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$
Surviving seven degrees. page 5
FEBRUARY 7, 2025 | VOLUME 16 | ISSUE 4
YOUR PURCHASE BENEFITS THE VENDORS.
PLEASE BUY ONLY FROM BADGED VENDORS.
MEET YOUR
VENDOR:
SHELLEY
DENEVE
PAGE 3
GROUNDCOVER
NEWS AND SOLUTIONS FROM THE GROUND UP | WASHTENAW COUNTY, MICH.
Where I slept last
night.
Marie's tent, which will be
displaced by Ypsilanti's
Water Street remeadiation
project. Read more on
page 4. Photo submitted.
THIS PAPER WAS BOUGHT FROM
• Proposal: Housing-development
accelerator
• Charbonneau: Open your eyes to
housing inequity. PAGE 4
@groundcovernews, include vendor name and vendor #
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
GROUNDCOVER
GROUNDCOVER STAFF
On February 3, the first day of
Groundcover’s annual Vendor Appreciation
Week, vendors, staff, volunteers
and board members gathered in
Ann Arbor’s Council Chambers for the
City Council meeting. The first item on
the agenda was a special proclamation.
Mayor Christopher Taylor called the
Groundcover representatives to the
podium and read the following
message:
“WHEREAS, Groundcover News is a
street newspaper that provides quality
news and features to the Ann Arbor
community since July 2010; and
WHEREAS, Groundcover News, a
501(c)(3), empowers and supports
low-income community members to
make the transition from homeless to
housed and from jobless to employed;
and
WHEREAS, Groundcover News is a
member of the International Network
of Street Papers that believes everyone,
everywhere deserves freedom, community,
home, dignity, and hope; and
WHEREAS, Groundcover News provides
training and support for vendors
to increase their skills and ability to
navigate challenges; and
WHEREAS, Groundcover News and
vendors provide an invitation to build
meaningful relationships in the community;
and
WHEREAS,
stories in Groundcover
News have been inspiring and transformational
to vendors and community
members who read the paper; and
WHEREAS, Groundcover News and
vendors add to the quality of life in the
Ann Arbor and Washtenaw County
community; and
WHEREAS, the week of February 2,
2025, is observed as Groundcover News
Vendor Appreciation Week.
NOW, THEREFORE, I, Christopher
Taylor, Mayor of Ann Arbor, Michigan,
do hereby proclaim the week of February
2, 2025, as Groundcover Vendor
Appreciation Week. I call upon Groundcover
News, staff, volunteers, and the
Ann Arbor community to join us in this
celebration and to greet and support
Groundcover Vendors!”
After handshakes and remarks from
vendors Joe Woods and Terri Demar,
the Groundcover crew went on their
way — some to continue paper sales
downtown and others to get some rest
to prepare for the festivities planned
for the week.
Thank you to Mayor Taylor and the
Council for recognizing the vendors
for their contributions to Ann Arbor
and the Washtenaw County
community.
FEBRUARY 7, 2025
City of A2 proclaims Vendor Appreciation Week '25
PROVIDING ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES FOR
SELF-DETERMINED INDIVIDUALS IMPACTED BY POVERTY,
PRODUCING A STREET NEWSPAPER THAT GIVES
A PLATFORM TO UNDERREPRESENTED VOICES IN WASHTENAW COUNTY,
PROMOTING AN ACTION TO BUILD A JUST, CARING AND
INCLUSIVE SOCIETY.
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
Michelle Lardie-Guzek — intern
ISSUE CONTRIBUTORS
D.A.
Elizabeth Bauman
Pedro Campos
Jim Clark
Amanda Gale
Heather Feather
Roberto Isla Caballero
Ken Parks
Scoop Stevens
PROOFREADERS
Susan Beckett
Elliot Cubit
GROUNDCOVER NEWS ADVERTISING RATES
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Dimensions (W x H in inches)
5 X 3 or 2.5 X 6.5
5 X 4
5 X 6.25
5 X 13 or 10.25 X 6.5
10.25 X 13
Zach Dortzbach
Matthew Rohlman
Steve Ross
Dillon Schweers
Anabel Sicko
Allison Wei
VOLUNTEERS
Jane Atkins
Jessi Averill
Sim Bose
Luiza Duarte Caetano
Jacob Fallman
Glenn Gates
Jonathan Glass
Bella Fernandez
Robert Klingler
Ari Ruczynski
Harrison Slutzky
Jack Weinberg
Mary Wisgerhof
Max Wisgerhof
Melanie Wenzel
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 a.m. - 3 p.m.
Phone: 734-263-2098
@groundcover
@groundcovernews
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Additional 20% discount for money saving coupons
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ON MY CORNER
MEET YOUR VENDOR
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
The coyote charges you $10K to
come to America
The coyote charges you $10
thousand to come to America
and later if you do something
here, the police report you to ICE.
The question is: what’s happening
with the American Constitution?
We
Shelley
DeNeve,
vendor No. 22
In one sentence, who are
you? Shelley Belly. I’m a compassionate,
caring person.
Where do you usually sell
Groundcover? Churches: Trinity
Lutheran, Zion Lutheran,
Church of the Good Shepherd,
Northside St. Aiden’s. Argus
Farm Stop on Packard on Friday
afternoons!
When and why did you start
selling Groundcover? September
2010. I’m vendor No. 22 out of
650+ vendors. (Only about 40-50
are active). I was recruited to
sell by the late Rissa Haynes.
What is one place in A2 that
feels like your own personal
sanctuary? Lily Park. Or the
pools of Ann Arbor!
What’s your life motto? Open
your eyes and ears to what’s
going on.
What advice would you give
to your younger self? Go with
your gut feeling.
What is your comfort food?
Just about any pasta dish.
If you were stranded on a
desert island and could only
bring 3 things, what would
they be? Water, food, matches.
If there was a theme song for
your life, what would it be?
“That’s the way love goes”
If you could travel anywhere,
where would you go? Hawaiian
islands!
What is the weirdest food
combo you swear by? Peanut
butter and onions or radishes.
