. I.had seen ,middle class Ann Arbor before, I had run into the honkies in the bars downtown. And I had driven by Ann Street be- fore, and the Model Cities; I wasn't ignorant of that part of Ann Arbor's black community, and I had a vague n'otion that all in Ann Arbor wasn't as rosy as it seemed to be. But my preparedness (hardly soft= ened the blow when my cab began taking me to people and places whose presence in the All-American City was all but swept under the rug and ignored. I shouldn't have been shock- ed, but somehow the image that Ann Arbor casts is larger than life; cleaner than clean. It wasn't so much the discoveries of projects like South Ma- ple, Hikone and Pontiac Heights that bugged me. I am aware of Ann Arbor's rapid growth, and the increasing numbers of largely black working class people that are migrating here; What shocked me was that I found a totally different world right here in Ann Arbor, and it bothered me that more people didn't know about it. IT DOESN'T take a cab driver very long to get to know Ann Street. On that single block are two pool rooms, the Derby, the Red Shield repose there for a snootful after a hard day's work, but also the central clearing house for pimps, prostitutes and drug traders who administer the large hard drug market in Ann Arbor. ANN STREET'S incongrous location -it sits between the County Jail and the Ann Arbor Police Depart- ment - doesn't seem to inhibit dope czars in the least. Every once in a while there's a shooting or a stab- bing or a big bust. Several weeks ago, a squadron of Ann Arbor cops burst into the Derby with drawn guns hop- ing to stymie a big dope deal they heard was in progress. Instead of nailing Mr. Big, they blew the cover off a crew of Detroit narcs who were posing as dealers in trying to trap the Detroit-Ann Arbor traffickers. "Ann Street's the only place we got to go," one of the regular ex- plains. "Ain't nobody's secret, what goes on there, shit. You want a wo- man? A color television? I can get it for you. The police? Shit, they come every now and then, but most of the time'things stay cool. You know what I mean." * * * I STARTED to cruise away from Ann Street when a middle-aged man waved for me and I pulled to the curb to let him in. He was conservatively dressed with a few drinks already un- der his belt. "Okay," I said and wheeled the cab onto Main heading south. "Hey, man I said the Elk's. Where you going?" "The Elk's is right down here on Main and William." "Noooooooo. That's the white Elk's. I'm going to the colored Elks, on Sunset Street. I laughed in disbelief. "You mean that there's a separate Elk's Club for blacks?" To him, the answer was obvious. "Well, we not allowed into the white peoples'." ANY READER still clinging to the belief that Ann Arbor 'is just a nice place to live is invited to visit North Maple Park, still another swept-under-the-rug housing project about a mile north of the Maple Vil- lage shopping center. North Maple is the headquarters of the "Forty Thieves," a dastardly group of 13 to 15-year old outlaws bent on petty larceny and varied sorts of mischief. As a rookie cab driver, I thought they were a bunch of cute kids. They had me surrounded one night -there must have been a dozen of them - jiving with me, playing with my microphone, grabbing cigarettes from my pack, playfully climbing all over my cab. I was having as much fun as any of them when -thwap!- the right hand door was openand a little bandit was in and out, taking with him my coin changer, my FM radio and a lot of my faith.. That episode repeated itself several times with other cabbies climaxing on Labor Day when the same group of kids robbed a driver, ripped out his cab radio, punched him and sliced his arm with a rusty nail. * * * THERE ARE crazies in Ann Arbor, and the champion of them all is Maddie Moss, a raving but harmless 40-ish woman. She's a frequent cab rider and the dispatchers have an understandable passion for sending unaware rookies out to get her. My number was up. "I tell you right now I don't like no white peoples," she begins, "so you just take me where I want to go and don't ask me no questions. You white peoples asked enough questions al- ready. You don't never know what's Doily Photo by KAREN KASMAUSKI "Man if you're black in Ann Arbor there's ony one block on Ann Street." so smart after all. And you know, I'm gonna give you a tip 'cause you white peoples needs lots of help." HER BANTER finally stopped when I pulled into Woodland Hills sub- division. "I ain't gettin out of this cab, colored man, and you ain't get- ting no money." She sat mum, arms crossed, refusing to budge. "Lady," I said, "if you don't get out I'll have to take you to the police sta- tion." She was silent, so off I went, trying to break her along the way. She still sat like a wooden Indian when I pulled into the station. Two officers came out and scowled when they recognized her. Maddie loosened up and handed me a ten dollar bill. "Here, white boy," she said, "share this with them cops, they need some help, too;" Y CAB DRIVING day was four or five hours old; visions of wierdos, drunks, superflies, red necks and old ladies lingered on my weary mind. I pulled in front of the. Union, grateful for a chance to rest and glance at some of the porno magazines the day driver had-left me. A hip young lady in an A2 Blues and Jazz tee-shirt bounced up and iflopped into the back seat. "Hi!" she bubbled. "Isn't it a beautiful day?". "Yeah. Uh-huh." "You know, I can't believe what a beautiful place Ann Arbor is. I've been all over - San Francisco, Colo- rado, Boston - and Ann Arbor is the nicest. There doesn't seem to be any- thing bad here. It's like a paradise." I can usually control myself, but I suppose this girl just sent me off too far. I had heard enough of the Ann Arbor as Utopia myth; in fact I may have