rc IG bo rd m etin • e ch t te gave report on i progre nd it proj ct . Som ofth i ue pcopl di - c ed were ffordable ho - in ,10 n counseling, politi I c mp ign reform, reforma­ tion of HUD policie nd th incre e of paren • voice in th hool y tern . Wh t got re lly iting w wh n we cho e th cam­ paign th t re important to all th tate and developed plan to wor together on them nationally. Two of the thing we focused on were HUD reform and the develop­ ment of a third party. We agreed that HUD house have become for real­ e tate peculators, not the poor, and that both Democrats and Republicans are increasingly controlled by special-intere t group who finance their campaigns. We're already eeing the result of our nation-wide campaign against HUD. On October 31, ACORN national leaders met with Juan Aco ta, assi tant to Jack Kemp, to negotiate changes in HUD policy. As the meeting was taking place, delegations of ACORN members across the country marched into HUn offices to insist that a letter of our demands be faxed to the national HUn office in Washington, ,D.C. This show of trength must have made a difference: HUD agreed to change its policy on "earne t money" down. NOW, INSTEAD of re­ quiring a deposit of 5 percent of the cost of the house to hold a bid, the buyer in never required to put down more than $500 on any house under $50,000. ACORN's pressure on HUD will continue nation­ ally. At the same time, we will keep developing our plans for a third party plat­ form. Already, ACORN has elected members to the school board in Chicago, and to the City Council in Pine Bluff, Arkansas. The City Council representative was elected on a_developed, third­ party, "people's platform." ACORN members around the country are ready to develop a third party controlled by people, not money, and will begin focusing energy on it nationally in 1992. ACORN is growing not only nationally, but in Detroit as well. To join ACORN, call 963-1840r . Deliver your Christmas Wish Lists to Santa Claus Children of all ages are en­ couraged to come out to the Inkster Recreation Complex. � Friday, December 13, 1991 at 6 PM to meet and deliver their Christmas Wish Lists per- onally to SANTA CLAUS himself during the City of Inkster'S Annual "Santa Night." Santa's pecial helpers will al 0 be on hand to snap that special photo of your child and Santa (photo can be purcha ed for $5 w/proceeds going toward pecial Parks and Recreation projects.) . For more information on "Santa Night" iii Inkster, call the Parks and Recreation Department at 728-7530. . " .. " union' bargamin H PPY aid they would b DETROIT c oar di r o HP employees benefit n.eedy families By NATHANIEL SCOTT St."W,ItM HIGHLAND PARK-The winners in Highland Park' employees ver- u the public afety department fourth annual basketball game were 11 needy families, not publi afety who edged the employee 89 to 85. City employee Tony Lampkin aid the proceed from the game were used to purchase 11 boxe of food for needy families in Highland Park.. Teen learn the problem of saying Yes More than 75 teens and parents attended a panel discu sion spon­ sored by Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc., Pontiac Chapter, on the "The Consequences of Saying Yes to Teen Sex. Part 2". A similar panel was held in 1990. Donations were also accepted for the Stork's Ne t� a Zeta communi ty ervice project that donate infant layette to teen mothers. The panel! 18 included teens, ex­ perts and intere ted adults from the community. Adult panelists were Betty Yancey, RN, Program Coor­ dinator, Infant Health Promotion, Oakland County Health Division, Syrenia Taborn, teacher, Early Childhood Development Class at Pontiac Northern High School, Glenn Chappel, MALO Board Chairman, and minister at Greater . Grace Temple in Detroit. Teen members were Nichole Hickson. Zeta Archonette youth group, Stephen Kennedy, Young Men of Simba youth group, Willie Rainstaff Leaguers youth group, and Karmen Davi • AKA Teen youth group. Two teens from Ms. Taborn' Early Childhood Development Class, Yvette Dunlap and Karen Turner, discussed limitations in freedom experienced when re­ quired to carry a doll with them at all times as part of an exercise in learning what it feels like to be responsible for a baby. SOME CONSEQUENCES to teen sex discussed were teen preg­ nancy and sexually transmitted dis­ eases including AIDS. Interruption in or permanent postponement of school or college and the high cost of raising a child i.e.. $162,000 to the age of 18, were other factors Mattie 's f£�otic 'Blooms "Making Yoyr Christmas Fantasies Corne nye!" IT'S OUR 8USINESS TO �� THAT YOUR HO"� OR 8USlNI! "EFLECTS THE OLOWAND JOyaE THE HOLJQAYSWClN. FREE DECORATING CON ULTATION -10YMN!xperIenoe TREES.TRIMMING. TARTlNGat$21 T.... �Q YAAO WN!Anta-OOOR � IItONICI..QAILUD IALMII­ EVERGRB!NCANDYCAH WIN.AH� COMMERCIAL INTERIOR. EXTERIOR DECORATING East Side • Eastern Market P 'ng Lots t863, 16&4, 1665, nd 1668' At Ropel & WI Ina West Side • 18358 Livernois Avenue On The Avenue Of Fashion, 2 Blocks NOI'Ih of 7 M • RotId Each box contained all the nee ary ingredients for a tradi­ tional Thanksgiving diner, includ­ ing turkeys. Lampkin said the Department of Social Services provided the names of the familie who received the boxes. Th annual game wa played at the Earnest T. Ford Recreation Cen­ ter and there i talk of a rematch before