News Scrapbook 1989

Eu 1888 1 Ucso Chinese Studfn~S-~k Help Fr6ffi Bush II Dissent: The pro-democracy movement in China could be threatened if students in the United States are required to go back to their homeland after thei r studies a re con:ipleted , studepts mainta~~- By ~AVJD$~OLLAR TIMCS STAFF WRITER Despite warnings from Chinese gover~ - ment. officials to end support ro; t e pro-democracy movement in the!~ omh~; land Chinese students at UC San Diego t week publicly asked President Bush to sign bill allowing the esUmated 30,000 s tu- ~ents in the United States to rema~n mdefmllely and not return _home to possi- ble punishment for their political ,vle;r es In an interview Sunday with 'l :Ru•~ six students said that, without e protection, they will be required to re~rn immediately upon completion of stu es, even if there should be no change in ~he harsh Ch mese political climate follow1~g the June 4 army massacre of protesters n Tien An Men Square m Beijing, The lack of immigration security will chill their de~lre to continue speaking out for reforms, t ey said. · t· but one "Th is is not a bill of lmmlgra ion " of human rights, of minimum protectio~ slude1t Shizhong Chen said over t e k nd. "We students (abroad! are the : n~e oice keeping th!' Jemocr~tlc ~ov~ - mc~t alive in China since the s1tuation~n m p ,ornclandJ is so severe now. . . . e nied the bill so that, in the freest country in the world , we can continue to speak out freely," th ed Their resolve has been Streng en , they added, by events in Eastern Europe, where student-led protests for democra~y have triggered governmental changes n Hungary, East Germany and Czechoslova - k1~.The right to be protected from arbitrary overnmen t power, to have a meaningful ~ay about your hfe, these rights transcend historical distinctions" whether Czech o~ Chinese, s:i.id John Min a_n, associate d{tn~ the Universi ty of Sa..!J...lliegbo Sthool ~hin~s~ M1nan Cl7Tl!uthor of a text oo on law, I ;s offered his support l? the students Ill easing immigration regulations. Th US State Department has recom - mend d .that Bush v~to the bill, whl~h both houses of Congress unam - passe h t ·t enactment mou,ly, on the grounds t a I s . woul~ end educational exchanges wit~ Be1 mg regime, wh ich Chinese off1c1a s haJe threatened. Should a veto occur, Congress wou ld be unable to attempt an override until after it reconvenes early next year. · ·111ook as "If Bush should veto, then it wt . if he is yielding to the press~re o~ tne Chmese government, " Hong -Mmg \Z _ang .d "And the prestige of the American 631 · men t will turn into dust in the eyes govern .. of the Chinese people. RET.URN 82 Pleue see ,

.Jlll~n '• ii. c. B F.s1. '888 -P-,,_ P/ILE Fritz1e Galini has - m h~r. words - " dodged c;uite a lot of bullets mher first three months as executive director of the I Alternate Defense Counsel. A She takes over at at' e wh~n Los n- geles County officials ha".e i~~a1!~~ pressure on judges to app~n~ch officers yers. Her job: to con~mce e when to stop appointing pnvatefficou~selnavail- the Public Det nder's O ce _is u able and use her staff lawyers ms!ead. "Obvious! these courts don t want ADC. Jt was offered to. t~~m filia~c _Ye~d h didn't take it, Gal m a1 . ago and t e_y h "largest obsta- She ranks Judges as er S de" to fulfilling the county pervisors' policy to expand t c every court. gth ed Galhani's sale~ pitch was stren wh~ it by the state Legislature last year Fritzie Galliani

f Cal Lutheran's Jeff d

uso·s Brooks Barn

hard goes over the top o

_..J._~---

Lo Ang les,CA (Los Angel s Co .) Times Ed l ! San D1euo · C ir. D. !10,010) Cir. S. 65,573)

San Diego, CA. (San Diego C~.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir . S. 341,840) NSV ?, 7 1Q89

NOV 2 6 19 9

ns

JUI..'•

p c. B

f.Jr. ,,,,

r

• Julia//Dona cored nme po n d Jul e Lemery and Pauli each had eight to lead57 ...., f an Diego to a • Unlveu,ty o ho t University vicfcii'YoUvS~ trailed by two Irvine. ed UC Irvi hal!tlm nd outscor 43. 18. the cond half.

