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$
JANUARY 12, 2024 | VOLUME 15 | ISSUE 2
YOUR PURCHASE BENEFITS THE VENDORS.
PLEASE BUY ONLY FROM BADGED VENDORS.
Remembering Dr. Martin Luther
King's visit to Ann Arbor and Detroit.
Page 8
ASK YOUR
VENDOR:
EAMONN
OFOIGHIL
#531
WHAT DO YOU
LOOK FORWARD
TO IN 2024?
GROUNDCOVER
NEWS AND SOLUTIONS FROM THE GROUND UP | WASHTENAW COUNTY, MICH.
We are football
champions: Let's
dance to the drum
beat of victory. page 4
THIS PAPER WAS BOUGHT FROM
• Proposal: Housing-development
accelerator
Photo by Mike Jones
• Charbonneau: Open your eyes to
housing inequity. PAGE 4
@groundcovernews, include vendor name and vendor #
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2
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
GROUNDCOVER
JANUARY 12, 2024
save the date! two hyperlocal scenes together for one night only
Groundcover Geezer Happy Hour Fundraiser
@ Live Ann Arbor!
FRIDAY,
FEBRUARY
2ND
102 S. First Ave
6:30-9:00PM
NO COVER
music by Jive Colossus
Groundcover merchandise for purchase
T’onna Clemmons Art for auction
All proceeds go to Groundcover News
RSVP, share, + invite your community
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
Simone Masing — intern
ISSUE CONTRIBUTORS
Jane Atkins
Elizabeth Bauman
Suhita Chintalacharuvu
Cindy Gere
Mike Jones
Elizabeth "Lit" Kurtz
Joshua Lee
Eamonn Ofoighil
Ken Parks
Ashley Powell
Will Shakespeare
Denise Shearer
Scoop Stevens
GROUNDCOVER NEWS ADVERTISING RATES
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PROOFREADERS
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Anabel Sicko
VOLUNTEERS
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Jane Atkins
Luiza Duarte Caetano
Zachary Dortzbach
Glenn Gates
Alexandra Granberg
Robert Klingler
Ruben Mauricio
Emily Paras
Holden Pizzolato
Melanie Wenzel
Mary Wisgerhof
Max Wisgerhof
Emily Yao
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
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Additional 20% discount for money saving coupons
׉	 7cassandra://M-AtMggp-7pfonJD3HjvkwwMUXxs8JKDPJh-Z4mp7SUSf` e\aB2@̾׉E=JANUARY 12, 2024
ON MY CORNER
ASK YOUR VENDOR
What do you look
forward to in 2024?
I'm looking forward to my
music career.
— Eamonn Ofoighil, #531
Keeping my hopes high and
expectations low.
— Wayne Sparks, #615
To be at home in my body.
—Ken Parks, #490
To get a tricyle.
— Roberto Isla Caballero, #347
To buying a mini van; I want to
travel and sell street papers!
— Mike Jones, #113
Move into my apartment, stop
drinking, read more and go fishing
more! I got some ambitions.
— Mansel Williams, #96
Getting married before its too
late and getting a nice car.
— Juliano Sanchez, #174
The world not ending would be
nice.
— James Manning, #16
Mo' money, mo' money, mo'
money.
— Derek Allen #177
2024 Presidential Candidate
Ashley Powell lives in and loves
Michigan. She just turned legal
age to run for office August 30
this past summer, but she has
been registered to run with the
Federal Election Commission
since 2019. Ashley has several
things she's hoping to rally support
for in her campaign.
A few include:
• The United States Agriculture
Corps: a national program created
to bring jobs to rural areas and
finally create food security.
• The Homeless Tier ACT which
classifies the six major reasons
people are homeless.
• Providing a designated area
with shelter, police, fire and medical
services.
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
Vote Powell for President in 2024
ASHLEY POWELL
Groundcover vendor No. 595
• She started the Motor City
Brick to Farmer Challenge: 50 Million
Bricks, One Challenge. The
goal of the Challenge is to sell 50
million Bricks and use the funds
to build greenhouses in Metro
Detroit. www.50millionbricks.com
When Ashley is not working to
3
save the world she can be found
reading, at the gym or listening to
music!
Take care of your dogs! Dealing
with anxiety is important
Dogs are considered family
members. We go to extraordinary
lengths to make sure they are
comfortable and well adjusted to
living in their homes, but for some
dogs it takes time to feel safe. For
some dogs, like pound puppies, it
can take even longer because of
kennel cough and the trauma of
being in doggy jail for months.
Here are some ways to help your
dog deal with your time away from
home. They will feel better as time
goes by.
1. Call your dog on a Ring Doorbell
or even on TV and do two-waytalk
— he will love seeing you on
the time for your dog. Even recording
your voice can help them.
3. Take a night t-shirt and wear it
CINDY GERE
Groundcover vendor No. 279
the screen. Doing this one hour
before you get home will help them
know you are on your way.
2. Leave a radio on to help pass
to bed and place that shirt on their
day bed in the morning. It will help
them feel your presence and can
help calm them down as they nap.
4. Getting an anxiety jacket can
help them calm down when you
are away. This is a new thing that
operates on the principle that if
you apply pressure to the dog’s
torso, it has a calming effect.
They’re available online.
I do hope this can help with your
pet this wonderful year 2024 and
beyond. Peace!
