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$
DECEMBER 12, 2025 | VOLUME 16 | ISSUE 26
YOUR PURCHASE BENEFITS THE VENDORS.
PLEASE BUY ONLY FROM BADGED VENDORS.
From the archives: The legend lives
on at Downtown Home and Garden.
page 14
MEET YOUR
VENDOR:
DENISE
SHEARER
PAGE 3
15 YEARS OF NEWS AND SOLUTIONS FROM THE GROUND UP | WASHTENAW COUNTY, MICH.
Memories of the deep north.
page 6
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
GROUNDCOVER15
DECEMBER 12, 2025
PROVIDING ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES FOR SELFDETERMINED
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.
Vendors are the main contributors
to the paper, and are compensated
to write and report.
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
Gray Connor — intern
ISSUE CONTRIBUTORS
Elizabeth Bauman
Teresa Basham
Susan Beckett
La Shawn Courtwright
Marquetta "Q" Clements
Erick the Dream Giver
Amanda Gale
Cindy Gere
augustine jay
Mike Jones
Rachel
Ken Parks
Denise Shearer
Steven
Lynn Stuftin
Shawn Swoffer
Felicia Wilbert
PROOFREADERS
Susan Beckett
June Miller
Anabel Sicko
VOLUNTEERS
Jessi Averill
Sim Bose
Jud Branam
Libby Chambers
Stephanie Dong
Jacob Fallman
Glenn Gates
Robert Klingler
Margaret Patston
Mary Wisgerhof
Max Wisgerhof
Emilie Ziebarth
BOARD of DIRECTORS
Anna Gersh
Greg Hoffman
Jessi Averill
Jacob Fallman
Jack Edelstein
Glenn Gates
GROUNDCOVER NEWS ADVERTISING RATES
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CONTACT US
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ON MY CORNER
MEET YOUR VENDOR
Denise Shearer,
vendor No. 485
In one sentence, who are you?
I love myself and my friends and family.
Where do you usually sell
Groundcover?
Each time I sell I pick a spot on Liberty
Street in downtown Ann Arbor.
When and why did you start selling
Groundcover?
I started selling in 2019 because I wanted
to help and support myself, and make
new friends.
If you could do anything for a day,
what would it be?
I would go to Frankenmuth!
If you had to eat one meal for the rest
of your life, what would it be?
I would eat BBQ hamburgers and hot
dogs with plain iced black tea.
What is your superpower?
Seeing the good in everybody.
What was your first job?
A shampoo lady at a beauty shop in
Ferndale. I think I was 24 years old.
What are your hobbies? How did you
get into them?
My hobby is making artwork. I have been
doing it since I was a kid and still like
doing it.
What change would you like to see in
Washtenaw County?
That low-income and poor people get
treated better. And! People with special
needs are treated better too.
What would be the first thing you’d do
if you won the lottery?
I would buy a house. It would be a tiny
dream home.
Good wintertime foods on a
budget
There are a lot of delicious
What would YOU ask?
If you have a question or issue you would
like Groundcover vendors to discuss, email
us at contact@groundcovernews.com
We will be featuring vendor responses in
future issues.
wintertime foods that soothe
and comfort and do your body
good in the winter. I’m going to
talk about three casseroles that
are delicious. One is tuna
noodle casserole made of
cream of mushroom soup,
tuna, cooked macaroni, a little
bit of salt and pepper (if you
want it), and cheese from the
macaroni package, mixed
together. It’s called a tuna
noodle macaroni and cheese
casserole. You can eat it hot or
cold. It is so comforting and
soothing to eat.
Another is a ham salad noodle
it is very delicious! It is also
soothing and comforting to
your body.
Another delicious comfortDENISE
SHEARER
Groundcover vendor No. 485
casserole. Combine ham,
cooked macaroni noodles,
mustard, mayonnaise, salt and
pepper (if you want it), and
pickle relish. Eat it hot or cold,
ing casserole is turkey, stuffing,
gravy and ham together.
Mix stuffing, cream of mushroom
soup, gravy, turkey and
ham. You can eat it cold or
warmed up. It is delicious
and comforting to your body
and it makes you feel warm
and good.
Those are the three comforting
casseroles that are really
good in the winter.
Public debate?!
Speakers Corner in Hyde
Park in London, England, is a
famous public debate space
and the world’s oldest free
speech platform. And I love it!
I watch it every so often on
Youtube.
There is a saying I’ve heard:
one must be under the hypnosis
(that is, believe wholeheartedly
in hypnosis) in
order to hypnotize others. It
makes me smile to see people
who feel so passionate about
their beliefs.
The origins of Speakers
Corner can be traced back to
the Reform League riots of 1866
or the last speeches of the condemned
at the Tyburn gallows.
The space was originally a
public place for executions,
including the notorious Tyburn
hanging tree.
In 1872, the Royal and Garden
Regulation Act was passed,
allowing people to speak freely
MIKE JONES
Groundcover vendor No. 113
make it so unique.
American society is missing
this element in its character. I
feel we need to use our voices
and be more passionate when
expressing the way we feel. In
the UK there is a religious and
racial divide; whereas people
in the United States are also
racially divided, but we are
more likely to want to debate
about politics. I would like to
see more debate spaces in our
in a designated area of Hyde
Park without police permission.
The Reform League played a big
part in passing this act.
Historic figures such as Karl
Marx, Vladimir Lenin, William
Morris and George Orwell
spoke at Speakers Corner, and
Orwell described it as “one of
the minor wonders of the
world.”
Speakers Corner is known for
its tense face-to-face cultural
and religious arguments that
society where people can voice
their opinions and differences
without violence.
Speakers Corner has a gang of
notables like a Muslim woman
turned Christian, Hatun Tash,
and a funny Christian man
named Orlando who is my
favorite. In summary, Muslims
and Christians have at it! Public
debate style.
Let's talk about it!
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
3
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
GROUNDCOVER
DECEMBER 12, 2025
Left to right: Marius Johnson, Felicia Wilbert, Cindy Gere and David Putman.
Groundcover annual open mic extravaganza
STEVEN
Groundcover vendor No. 668
I was inspired to write this story
while I was in the glow of having just
ended emceeing the Fourth Annual
Groundcover Open Mic. I’ve never
emceed anything. I had no idea how to
emcee but in the moment it struck me
as a fun idea. Soon after getting the
enthusiastic approval of “people”
about this thing, I panicked. I guess I
was in. It was fun. It was epic and I’m
proud to have been part of it.
I’m over here watching videos about
emceeing, figuring out how one might
write about a cool thing like this. I panicked.
Did I mention I panicked? I
wished dearly I could tell the boss I
had changed my mind. I could have.
100% I could have. But not and still be
cool with myself, a stretch on the best
days.
The boss would have for sure let me
off the hook. I don’t like being that guy.
I have been and will be a guy who
ducks out, but not this time. I followed
through.
Bang howdy I’m glad I did it. I suspect
this event would be better served
by a better event reporter, but I was
there. I was engaged in a way different
than usual. I’m glad I leaned into this
because this is the Beat Generation I
was looking for.
Here’s the list of performers: Panda,
Wayne, Ken, Marius, Amanda, Ty,
David, Joshua, Victor, Dylan The Autistic
Spitfire, Ameera and Anna.
Okay, my journalism part is fulfilled.
Here’s my take: Holy shit we need
more of all of this. As a species, as a
culture, storytelling and listening are
intrinsic to us but it’s satiated by
screens. I love screens, this isn’t hate,
it’s love for interpersonal events.
Every. Single. Person. Who got on
that mic crushed it. I’ve been to open
mics. Usually there are people who I
might have preferred if they hadn’t got
up. Not this night. The worst thing I can
say is the emcee was underprepared,
and awkward, but had a certain charm.
The people who ponied up and put
themselves out there crushed it.
The show ran the gamut. We had fantastic
indigenous folk music, original
songs, well-written, and professionally-performed.
We had a standup comic
who had my and others’ asses rolling
in the aisles. We had interpretive readings,
we had interpretive dance, we
had spirituals, we had pop-art, we had
(a highlight for me) “an old guy saying
stuff.” We, as a culture, need more of
that.
There were people who I suspect saw
open mic and went for it, and got it.
This one guy sang and played at a professional
level like Elliot Smith. A
beautiful, great, encouraging crowd.
There are a few of us who thought we
must have shat the bed, but on every
account from everyone who wasn’t
them, they didn't. I rediscovered my
love of the ukulele, manic ramblings,
and the disjointed truth of people.
At its heart, and this event was very
much bolstered by heart (thank you
boss), this was a space for creative
expression. This space very easily
could have been a coffee shop in The
Village of 50s New York. It was safe and
public. A space where our underserved,
underrepresented, the groundside,
could just be, and mingle with the
square public and both have good
things to get from it.
