-Page. Elght THE MICHIGAN DAILY TN Page E1ght~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY r hursdciy, September 9, 19 10 0.00 om nmmMm mmmmummminm mm mmmummm mmmmm mau I E r r " THIS u NVALUABLE r COUPON r r I ENTITLES: r YOU TOr *PLAY * I *PINBALL r r ~OR ! FOOSBALLr r e I FOR r * 12 PRICE u r AT I r TOMMY'S ARCADE PACKARD & STATE * One coupon per customer. REDEEMABLE ANY- ; TIME BEFORE Sept. 20, 1976. Good for 50c ; worth of pinball for 25c u DAILY CLASSIFIEDS BRING QUICK RESULTS 'The Block': City's haven of vice By DAVID WHITING and MICHAEL YELLIN Students are far between on The Block, where the dice roll, the numbers run, the skin pops and people hustle for a living. Located two blocks from City Hall, just east of the county jail on Ann St., The Block is the black hub of the city's heroin trafficking and fencing of stolen goods. PROSTITUTES, junkies, gam- blers and thieves converge on the Derby Bar, which serves as the front office for many local hustlers. What is not sold inside is available in some near- by parked car or the unnamed game hall two doors up. "It's just like a little Detroit 210 GO down here, maybe a little small- er, friendlier," says Roxanne, a young woman in describing the area. "Everybody knows every- body." The Block's small size creates a tightly-knit community which allows hustlers to know their competition as well as their customers. LOPENZO, a self-styled gam- bler speaking from beneath the brim of a Fedora carefully cap- ping his shaved head, says, "I could tell you who does what, where and when, but you see, I don't know you." A musty atmosphere clings to the Derby, located next door to the Salvation Army's Red Shield store. Within ten minutes of walking into the bar, someone will often slide up and, just above the juke-box blare, hoarsely whisper, "Hey are you nice for the evening? You want to buy some drugs?" Although the black market sales-persons are aware that "The people making thebig money are white and rich," they maintain their self-respect through style and grace. "WE DON'T sell no dime bags down here," says Sam, a street merchant, coolly discussing a heroin sale. "You can't get nothing less than $20 worth down here." Money is a prime concern on The Block, and pocketing more of the green stuff through vir- tually any means is acceptable. "My cousin comes in here to sell stereos and shit," Gale, a young high school drop-out free- ': .SY HQ UN A l-)( ly admits. But she is calmly alert to the harsh methods sometimes used in transactions :n The Block. "My girlfriend's old man was stabbed here last week over four dollars." Leroy, a long-time regular, explains why vice is so preva- lent on The Block. "Most peo- ple here are trying to survive. If given the chance, anyone would hustle." BUYING and selling narcotics and stolen goods are the appa- rent mainstays of illegal busi- ness on Ann St., but they are not the only vices sold. Prosti- tutes are usually available while cards, craps and the unofficial D a ig y Double' areplayed throughout the week. Says one young woman who makes a point of sitting down with stran- gers, "Nobody going to come over and sit down and talk to you unless they've got business -such as young women.' While nickel and dime card games are common in the Der- by bar, the real gambling goes on at the game hall two doors up the street. Past the pool table, the pin-. ball machine and the sandwich counter the action begins. Five dollar bills are strewn across a felt-covered craps table, and the sounds-clicking ivory and the call of "five and a quarter" -remind one of Reno. The stakes on any given toss often total $25, which some 15 men hope to win. JOE HALL, operator of -the game hall, blames poor law en- forcement for the illegal deal- ings on the Block. "If police don't do nothing, there's nothing much I can do." But while virtually everyone admits a problem exists, no one has proposed a solution that will end the heroin trafficking, prostitution, gambling and fenc- ing of stolen goods on the 100 block of Ann St. In one month alone this year, police confronted one assault, three fights, two felonious