What change would you like
to see in Washtenaw County?
More affordable housing.
have
Latino
representatives in the high institutions
of United States government,
like the Supreme Court
Justice Sonia Sotomayor and the
members
of Congress Bob
Menendez, Marco Rubio, Ted Cruz
and Marion Diaz-Balart. What are
these Latinos doing for the workers,
the humble people, the poor people,
who come to this country in search
of the American dream?
El coyote te cobra $10 mil por venir
a Estados Unidos y luego si haces
ROBERTO ISLA CABALLERO
Groundcover vendor No. 347
algo aquí, la policía te denuncia
ante ICE. Tenemos representantes
latinos en las altas instituciones del
gobierno de los Estados Unidos de
América, como La Jueza Sonia
Sotomayor, y los miembros del Congreso,
Bob Menendez, Marco Rubio,
Ted Cruz, y Mario Díaz-Balart. Que
hacen Los Latinos con las personas
trabajadoras, las personas humildes,
las personas pobres, que vienen
a ese país en búsqueda del sueño
americano?
3
12 steps of love and commitment
HEATHER FEATHER
Groundcover vendor No. 45
1. We admit we are two hearts
united in love. Together we recognize
that our love is the foundation
of our relationship, and we
embrace each other’s imperfections
as we build a shared life.
2. We come to believe that our
love is a powerful force. We trust
in the strength of our bond, knowing
that together, we can overcome
anything life brings our way.
3. We make a decision to commit
fully to each other. With open
hearts, we choose to cherish one
another in all circumstances,
making love our priority.
4. We make a searching and fearless
love assessment. We reflect on
our past, the moments we’ve
shared, and the lessons we’ve
learned, always striving to grow
together.
5. We admit to each other the
truths of our hearts. We vow to be
open, honest and vulnerable with
each other, sharing our deepest
thoughts and feelings without fear.
6. We are entirely ready to let go
of the past and begin anew. With
full hearts, we release any lingering
doubts or regrets, embracing
this fresh chapter of our shared
story.
7. We humbly ask each other to
be our best selves. We encourage
each other to grow, to evolve and
to become the best versions of
ourselves, individually and as
partners.
8. We make a list of promises to
keep to each other. We promise to
support, honor, and love each
other, through every joy and challenge,
forever.
9. We make amends whenever
we faltered. When we stumble, we
will forgive each other and ourselves,
knowing that love is stronger
than any mistake.
10. We continue to nurture
our love, day by day. We pledge to
nurture our love, with patience,
understanding and gratitude for
every day we share.
11. We seek to deepen our
connection with each other.
Together, we will grow spiritually
and emotionally, never taking for
granted the beauty of the bond we
share.
12. Having experienced the
joy of true love, we will share our
light with the world. As we walk
this journey together, we will
spread kindness, compassion and
joy to others, knowing that our
love is a light that can illuminate
the world.
g	ˌ4g	ˌ4
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ˌ4׉E]4
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
HOMELESSNESS
FEBRUARY 7, 2025
City of Ypsilanti funds relocation of homeless
residents displaced by Water Street remediation
LINDSAY CALKA
Publisher
On January 17, Marie woke up with
a letter taped to her car. The letter was
from PATH (Washtenaw County's Projects
for Assistance in Transition from
Homelessness) informing her that her
tent was scheduled to be cleared from
the Water Street property on Friday,
January 31. In the letter PATH offered
help moving her campsite if she
wanted it.
Does this sound familiar? In a January
26, 2024 article, Groundcover News
reported on a threatened sweep of the
same site, the same campers, for the
same reason: remediation and redevelopment
of Water Street in downtown
Ypsilanti. Community response to this
threatened sweep resulted in an indefinite
delay. Council called off the scheduled
work until a better approach could
be formulated.
A year passed with no intervention,
and ironically the sweep was scheduled
for the second time in the last week of
January 2025 — the coldest week of the
year. So the Tuesday after the letter was
posted, January 21, 2025, concerned
community members attended the
Ypsilanti City Council meeting and
participated in public comment to urge
Council to call off the sweep, again.
Councilmember Amber Fellows
introduced a discussion regarding the
“Water Street Fence Repair and Tree
Removal.” In this discussion the City
employees argued against further
delays of the remediation work because
of time-sensitive funding and potential
ramifications from the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency. The Water
Street property is mostly contaminated
land that can not be formally occupied,
developed or used until all the contaminated
soil is removed and replaced.
The first step to this process was removing
trees and repairing fences, work
that could not be scheduled until
homeless residents were removed.
Council decided to delay the work by
two weeks and make an effort to problem-solve
with Washtenaw Camp Outreach
and the affected campers, get
more information on the scheduled
work, and research available City properties
for relocation.
What the public hears
Three days later, on January 24, Ypsilanti’s
communication department
published a release titled, “The City of
Ypsilanti is moving forward with the
Water Street Redevelopment Area.”
The press release outlined the funding
source for this project, which is a
combination of time-sensitive funds
from MDEC and HUD’s Economic
Development Initiative. The press
release continued with a timeline for
the work that would be done in 2025
and the funding sources for each of
these steps.
"This is a long-awaited project and
one of the city's last pieces of undeveloped
property. We are excited to leave
it better than we found it, redevelop it,
and return it to the city's tax rolls,
making it profitable for the City of Ypsilanti
and benefiting its residents," said
Mayor Nicole Brown in the release.
“This funding is crucial for the redevelopment
of the Water Street project,
as it provides us with the unprecedented
opportunity to address the contamination
on the property and prepare
it for future development. By excavating
and revitalizing this site, we are
removing environmental hazards and
paving the way for new opportunities,”
said Andrew Hellenga, City Manager of
the City of Ypsilanti.
The press release contained no referto
the potential
ence
delay or
displacement, signalling the threat of
the sweep was truly imminent.
Negotiating compensation
Friday, January 31, Councilmember
Steve Wilcoxen, Councilmember
Amber Fellows and City Manager
Andrew Hellenga met with Washtenaw
Camp Outreach members Jim Clark
and Sheri Wander; Country who lives
on Water Street; and KJ from Homelessness
Solidarity Network.