held that conception myself not too long ago. After all, where else could you smoke dope on the street and only get tapped for five dollars? Ard isn't Ann Arbor chosen year after year As "one of the top ten places in America in which to live?" What about the booklet the Chamber of Commerce puts'out, the one with the lush color pictures of 'the' campus in autumn, sailboats on the Huron - hand-ho.ding couples on the Diag, a collage of scenes that bring to mind the sickening appelation of "The All- American City." I turned around and shook my head. "Why don't you try opening your eyes?" John Papaneck is a ex-Daily Sports Editor. cab driver and Vy RICK STREICKER In the streets Daily Photo by KAREN KASMAUSKI For the kids at North Maple Park a playground is an automobile graveyard. "Uh, Ann Street . . . uh, right . . . Store and Rush's Barber Shop. Be- Ann and what?.. . Imean what block cause Ann Arbor's black community is of Ann Street? I live on Ann Street chopped up 'into little pieces and myself . . . down near the hospital." tucked into every backroads pocket I saw a cooly disinterested face in in the city, "The Block" represents my rear view. "You must be a new its only common ground. driver." On summer afternoons and eve- "RIGHT. Yeah, I am a new driver." nings, the crowd spills out of the Der- 'by and the pool rooms into the "'Well, man, you know where the street and the adjacent parking lots. Derby Bar is at?" Flashy green Cadillacs and white "Oh, shit yes, the Derby Bar? Sure, Mark IVs sit in the few metered park- I know where the Derby Bar is. You ing places on the block. There is nev- want to go to theDerby Bar." er a parking problem here. The un- "No man." He was getting irritated, written rule says, "If you ain't driving and my ignorarce was fuel for the some baaaaad muthafuckin car, it fire. "That's Ann Street. Where the don't belong on the block." There's. HERE WERE a lot of oohs and aaahs from the fres;i- men and sophomores a couple of weeks ago when two wandering minstrels from Berkeley opened up shop and played for pennies on the diag. They were pretty good, too - sort of an updated version of the Smothers Brothers. But they couldn't hold a candle to John Lennon and the boys. Back in the fall of 1970 and again in the fall of 1971 John Lennon and his friends gave a daily concert on the diag. John Lennon wasn't his real name, of course, but his friends called him John and he was the spitting image of the real John Lennon before the real John Lennon cut off all his hair. There were a bunch of people who used to sing with John Lennon at those concerts, but the two main ones were Peter the Red and Chet Morton. Peter the, Red was a guy with curly red hair, and Chet Morton was a fat guy with a moustache who looked just like you'd picture the fat friend of the Hardy Boys. The, fall of 1970 was the absolute height of the hysteria over' Crosby, Stills Nash and Young, and- somehow these three guys managed to sing all four parts perfectly. The music was great in those days. Everybody, on campus must have owned CSN&Y's two albums as well as Sweet Baby James, The Band, Everybody Knows This is Nowhere and Volunteers. All albums you don't listen to anymore, but they were hot then. Everybody knew, the words to every song, so if you were walking to your two o'clock class -in Angell you'd see this huge crowd of people on the diag and hear "Do-do-do-do-do, doot- doot-do do-do-do," the end of "Suite: Judy Blue Eyes," and naturally you'd have to put off going. to your class to find out what the next song was going to be. JOHN LENNON was in the middle of a crowd with his guitar. Peter the Red and Chet Morton would be sitting beside him. Completing this inner circle would be a couple of other friends and a gaggle of groupies. The groupies were always breathtakingly beautiful girls. There was one girl with curly black hair, a like- watched him every day you could predict what the song was going to be by the way he played this chord, but most people had to wait until John and Peter arid Chet began singing before they could join in. The high point was always the chorus. A good heavy song like "Long Time Gone" would give every- body on the diag the chance to get funky and indulge in their fantasies of being a rock-and-roll star. THERE WAS A great girl who was there every day and who used to dance until her excitement was so great that it would be an orgiastic frenzy. She'd sing, too, in a high, piercing voice with all the painful eno- tion of post-adolescence. She used to station herself right around the ring of bicycles, where everyone could see her. She didn't know John Lennon or his crowd, but she wanted to. She probably never got to know them, though. They were intent, those birds. John Lennon rarely look- ed up from his guitar. If the words were really mean.- ingful and the harmony tight, he and Peter and Chet would look into each others eyes while they sang in order to goad each other on to greater depths. It was hard to crack that little circle. They were the people on the inside, and they knew it. What the captain of the football team or the captain of the cheerleaders were in high school, John Lehnon and his friends were in college. You went to see them. every day - why, it was more than you did for your pro- fessors! You could always spot the guitar players in the crowd - when they weren't peering intently at John Lennon's fingers to learn'the chords, they would wave their hands in the air-playing a phantom guitar. It was the heyday of that sort of thing, and even if you walked across the diag at three in the morning you were sure to meet someone soming the other way mov- ing his mouth and playing that imaginary guitar. NOW THESE guys from Berkeley who came here and played on the 'diag - they never gave you any- thing as valuable as an imaginary guitar. At best they