• In pt mber 1991, those now unl hing a reign of en-or in H i i sta a bloody coup t�at ov rthr w P iden J n- lertrand Aristide, who had won 67 per nt of the vote in field of 11 candidat . In a bold roke last summer, President Clinton brok red the Governors I - land agr ment, commit ing his Administra­ tion to he returrrofPr ident Aristide to Haiti. Ye now, 1 than a year la r, the President has abandon d Mr. Aristide and has failed to tand up to H iti' military rulers. The U . has neither the means nor the re­ sponsibili y to right all of the world' wrongs. But the Hai ians do h v a right to feel betrayed by President Clinton, and they are not alone. Officials at the Defense and State Depart­ ments have hared with me their frustration . over Mr. Clinton's failure to use his enormous power in add ing the crisis in Haiti. U.S. policy, they y, ha n left lar ly in the h of . pecial r on . Lawre , who- a oda Haitia or P �:.-.. ........ _. __ c , five states. Half of th hospitals were in large cities, 15 percent were in rural towns and 35 per­ cent were advanced teaching hospitals in major cities. Less than halfofthe very sick Black and poor patients were put into intensive care units, as opposed to 70 percent of the other similarly ill Medicare pa­ tients, Dr. Kahn said. Over all, Dr Khan. added, the survival rate of Blacks and whites was the same. This is because many more Blacks went to urban . teaching hospitals where the quality of care is much higher than at the other types of hospi­ tals, she said. In the second study, re­ searchers examined data col­ lected from 1988 to 1990 for treatment for heart attacks on 33,641 'VI terans who went to the nation's V A. hospitals. The 4,522 Blac treated were '33� I likely than whites to have cathe eI'S inserted into their hearts to look for damaged arteries, 42 percent I likely to have blocked arteries reamed with balloons or similar devices, and 54 rcent less likely to un­ dergo heart bypass surgery, id Dr Eric Peterson, a Duke U ni­ versity Medical Center cardiolo-' gist who helped conduct the tudy, hich was analyzed at th W t Roxbury V.A. Hospital in M achuset. It IS not clear why Black pa­ ien who got I treatment long as whit t­ ive treatment, Dr. P terson aid. Perhaps the whites are getting too much treatment, he said. of Vet­ , J Brown, said med about the pos- r cial bi in th eli ry of are a V.A. H pi­ ddmg, "I will do whatever �cay-" to sure that vet- r n re treated equally." Although Black and poor pa- ay tients did not experience higher death rates in either study; these studies should encourage all medical professionals to re­ flect on and explore the quality of care they provide," to Black and poor patients, said Dr. John Z. Ayanian.a medical instructor and health care analyst at Har­ vard Medical School. Support Our A d, 'crt is« 1·,\' ABOVE: Mr . Kh dijah F rrakhan, wif of Mini ter Loui F rrakhan (I ft), Pre ident J rry Jo�n Rawling of Ghan (c nt r), nd Mini t r Akb r Muh mmad, Dir ctor of th Nation of 11m 8 Afric n Office (right). The NOI i organizing trip to Africa thi coming October. BELOW: Khadijah F rrakhan, Akbar Muhamm d, M ryam Muhammad, nd the taff t the S.O.S. Children'S Viii ge in Ghana. c y , co groups - would also f funds ford velop n In rnational capital mark nd foreign banks would be" tapp d, although cautiously, Manuel id. Manuel said the shifting of arge amounts of capital 'out of South Africa by white busi­ n es and individuals - 11 bil­ lion rand (dlrs 3.1 billion) in 1993 - was a concern. But he said it was expected in the volatile atmosphere that had proceeded the first elections to include the black majority. celt's been like that in any transition, anywhere in the world " Manuel said. Manuel and Jay Naidoo, who he ds th ANC's r onstruction and development effort, said the "final" program released Tues- day could till altered. THE it i f)l, .. holding discussion with all groups with a stake in the eco­ nomic progr m, including the private or, for ign inv tors and trade unions. Th programaims to provide 2.5 million jobs and I ctrify 2.5' million homes over th next five years. Nationalization remains an option, but Manuel said it was only "one possibility in a range of possibilities. " Th AN r moved th ection in previous versions that tated its intention to maintain a budget deficit of no more than six percent of GDP. However, Manu I aid he ex­ pects to keep th budget deficit at around. 