WCO presented demands from the
campers — which, in sum, was compensation
for the displacement from
their homes. The City representatives
claimed that they couldn’t do much
themselves, but offered to reach out to
PATH, Washtenaw County Commissioners
and staff, and even donate personal
items.
After the close of the meeting Wander
reflected, “They walked away with an
acknowledgement that they need to
take personal and institutional responsibility
for the situation we’re in."
Tuesday, February 4 — the scheduled
follow-up discussion during the
City Council meeting itself — arrived
see WATER ST next page 
"Where I Slept
Last Night"
by Kaleaf
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HOMELESSNESS
Surviving seven degrees
At the time of this writing, January
21, 2025, the outside temperature is
seven degrees fahrenheit. People
who have been sleeping outside are
now seeking emergency shelter in
the same way a drowning person
would seek a life preserver. Sometimes
that life preserver is a motel
stay. Motels provide shelter for especially
vulnerable people — elderly,
differently-abled, ill, marginalized
people or families. During seven
degree weather, motels and overnight
sheltering programs are critical to
saving lives.
Something people
experience
when unsheltered is being constantly
in “fight or flight” mode because
sleeping outside or in a homeless
shelter is simply dangerous. Also the
panic of not knowing where you’re
going to sleep keeps you in a “highalert”
state which can persist even
after finding safe shelter. In order for
“shelter” to be effective it must include
safety and solitude so a person can
enter “rest and digest” mode. Further,
people experiencing homelessness
who are using the sheltering system
have very little solitude. This wears
people down psychologically, making
the collective homeless community
environment stressful, hostile and
physically unsafe. Spending money
on alleviating the need for solitude
translates to a higher survival rate
beyond just shelter from the cold.
In the coldest of winter months,
members of Washtenaw Camp Outreach,
the non-profit Mission, and
other homeless solidarity organizations
operate a program called
Weather Amnesty, located in a house
of hospitality in Ann Arbor. Because
of the dangerously cold weather,
people who had been sleeping in
tents, in abandoned buildings or on
the street started showing up in
droves. Overcrowding in the county
shelter, the Delonis Center, had been
an issue for a few weeks now and the
safety of the shelter system is failing.
Furthermore, the Housing Access of
Washtenaw County (HAWC) was
Manager, who was able to secure ten
more rooms for the next day.
Hall said this about her role: “It is my
JIM CLARK
Groundcover vendor No. 139
going to close on Tuesday the 21st
and Wednesday the 22nd due to the
extreme cold. HAWC is the organization
that is charged with referring our
unsheltered citizens to the agencies
and information that can help. Vocal
members of the Continuum of Care
were able to overturn the decision
and HAWC opened back up on
Wednesday.
Fortunately, amidst the weather
emergency, a few people were in the
right place, at the right time, and had
the same idea.
At about 3 p.m. on Monday Jan. 20,
I was asked by the WCO team to reach
out to Washtenaw County Commissioner
Annie Sommerville to see if
there was help available from the
county. As she checked with her team,
she mentioned that Dan Kelly, director
of the Delonis Center, could help
with sheltering as well. The Shelter
Association did not have an option for
immediate motel shelter, but Kelly
was able to lift trespass notices so that
people could access Delonis’s emergency
overnight shelter services. (Clients
at the Delonis Center who
commit egregious violations of the
rules are banned for a certain amount
of time. Kelly temporarily exempted
them from trespass in order to accommodate
their survival.)
Shortly after that, Commissioner
Sommerville replied. With Washtenaw
County funds, she secured ten
motel rooms. She then put me in
touch with Ashley Hall, the Washtenaw
County Board of Commissioners
Operations and Communications
responsibility to help with Commissioner
properties, and the top priority
for the Board of Commissioners is
housing and homelessness. Commissioner
Somerville believes it is critical
that the most vulnerable members of
our community have a safe, warm and
secure place to stay throughout the
year, but especially during weather
emergencies. I am glad that I was able
to work with you to help identify
options for emergency sheltering.”
In the late afternoon of the 20th,
WCO and Weather Amnesty teams
began picking people up from the
daytime warming centers and from
their tents and taking them to safety.
To the county officials Commissioner
Sommerville, Mr. Kelly and
Manager Hall — thank you for stepping
up!
To the WCO/Weather Amnesty
teams — make no mistake, you are
heroes. Not just to me, but to all of us
housed and unhoused members of
our street community. Props to you
all.
Special thanks to KJ, Dax and CP for
transportation support and food provision,
to Sienna and Eric of Weather
Amnesty who held down the fort at
Purple House while we shuttled
people to safety and to CL and AG for
keeping track of it all! Also thank you
to the staff at the Extended Stay America
and Days Inn for their considerate
and professional service.
Barabara Laster-Bell, concierge at
the Days Inn, mentioned that it was
“heartening and encouraging to see a
community of people come together
to save their neighbors from the cold.”
Finally a shout-out to the allied
activist communities of Shelter Now
and the Washtenaw General Defense
Committee. Thank you for your continued
work in housing and social justice
and championing the mission to
end homelessness at its source.
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
5
 WATER ST from last page
quickly. This time there was more
community support; activists spoke
and waited the long two hours through
other items on the agenda.
After disappointing repetition of the
information shared at the January 21
and January 31 meetings, to the surprise
of the attendees, Councilmember
Patrick McClean moved to allocate
$7,500 from unspent staff salaries for
relocation assistance costs for the
homeless residents of Water Street —
and the motion unanimously passed
after clarifying discussion. Funds will
be spent at discretion of the City Manager,
informed by the needs of the current
residents of Water Street.
Examples of possible relocation costs
would be replacement camping supplies,
hotel stays or storage fees.
What remains unsettled can be summarized
in the title of the previous
Groundcover report on this story: “Go
where?” It is illegal to camp without
permission on private property, and it
is illegal to sleep overnight in public
parks and other public land. Especially
during the spring, summer and
fall seasons, when there are no shelter
options in Ypsilanti — homeless residents
have nowhere to go.