Eamonn Ofoighil
View more of Eamonn's artwork
on Instagram @dj_chirish734
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
LOCAL NEWS
JANUARY 12, 2024
Did the City of Ann Arbor renege on its affordable
housing promise?
In the 2020 general election, Ann
Arbor passed Proposal C with nearly
73% of voters in favor of what was considered
to be “the most significant
expansion of affordable housing in the
region in over 40 years,” according to
the City of Ann Arbor website.
Affordable housing has always been
a touchy issue in Ann Arbor and many
cities around the country. It certainly
raises eyebrows when a former city
attorney questions whether monies
appropriated to supply more affordable
housing to citizens who live below
the median income are being used
appropriately.
Proposal C assured taxpayers that
that monies generated from the 2020
millage would be used for building,
maintaining and acquiring new affordable
housing units which would be
permanently affordable to low-income
households making up to 60% of
area median income, and providing
social services, not to exceed 20% of
the millage revenues over the entire
term of the millage, for the residents of
such housing.
Yet, according to an MLive article
which ran this past November, former
city attorney Bruce Laidlaw filed a lawsuit
against the City of Ann Arbor
claiming that the city misappropriated
the millage funds which were intended
for affordable housing. In his lawsuit
he accuses the city of playing “a political
shell game” with taxpayer dollars.
At a time when housing shortages
LIT KURTZ
Groundcover vendor No. 159
are at an all time high, especially for
unhoused individuals who need to
find permanent housing, one might
question why any of the funds allocated
for providing more space to
those who are experiencing this crisis
would not be used to their fullest.
Yet, it appears as though the city has
fallen short on its promise. This past
September MLive ran an article
announcing the city’s plans to renovate
a new elections center and TV
studio on Miller Rd. in order to ensure
the integrity of elections. The decision
was unanimous. $5.2 million of the
overall project cost involving the
former YMCA parking lot is coming
from the affordable housing millage
funds. Another $800,000 is coming
from the sale of city property at 350 S.
Fifth Avenue to the city’s Housing
Commission.
According to MLive, Laidlaw is questioning
the legality of the city’s move to
essentially sell the 350 Fifth Avenue
property, formerly home to the YMCA,
to the city housing commission, noting
that the housing commission is part of
the city government. (The empty parking
lot has long been problematic, with
the city failing to garner enough support
for any of the proposed uses for it.)
Housing Commission Executive
Director Jennifer Hall made a convincing
argument to the City for the commission
to oversee the property, citing
that over the past 20 years “ … the site
has been at the center of legal battles
with developers and political disagreements
on council.” The city agreed and
the eventual cost was set at $6.2 million
with one million coming from
stimulus funding.
While this is underway, Hall revealed
plans to progressively include other
affordable housing units on the
various other planned sites within the
city over the next few years. There are
nine properties owned by the City
available for development including:
353 S. Main, 121 Catherine, 404 S.
Ashley, 721 N. Main, 309 S. Ashley, 350
S. Fifth Ave., 415 W. Washington, 1510
E. Stadium, and 2000 South Industrial.
While this sounds promising, it seems
doubtful that in coming years the city
government will use all of its available
funding resources to implement this
or other plans for affordable housing.
If this past year is any indication, it
seems that the future funding of
affordable housing under the auspices
of city government is destined to
shrink as the city becomes infatuated
with other projects and is further distracted
from the housing crisis and the
need for affordable housing.
GROUNDCOVER NEW VOLUNTEER ORIENTATION
Interested in volunteering with Groundcover News? Join us for
a public volunteer meeting on January 19, 5:00 p.m. to learn
more! As a volunteer, you can help contribute to the paper via
writing or editing; attending and making food for article reviews;
distributing papers to vendors; and more! We value our
volunteers so much; come join our community!
Friday, January 19, 2024, 5 p.m.
Groundcover News office
423 S. 4th Avenue
(basement of Bethlehem United Church of Christ)
We are football champions: Let's dance to the drum
beat of victory!
In the summer of 2023, I predicted
the Michigan Wolverines, my favorite
football team, would win the National
College Football Championship. I was
not the only person who made this
prediction. Many other Michigan football
fans hopeful like myself wished to
see our Wolverines take it to another
level.
The Michigan Wolverines took it to
the next level by defeating the Alabama
Crimson Tide in the semi-final playoff
game 27-20, and then played the Washington
Huskies for the College Football
Championship on January 8.
WE DID IT!!!!! The Michigan Wolverines
defeated the Washington Huskies
34-13, and are now NCAA College
Football Champions. Go Blue!!!
10-7 Los Angeles Rams in the NFL
Wild Card Game this Sunday at Ford
Field.
The Detroit Lions have made a comMIKE
JONES
Groundcover vendor No. 113
On a related topic, the Detroit Lions
are back in the NFL Playoffs for the
first time since 2016, and clinched the
NFC North for the first time in team
history. The Lions will host former
quarterback Matthew Stafford and the
plete turn around under the leadership
of Dan Campbell since he
assumed the role of head coach 2021.
The 1991 season was the last time the
Lions won a NFL Playoff game and that
was the only time since 1957 in which
the Lions won a playoff game. The
Lions finish this year's season 12-5
after defeating the Minnesota Vikings
30-20.
I am going to put it on the line, the
Detroit Lions are going to take it to the
next level and win the conference
championship and make their first
appearance in the Super Bowl.
U-M football fans no longer have
to party like its 1997 — they can
party like its 2024!
