The Michigan Daily/New Student Edition - Thursday, September 5, 1991 - Page,3 Jake shakes us all year long by Melissa Peerless Daily Staff Reporter * A pack of Marlboro Reds. Mashed potatoes lith gravy. A $38,000 home. ?i '.These are a few of Shakey Jake Woods' fa- vorite things. -xHe also loves the students at the Univer- ity, which could explain why Jake has been playing his guitar on the corner of State and William streets every day for as long as anyone vcn remember. "This is my life," Jake said. "I've been play- g in Ann Arbor for 32 years." Although it may seem painfully obvious to pyone who has heard Jake play, he proudly Wasts that he has never had a guitar lesson in Rhs long life. "I taught myself to play guitar when I was Ppne, and now I'm 99. I can't read or write. I "6n't read music. I play by ear," Jake said, strumming a melody and smoking a cigarette. During Ann Arbor's sweltering muggy summers or blustery freezing winters, stu- *nts can count on encountering Jake every time .4ey walk down State Street. And they can rest fissured that his flamboyant clothing will con- ist of a veritable plethora of patterns and tex- tures. "I get my clothing tailor-made," Jake said, ,spinning to model his brown tweed blazer, pur- e flowered vest, mint-green rayon shirt, yel- JAiw plaid bow tie, and pink polyester pants. An imitation mink stole (with teeth and glass- Ilad eyes) and 3-foot-tall straw hat composed *hs outfit on a 90-degree summer afternoon. And while passers-by sweated and licked melting ice cream cones as they paused to put -Same change in the coffee can at his feet, Jake kept his cool. "There are two shade trees on my corner which were put here for me by God. It's not hot it all under them. They keep me chilly in sum- ier. Iri the winter, they keep me warm," Jake like Shakey Jake. He's hilarious in all those old clothes. He also plays pretty well too, consid- ering that he probably never had any lessons or anything. I always try to give him a little something when I walk by." While many students who agree with Jen- nifer give Jake any spare change they have when they pass him, other students feel that Jake doesn't deserve their money, or even their at- tention. Jason Sklar, an LSA sophomore said, "It's not our responsibility to support street people who are too lazy to have real jobs. We're just poor college students. If Jake wants to get off of the streets, all he has to do is find some normal employment. He surely can't play gui- tar, but I'm sure he can do something." Jake is indeed "off the streets." He owns a home which he purchased with money that he earned "doing his thing." Jake said, "One day, I decided that I wanted a house. So I played my guitar right here on this corner for 18 hours a day every day for two weeks. I made $38,000, and I went and bought a house." While that may not have been exactly how it happened, Jake's corner serenades and post- card sales are his sole source of income. "This corner is my favorite because once I made $14 million here in one day. I also have ten million fans who come by and visit me each hour," Jake said. Some of the things Shakey Jake says and does, the way he dresses, and his constant tremors have lead doctors suspect that he may have a minor form of schizophrenia. Dr. Karen Fried, a University alumna from the class of 1986 said, "Shakey Jake is able to function in society; however, his actions are not really mainstream. He probably has a mild schizophrenic condition. "It's nothing that makes him dangerous. He doesn't need to be institutionalized or arrested. Students should not be frightened of him." Some students are afraid of Jake regardless. Nursing senior Lauren Rochlen said, "One day I stopped to talk to one of my friends in the street and Jake was walking by really fast car- rying his guitar. He looked straight at me and said, 'Get out of my way, woman.' I was really scared. I thought he was going to hurt me or something. He's really scary. I almost called the police." However, Jake says that the police have nothing on him and generally leave him alone. "The police don't bother me. They can't re- ally. I have a peddler's license to sell my post- cards, and an entertainer's license to play my music. They come from Washington D.C. I'm also a member of the entertainers' union," he said, pulling three folded papers out of his breast pocket. The police would not say whether or not Jake has a criminal record. While Jake loves playing his guitar on street corners, and makes a fine living doing so, he said he wouldn't mind a change in locale. Although he shunned Carnegie Hall, saying that he prefers Ann Arbor to Manhattan, he said he wouldn't mind moving indoors to Hill Auditorium, located on North University, which hosts a variety of musical events each year. "If they asked me to play in Hill Audito- rium, I would go over there in a minute. I would just stand up on stage and do my thing. I love doing my thing for the students here. It's my life," Jake said. And tickets for the Shakey Jake Campus Tour would probably sell out every night, too. Recent graduate