Tag: Michigan
a News 4 Detroit broadcast
1979
the menu at Shield’s in Michigan
the time I stayed with Cordell for the summer
I was eleven years old; almost twelve. It must’ve been June and July. I figure that because school was out and Weird Al Yankovic’s Deep End album was still new. I remember watching him perform songs from it on one of those late night talk shows. I was at Cordell’s house. Though he didn’t own it; his mother and father, my uncle, stayed there but were often gone; it was the house he lived in. I was just a visitor, staying with him for a few weeks because me and my mother, whom I lived with, weren’t getting along.
I barely knew his mother, but I liked her more than mine. They at least seemed to have a normal mother-son relationship. She yelled at him on occasion, but they seemed to get along. She was cool too, in the sense that she could relate to him; a boy the same age as me. I remember the topic of sex coming-up casually one day. He said something in regard to the smell of pussy, using an implication or euphemism as to not get too explicit in front of his mother. She asked him what it smelled like. He said fish. She laughed.
She laughed even harder the time I wrote “niger”. We were at one of her friend’s place one night, playing a board game; just the four of us, I’m almost sure. It was a type of guessing game in that one player had to guess what another player wrote down based on certain clues or something similar to that. I was told that what I had to guess was the color black, so I guessed “niger”. I don’t know if that’s how I spelled it, but I know it was spelled wrong as both his mother and her friend burst-out laughing.
There was also the time we were at another person’s house and a man head-butted a light pole outside to show a skeptical Cordell that he could make it move, but, aside from going to The Boys And Girls Club; his mother would drop us off there regularly until we got tired of it and told her we didn’t want to go anymore; it was mostly just me and Cordell at the house. He was funny. His unique sense of humor made an interesting contrast to my general solemness, but he wasn’t always fun to be around.
There was often unease, at least for me, as we traded insults; not only about each other but, one day, each other’s mother; and sometimes argued. It was never vicious; him yelling at me for not rinsing my dishes, which led ants to invade the sink, is the only time I remember him being mad for real; rather like rough play. One day we had a wrestling match outside on the grass. My uncle used to say he was going to buy boxing gloves so we could duke it out for real. He said he’d bet on me because I had less mouth.
Most of my verbal attacks came out of defense. It seems he always started it and I always threw it back at him. I had to stay on my toes. Not that we didn’t bond. We shared many laughs and had lots of friendly conversations. He liked my raps; I remember him telling his friends about me; and music sense. I had a lot more cassettes than him and knew more about music than him, which, even though he didn’t share my diversity when it came to genres; he mostly listened to rap; he seemed to respect.
Delmere lived across the street. I knew her from elementary school. Ebony went there too. She also lived on his street. I remember him calling her “Ebonyzer” from the porch, but that was nothing compared to how he made fun of me for leaping the gate when he sicced his dog on me. We were in the backyard, with Tobe, when Cordell unlocked the dog. I turned around, ran and cleared the gate like an Olympic sprinter, which he found hilarious. He did a similar thing to Gregory, a boy who lived down the street.
Cordell knew a lot of people in his neighborhood. He was a normal kid in that sense. I usually preferred to stay at home than hang with the kids in my neighborhood. Another major difference between us is that he cussed a lot when his parents weren’t around and I didn’t. It just wasn’t how I talked. I would’ve been fairly quiet there if it wasn’t for him. He liked to talk, joke and laugh, and I had to keep responding. It wasn’t nearly as annoying as it should’ve been though. I don’t remember ever getting homesick.
I don’t even remember going home. Memories are fragmented and out of order. I just know I stayed there; he had twin beds in his room; for weeks. A little stank-breathed boy his mother was babysitting stayed with us one night. One day Cordell and I cleaned Carrie’s nasty house and she only paid us like 15 dollars to split. I remember us complaining to his mother about it in the basement. I remember my uncle playing music and cutting my hair in the basement. Cordell insisted on the barber shop instead.
I remember my uncle falling asleep in the basement when he was supposed to take us somewhere. We used to watch movies; Night Of The Living Dead, Johnny Handsome, Die Hard; there too. He lived there while Cordell’s mother slept on the second floor across from our room; the result of a romantic relationship gone awry, which I never pondered at the time. Thoughts like that didn’t really cross my mind back then. I was just getting into sex when Cordell teasingly asked me how many “holes” girls have.
I doubt he was getting any either. He talked with girls on the phone; one even prank-called my uncle; but they never came over. He talked with Keith sometimes. He’d tease him about the mole on his face. Cordell loved ridiculing people for the sake of a laugh. When I told him about Chris getting “jumped” and hiding by a trash dump, it was comedy gold. He once told me a joke about a man who took a challenge to shit without straining and saw a bird “waaaaay up there”; something I still think about when I go.
