4 ,i Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, March 18, 1973 Glory (Continued from Page 1) all kinds of people. There were train fanatics that would just sit and watch the trains come in." There was One--Eyed Charlie, a local hobo who made the depot his favorite haunt and who made a general nuisance of himself, Usually drunk, Charlie would loll around the station asking for hand- outs and accosting women. And although he was regularly evicted by the police, he would in- variably return. Finally Aldrich called the police station and de- manded to know why Charlie had not been locked up. "One-Eyed Charlie can slip into places we can't get into," she was told. "Charlie gets every crime lead we need in town." So Charlie stayed and became a fixture in the otherwise ever- changing scene of commuters, stu- dents and miscellaneous travelers. Salesmen made the train their home; students used it as a means of escape: poor Southern whites '-igrated in droves to work in the bomber plant. The Michigan Central Railroad- a locally originated line-had built the depot in 1887 for the extrava- gant sum of $30,000. The depot was designed as a 'showplace for the railroad and its was regally appointed with Turkish rugs, rock- ing chairs, and what a then con- temporary newspaper called "fancy settees for the ladies." The depot was eventually en- larged, the appointments became functional and the . settees disap- peared as the railroad became busier and more passengers passed through the depot. By the mid 1930's the Michigan Central was reachinghpeak pro- ductivity. The trains had names : fadesd the Wolverine, the Mercury, the Twilight, the Detroiter-and there were 42 every day. "We really had a railroad. We gave service, we had enough help to give service and everything was clea--there was never even a weed in the yard." Marion Starry talks, acts-is- the definitive Railroad Man." Tall, lean and erect despite his 73 years, there is nothing grandfatherly abo-t him. His life has been spent on the railroad-31 years as a baggage- man at the depot after arriving here in 1935 from another job at but memories agement that entered became more" demanding as men were laid off and the railroals deteriorated. Dur- ing his final years at the depot, Starry worked as janitor in addi- tion to his baggageman job. "They had me cleaning washrooms," he says with disgust. "The longer you worked there, the meaner they got." He speaks bitterly of the "big men in New York" who sat at their desk and gave orders while the railroads became inefficient and disorganized. "There were too many chiefs and not enough In- dians." It is almost midnight and the ticket seller is alone in the depot when No. 9 from New York comes to a grinding halt. Three men wearing dark coats, their hats pulled low over their eyes, get off and demand to see the books. They say they are auditors. But the ticket seller thinks they are gansters and calls the station agent before showing them any- thing. The agent opens the books and during the audit an illegal petty cash box is discovered, an in- investigation is over, the egent According to Aldrich, the depot was the perfect set- tin for melodrama, but she and o th e r s who worked there view the station's finat years as tragedy-the re- suit oiily of neglect and mismanagement,. linger in the early 1960's and the railroad was bogged down in an even larger bureacuracy, "there just wan't' anyone around to take care of a passenger's needs and wants," says Starry. Maybe. Or maybe passenger trains are simply obsolescent in an age when it is cheaper and considerably faster to take a plane. Even Starry admits he "never traveled much 03 the train." "You'll laugh," Viola Aldrich says, "but I bought stock in Penn Central even though it is a bank- rupt company. The railroad must' prevail." But today the depot is a restau- rant, purchased in 1968 for soine ten times what the Michigan Cen- tral paid to build it almost a h1 n- dred years ago. The building 1,0s not changed atlhough thera are new 'fancy settees'; and the res- taurant's name is rooted in rail- road history. Gandy dancers