Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, May 23, 1985 NAACP admonishes KKK joke IN BRIEF From United Press International n T~mTT K:1./TD\ t,,emnlo ees to wear the chnol's white. ena that tha i ilinr rtin A PORT HURON, Mich. (UPI)-The "uWer"'-a y ' "'-esppr- - 'e ,""-ato NAACP is shocked at a prank against hooded sweatshirts-simulating the taken against the assistant principal a black teacher involving school em- white sheets and hoods worn by KKK Monday night was "appropriate and ninvees dressed as Ku Klux Klan members. Diggs said Lyszak then firm." members and says the white ad- ministrator allegedly reponsible should have been fired. Armtead Diggs, president of the Port Huron NAACP, said Tuesday the school board's decision to place Walter Lyszak on probation for his role in the incident was "a slap on the wrist." LYSZAK, a white assistant prin- cipal, allegedly ordered four school No one faces canceralone. Callus. 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The offered material will demonstrate to the student tbe convenience of its efficiency, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. Fees: Less than you'd expect. summoned the black teacher to the administrative offices during a break "We should not be playing practical between classes. jokes when it comes to race," Diggs . said. "..There is no place in our "The teacher was met at the office si.".Teei opaei u "Theteacer ws me at he oficeschool district for a person like this." door, and this individual told him the grand dragon wanted to see him," Neither Lyszak nor James Jones, Diggs said. "He then opened the door, the black teacher, would comment. and saw four individuals dressed in Jones, who is among a handful of sweatshirts with 'Big Red' insignia on black teachers at the high school that them." has a 75 percent white enrollment, said he didn't want to comment until Big Red is the nickname of the high he learned more about the school's sports teams. disciplinary action taken against "THIS particular individual Lyszak. thought it was quite a big joke and Moeller said he determined that laughed all over the place...Naturally, four school secretaries had donned the black teacher was quite offended the hooded sweatshirts in a humorous by this," Diggs said. attempt to show Lyszak that they Diggs said he disagreed with were cold. When Lyszak saw how they Schools Superintentdent Larry were dressed, he decided to play a Moeller, who told a Port Huron prank on the black teacher. Project Grow promotes Ann Arbor's green thumb Car bomb kills 32 weapons. Cear bmbi lsh 32 wThe current disparity betweei near Beirut school NATO's conventional forces and thos( BEIRUT - A car hacked with high of the Warsaw Pact risks an unduc explosives blew up near a school in reliance on the early use of nuclea East Beirut yesterday, killing 32 weapons," the NATO ministers sail people and hurling fireballs down a in a communique issued at the end o busy street. Across the city, heavy their one-day meeting. fighting raged for a third day between Shiite Moslems and Palestinians. Senate approves The car-bomb attack came just asc k children were being let out of school juvenile crackdown during the lunch hour in the city's LANSING - The Senate yesterday crowded Sin El Fil neighborhood, approved, by a wide margin, a tough Christian radio said. At least 200 crackdown on juvenile offenders. people were reported wounded. Legislation sent to the House on a Dozens of youngsters were among vote of 32-2 permits prosecutors t the victims in the bloodiest car- demand adult court trials foi bombing in the divided Lebanese juveniles 15 and older who are capital since March 8, when a booby- charged with certain serious crimes. trapped auto exploded in a ram- Those convicted and sentenced will shackle Shiite neighborhood in mainly be incarcerated in special juvenil Moslem West Beirut, killing more facilities and considered for parole at than 80 people and wounding 250. age 19. Gandhi signs pact At present, youths convicted ir juvenile court win automatic release with Moscow at 19 regardless of the offense they committed or other factors. MOSCOW - Indian Prime Minister They can be tried in adult court only Rajiv Gandhi signed a major if the juvenile court judge approves a economic pact with Moscow yester- waiver. day but said he also wanted to expand trade with the United States and was Sextuplets face looking forward to meeting President fight for life Reagan next month. fg Gandhi said a major economic ORANGE, Calif. - The six sur- agreement he signed yesterday with viving Frustaci septuplets fought a Moscow - the second such agreement critical battle for life yesterday as an reached in his six-day visit - was army of medical specialists worked to worth $1.16 billion in trade credits to save the tiny infants from heart- finance