The $7,500 is an emergency allocation.
Considering the January 7 resolution
towards establishing a
permanent shelter in the City, and the
February 4 motion tasking the planning
commission to research public
land for safe tenting, Council seems to
be shifting its priorities towards housing
and shelter and the well-being of
its constituents.
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6
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
WHERE I SLEPT
How did you sleep last night?
When I was first homeless in Ann
Arbor in 2018, I did not realize it
because I had so many safe spots. I
was a journeyman union painter in
Ypsilanti, in the Ypsitucky world, from
1977 to 1981. I discovered the kagyu
Tibetan Buddhist Center in January
1980 and quickly became a practitioner.
The meditation on compassion
became a life focus. The People’s Food
Co-op in Ann Arbor was an important
community from day one.
I was still based in Detroit, sharing a
home and helping raise four kids. I
also shared a two bedroom in Ypsi
with one of my painter friends. I soon
had a room in the Buddhist Center so
I had three homes at once. As I
explored Ann Arbor in 2018, two
garages and the YMCA quickly became
kinds of homes. Mercy House, the
Breakfast Church (St. Andrew’s Episcopal
Church) and Delonis became
backup spots. As Peggy at Mercy
House put it, being homeless would
not be so bad if you didn’t need to
sleep.There is so much to do in Ann
Arbor that homeless folk disappear
during wakeful hours.
If you need to sleep homeless you
are in trouble; if you have no secure
lodging your choice will be the park or
the alley. You may search a wooded
area for a spot. If you are handy you
can put up a tent, build a lean-to or
sleep in the open. Hopefully you have
a sleeping bag or two. You learn to be
a camper.
In my experience, how well you
sleep is more important than where
you sleep. A good night’s sleep is a
treasure of energy. The relationship of
location and quality is complex. For
over three years, I’ve had an “efficiency
apartment” in a location where it’s difficult
to make a home. Avalon Housing,
who runs it, is lost in a bureaucratic
quagmire and, in all honesty, I must
say that I don’t get a great night’s sleep
there.
In my memory, the best sleep I experienced
was in West Park and the
KEN PARKS
Groundcover vendor No. 490
adjacent woods behind Miller and
Fountain. I had a welcoming tree as a
companion. Also excellent was most
of the sleep on a futon in a garage loft
on Third Street.
It becomes obvious that housed or
unhoused is not the decisive factor
you might think. It's more like where
are you at home in your body. Sleeping
near the earth may be more important
than a legal roof over your head. Sometimes
homeless people sleep better
than housed people. The best literature
on this is an article by Christopher
Ellis in the Nov. 15, 2022, Groundcover
titled “Housed, unhoused or
homeless?”
Reality is never what you think it is,
as most of us discover to our dismay
when we realize that our expectations
may have little to do with the outcomes
of our actions. The socialization
process creates many taboos and illusions
that reside in our sub- and
unconscious, as Freud and others
have shown. I think Ernest Becker has
done good anthropological science in
looking at Homo sapiens' increasing
propensity for evil and the cultural
need to be or worship heroes who
have defeated death in battle or mastered
the key to eternal life. Shamans
become priests as bureaucracy corrupts
our natural power into opportunistic
power.
A culture which promotes belief in
the seen world but ignores the unseen
is not able to experience the
completeness of reality. Data are helpful
in the proper context, but without
it they’re worthless. I recommend two
of Becker’s books. “The Denial of
Death” is a landmark book of the 1970s
and his final book “Escape From Evil”
is a great companion book to his
search for a science of Homo sapiens.
His quest to analyze and critique the
large amount of anthropological and
archaeological data is amazing. His
intellectual work brings art and science
together for a creative view of our
evolution and history over the past
estimated 300,000 years.
Our awareness of death is largely
repressed through cultural norms that
feed on our desire to continue the experience
of this body as if there is no end
in sight. We are now struggling with the
extremes of eternalism and nihilism;
Buddhism proposes the Middle Path
which avoids those extremes. The view
of a permanent soul as a separate entity
captures many Christians, Muslims
and other theists. What is it separate
from? If the answer is the highest and
most powerful God, what does it mean
to be a believer? If sin is separation, is
this separate soul an illusion? Is there
an all good expanse of primordial
purity that is not separate but yet our
true nature.
These are the issues that mindfulness
training may resolve. When you
observe your breath you will come to
the question: “Who is the observer?”
When you observe your state of mind,
what is the nature of the observer to the
observed? We know from physics that
Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle
shows that the act of observation influences
the experiment. Therefore you
cannot know the precise location and
velocity of a particle at the same time.
You must choose one or the other.
In meditation, resting at ease in the
natural state is difficult largely due to
our habit of self and other projections.
Look for a teacher who is at ease with
observing the observer and can help
you reach a single-minded focus on
the experience of a calm and clear
mind. The karma kagyu Tibetan Buddhist
meditation masters have been
the most helpful for me. Christian
believers like the Berrigan brothers,Thomas
Merton and Martin Luther
King are important examples of Jesus
as a living presence and guide to a life
of truth in love. As Dion Fortune from
the Fraternity of Inner Light taught,
“Love is the Law.”
Facing reality is the task for every
Homo sapien. Cultivate your inner
confidence that we can do this together.
You must do it yourself but you don’t
do it alone. Tune in to earth, water and
sky. You will sleep well surrounded by
all the holy beings of your creative
imagination which invites them into
your dreams.
FEBRUARY 7, 2025
׉	 7cassandra://HcsBa8ra9X59JIwLMmmhHSyeKG3S1pcNbhVsvoJA34UUq` g	ˌ4׉EFEBRUARY 7, 2025
WHERE I SLEPT
Sleeping in the Lion's Den
PEDRO CAMPOS
Groundcover vendor No. 652
It was past 11 p.m., on January 23,
2025, at the Delonis Center on 312 E.
Huron in Ann Arbor. After playing
jokes trying to humiliate me, in public,
she said, “You’re free to go…” Go outside
in the cold, she meant, 10 degrees
Fahrenheit.