6.2 percent of GDP. Thurs. - Sal 1 Oa.m."7p.m. Retail pace Available 259-7012 (313) 25;·7012 ouch hop ell Mail entries postmarked befor July 17, 1994 to 'COBRA, 1249 Washington Blvd., SUite 48, Detroit, MI 48226 or Call. R p ra Ions Ray (313)863-3222 or Cicero Love (313)831-2327. he Perfect 2735 Ru (Loeat d In the Eastern Market) HRS: Mon.-Wed. 10a.m.-4p.m. Fashion. & . Ace.NOn fer Wom n 1//; !..II. HIgh F. '''0'' PillS SIlt East�'" J t., _ (l13) 25' 2530 INSIDE THE PEIIFECT TOUCH MINI MALL .... _" l..,J M 1" 'r .... , "' .. . JO B RG, South Afrlc (AP) - The African ational .-�� ... �.�.�.,.. "Congress d Tu Y it plans to illion. dlrs 10.8 DIllion) over five y ars to provid housing, el ricity and jobs. The ANC, expected to take power after th country's first all-racial election April 26-28, lso said it w s abandoning a pledge to limit government defi­ cits to 6 p rcent of the country's gross dom tic product. Th A C' reconstruction and development program, until Tuesday available only as draft, is the nterpiece of h ANC's election platform. AN e nomics head Trevor Manu I told r porters that. mo t of the money for the program would come from shifting exist­ ing spending. Defense spending, now more than 10 billion rand (dlrs 2.8 billion) a year, would be cut. til (313) 393·3680". T .... UNISEX 0 .. r s ... to SPORTSWEAR & ACCESSORIES e ESSAY CONTEST Op n to all 12th grad r � 5WI S will 1 1 $100 prizes will ward d. "Why Mrican Ainericans should receive Reparations from th U .. govemm nt." (100 words or lea ) Men � Women • Chlldren's We r cotsen Brogdon CHEST OF OLE TREASURES Resale Shop AFRICAN BEADS A suggestion that hospital treatment van s with race al­ most seems to be factual Ac­ cording to a new study, released by The Journal of th Ameri n Medical Association on April 19, 1994, seriously III M icare pa­ tients who are Black and poor receive worse care than p tients in every type of h pital The main differen ,i t s ms is th location of treatm n n­ ters. In big cit. , wh r th re are teaching hospitals, poor Blacks, the res arche id, nd up getting care that is just as good as that provided to oth r groups over all, beca tho hospitals provid b tter care than other types of hospit Is. A second study found that in Veterans Affairs ho pital , blacks suffering from h rt at­ tacks receive less m ical t t­ ment th n whit , V n th ugh both groups ha v identical ac­ cess to care. "Within each type of hospital and even within ch individual hospital, p tients from Black or poor n ighbor­ hoods got less c ," aid Dr. Katherin L. Kahn th tudy's lead author, who is an internist at U.C.L.A. and an analyst a the Rand Corporation in Santa Monica, Calif. The first study examin the quality of care given to 9,932, Medicare patients who were taken to the hospital for conges­ tive heart failure, heart attacks, pneumonia or stroke. Th study xamin peed of adrm ion to i ntensi uni, how d and nu rfonned on 2 1 clinical practices and echnolo­ gi ,1 ngth of tay, wh th r pa­ tien were nt hom or 0 nu mg hom and d th rat one to six months a ion MICHIGAN'S LARGEST SELECTION • SPI RIT STO ES • BEADS FOR PROTECTION • BEADS FOR GOOD LUC K • KENYA � LOVE BEADS • SNAKE VERTEBRATE • FISH VERTEBRATE. • COWRIE SHELLS • SEA SHELLS • 300 YR OLD BEADS • 100's OF ITEMS OUT OF AFRICA DABL'S GALLERY BOOK TOWER BLDG People Mover Stop #1 1257 Washington Blvd Det, 148226 (313) 964-4247 M-SU 12-7P SINCE 1985 • 10% OFF W/COUPON