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$
DECEMBER 30, 2022 | VOLUME 14 | ISSUE 1
YOUR DONATION BENEFITS THE VENDORS.
PLEASE BUY ONLY FROM BADGED VENDORS.
Women, life, freedom: What you
should know about Iran's protest.
Page 8
MEET YOUR
VENDOR:
BRIAN
HARGROVE
PAGE 3
GROUNDCOVER
NEWS AND SOLUTIONS FROM THE GROUND UP | WASHTENAW COUNTY, MICH.
Undercover art
intel: Native
American art
store opens in
Ann Arbor.
page 7
Inty Muenala in front of his store,
NTVES, a Native American fine art
and craft store located at Briarwood
Mall.
THIS PAPER WAS BOUGHT FROM
@groundcovernews, include vendor name and vendor #
NEW ISSUE EVERY OTHER FRIDAY!
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idsFז0?HQנdsFז0?HQ ǁ9׉H !http://www.groundcovernews.org%20GׁׁrנdsFז0?HQ ܁9׉H  http://linktr.ee/groundcovernewsGׁׁrנdsFז0?HQ 9ׁH "mailto:contact@groundcovernews.comׁׁЈנdsFז0?HQ N!9ׁH &mailto:submissions@groundcovernews.comׁׁЈנdsFז0?HQ 9ׁH  http://linktr.ee/groundcovernewsׁׁЈנdsFז0?HQ ʁ9ׁHhttp://www.groundcovernews.orgׁׁЈנdsFז0?HQ gd	9ׁHhttp://ernews.comׁׁЈ׉E2
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
GROUNDCOVER
from the DIRECTOR's DESK
biweekly edition of Groundcover News.
The date of publication will be the
date printed on the paper. Don't be
alarmed if it is a different month or year
than the day you purchase (like you
might see with this issue).
In addition to the outcome of consisLINDSAY
CALKA
Managing Director
Did you notice the yellow banner on
the cover? "New issue every other
Friday!" It's not a big change but it's an
important one.
The issue you are holding right now
will only run for 14 days — two weeks
exactly — and there will be a new edition
out January 13, 11 a.m. The decision
to go "twice monthly" last year was
one we did not regret, but in 2023 we
wanted to make the publication cycle as
consistent as possible for both the vendors
and our customers. This is the first
tency, this change will increase the
amount of issues we will be publishing
in a year. Even though it is small, the
uptick from 24 to 26 issues means more
space for more writing, and therefore
new contributors! Remember, anyone
can write for Groundcover News.
The submission deadline is every
other Monday — the Monday after each
new issue release — and can be done by
emailing submissions@groundcovernews.com.
If
you are interested in writing as a
community reporter, consider attending
our news writing workshop with
Ypsilanti District Library in late January
(details listed on next page).
If it isn't already, Friday is about to be
your favorite day of the week!
DECEMBER 30, 2022
letter to the EDITOR
Dear Michigan Ability Partners,
I wanted to thank you for all of the support you have given me
over the years. I spent a night outside a few days ago in Ann Arbor,
from around noon till noon the next day. This was once an everyday
occurrence for me. As the evening got colder, walking past
many of the places I used to “sleep,” I recalled how miserable and
hopeless I was. I was thinking, “How do people do it?” “How did I
do it?” — even though I knew I would eventually return to my
apartment (MY apartment?!). When I did eventually return I was
overwhelmed with relief, gratitude and an appreciation with an
understanding: had I not been housed I truly do not know where
I would be today, or even if I'd be alive.
I didn't realize the healing process would take so long. A counselor
at Delonis said I was a success story, which (at the time) I
balked at, as her definition of success was quite different from
mine. Sometimes it seems as though I knew more people who
passed away in my three years of homelessness in Ann Arbor than
all the people I have met in my 50 years of life! All were wonderful
amazing individuals in their own way and are gone mainly because
of becoming homeless and all that comes with being such. I still
have a long way to go to become the “success” in my mind and
knowing with your continued support I wouldn't have made it this
far and still have a hope for the future.
Again, Thank you!
Sincerely, David Winey
CREATING OPPORTUNITY AND A
VOICE FOR LOW-INCOME PEOPLE WHILE TAKING
ACTION TO END HOMELESSNESS AND POVERTY.
Groundcover News, a 501(c)(3)
organization, was founded in April
2010 as a means to empower lowincome
persons to make the
transitions from homeless to housed,
and from jobless to employed.
Vendors purchase each copy of our
regular editions of Groundcover
News at our office for 50 cents. This
money goes towards production
costs. Vendors work selling the paper
on the street for $2, keeping all
income and tips from each sale.
Street papers like Groundcover
News exist in cities all over the United
States, as well as in more than 40
other countries,
in an effort to raise
awareness of the plight of homeless
people and combat the increase in
poverty. Our paper is a proud member
of the International Network of Street
Papers.
STAFF
Lindsay Calka — publisher
Cynthia Price — editor
Jim Clark — vendor manager
ISSUE CONTRIBUTORS
Teresa Basham
Elizabeth Bauman
Odile Hugonot Haber
Cindy Gere
GEO Abolition Caucus
Mike Jones
Emma Kin
Ken Parks
Denise Shearer
Kevin Spangler
VOLUNTEERS
Jessi Averill
Luiza Duarte Caetano
Glenn Gates
Alex Granberg
Robert Klingler
Mira Simonton-Chao
Mary Wisgerhof
Max Wisgerhof
Claude VanValkenburg
Navya Yagalla
PROOFREADERS
Susan Beckett
Elliot Cubit
Anabel Sicko
Sandy Smith
@groundcover
@groundcovernews
DONATE,
PITCH A STORY
+ LEARN MORE
www.groundcovernews.org
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CONTACT US
Story and photo submissions:
submissions@groundcovernews.com
Advertising and partnerships:
contact@groundcovernews.com
Office: 423 S. 4th Ave., Ann Arbor
Mon-Sat, 11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m.
