Styturday, May 29, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Doge Seven Street people: Spare -changin' it By MICHAEL YELLIN FROM THE front of the UGLI he looked like a tired, bloodshot, droopy basset hound. Drawing nearer, the image of Dustin Hoffman's urchin, Ratzo Rizzo filled my eyes. Barefoot, with boots in hand, he stood swaying in the finicky May rain stupified-an Ann Arbor street person, an unpaid professor of love, drugs, freedom and panhandling. Tightening my hold on my last dollar bill, I passed him by, head bent and ears closed to his rasp, "Got any spare change?" I was headed for Cottage Inn, where I planned to sit and drown all remembrances of the past winter semes- ter in generous amounts of rich black coffee, daydreaming about the coming of summer. The money in my pocket was for me, me, me. It was mine, mine, mine, not to be given away to anything that wouldn't benefit me, me, me. With a flash my new job sunk like a dead bolt in my mind. Making $55 a week as a Daily grub reporter did not rest easy. I envisioned myself standing alongside Ratzo, spare-changing the pub- lic on the corner. In one pirouette step I faced about and asked what my money would be used for. Ratzo mumbled something about heat and getting out of the cold, wet weather, then his mind rusted, set, on a final word-coffee. Exactly in synch and on time with mine. AS HE HOBBLED, staggered and reel- ed down the street I pestered him with a reporter's questions. Working his mouth feverishly, he responded in one repetitive stoned sentence. "I should have never left Gainesville, man, it was warm down there, I should've stayed in Florida . . ." Not until he stopped in front of Cottage Inn to stoop and slowly pull his boots over his bare toes, did he mention his name, Jonah. His words spilled out, over the brim of our first cup of coffee and I barely managed to understand, due to his dif- coffee in walks three of the city's more notable street adventurers. Blue, a work- ing class product of red-neck Muskegon; T-Bone, a parentless at age seven "rais- ing hell on the streets of Detroit," head- ed for delinquency; and Siobhan, a mid- dle class daughter of "Xerox" parents; a contrast in cultures they meet as equals on the street with a shared philos- ophy, "What goes a r o u n d, comes around." The sight of Blue antagonizes most midwesterners enough to make them stand gasping with mouth and anus gaped open wide enough to receive the pair of size ten saddle shoes he wears. Sporting a brightly dulled Hawaiian flower shirt worn under a bleached denim vest with a marijuana sticker pasted on the back, Blue's appearance is not extremely radical until you look above his shoulders. Blue's hat is blatantly that of a social anarchist. His wide brimmed, well- formed fedora contains a number of alluring antique amulets, feathers and buttons made available to him through his travels. Pulled way down over his forehead, the brim meets a large pair of two-tone red shades which add to the image and blend well with his ragged behrd and jagged jaw. 4 FTER ASKING around for loose joints Blue, T-Bone and Siobhan seat them- selves and order coffee. The waitress immediately asks if they will have enough to pay for the three cups. But her inquiry is blunted by Siobhan's pointed response. "If we don't have it we'll get it outside," by panhadling, a steady way of collecting small change when needed, Blue is visibly upset with the waitress's question, but he keeps quiet, knowing that Cottage Inn is one of the few res- taurants in town willing to fill your cup up all day long for 26 cents. We talk on about the local biases against street people. "The landlords, students and police are the biggest problem here Doily Photo by S TEVE KAGAN T-Bone and Siobhan The Saturday Magazine fuse use of the English language, that he has been steadily on the road since the not so tender age of 14. With the coming of the second cup, Jonah ex- plained that he had been extradicted from Florida, while en route to Montreal, when he got sidetracked in Adrian, Michigan-busted and booked for the possession of marijuana. He decided to wait out the 16 days in Ann Arbor until his court arraignment. Once inside the city limits, Jonah bought a bottle of mad dog and looked to the start of a new day. Hours later he was arrested, the charge, drunk and dis- orderly conduct. "T IFE ON THE road is hard, I'm worn out," rambled Jonah. "But with prices going up and jobs going down, there ain't no funky jobs to be found. Taxes keep going up so I stay on the streets. There the police are bad. Most people don't see them do anything but believe me, they're always present, they can't stand free people that have no ties, no debts and no money." Halfway through our third cup of