This was the manager known to
harass honest people, targeting those
who question her evident incompetence.
She banned me for going outside
to smoke weed, a medicine
according to state law. In a place where
everyone smokes everything, everywhere,
at any time — even methamphetamine
and crack on a daily basis,
in the bathrooms and smoking rooms,
she decided to leave her little cell and
pretend she cares. So she kicked me
out to discipline me for my behavior,
trespassing me for three days.
Disoriented, I left with no money or
place to go, without a jacket or a blanket.
And as I rumbled up on Huron
Street, I stopped at the Fire Station,
where they have an emergency button
that should work 24/7. Nobody
answered.
I can’t say that the Police of Ann
Arbor are friendly to the homeless.
They are not. I can’t even say it’s safe
there. I have been harassed by a couple
of criminal police officers there once,
and they can get violent. Everyone
knows. But when I saw a kid inside the
little room in between the doors that
access the building, the Ann Arbor
City Hall Police Department, I knew it
would be safer than the streets, and
warmer.
Living my life in Brazil, I have not
developed survival skills for this cold
Michigan winter. The "kid" inside the
vestibule, apparently a homeless man,
agreed to share his refuge with me. We
didn’t talk much. I checked the floor, it
was warm. I was so sad and tired. Thank
God I was able to rest protected from
the cold, and with the police cameras
watching us.
You gotta make the most of it. Streets
can get violent, and when you take violence
from shelter staff members who
you should be able to rely on; get no
assistance from the fire department;
nor the police who watch everything,
you find comfort and shelter from an
unknown man, a poor homeless
person like me, rich in the heart. There,
in the vestibule, I could lay my bones,
stretch my legs and warm my soul, not
like a sardine in a can surrounded by
all that disrespectful noise, violence
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
7
Pedro sitting in the Police Department vestibule, where he slept the
first night he was kicked out of the Delonis Center.
and thievery, people dealing and using
drugs, with nasty smells and bad attitudes.
In the silence I planned my next
steps; I even read my book.
Even if God didn't bless me with that
night's sleep, which I did deserve
because I work hard, and even if I had
to spend all night, again, walking
around lost in the cold, avoiding
tweakers and criminals, cops and
ambulances, like many times I did — it
would be totally worth it. Because the
fire that comes from inside of me, will
always burn strong enough to warm
myself and others.
I keep my dignity, and tired as I get,
I just sleep anywhere. As my uncle
Gustavo once said, “The rest of an
honest man.” That’s what keeps me
going, walking wherever I want, with
my head up, able to look people in the
eyes.
g	ˌ4g	ˌ4
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
TRUMP
Trump's second term as President
SCOOP STEVENS
Groundcover vendor No. 638
Now that I have had time to process
the fact that Americans have elected
Donald J. Trump as President again
and what this might mean for homelessness
in the United States, the conclusion
that I came to is that
everything will go wrong for Trump
and by the end of his presidency he
will wish that he had never run for
office again.
The racist real estate developer
Donald Trump will witness our nation
being fundamentally transformed
and none of this will be to his liking.
Martin Luther King said that the arc
of history leans towards justice. The
national reconstruction project that
began in 1865 will come to its fruition
during Trump’s second term as President
because, I believe, circumstances
will dictate a downsizing of
our empire. We’ll therefore get more
towards the republican form of government
that our founders intended.
Then we’ll concentrate on our own
national character.
The national reconstruction project
that began with the 13th, 14th and
15th amendments got off to a slow
start. After 50 years, in 1915, President
Woodrow Wilson was showing a Ku
Klux Klan film (The Birth of a Nation)
in the White House. The film is about
white people in the North and the
South having a conflict but now they
are reunited in the cause of white
supremacy. Reconstruction’s early
setbacks led the nation to become
involved in World War I which was a
prelude to World War II. Then came
the Cold War with Russia with no end
in sight for America’s entanglement in
wars that it really doesn’t need to be
involved in.
Did Reconstruction’s early failure
really lead to the United States
becoming involved in all these wars?
I believe that it did because these
were national amendments that were
meant to reconstruct the Nation.
When this didn’t happen it resulted in
a gilded age with great inequalities of
wealth and many evils including endless
wars to protect the interests of the
monied class.
This in turn caused increased homelessness.
The elderly homeless problem
was supposed to be solved by the
Social Security Act of 1935.
I have discovered that not having to
pay rent was the solution for my
homelessness.
I don’t make that
much money but I do not need that
much money because I do not have
to pay rent. Would rent-free living be
a solution for homelessness on a
larger scale? I believe that it would
because we really do not need a parasitical
landlord class oppressing us.
Now that I am old enough to collect
Social Security, I choose not to
because if I collect Social Security I
will have to give up my rent free HUDVash
(veterans program) housing
voucher and pay rent.
When white Americans finally
come to the realization that their fate
is tied into the well-being of their
Black neighbors, the final stage of
national reconstruction will have
arrived. I believe this will happen
during Trump’s second term as
President.
FEBRUARY 7, 2025
exp. 06/31/2025
׉	 7cassandra://EjjtiIOGGosLdSJhWOvIoPmaj_7MOeSTW0fNFGv_WTgM` g	ˌ4׉ExFEBRUARY 7, 2025
PUZZLES
Go Fish
Peter A. Collins
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 an issue more than 4 weeks
old.
• 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 or leave
positive review of a Vendor experience
please email contact@
groundcovernews.com or fill out
the contact form on our website.
Thank you!