Phone: 734-263-2098
׉	 7cassandra://Z-jvat00bJtVMzi2qFut8z7u5-sueXWi-YJG14mNcYwP` dsFז0?HQu׉EDECEMBER 30, 2022
ON MY CORNER
MEET YOUR VENDOR
Facing the new year
It can be hard coping with
Brian Hargrove,
vendor No. 158
In one sentence, who are you?
I’m Brian Hargrove.
Where do you usually sell Groundcover
News? Around everywhere.
When and why did you start selling
Groundcover News?
I restarted December and it's been
good for me since I’ve been selling
them.
What is your favorite thing to do in
Ann Arbor? Talk to people and have
fun meeting people.
If you could do anything for a day,
what would it be? Eat some food
and be around good friends.
What motivates you to work hard
selling Groundcover News?
I’m motivated by the prospect of getting
off the streets by making my situation
better.
If you had to eat one meal for the
rest of your life, what would it be?
Pizza, ice cream and soul food!
What words do you live by?
Keep my focus on God.
What is your superpower? I can lift
a lot of things.
What change would you like to see
in Washtenaw County? More
people helping homeless people get
off the street. This would make it
better for everyone in Ann Arbor.
What are your hobbies? Reading a
good book at the library.
What is something someone on
the street wouldn't know?
I’m a happy person who likes to make
everybody smile.
What's the best or worst thing
about selling Groundcover News?
The worst thing is people who are rude.
facing a new year. It can be hard
because you never know what’s
going to happen in a new year. It
can be hard facing a new year
because you never know what’s
going to change; sometimes
people and things change for the
bad instead of for the good. You
never know who or what you are
going to lose that makes life
happy and pleasant for you.
Sometimes good things happen
in the new year. Sometimes you
gain new people and things that
make life pleasant and happy.
Music is always pleasant and
DENISE SHEARER
Groundcover vendor No. 485
Jesus always makes life more
pleasant. Having a cup of iced
tea or lemonade is a good way to
cope with the day, anytime of
year. Singing a spiritual song in
your mind about God and Jesus
is always a good way to cope any
day of the year. Toys are also
something pleasant to help cope
anytime of the year and on any
day.
Things change for the good
happy. Nice artwork is always
pleasant and happy anytime of
the year. Celebrating God and
sometimes; things change for
the bad sometimes. I like to love
and celebrate God and Jesus
when things change for both the
good and the bad.
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
3
The killing machine: mass
incarceration
Mass incarceration rips apart
families and communities, disproportionately
hurts people of
color and costs taxpayers $260
billion a year.
Michigan has an incarceration
rate of 599 per 100,000 people
(including prisons, jails, immigration
detention, and juvenile
justice facilities), meaning that it
locks up a higher percentage of its
people than almost any democracy
on Earth.
There are two million people in
the nation’s prisons and jails — a
500% increase over the last 40
years. Changes in sentencing law
and policy, not changes in crime
rates, explain most of this increase.
What is the cause of mass
NEWS WRITING
BEST PRACTICES
INTERVIEWING
SOURCES AND
IMPROVING YOUR
ARTICLES
TUESDAY, JAN 24, 2023 6:30PM
YDL-WHITTAKER 5577 WHITTAKER ROAD
WRITING A NEWS STORY TAKES A KEEN EYE AND A LOT
OF LISTENING. GET GUIDED PRACTICE INTERVIEWING
YOUR SOURCES AND TIPS ON INCORPORATING THEIR
THOUGHTS INTO YOUR STORY. YOU'LL ALSO LEARN TO
HIGHLIGHT THE MAIN HOOK OF YOUR ARTICLE AND
HOW TO WRITE IN A WAY THAT KEEPS EVERYONE
READING UNTIL THE LAST LINE. IN PARTNERSHIP WITH
YPSIWRITES AND GROUNDCOVER NEWS.
MIKE JONES
Groundcover vendor No. 113
incarceration? Drug offenses still
account for the incarceration of
almost 400,000 people, and drug
convictions remain a defining feature
of the federal prison system.
Police still make over a million
drug-possession arrests each year,
many of which lead to prison
sentences.
I had a chance to interview a
childhood friend, Brian, who has
been incarcerated several times.
Brian's first prison sentence was
in 1996 and he was just released
from his most recent stint in April
2022. Now homeless and staying
at the Robert J. Delonis Center
after getting kicked out of statefunded
housing, Brian said, “It's
not easy making it in society without
housing, a place you can call
your own.”
Brian added, “Being homeless,
staying at the warming center, is
like prison because you are always
in a toxic environment. Drugs, violence,
etc.”
Register online for
Groundcover and
Ypsilanti District
Library's workshop by
scanning the QR code!
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
OPINION
DECEMBER 30, 2022
“Fund safety, not police:” How U-M administration
makes us less safe and stifles alternatives
U-M GRADUATE EMPLOYEES'
ORGANIZATION ABOLITION
CAUCUS
On November 17, as University of
Michigan President Santa Ono was
leaving after his speech at the Ross
School of Business, he was confronted
by a march of two hundred members
of Graduate Employees Organization
3550. This march, which kicked off our
union’s contract negotiations with the
University, featured speakers calling
for a living wage and for a campus free
from policing. Our march was trailed
by four U-M police cruisers.
Ono’s hasty departure presented an
opportunity: two GEO members held
up a banner, created during the 2020
strike, to block the president’s path and
prevent him from continuing to ignore
us. The banner read “FUND SAFETY
NOT POLICE.” The underlining of
“ICE” also signals GEO’s current
demands for codifying protections for
international graduate student-workers
from Immigration and Customs
Enforcement. The two students were
quickly pushed aside by members of
the President’s security detail, eager to
shuffle off the disruption so Ono could
return to business-as-usual.
Each year, the University of Michigan
spends over $32 million on policing
and security. While the university’s
endowment reached a record $17 billion
during the COVID-19 pandemic,
essential student services (such as
Counseling Services, Services for Students
with Disabilities, and the Center
for the Education of Women) remain
underfunded and the salaries of graduate
students and other workers have
not kept up with the rising cost of living
in Ann Arbor and Washtenaw County.