Panda and Amanda bookended the
evening with beautiful songs, to set the
beginning tone, and bring us home at
the end. Several people were funny,
but The Autistic Spitfire was side-splitting
and not kitch, just funny.
Politics were espoused, social commentary,
creative game design were all
to be had. If any mainstream media
tried to do this it would have been lost
in the filth that is modern media. There
were no pop-up ads. Well there was
one. I as the emcee did, in fact, clumsily
point out the whole idea of this
thing was to give voice to and call
attention to the unhoused and the
hungry, in recognition of Homelessness
and Hunger Awareness Week.
I’m very grateful to Groundcover
News, its publisher Lindsay Calka
(she’ll hate this, heh heh), the people
who keep it going by buying the papers,
the maniac contributors, the wonderful
art gallery event space, Makeshift
Gallery (407 E Liberty St in Ann Arbor)
and the people who braved the fear of
putting themselves “out there.” The
people who showed up, money spent
or not.
This was the fourth year of the
Groundcover open mic and I hope it
continues for years beyond our great
time and space.
Peace.
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.
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COMMUNITY
letter to the EDITOR
My name is Grace and I’m a resident in Ann Arbor. I just wanted to write to say that I really enjoyed Ken Parks’
(Groundcover vendor no. 490) article titled “Gratitude” in the latest edition of Groundcover. I thought his insight
was thought-provoking and his prose was beautiful. The way he tied together the meaning of life to optimism and
community was deeply inspiring given today’s world. I hope you will pass along my message to the author — I
have “gratitude” for him sharing his profound writing and perspective!
Thank you and happy Thanksgiving,
Grace
community EVENTS
CHIME CONCERT: KERRYTOWN
MARKET & SHOPS
Friday and Saturday, December
12-13, 12-12:30 p.m. (Fri), 10:30-11
a.m. (Sat), Kerrytown. All are
invited to play one of 200 songs,
with melodies transcribed in numbers,
on the 17-bell chime’s numbered
keys.
TINY EXPO INDIE ART &
CRAFT FAIR
Saturday, December 13, 11 a.m.-6
p.m. AADL downtown, 343 S 5th
Ave, Ann Arbor. Annual Tiny Expo
features over 75 artists and crafters
selling handmade wares. Support
your community and find
unique gifts for the holiday
season! Drop-in crafting from 1-4
p.m. in the lower level of the
library to make a card or
bookmark.
SCIO FARMS CHRISTMAS
MARKET
Saturday and Sunday, December
13-14, 10 a.m. - 7 p.m. Scio Farms
Clubhouse, 6655 Jackson Rd.
Holiday Market with local artisan
goods!
CHRISTMAS MOVIES AT
THE MICHIGAN THEATER
December Sundays at 1:30 p.m.
Michigan Theater, 603 E Liberty
Street, Ann Arbor. Free and open
to the public! Please reserve
tickets in advance for an accurate
attendance.
Sunday, December 14: "Home
Alone"
Sunday, December 21: "The Polar
Express"
WINTER ECOLOGY AT THE
RIVER
Sunday, December 14, 2 p.m.
Leslee Niethammer Saline River
Preserve, 9000 S Maple Rd.
Saline. Join Josh and Amy for a
guided hike through the preserve
to learn about winter by the river.
Dress for the weather. Free, all
ages welcome!
COMEDY SHOW
Monday, December 15, 8-9:30 p.m.
The Blind Pig, 208 S. First St.
Performances from up to 15 aspiring
stand-up comics from around
the state. Local comics emcee.
Age 21 & up only. Free candy!
“SAY WHAT?” COMEDY
OPEN MIC
December 18, 8-10 p.m. hear.say
Brewing + Theater, 2350 W. Liberty
St. Ann Arbor. Stand-up
comedy open mic hosted by local
comics Ned Rice and Jeff Teed. All
ages 18 & up welcome to listen or
sign up for a 6-minute set starting
at 7:30 p.m., 8–10 p.m. Preregistration
advised at heardotsay.
com/events.
AROUND THE KITCHEN
TABLE PEACE HOUSE
BRUNCH: COOKIE SWAP!
Sunday, December 21, 11 a.m. -1
p.m. Growing Hope Farmers Marketplace,
16 S. Washington St.
Ypsilanti. Monthly free brunch
and community building event.
Free to everyone — we always
have omni, vegan and gluten-free
options. A hot chocolate bar,
cookie exchange, plus all your
favorite brunch eats.
MAGIC SHOW WITH JEFF
WAWRZASZEK
Saturday, December 23, 1-1:45
p.m. AADL downtown. Target age
group (5th Graders) be damned.
Be dazzled and amazed at an exciting
magic show performance by
local entertainer Jeff Wawrzaszek!
DRAG BINGO WITH JADEIN
BLACK
Sunday, December 28, 2-3 p.m.
AADL downtown, 4th floor program
room. Join Drag Queen
extraordinaire Jadein Black for a
fantastic session of BINGO with
music, prizes, and lots of fun! All
are welcome.
Submit an event to be featured
in the next edition:
submissions@groundcovernews.
com
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
5
Truth or Lies reading game out now!
FELICIA WILBERT
Groundcover vendor No. 234
Happy Holidays to all. Hopefully,
you receive that special gift of reading
this year.
Check out my new and exciting
reading game! The game offers exciting,
engaging reading challenges
where players must decipher
whether the stories are true or false.
If you’ve been following my column
this year, you might already be familiar
with how it works.
My game is designed for everyone,
suitable for all ages: children, family
and friends. Improve your reading
skills effortlessly. You can purchase
it on 4th Ave and Liberty Street from
me, the author, Felicia Wilbert. It is
$40. Don’t miss this Special Edition
of Truth Or Lies Mystery Lane!
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
HOLIDAY REFLECTIONS
Memories of the deep north
As I reflect on my younger years in
the ever changing deep woods in the
village of Good Hope Lake where my
tribe is, the massive hills and mountains
fill my memories with high trees
of spruce and cedar. The wind was
constantly whipping
the high
branches, making a whooshing noise.
I remember the smells of smoked meat
from the family smoke house filled
with moose and salmon meat.
Grandpa would sit and tell stories of
moose and bear hunts long past in the
deep woods. The days would go by but
no one cared about the time. It was a
lazy, soft atmosphere. Everyone cared
only that spring would arrive and
Canadian geese would fly over the
village.
There’s no other place in the United
States like the North, including Northern
Michigan. The North, in all parts,
be it Michigan or Alaska, all have very
similar ways, such as planning for that
extra 30 minutes to put on and take off
extra layers to keep one warm and
CINDY GERE
Groundcover vendor No. 279
toasty. Time seems to slow down on
dark winter days. Northern activities
have become normalized, such as the
winter games from Alaska or from
Detroit — ice hockey and ice skating
and skiing across the mountains of
Northern Michigan.
Here in Michigan, as well as other
locations in the North, ice carving
competitions pop up. There is a language
among the northerners for what
we call clothes. In the far north of
Alaska, we wear mukluks with seal
Prosperity and gratitude
The focus of the holidays is sharing
in the abundance of our labor and the
harvest that mother nature provides.
Many so-called weeds are tasty nutritional
foods. The best bonus I ever
received in appreciation for my work
was a bottle of homemade dandelion
wine. It was delicious.
If you know my writing, you know I
play with the basics of life from many
perspectives and adventures. Distributing
Groundcover from the Argus
Farm Stop at 325 West Liberty is an
adventure of interesting conversations
— as well as learning that NO is
an okay response from the many who
cannot be distracted from their mission
of coffee and groceries. Some
conversations are so profound that I
regularly think that freedom is growing
rapidly. Will many of us bond and
live in freedom at the next level?
"Woke Up This Morning” (with my
mind fixed on freedom) is a song from
the 60s and 70s that played in my
mind the week before the Groundcover
open mic at the Makeshift Art
Gallery on November 21. Those who
attended saw me freeze with nothing
of that song coming out. My Google
search had one word wrong and took
me to the ozone. I also blanked out at
my first backup song that I sang at the
2024 open mic. No one remembered
the name and I went back to the
basics of the 60s with “Blesst Be the
Tie That Binds,” using the Old English
colloquial for Blessed.
KEN PARKS
Groundcover vendor No. 490
Back to the basics is something I
reflect on and practice everyday. It is
easy to learn that compassion and
unconditional love is the best intention
to live by. You also know that not
everyone learns that, and those who
do are easily distracted from that lofty
goal by a host of obstacles. You can
wake up with freedom on your mind
and quickly get lost in compliance
culture and the penalties that appear
if you are not in compliance. Foreclosure
for back taxes on my house in
Detroit was a ten-year struggle that
kept me from my Cuban family until I
resolved it. That’s another story.
