_____ __ 0 10B - The Michigan Daily - PerSDCtivSe- Thursday. March 6. 2003, t ., .__ I ; v' a. , ' ,.. ... ., i}, The Michigan Daily - PrS pectil A long, strange tip The Muslim Community Association Presents usl 00 on 0 By Zac Peskowitz Daily Staff Writer "Your Muslim Neighbors: A Window to the World." I Saturday, March 8th 2003 From 12pm-8*3Opm --- '- ., z Islamic Center of Ann Arbor 2301 Plymouth Rd. Ann Arbor, MI 48105 A cross from the University of Michigan North Campus Fire Station Buses: UM Northwood or the AA TA #2 ast August, I stood in a packed Arbor Brewing Company as the comfortable environs of Ann Arbor unceremoniously collided with the rough and tumble world which surrounds our bustling hamlet. Forty-five-year-old Ann Arbor resident then U.S. Rep. Lynn Rivers had 'ust conceded victory to Rep. John Dingell (D-Dearbor) in her bid for the Democratic nomination for Michi- gan's 15th Congressional District and the city's politicos were in shock. Although many had expected this outcome, the prospect of John Dingell, the man who had called agents of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms "jack-booted thugs," serving as their rep- resentative was beyond comprehension. Thanks to the Republican-controlled state Legislature's redrawing of Michigan's congressional districts, their beloved bastion of social liberalism, progres- sivism, bohemianism and cosmopolitanism would now be identified with the uncouth Dingell. The endorsements of EMILY'S List, the Sierra Club and an unbelievable margin of victory in Ann Arbor, this city's voters chose Rivers with a 4-to-1 majori- ty, could do nothing to save Rivers from her fate. The heterogeneous collection of University activists in their bright red "Rivers for Congress" T-shirts, dot- ing yuppie couples with their children in tow and aged hippies milled about as this reality sunk in. Listening to those conversations it would be impossible to imagine Dingell as anything but a bestial ogre. - But this was the nation's most uncom- promising advocate of a single-payer uni- versal health care system, the man who almost single-hand- edly passed the landmark Clear Air Act and who cherished the legacy of the New Deal more than any member of Congress. Despite his accomplishments and abilities, Ann Arbor resoundingly, practically unanimously, rejected Dingell for his social positions, most notably abortions and guns. With the exception of a few university towns consisting of fellow travel- ers, it would be impossible to find any locale where these divisive issues were not met with fiery conflict, but yawning consensus. The first step to understanding our consensus is the recognition that the entire premise of "campus versus Editors: Charles Pard.s nd Weekend MAGAZINE Rebecca Writers: Sravya Chirumamilla,Joseph Lit- man, Ellen McGarrity, Neil Patel, Neal Pais, Zac Peskowitz Photo Editors: Tony Ding, Brett Mountain Photographers: Brett Mountain Cover Photo: Tony Ding, Brett Mountain Arts Editors: Todd Weiser, Managing Edi- tor, Jason Roberts, ScottSerilla, Editors Editor in Chief: Louie Meizlish community" is hopelessly flawed. In the most rudimentary sense, Ann Arbor feeds off the University and vice versa. There is no place in the country where the transition from town to gown is as seamless as the intersection of North University Avenue and South State Street. Over Spring Break, a friend from back East forced me to describe Ann Arbor. I was reduced to a stammer- ing and cliche-ridden depiction. It's difficult to do justice to the spirit of 38,000 young people, all suffering from an excess of hormones, post- teenage angst, hopped up on caf- feine and crammed into sub-standard living conditions. In the city's suburban outskirts this vibrance may be impossible to dis- cern, but even in the Levittown-style developments this vibrance colors the city politically, socially and cultural- ly. Even here, away from the Marxist bookshops and boutiques, the con- sensus rules unchallenged. The story of how this came about begins with another epoch of pacific tranquility. U.S. Rep. John It is 1960. Robert Strange McNa- University ove mara, an Oakland, Calif. native, World War II veteran and president of Ford Motor Co., drives from his home in the Geddes neighbor- hood of Ann Arbor to Ford's world headquarters in Dearborn. McNa- mara is the embodi- ment of post-war America - an innocent faith in the ability of "nod- ern technology, the mixed economy and govern- ment regulation to achieve prosperity and stability in an industrial urban nation. Within a year he will be President Kennedy's defense secretary. Tom Hayden is editor in chief of The Michigan Daily. In his time in Ann Arbor he has cultivated an interest in the budding civil rights movement. He becomes associated with the local chapter of the Student League for Industrial Democracy, which will eventually morph into Students for a Democratic Society. Their paths crossed in strange ways in the com- ing years. When John Fitzgerald Kennedy called for the creation of the Peace Corps from the steps of the Michigan Union, it marked the last time that the youth of the '60s and their elders were in genuine agreement. Within two years the sea change was made perfectly clear. In 1962, McNamara returned to Ann Arbor to deliver the commencement address to the University. McNamara's speech was not a paean to volunteerism, soaked in the elevated prose that was Kennedy's trademark. Instead the speech was a calculating examination of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's nuclear strategy. Later that summer, Hayden drafted the majority of the Port Huron Statement, the document that defined the New Left, with the apocalyptic horrors of nuclear confrontation fresh in his mind. By the end of the decade, the popular imagina- tion will identify the two men as adversaries. McNamara, the dignified statesman whose hubris led to disaster in Vietnam, against Hayden, the hero of the New Left and the revolution of youth that i n Dingell (D-Dearborn) communes with members of the r the possible war with Iraq. promised to shake society to its foundation. The stolid consensus of the early '60s gives way to the Technicolor disputes of the late '60s. The apex of that generation was realized on May 10, 1968, the "Night of the Barricades," when 60,000 youthful revolutionaries marched through the Latin Quarter of Paris demanding freedom for a coterie of jailed activists. Charles De Gaulle's Fifth Republic trembled and almost fell. In 1968, the thundering reverberations of the student movement were intimately felt from Chicago to Mexico City to Prague. Throughout the vast majority of the world the promises of this move- ment were left unfulfilled, as the youth were dis- credited and grew bitter with their failure. Pockets of this failed revolution endured, strug- gling against the tide of history, they stubbornly fought against this tide. And something unexpect- ed began to happen. Ideas and mores flowed out of the University, serving as an incubator, for the temperament and spirit of the city. From lenient marijuana laws to a living-wage ordinance to its permissive atmosphere, that generation achieved victory after victory. They didn't end poverty, their methods didn't lead to nuclear disarmament, but they altered the contours of everyday life in a fashion that upheld the spirit of Port Huron. And as they exercised power and became a part of the political establish- ment, the idealistic desire for revolution gave way to the practical work of governance. There was nothing left to gain and revolutionary zeal replaced itself with establishmentarian orthodoxy. This is a long journey ending in sterility. Look- ing at the present state of Ann Arbor I am remind- ed of Francis Fukuyama's warning that "the end of history will be a very sad time." The battles have been won and won and won, but there is no tri- umph. The smugness and complacency that Hay- den once railed against in the Port Huron Statement now surround us. Until a few more Dingells are willing to climb up on the barricades and challenge that certitude and inextricable boredom will reign. -1 x i Learn More about Islam and Muslims Tour the Islamic Center Islamic Art, Entertainment, Kids Room & More For more information and directions and to RSVP (optional) , Visit us at www.mca-aa.org/openhouse , email openhouse@mca-aa.org or call (734)665-6772 To advertise, contact advertising@mca-aa.org p i Ir, ## W# t-T t ., 0 -9- + . sa . *s s,- . ,. . . . .v : , 0a av ,