Tuesday, June 15, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five TusdyJue-5-17 TEsIHIANDIL ae .Five Reibert: Just trying to feed her kids (Coontinued from Page 3) "I'M TRYING like hell to get off welfare," she says, shaking her head for emphasis. "And as soon as I do, I'm going to find another ADC mother and get her off welfare, too. I don't care if the Agency doesn't like it; I'm going to do it." Her face darkens; she talks about the horrors of being a welfare mother trying to get through school. The social serv- ices agencies, she claims, are trying to keep as many people as possible f r o mn improving themselves. "All the time they're telling you, 'You're not going to make it, you're not going to make it, how dare you even ry; you have no right.' You're in a constant state of panic all the time." MANY WOMEN can't take the strain imposed on them, she adds, and are forced to drop out of school. She spoke of a friend of hers who was also enrolled at the University: "They waited until she was in the middle of finals, and then made her go downtown f o r recertification. Every day she'd wait until noon -they'd tell her to come back in the afternoon-and she'd wait there until closing, and they'd say, 'Gee, we're sorry, but we can't see you today.' It got her so upset she couldn't study." As she speaks, the front door opens. A tiny old woman in a pink dress walks painfully up the stairs to the hallway; the dog barks half-heartedly at her. Joyce calls to a daughter-in- law. "Just fix her some lentils and a little lemon," she tells the girl. "She'll like that." The daughter-in-law takes the old woman into the kitchen. JOYCE, lowering her voice, explains that the woman has been cut out of the food stamp program because of a small savings which she refuses to give up. "She only has a little," she mutters, "but it's enough for them to use as an excuse not to let her eat." Joyce feeds her whenever she can. "You know," she says, "if I were affluent and I did these On the 14th of December, 1962, the U. S. Spacecraft Mari- ner flew close to Venus and for 42 minutes its instruments recorded information about the earth's closest planetary neigh- bor. 7There IS a : difference!!! PREAM E FOR: : : CAT te~ya " MCA e35e of expeence " and success " DAT tclasses LSAT oluminus hme GR tudymeaterals GRE -" ATGSB Coursesthat a red* CAT apefacilities fne * 0 CA rerws it cass CPAT lesos and tr use C oitsupplementary " F E materals "Makeups for " ECFMG rmised'le-sos i NAT'L MED BDS i NAL DENT BDS + write or call: 1945 Pauline Blvd. * Ana Arbor 48103 " * 66-3149 " " r EDUCATIONAL CENTER *" L SECA ISTSINCE 7Aea+ee nmsa u ~w " * nnsouna s * things, they wouldn't be able to pat me on the back hard enough. But what they really say to me is, 'You have no right to be kind.' " The living room furniture was a gift from her parents, who had recently sold their house and moved to Florida. "And I've had social workers come in ask- ing, 'How'd you get this furni- ture on the money you're get- ting?' I shouldn't have to apolo- gize for having a decent house. I shouldn't have to apologize if my children are good students or musicians or athletes. I shouldn't have to, and I don't like it." MUCH OF the problem lies in the average citizen's misunder- standing of poverty, she asserts. "Things used to be different for me; I wasn't always poor. If I hadn't been involved in a divorce I'd be middle-class, in fact; but I'm grateful for it. It's taught me a lot of lessons. Unless you know what it's like to spend two weeks living on oatmeal because a bill came in or the furnace broke down in the middle of winter, you don't know how poor people think- how they feel things. I used to think, 'Who are all these people who want want to live off my hard-earned money?' Now I understand them; and I know they're caught in a system that wants them to stay poor." People who try hard to rise above their poverty should be rewarded, she says. "They should get a chance for better things. Your children should maybe be able to take music lessons like other people's chil- dren, or join the Boy Scouts. You know what it's like when your boy wants to join the Boy Scouts and you can't afford a uniform for him?" Joey, her foster child, walks into the room. She introduces him, and he smiles shyly. "Unless people start taking some kind of a stand," she says, "the Joeys of this world are always going to be punished." COMMUNITY ANTI-RAPE EFFORT Presents RAPE CULTURE A Thought-Provoking Documentary Film TUESDAY, JUNE 15-7:30 P.M. EAST QUAD, Rm. 124 Film and Discussion FREE of Charge l TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY ""ALL -YOU CAN EAT" ENGLISH STYLE FISH 'N CHIPS includes unlimited trips to our famous solad bar and hot loaves of our home baked bread. ADULTS.. .... $3.44 CHILDREN..$1.95 (under 12) Served Tuesday and Wednesday 5 p.m.-1 1 p.m. at the Holiday Inn West 2900 JACKSON RD. J' 665-4444 ui .r - -BIVOUAC now carries the Lev -Straussine of K ug- ---- JEANS CORDUROYS and SHIRTS// BIVO UAC M-S: 9:30-5:30 FRI - TIL 8 761-6207 330 S. STATE ST. (Nickels Arcade)