Even if we have accepted the intention
to benefit all beings without
exception, of course we regularly
forget. We need a community of likeminded
persons and regular practice
for this spiritual marathon. The gratitude
shared by those on the path of
liberation opens the gates of creativity
and abundance. We all have
something to share and the best gift
of all is your presence. From that felt
presence, whatever needs to be done
gets done as we celebrate the sacred
reality that surrounds us.
The assumption that reality is
sacred is unearthed by reflection and
analysis. If you are a dedicated, secular
humanist, you may come to
another assumption. All assumptions
need analysis and reflection. It should
become clear
related in the context of the whole,
and only mindful awareness can give
us the clues to make sense of the mystery
before us.
I found a University of Michigan
T-shirt that said “Mindful Leader” on
the back. I gave it to Khenpo Choephel
in honor of his mindfulness
teaching and practice at Karuna Buddhist
Center which you can experience
in the Upper Room of Bethlehem
United Church of Christ, 423 S.Fourth
Ave, on Saturdays at 10:30 a.m.
The most excellent result from my
Argus conversations came when Kori
Kanayama contacted Groundcover to
find me. Kori is a Japanese heritage
chef who does cooking workshops. I
was quickly invited to one in Chelsea
at Agricole. I rode the WAVE that goes
to Chelsea from the Meijer store on
Jackson Rd. It was a fully participatory
cooking workshop where I was
worked into the cookie-making and
into the Miso Soup pot. And then we
ate together; the work and the eating
both were a community celebration.
When I learned that Kori’s daughter
that everything is
Mai was singinging in a “Messiah”
concert, I asked where, and was
invited to the concert at St. Mary’s in
Royal Oak. “The Messiah,” by George
Frideric Handel, is the most famous
oratorio of Western music and my
parents used to break into it when I
was young. It is performed often by
music lovers who have practiced the
art well. The best of Western civilization
is presented as we consider what
the West has to offer the world. The
human voice is intimately explored in
this oratorio and it is an honor to hear
those who have mastered this tradition,
especially sopranos and tenors
who were the standouts in the
concert.
As we explore our voices and learn
from those who have mastered this
creative expression, we will grow in
the unity of body, speech and mind.
If you learn mantra practice you will
connect with your sacred nature. I
was given a copy of “Psycho-cybernetics”
in the 60s, an important book
on OM MANI PEME HUNG, the universal
mantra that awakens your primordial
capacity to be an awakened
being, from mindful posture to mindful
breathing and mindful awareness
of stillness in motion. Explore your
curiosity and become a Buddha!
bottoms in the deep snow to keep the
feet extra warm, but in my village we
used snug snugs called socks for the
feet. And across Canada many put
tuques on their heads for winter along
with their bear paw gloves.
We northerners are what we love to
do and how we choose to live in the
North, such as driving skidoos and
hunkering down in our ice fishing
shacks to try and catch fish, and we call
this fun. As I used to say “You know
you're a lover of the North when …” (for
example, when you love to ski or catch
fish through a hole in the ice). Michigan
is no different; only the truly hardy stay
and show just how strong they truly are.
The hardest thing is truly the ice.
When I was in Alaska, I met a Yupik
named Dam Lum who showed me on
a river how to walk on ice; it was really
the hardest thing I learned living in
Alaska. You put your foot down and
slide at a right angle to stop and do it
all over again, step by step. I fell more
times than I walked. He would walk
Cindy's mukluks.
right by me and laugh at me and my
attempts at Yupik ice walking. He told
me it was the first thing they learned as
kids.
The North is one big mystery of fun
and excitement, so get off your chair
and take a walk in the snow! Look at
the trees on a night walk with a full
moon and see the crystals of snow
flicker and dance on the ground with
each step you take. This is mother
earth’s renewal time of deep self-reflection
in the approach to the new
year, 2026.
DECEMBER 12, 2025
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HOLIDAY REFLECTIONS
Am I an antique?
Sometimes, when I watch “Little
House on the Prairie” or “The Waltons,”
I feel my generation is robbed of all the
types of ‘old-fashioned’ items from the
eras depicted in those shows, and the
creative inventiveness that surrounded
these times.
The year is 1978. The Gonella’s Italian
Family Deli calendar on my Nana’s
kitchen closet wall that faces you when
you go into her home’s side door, assures
me of this. I am seven years old, glancing
appreciatively at its familiar block
squares, its fall and winter decor, and its
listing of Federal holidays and President’s
birthdays. (The President’s depictions
in cartoon form are kind of cute
– even if they appear QUITE stilted and
stuffy as people.) At least this calendar
and some of my Nana’s household
belongings seem kind-of more oldworld
feel – because my Home with
Granny and Grandpa and Mom is just so
boringly ‘modern.’
Back at our Home — Granny just now
pulled this month’s Detroit Edison (electric
power) and MI Bell (landline telephone)
bills from our mailbox. I am
FULL of WONDER and EAGER for ALL
that LIFE CELEBRATES — including the
Thanksgiving and CHRISTmas Holidays.
These are fast approaching. I am
on Thanksgiving break from school;
tomorrow Granny and I will prep our
Family’s risotto recipe, as our Family has
made for this Holiday for years! We will
use our ‘by-hand’ meat and veg grinder
to prep its ingredients; that’s some of the
FUNNEST part! (In a few years Granny
will sometimes ask me, “Should we use
the electric grinder?” that we had also —
and I ALWAYS ASSURE GRANNY, “No!
Granny It just wouldn’t be THE SAME.”)
It has that ‘old-world’ FEEL to it, however
… this also is actually Nana’s
(though in two to three years she’ll tell
us to just keep it at our Home), and each
year we bring it over to prep our Risotto.
I walk over to our rotary-dial landline
phone in our kitchen; no-one is using it
now, so I can call my grade school friend
Melinda from school. She and her family
are going out of town to be with other
family for the holidays, so it’s NICE to get
to chat with her a bit because we won’t
get to ‘hang out’ until school starts again.
It’s so NICE using our home phone
instead of those public phone booths
that even the “Carol Burnett Show” that
Granny always watches poked fun at.
My friend Melinda’s family is also a lot
of FUN! With five children including her,
a solid Catholic faith, and two REALLY
FUN parents, I enjoy not only the games
and antics and explorations we kids
come up with when I go there — but also
ESPECIALLY the family meal times,
when her parents lead all their kids and
any guests in REALLY FUN 'around the
table’ games, like historical trivia or
AMANDA GALE
Groundcover vendor No. 573
guessing an object or activity or each
person just responding to a creative ‘getto-know
you’ question. These parents
really love their kids, and are ALWAYS
SO! WELCOMING for each guest at their
table. They bring out EVERYTHING
INTERESTING IN EVERY ONE. They
always have warm smiles and OPEN
HEARTS ready to receive all that is
INTERESTING from their guests. This
holiday season they’re focusing on one
of Melinda's grandparents though,
because one of them had gotten ill. So it
will likely be after the Holidays for my
visits there to resume; I might get to visit
Melinda and her parents and brother
sometime during the longer, CHRISTmas
vacation though. Melinda and I
often play FUN board games or act out
plays or stories that we invent. Melinda's
little brother sometimes HELPS us.
Sometimes her Mom plays along with
our pretendings.
Melinda’s mom is friends with my
Granny and they volunteer for our
school activities and are regulars for
‘PTA’ meetings. (Granny brings me to
these sometimes; and I was always sure
to ask a question to draw out a little
laughter from its otherwise somber
tone.) Oh well.
In our living room I walk on our earthtone
shag rug, past the unique, stone
comprised gold-colored water fountain
with a draped female figure and lamp at
the top of it. Granny purchased this as a
special token of her earnings via Ford
Motor Company Kitchen for herself and
our home.
I observe the gaudy gold and black
wallpaper that looks like its shapes are
monsters, and am amazed that that’s
really in style! It’s not as bad as that big,
ugly medium-blue hanging lamp that
Mom has in her room though; with its
large carved-out, dark-shaped holes that
appear just plain creepy — ESPECIALLY
at night. That also is REALLY in style,
though. (If only it was a FUN ‘creepy,’
like that pretend ghost-rifle that I got for
Halloween that you look through a viewfinder
and shoot the pretend villain —
ghosts who make Casper ashamed. Nor
like the small, black, square-box, green
hand coin bank that also found me at
Halloween).
I walk over to our TV console, and
open the top part that has the radio-stereo
in it. As I turn the knob to hear the
radio, I must put my Leprechaun Pet
Rock or a book on it, to prevent the
sound going out or static.
Like so many U.S. American households,
whenever our family tunes in to
Channel 2 (the most awaited part is
when Walter Cronkite once again
assures us, “And that’s the way it is …”)
each night, we must often turn that big,
clunky button dial that sits atop the TV
console, to get that large outdoor
antenna that looks like an 1800s lightning
rod or an overdone farmhouse
weather-vane — to turn to just the right
spot, to get a clear picture of Walter on
our TV.