If nothing else, I cherish my stay for the funny and fun memories it created. Like most of my childhood, it wasn’t particularly pleasant at the time; it was merely tolerable; but I now hold those memories dear. It’s the closest we’d ever been; a bit of how it would be to have him as my (only) brother. He was an only child, at least as far as I was ever told, and, though he’s only a little older than me, he basically treated me like a little brother.
a girl named Rebecca talking about running at The Big Ten Conference in East Lansing
2012
runmichigan.com
a girl named Brittni talking about winning The Summit League Cross Country Championship in Rochester
2012
runmichigan.com
a girl named Julia talking about winning the Elite race at The Spartan Invitational in East Lansing
2012
runmichigan.com
a girl named Meg talking about winning The High School Girls Green Race at The Spartan Invitational in East Lansing
2012
runmichigan.com
a girl named Julia talking about winning The High School Girls White Race at The Spartan Invitational in East Lansing
2012
runmichigan.com
promo : The 35th Annual Dally In The Alley

Papa Hobo ( song ) … Paul Simon
1972
my Joy Of Jesus camping experience
I was 12 years old. It wasn’t my choice to go. My mother just wanted to get me out of the house. I remember being given the choice of going to a Christian camp or a regular one. I chose the Christian one because I figured it would be easier to get thru. It’s not that I resented having to go. It’s just that I was generally a loner who’d rather be at home than out meeting other kids, especially other boys. I figured I’d give it a try though without putting up a fight. Besides, it was only going to take about a week or two from my summer.
I guess all campers had to take a TB test beforehand as I remember sitting on a gurney and coughing with some creepy doctor’s hand on my stomach, but I never thought the trip would trigger the first case of asthma I ever remember having. Actually, I didn’t know what it was. I just knew that, shortly after arriving, it became harder to breathe. It was a concern, but I knew I could’ve sought medical attention if needed, so I decided to tough it out while taking a considerable amount of effort to do something I’ve always been able to do with ease.
I saw Byrant; I’m almost sure that was his name; a boy I’d met in middle school not long before. We used to talk about movies and stuff in Mister Ellis’ art class. Bryant looked like the Tin Man from the Wiz movie, but he was always cool with me and it was a relief to see him there in camp. Though we were in different groups; our groups were separated by age and he was put in the one just below mine; and only saw each other when the groups got together at the main site for church service, meals and such, he was a friend among strangers.
The stay put me off of Lucky Charms for a while. It seems that’s all we ate. I remember seeing huge plastic bags full of it being dragged in by the staff. The two camp counselors and leaders of my group were a guy definitely named Smokey and a guy I think may have been called Tank. We all had nicknames. If we didn’t, we were given one by the group. I was supposed to be Al Bundy. It never really stuck, though I did have a chance to play into it eventually by saying “Let’s rock” to a campmate before a ball game, which was hilarious.
Smokey was the loud crazy type, always making jokes and having fun, while “Tank” was more quiet and subdued. I don’t even remember if he was there when Smokey started waking us up during what seemed like the middle of the night for some obnoxious fraternity play. He’d wake us, or see if we were really asleep, by shining a flashlight in our eyes and making us go in the bathroom or something. It was all in fun; he was a great counselor in that regard; but I was in no mood for games, so when he came to me, I pretended like I really was asleep.
It was antisocial behavior like that, along with staying on the sidelines while most of the others played basketball and such, that brought criticism my way when I was the first to win the coveted Camper Of The Day or Camper Of The Week honor. Some of the kids complained about it and they had a valid point, but they were probably just upset because they didn’t win. They said the next winner; the boy who cried because it was his first time being away from home for so long; only won because the counselors felt bad for him.
Despite a little criticism and a courtside altercation between a tall skinny black boy and one of the “ugly” brothers, we all basically got along; no fights; that is, until the very last day. It was morning and we were about to leave for home when the counselors, mainly Smokey, instigated a physical encounter between Bear; the biggest kid in our group; and a boy from the group cabined across from us. It wasn’t supposed to be a real fight, more like a wrestling match or something to see who was stronger and tougher.
Smokey rooted for Bear while the counselors from the other group rooted for their guy, but their guy let it go to his head. I remember him getting up in Bear’s face and pushing him or something like that. Bear obviously didn’t want to fight, which caused the boy to assault him more. That’s when Smokey flipped out. Smokey; a full-grown adult, at least to us; attacked the kid; a teen who himself looked and acted like a young adult. He might’ve even been the same dude who got into it with the “ugly” brother a few days before.
Smokey jumped on him, not playing around but seriously angry, and took him down to the ground. I remember all the commotion; “Tank” and the other counselors trying to break it up; as Smokey and the boy rolled around in a violent struggle. I, like other kids in our group, felt sorry for Bear and appreciated our Smokey defending him so vehemently. He was very much out of line though for attacking the boy, who appeared to be as startled as the rest of us, especially considering the fact that he (Smokey) was the main instigator.
It was the most exciting part of the stay, but, by then, I think it’s safe to say we were all ready to go home. The testosterone-driven madness, which at one point brought up talks of seminude ice-water swimming like the Polar Bear Club; an environment marked by daily Army drills with Jesus praise tossed in for good measure; had grown tiresome. One of the first things I did when I got home was sit down to a bowl of anything but Lucky Charms. One of the next was to have my mother take me back to the doctor for an asthma inhaler.