׉	 7cassandra://wIsjy-aPAjZoKxTUrP1LjfOfWG2OPdoYfHy3rXKGqIwVm` e\aB2@׉E%JANUARY 12, 2024
HOUSING
HOUSED: On being your own
advocate and the fight to find a place
LINDSAY CALKA
Publisher
For this edition of HOUSED,
Groundcover News talked with Glen
Page, Groundcover vendor No. 407,
and discussed the challenging process
of finding an apartment after
being pulled for a Housing Choice
Voucher, often know as Section 8.
LC: Tell us about your journey
to housing.
GP: I had to make myself marketable
so I was “user-friendly” when
I filled out an application. I found a
couple of jobs and stayed into that.
I had to stay busy and maintain my
situation. I worked at FedUp Ministries
and Groundcover News and
did odd jobs running errands for
people.
There were Beal Properties,
McKinley Properties and smaller
landlords. They always told me “if
you start doing ‘this,’ than we can
do ‘that.’” They want you to make
three times the rent, or have a
cosigner.
RPI [an agent for the Michigan
State Housing Development
Authority who manages Housing
Choice Vouchers] is dysfunctional;
they moved offices three times on
my watch and I had to chase them
down each time in order to get my
voucher. Being pushy helped me
out. There is a great lack of communication
in the system.
Delonis is dysfunctional, too.
When my caseworker left Delonis,
everything slowed down. He was
the only one really honest with me.
I didn’t really have any help after
that. Besides a handful of people,
there’s no one really qualified to
advocate for us to find housing. You
have to know your shit, and not
many people do. [Delonis is]
already short-staffed. People are
leaving to work at Avalon Housing,
or just straight up leaving. It’s
spookier than it used to be.
Really, it took three tries. My first
opportunity was at Courtyard
Square. The front desk manager at
the time made my life hell. There
was no way I was going to come off
the streets and live under her. I
wasn’t scared to keep looking
though. I knew I was looking for my
house.
The second opportunity was
Aspen Chase. The third was where
I’m at now, Huron Heights.
What was the biggest barrier
that you faced in obtaining
housing?
Knowing that there wasn’t help. I
had to be my own advocate and
find my own place. It took me nine
months. I had to fight for that.
Housing is a human right. A lot of
kids, and even grownups, don’t
realize that. We don’t need cats
coming in here [Delonis] just looking
for a paycheck.
What is an unexpected positive
thing that most people don’t think
about when becoming housed?
Just relaxing again. I’m so used to
getting up, running out the door, to
get where I’m at now. To get a job,
find a place.
Also, personalizing everything in
the place just like how I do my
clothes. My room is set up like a
dojo and I make little movie nights
by the window with my backyard
and projector. But I’m still making
it really feel like home.
What is an unexpected struggle
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
5
that most people don’t
think
about when becoming housed?
Wrapping my mind around the
fact that I’m actually in my place.
I’m still waking up swinging.
Additionally, I want to help my
friends get on their feet but I don’t
want to jeopardize losing my apartment.
It’s really hard to just sit down
and let this happen to other people.
I have a lot of family down here, but
growing up, I couldn’t ask for help
from any of them, so I had to make
my own way. Thankfully I ran into a
lot of people like me. People who
did want to help.
What pieces of advice would you
give to people who are experiencing
homelessness?
Don’t trust anybody, anything.
Ask questions and when people
seem like they are avoiding answers,
ask for their boss. And try not to
screw it up for other people.
What’s next for you?
I want to go to school, and keep
up with selling Groundcover. I’ve
been asked to be President of Circling
Back Peer Support Network.
That’s an affirmation of my work
ethic. I landed in the right place,
with the right people around me.
Any place called home is enchanted
Everybody who has a home has an
enchanted cottage. It is a blessing to
have a home. When you have a home
it is good for your health. A home is a
place you can totally be yourself in.
When you have your own home, you
can rest and work.
When you have your own home you
can play when you want and have fun
when you want, too. You can decorate
your home and have it look the way
you want. A home is very beautiful, no
matter what it is, no matter where it is.
A home gives you shelter from bad
DENISE SHEARER
Groundcover vendor No. 485
weather. A home gives you shelter
from wild animals that could attack
you. No matter if you live in a hotel
room or a rooming house or an apartment
or house of your own, it is always
good to have somewhere to live.
You can also have get-togethers with
family and friends when you have a
place to be. You can cook lunches and
dinners for company when you have a
place to be. You can watch things on
TV and dream when you have a place
to be. You can have a comfortable
place to talk to Jesus when you have a
place to be.
You can make your enchanted cottage
however you want it when you’re
the only one who lives there. People
who share a place, that’s an enchanted
cottage too — it just takes more compromise
and consideration when you
share a place. Any place to be is an
enchanted cottage. Any place someone
calls a home is an enchanted cottage
as
long
as
comfortable.
someone is
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
WINTER SAFETY
JOSHUA LEE
Groundcover contributor
As winter's icy grip tightens, the
looming threat of frostbite becomes an
undeniable concern for those exposed
to extreme cold. This cold-weather
menace, where skin and underlying
tissues freeze due to prolonged exposure
to frigid temperatures, demands
a keen awareness of its dangers and a
proactive approach to prevention.
