The Battalion K/VORLD & NATION Tuesday, January 24,1989 ups Policeman arrested In Miami riot killing Bush attacks abortion ‘tragedy,’ supports repeal of Roe vs. Wade vt °han(l|fi MIAMI (AP) — The policeman ■hose fatal shooting of a black mo- e situation jjtorcyclist sparked last week’s racial ty. ffiolence was arrested Monday and ow thev'r t f|ha r ge c l with manslaughter only Biours after the young man’s funeral, lip object.; Meanwhile, the Justice Depart- hy it haw ent ’s civil rights division began an Btvestigation into the shooting, and a r lives andlpty panel formed to review the inci- ■ent complained it did not have suf- icy’re in so ■dent power. endtothfl Officer William Lozano, 29, was Booked into Dade County Jail on two i 10 m era .|tountsof manslaughter and released may beseHf ter posting $10,000 bond, Sgt. Ar- Biur Clemons said. counselintl Lozano was charged in the killings ieycantoi.Bf Clement Lloyd, 23, and Allen supportiveBl anc h ar d, ^ he two were speed- Bigona motorcycle Jan. 16 in Over- ing service■P wn w hen Lozano allegedly shot Bloyd in the head. Lloyd died at the -^.pcene and Blanchard, his passenger, Bied the next day from injuries suf- ftred in the ensuing crash. Only hours before Lozano’s ar rest, about 150 relatives and friends of Lloyd gathered for his funeral at the small Bahman Avenue Church of God in Opa-locka. “As Martin Luther King said, we live together as rational human be ings or die together as fools — not only in Miami but all over America,” the Rev. Morris Lloyd, the victim’s uncle, said in his eulogy. “Until something is done to correct our in justices, I believe a lot more lives are going to be lost.” Lloyd’s mother and other family members, most immigrants from the Virgin Islands, wept and cried out as the mourners sang “Rock of Ages.” The Rev. Dennis Archibald, pas tor of the church, noted that the kill ing occurred on King’s birthday. “It is ironic that Clement should be gunned down on the very day we celebrate the birthday of the founder of the civil rights movement,” he said. iti Court limits power to earmark funds for minority businesses fraid thet | it that’s r| WASHINGTON (AP) — The Su- ry to teaclffireme Court, in what three justices ectively ais^lled a giant step backward for ra ve a socialtlaal equality, drastically limited Mon- flay the power of states and cities to nformatiol&rmark public works contracts for >ign upforiininority-owned businesses. fl Voting 6-3, the court said the Bichmond, Va., City Council uncon- Bitutionally discriminated against whites in saying a contractor on any I ll^|Bty building contract must give at *Bast 30 percent of the value of the Broject to firms at least one-half mi- Bority owned, of the Anr i entativescI j us ti ce Sandra Day O’Connor, vans for Be: griting for the court, said the city Women f# |) a t was once the seat of the old .xcellencr: Honfederacy and now has a majority io;andSffi ol blacks on its governing body re ember Johljied on “past societal discrimination” ,n >°- Bp justify the c)uota. B "None of the evidence presented te truth,ainBy the city points to any identified t saving se| thiest cnoKti wman oftk n, said. discrimination in the Richmond con struction industry,” she said. Adoption of such nationwide would obliterate the goal of a colorb lind America, she said. “The dream of a nation of equal citizens in a society where race is ir relevant to personal opportunity and achievement would be lost in a mosaic of shifting preferences based on unmeasurable claims of past wrongs,” O’Connor said. But Justice Thurgood Marshall, in a stinging dissent, said the ruling “sounds a full-scale retreat from the court’s longstanding solicitude to race-conscious remedial efforts. “Today’s decision marks a deliber ate and giant step backward in this court’s affirmative action jurispru dence,” he said. Marshall, the court’s only black, also accused the majority of cynicism in suggesting that the case was a product of local racial politics. WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi dent Bush told tens of thousands of demonstrators today that abortion on demand an “American tragedy” and said he favors reversal of the landmark Supreme Court decision legalizing it. Speaking by telephone hookup to activists gathered near the White House on the 16th anniversary of the historic Roe vs. Wade decision, Bush said he believes that ruling “was wrong and should be over turned.” The new president made the call shortly after Vice President Dan Quayle also assured anti-abortion leaders that the new administration supports their cause. “I wanted to share with you my deep personal concern about our American tragedy — abortion on de mand,” Bush said. “I think America needs a human Painter Dali dies Monday at 84 in Spain FIGUERAS, Spain (AP) — Sur realist master Salvador Dali, who was among the century’s most important painters and created a public image to match his art, died Monday in the town where he was born 84 years ago. The melting clocks and barren landscape of his “Persistence of Memory” made an indelible impres sion on contemporary culture. It is probably the most celebrated sur realist painting in the world. Equally identified with “The Di vine Dali,” as he liked to call himself, were the pointed, waxed mustache curling up like a bull’s horns, long hair and a walking stick, of which he owned more than 30. He died at 10:15 a.m. at Figueras Hospital. His physician, Dr. Charles Ponsati, said, “The cause of death was cardiac arrest brought on by his respiratory insufficiency and pneu monia.” NOTICE: Looking for mountain cedar allergic individuals to participate in a 1 or 2 week allergy study. $100 monetary incentive for those cho sen to participate. 