This is why, in fall 2020, GEO went on
strike for a safe and just campus. In the
two years since, U-M has failed to redirect
funds from policing. It has instead
used diversion and counterinsurgency
tactics, such as starting a toothless task
force on public safety and a scholarship
in the name of George Floyd. It has
also attempted to normalize policing
across campus. Under the “Ambassadors
Program,” the university sent
campus police officers and work-study
students to enforce social distancing
rules — a plan that was quickly canceled
under pressure from the undergraduate
Students of Color Liberation
Front and the 2020 strike.
As we wrote in the Michigan Daily
earlier this year, “When it comes to
campus safety, the university is trapped
in an endless cycle of scandals and
promises to do better.”
U-M is quick to cry poor when it’s
cutting budgets, freezing wages and
raising tuition; yet the cost of policing
continues to grow. The Division of
Public Safety and Security, which
houses the U-M Police Department,
currently receives over $32 million dollars
annually from the university. But
what do they actually do in and around
campus with this enormous budget?
To answer this question, we obtained
the daily activity logs of U-M police
from January 2001 through July 2022.
These data reveal several crucial facts
that support the abolitionist call to dismantle
U-M police and redirect its
resources towards the life-affirming
services that graduate workers, undergraduate
students, staff, faculty and
community members need.
First, the vast majority of U-M police
activity is not in response to violence,
but rather to property crimes like a
stolen bike or laptop, traffic violations,
or drug and alcohol use. In 2021 for
example, there were over 200 police
activity logs related to drug or alcohol
use. Likewise, most arrests are for drug
and alcohol offenses (33%), traffic violations
(13%), or disorderly conduct
(18%). Disorderly behavior includes
people experiencing a mental health
crisis, urinating in public, and sleeping,
resting, or hanging out in public spaces
(such as the Nichols Arboretum). Contrary
to what the cops say, it is police
involvement in such things that is the
major source of violence in communities.
These statistics show how U-M
police criminalize poverty, displace the
poor, and effectively control who is
allowed to be in or near campus —
thereby further gentrifying the Ann
Arbor area.
Second, U-M police are involved in
situations they shouldn’t be — and
they make things worse. For example,
campus hospitals are major hot spots
for police activity. Michigan Medicine
pays tens of millions of dollars to maintain
a Division of Public Safety and
Security presence in hospitals. As a
result, people seeking care are harassed
and arrested for things like possession
of marijuana; the narrative “Marijuana
was found in patient property”
appeared 128 times in the police logs
in 2022 alone. This is part of a long history
of medical providers collaborating
with police and other state agencies to
criminalize or commit disabled people;
those with unmet mental health and/
or housing needs; Black, Indigenous,
Latinx, queer and trans people; and
immigrants. For many marginalized
groups, seeking care comes with surveillance,
policing, punishment and
Percentage of police activity between 2001-2022 that involved arrests,
broken down by police activity type (excluding ambulance/fire
calls). Absolute numbers of arrests shown in parentheses.
control.
Policing in hospitals negatively
impacts patient and community health
outcomes. Police violate patient-provider
confidentiality and trust and
deter patients from seeking out necessary
care out of fear of persecution by
police, as well as child/family welfare
and immigration authorities. In U-M’s
case, we found that police are often
called to handle suspected cases of
domestic violence, child neglect, or
mental health crises (including suicide
attempts). All of these are serious matters
that the police are ill-equipped to
handle, and which require a noncarceral,
non-police, community-controlled
and anti-racist response.
Third, U-M police directly collaborate
with other police agencies, from
the Ann Arbor Police Department to
the Washtenaw County’s Sheriff’s
office to Immigration and Customs
Enforcement. The logs reveal that U-M
police have detained and turned
people over to these other police forces,
including ICE. Campus police are thus
part of the larger system of racist violence
that inspired the 2020 uprisings
and GEO’s strike. The recent U-M task
force on policing has failed to provide
more information about these collaborations.
Aligning with police is predictable
given that U-M’s current
Director of Housing Security, John
Seto, was the Chief of the AAPD when
police shot and killed Aura Rosser, a
Black woman, during a domestic dispute
(Aura had moved to Ann Arbor to
find safe access to community mental
health).
These are only three main takeaways
about U-M police activities. For more,
see the interactive map on the GEO
website: abolitiongeo.org. You can use
this map to see what U-M police do in
the place where you work, study, teach,
and live — and ask yourselves whether
this keeps you safe.
Yet this data is incomplete. The map
does not show the activities of police
forces that collaborate with U-M police,
such as ICE or AAPD. The City of Ann
Arbor has denied our FOIA request for
similar data on AAPD’s activities, and
the city administrator, Milton Dohoney,
subsequently denied our appeal.
The data are also incomplete with
respect to U-M police activities. Critical
information is missing, including the
race of the people arrested by U-M
police during each incident, which the
DPSS website does not make available.
We know these data exist because the
Michigan State Police publishes aggregated
statistics about arrests made by
U-M police broken down by race. U-M
has denied our Freedom of Information
Act request for these data, and the
University President’s office has
rejected our appeal of that decision. In
a letter dated September 15, 2022, the
Office of the President wrote that “the
university is not required to make a
compilation, summary or report of
information, nor create a new public
record, in order to respond to your
request,” and pointed us to the existing
DPSS website which doesn’t contain
the information we have requested.
This chain of events demonstrates
that the university president is also the
campus’s top cop: actively committed
to concealing police activities amid
calls for even a modicum of transparency.
While the recent U-M task force
on policing has called for more transparency,
so far we have only faced
institutional opacity. This active hiding
of the racist nature of policing is
intended to protect police power and
undermine abolitionist efforts to build
safe alternatives.
But police power can and must be
dismantled. Crucially, U-M police is
relatively new. The campus police was
see POLICE next page 
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AROUND TOWN
How to be happy during the
Michigan winter
As the days become shorter and the
weather becomes colder, it becomes
difficult to maintain a positive attitude
on life. The sun setting as early
as 5 p.m. depletes motivation, and
fatigue makes it harder for individuals
to continue their daily activities.