The songs that reach through the radio
include such artists as Barbra Streisand,
Peter Paul and Mary, Helen Reddy
(“Keep On Singing!”) and the ill-fated
Karen Carpenter (John Denver also
brings us Home on Country Roads).
“Mariah,” I perceive, is a song (not a
singer) about a great storm tragedy.
The Singer sewing machine we have
in our basement, however, is what
Granny sometimes uses when some of
our clothes need a ‘touch-up.’ Mom uses
it to actually make some of our clothes
— including, each year, my Halloween
costume.
Epstein is a character on the show
“Welcome Back Kotter” — but that’s
another matter. Then there’s Mom’s
typewriter in our basement, most often
atop our sewing machine when it’s
closed like a desk. Although this is also
so boringly modern, I feel a little more
grown-up and ready for “BIG things”
because this year I learned from my
Mom the “home row” for typing. Mom
has some nice, in-style clothing and
effects. My favorite “pop-thing” she has
is a mood ring that turns colors, somehow,
according to how the wearer is
FEELING. Mom also does some ‘nail-into-boards’
art and velvet backdrop
painting art. She has turquoise jewelry,
a macrame purse and belt, and bell-bottom
jeans. Mom’s hair-style is ‘puffy’ in
the center, with side-hair curlets surrounding
the bottom of her ears. Granny
always wears her hair completely puffy
bee-hive style, and Grandpa has sideburns
and a baseball cap. People don’t
look like this on “The Waltons” and
“Little House on the Prairie.”
Sometimes as a family we watch the
old silent black and white film reels that
have to be attached to a film projector
and the machine with the reel feeding
through. It aimed at a blank screen or a
sheet. Through these, I get to meet my
Nono in his middle-aged years. He had
severe memory loss during his presence
in my mom’s preteen years and my
youth to 4th grade when he passed from
this life. Through the films I got to see
him dancing around for an Italian neighborhood
gathering, and they were all
dancing either the “Tarantella” or “The
Hokie Pokey” or maybe some combination.
Nono looked right into the camera
and his crisp, clear eyes that I know were
blue — just twinkled as he smiled.
These were the same type of film reels
that we’d watch — children’s movies and
children’s stories made into movies — at
school, often around the holidays, each
grade school class would observe
several.
However, we now even have the even
more really modern film reels that are
in-color for our new family moving pictures.
Our still family photos are all in
color also, these also contrast with the
old black and white family photo albums
from Granny’s childhood, and from
when she and Grandpa had courted and
then gotten married.
In this year that I will turn eight years
old, my mom and I would never even
imagine that years later we’ll lose all our
family photos to an ‘eviction.’ The
thought would have been HEARTWRENCHING
as it was when it occurred.
If we had known — would we have continued
taking photos?
The cameras we use are Kodak and
Polaroid. Film is brought to a store for
developing, while single photos from
Polaroid are pulled out and developed
in 1-2 minutes. This is just so modern.
Other aspects that are modern include
drive-in theatres, dishwashers, most
clocks, and watches displaying Arabic
(not Roman) numerals and lighting that
is two development steps out from Edison's
incandescent bulb.
A&W food brought out on a tray to
your vehicle is a reminder of at least the
1950s; however, there’s now more and
more drive-through fast food. The Bob
Jo's Frozen Custard stand in Southgate,
Mich. reminds Grandpa of the local
frozen custard craze of the 1940s; I just
like its really different “Blue Moon” ice
cream. However, a Baskin Robbins that
amazingly has 31 flavors (not just the
standard strawberry, chocolate, or
vanilla) has recently opened up, and it
will become a favorite for me and some
of my summer softball team members.
Grandpa’s WWII navy hat, that he
allows me to playfully engulf all of my
face in, is maybe a little less modern.
Grandpa talks with me about our dogs,
my schooling and his job at the steel
mill. Once for my birthday and once for
Christmas he made me special-designed
cakes! His listening to Frank Sinatra
and Bing Crosby records are a bit
nostalgic. Granny brings me with her on
shopping errands when I’m on school
vacations. When I was younger a few
years ago, Granny would bring me along
see ANTIQUE page 11 
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
7
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
HOMELESSNESS
The state of affordable housing in Washtenaw
RACHEL
Groundcover contributor
Last month I had a chance to attend
the 2025 State of Homelessness and
Affordable Housing conference at
Washtenaw Community College.
Hosted during National Hunger and
Homelessness Awareness Week,
coincided with Washtenaw Housing
Alliance's 25th anniversary and the 5th
anniversary of the Ann Arbor Affordable
Housing millage.
The breakfast conference had a
three-part focus: food, health and
housing. There were guest speakers,
panel discussions, a preview of a housing
documentary called "The Road
Home," and a forecast that was bleak.
The H.R.1 bill passed in late July
recently froze federal funding to essential
survival programs like the Department
of Housing and Urban
Development, the Supplemental
Nutrition Assistance Program, and
Medicaid. "This bill will cause people
to die," said Dr. Jeremy Lapedis of the
Washtenaw Health Project.
The restructures are expanding work
requirements for food aid; shifting
hundreds of millions in SNAP administrative
costs onto states; halving
USDA shipments to food banks like
Food Gatherers; requiring Medicaid
eligibility renewals twice a year; and
continuing to sweep homeless
encampments out of sight without
addressing their roots. In other words,
being poor in the United States is more
of a crime than ever before.
Dr. Ravi Vadlamudi from Packard
Health talked about the challenges of
healthcare without housing. Pneumonia
and wound care are manageable,
but chronic medical problems like diabetes
or kidney disease are virtually
untreatable under the circumstances
of homelessness. Hospitals will not
even schedule major procedures for
unhoused patients, like colonoscopies.
“You can imagine someone in a
tent trying to drink a gallon of
GoLYTELY.” His takeaway: people can
only think about long term goals when
they are not in survival mode.
“Housing is health,” said Dr. Chiquita
Berg, Trinity vice president of
community health and well-being.
The figures are not healthy. Last year it
took an average of 202 days to get into
housing, and at least 704 people experienced
homelessness in Washtenaw
County this year. Alpha House has a
waitlist of 120-130 families and the
Delonis Center's residential waitlist
can be 50-60 people long. Hundreds of
families will lose their rental assistance
under HUD restructuring and
the state housing voucher pause,
12,000 to 18,000 Washtenaw County
Panel on health and hunger relief (left to right): County Commissioner Katie Scott, Dr. Ravi
Vadlamudi, Markell Miller, Dr. Chiquita Berg and Jeremy Lapedis.
residents could lose Marketplace and
Medicaid eligibility soon, and food
insecurity will be at an all-time high.
Statistics and numbers were the
framework of the conference, but its
emotional heart was people. Dr. Ravi
shared his experience doing home
care for a terminally ill patient. As her
cancer progressed and she lost more
and more weight, she was steadfast in
wanting to remain in the apartment
where she finally had her own bed,
kitchen, and the comfort she never
knew when she was unhoused.
Washtenaw Health Project told us
about a woman discharged from the
ER with 48 hours of medication she
could not afford to refill. WHP fixed a
Michigan Department of Health and
Human Services error, found out she
was eligible for Medicaid right away,
and connected her to Community
Mental Health treatment so she could
go back to work with peace of mind.
The brightest forecast at the conference
was affordable housing. Jennifer
Hall, executive director of the Ann
Arbor Housing Commission (AAHC),
shared pictures of seven new developments
breaking ground in the city and
talked about the public-private partnerships
that make them possible. Forprofit
developers are the biggest
creators of affordable homes, which
cost the same to build as market-rate
housing. In 2020, a City millage passed
with 73% support that puts $7 million
a year toward low-income housing.
AAHC has 2345 housing vouchers for
Washtenaw and Monroe counties, 20
properties in Ann Arbor, and 1,071
units underway, offering opportunities
for thousands of people who work
in Ann Arbor but cannot afford to live
there.
Eating croissants and fresh fruit with
well-dressed office workers, it was not
lost on me that everyone in the room
represented organizations with overhead
costs and salaries higher than the
lifetime savings of the people they
helped. The caterers refilling the hot
trays made a fraction of the income of
the city planners there, and the houseshaped
stress balls with WHA logos at
every seat could have sponsored 200
bus tokens instead.
Some of the groups only rely on student
interns, barebones staff and
unpaid boards to fulfill their mission,
but others have executives with six
figure compensation.
Mutual aid organizations have a
term for charities that prop up social
inequalities and top-down hierarchies
like this: the nonprofit industrial complex.