5 days remaining to enroll. $50 00 bonus for qualifying patients Free skin testing available to determine elegibility. tal Call Pauli Research International 776-0400 life amendment, and I think when it comes to abortion there’s a better way — the way of adoption, the way of life,” he said. “I’m confident that more and more Americans every year — every day — are hearing your message and taking it to heart. I promise you that the president hears you now and stands with you in a cause that must be won. God bless you all and God bless life.” Although the protestors cheered Bush with enthusiasm, Nellie Gray of the March for Life, an organizer of the rally, cautioned the crowd on the Ellipse, off the White House grounds, that although they could see the White House and hear Bush he could not hear them. “Unfortunately the White House staff chose to put in a one-way com munications line,” she said. “He spoke to us but he could not hear us. That was not an adequate way to deal with our pro-life march.” Former President Reagan fol lowed the same practice as Bush in past years. Talking to anti-abortion leaders earlier, Quayle said, “I have been in volved with a lot of people in my state (Indiana) on this issue. I couldn’t think of a more appropriate group to be meeting with.” The noontime rally and a march to Capitol Hill culminated a series of nationwide protests against the Su preme Court’s 1973 Roe vs. Wade decision that legalized abortion. Crowds at past commemorations on the Ellipse have ranged from 5,000 in a heavy snowstorm to 100,000 or more. Police reported no violence Mon day, but said about 75 anti-abortion protesters were arrested for block ing access to a Washington doctors’ office where abortions are per formed. Woman in Politburo decries birth-control shortage in USSR MOSCOW (AP) — The highest-ranking woman in the Kremlin decried the chronic shortage of contracep tives in the Soviet Union on Monday, saying it contrib utes to an estimated 6.5 million abortions a year. “It is not normal when the number of abortions is about equal to the number of births,” Alexandra Biryu kova told a news conference. “Our complaints from women are completely well- founded concerning the number of abortions com pared to the use of contraceptives,” she said. The comments by Biryukova, a candidate member of the ruling Communist Party Politburo and a deputy premier, addressed an issue that until recently would not be discussed by the official Soviet media, much less by a top official. But in the past two years as the society has begun to discuss openly many of the social problems it kept hid den for decades, women have protested the lack of con traceptives and sex education, and the humiliation they say they face when they seek an abortion. Abortion is used instead of contraceptives as the main means of birth control in the Soviet Union, and Western experts estimate that the average Soviet woman has nine abortions during her child-bearing years. The Health Ministry newspaper Meditsinskaya Ga- zeta, commenting on a critical shortage of condoms, said some couples were so desperate they had turned to using children’s balloons. “The first thing we have to do is increase production of contraceptives,” Biryukova said. “We have to im prove conditions in hospitals.” The latest salvo against the medical profession came in an article published in the weekend edition of the newspaper Moscow News. Yekaterina Nikolayeva wrote about standing in line at the door of a hospital operating room one recent morning, waiting for her abortion. “What are you waiting for? Come on, don’t stare,” she quoted the doctor as saying, taking off a pair of blood-stained rubber gloves as she entered. “My hands started to shake, I felt scared, hurt and on the verge of tears,” she continued. ‘“Hurry up, you! I’m sick and tired of your stupidity!’ the doctor spurred me on.” After the abortion the doctors left for the day with out checking on her, and she finally left on her own in a nightgown and robe, she said. Nikolayeva said 600 to 700 women die every year as the result of abortions in the Russian republic, the larg est of the Soviet Union’s 15 republics. She said 90 percent of all first pregnancies end in abortion and that 6.5 million abortions are performed annually in the Soviet Union. She did note cite a source for the figures, but if they are accurate they would indicate that there are about 900,000 more abortions a year in the Soviet Union than live births. A Soviet statistical reference says there were 5.6 million births in 1986. Biryukova said she had read the Moscow News article and had asked Health Minister Yevgeny Chazov and Moscow officials to investigate the complaints. 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