ACROSS
1. Request for permission
5. Batter's posture
11. Keg attachment
14. Big name in heating and
cooling
15. Add to the payroll
16. Author Tarbell
17. A loose one might cause an
under-the-hood rattle
19. Fireplace fuel
20. Doofus
21. Surgical locations: Abbr.
22. Italian volcano
23. Noted Georgia memorial
26. "Come to My Window"
singer Etheridge
28. Atomizer sprays
29. Apple debut of 1998
30. With pluck
33. Autumn mo.
34. Bar request
36. Itsy bitsy
39. Name typed in to log on
40. Mineral (and an anagram of
29-Across)
41. Hawaiian "Tiny Bubbles"
singer
43. Nero, for one
46. Best Actress winner for
"Still Alice"
49. Pinnacle
50. Family member
51. Moose or mouse
54. Rain-___: bubble gum brand
55. 2003 Disney film (and an
activity done by looking inside
17-, 23-, 34-, and 55-Across)
57. "The Fresh Prince of
___-Air"
58. Give the cold shoulder
59. ___ buco (Italian entree)
60. Dismiss abruptly
61. Chewed like a beaver
62. Go to the mall
DOWN
1. G.I. fare
2. Family member
3. One from Zagreb, until 1991
4. Asinine
5. Glossy surfaces
6 "Tiny" Dickens boy
7. "___ With a View"
8. Prefix with science or surgery
9. Advertiser's target
10. Tolkien tree creature
11. Attack a la Don Quixote
12. Handsome god
13. Nonbeliever
18. Many charitable groups,
briefly
22. Online market for handmade
crafts
24. Enthusiastic
25. Egyptian flower?
26. Opposite of max
27. Broody music genre
31. Friend in France
32. Internet connection device
34. Employee safety agcy.
35. Vegas light, maybe
36. Screen component
37. ___ -friendly
38. Hear here!
39. Widely used operating
system
40. Some sheep
41. Two-unit home
42. Repetitive World Cup chant
44. Lamented
45. '70s video game
46. "Star Wars" villain
47. Italian granny
48. Create, as a scholarship
52. Recess retort
53. Figure-skating move
55. Newton filler
56. Rage
g	ˌ4g	ˌ4
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
HEALTH
Amanda's home remedies for a sore throat
Recently encountering a sore throat
SUFFERER while working on a project
other than what became this article,
gave me this idea. Why not share this
information with as many people as
possible via our Groundcover publication?
So “Here Goes” ...
“An apple a day keeps the doctor
away …” Most of us in the United States
have heard this old saying (let’s just
hope it’s not the problem-bringing
fruit Eve gave to Adam!) Obviously, the
idea is that we can do something
pro-active to stay healthy.
Here we are, mid-winter according
to our calendars, and we have sore
throats — possibly from cold air exposure
weakening our immunity, or perhaps
more often from all the germs we
likely encounter if we’re stuck indoors
too long. So, what can we do? Are there
natural remedies and obtainable over
the counter items that ACTUALLY
CAN PROVIDE RELIEF? Is it reasonable
to think that just perhaps even
some humble herbs or other simple
ingestibles might have actual potency
for health prevention and cures?
Legend from North American Pioneers
has it that boiled pine needles
cure colds (and scurvy), while Romans
paid taxes with anise and also made
cough drops from it! Some cultures
have indicated successful use of Duct
Tape for wart removal; and old farmers
were said to cure “sour humors” (and
scorpion and spider bites — OUCH!)
with oregano. While coconut oil is still
useful for curing acne, not all herbal
use requires the caution to not fall
asleep under an Elderberry tree in
mid-summer, if you wanted to avoid
disrupting the fairies' travels to their
Mid-Summer Feast and consequently
have them carry-you-off with them —
never to return!!
And not all home remedies’ purposes
must be as dramatic as warding-off
vampires (and infections) with
garlic, or as unusual as getting (the
vitamins within) golden raisins drunk
from juniper berries (used to make
gin) to bring about the anti-inflammatory
aspects that reduces swelling and
eases pain for arthritis sufferers.
Perhaps this journey for sore throat
RELIEF might not be as entertaining;
though ADVENTURE is yours FOR the
FINDING! HOWEVER, I can and will
herein seek to share what I have found,
to be TRULY VERY! RELIEVING, for
the pain of throat infection!
Of course we realize that anything
we can do to boost our overall immunity
is excellent for preventing infection
and disease for our whole body.
Beyond just a healthy diet and any
specifics per person for care for particular
physical conditions one might
have, our culture also has a general
AMANDA GALE
Groundcover vendor No. 573
Besides being a good preventive and
curative against sore throats, elderberry
also helps eliminate congestion
and coughs and is helpful against
infections in general. If you include
vitamin C with elderberries, this is
extra-helpful for health; just don’t
allow those fairies to carry you off to
their “place of no return!”
Healthy foods: Eating foods that are
awareness for getting sufficient rest
and exercise, consuming appropriate
vitamin intake and adequate daily
light exposure per day. Beyond this
however, what might we include to
PREVENT sore throats and physical illnesses?
What follows is my shared
experience and awareness for prevention
for throat infection. (I am placing
a * by the ones I find MOST EFFECTIVE,
RELIEVING or that I have used
the most).
BOOST IMMUNITY!
Probiotics: kind of the opposite of
antibiotics (which get your body to
produce more of its defenses against
the invading agent of illness, by introducing
a little more of the inflicting
agent — sometimes in another form).
Probiotics are a gift to your body of a
boost HEALTHY microorganisms.
Unhealthy microorganisms don’t like
to “hang around” the healthy ones; so
this is a GOOD strategy. The higher the
healthy microorganism count, the
BETTER you are fortifying your body’s
immunity.
Billions and billions of healthy
microorganisms are more helpful than
even just millions! A barrier to probiotics
can be the price; however, sometimes
if you have a pre-existing
medical condition, and you seek to
coordinate with your healthcare provider,
PERHAPS if a prescription is
written for it, there might be a way to
get it paid for other than out-of-pocket.
Otherwise, some other ways to obtain
at least some probiotic immune-boosting
is via eating yogurt and drinking
(usually herbal) teas that include probiotics.
Of course even a lower-amount
supplement of probiotics (which cost
less) might be more helpful than not
ever consuming any because of the
prohibitive financial cost of the capsules
that contain billions.
*Elderberry, *echinacea and *green
tea as brewed tea (or via supplement
or other forms): These teas are used
with success by everyday people with
great success for boosting immunity,
and herbalists concur these herbs
have immune-boosting aspects.
healthy in general is good; eating
foods targeted to what each person
needs to BUILD and KEEP their immunity,
is BEST.