Some may even experience Seasonal
Affective Disorder. This is due to the
lack of sunlight the body receives,
resulting in higher levels of melatonin,
drowsiness and depression. In
addition to the psychological effects,
Northwestern Medicine reports that
low temperatures can increase the
likelihood of getting sick. The
immune system weakens and
becomes less effective at fighting
viruses. Once there is snow on the
ground, it becomes important for
individuals to be aware of their
mental and physical wellbeing. Luckily,
there are ways to combat the dangers
of Michigan winters. Here are
some easy accessible methods that
you can participate in to take care of
yourself during wintertime.
Considering how long Michigan
winters tend to last, this season is the
perfect time to start a new project
with an end date in mind. Dr. Supriya
Blair, clinical psychologist, suggests
this solution to create a sense of
excitement, curiosity and fulfillment.
Having a goal helps individuals to
stay motivated throughout winter as
they attempt to accomplish their
projects. Depending on the timeline
of the project, this motivation can
sustain people against the cold temperatures
for a long time. Even the
smallest efforts towards a goal can
provide encouragement to continue
the season with a positive attitude.
This is adaptable for everyone as
there are multiple possibilities:
beginning a new workout plan, cleaning
out a room, or setting a reading
down and view oneself in a new light
can help relieve feeling overwhelmed
and anxious.
Finally, those struggling to make it
EMMA KIN
U-M student contributor
goal every week. This practice is very
versatile since it is up to the individual
to decide what they can manage.
Staying accountable and setting
small achievements can change one’s
entire life during winter.
Journaling is a creative outlet for
people to release tension and worries
by becoming intimate with themselves.
When the lack of sunlight
takes a toll on the human body, journaling
can deliver self-care and contentment.
Because of this, Dr. Blair
also suggests journaling and making
it a habit. What to journal is up to the
writer as the purpose is to make one
aware of one’s wellbeing. Many begin
with a gratitude journal and answering
simple questions. Some examples
to consider for gratitude are to think
about the relationships, achievements
or lessons that developed
during this year.
Reflecting on the year is a productive
way to stay mentally healthy
since it helps lower stress levels and
allows clarity of one’s being. Once
again, this resource for joy is obtainable
for the majority of people since
it only requires paper, pencil and
one’s thoughts. Even in this day and
age, paper is an option though electronic
devices have become the new
norm for writing. Taking time to sit
through the winter should focus on
three components during their daily
lives: exercise, diet and sleep. These
three components are essential to
having a healthy body and mentality.
Exercising reduces multiple health
risks like cardiovascular disease, diabetes
and some cancers. Getting 30
minutes of moderate physical activity
every day is very important for one’s
health, and everyone can experience
the health benefits of physical activity.
Although it may be difficult to
afford a gym, taking a brisk walk outside
is just as helpful as working out
in a gym.
Eating a healthy diet is just as critical
as moving the body. An extra
emphasis on vegetables, fruits, whole
grains and protein energizes the body
throughout the day, and the nutrients
help cells to grow and repair, resulting
in a healthier and stronger
immune system. Again, cost for produce
may be an issue for some, but
there are resources available to gain
nutritious food. The Maize & Blue
Cupboard provides healthy and
nourishing food to those who lack
equitable access. They also provide
cooking utensils and household
items to support the community.
Lastly, sleep is key for good health
and well being in the winter. Getting
between seven and nine hours of
sleep is important for hormone and
cell growth. It can also affect how well
one thinks, works, learns and gets
along with others. Because all three
of these factors occur naturally, extra
focus should be placed on these
activities to avoid the effects of winter.
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
What’s
Happening
at the Ann
Arbor
District
Library
Open 10am–8pm Daily
Hang out in any of our five
locations across town, browsing
books, magazines, newspapers,
and more, or check out movies,
CDs, art prints, musical
instruments, and science tools—
you name it! Study and meeting
rooms, fast and free WiFi, and
plenty of places to sit and hang out.
Fifth Avenue Studios
To foster the creation of original
audio content, AADL has
launched Fifth Avenue Studios
to support local podcasters,
musicians, and audio creators
in the Ann Arbor area. Want to
launch a podcast? Record and
release an album? Produce an
audio drama? Visit AADL.org/
fifthavenuestudios and pitch us
your idea!
Fastest WiFi in Town
Every AADL location has loginfree
wireless inside all buildings
and parking lots, available 24
hours a day. No restrictions, no
monitoring, and some of the
fastest speeds in town!
FEATURED EVENT
5
 POLICE from last page
only established in the early 1990s.
On a campus with a long and proud
history of radicalism, university
administration also hoped that
police would crack down on the
anti-racist student activism that had
intensified in the late 1980s. Their
demands have yet to be met.
Today, GEO members are committed
to creating a safe and just
campus for all, just as earlier generations
of activists were. Our platform
for negotiations with the
university includes the demand that
U-M fund the proposal for a non-police,
unarmed emergency response
being explored by the City of Ann
Arbor. Led by the Coalition for
Re-Envisioning Our Safety (CROS),
the proposal would create a community-based
program and hotline
modeled on the best practices of
crisis response teams across the
country. GEO is proud to be among
the more than forty community
groups — including mutual aid
groups, housing justice groups, and
abolitionist groups such as Liberate
Don’t Incarcerate — that have
endorsed the plan.
DPSS’s over $32 million budget
can be put towards alternatives such
as CROS, as well as towards other
beneficial ends, including: better
wages for staff and student workers,
better health and mental care, better
support for survivors of sexual violence,
or housing for the unhoused
— all of which would be preferable
to a dangerous, bloated and racist
police force, shielded by unaccountable
administrators.
Sunday, January 29 • 1–4pm
Downtown Libary
Looking for a preschool? The
annual Preschool Expo brings
representatives from area
preschools to one location on one
date. Connect with schools in
Washtenaw County and explore
your options to find the best
preschool for your child.
For more information visit
AADL.org/preschoolexpo
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
COMMONS
DECEMBER 30, 2022
Odile Hugonot Haber was visisting People's Park in December 2022 when she documented the destruction of the park by the University of
California. They intend to build student housing in its place.
People's Park is a very famous historical place and
the site of an epic battle
ODILE HUGONOT HABER
Groundcover contributor
A battle of epic proportions is happening
in Berkeley, California even
now, a continuation of a battle first
fought in the 1960s on 62 acres in the
middle of Berkeley. It was won by the
people and gave birth to the famed
People's Park.