as- saults and two narcotics trans- actions on the Block. "They op- erate big, and they operate in the basements," observes Police Chief Walter Krasny. HE REPORTS that police at- tempts to close down The Block's illegal operations have been ineffective. "It's like swat- ting at flies." Hand-in-hand with The Block's wear of violence is a pervading suspicion of the establishment and the law. Yvonne is one young woman who has found the police to be a too often and unwelcome in- trusion into her life. "The po- lice arrested my boyfriend, Rod for larceny. He's been in Jack- son (state prison) for 15 months. Cops come in The Derby and hassle people. Like Gregory, they hassled him last week. Thought he was pushing some drugs up his arm. Last month they came in here and hassled Cheryl, thought she was push- ing drugs up her arm." On the establishment's side, Krasny points out that the po- lice receive little assistance from The Block's customers when trying to make an arrest in the neighborhood. "It's a question of coming up with suf- ficient evidence to charge them. They're pretty sharp. Some- times there's a shooting and when the police arrive you've got a dead man and no wit- nesses. I don't know how you solve the problem though," he adds resignedly. "I've been here 37 years and it hasn't im- proved." ALTHOUGH M a y o r Albert should be done, but he has yet Wheeler agrees that The Block to move on the issue. "We does pose severe law-enforce- shold try to do something about ment problems to police, he be- 'he physical street itself. The lieves, in contrast to Krasay, }oltion is to- take away what that the neighborhood was not :an be physically seen as a always as rough as it now is. )roblem," he says. "It wasn't always like that. Krasny r e g a r d s increased It used to be a place where law-enforcement as a way of people could go to relax and alleviating the problem. But he have a beer," says Wheeler. contends that his officers can- "But now there's a lot of drug not compete with the nustlers pushing, you know heroin and because his staff is too out- cocaine." numbered. Wheeler appears to have the As for the area residents and l most concerete agenda for im- hanger-oners, many have come proving The Block and he hopes to accept their lives on The to initiate action soon. "I'm Block. "On this side of town hoping before my term is up neople don't get a chance to go (next spring) that we'll have a g school," comments the gray- soluton."ing Lorenzo. "A lot of people suo leave but they always drift MASSIVE restructuring of the back." white-owned Block is wh h "Ann St. has always been the i-k s cn same, Ann St. is Ann street," Wheeler has in mind. He is con-TLorenzo adds matter-of-factly. sidering "totally replacing the "We want to change it but what buildings there and supporting can you do?" black ownership of businesses. N City Administrator Sylvester sons quoted in this story have Murray agrees that something been changed. I 2455 S. STATE ROAD... BETWEEN THE CAMPUS AND BRIARWOOD. I1 M1 7 1 4 S 11 aA I' Along with furnished apartments, weekly maid service, and con- venient location, "U" Towers offers you a congenial atmosphere Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN Men linger in a portion of "The Block" on E. Ann St. near the county jail and City Hall The region is the center of the city's narcotics trafficking, gambling, numbers-running, prostitution and other illicit dealings. SOUP'S* ON, Ummm!...AND THE SALAD BAR'S LOADED* AT H UIa I B I I d01DP0 . D I BIG DADDY'S DEN "N A OI * COME ON, FILLYOUR BOWL AGAIN AND AGA FROM OUR STEAMING SOUP KETTLE * MAKE A MEAL FROM OUR SALAD FIXINGS IF YOU'RE REALLY HUNGRY, TRY THESE UNBEATABLE ENTREES: IN NEWEST )D SPOT " Big Daddy's 24 oz. Super Porterhouse " T-Bone and New York Strip Steaks " One Pound Center Cut Pork Chop " King Crab Legs, Steamed " Frog Legs, Roadhouse " Broiled Rock Lobster Tails BEER, WINE, MIXED DRINKS DANCING AND LIVE MUSIC Sororities, Frats, Campus and Faculty Groups-Let Big Daddy's Host Your Next Party-CALL 429-4280 U U El ri l/./ Com..Y I i K2- N. Follow S. Main to [ lpi r i-v o p iml I I - - - - - C4 1 4- F