*Walnuts: These are rich in Omega-3s
and thus provide powerful antioxidant
immune fortification.
*Hibiscus tea, *beets, *baby spinach:
Boost hemoglobin which helps iron,
and thus red blood cells, to increase.
Kale and *swiss chard and some particular
mushrooms: Help increase
platelet count.
Green, leafy vegetables like romaine
lettuce or celery: These are very
HEALTHY and contain vitamins.
*Powdered electrolyte mixes (to be
added to water): Salts and sugars your
body needs! When you feel your body
feeling weaker, drinking this will energize
you and improve your physical
energy and how your body feels overall.
This also can help relieve physical
weakness and tiredness, and you will
feel more hydrated and have more
physical energy after consuming it.
GARGLING
Keeping your throat as clean as possible
from infectious germs and other
harmful agents is a great preventive
measure. Though, as with other preventive
measures, gargling is also a
great curative for sore throats.
• *Water or *saltwater: Water to
rinse/cleanse throat and salt can help
heal throat wounds and reduce swelling,
though for sore throats it will be
somewhat worse at first, but will bring
RELIEF afterwards.
• *Peroxide (three parts water, one
part peroxide): Do NOT swallow the
peroxide, and DON’T give this to
young/unsupervised children.
• *Listerine (or off brand): disinfects.
Please note disinfecting
agents
shouldn’t be overused or can cause
throat irritation.
• Brushing teeth: Regular good oral
hygiene rids the mouth of “bad stuff”
that can infect. There are also even
tongue scrapers available nowadays!
• *Vinegar: This cleanses out germs
and also changes PH (acid) in your
throat, which aids against acid-consumption
and/or acid reflux sore
throats. Also, vinegar is a natural analgesic
— i.e. it numbs pain! Caution: it
does sting at first, however within seconds
it brings RELIEF!
• *Distilled water: In the microbiology
lab, one learns distilled water is
the PUREST water there is, being the
ONLY water that can be included on a
slide to not also view microorganisms
that were simply within the water! Distilled
water is SO GENTLE and REALLY
FEELS SOOTHING for an IRRITATED
THROAT; soup, bullion, Jello, and
more can also be prepped with this
water. (For drinking and/or gargling)
• *Aloe Barbadensis juice prepared
for consumption (NOT topical or other
forms of aloe): This is another REALLY
SOOTHING agent, for an irritated
throat. (For drinking and/or gargling)
CURATIVES
TEAS: Any tea that is soothing for
sore throat can be gargled and/or
drunk warm (most preferably) or cold/
room temp, with great success to rinse
the throat and also begin RELIEVING!
sore throat symptoms. Though various
herbal teas can qualify there is ONE
PARTICULAR TEA I recommend:
*Twinings (purple-box) black tea,
grown in the altitude and climate of
India’s Himalayas (its particular processing
probably is what makes it particularly
effective). I have not
experienced any other tea — including
ones specially formulated to ease
sore throat — to be as effective!
*STARCHY FOODS: Though a constant
diet of only this probably ISN’T!
healthy — i.e. lacking nutrients and
being bad for diabetics! If you have a
sore throat, starchy foods can be BEST
tolerated by your throat, and also
HELP TO RELIEVE symptoms and
also helps to reduce acid:
• Crackers with or without salt: Salt
can help disinfect and begin to reduce
swelling, though might not be tolerated
by an extremely irritated sore
throat.
• Potatoes, bread, biscuits and pancakes:
(Possibly without syrup if throat
is REALLY IRRITATED; possibly butter
use is OK.)
• Pasta with butter only: This isn’t as
soothing, however it isn’t irritating or
acid-producing, either.
• Chicken soup or bullion (with or
without noodles): Chicken broth has
an aspect that actually provides a light
congealing function, which therefore
coats your throat in a soothing way.
Additionally, the warmth and nutrition
from it also aids healing!
• Tomato soup mix (added to water):
Some of these can actually FEEL
soothing for a sore throat. However, if
the tomato aspect is TOO strong, it will
burn instead of feeling relieving.
see REMEDIES next page 
FEBRUARY 7, 2025
׉	 7cassandra://_n8IiI45OXxgDUGUx4_oyI0ThMNJvSdpC7PceGsEO94L2` g	ˌ4׉EFEBRUARY 7, 2025
POETRY
Slavery is not dead!
D.A.
Groundcover writer
These poetic verses were not written because I’m against any
human being. That’s what we are to me, human beings. Not a
collection of races or economic brackets. I am a humanist.
Slavery is not dead
It still exists
for people’s lives who are impoverished
Equal rights is just nonsense when it comes to them
Slavery is not dead
And has never ended
Slavery is not dead
It’s just more elusive
in the many forms and ways that it presently exists
Slavery is not dead
It comes in the form of policing systems,
laws, federal policies, health and human services,
Taxes, government, education, employment practices,
and so-called fair-housing policies
Slavery is not dead
Cause they still take our babies
and send them off, by paying strangers
Rather then their family members
to do as they please
Yeah!!!!!
Slavery is not dead
As we continue to experience their horrific dread
Breaking up siblings
Slavery is not dead
Look at what’s goin down in the White House
The former candidates for presidency
Slavery is not dead
Democracy is a “LIE”
Slavery is not dead
Had that been me
I’d been locked up in prison for
the rest of my natural life “YOU SEE”
Slavery is not dead
Poor folk are still punished, fined, penalized by laws
reflective of “PEONAGE and VAGRANCY”
Slavery is not dead
Don’t believe it, use common sense
Hence, hence
Trump, Vance …
and many others get away just like them …
Because of generational wealth, privilege
built off of the backs and hands of slaves
Slavery is not dead
No matter how you try to chalk it up or look at it
“SLAVERY IS NOT DEAD” !!!!!!
 REMEDIES from last page
*Jello/gelatin NOT made into Jello:
Simply with hot water added is VERY!
coating and SOOTHING for sore
throat. (I learned this years ago from
a pharmacy-tech when working for a
major drug store retailer!) Jello is fairly
inexpensive, and the flavors to select
from are YUMMY! Jello/gelatin with
warm water can also be gargled.
