Read later installments of "Life and Death on Allied Drive" to learn more about these people:
<
Residents
Henrickus Echols, 23; and his fiance, Beverly Williams, 22, above; and
their four young children came to Allied Drive a year ago to escape
gang violence in Chicago. <
Jerry Sanders, 63, offers a smoky haven to the homeless.
<
Monday: Echols and Williams use handouts but move toward independence.
Sanders is forced out. The promising young life of Lawrence Williams,
19, above, ended in violence on the streets of Allied Drive. <
Tuesday:
A year after Williams's death. Jeff McPike, above, a 10-year veteran of
the Madison Police Department and son of well-known retired East High
School Principal Milt McPike, could work anyplace but chose to become
the neighborhood officer in Madison's worst neighborhood. <
Wednesday: On a drizzly March night, McPike confronts the role of race
in Allied Drive's crime problems. A 44-year-old mother lost her home to
drinking and drugs on Allied Drive. <
Thursday:
The woman struggles to regain her life. Maria Alvarez, 54, is confused
but not alarmed when gunshots shatter the calm on Oct. 15. Alvarez, who
speaks Spanish but little English, wonders why police armed with rifles
keep her from driving to work. <
Friday: Alvarez's extended family embraces friends fleeing Chicago -
and the Madison School District gains a popular, bilingual
sixth-grader, Luis Lugo. Marvin Harris, 16, playfully tosses a football
with friends on Allied Drive shortly after shots ring out on Oct. 15.
<
Saturday: Marvin and his sister, Marissa, suffer a heartbreaking loss
while struggling to succeed in Madison's schools and trying to earn
full-tuition scholarships to UW-Madison. Single mother Margaret Warner
works more than 60 hours a week to save for a down payment on a home
that would free her of the dangers of Allied Drive. Troy and Dorene
Barlow have long-time roots in Allied Drive but dream of moving their
four children to a home in the country, where they won't be exposed to
a barrage of drug and prostitution offers. Activist and resident Marie
Joe wants to help make a difference on her street. <
Sunday: Warner, Joe, the Barlows and others propose ideas for making this a decent neighborhood once again.