Dangers of Frostbite: The repercussions
of frostbite can be severe, ranging
from tissue damage and infection
risk to nerve damage and, in extreme
cases, amputation. Extended exposure
to cold triggers blood vessels to constrict,
diminishing blood flow to
extremities and causing harm to the
skin, muscles, and even bones.
Signs of Frostbite: Recognizing the
early stages of frostbite mean that it
can be caught in time for treatment to
be effective. These early stages present
with patches of reddish skin and burning
pain, progressing to cold, numb,
white or grayish skin that feels stiff or
looks waxy.
Expert Insights and Prevention
Measures: Dr. Sarah Coleman, Chief
Medical Officer at the Cold Weather
Research Institute, highlights the gravity
of frostbite's dangers and offers proactive
prevention measures. From our
exclusive interview, "Frostbite is dangerous
due to its potential for irreversible
damage to the skin and underlying
tissues. Constricted blood vessels
reduce blood flow and oxygen, leading
to severe complications and, in
extreme cases, amputation," warns Dr.
Coleman.
To preempt the risks, Dr. Coleman
advises individuals to prioritize dressing
in layers, ensuring thorough coverage
of extremities. Opting for mittens
over gloves and investing in insulated
footwear are key to superior heat
retention.
Staying dry is crucial, as wet clothing
elevates the risk of frostbite. Dr. Coleman
also emphasizes taking breaks
indoors to counteract exposure to
extreme cold and wind, if possible.
Addressing common misconceptions,
Dr. Coleman dispels the notion
that frostbite only occurs in extremely
low temperatures. Wind chill, she
emphasizes, plays a significant role,
stripping away the body's protective
heat layer and making it feel colder
than the actual temperature.
Early detection, Dr. Coleman
stresses, is pivotal. Numbness, tingling
and changes in skin color are early
warning signs. Immediate action, such
see FROSTBITE page 11 
Stages of frostbite. Coyne Survival Schools.
JANUARY 12, 2024
Battling the chill: navigating the perils of frostbite
׉	 7cassandra://cpwuswJ_1vWYUJBD_-fzg1cfEysjTJdLHHa4PQPntzwU` e\aB2@׉EJANUARY 12, 2024
MAKING CHANGE
Turning Houses2Homes
SUHITA
CHINTALACHARUVU
U-M student contributor
Six years ago, a small group of service-driven
individuals and friends
worked together to furnish a home for
a single mother and her children. In
2017, they took that experience and
turned it into a community-wide nonprofit
organization. HouseN2Home is
their name and furnishing homes for
the homeless is their game. Their
motto absolutely embodies what their
mission is: “creating a space for people
to thrive.”
HouseN2Home operates mainly in
the southeast Michigan region, with
their office in Ypsilanti. Their workers
are primarily volunteers, and they
have grown in the past six years to over
100 volunteers. They have many community
partners, such as United Way
of Washtenaw County, Ann Arbor Area
Community Foundation and Trinity
Health.
The organization targets people in
the area who are moving out of homeless
shelters and into rental housing.
However, each homeless individual’s
situation varies greatly, and the organization
does their best to match
everyone’s unique needs.
Their process for furnishing homes
is very in-depth and thorough. It
begins when a caseworker from a local
shelter finds a family that has housing
and needs help with the move.
HouseN2Home workers then meet
with the family and assess their new
home and their needs. They obtain all
the necessary furniture and household
goods, and remarkably, most of
the items are donated. On the big
move-in day, volunteers load up the
furniture, move it to the new home,
and arrange it to make the house feel
like a home. Amazingly, with this process,
they have completely furnished
over 925 homes since 2017 for individuals
and their families in Washtenaw
County. Clearly, they have had a huge
positive impact on the community!
On their website, you can see the
evidence of this impact in the last two
years. In 2022, they performed 290
moves, which was a 30% increase from
2021, and they furnished over 500
moves in the past two years alone. Out
of those clients, they served 199 children,
crafting safe and stable home
environments for these kids. In 2022,
they contributed 16,000 volunteer
hours, showing the importance and
value of volunteers for this organization.
They also added many new community
partners, including the
University of Michigan’s Office of
Sustainability.
A non-profit like HouseN2Home
requires lots of support, and there are
so many ways members of the community
can get involved. The main way
to participate is through volunteering.
There are several different opportunities
for volunteers such as refurbishing
donations, cooking meals for clients or
assisting on move-in days. HouseN2Home
is an equal opportunity nonprofit
organization, so any volunteer
will feel welcomed and valued!
Another great way to participate is by
donating gently used furniture for the
organization to use in the furnishing
of new homes. Finally, contributors
can also sponsor a move, which typically
costs around $600, or also just
donate to the organization to reduce
the costs of each move.
HouseN2Home provides such a
great service to the community. They
truly go above and beyond in their
work, even providing families with
items like toys, books and decorations
to really make their clients’ new
houses feel like homes. I would highly
recommend checking out this amazing
organization and helping them
serve the community because it’s clear
how much they value each of their clients
and how big of a difference they
have made in Michigan! Check out
their website to coordinate donations
and get involved:
www.housen2home.org/
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
Lansing’s “Fretail”
Store is a good idea
for Ann Arbor
JANE ATKINS
U-M student contributor
Cardboard Prophets’ Fretail Store in the Lansing Mall looks just like a
normal retail store: display racks, mannequin, and tags on each item.
