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What it's like to ride the "El" from Howard to 95/Dan Ryan

Published: Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Updated: Thursday, May 12, 2011 02:05

I've always had a strange passion to go to the South Side of Chicago. Whenever I rode the El, I wondered what existed at the mystical 95th/Dan Ryan. And thus began my passion for South Side Chicago. And so, when the opportunity of riding the El to 95th/Dan Ryan came from my editor, I jumped at it. Though I had long conjured the mystical images of the South Side in my head, I had never visited and was dying to go.

I plopped onto a stained window seat when the train came to the Purple Line Noyes stop one Saturday afternoon, ready for my trip out of the suburbs. And after transferring to the Red Line, I was ready to sit back and take in the magic that is the Chicago public transit system.

I looked around. The car smelled like beef, and the man dressed in all denim next to me was sitting uncomfortably close. Eminem blasted out of the earbuds of a guy 10 feet away, and the woman behind me coughed in my hair.

At Addison, intoxicated Cubs fans swarmed the train in souvenir rain ponchos. The inebriated man nearest to me attempted to hit on an equally drunk girl across the car for several stops but then became preoccupied by a verbal dispute with the man he kept falling on.

When the majority of the Cubbers had left, around Grand, a visual path was cleared to a man sitting kitty-corner to myself, clutching a bottle of corn syrup and meditating in his seat.

It took me three stops of staring at the corn syrup man to pry my attention away, wherein I realized the car had cleared out just as we began to leave downtown, headed for the South Side. I gripped my seat in anticipation.

We rode through a couple rough areas containing strip malls with all-night liquor stores, where litter lined the highway and graffiti adorned nearly every building ­— but it was nothing I hadn't seen before.

When we finally reached 95th/Dan Ryan, I stepped out of the train with excitement: This was where I had been waiting to be my entire life — my destiny, if you will. But as I stood on the platform, I inhaled and looked around for a hint of anything exciting and different — almost like Dorothy when she lands in Oz. However, to my horror, all I saw was a Burlington Coat Factory seemingly connected to a Best Buy in the distance. This was certainly not the place I had dreamed about.

As another train rolled up to take me back to Evanston, I walked on somberly at the lack of adventure and amazement. A man boarded my car surrounded by three police officers. I held out a little hope they were arresting him on some sort of charge, but soon it was shattered when they patted him on the back and exchanged stories about their children.

I rode in the otherwise empty car listening to the four men, whose conversation had transgressed into a debate of Chicago politics, for a little while.

The first looked up, noticing my less-than-shrewd eavesdropping, and said, "Man, this is Chicago: can't expect anything more than it is. And it can't be anything more than you make of it."

emmalehmann2014@u.northwestern.edu

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60 comments

Anonymous
Wed Jul 6 2011 23:53
I don't know if NU has this class, but you might want to take "Race, Gender, and Class in the Media", or just even read the book, especially if you are in any type of media program at NU. You'll then understand how, this statement is offensive, "A man boarded my car surrounded by three police officers. I held out a little hope they were arresting him on some sort of charge, but soon it was shattered when they patted him on the back and exchanged stories about their children."
Anonymous
Wed May 25 2011 14:21
I can also become a famous NU editor. Here's the formula for success in getting articles published:

1. Write about normal things in life such as experiences when going to the bathroom or eating in the ktichen
2. Add adjectives
3. Check for grammar errors
4. Submit!

You're welcome

Anonymous
Tue May 24 2011 11:55
Emma, did you really expect to find adventure riding the train to 95th, looking at the neighborhood from the platform, and then getting back on the train? Maybe you would have had a better time if you'd take the opportunity to leave the train station and experience some of the things that the south side has to offer. Whether you intended it or not, it sounds like your mission was to gawk at people and the south side while not actually experiencing any of it. That's a shame.

As an NU alum who lives in Chicago I find this article embarrassing.

Anonymous
Mon May 23 2011 16:17
The ignorance of this article already has been clearly stated in the comments. How this article is an awful attempt at journalism has also been stated.

My concern is with all of the Uchicago students posting comments: do you really think that this article reflects upon Northwestern as a whole in the least? NU has an undeniably honorable reputation for its journalism--in fact, it is most definitely on a pedestal above the quality that can be generally found at U of C. I am a Uchicago student myself and I find a majority of the comments made by my fellow students to be an embarrassment. Yes, this article is a travesty but EVERYONE recognizes this, including the rest of the Northwestern community that you find condolence in bashing. Stick to discussing the journalist--a clueless first year from Iowa--rather than the journalism program.

