<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8901030944
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
890122
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, January 22, 1989
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO EDITION
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1989, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
SUNDAY ISN'T SUPER FOR ALL OF MIAMI
TENSIONS ARE BOILING, BUT THE GAME GOES ON
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
MIAMI --  You expect, now and then, to run smack into your conscience. You
just don't expect it to happen at the Super Bowl. A game. A gunshot. And, in
the land of beach and sun, we suddenly ask  ourselves what America is all
about.

  This was a week of confrontation. Funny, no? Because this is usually a
week for escape, the biggest of parties, the fluffiest of stories, articles
about football  players dancing and talking crazy and living it up while
awaiting the Big Game. It was to be a salsa celebration in this sun-baked
city, a chance to put on the glitz for the NFL and several hundred million  of
its closest friends.

  And instead, tragedy. People died,  just a few miles from the
headquarters hotel, unnatural deaths, deaths by bullet. In sections called
Overtown and  Liberty City, people  were beaten, robbed, stoned, cars were
burned and stores looted, there were police cars at every highway exit, nobody
in, nobody out, it was a riot, a racial explosion, but it took place during
Super  Bowl week, a party that, for some reason, seemingly must go on.
  So it was that in the morning we boarded the buses for the team news
conferences, prune danishes and coffee in silver pitchers  and cliched quotes
about "respecting the opponent" -- and by afternoon the blood was flowing in
the streets. So it was that concerts featuring Frank, Sammy and Liza, and
parties in places like the Vizcaya  Palace and Gardens were held in splendor
--  while police raced through Overtown in full riot gear, helmets and tear
gas and rifles.
  What do you cover in an event like this? Assigned to write about  sports,
do you close your eyes to reality? There were thousands of reporters in Miami
for today's game between the San Francisco 49ers and the Cincinnati Bengals,
and from the moment the horror began  -- the moment a black man named Clement
Lloyd was shot  to death  by an Hispanic police officer named William Lozano
-- the buzz was always: "Are you going out there? In the thick of it? Or are
you sticking  with football?"
'A man's been killed here'
  What a question. Didn't it seem that  somehow the game should have
been put on hold until this was taken care of -- until the cries of the poor
blacks  in the poverty-ridden sections were heard? Of course it did. And yet,
the truth is, other Super Bowls have been held while poverty and frustration
boiled in nearby streets. New Orleans. Tampa. Detroit.  Los Angeles. Name one
that hasn't. What made this unique was that suddenly the problem splashed out
of the water and bit the nation's biggest sports celebration right in the
behind.
  "Lemme ask you  somethin'," a black youth said to me Tuesday as we stood
along Northeast 20th Street, a few hundred yards from the burnt skeleton on an
auto parts store. "Don't you think that game means nothing now?  A man's been
killed here. What's that game gonna mean to us here?"
  I could give no answer. We laugh at the image of Nero fiddling while Rome
burned. And yet Friday night, nearly 3,000 of us attended  an NFL party that
featured unlimited shrimp, lobster, steak tartare, salsa bands, rock 'n' roll
groups -- while on the highways, the police cars still flashed their blue
lights, cutting off the exits  to the danger zone. Fiddling while she burns?
How far off are we really?
  I don't know how other reporters  reacted to this. I know it bothered
many. It bothered me. I had stayed safely inside the hotel the night of the
initial violence -- when Lloyd's dead body lay bare in the street, and the
gathering black crowd began to tremble, then shake, then explode. I had
watched on a TV in the Hyatt  Regency lobby. The violent pictures mixed with
cocktail music from the lounge. For choosing safety, I felt somehow weak and
ashamed.
  The next morning, we attended the traditionally giant news conference
with the Super Bowl teams inside Joe Robbie Stadium. Players joked around --
Ickey Woods, the Cincinnati fullback, did a bit of his Ickey Shuffle dance for
the cameras -- and besides a few brief "sorry  it happened" and "what can we
do's?" you would never know anything was wrong.
  And just hours later, in Overtown, a group of black youths was throwing
stones at passing cars, particularly those with white drivers. Finally, one
car that was pelted slowed down, stopped, and out stepped a white man wielding
a gun. He fired wildly into the crowd, four shots, five shots, six shots,
seven shots, he hit  a teenager in the leg, then got back in his car and hit
the gas. It was 2 p.m. The sun was bright and tropical.
  Blood in the afternoon.
  He drove away.
  I was on those streets. I had dragged  myself there, scared, unsure, but
feeling somehow that I needed to see this. And I had wandered clumsily into
the shooting.
  "Didn't anybody catch the guy?" I asked, incredulous.
  "Nope," said  a young black woman named Selma.
  "He just drove out of Overtown?"
  "Who was gonna stop him?" she said.
A mixture of images
  Here are the scenes that linger from the week of fun and gun:  Joe
Montana, the 49ers quarterback, jogging through the hotel lobby, with people
turning their heads as he passed; Woods and his "SWAT team" teammates, waving
and doing The Shuffle at mid-court of the  Miami Heat  NBA game Thursday;
49ers owner Eddie DeBartolo, greeting his team dressed as a bellhop;  Bengals
linebacker Reggie Williams, who also serves as a Cincinnati city councilman,
holding reporters  spellbound with his daily thoughts.
  And these: Miami Mayor Xavier Suarez walking down a dark Overtown street,
his hands up, pleading with the seething crowd to stop the violence; half a
dozen jeering  youths, running madly from a vandalized meat truck, their arms
filled with stolen food; the hospital spokesperson  who announced that Allan
Blanchard, who had been riding the motorcycle with Lloyd when  the policeman
shot him, and who had flown off and smashed into a windshield, had died of his
wounds; an 8-year-old black schoolgirl named Yolanda Romeus, her hair in
pigtails, telling a reporter, "They  shot (Lloyd) 'cause he was speeding; a
white man shot him and made the dead man's family start crying."
  How do you balance these images? Which tell the real story of this week?
How can outsiders  understand the frustration of a black community that has
suffered harassment from a largely white police department and has watched
other ethnic groups enter Miami and leapfrog them on the socio-economic
ladder?
  "You know, I want you to come back here in three days, when all this dies
down," a man named Colanel told me. He wore a cap and an open shirt and he had
lived in Overtown all his life. "If  you come back then, you'll see how it is
here normally, and why this kind of stuff happens over and over."
  And perhaps he was right. "It was the worst thing that could have
happened," the writers  wrote, and yet, in a way, it was sadly perfect. Where
else can the plight of the poor draw such good light as in the shadow of a
party?
Head-spinning hypocrisy
  And today they play the football game.  The violence has subsided. The
asphalt has cooled. The halftime show will go on as planned, Billy Joel will
sing the national anthem, two teams will battle it out, and in the end, when
one of them wins,  a player will gaze into a humming camera, and declare, "I'm
going to Disney World!"
  And if that doesn't spin your head with hypocrisy, I don't know what will.
  This was a week for conscience,  for realizing that life is more than a
football game and a good crowd to have a beer with. This was a week for tears,
the death of defenseless people, of schoolchildren in Stockton, Calif., of
motorcycle riders in Overtown. This was a week for hope, a new president
installed, promising visions of a "kinder and gentler America." This was a
week for reflections, our own reflections, America had to look  in the mirror
and see herself in all her triumph and failure.
  We play the game today, with  balloons and music and a three-dimensional
halftime, but somewhere in the decaying streets near the  hotel sits  the man
in the cap, knowing, full well,  that we're not coming back. Who listens when
the party is over? That question, most of all, was what this week was all
about.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
MIAMI;SUPER BOWL; FOOTBALL;RACIAL;RIOT
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