In the aftermath of the “Free Speech”
which consisted of students speaking
about the effect of the war in Vietnam,
in particular we remember the Mario
Savio speech: “There is a time when
the operation of the machine becomes
so odious, makes you so sick at heart,
that you can’t take part! And you’ve got
to put your bodies upon the gears and
upon the wheels…upon the levers,
upon all the apparatus, and you got to
make it stop!”
When, in the summer of 1969, the
peace activists were kicked off Provo
Park, they went to do their peace
events on a piece of land nearby, off
campus. There they built a Free Speech
Stage where they could continue their
anti-war speeches and actions.
That land had been seized by the
University under eminent domain a
year before. They had demolished the
53 red, shingle-topped houses that had
served as habitations to students, leftists,
artists — a poorer population that
the university blamed for being the
"counter culture” that was at the base
of the peace and freedom movement.
The UC said they wanted to build
student housing but left the land in
shambles and progressively people
moved onto it, women with their children
at first. People started digging,
laid sod, planted flowers, trees, and
built a playground for the children.
Some people were crucial in advancing
the project and raising money for
it. They were Michael Delacour, Jon
Reed, Wendy Schlesinger, Frank Bardacke,
Stew Albert, Judy Gumbo and
so many others … The idea went public
and grew big … They reclaimed the
land that had been taken long ago —
from the Costanoan Indians, also
known as Ohlone; they believed that
the land was under the care of the
people who used it and lived on it.
On May 15, 1969, known also as
Bloody Thursday, 5,000 people gathered
and marched to the steps of
Sproul Hall. They also confronted the
police, erecting a fence around the
park. Mayor Johnson called for martial
law and Governor Reagan activated
the National Guard. Eventually buckshot
was fired; 150 people were
wounded, 40 were hospitalized, one
became blind and James Rector was
killed.
The battles lasted a week. Eventually
people put flowers in the guns, and
peace came back. People’s Park went
on. People’s Park was well known
around the world as a people’s victory
and a successful Commons.
The park was neglected by the University,
but it grew more beautiful as
the people worked. "Everyone gets a
blister” was the park’s motto, posted
on a mural outside. Over the years, as
Berkeley grew to be exorbitantly
expensive, artists and activists left, so
the park was neglected and some
drugs dealers moved in. Nevertheless
the garden continued to grow, sheltering
many bird species, and while the
University liked to call it a “crime
scene,” there was apparently much less
crime there than in the 20 blocks
around that area.
Recently the University decided one
more time to grow student housing.
On August 22, 2022 they came with
Caterpillars and started butchering all
the remaining plants — redwoods,
palm trees and rose bushes — and
destroying gardens. The park looked
terrible with parts of trunks thrown
everywhere.
They said they are building 1,100
apartment for students and some for
community members, and that 60% of
the park will remain and be memorialized,
as they will abide by the landmark
designation. The Park Defense
has challenged the University in courts
for its failure to have an adequate environmental
report. For now, activists
got the courts to place an injunction
on any construction until November.
They would like to see the University
consider other alternatives.
Activists fear that the university will
wait for a time when no one is paying
attention to continue their sinister
business. While 48,000 students,
researchers, and staff are on strike at
the University of California, the cost of
living seems to be more of an issue to
them than People's Park, even though
climate change is so forward in the
consciousness at this time. Student
classes are disturbed by the strike, says
the Daily Californian.
It seems that the actions of the UC
system indicate an overall lack of
respect and understanding for nature,
the community it serves and their
workers. This is a deplorable way to
administer a university.
Michael Delacour is one of many
organizers who conceived, built
and fought for the People's Park
in Berkeley, California. The
above picture is from 1969.
׉	 7cassandra://6OSTOY7Xh3wnctIGiii3mfiEAGHRBofSeylqaV-ev2UW` dsFז0?HQ|׉E+DECEMBER 30, 2022
ARTS + CULTURE
Art intel presents international
Native artist Inty Muenala. He has
traveled the world and has landed on
the shores of Ann Arbor. I was wandering
the Briarwood Mall and lo and
behold, right before me was a very
colorful shop named Natives written
in a unique way NTVES. I, as a Native
Canadian from the Kaska Dene Tribe,
was in fact shocked to see this store.
We tribal people are so underrepresented
in the mainstream.
I personally have known Muenala
for years as a vendor for his artwork at
the Ann Arbor Pow Wow. As a native
dancer I always had people come up
to me after the fact saying, “When is
the Ann Arbor Pow Wow going to be
held?” Sadly I would tell them it was
now in fact over and to look for it the
next year. But now I can also tell them
NTVES is here and we all hope to stay.
NTVES was created by Inty Muenala
and his wife Lizbeth Conejo Kawaii.
Muenala comes from the Kichwa tribe
of South America Ecuador in the
Otavalo region; his tribe honors the
Condor, a bird of greatness representing
liberty, love and protection. He
has has been making art for 25 years.
He was educated in the capital of
wonderful
His beautiful wife helps create the
jackets
and
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
Undercover art intel: Native American art store
opens in Ann Arbor
My last question was what the store
fashion
designs. His son is finishing up at his
university, studying international
marketing and business. He hopes to
join the family after graduation.
What is found in the new native
CINDY GERE
Groundcover vendor No. 279
Ecuador at the Central University of
Quito, and he was also educated in
New York in 2002 at the Art Students
League.
Muenala’s art reflects the web of life
and natural native spirituality of the
ages before 1492. His colors blast on
the canvas and create vibrant images
that tell stories of native life. Muenala
has traveled across continents to display
his works in France, Russia, Italy,
Canada, the United States and his
home lands of Quidore.
I asked him what made him come
to Ann Arbor. He talked about how
the lakes and water reflect his home
village back in Ecuador. He loves the
lush trees here as well.
store? Wonderful paintings and
native-made clothing from Lizbeth.