"Dysfunction is part of the plan,"
says Shihab Jackson, a longtime community
volunteer. "It keeps a small
army of well-paid administrators gainfully
employed in a system they are
supposedly tasked to disrupt." If the
coalitions working to end homelessness
in Washtenaw County truly
reached their goals, he points out,
their careers would end.
Two-time Emmy winning director
Kameron Donald offered a more hopeful
analysis on the conference stage.
"There's no fame in this, no getting
see WHA page 10 
it
DECEMBER 12, 2025
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HOMELESSNESS
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
12/21 Walk for the Homeless: End the
criminalization of survival on the longest night
On December 21, the Winter Solstice—the
longest, coldest night of the
year—I will once again organize our
annual protest, the 12/21 Walk for the
Homeless. We march to honor Homeless
Remembrance Day and to protest
the constant, unjust criminalization of
poverty and survival.
For over a decade, this walk has been
a national call to action, launched by
Eric the Dream Giver and supported
by a network of advocates, including
Groundcover News here in Ann Arbor
and Real Change in Seattle. Our core
message remains: Poverty is not a
crime. Yet, Michigan and most communities
nationwide continue to
implement policies designed to punish
the poor and strip rights from all but
the wealthiest.
The roots of homelessness are not
individual failures, but catastrophic
economic forces that have engineered
a universal threat. These include
increasing financial instability, the
attack on housing security where
rising property taxes and other factors
result in vulnerability for even those
whose housing seemed totally secure,
and capitalism failing to provide basic
ERICK THE DREAM GIVER
Groundcover vendor No. 617
living in their vehicles. When cities
pass ordinances that ban RVs or heavily
restrict where they can be parked,
instead of solving a housing crisis, they
are criminalizing a legitimate lifestyle
and removing the last line of defense
against absolute homelessness. Our
demand is the immediate repeal of
this and all other discriminatory ordinances
that unjustly criminalize
people experiencing homelessness.
The economic system has made the
human needs and creating an economy
where survival is a privilege, not
a right.
A significant portion of our unhoused
neighbors struggle with mental health
conditions. We demand that cities
across Michigan and the nation shift
resources from punitive policing to
dedicated mental health crisis teams
that offer support, shelter and longterm
care.
Another example of how the homeless
are discriminated against even if
they’re not on the streets is the discriminatory
enforcement of zoning
and parking laws that target people
bottom 99% vulnerable to falling into
poverty and becoming criminalized.
This failure is creating a universal
police state designed to manage and
punish the poor, ultimately stripping
rights away from everybody.
The 12/21 Walk for the Homeless is
a vital part of a national movement
demanding justice. Our demands are
clear: End the laws that punish people
for poverty and support laws that protect
them, like the Michigan Homeless
Bill of Rights (HB 4919).
Moving forward, the work requires
more than just walking. We must take
direct political action. Contact your
lawmakers and in Michigan ask your
representatives to support bills like HB
4919. People who are so inclined can
also run for public office, challenging
the status quo.
It is time for Michigan to stop passing
"stumbling blocks" and start building
pathways to housing. Join us in
demanding that our tax dollars fund
housing and healthcare, not arrests
and incarceration.
Support the Movement: Join the
12/21 Walk! The 12/21 Walk for the
Homeless is an annual, decentralized
demonstration. The action starts on
December 21 at sunset, 5:05 p.m. at
Detroit City Hall. People are meeting
in downtown areas across the country;
I encourage readers in Ann Arbor and
Ypsilanti to organize their own walks.
City Halls are a good place to start. I
invite everybody to walk — pick up a
sign, join hands, and walk with candles
in your local downtown area; post
your walk on social media (use the
hashtag #1221WalkForTheHomeless);
and share the message for people to
join us.
If you want to walk with me and
follow my ongoing advocacy, please
subscribe to my YouTube channel,
Eric the Dream Giver.
9
CALL FOR SUPPORT
WE’RE HERE FOR YOU
& YOUR FAMILY
24/7 mental health and substance use support
734-544-3050
YOUTH & FAMILY SERVICES: ELIZABETH SPRING-NICHOLS AND ALYSSA NEWSOME
LEARN MORE about programs funded by the
community mental health and public safety
preservation millage.
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
RECOVERY
DECEMBER 12, 2025
MDHHS to invest $37.5 million in opioid settlement
funds to further expand recovery housing across MI
LYNN STUFTIN
Michigan Department of Health
and Human Services
As part of a statewide strategy
designed to save lives and reduce overdose
deaths, the Michigan Department
of Health and Human Services
(MDHHS) plans to invest $37.5 million
into stable housing to help Michigan
residents recover from substance use
disorder (SUD). This funding is part of
the FY 2026 state budget that includes
$131.75 million for SUD prevention,
harm reduction, treatment and recovery
services.
"Ensuring someone has a safe place
to live is one of the most powerful
resources we can provide to prevent
setbacks in recovery,” said Elizabeth
Hertel, MDHHS director. “These investments
provide people in recovery with
the security, structure and dignity they
need to thrive. By directing opioid settlement
funds to stable housing, we are
creating meaningful, lasting change in
communities across the state.”
A recent analysis by MDHHS found
that more than 7,500 discharges from
publicly funded SUD treatment annually
resulted in people leaving treatment
without stable housing. To address this
gap, the department has set a goal to
create 3,467 new recovery housing beds
by 2028, an increase of 40%.
Michigan is slated to receive more
than $1.8 billion from national opioid
settlements by 2040, with half being
distributed to the State of Michigan
Opioid Healing and Recovery Fund
and the other half being distributed
directly to county, city and township
governments. Over the last several
years, MDHHS has distributed settlement
funds in support of the state
strategy addressing prevention, harm
reduction, treatment and recovery.
This allowed the state to expand recovery
housing by more than 200 beds in
the last two years through $8 million in
investments.
“We know that the transition out of
treatment is one of the most critical
times for individuals with substance
use disorder,” said Dr. Natasha Bagdasarian,
chief medical executive and
Michigan Opioids Task Force co-chair.
“It’s a time when individuals face an
increased risk of returning to substance
use. Without safe and stable
housing, the risk of overdose increases
dramatically. Recovery housing is a
medically informed, evidence-based
solution that offers individuals the stability
and support needed to maintain
their recovery and rebuild their lives.”
According to a Michigan Association
of Recovery Residences (MARR)
survey, recovery housing assists individuals
in successfully obtaining and
maintaining employment. Upon
entering a MARR-certified recovery
house, about 17% of individuals indicated
needing employment assistance.
This statistic decreases during their
stay to about 8% at the 90-day mark.
Recent recovery housing investments
include:
$1.5 million to support a new recovery
housing project by Wellspring in
Southfield in partnership with the
Michigan State Housing Development
Authority and Oakland County government.
Construction will soon begin
on 60 new recovery housing units.
$3 million for The McDaniel Apartments
at Andy’s Place in Jackson, 26
affordable apartments and vital recovery
services designed to serve expectant
families overcoming opioid
addiction.
$3.8 million through the Recovery
Housing Investment Program to purchase
or lease homes across the state
dedicated to supporting individuals in
recovery, adding more than 110 new
beds to the state’s total capacity.
“This is a matter of both equity and
urgency,” said MDHHS senior advisor
Tommy Stallworth. “Black and low-income
communities are disproportionately
impacted by housing instability
and the heightened risk of overdose.
Our investment in recovery housing
reflects a strategic, data-informed
commitment to ensuring every
-
 WHA from page 8
rich," he said, noting that it was rare to
find himself in a room so full of people
who found their purpose in life. "You
really have a heart of helping." He was
there to preview his upcoming documentary
"The Road Home," an artistic
partnership with AAHC about the
housing crisis. His film about Ann
Arbor’s historically Black
neighborhoods, "A Letter to the West
Side," sold out its debut in February.
"The Road Home" premieres at the
Michigan Theater in March.
We ended the morning with a call
and response led by Hall and surprise
guest Morice Norris from the Detroit
Lions: “Yes, we can! BUILD AFFORDABLE
HOUSING!” The critical state of
homelessness in Washtenaw County
shows that we need to.
Michigan resident has a real opportunity
for sustained recovery. Additionally,
these projects demonstrate how
state and local governments can work
together to advance Governor Whitmer’s
goal of expanding access to
affordable housing.”
For more information about SUD
resources, visit Michigan.gov/SUD.
Additional information regarding
proposed programming under Michigan’s
Opioid Healing and Recovery
Fund is provided on the opioids settlement
website.
׉	 7cassandra://lAfOrZK9_VRInx5Q3EgYlV1c5iG357m4YPEe5RkMahUT` i;cs6׉E+5DECEMBER 12, 2025
HOLIDAY REFLECTIONS
 ANTIQUE from page 7
to a pond of ducks by Ford Motor where
she worked, and we’d invest a Sunday
afternoon feeding them (we didn’t know
we should’ve brought seeds instead of
bread that was not the best for them).