Joel Caminer said, "If Shakey Jake was playing at Hill Auditorium, I'd go to the concert. I would pay for a ticket to see him, I guess. He may not have much musical talent, but at least he's better than the New Kids on the Block. People pay t ke $25 a seat to see them." Although donations to Shakey Jake are not officially required student fees, remember that, until he goes on tour, a handful of spare change is the only way to keep this campus tradition dressed in his tailor-made clothes and "doing his thing. The man, the myth. Ann Arbor living legend Shakey Jake strikes a pose ° that postcards are made of. EmOrganizations help Ann Arbor's homeless by Melissa Peerless Daily Staff Reporter Although University buildings are the last place students want to be at night, for some people they are a grand hotel. "We have problems every day with homeless people trespassing on University property," said Frank Cianciola, director of the Michigan Union. "University facilities are re- ally the only places that aren't locked at night, so people who don't have anyplace else to go try to take refuge inside." As evidenced by Cianciola's comments, Ann Arbor, like all metropolitan areas, has a large num- ber of homeless people. Jen Rubin, a Rackham graduate student and member of the Homeless Action Committee (HAC), said, "People have pretty much agreed there are about 1,500 homeless people in Ann Arbor. That's a fairly large number for a city this size." Rubin said that this number may be misleading in that it is probably lower than the actual figure. "The problem is more than just homeless people on the street; how- ever, they are the only ones who get counted in the figures," she said. "People are doubled and tripled up in housing facilities to avoid being on the street. Many people have been displaced from Ann Arbor and gone to Ypsilanti or another surrounding area. These people are not counted in the figure of 1500." Some community and student organizations have established pro- grams to provide assistance to Ann Arbor's homeless. The Shelter Association of Ann Arbor, which currently sponsors a night shelter housing 50 people and a walk-in day shelter, was founded in 1984 as a temporary relief service as a volunteer project of St. Andrew's Episcopal Church. Ralph Bogl an administrative assistant at the Shelter Association, said, "We have more going on dur- ing the winter when it's really cold. Last winter, we had to send people to some local churches and hotels because the shelters were overflow- ing." In addition to the Shelter Association facilities, several local churches work together to provide a revolving shelter, in which home- less people sleep in the basement of different churches each night. They also provide a free meal service each night. In addition, homeless people may take refuge at the Arbor House shelter which is sponsored by the Salvation Army, the Prospect Place Family Shelter, the Ozone House for runaway teens, and other facili- ties. However, Bogle stressed that while providing immediate, tempo- rary shelter for the homeless is a necessary service, a more permanent solution must be the ultimate goal. "The city of Ann Arbor simply must find a way to get some more low-income housing. That's the only way to assuage this problem in the long run," he said. Bogle's philosophy runs parallel to that of the HAC. "HAC is not service-oriented. We. don't feel that service is unnec- essary or a waste of time," Rubin said. However, Rubin did say that she feels the system by which some shelters operate essentially makes homelessness a full-time job. "They have to get to the shelter and get in line and wait there all day every for their whole lives so they never get past their homelessness," she said. "We want to make Ann Arbor city council respond to the needs of the homeless and get low- income housing built." Using what little funding is available from federal grants, the Ann Arbor Housing Commission is trying to provide more of the des- perately needed housing. Conrad Benson, interim director of the Ann Arbor Housing Commission, said, "Ann Arbor wa recently given approval to build 25 new low-income housing units. Fcv of these grants were given becauge renovating existing structures usp- ally takes priority over building new structures."' While the building of new low- income housing units is definitelca step in the right direction, the City of Ann Arbor has a long, difficitlt road ahead in its struggle to eradi- cate homelessness. Huge waiting lists at shelters coupled with reccnit cuts to state social services funding show that this problem is going nowhere fast. W A sign at an Ann Arbor homeless shelter reminds occupants that their Sstay can only be a temporary one. CLASSIC STY UNCOMMOI (LE... 4y;1 .rf ?:: Yv C i r fr L : L v L t r t i fv f f A " K K rr rr r r r ~ "'i. V K. . K"" ' r K" p". "}l. i :"'ti :: f i" "rr :: J': ': '::" .. J. {,:tiff':', .. J......... ".. . SERVICE ... t '" :;:: :;:"'::' :':tiff'::::. ::::: , ;. :"sY. ::riff{ S 'JJ." 'i l:ff .".v::. % yr .. r. :%Si:%':":: % : ':v:': :",: Vii:;;?". I oMN '\