The twist? Everything is free. The “dignity tags” contain Cardboard
Prophets’ phone number on the barcode and an inspirational message
rather than a price. Cardboard Prophets is an outreach organization
founded by Mike Karl, aiming to involve the community in real change
for people who are homeless or at risk for homelessness in the Lansing
area. The store is an innovative, direct response to the needs of homeless
and low-income people in Lansing, and Ann Arbor should consider
how its unique approach could benefit our community.
The Fretail Store started as a diaper bank with no storefront. They were
offered a space in the Lansing Mall to operate in, and Karl knew it could
be used for more. It has grown exponentially since it opened in 2020. It
has been a hub for thousands of Michigan families and individuals to
shop with dignity and receive the items they need to maintain a good
quality of life. The store has clothes, food, furniture and much more. In
the past, the Fretail Store gave out 200,000 cans of formula to families
all over Michigan during the formula shortage. Families from all over
Michigan traveled to the Fretail store to get formula for their children.
During Christmas time, the entire storefront transformed into a toy store,
which helped 2,200 families get Christmas gifts. Karl said they are looking
to double that this year as the holidays are approaching.
The Fretail Store has had such a positive impact on the Lansing community
that it comes as no surprise that people from across the state
and the country are contacting Cardboard Prophets looking to replicate
see FRETAIL page 11 
7
CONTENT correction
In the Dec. 15, 2023 edition of the Groundcover News, the words
of a Jewish prayer were incorrect. The corrected version: "If the
desire to honor the memory of your loved one impels you to do a
mitzvah you otherwise would not have done, learn something you
otherwise would not have learned or go higher and farther than ever
before then the soul of the deceased lives on in you." Cultural
appropriation was never intended.
In the Oct. 20 GCN edition, Morgan Battle, one of the previous
directors of The Breakfast at St. Andrew's, was omitted.
e\aB2@āe\aB2@Á
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
MLK DAY
JANUARY 12, 2024
Remembering Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr’s.
visit to Ann Arbor and Detroit
Dr. King came to Ann Arbor in the fall
of 1962. Brian A. Williams of the University
of Michigan’s Bentley Historical
Library wrote that “King spoke on a
cool fall day.” Williams also noted, “No
recordings of King’s lectures are known
to exist and newspaper coverage is
scant at best.” In her January 16, 2023
article titled, “In Pictures: Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. Visits Ann Arbor,” Meredith
Bruckner of the Ann Arbor News
confirmed Williams’ assertion and
added, “Although no copies of his
speeches exist, according to school
records, King told U-M students, ‘We
must learn to live together as brothers
or we will perish as fools.’”
It is fair to say that the coverage of Dr.
King’s visit to the University of Michigan
in Ann Arbor was inadequate for a
transformative national civil rights
leader. Bentley Historical Library Archivist,
Ms. Karen Lee Jania, told the Michigan
Daily newspaper that “there was
little press coverage of King’s visit and
details about his lecture were sparse.”
Perspectives on Dr. King’s
Visit to U-M Campus
As the U-M’s Office of the President
continues to support the new campus-wide
initiative known as “The
Inclusive History Project,” there is
public interest in learning more about
important events which have shaped
the Michigan experience.
In 2014, Michigan Radio’s Mark Brush
reported on, “Martin Luther King Jr.’s
forgotten visit to the University of Michigan’s
Campus.” He mentioned what
former U-M President, James Duderstadt
told one Michigan Daily reporter,
Haley Goldberg, in 2012. Duderstadt
said, “There apparently was a controversy
because in his speech, King suggested
the importance of civil
disobedience, and I guess a couple of
the University regents raised concern
about that.” He continued, “It was almost
50 years ago, and it was a time when
Martin Luther King was a pretty controversial
person. The FBI was tracking him
and so forth.”
A few weeks before Dr. King arrived on
the Ann Arbor Campus, University President
Harlan Hatcher admonished the
students to obey the law and avoid holding
large-scale demonstrations and rallies
outside the Michigan campus. As
the Bentley Historical Library noted,
“King was on campus as the leader of the
SouthernChristian Leadership Conference
and was advocating student civil
disobedience — something that the
leaders of the University at the time were
likely weary of.”
and Alan Haber were on the tentative
program list. U-M President Harlan
Hatcher and his three vice presidents
were also on the tentative list to lunch
with Dr. King.
Student reporters for the Michigan
WILL SHAKESPEARE
Groundcover vendor No. 258
The University of Michigan Office of
Religious Affairs invited King to their
annual religious lecture on November
5, 1962. They also invited University of
Chicago Theology professor Preston
Roberts and Northwestern University
Philosophy professor Paul Schllpp.
The Office of Religious Affairs asked
other groups on campus to co-sponsor
King’s visit; the U-M Office of Special
Projects became a co-sponsor. The
Women’s International League, Challenge
and Voice also supported the
event. The Bentley Historical Library
noted “that all three associated organizations
were sympathetic to the
causes espoused by King."
The Voice campus political party was
established in 1960 by Tom Hayden. The
Voice also became a key chapter of the
new campus organization known as Students
for a Democratic Society. The
Voice platform called for “eliminating
inequality, especially economic, social
and racial inequality.” Although the
Voice supported the civil rights bill proposed
by President Kennedy in 1962,
they felt that it did not go far enough.
The Voice also supported what John
Lewis’ Student Nonviolent Coordinating
Committee was trying to accomplish in
the segregated South.