Jllk11 ·• ,. C. B

Ft, 1888

San Diego, CA. (San Diego C~.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) NOV 2 8 1989

USD's c~r for ---"'-.-- Public Interest La . USD law pro- Rob rt Fellmeth, ah rnng direc- h h·ud-c ar.,. . re r and t e n that v,cto- 1' • ~1tute wo R tor of the iru ~tate Pubhc ry recently m a st the tate .,_ Act suit agam car= . agency. hamp1on at usmg fellmeth, a c dm1tted the ds laws, a pubhc recor . m the lottery titute' stilt aga th word like in II h d WI h was embe 1 to make t 'tergiv r atol) J~do morefun bof c.rtizenw1;1t d 1beb JO d SI, 1 The v.or , h de concea who 1 "bureaucrats " and prcvancateFellmcth, institute ccordmg to Wheaton and . ttorney James d t Julianne a 1 w stu en third-year a , ·ust what lottery D'Angelo, thats J doing ince the official have been examining its institute beg::ices. . advertising pr ls were apparent!) Lottery officia_ and could not holiday Friday on a £ mrnent. . be reached or co h state lottery is To Fellmet~, t i:::tween Caesar's "combination · 1 salesman of a d h nake o1 d Pla ce an t e . g aroun Runmn . the state k ,. and trying • for buc s, buck tenng ,, Califom1a. to "Las Vegas up ts aren't h commen In case t has a strong philo- clear, Fellmet. £ a government sophical d1sdam or tes belief in agency that promof luck rather ade o bootstraps m than hard workh ld tand on the "The state s ou rewarded . h t people are . " P remise t a . ntribullon, I their co t based on . stead, the lot ery F llm th said. In "Just roll the te s a fantasy· .. promo . will be your • since ,July by

ham & Co. and Reha : John Burn C tre are on order at sance Town~ e~iates . . . Proj- Warnfer = and the Wyatt Co. by ects or . PrimeTime As- A &G Productions ••· soc1atJon JS . . . getting a video from H~ Wendt ...

Jllla. ', p C. B

f

C 11f. o Co) R. E

NOV 2 7 1989

National Invitation Tournament. The Gauchos won last year's meet- ing with the Toreros, 76-58, at Santa Barbara. Last WPek's season-opening victory over Pepperdine was Santa Barbara's 20th win in its last 21 non- conference games. "This is going !b be an excellent test for us," said Egan, whose club opened with a 82-46 victory over Di- . vision II Cal Lutheran here Friday night. "Cal Lutheran was a nice way to open, but it doesn't tell you a lot," Egan said. He actually lo t some of his enthu- siasm for his club's opener after re- viewing films of that game. "When I looked at the films, I was not that pleased with the way we played on the defensive end of the floor. We've got work to do." Then Egan watched Santa Barbara dismantle Pepperdine on television. "Santa Barbara is a really, really good defensive basketball team," said Egan. "They are misleading in their size. Santa Barbara's biggest player is only 6-9, but the smallest man is 6-4. "They just did a textbook job on 1 Pepperdine. They shut everything Pepperdine likes to do down."

Hank Egan betiev~ it is never too early in the season for a stern test. An appropriate thought, consider- mg the University of San Diego's op- ponent tonight at 7:30 in th USO Sports Center. UC-Santa Barbara, fresh from a 67-46 rout of West Coast Conference preseason favorite Pepperdine, visits the Toreros m a game filled with subplots. USD's Egan and UCSB's Jerry Pimm have been coaching rivals sinre both were assistants in the early '70s. Later both were head coaches in the Western Athletic Con- ference, Pimm at Utah and Egan at the Air Force Academy. "I don't think either one of us is going to fool the other guy with any new tricks," Egan said yesterday. And the past two "freshmen of the year" from the WCC will be on the court tonight. Sophomore Gylan Dot- tin will be starting for USO, and John Sayers will be coming off the Gau- chos' bench. Sayers won the wee hor,or for the 1987-88 season when be started 22 games and averaged 6.8 points and 4.1 rebounds for Egan's Toreros. The 6-7 forward left USO after bis freshman season and trans- ferred to UCSB after averaging 18.4 pornts and 8.0 rebounds a game at Diablo Valley College last year.

dice and riches 1 ttery regardle But the ~ate ~ical 'bent, is an of one's philo p e tab Ii hed fact.d d of mi lions of And with hun red i·ts control g un er dollars passm to make ure, the in titute wants exi t where k mer can "no dar co ., scandal might f~~:neth said, the To that nd e Pl e turn to Pafle

Santa Barbara forced Pepperdine into 27 turno~ers and had a 42-27 re- bounding edge over the Waves. Pep- perdine scoring leader Tom Lewis was held to four points. Gary Gray, a 6-9 junior forward, led UCSB with 24 points and eight rebounds. Eric McArthur, a 6-6 cen- ter, had 15 points and 11 rebounds and 6-4 guard Carrick DeHart had 10 points and five assists. Egan will start 6-9 John Jerome, 6- 9 Dondi Bell and 6-5 Kelvin Woods up front tonight, with sophomores Dot- tin and Wayman Strickland at the guards.

1

Sayers might have a hard time recognizing the USD players he'll be facmg tonight. Four of USD"s start- ers weren't in school when Sayers de- parted 18 months ago and the only one who was, center Dondi Bell, played only 10 minutes a game. Sayers is not starting with the Guachos, who return three key play. ers from a 21-9 team that finished third in the Big West Conference last season and played in the postseason

Made with FlippingBook - Online Brochure Maker