SORE THROAT SPRAY:
Such as
Chloraseptic or an off-brand. For
$9.99 it has seven pre-prepped, helpful
natural ingredients. These can
really help RELIEVE throat and mouth
pains. However, these need to be
re-applied somewhat frequently. Can
also be gargled.
OTHER LOZENGES:
• Sucrets: specially formulated for
throat relief
• Ricola: herbal, helpful, tasty and
refreshing
• Slippery Elm: soothes sore throat
• Vitamin C drops and/or cherry or
other flavored lozenges that DON’T
have menthol (which greatly irritates
throat)
GOLDENSEAL HERB: In ANY form
INSTANTLY relieves throat pain.
Goldenseal can be taken directly from
plants or a supplement, drunk as tea
or can be gargled. If picked directly
from “the wild” — be SURE you can
somehow CORRECTLY IDENTIFY
that it is this plant for sure. Goldenseal
can be grown in your garden.
*ICE CUBES: This might seem counterintuitive,
however, many times
COLD applied to sore throat, does
actually RELIEVE the pain. Can also
make aloe juice cubes, distilled water
cubes, black tea cubes, melt Ricola
lozenges and then freeze as cubes!
GINGER: In tea or root form or crystallized
drops. Ginger has anti-bacterial
aspects and is a natural
anti-inflammatory. Ginger RELIEVES
ALL types of physical pains. However,
it stings at first. Ginger in tea form can
be gargled.
*HEALING ENERGY VIBRATIONS/
PUZZLE SOLUTIONS
SOUND FREQUENCIES: Such as 432
hz (a "general healing," relaxing one),
741 hz (which removes toxins from
throat), or 192 hz (which offers almost
INSTANT! RELIEF for sore throat).
Additionally, some frequencies have
been set to a pleasant background of
classical music. Some also include
"binaural beat" vibrations, and there
are even some "spooky rife" frequencies
— for those who might like to
even SCARE! away their sore throats
(HA HA!) This may seem weird, though
it ACTUALLY WORKS! These can be
found via YouTube and other places
on the internet. All you have to do is
LISTEN and these work to create conditions
that create HEALTH and NOT
ILLNESS for your throat. (There are
other healing energy vibrations and
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
11
sound frequencies that WORK WELL
for other prevention and curing for
other maladies, also.) I believe this is
part of “the future” of medicine.
*PRAYER AND ANOINTING WITH
OIL: The Book of James mentions this
specifically (James 5.14-16). This is
the TIMELESS, preventive and curative,
for EVERYTHING sometimes
GOD EXACTLY wants to bring our
attention and approach, DIRECTLY to
HIM for the HEALING.
HOWEVER also, did you ever hear
about the one guy who was praying to
be RESCUED off an island, and he
therefore refused a helicopter, a boat,
and a long-rope to another island,
saying, “I’m praying to GOD for HIS
rescue of me,” and GOD answered
back, “Son, then WHY!? did you
REFUSE the helicopter, boat, and
long-rope I sent you!” Not to worry
GOD gives discernment to those who
REALLY SEEK HIM! It is also HELPFUL
to have a HEALING approach to
our LIVES and for those around us.
NSAIDS: I find *ALEVE (Naproxen
Sodium) MOST HELPFUL for me, for
MOST any type of physical pain —
including sore throat. However, many
people experience BEST RELIEF from
Ibuprofen, Tylenol, willow bark (aspirin),
Soledo and such. Some recent
research suggests possible overuse of
various NSAIDS can cause liver
damage and other maladies; therefore
use with caution and/or consult your
medical provider.
Returning to our “days of lore” from
the introduction … Once there were
some Vikings seeking to invade the
Scots. The Vikings thought they’d outsmart
the Scots by creeping-up on
them barefoot, so as to be really quiet.
However, the Vikings hadn’t counted-on
the milk thistles that were growing
in the fields surrounding the Scots,
and one instantly SCREAMED! When
he stepped-on one, thereby alerting
the Scots, who immediately successfully
fended-off the Vikings. We hope
however, to NOT have to make a mistake
such as the Vikings did.
If none of these remedies help
RELIEVE your sore throat and/or
AREN’T ACCESSIBLE for you — perhaps
you could be benefited from a
NICE, SKILLFUL throat specialist.
Surely, there are many around our
Washtenaw County area. Those with
persistent throat pains might wish for
example to check for any possible
other complications such as polyps or
other cancers.
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
FOOD
Valentine's peanut butter
Kiss cookies
ELIZABETH BAUMAN
Groundcover contributor
Ingredients:
1 ¾ cups flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
½ teaspoon salt
½ cup sugar
½ cup brown sugar
½ cup shortening
½ cup creamy peanut butter
1 egg
1 teaspoon vanilla
2 Tablespoons milk
48 chocolate Hershey’s Kisses
Directions:
Preheat the oven to 375 degrees.
In a large bowl mix flour, baking soda
and salt. Add remaining ingredients
until well combined. Chill dough for
one hour and then make into one inch
balls.
Bake on an ungreased baking sheet
for 12 minutes or until golden brown.
Remove from the oven and place a
chocolate Kiss in the middle of each
cookie. Cool on a cooling rack and
store in an airtight container.
A perfect treat for your Valentine!
FEBRUARY 7, 2025
$5 OFF
NATURAL FOODS MARKET
216 N. FOURTH AVENUE ANN ARBOR, MI
PHONE (734) 994 - 9174 • PEOPLESFOOD.COOP
ANY PURCHASE OF
$30 OR MORE
One coupon per transaction. Must present coupon at the time of
purchase. Coupon good for in-store only. No other discounts or coop
cards apply. Not valid for gift cards, case purchases, beer or wine.
OFFER
EXPIRES
3/6/2025
׉	 7cassandra://2eI-MPxG5ZftjGUBBZ6Zcde4br5uSaN1PnTUpg7QIA0*T` g	ˌ4׈Eg	ˌ4g	ˌ4
,February 7, 2025gˁDs_