This would often be after a trip to the
“Lighting Candle Church” as I like to call
St. Henry’s in Lincoln Park. It was always
so fun because we’d light some candles
as part of our prayings.
Once when I had a bad cold for a week,
Granny brought a fun water jug in my
room to make drinking lots of water fun!
She also bought these two little curious
motorcycles that she or I would hide
somewhere in my room for the seeking
person to find, as I was getting better.
Granny and I often play card games
like Crazy Eights, Old Maid, Go Fish, and
Memory Game. Granny is also who
taught me how to read and when I was
five, I was reading to her and writing my
own stories like “The Flower that
Stamped Its Stem”, “The Truth Fairy,”
and a Pecos Bill style cowboy story.
In just a few days, just before my birthday
in December, I’ll need to be pushed
to the old Oakwood hospital where I was
born to have my appendix removed,
though none of my family know this yet.
My second grade teacher will stop by my
four-day hospital stay to tell me how
glad she is that I survived, to give me
some birthday and Christmas cards
from my class members, and to help me
‘catch-up’ on my homework. I’m glad
there’s TV in the hospital because I get
to watch two of my FAVORITE shows
“Happy Days” and “Laverne and
Shirley.”
Fonzie is a good, all-American guy,
“cool-type” of person. He’s a hardworker
in his mechanic shop, and he’s
always a good and helpful friend. His
character is “breaking ground,” allowing
a cool, tough guy to also share a softer
side.
The TV guide for this evening says
we’ll meet up with his more tame counterpart,
a high school kid named Richie
Cunningham, and his friends and family
at Arnold’s Diner. Mr. Defazio, the Italian
waiter, will chat with them and serve
them; there will be laughter and fun. A
young couple, Joanie and Chachi, will
also stop by, as will a “hot” woman
named Leather. Mrs. C is always supportive
and has good practical life
wisdom, and Fonzie has a lot of sharp
sense. This Christmas episode will find
mutual encouragement by making sure
to invite Fonzie to be a part of it. Meanwhile,
Lavene and Shirley who work for
Shotz Brewery will go singing at an
elderly home. These two shows are really
popular — especially Happy Days.
The year I was born, TV had only been
around for about 20 years; it’s amazing
it’s now in color and not black and white
as it was then. In 1978, we have no VCRs,
video games, iPods and of course we
were just at the brink of a beginning for
computers. Our culture “at large” could
not completely have imagined these just
yet; though the concept for these items
was beginning to take shape. There is a
lot more reading of books, and more
direct communication with people.
Oddly though, most high school seniors
often look like they’re in their 30s. There
seems to be a great deal of pressure for
“maturity” and upward mobility and
being ready for new technology.
When I return home, besides my
catching up with homework, Mom will
play Barbies and dollhouse with me as I
recuperate; and actually, Mom so beautifully
and capably put together the dollhouse
kit that crafted it.
I will be sure to get to Nana’s soon for
our regular visits! I’m glad there’s more
of a traditional, previous world feel for a
little girl to explore at Nana’s. Nana
brings out the Italian chocolate boxes
that have long instead been the just right
home for her heirloom jewelry. She
carefully picks up each piece like a show
and tell item, telling me special memories
and meaning of each one. There are
the two necklaces (“kadanga”) that had
belonged to Nana’s mom, and that she
gave to her, and the two or three rings
from Nana’s mom and a sister. There’s
the “gold 13” pendant that Nana’s mom
gave her for “Good Blessing” travel to
America, and good fortune here. Thirteen
has long been a “lucky” number in
Italy, and this 24k gold was made in
honor of Pope Leo XIII, a champion of
the working people’s rights. There are
several crosses, including the two that
are “look-through,” kind of like my toy
view-master — one displays the Lord’s
Prayer, and the other a depiction of Jesus
on the cross.
(Nana will give to me the blue cross
with red flowers; it was hers for a long
time, and she wants me to have it. This,
so sadly like our family photos, will one
day be lost to an eviction.)
There are many cameos, brooches,
earrings, and other various pendants
and necklaces, each with their own story
of who gave it and why. Special occasions
and “close-to-heart” people were
remembered.
There are two pocket watches that
Nana’s dad gave her to bring to America,
also for good fortune and to forever
remember him, now that a whole ocean
and another brewing war would separate
them, but for one last visit, three
years later, then forever.
The smaller pocket watch that is gold
colored somehow has the “modern”
Arabic numbers, and a depiction of a
steam train, rolling right out at you. It
also has a “fob” with it.
The silver-colored, quite large pocket
watch that might have been slightly
larger than Nana’s Dad’s hands — has
the beautiful old, Roman numerals
though; and just a touch of some green
foliage and red formal decor on its face.
It has decorative, fancy shapes all around
on it; there is no ‘fob’ to it. Nana says that
its exaggerated size was the style back
when that one was made. Nana carefully
keeps also and frequently shows me -
Nono’s war medal from when he’d
served in WWI in the Italian Army; and
also a cute, little white chapel-like frame
that a photo of her and Nono just after
their marriage and just right before their
move to America is set in. Nana often
cries as she shows me these special
items, and tells me the story of each one.
Now that Nono is gone from her with
his memory loss, the observable contrast
of her and Nono’s juvenile, smiling,
eager innocence in that photo — is just
brutal. It’s part of our family’s story
though, and Nono has always been
Nana’s man; and we must never lose
that; and we won’t. Nana shows me her
wedding ring on her finger; she tells me
it's been there since Nono placed it on
her hand when they married, and she
will never remove it.
Around Nana’s house there are some
items that handyman Uncle Mario,
Nana’s brother, made, such as the green
“skanette” — a versatile, wooden piece
that can be used as a stepstool or a quick
sit, but that Nana will use mostly as rest
for her swollen legs in her later years.
Somehow Uncle Mario also crafted a
green comfy cushion for it, and it has a
handle-part that he built into the middle
of it.
There’s the precious violin that he
carved out and then installed the strings;
he also crafted its bow. There are two
knives at Nana’s house and our own, that
Uncle Mario fashioned the steel blades
and the wood handles for; these are
really good cutting knives, and the handles
are really solid.
In Nana’s basement there’s that long,
dark-brown, glossy dining table that we
find useful not only for holiday dining
and as a holiday meal prep table, though
also Granny insists it will save our lives
also with couch pillows over us with the
table over us when tornado season
occurs — usually in late spring, though
in July 1980 a horrible one will rip
through, affecting many. And under that
table, we will go! We were preserved by
God’s hand.
Also in Nana’s basement, there’s her
1930s, white-with-black-burners stove
and over that each Christmas and Easter
we prepare our family Ravioli recipe.
And in another section there’s Nana
and Nono’s old phonograph — the type
that can play only the oldest of records
ever made — the old, really thick type
that smash and break if you drop them
just once.
Our family enjoys learning the Greats
from the 1920s and the 1930s again on
that old phonograph. My favorite is
Mario Lanza and sometimes I segue just
myself to go downstairs and listen to his
singing. Nana is always GLAD the
records are getting use and keeping our
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
11
family traditions ALIVE!
Mario Lanza’s music was formative for
the so ‘modern’ rockstar Elvis, whose
music we all love and who died tragically
just the year before. However, concert
specials from when he was alive are
often featured year-round, and also
some of his Christmas concerts in
December. Dad follows the concert
sometimes by playing an interview with
Elvis from when he was alive.
Maybe not everything ‘modern’ is ‘so
bad;’ Baptist preachers are always warning
us of all the dangers of that even
more modern rock group, KISS, though.
In Nana’s garage there are two old cars,
one from the 1930s, the other possibly
1925. These Nana keeps in museum
condition for the sentiment that Nono
had for them. It was also a part of his
upward rise, becoming fully US-American
though his family in Italy had been
a part of the upper class there.
Also, in Nana's garage, a fun, wooden
wine press which with Nono had sometimes
made his own “vino” the good old
fashioned way. In Nana’s larger cellar in
the basement (there are two), there is a
box of brushes and a hoof pick that Nono
used to groom his army captain’s horse.
Those were dear to his heart and in a few
years when I become the owner of a
horse at a boarding stable, Nono will
allow me to use the two of these I ask for
to groom my own horse. There’s also a
keychain with a plastic green horse shoe
and a wheat penny in the middle of it
that was Nono’s.
On many days that we are not using
Nana’s basement to prep our family recipes,
Nana has two clothesline ropes
running all along the basement length,
on one side of it. Though Nana has a
clothes dryer, she still sometimes likes to
dry her laundry as when she was in Italy.
Then we arrive at another curious, very
special memento. The trunk that Nana
and Nono used to bring all of whatever
they were bringing to America with
them.