There are wonderful sculpted pipes,
beadworks and blankets. Other items
are sage dreamcatchers and, of
course, Muenala’s paintings. My personal
favorites are the shields, jackets,
blankets and the wolf pipe in the
image shown below — all reflect my
Wolf Clan. My clan of wolf represents
family, loyalty and warriorship.
Muenala can also be seen with his
artworks at the Ann Arbor Art Fair in
July and the Dance for Mother Earth
Pow Wow. The Pow Wow will be held
this year Saturday, March 25 and
Sunday, March 26, 2023.
was about — besides just bringing
Native American culture to every
American home. He replied, “Where
there is no representation other than
reservations and online, I want to
bring together the sacred part of our
native ways and strength, with the
web of life — unity of all — and show
off the native tribes of the Americas to
the world.”
Native Americans are very important
to the original cultures of the
Americas. My tribe is Kaska Dene
from the Yukon, Canada. Seeing the
store brings faith back into my world
and I hope and pray yours. Let us all
join together in the sacred ways of this
shop and bring back the unity of the
United States of America because that
was the original dream of the Indian
soul.
Yours truly, Kung Fu Panda aka
Kulema, Fire Woman.
NTVES.COM
FACEBOOK.COM/NTVES2020/
INSTAGRAM: @NTVES.CO
7
Conquer the Cold
is Back!
The challenge returns
January 10–February 10, 2023!
Register now at
CommuteandWin.org
#OwnWinter
@getdowntown
The getDowntown Program provides commuting programs and services to
downtown Ann Arbor employees and employers. A program of TheRide,
getDowntown's partners include the City of Ann Arbor and the Ann Arbor DDA.
Top and bottom left: Decorative pipes and a wolf shield available for
purchase at NTVES. Bottom right: Muenela's largest pieces, including
"Water is life, Sacred Protector" are on display throughout the store.
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idsFז0?HQנdsFז0?HQ 9ׁH "mailto:contact@groundcovernews.comׁׁЈ׉EZ8
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
WOMEN'S RIGHTS
DECEMBER 30, 2022
Women, life, freedom: What you should know about
Iran's protest
September 16, 2022, is a day that will
forever be remembered in Iranian history.
On this day, the religious morality
police in the country of Iran killed an
innocent woman by the name of Mahsa
Amini. She was only 22 years old.
In present day Iran, the government
in power is an strict Islamic regime,
forcing authoritarian religious laws on
its citizens. One of these laws is forcing
all women to wear a hijab in public.
On September 13, Mahsa was out
walking with her hijab only partially
covering her hair. The morality police
took her into custody and three days
later, she was dead. The government
tried to claim that her death was caused
by pre-existing medical issues, but her
family vehemently denied this, saying
that Mahsa was completely healthy and
did not have any medical conditions.
Since her death, protests have shot up
all over the country as the Iranian
public was enraged after hearing the
news of her death. These protests have
continued across Iran and have gained
traction all around the world. In
response,
the
government
has
responded with cruel and extreme
actions, from arresting thousands of
protesters, to detaining political prisoners
for long periods of time, and in
RYAN YOUNESSI
U-M student contributor
many cases executing some of them.
Even with the horrifying actions taken
by the government, the protests have
not been quelled.
Iranians have responded to the situation
in a multitude of ways. Individuals
of all ages have marched demanding
that change take place in the country.
The majority of these protesters are
young people, sometimes as young as
14 or 15 years old. Some protests have
even gone to the extent of shutting
down different sectors of the economy,
with workers boycotting and not showing
up to work, even in critical areas of
the economy such as oil and steel. The
protests have significantly differed from
ones in past years. First, instead of calling
for reforms in the law or
modernization of the government
system, protesters are demanding a
total upheaval of the regime and the
ushering in of a new government.
Second, the protests do not seem to
have a singular figure representing the
movement. Third, the individuals participating
in the protests are from
regions all over Iran and even in the
heavily religious areas of Mashhad and
Qom. This phenomenon has never
happened in the past.
Additionally, there has been a
resounding reaction from the international
community. From foreign leaders
all across the world, including
figures like President Joe Biden, British
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and French
President Emanuel Macron, to the
European Union and United Nations, a
response like this has not been witnessed.
People all over the world have
been protesting in big cities and even in
their local communities. Just in the past
two months, six different protests have
taken place in the city of Ann Arbor. The
protests have not stopped yet, and it is
the hope of many that some long overdue
change will take place in Iran.
Since the start of the protests, the Iranian
government has responded with
violence and condemnation. Due to
Join the Conversation!
Unarmed Crisis Response Team Public Forum
In April 2021, the Ann Arbor City Council passed Resolution R-21-129 to develop an unarmed crisis
response team. The City of Ann Arbor asked Public Sector Consultants, a nonpartisan research and
consulting firm, to gather feedback from community members about the best way to create a team
of unarmed social and human services professionals to respond to crisis and public safety calls in
the city.
Join the conversation at one of the upcoming public forums!
Monday, January 9
1:00 PM
Downtown Ann Arbor
District Library
343 S. Fifth Avenue
Multipurpose room—
basement
Thursday, January 12
6:00 PM
Pittsfield Ann Arbor
District Library Branch
2359 Oak Valley Drive
Program room
Thursday, January 19
6:00 PM
Virtual via Zoom
https://pscinc.co/discuss
Meeting ID: 859 4501 3079
Passcode: 090446
censorship of the government, it is not
known the exact number of individuals
who have been arrested or killed, but
outside groups believe that over 15,000
people have been arrested, and several
hundred people have been killed. The
government has tried to claim that
Western nations instigated the protests
in the nation and that they are behind
the protests, but this is simply not true.
With the government in control of all
media and the internet, they have used
state-run television to provide misinformation
to the Iranian public about
the protests; they also shut down the
internet, disconnecting social media
apps like WhatsApp, Instagram and
Telegram to stop Iranians from communicating
with one another and the
outside world.
Even with the horrible actions taken
by the government, the Iranian people
have refused to give up. With protests
still going on, there is no sign of them
stopping. The new generation of Iranians
are ready for a different Iran than
they grew up in and there is no stopping
them from achieving their goal. There
is a long fight ahead but the international
community must coalesce
see IRAN next page 
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PUZZLES
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
9
Groundcover Vendor Code
While Groundcover is a non-profit,
and paper vendors are self-employed
contractors, we still have
expectations of how vendors should
conduct themselves while selling
and representing the paper.