The Challenge was a student organization
established in 1960 in order to bring
prominent national figures on campus
to help discuss problems and issues of
national importance. It originated at
Yale University and spread to other campuses,
including Michigan. The U-M
student organizers who co-sponsored
King’s visit were able to include the
names of 23 faculty faculty sponsors.
They included Robert C. Angell, Kenneth
Boulding, Angus Campbell, William
Haber, E. Lowell Kelly, Theodore
Newcomb and Alan F. Smith.
Planners of King’s visit wanted him to
give a lecture in the morning, and
another lecture in the evening. Invitations
were made to 50 to 60 people,
including student organizers, to join
King for a luncheon at the Michigan
Union. Voice Members Tom Hayden
Daily — Majorie Brahms and Martha
MacNeal — said that King framed his
lecture and discussion by stating that
every man is “heir to a legacy of dignity
and worthiness,” and that man’s essential
rights do not originate from the State,
but rather are established by God.
King touched upon integration and
the immoral nature of racial discrimination.
He expanded on that theme, pointing
out that the American dream cannot
be separated from the world dream of
brotherhood. King told his audience at
the Hill Auditorium that, “We must learn
to live together as brothers or we will die
together as fools.”
The Bentley Historical Library mentioned
that King condemned the concept
which stated that one race is
superior to another as outdated, and
called for its abolition. The Historical
Library also said the portion of King’s
lecture which he directed specifically to
students urged them to take action and
join the growing student movement.
Apparently, he had been briefed about
the recent State of the University address
given by President Hatcher in which
Hatcher had encouraged students to
limit their involvement in student movements
and to restrict their activities to
the campus. King sharply disagreed, telling
students that they "have a responsibility
to participate in the movement."
He went on to tell them that to him, education
meant "being true to studies yet
devoting oneself to a significant cause
like integration.”
Dr. King inspired so many students
who heard his lectures and/or talked
with him on November 5, 1962. One
such student became Dr. Larry Brilliant.
In
his 2013 commencement
speech at the Harvard School of Public
Health, Dr. Brilliant gave credit to Dr.
King for “inspiring him to his life’s
work, which included eradicating the
world of smallpox and working for
global sustainability.”
Unfortunately, King did not agree to a
second visit despite repeated attempts
to bring him back to the Ann Arbor
campus. We are grateful that he visited
Ann Arbor during the heyday of the civil
rights movement. He brought his perspectives
on the concepts and techniques
of citizen participation, humanity,
moral compass, civil rights and of course,
David Thoreau’s ideas of civil disobedience
for peace and justice.
Dr. King’s Visit to Detroit
Detroit was a paradox in the early
1960s. It was the fourth largest city in the
nation and the population was close to
2 million. There was extreme poverty
alongside middle-class prosperity. Dr.
King was invited by the Detroit Council
for Human Right to participate in a civil
rights march on the streets and a rally at
Cobo Arena. What Dr. King called the
“greatest demonstration for freedom”
happened on June 23, 1963. More than
125,000 people walked down Woodward
Avenue in Detroit as part of the Detroit
Walk to Freedom. They also held a big
rally inside and outside the Cobo Arena
after the street March. They were marching
in Detroit to promote civil rights.
Writer Ken Coleman of the Michigan
Advance newspaper noted that the idea
behind the rally was “to highlight social
inequities in the Motor City which
included housing discrimination, poor
police-community relations and lack of
economic opportunities for Blacks and
other people of color.” Participants who
joined Dr. King in the street march and
Cobo Arena rally were thousands of
ordinary folks. Other influential people
included Reverend C.L. Franklin, the
father of famous singer, Aretha Franklin.
Rev. Franklin was also the Pastor of
New Bethel Baptist Church. There were
other clergymen, such as Pastor Albert
Cleage of Central Congregational
Church; and Rev. Nicholas Hood,
Pastor of Plymouth United Church of
Christ. Former Michigan Governor
John Swainson, Detroit Mayor James
Cavanaugh, UAW President Walter
Reuthers and many more community
leaders participated in the march.
Michigan Advance noted that during
the June 23, 1963 event at Cobo Arena,
King delivered a precursor to the “I Have
A Dream” speech which he gave in frontof
the Lincoln Memorial on August 28,
1963. In King’s Detroit speech, he said:
“Almost hundred and one years ago, on
September the 22, 1862, to be exact, a
great and noble American, Abraham
Lincoln, signed an executive order,
which was to take effect on January the
first, 1863. This executive order was
called the Emancipation Proclamation
and it served to free the Negro from the
bondage of physical slavery. But one
hundred years later, the Negro in the
United States of America still isn’t free.”
The Detroit Walk to Freedom and the
Cobo Arena speech by Dr. King gave
much needed impetus to the “I Have
A Dream” speech in Washington D.C.
Subsequently, the Detroit and
see MLK VISITS 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.
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panhandling with only one paper or
selling past monthly issues.
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I will not “hard sell,” threaten,
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 MLK VISITS from last page
Washington D.C. events contributed
to the passage of the civil rights legislation
of 1964 and the voting rights
legislation of 1965.
Many observers think that Dr. King’s
visit to Detroit energized and empowered
poor Blacks to fight for their rights.
From the perspectives of some journalists
and community observers, Dr.
King’s visit gave rise to the harnessing of
Black excellence in music, entertainment,
art, science and scholarship. For
example, Motown Founder and CEO
Berry Gordy recorded Dr. King’s Cobo
Arena speech. It is titled, “The Greatest
Demonstration for Freedom.” Gordy
also recorded Dr. King’s “I Have A
Dream” speech in Washington, D.C.