Soviet power, oil, coal and related illness, immature lungs and machine-building projects in India to jaundice. the year 2000. The septuplets were born 12 weeks premature Tuesday to Patti Frustaci, NATO to bolster a Riverside, Calif., English teacher conventional forces who took the fertility drug Pergonal. The seventh and smallest infant, a BRUSSELS, Belgium-NATO girl weighing less than a pound, was defense ministers, in one of their shor- stillborn. test meetings on record, yesterday The surviving infants, from 1 accepted a plan to bolster conven- pound, 13 ounces to 1 pound, 1 ounce tional military forces and avoid "un- were suffering a variety of life- due reliance on the early use of threatening illnesses, all "predic- nuclear weapons." table, but serious," said Dr. Carrie NATO sources said ministers heard Worcester, the neonatologist direc- a secret report that, within 15 years, ting the babies' care at Childrens the Soviet Union will be able to Hospital of Orange County. overrun Western Europe before She said their chances of survival NATO commanders could decide were 50-50. "Everyday it is 50-50 until whether to retaliate with nuclear we're out of the woods." m >e id A Y h a r e 11 e A 1 I 0 4 (Continuedfrom Page 1) Though Grow has no formal ties with the University, Eskstein points out that an increasing number of green-thumbed students are showing interest in gardening. Nancy Tillengast, a Michigan graduate who worked on a "Grow" plot four years ago, touted the project as a savior for financially strapped students. "I suddenly found myself with a vir- tual cornucopia of food during the school year," she says. "It was cer- tainly a great change from the drudgery of eating cheap peanut but- ter or expensive frozen foods." ESKSTEIN seconded this opinion by saying that "nearly half of our new people are students. In the summer it works out well. When one person leaves for a while, his friends stick around and care for the garden." Besides offering land for the garden itself, Project Grow provides services such as watering and a limited supply of seeds and tools. As a new twist this year has marked a great influx of group gardening at Grow. Debbie Yeager, head of the Peace Neighborhood Center in Ann Macintosh Upgrade We offer a quality, affordable way to upgrade your 128K Macintosh to 512K. The MacMemory Upgrades are the "Electronic Twin" of Apple's Fat Mac and are guaranteed to be 100% compatible. The upgrade is available in kit form or isstalled on your motherboard with a 90-day warranty. $295 Installed $195 Kit MacMemory Electronics 500 W. Middlefield Rd., _ Suite 28 Mount aView.CA94043 14151 964-4176 Arbor, works with young children in after-school and summer programs which teach the youngsters ways to deal with hunger. It's a real education for them," she says. "It also has a real family-oriented sort of flavor. Once the kids learn and become interested, they take their vegetables back home to their families." And though Project Grow places a heavy stress on the logistic and economic gains available through community gardening, its aims often reflect a more basic, tangible quality. Rebecca Arebo has only been with Project Grow for a year, but the benefits that she gains from her gar- den perhaps exceed those gained by others. "The major overriding factor to me concerns a medical problem ... allergies," she says. "I need an organic sort of diet, one that's free of additives and pesticides. Project Grow is as close to a controlled system as I can find." INDEED, Grow gardens do offer a natural environment to avoid what Tillengast calls "plastic food." She urges anyone striving for a more healthy diet to "start a Grow garden. It, for a change, is 100 percent real." The members of the project make it quite clear that each gardner must take excellent care of their plots. The gardens must be weeded and fer- tilized on a regular basis, and those who do no comply often have their plots reclaimed by the program so that others may garden. Arebo took that point one step further in pointing out one final factor on which Project Grow is based: "On top of everything, it's just a nice statement of community, without any real bureaucracy." Those interested in starting a gar- den should pick up a Project Grow registration from the Ann Arbor City Hall or the Ann Arbor Public Library. For further information, contact the Project Grow office at 926 Mary st. 40 Vol. XCV - No. 5-S The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Tuesday through Sunday during the fall and winter terms and Tuesday through Saturday during the spring and summer terms by students at The University of Michigan. Subscription rates: September through April - $35 outside the city; May through August - $8.00 in Ann Arbor, $15.50 outside the city. 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