The following is our Vendor Code
of Conduct, which every vendor
reads and signs before receiving a
badge and papers. We request that
if you discover a vendor violating any
tenets of the Code, please contact
us and provide as many details as
possible. Our paper and our vendors
should be positively impacting our
County.
• Groundcover will be distributed
for a voluntary donation. I agree not
to ask for more than the cover price
or solicit donations by any other
means.
• When selling Groundcover, I will
always have the current biweekly
issue of Groundcover available for
customer purchase.
• I agree not to sell additional
goods or products when selling the
paper or to panhandle, including
panhandling with only one paper or
selling past monthly issues.
• I will wear and display my badge
when selling papers and refrain
from wearing it or other Groundcover
gear when engaged in other
activities.
• I will only purchase the paper
from Groundcover Staff and will not
sell to or buy papers from other
Groundcover vendors, especially
vendors who have been suspended
or terminated.
• I agree to treat all customers,
staff, and other vendors respectfully.
I will not “hard sell,” threaten,
harass or pressure customers, staff,
or other vendors verbally or
physically.
• I will not sell Groundcover under
the influence of drugs or alcohol.
• I understand that I am not a legal
employee of Groundcover but a contracted
worker responsible for my
own well-being and income.
• I understand that my badge is
property of Groundcover and will not
deface it. I will present my badge
when purchasing the papers.
• I agree to stay off private property
when selling Groundcover.
• I understand to refrain from
selling on public buses, federal
property or stores unless there is
permission from the owner.
• I agree to stay at least one block
away from another vendor in downtown
areas. I will also abide by the
Vendor corner policy.
• I understand that Groundcover
strives to be a paper that covers
topics of homelessness and poverty
while providing sources of income
for the homeless. I will try to help in
this effort and spread the word.
If you would like to report a violation
of the Vendor Code please email
contact@groundcovernews.com or
fill out the contact form on our
website.
 IRAN from last page
around the Iranian people and support
them.
As the child of two Iranian immigrants,
I have heard firsthand the difficulties
and oppression that exists
with living in Iran. Family friends of
mine have had loved ones killed for
speaking out against the government.
The fight for basic human rights must
go on in Iran and cannot stop until real
change is made. I encourage you to get
involved.
Join protests, call your representatives
and urge them to take action, take
the time to hear and learn from Iranians
in your community. Finally, always
remember these three words: Zan,
Zendegi, Azadi (Woman, Life,
Freedom).
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idsFז0?HQ׉E10
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
VENDOR VOICES
Mother nature's last call
KEN PARKS
Groundcover vendor No. 490
When I was a child I knew the Earth
was flat because I went to the edge in
a dream, looked into the fog far below
and saw the mystery of the bottomless
void. We lived in Oregon and California
in my early childhood so I saw
the Pacific Ocean and the curve of the
horizon. The Earth is round. What a
great discovery.
Then I learned that China was on
the other side and started digging
holes in the ground. I learned that the
diameter of the earth is big enough
that it would take a lot of digging to
get to the red hot molten core at the
center — another void that was found
in my six-year-old mental capacity.
My sense of awe and curiosity grew
from there, as all children who love
dinosaurs well know.
Where does power come from?
Every sentient being — a being with
consciousness — has perceptions
and emotions that lead to actions
and, ultimately, results. Karma is the
word. Everyone has a karmic accumulation
of actions and results that
is carried throughout life until awareness
arises and we see the depths of
reality. There is no bottom.
The debate about the extent of
human influence upon geological
time is raging now. Is our awareness
and intelligence up to examining
what geological age we live in? Are we
in the Anthropocene? Alan Haber, the
Ann Arbor Commons guy, mentioned
that we may be in the Pyrocene (age
of fire). Whatever the case, our Paleolithic
heritage lives in indigenous culture
and our DNA.
I am back from a break after some
adventures in the alleys of my mind.
The downtown library has a large
magazine collection. I was fortunate
to find the November issue of Monthly
Review and a good article by Carles
Soriano entitled, “Anthropocene,
Capitalocene and Other ‘Cenes.”
Soriano is a geologist from the Geoscience
Barcelona Institute of the
Spanish National Research Council.
Monthly Review is an important
voice, as the editors have been studying,
writing and publishing about the
“metabolic rift” (the damage that
occurs due to capitalism’s extractive
nature) that Marx observed. As capitalism
evolved, the expropriation of
nature and the exploitation of labor
created great wealth known as capital
accumulation. It takes great mental
focus to understand this process of
commodifying everything, largely
because we are addicted to the consumerism
that is the global culture. It
drives excess wealth in the first world
and poverty in the third world, where
people are consequently fleeing to
the first world. Fortunately, the Editor’s
Note in November’s Monthly
Review is a good place to learn about
and focus on the basics of capitalism
and geological age.
I want to be in a group studying
MR’s article “Anthropocene, Capitalocene
and Other ‘Cenes.’” It is not
long but goes deep quickly with much
to meditate on and analyze. My past
articles usually refer to what I consider
essential reading, from “Black
Elk Speaks” to “Inflamed: Deep Healing
and the Anatomy of Injustice.”
Maybe we will come up with some
shared language. It’s a wonderful
thing to share a language that helps
you navigate reality. I am asking for
help in organizing collective study
that will enable us to come to some
conclusions on how to approach this
examinat ion
and
organize
ourselves.
Groundcover News has an important
relationship with the University
of Michigan and it is time for us to
take a fresh look at what we can do
together. My good karma connected
me with the 50th anniversary celebration
of the Native American Student
Association where I met some
brilliant minds fully embodied in
indigenous-centered life. What a
blessing to meet a professor there
from the School of Environment and
Sustainability, Kyle White, who is
aware of history and science as we
face our current situation.
I believe we can lighten the load of
individualism as we share in the
intellectual organizing work and get
our hands in the dirt. Every kind of
labor is precious and it is the commodification
of everything that distorts
our perception of reality. Human
beings and our labor power become
alienated when commodified. The
perception of self and others is a limiting
cognitive bias, which we can
heal into an experience of completeness.