In a January 17, 2011 article titled,
“Martin Luther King and the Great
March for Freedom in Detroit," Michigan
in Pictures magazine included
some of King’s speech in Detroit,
described as Detroit’s version of “I Have
a Dream Speech.” King spoke eloquently
when he said, “I have a dream
this afternoon that my four little children,
that my four little children will not
come up in the same young days I came
up within, but they will be judged on the
basis of the content of their characters,
not the color of their skin … I have a
dream this afternoon that one day right
here in Detroit, Negroes will be able to
buy a house or rent a house anywhere
that their money will carry them and
they will be able to get a job.”
Conclusion
Dr. King’s visit to the U-M campus in
Ann Arbor and his visit to Detroit
revealed a clear contrast in media coverage
and important historical documents.
Although many U-M students
were thrilled to see Dr. King, some of
university leaders saw him as too controversial
to share his viewpoints with
the campus community. King’s Detroit
visit seemed like a huge celebration of
common purpose and the prospects of
gaining more freedom, more civil rights,
equality and racial justice. Black insitutions
and social movements were established
in the years to come. However,
they were not enough.
“The more things change, the more
they remain the same” is a popular
saying of particular relevance to the
poor, the homeless and the disadvantaged
folks of both Ann Arbor and
Detroit.
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]10
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
MLK DAY
Roll me up and smoke me when I die
This song from Willie Nelson has
been in my mind since Christmas
with my Michigan family when we
watched the star-studded 90th birthday
party for Willie. His love of music
and mastery of the country genre has
made him beloved for many people
of America. It would take some time
to listen to all the duets he has
recorded with a wide range of talents.
His album “Red Headed Stranger”
was my best friend during a big heartbreak
episode in my life.
When I heard Willie and friends at his
90th year, I reflected on what I want to
do before I die. “Seeds for Cuba” came
to mind. It is the next step as I follow
through on things I started in the 1990s.
Villa Internacional is a bilingual
proposal I made in Cuba for an ecovillage.
We did build two houses
where I have a room waiting for me
whenever I am there. We also have an
extended family at La Finca Esperanza,
a small farm in our neighborhood.
They have a moringa tree, one
of the superfoods of our day.
The war on Cuba includes stiff sanctions
which create serious austerity;
the government cannot support the
free seeds they once did. I have a list of
seeds that I want to share with the Ann
Arbor Seed Company and see if they
can supply for me. I will send or take
KEN PARKS
Groundcover vendor No. 490
whatever seeds possible to Cuba. I plan
to go back in March this year. We will
probably build a small house with a
greenhouse on the south side.
There is talk of similar demonstration
projects in southeast Michigan
and Brazil where people and land
may work together growing whatever
is nutritious and healthy with a focus
on making key plants available. I
hope many of us learn to grow crops
such as chia until they are commonly
available for everyone. Delicious recipes
will follow.
We will learn to promote a healthy
intestinal microbiome as the center
of good health. If we are timely in this
work we will benefit with healthy
aging for whoever is ready. I hope we
work together in 2024 and make
progress as we learn more about who
we are as human beings and tap into
our potential.
An understanding of the commons is
helpful. Martin Luther King Day on
January 15 at Liberty Plaza will be a
good event to share our aspirations
and practical work. Go to annarborcommunitycommons.org.
I will be
working with Alan Haber and join in
the open mic at Liberty Plaza.
May 2024 be a year of blessings as we
work together for the common good.
Our ancestors want to help us. May we
honor all those who go up in smoke
and join the ancestors, may they be
reborn in a Pure Land. The struggle
continues.
JANUARY 12, 2024
PUZZLE SOLUTIONS
׉	 7cassandra://3ly5N_fNCTLSn_OOvYVfXJODZOmP59INfSXj4_hbAEcL` e\aB2@׉EJANUARY 12, 2024
THINK ABOUT IT
Equal Rights
Ammendment
Revival
SCOOP STEVENS
Groundcover contributor
In the 1970s, the Equal Rights Amendment was well on its
way to being ratified by the states when self-appointed
spokesman for women, Phyllis Schlafly, led a movement to
derail ERA ratification. Some states already had a bias
against the ERA and that reinforced their bias. By the artificial
deadline imposed by Congress, 1982, only 34 states
had ratified it, four short of the 38 needed.
We are in a new era now and the time has come to get the
ERA back on track.
On December 15, 1791 the Bill of Rights was ratified by
the states. Without the Bill of Rights the U.S. Constitution
would have never become the “Law of the Land.” James
Madison was tasked with making a Bill of Rights. Madison
did not believe they were necessary, but as he was composing
them, he reasoned that their purpose would be to
instruct the American people about their government.
As of now, 38 states have ratified the ERA, including four
since the deadline passed. (Even imposing that deadline is
open to legal challenge.) There is still uncertainty because
some states have rescinded their ratifications. But in 2023,
representatives started the Congressional Caucus for the
Equal Rights Amendment. They should follow through to
make the ERA the 28th Amendment — the Law of the Land.
In the American Civil War (1861-65) the Union Army conquered
the Confederate States of America but the slaves did
not become freemen until the 13th Amendment was ratified
on December 6, 1865, abolishing slavery in the United
States. In the same way, women have come a long way
toward achieving equality with men but they will still be
subordinate to men until the ERA becomes law. Then we
can finally realize the truths of the Declaration of
Independence:
“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are
created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with
certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty
and the pursuit of happiness.”