were workers who followed a machine dumping gravel along the tracks. Their job was to spread it evenly: Supposed- ly there was one gang, headed by~ a man named Gandy, that worked particularly fast-so fast that they seemed to dance down the track-. The depot has been historicaly preserved-but it is a restaurant. Of course, there is still a depot. Located a few yards from the Gandy Dancer is a small building labelled AMTRAK. It was once used for storage by another rail- road. Four passenger trains ruin- ble to a halt here each day, un-' heralded by marching bands and without a single cheerleader boui-. ing on the roof. (Continued from Page 5) PERSONAL ON SUNDAY, Mar. 18. 8:00 p.m., the Ann Arbor Cantata Singers and Chamber Orchestra will present G..F. Handel's oratorio, "I SRHA EL IN EGYPT" at University Reformed Church, E.aHuron at Fletcher. Ad- mission: adults, $1.50; students and children, $0.75. Tickets at The Musicl Shop, 717 No. University, and at the door. 60F131: PERSONAL WANT TO MAKE a deal? For large wine orders try us. The Village Apothecary. cFtc NAME YOUR TOURNAMENT 8-Bail, 9-Ball, Straight Pool? Sign Up - Union Billiards cF13O PASSPORT APPLICATION PICS. faster, and cheaper, by experienced Daily photographer. Come to the Daily on Mondav nightsbetween 7 and 8:a sk DO YOU dislike money? Do you lik for David Margolick. dFl3 reading this page? Would you like toP FESSIONALLY desinediamond write it? If the answer to any or all engagement and wedding rings. Hand of these questions is YES, then come hammered, hand engraved, any pat- on down to 420 Maynard St., or call tern-wholesale. Austin Diamond, 764-0560 and join the MICHIGAN 1209 S. University. 663-7151. cFtc DAILY CLASSIFIED STAFF. dFl3l _______ ARE YOU PREGNANT Desperate? BILLIARDS and BOWLING Dayyor Night, Call Problem - Preg- OPEN TODAY AT 1 P.M. nancy Help. 7(69-7283. cFtc Michigan Union cF131JAZZ AND CLASSICAL GUITAR les- _,.___' sons. Modern theory and harmony WIN $50 WORTH OF FOOD in the great Prof. Curtis. 662-8281. 70F130 Garbage Pit Calendar Coloring Con-_ test. Contest deadline March 24. Come WHY BUY MASS produced WEDDING to the Pit, 810 S. State, for your RINGS? Have your personal design cre- calendar to color. 17F134 'ated by JHAN, 769-7550, eFtc ENJOY COMPANY while eating? Board WE DO GOOD PIZZAS-the president. or room/board at an international co- MR. PIZZA. op this semester. Qall Tom or Carol 78F131 761-7435. 07E131 ___--- - - PERSONAL BOARD EXAM TUTORING Enrollment for Kaplan Tutoring courses. nov being accepted for the upcoming LSAT, MC AT, DAT exams, For infe-mation and enrollment call 313-354-0085, cFtc at MARTY'S "Wail-of -Slax" Flared 'n Cuffed Knit or Knot Jeans 'n Jackets MARTY'S MEN FASHION. CLOTHING 310 S. State St. cFtc DON'T PAY for a store's overhead via high mark-up. For the areas lowest prices and finest qualities possible on an engagement ring, shop Austin Dia- mond, 1209 S. University, 663-7151. cFtc UNIQUE JEWELRY DESIGNS. Award- winning artist-craftsman. Bands, stone setting, e tc. Fairly priced. Stu- dio 484-0854 or 434-0055. 5 J's JEWELRY cFtc OZONE HOUSE is begining, an emer- gency shelter program. If you oc- casionally can give someone a bed for a couple of days, call 769-6544. 04F131 GRAD COFFEE HOUR: Wed. night, 8- 10 p m. Lots of people. Special: Hot Chocolate, 4th floor Rackham. New people welcome! * cFtc s1 -1 spoolwa 11111 11 1 pill oplip Ig milmillim AM S4D g tthejqkdo e grel the job done ad another railroad in Cedar Rapids, Iowa (he calls it 'Ioway'). Now he sits in his living room with a moose wading in the tapes- try behind him and remembers a {different depot from the one Aldrich recalls. His job was baggage, getting baggage on the trains, and even the people he remembers are bag- gage-corpses in caskets, patients on stretchers. Starry doesn't romanticize. The railroad he came to in the 1930's was not the same one he left eight years ago "when he didn't care if he worked any more." The local Michigan Central was acquired bythe larger New York Central in 1944 and the new man- "When the New York Central' vestigation is called. Before the took over