Everything is interconnected;
solidarity includes all living beings
without exception.
When Mother Nature calls, it's best
to get the message and look forward
to the next step.
Boober Pink Castle EDM Club.
Boober update
KEVIN SPANGLER
Groundcover vendor No. 307
It has been a while since Boober
has put out an article. Where do
we start? We last left off getting a
new 3200 square foot warehouse.
That was interesting. I found out
what it was like to get into a five
year lease. We didn’t move in
because we were having to put a
garage door in to make the space
work for Boober. Then we started
learning about permits … time …
architects … We never moved in
and I went to the guy we signed a
lease with and said long-term this
agreement will not work and
offered $2,000 to buy the lease
out. He didn’t like this and said it
would cost a lot more to get out.
It was at that time I shook his
hand and said I’ll figure it out.
That was July 1. We decided to
throw a rave because my friend
has DJ equipment. So we rallied
the troops on social media and
threw a rave on Sunday, July 3. We
had 100 people show up to the
new venue Pink Castle EDM Club.
We took the name from the previous
name; the space was previously
called Pink Castle Fabrics.
Well, we only operated for two
months. Towards the end we were
running an after-hours club,
2:30-7 a.m. It all ended when the
landlords found the whole parking
lot covered in chalk and they
checked the cameras including
the cameras inside. They said to
me, “You can’t do that.” Well, we
do what we do to try to make the
rent. Honestly it just barely made
the rent. But the experience was
worth it — the stories we created,
the fun we had. And we were able
to hang out which I have not done
in seven years. My friend and I
maintained sobriety through the
whole thing. In the end we were
let out of the five-year lease with
a better story that will be remembered
in many hearts.
Now, the Boober progress. We
started another business called
Action Jackson Electric Bicycle
Parts. We have invested our
money into parts for pedicabs
and electric bikes. Our next step
is setting up an Amazon account.
Been working on these projects
for a while and collecting many
parts.
Oh yeah, we bought a party bus
for the Pink Castle but it now
serves as storage for all our parts.
We also started a nonprofit called
The Royal Road and will be creating
a cultural center that teaches
how to forgive, reprogram our
brains and create goals.
We have increased our fleet
with eight new carriages that fit
four to six people. We have also
expanded the fleet to 25 pedicabs;
some are projects to resell
and learn how to fabricate different
products.
We have expanded to an old
auto shop with four garage doors.
We’ve patched the roof, put insulation
in and currently we are
grinding the floor and basically
freshening up the whole place to
store all of our equipment and
have space to work on projects.
We have two new sponsors, JARS
cannabis and Spa Daze.
We now have accomplished
one of our goals of massages once
a week.
Oh, one more thing. I got my
license to drive again after 20
years so we can operate pedicabs
in major cities. All in all, we have
been enjoying this time on Earth
and will continue to spread the
message of forgiveness.
DECEMBER 30, 2022
-
׉	 7cassandra://Ao57VTeB65A0UfomiplVUBoJRs_hhUBPOGE_mMr1ojILl` dsFז0?HQ׉EmDECEMBER 30, 2022
POETRY
To my Lil Boodaboo
TERESA BASHAM
Groundcover vendor No. 570
There comez a time,
In your life,
To where ya don't want drama around,
You want peace of mind,
Don't wanna be on shaky ground,
Don't wanna be a tool of any kind,
Don't wanna be lied to,
Don't need that knife
Going through your heart,
Don't wanna fall apart.
You do wanna be next to
One you wanna love,
The one you dream of,
The one you fell in love,
Somehow you'll know,
That cha don't wanna go,
There'll be somethang in your heart,
That will let you know,
You never wanna be apart.
To my Lil Boodaboo
RON PAGERESKI
Groundcover contributor
My poetry is bad I must admit.
On the open mike, I'm not a hit.
But bide your time if you've got a while
I'll do my best to make you smile.
Inspired to write by one I met
who later said I made her fret.
She thinks I'm weird, my mind all bubbly
but I'm as harmless as a Teletubby.
She looks down on me, I fault her not,
a humble life is all I've got.
Where she went is all a blur,
I still long to be friends with her.
But social class is her life's story
I fall quite short in every category.
I'd love to take her out, eat fried chickens
she looks down on me like slim pickens.
In her mind my face does reside,
reminding her of a horse's backside.
I said, let's go out and have a beer,
she told me, take a long walk on a short pier.
I know her heart I'll never win,
I thought I told her I don't know how to swim?
My thoughts of her are pure, not kinky,
But, I'm as virtuous as Tinky Winky
I'll never get a letter or call on the phone,
I guess I'll eat some fried chicken alone.
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
Swimming with chickens
11
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
FOOD
Garbanzo bean and
vegetable soup
ELIZABETH BAUMAN
Groundcover contributor
Ingredients:
1 tbsp olive oil
2 stalks celery, diced
1 carrot, diced
1 medium yellow onion, diced
1 cup sliced Bella mushrooms (I also
use white)
2 tbsp minced garlic
2 tbsp tomato paste
14.5 oz. can fire-roasted diced
tomatoes
32 oz. vegetable broth
15 oz. can of garbanzo beans, rinsed
and drained
1 small zucchini, sliced
¼ cup parsley
Salt and pepper to taste
Directions:
Using a heavy pot, heat oil on
medium heat. Add celery, carrot and
DECEMBER 30, 2022
onion and sauté for five to six minutes
(onions should become translucent).
Add the mushrooms, garlic, tomato
paste and tomatoes and sauté for
another 3 minutes. Turn the heat to
low and add the vegetable broth, beans
and zucchini. Simmer for 20 to 25
minutes. Add the parsley, salt and
pepper and simmer for a few more
minutes. Serve hot.
So perfect on a good winter day!
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Willam St.
AADL
The Groundcover office is located in the basement
of Bethlehem United Church of Christ
(423 S 4th Ave, downtown Ann Arbor)
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Fifth St.
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,December 23, 2022ds?UŎ|