 FROSTBITE from page 6
as moving to a warmer environment, removing
wet clothing, and gradually warming the
affected area, is crucial. Seeking medical
attention promptly is imperative if symptoms
progress.
First-Aid Steps: When faced with frostbite,
taking immediate first-aid steps can make a
significant difference:
1. Check for Hypothermia:
a. Look for signs such as intense shivering,
drowsiness, confusion, fumbling hands and
slurred speech.
b. Seek emergency medical help if hypothermia
is suspected.
2. Protect the Skin:
a. Avoid thawing affected areas if there's a
chance they might freeze again.
b. If already thawed, wrap them to prevent
refreezing.
3. Warm Frostbitten Areas:
a. For hands, tuck them into armpits; for
the face, nose or ears, cover with dry, gloved
hands.
b. Do not rub affected skin with snow or
any other substance.
c. Avoid walking on frostbitten feet or toes
if possible.
4. Get Out of the Cold:
a. Move to a warm space.
b. Remove wet clothes and wrap up in a
warm blanket.
5. Gently Rewarm Frostbitten Areas:
a. Soak affected areas in warm (not hot)
water (105 to 110 F or 40 to 43 C) for 20 to 30
minutes.
b. Test water with an uninjured hand or
elbow.
c. Do not use direct heat sources like
stoves, heat lamps, fireplaces or heating
pads.
6. Stay Hydrated:
a. Drink warm liquids like tea, coffee, hot
chocolate or soup to help warm from the
inside.
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
11
b. Avoid alcohol.
7. Consider Pain Medicine:
a. Over-the-counter pain relievers can be
considered if in pain.
8. Expectations as Skin Thaws:
a. Tingling and burning may occur as the
skin warms and normal blood flow returns.
b. Avoid breaking any blisters; seek medical
help for more severe cases.
As winter lingers, the insights from Dr.
Coleman and practical guidance collectively
provide a comprehensive approach
for individuals to fortify themselves against
the threat of frostbite. Incorporating these
expert recommendations into winter routines
enables people to enjoy the season
while prioritizing their health and well-being,
successfully navigating the perils of
frostbite.
In a poignant testament to the harsh realities
of winter, Jake Thompson, a homeless
resident of Ann Arbor, Michigan, shared his
experience in an interview battling frostbite
during the bitter cold nights.
"Sometimes, the cold bites harder than life
itself. I felt the burning pain and saw my fingers
turning numb and white. It was like I
was losing a part of myself out there on
those
freezing
streets,"
Thompson
recounted.
His struggle with frostbite in the unforgiving
cold of Ann Arbor mirrors the stark
warnings provided by experts like Dr. Coleman.
Thompson's story serves as a reminder
that the impact of frostbite extends beyond
the medical realm, reaching individuals
facing homelessness who are particularly
vulnerable during the winter months.
As we heed the advice of experts to protect
ourselves against frostbite's peril, let us also
extend our awareness and compassion to
those grappling with the bitter cold on the
streets, where the battle against the chill is
a daily struggle for survival.
 FRETAIL from page 7
the Fretail model. Mike Karl embraces
this. “We want other organizations to
try and open something special like
this,” Karl said in an interview with
Groundcover.
Implementing something like the
Fretail Store in other places not only
benefits those who need it but it also
brings communities together by
involving more citizens in community
action.
“People can get discouraged with
non-profits because they cannot see
where they are going to go, they
cannot see how they help people, and
they cannot see how they change
lives,” says Karl, “When a community
gets an opportunity to see a nonprofit
put their money where their mouth is,
that actually gives away your items,
it’s beautiful to watch. It would be a
blessing to any community to do this.”
Bringing something like the Fretail
Store to Ann Arbor could have very
positive effects on the community.
Being a college town, University of
Michigan students make up a notable
part of the Ann Arbor community.
When the winter semester is over,
thousands of students abandon items
they do not want to take home in the
basement of their dorm or out in the
street. This could be a chance for University
of Michigan students and make
a real contribution to Ann Arbor by
donating them instead.
Having a Fretail store here could
encourage more direct involvement
overall, address the needs of our own
homeless and low-income residents,
and create a more connected Ann
Arbor community.
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
FOOD
Salted maple caramel
sauce
ELIZABETH BAUMAN
Groundcover contributor
You will need a candy thermometer!
Ingriedients:
1 cup real maple syrup
2 tbsp butter
1/4 cup heavy cream
1/4 tsp sea salt
Directions:
Put the maple syrup into a medium
saucepan with a heavy bottom. Fit the
pan with a "clip on" candy thermometer.
You'll need a pan tall enough to
allow the maple syrup to foam up as
it boils. The heavy bottom helps prevent
scorching.
Bring the syrup to a boil over high
heat and boil until it reaches 225F230F,
this is just under the softball
stage.
Remove from heat and add the
butter, stirring until it melts. Add the
cream and salt and mix in gently.
Note: the mixture will be very hot. Do
not stir too much, just enough to
blend the butter and cream. Too
much stirring can cause the mixture
to crystallize.
Pour into a heat safe jar and let cool
before refrigerating. It will thicken as
it cools, and will thicken further in the
refrigerator.
JANUARY 12, 2024
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,January 12, 2024e\4,