the line (from the Michi- gan Central in 1944) the railroad started going downhill. And when the Pennsylvania came in, it went to nothing." Starry began working at the de- pot hauling mail to the city post office, but he "had a lot of leisure time," the baggage men were busy and he helped out rather than watch. And when the rush was over, the .station agent handed him a check. Starting pay was $3.97 for an eight hour day of hand labelling baggage and loading suitcases and trunks and 200 sacks of mail on the train. There was no6overtime pay and the job was 365 days a year long. Remembering his years on the railroad now, he speaks warmly only of the early years when stu- dents would :crowd the platforms at the beginning or end of each term-"when everyone dressed with the boys wearing suits and the girls wearing dresses." Celebrities would invariably ar- rive by train then and word would go down the line that "so and so is on No. 12. And we had big doings for Wendell Wilkie-even built a big platform . .." But celebrities obviously don't interest Starry. He is a railroad man and he did his job and that is what he talks about. One-ton loading carts, sacks of mail and the men who were killed. The crash in 1940 when 20 cars were derailed and the locomotive turned over on its side and lay there like a wounded animal. "I don't know what Marion Starry could tell you," Aldrich says. "He was only a baggage man." Because she remembers the de- pot differently-in anecdotes that are sometimes like a late night movie: FOOSBA LL BOWLING TABLE TENNIS BILLIARDS UNION has committeed suicide. According to Aldrich, the depot was the perfect settting for melo- drama but she and the others who worked there view the statian's final years as tragedy-the re- sult only' of neglect and misman- agement. Passenger service was never as profitable as freight traffic and the railroad gradually cut one train after another, laying off men and discontinuing services Ike dining cars and express runs that attracted passengers. By the time Penn Central had merged with New York Cenral RESUMES $20.00 Includes consultation, writing, and printing 50 copies, 1 page. Achieve positive results. Mail orders invited. BEST RESUME SERVICE 17220 W. 8 Mile Rd. Southfield, Michigan 48075 1-356-2332 02F134 TRAVELLING IN Europe or interested in having your son or daughterwpar- ticipate in an unusual and reward- ing experience? Our children were participants at BIRUS last summer. Languages, ice-skating, skiing, etc. Can we help you? 769-2496. 06F137 Do You REALLY Want To Go To MEDICAL DENTAL - VETERINARY SCHOOL Let us help you gain admission PROFESSIONAL SCHOOL PLACEMENT SERVICE 29636 Pickford Livonia,, Mich, 48152 CO-OP DINNERS 1' nights/week $6.00. 1 Help cook/wash one night/week. Call Bob, 769-5665. 32E131 __ . . WANT TO * ,Impress your o Drink nickel l " 1 " friends? cokes ? DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN * Meet some new peosle ? * Learn something about advertising? ® And even get paid eventually? Cash in on this once in a lifetime offer Call Ray at 764-0560, or drop in at 420 Maynard Camp Metamora, Det. Metro. Girl Scout Council. Will interview Mar. 21, 9 to 5. Openings include camp,'direc- tor (25 or over), general counselors, specialists in waterfront, arts/crafts, tripping, campcraft, drama, nature. Attention Detroit Resident Stu- dents: City of Detroit offers free training for lifeguards for their city- operated pools. Eight Week Program beginning Mar. 26. Orientation meet- ing Mar. 24; details at this office. INTERVIEW: Oak Cove Resort,iLaw- rence, Mi. Will interview Mar. 21, 9:30 to 5. Waitresses needed; room and board plus tips and salary. CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT 3200 SAB INTERVIEWS ON CAMPUS: Dept. of the Army (WAC), Mar. 19; Inst. for Paralegal Training, Fruehauf Inc., Aet- na Life Ins., Mar. 20; O'Neils, Adult Probation Dept. Montgomery County, Mar. 21; The Hartford Ins.,, Mar. 22; v BORDERS BOOK SHOP NOW HAS AN EGCLUSIVE STOCK OF Jossey-Bass Publ. IN Behavioral Sciences O AND0 Education COME ON IN AND BROWSE 316 S. State-668-1653 OPEN MON.