now," comments Blue. He blames these groups for the hassles the "most dis- criminated against of people in Ann Ar- bor (street people) receive." T-Bone shrugs over the matter and says to me, "I'll tell you who's pre- judiced, Wilson and White. They won't rent to me 'cause I'm on welfare and because I'm a black guy living with a white woman." T-Bone has been on and off the streets for almost 20 years. As a kid he was sent through Michigan juvenile delinquent homes until the age of 18 when he joined the Navy. He tells me, "That's where I learned to take care of myself and my body and to respect other people." Re- ceiving a dishonorable discharge, "they found ten pounds of reefer in my foot locker," he came to Ann Arbor with $600 four years ago. WITH HELP FROM the coordinators of the Creative Arts Workshop, a program designed to help street people survive during rough times, T-Bone just began receiving general assistance from the government, after having spent a winter sleeping on stair landings and in the back of buildings. "I used to not give a hoot about get- ting in with the clique (those people get- ting welfare of some sort)," he re- marks, talking about those lean winter months. "I would hope for a joint and a few beers and not worry too much about where my next meal was coming from. But I was low on energy and my stomach took a real beating from this. And the police are always up on you if you're not with the clique, they're always waiting for you to fall into the arms of the law." The question of food posed, we strolled up the block to the dirty red brick build- ing situated almost above Mr. Tony's on State and East William, walked through the door and headed upstairs to the Creative Arts Workshop. Workshop, as it is commonly known, is the only semi- official place where street people are welcome, cared about and fed once a day. The program which started four years ago to facilitate an exchange of knowledge between people of the arts and the so-called "common" folk. It is now more practically oriented to help fulfill the basic needs of street people: food, clothes, medical care and jobs. It was somewhat hard for me to be- lieve that these people had some bit of bureaucracy linking them with the out- side world. A number of street people have organized work schedules. In ex- change for day-old bread and other sub- sistence food, they rotate between the food co-op, the Sun Bakery, and one of the two garden plots attained through Project Grow (a country-wide sponsored grow your own food program). Located on Washtenaw, a handful of street peo- ple spend time there several days a week to weed, water and watch what should yield an ample supply of vege- tables for future months. WRITTEN IN PENCIL on the walls of the Workshop are these words, "To rip-off a brother or sister is to steal .a flower and hide it." Among the twenty men and women congregated for a dinner of fish and salad that night, a good half have will- ingly thrust themselves out on the street, away from their former patterns accept- ed social behavior. With nothing else to attract their interests, the life of a modern day vagabond lures them off. But the remaining half have been forced into their positions. Released from men- tal institutions, juvenile homes, jails and the like, there often is nowhere else to go. Yet though their differences seem sometimes greater than their similari- ties, the way of life, their status on the street makes them compatriots, cohorts. Some are established, pay rent, do as many drugs as possible, consider them- selves revolutionaries and have money available to them through social security and veterans benefits. Others sleep out- doors or in hallways, only get into the bottle, don't have a cent and are con- stantly on the move. Their bonds with each other are usually loose but friendly. Blue explains, "You know your friends on the street are going to always be your friends." flAPPY WITH THE way the after- noon's turn of events had brought me a change from the pace of the previous semester, I stuck with Blue after dinner to await the evening's hap- penings. As it turned out there was a party at "Free's house." Over roasted chicken, beer, wine whisky, reefer, Motown, song and dance I was introduced first to Free-a self proclaimed revolutionary poet whose work is often printed and sold for spare change-and then to a number of people sporting such names as: Sundown, Cap- tain, Cowboy, T.C., Jai, Boston, Roach, Ox, Og and Noose. Sundown struck me as quite a char- acter. With a flair for speech and a cackle for background effects he looked like the missplaced man from the Southern Hills. He had come to the party with his wife Crystal and his baby See SPARE, Page 10 Michael Yeflin it a Daily nigh/-edit.