It became a sacred resting place for
our family’s oldest photos and portrait
paintings, ones of my great, great grandparents,
who were Nana and Nono’s parents.
And Nana would show these to me
frequently and tell me the stories of her
childhood — of her family, our family.
She would cry and remember and it
would be good and necessary to feel
happy again that we were keeping them
alive — always in our hearts and also me
being the next generation.
Nana kept her wedding dress in there
and there were other special family
mementos and linens in that good old
trunk. I’m ashamed that before the very
first time that Nana opened its contents
and her heart to share spilled out with it
with me; I had thought it must be that
there’s some million dollar value that
our family is keeping secretly in there,
see ANTIQUE page 13 
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
PUZZLES
CROSSWORD
International Network of Street Papers
DECEMBER 12, 2025
ACROSS
1. Harder to understand
10. Tall fur hat
15. Greek school of wrestling
16. Bone cavities
17. Shield bearing a coat of
arms (Var.)
18. River of Deutschland
19. Barely get by, with "out"
20. Earl Grey and others
21. Changing color
22. Microsoft product
23. The study of plants
24. Places to say "I do"
27. Barbaric
28. Aussie smoker's request
29. Loan for a start-up
33. Bit
34. Key ingredient of many
smoothies
35. How one finds Easter eggs
36. Brand of Irish whiskey
38. Eyelashes
39. Primitive locking mechanism,
as for a gate
40. African grasslands
41. Shoe for a tiny foot
43. "___ Poppins"
44. Educational programming
language
45. Scottish clothing chest
46. Battering device
49. Pathetic one (Brit.)
50. Inhumane caning of feet as
punishment
52. Clean one's feathers
53. [Intentionally left blank]
54. Mails
55. Plot
DOWN
1. Church area
2. Endorse
3. Pivot
4. Sylvester, to Tweety
5. Parsonage
6. They direct you to your seat
7. Lieu
8. Greek god of love
9. Bled, as colors
10. Minerals used in paint (Var.)
11. In a harmful way
12. Draft holder
13. Salty, as seawater
14. Yin counterpart
21. Question the truth of
22. Passionate
23. Spread widely, as a rumor
24. Jewish month
25. Old stringed instrument
26. Put one's foot down?
27. Romantic infatuation
29. Dinner prayer
30. "___ Lang Syne"
31. Do needlework
32. Flight data, briefly
34. Malodorous
37. Provisions
38. Notarized
40. More immense
41. Trumpet
42. Humorist Nash
43. Botch
44. Dangerous biters
45. German philosopher known
for the Categorical Imperative
46. Indian princess
47. Gulf of ___, off the coast of
Yemen
48. Mean, medium, and ____
50. Greyhound, e.g.
51. Zilch
PUZZLE SOLUTIONS November 28, 2025 edition
׉	 7cassandra://Npo1e-u0bMYPzuqQUcxtsWCFu9uGy2DVYcO-DDhs9BoJw` i;cs8׉EEDECEMBER 12, 2025
POETRY
untitled 1
AUGUSTINE JAY
Groundcover vendor No. 678
breakfast church, sleep
and later on i'll catch a show
gonna buy some merch to keep
hopefully a patch to sew
you know i'd like to hear from you
somewhere in the time between
tell me what you're gonna do
about your day and how you're feeling
write to me and i'll respond
perpetuating our new bond
send a picture i can keep
because i really love your face
when i see you my heart leaps
up past the clouds to outer space
...like a rocket
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
13
Til I See You Again December Time
TERESA BASHAM
Groundcover vendor No. 571
To All My Family & Friendz Who Passed A Way
Only God knowz,
Where you’re at,
Who you wit,
What you’re doin now,
You’re having thee best time,
I know you’re talkin to everyone that
You’ve missed so much,
Only God knowz,
How much I miss,
I know you’re at bliss,
I know you’re up in heaven sayin wow,
I never wanted you ta go,
I know you’re in a better place,
You’ll be in my heart, soul, & mind,
I’ll alwayz miss you,
Til I see you again,
For you itz just a new beginning,
I’ll just have to wait & then,
I’ll see you again,
I miss & love you so.
Happy Sweet Sixteen
LA SHAWN COURTWRIGHT
Groundcover vendor No. 56
"Happy Sweet Sixteen to You, my awesome, beautiful Daughter"!!
I Love You soooooo much!!
Telling You that, letting You know that
is definitely in order
I want this day to be extraordinary
for and to You
You are strong and a success
in anything You put Your mind to
I don't want to get melancholy
because this is Your Special Day!!
All about You!!
"So, Happy Sweet Sixteen Young Lady!!"
Never forget that You are exceptionally outstanding!!
And that I've always loved You and always will!!
So enjoy this beautiful day doing You!!
Love Always,
Your Mom
SHAWN SWOFFER
Groundcover vendor No. 574
Jingle bells
Sugar cookie smells
Singing carols joyful hearts
Bringing the spirit
The lights burning bright
Elves and santa ride by
Merry and bright
No Scrooges
Bright glow bright feelings
Merry Christmas to all and goodnight!
Snow
(ICE QUEEN)
MARQUETTA "Q" CLEMENTS
Groundcover contributor
Beautiful and Deadly
Merciless and Heavenly
Pure but intoxicating
Like a woman dancing
Can’t resist the devil operating
One touch can freeze you, give you joy,
or have you contemplating
The homeless die
Beauty turns to occupation
Struggling for heat
Staring at death, devastated
You lay weak and tired
Or conquer defeat
You give in to the winter
Or you ride it to spring
I became the Ice Queen!
 ANTIQUE from page 11
and that that is why Nana wouldn’t yet open it to
me. i.e. like maybe she thought I couldn’t keep
it secret!
I could hardly bear the shame I realized when
I was at last deemed old enough to appreciate its
contents and cry with Nana about it. Though
always being strong enough for her that instead
it had been a treasure so far greater than ever I
could have imagined, our memories and ties
with each other. Within the last year or so is
when Nana started to share it with me. These are
such meaningful times, discussing our family
story and journey.
So in 1978, as I think about all the really
“modern” stuff around my household, and find
some greater wonderment in the family history
and ties to previous eras, I have also a great wondering.
Now as we continue getting so “modern”
I just wonder in the future, will this make me an
antique? Will we humans reject the Alexandrian
lie of “No more to conquer,” and always hold
onto what matters most? Will we prize our
people, and work hard at our relationships? Will
we value our Creator and His values to guide us?
Will we walk in His love?
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
LIVING ARCHIVES
DECEMBER 12, 2025
The legend lives on at Downtown Home and Garden
SUSAN BECKETT
Publisher emeritus
Paying attention to detail is rewarded
when ambling around Downtown
Home and Garden. Among the treasures
are virgin maple, Bay City milled
flooring, the original Fleetwood Diner
sign, and an old grain elevator that
once dispensed mixed seeds for feeding
farmyard birds. Rumor has it that
vestiges of those old seeds are still in
the chute. A tour of the basement
reveals the last horse stalls in downtown
Ann Arbor.
The building has been in continuous
use supplying farmers and gardeners
since circa 1906 and the persistence of
the building and business model
earned the admiration of owner Mark
Hodesh. He originally acquired them
back in 1975 from Emma, Herman and
Gotleib Hertler. The store was being
run then by 89-year old Emma and her
nephew, George. Michigan was suffering
from factory closings in the early
70s and downtown Ann Arbor was
more populated by blowing newspapers
and vagrants than active shoppers
and diners; families did not
venture there. Briarwood was new and
shopping malls reigned.
With more than 11 vacancies on
Main St., property prices were low
enough for young guys to buy in.
Hodesh's first downtown business was
the Fleetwood Diner which he founded
when he was 26, after apprenticing at
Red's Rite Spot, a 13-seat diner run by
Red Shelton and eventually displaced
by the Tower Inn. Back then you could
get a quality breakfast at the Fleetwood
for less than a dollar. Even then,
Hodesh believed in quality ingredients
and buying locally.
“The eggs were from Bilby's Farm,
the toast bread came from the Modern
Bakery in Detroit — best bread you
could get back then, and the jam came
from Smuckers, and none of that
mixed fruit, either,” Hodesh said.
Emma Hertler must have recognized
his appreciation of quality and history,
because according to Hodesh, she
bestowed the company on him. “Sell it
to him, Georgie; he's a good boy. He
gets up early,” she reputedly commanded
her nephew. Hodesh kept the
Downtown Home and Garden will close on December 24, 2025 after 119 years in Ann Arbor.
name Hertler Brothers and made
money his first year. He shrewdly purchased
the lot next door and made it
into the store parking lot. Business
grew 500 percent in five years.
Hodesh and his wife, artist Margaret
Parker, found another business opportunity
in the Castine Inn in Maine at a
time they were ready for a change.