Anonymous
Sun May 22 2011 21:03
Zip-a-dee-doo-dah, zip-a-dee-ay
My, oh my what a wonderful day!
Plenty of sunshine heading my way
Zip-a-dee-doo-dah, zip-a-dee-ay

Mister Bluebird on my shoulder
It's the truth, it's actch'll
Ev'rything is satisfactch'll
Zip-a-dee-doo-dah, zip-a-dee-ay
Wonderful feeling, wonderful day!

NU Senior
Sat May 21 2011 10:53
This article is an embarrassment to Northwestern, and I hope the Daily, Emma, and her Editor are all doing some soul-searching about now. That said, the reaction of crowds of UChicago students only affirms my belief that, had I applied to and attended UChicago, I would have been setting myself up for absolutely insufferable priggishness of a different sort.
Insightful Student
Fri May 20 2011 19:09
UChicago kids have nothing better to do than troll The Daily. That's why there all here. Yes, this article probably shouldn't even exist. But seriously, UChicago kids, if you're trolling just GTFO. People may not want to admit it but The Daily is a serious and legitimate news outlet and you should treat it that way.
Anonymous
Fri May 20 2011 00:39
I went to NU (fortunately exploring Chicago far more than this chick did) and did some fact checking. She totally got at the wrong stop. If she'd gone further, there was a school and a park. What an idiot.
Anonymous
Fri May 20 2011 00:27
I don't think she intended to come across as offensive, but she really did. Maybe it would have been cool to get on a loop train and ride in a circle and see what that was like, or comment on what she saw outside of the window on the way there. Wrigley is easily the most obvious thing. What about watching the buildings loom, or moving from above ground to below, or the names of stops, or anything! If she just wanted to go to 95th and didn't want to talk about the way there, she should have taken an express train and not wasted her time.
Anonymous
Thu May 19 2011 23:12
rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble rabble
Anonymous
Thu May 19 2011 20:29
I don't understand--how do students at Northwestern have time to take five-hour round trip train rides. Just what does you in the mythical land of Evanston? I hear that it rains malted milk duds . . .
Anonymous
Thu May 19 2011 10:11
@ Anonymous

This isn't just an embarrassment for the entire Northwestern community. It's an embarrassment for anyone that has ever been associated with Northwestern. Really, anyone that has ever stepped on Northwestern's campus. Sorry isn't good enough. We need reform. We need penance. We need change.

This article represents a total paradigm shift. For too long we have sat here, unaware, unsympathetic, and unmotivated. Oh wait, I forgot. This is one stupid article and UChicago students need to get a grip.

Anonymous
Thu May 19 2011 00:02
Do U-Chicago kids not have anything better to do?
Anonymous
Wed May 18 2011 23:46
This is an embarrassment to the entire Northwestern community.
Anonymous
Wed May 18 2011 23:32
@ Annie

I know. They're cracking me up.

Annie
Wed May 18 2011 18:58
lol @UChicago kids... in general.
Nicole
Wed May 18 2011 18:19
People need to calm down. I initially read this article as a student simply fulfulling curiosity about the other end of the Red Line. It's like how my friends and I took the Skokie Swift this summer- we weren't aiming to gain profound insight into the sociology and ethnography of Skokie, but were simply on an adventure to find out where that squiggly yellow line with the dot on the end was actually located in the real world. In addition, this piece was written for a small weekly newspaper supplement, where Emma is given a limited amount of space to write about a difference experience each week. I'd say that attempting to tackle the layered racial nuances of various parts of Chicago (as commenters seem to be vying for) in 300 words or less would be an insult. Take the article for what it is- simply taking the El to a stop which the author had probably seen on the map for years but had never gone to before.
Anonymous
Wed May 18 2011 18:11
to my fellow Maroons, perhaps the reason we've taken such offense from this article (outside of its journalistic qualities) is that it allows us to expose our own long-held attitudes about the City in an external setting?
Anonymous
Wed May 18 2011 18:00
To be clear, did you even leave the L stop?
Eminem
Wed May 18 2011 17:09
Now this looks like a job for me
So everybody just follow me
Cuz we need a little controversy,
Cuz it feels so empty without me

I said this looks like a job for me
So everybody just follow me
Cuz we need a little controversy,
Cuz it feels so empty without me

Hum dei la la la, la la la la la, la la la la la, la la la la
Hum dei la la la, la la la la la, la la la la la, la la la la

"Kids!"







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