-SAT. 'TIL 10 P.M. Liggett & Myers, Mar. 23; Wayne State Univ., Mar. 27; Rike's, Rydell & Assoc., Mar. 28; Mass. Mutual Life Ins., Mar. 29; The May Co., Mar. 30; Montgomery Ward, Apr. 4, 1973. JOB HUNTING WORKSHOPS for graduating students: If you're seeking career employment in a non-teaching area after graduation, sign up for a one-hour- Job-Hunting Workshop. In- cludes resume preparation, interview techniques, job search ideas. Call 764- 7460 to sign up. ,.t . r , ,- - '' '' G .t{ - 1 1, THINK BICYCLES!I WANTED: ARTIST To be responsible for the design, lay-out and distri- bution of a weekly loint film schedule. Salary and free pass to all independent film societies. Contact: 769-7353 Coalition of Independent Campus Film Societies Dankwart Rustow (Notional chairperson of the Caucus for a New Political Science) will be visiting the U. of M. on WEDNESDAY, March 21 for a speaking engagement: The Study of Politics, Old and New: Professionalism vs. Social Obligation -All are invited to attend- 7:30 P.M.-LECTURE RM. NO. 1 MLB (Sponsored by the Grad & Undergrad Poli Sci Associations) Sam Sturgis Collection A crowd of dapper gentlemen greet the arrival of one of the many trains that pulled into the city's depot in the 1920's. CORNED BEEF SANDWICH ... $1.00 PASTRAMI SANDWICH .....$1.00 2 FRANKS . . . . . . ... $0.75 Above prices all include: Hawai'an punch, coleslaw, potato chips, and sauerkraut. EVERY SUNDAY-6:00 p.m. f at HILLEL-1429 Hill St. Subscribe to The Daily Phone 764-0558 ti ] f zz LONDON THEATRE WORKSHOP SUMMER 1973 July 16-August 31 sponsored by U of M Extension Service andk U of M-Flint Theatre Department Four hours of graduate or undergraduate credit for Speech 533: Special Work in Theatre Production and Performance (2) and Speech 539: Production and Direction of Contemporary Drama (2). International faculty. Tours, lectures, workshops, classes films, street fairs, open rehearsals. Approximate cost, including tuition, round-trip air fare, housing arrd meals at Imperial College, University of London, and theatre admissions-$1,000. Application deadline: April 1. Registration limited. For information, contact Dr. Gene J. Parola, Theatre Department, U of M-Flint: (313) 767-4000, Ext. 234. Center for Russian & East European Studies FALL OFFERING - .n' rC ,r rA.C.T UC CAVIC r .* IkIIA':Ii Spring is Fun Time: Kites-Frisbees- Marbles - Roller Skates - Jacks - Yo-Yo's - Time for riding a beautiful 10-Speed Bike! Schwinn - Raleigh - Mercier - Lapierre - Motobecane AND SOON to come "the famous French Peugeot Bicycle." We have all of your Bicycle Needs! We service what we sell. "THE FRIENDLY STUDENTS STORE" Campus Bie and Toy 514 E. WILLIAM ST. Compare the Records Nice-sounding leaflets are a dime-a-dozen in political campaigns. So we just ask you to check the record - was if the Human Rights Party or the Democrats who .. . 0 pushed for a City commitment to rent-con- trot NOW. " called for and held public on police priorities and practices. f sponsored unit - pricing, products dating, nutritional labelling, and ban on non-return- able bottle laws S demand city aid for a low-cost abortion cinic * pushed for and got the first City funding for chid-care centers FRANK SHOICHET City Council HRP-Ward 2 sI I The Dept. of Near Eastern Languages & Lit. ANNOUNCES THE 1972-73 ZWERDLING LECTURES BY' Nahum N. Glatzer Samuel Lane Prof. of Jewish History & Social Ethics, Dept. of Near Eastern & Judaic Studies, Brandeis University FIRST UNIVERSITY LECTURE: The Book of Job & the Problem of Man's Position in the Universe WED., MAR. 21, 170 Physics-Astronomy, 4:10 p.m. SECOND UNIVERSITY LECTURE: The Prophet Jeremiah & the Religion of the Spirit THURS., MAR. 22, 170 Physics-Astronomy, 4:10 p.m. " Left service Political the Democrats after on their Michigan Reform Commission, 0 Urban Corps intern with Detroit Model Cities. * Community Organizing Di- rector for local Vietnam Mor- otorium. * Coordinator f o r student support of GM and U workers' strikes. " Organizer for M a y d a y demonstrations in Washing- ton, D.C. " Active in HRP since Sep- tember, 1971. 0 U-M law student. El 1I