They sold the Hertler Brothers name
and business and moved to the Inn
located on Penobscot Bay, north of Bar
Harbor. Parker appreciated the light in
Maine where the blues were bluer and
it sparkled like Greece. She created
large pieces of art for the Inn and Castine
School while they were there.
Hertler Brothers faltered in the late
1990's, and faced with the prospect of
an abandoned building on the property
they still owned, Hodesh and
Parker elected to return to Ann Arbor
in 1997 and restore the business,
though they no longer had rights to the
name. The renamed Downtown Home
and Garden again prospered under
their ownership. Like today, it was a
time of gardening resurgence with an
emphasis on organic gardening.
Parker redesigned the parking lot,
transforming it into a popular location
for weddings and parties when the
store is closed. She also does
advertising covers, including those for
their store, and is a member of the
Commission on Art and Public Places.
She was recently honored at the Grand
Rapids Art Prize competition for her
entry “C'ood,” a piece 10 feet high and
24 feet in diameter. It was constructed
with help from volunteers and made
from donated t-shirts — very fitting for
a work whose name is a contraction of
“Common Good.” A great interactive
piece, it is looking for a home, either
indoors or out, for as long as it lasts.
She may be doing some more design
work this summer since Hodesh
recently purchased the lot on the
northwest corner of his building that
once sported a parking structure exit
ramp. Look for more on this project in
an upcoming issue of Groundcover.
Hodesh is not sentimental about the
business but likes being part of downtown
Ann Arbor. The grittiness is part
of the appeal, as is the sturdiness of the
building. The store is a small infrastructure
project with heating and hot
water systems sized for a house. In the
winter, they wear more sweaters. In the
summer, an awning protects the store
from direct sun.
Through good times and bad, the
store's foundation proved solid: Plant
a seed, grow a plant, harvest, cook and
can it. The products carried today are
similar to those stocked for the last 100
years. The town has changed and
today's patrons are more urban gardener
than farmer, but just like his earlier
Hertler Brothers and Fleetwood
customers, they have their eyes wide
open and are ready to appreciate
something good.
Originally published in the December
2010 - January 2011 edition of Groundcover
News.
׉	 7cassandra://kyJCW5mYLRgMX7LgWmn4wcSfiZwW5bgKwx5IIbWxoEgR` i;csA׉EDECEMBER 12, 2025
COMMUNITY RESOURCES
transit RESOURCE CORNER
AATA’S “THE RIDE”
734-996-0400
Serves the Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti
Area. Regular bus routes operated
via a pay-per-ride system ($1.50
fare). Offers discounts for seniors
(free), youth, as well as low-income
(half-fare) and disabled people (see
A-Ride). Downtown workers, ask
your employers about Go!Pass.
Eastern Michigan University: Students,
faculty and staff members
can visit Service EMU in the Student
Center to purchase 30-day unlimited
rides at a discount offered by EMU.
You must present your student or
employee I.D. card when you purchase
your pass.
University of Michigan: Active
students, faculty and staff at U-M
and Michigan Medicine have unlimited
access to TheRide's fixed-route
bus service with a valid yellow
Mcard. To take advantage of your
sponsored ride, swipe your valid
yellow Mcard when you board the
bus. Your valid yellow Mcard will
serve as your bus pass.
Visit the AATA Office at 2700 S. Industrial
Hwy, Ann Arbor to enroll for
reduced fares. Visit their website at
theride.org for more information.
AATA’S “A-RIDE”
734-996-0400
Serves the Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti
Area. Offers door-to-door transportation
for people with disabilities
who struggle to use the fixed route
system. Rides must be reserved in
advance. An application is required
and can be found at
www.theride.org/services/ride-eligibility
and mailed or delivered in-person
to the AATA office.
PEOPLE’S EXPRESS
877-214-6073
Within Washtenaw County, People’s
Express serves the residents of
Northfield Township and Saline.
Offers a Michigan Medicine commuter
route. Fare is determined by
time of day, starting point and destination.
Call between 8 a.m. and 7
p.m., Monday-Friday, to reserve a
ride. More information can be found
at peoplesexpress.org
MICHIGAN FLYER
517-333-0400
Stops in East Lansing, Whitmore
Lake, Ann Arbor and Detroit Metro
Airport. Ann Arbor stop is at Blake
Transit Center. Tickets can be purchased
online at michiganflyer.com
Tickets must be purchased in
advance.
D2A2
D2A2 is an express bus service connecting
Detroit and Ann Arbor. The
service provides hourly trips
between the two communities for 16
hours a day during the week (6 a.m.11
p.m.) and limited service on Saturday
and Sunday. Fare purchased at
the bus (passengers 2-64 yrs): $8
one way. Online booking discount
(passengers 2-64 yrs): $6. Eligible
senior/disability fare: $4. Infants 24
months and younger ride free. Tickets
are non-refundable. Two free
changes are allowed up to five minutes
prior to your scheduled departure.
Make reservation at d2a2.com
RIDE THE WAVE
734-475-9494
Call Center: Monday-Friday from 8
a.m.-6 p.m. Door-to-door throughout
Western Washtenaw to anywhere in
Washtenaw County, Chelsea—
Dexter—Ann Arbor fixed route Connectors,
Downtown Chelsea free
shuttle, Discounts for older people,
people with disabilities, low income,
and children through 12th grade.
ridethewavebus.org
GROUNDCOVER NEWS
15
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GROUNDCOVER NEWS
FOOD
Parmesan chickpea soup Happyscopes
ELIZABETH BAUMAN
Groundcover contributor
Ingredients:
1 tablespoon olive oil
½ sweet onion, diced
3 garlic cloves, minced
Kosher salt and pepper
Dash of crushed red pepper flakes
1 can chickpeas, drained and
rinsed
1 parmesan rind
4 cups vegetable stock
¾ cup tiny-cut pasta, ditalini
8 ounces fresh spinach
Parmesan cheese, for topping
Lemon wedges, for spritzing
Directions:
Heat the olive oil in a large pot
over medium-low heat. Stir in the
onion and garlic with a big pinch of
salt and pepper. Cook for 5 minutes,
until translucent.
Stir in the crushed red pepper
flakes. Add the chickpeas, parmesan
rind and stock. Bring the mixture
to a boil.
Taurus: Apr.20 - May 20
Hello, let those hands and feet
loose. Love has been poking at you!
Decorate in your favorite color and
embrace the love you desire. Accept
the love given. Don’t hide, you can
hold on to it forever.
FELICIA WILBERT
Groundcover vendor No. 234
Our song: "Happyscopes are here
today. Read it laugh and smile all day!
Happyscopes are here today!"
Once boiling, add in your pasta.
Cook until the pasta is al dente.
Once the pasta is cooked, stir in the
spinach. Taste and season with
extra salt and pepper.
Top with plenty of parmesan
cheese. Ladle into bowls and
squeeze a little lemon juice in each
bowl.
Sagittarius: Nov.22 - Dec.-21
You are great at shooting your love,
now reel it in and hold on to it. Ring
the Christmas bells, shake love and
harmony in your life.
Capricorn: Dec.22 - Jan.19
Don’t eat or work like a goat the rest
of the year. You deserve relaxation
time! Let the lights and joyous harmony
of music satisfy that urge to
work.
Aquarius: Jan.20 - Feb.18
Put the load down just for a
moment. Put up those lights, hang
joy and prosperity. Let your love and
creative side shine, shine, shine!
Pisces: Feb.19 - Mar.20
Yes, that wreath would look good.
Hang green and the money will come!
Happiness is yours ... accept it.
Aries: Mar.21 - Apr.19
Stop cramming. The holidays are
here! Your turn, time to release your
decorative energy. The love you give
will be given back.
Gemini: May 21 - Jun.21
Give a little, save a lot! Twins stand
still, take time to cook and enjoy your
decorations. We know you are two
times the fun and excitement.
Cancer: Jun.22 - Jul.22
Stand up for truth and love; be a
good example lighting the way up for
others. The truth is light, and life will
be in harmony. Hold up the mistletoe
and give that kiss.
Leo: Jul.23 - Aug.22
We all know that Peter did not build
it! You did, creative one. It’a time for
the party to start, don’t be shy. Your
love maybe staring you in your eye.
Virgo: Aug.23 - Sept.22
It’s your favorite creative season.
Now take time to show off some of
that work. Love is behind all that
work; time waits for no one.
Libra: Sept.23 - Oct.23
You won’t be hanging on a string
this year. String up those lights, balancing
with a pop of color, let the joy
glow.
Scorpio: Oct.24 - Nov.21
Put that stinger away, only kisses
and hugs are allowed. Reach out
giving someone else joy. Joy, peace
and harmony will be yours.
DECEMBER 12, 2025
Delicious food for everyone.
Fresh ingredients for holiday comfort meals.
$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
12/31/2025
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