Christmas. The employees, who aid this wa their first loss, are gearing up for the rematch and according to the rule of the game, the 100 er had to purcha e the food, pack and deliver the boxe . However, the employee did not consider th chore an unpleasant one. Neverthele ,Lampkin in i ted that Raymond Moore, Michael Hall and Inspector Hubert Yopp were mentioned. He wa equally adamant about thanking the recreation department for the use of the center. DETROIT PUBLIC SCHOOLS , arm violent a By FLO_DEAN S. RIGGS Mlchlg.n Cltlz.n Frank Hayden, Detroit Board of Education vice president said he i alarmed at what he has learned a the board' expulsion hearing of­ ficer. A majority of the children from the middle and high school cro s­ ing hi path are kicked out of the system because they brought guns to school fully intending to u e them. "They felt they had to arm them- clve to protect themselve ." Hayden, (lid. "We have to propo e an alternative to packing a gun." Confli t re lution, including program to develop elf-e teem, recruiting more African-American male teachers to serve as role model for male students will be efforts combined with language, wri t­ ten into the Student Code of Conduct. In addition a b l u e vr i bon commi ion will be formed to tudy, iden­ tify, recom­ mend and put into action solution reforming the violent men­ talities of tu­ dent , Hayden said. • I violence, Nicholson aid. "They don't tell anyone after coming back to chool fter a homicide," she said. "They have been taught it' not okay to cry, 0 they keep it inside and their anger builds up. "I try to a k them what they can do that's positive, that' not going to get them into trouble." TUDENT AS young a first grader have a double anger, she continued. They're mad because of the violence that ourrounds them and they're angry over their fear of ecorning a tati tic. Through talk and role playing the students learn they are not alone which is rehabilitating itself, Nicholson said. The American Medical Associa- tion reports t hat homicide is the leading cause of death in Mi c h i g a n a m .0 n g African American males over age 9, and further reports that Michigan's you n g African American males have a greater chance of be­ coming homicide victims than those in any other state. African American men in Wayne County die at nearly 15 times the national average for all men in the United States. Within the Detroit Public School District. Student Code violations have doubled in the last year, cases involving guns have tripled and the number of students bringing knives to school has significantly in- The American Medical Association reports that homicide is the leading cause of death in Michigan among African American males over age 9 ... African Amerian men in . Wayne County die at nearly 15 times the national average for al/ men in the United States. "I THINK THI will send a po itive message that we are very serious about what we will and will not tolerate, " he said. "School is a place to learn, not a place to settle dis­ putes." Nancy Nicholson, a Save Our Son and Daughters children's counselor who al 0 works as with the Public Schools Survival In­ s ti tute said it ha been her ex­ perience that conflict re olution works, "It's an excellent idea, but Its no different from what we 've been doing in the chools," she said. Working with kindergarten through ixth grade tudents, Nicholson aid she has found that three-fourths of them have been victimized by homicide - either a relative or a friend has died from violent crime . The young male uffer the mo t because they have been taught to internalize their pain and when they become teenagers the tendency is to resolve their conflicts through creased. Day 335-2244' • Evening 872-0127 Or Toll Free 1-800-554-2125 I Teen panelist, Stephen' Kennedy (standing) seated (l-r): Nlchole Hlck­ son, Glen Chappel and Karen Davis. cited. Soror Carolyn Dinkins, a. teacher at Madison Jr. High SCQ,Qol was the panel moderator. The event wa held at UA W Local 653 in Pontiac thanks to the charitiability of Local 653 leaders. Soror Doris Woods is the Stok's Nest Advisor. Soror Brenda Street is the Chapter President. • Phar macy & Your Health Medical Arts Pharmacy 13700 Woodward 869-1800 DAVID N. ZIMMERMAN PD. FACA Prealdent Anabolic Steroids and Teenage Athletes The use of performance enhancing drugs by athletes continue to be reported. Anabolic steroids and amphetamines seem to be the focu of most media reports. Anabolic teroid are commonly referred to as "male hormone .n Some teenage athlete have been told that teroid will improve perfor­ mance. A recent tudy of over three thou and male high school eniors indicated that 6.6 percent use or had used teroid. Over two-third indicated that they were 16 years old or younger when they tarted u ing teroids. Teenage athlete hould know the following about the drug: 1. Anabolic steroids do not promote muscle growth in boys or women. Large dose of teroids may timulate mu cle growth in men. 2. It i not known whether or not teroid improve athletic performance. Even if phy ieal trength increase , it h not been hown that trength alone improve thletic performance 3:Potential ide effects of anabolic teroid include ggre ive beh vior, premature halting of bone growth leading to horter adult height, liver I dy function, and liver cancer. Steroid can lead to death. :