July 25, 1989

excerpts from the "Los Angeles Times" re Tian An Man Square - none

but there was an excellent article in the "Los Angeles Times" by Times staff writer Alice Su  which appeared yesterday, July 24, 1989 (which I have now put on yesterday's date for this blog) - regarding the PRC and Hong Kong right now.

I have been using newspapers.com to access the old articles I have been using - but with the developments now with the PRC and Hong Kong, will also subscribe to the digital content for the "Los Angeles Times" (since the newspapers.com articles for the Times only go up to June 24, 2919)

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Well, I went online to subscribe to the "Los Angeles Times" digital edition but seem to have hit a snag, a glitch - so, in the meanwhile, I searched on the LAT website for Alice Su articles and these came up (with the hyperlinks, including the link for the article which appeared yesterday, July 24, 2019):



Hong Kong protesters are now directly challenging the Chinese government while pro-Beijing thugs have gone on a rampage, beating bystanders, journalists and protesters in public. China’s state media is stirring nationalist sentiment with rhetoric that has been used in the past to pave the way for crackdown.
July 24, 2019
·         WORLD & NATION
Hong Kong singer Denise Ho spoke past two interruptions by a Chinese diplomat at the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva on Monday.
July 10, 2019
·         WORLD & NATION
Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam announced Tuesday that an extradition bill that brought millions of protesters into the streets is now “dead.”
July 8, 2019
·         WORLD & NATION
Beijing might have dreamed of a scene like this: a crowd of jubilant Hong Kong youths shouting the Chinese national anthem at the top of their lungs.
July 7, 2019
·       WORLD & NATION
There were hundreds of protesters in the legislative chamber that night, but only one face.
July 6, 2019
·         WORLD & NATION
Only four protesters were left in Hong Kong’s legislative chamber as midnight approached.
July 2, 2019
·         WORLD & NATION
China’s central government on Tuesday condemned Hong Kong protesters who smashed their way into the legislative chambers a day earlier, while demonstrators used social media to illustrate their fears of dangerous confrontations with police.
July 2, 2019
·         WORLD & NATION
Protests in Hong Kong turned violent Monday when demonstrators stormed a legislative building, smashing its glass walls, dismantling fences and gates and vandalizing the inner chamber.
July 1, 2019
·         WORLD & NATION
Gambling is illegal in China, but that didn’t prevent Fan Zheng from betting tens of thousands of dollars online.
July 1, 2019
·         
A black flag flew over Hong Kong’s legislative complex at dawn Monday, the anniversary of the former British colony’s handover to Chinese control in 1997.
June 30, 2019

Here is the bio of Alice Su from the "Los Angeles Times" website:

la-bio-alice-su

Alice Su

Staff Writer
Alice Su is a foreign correspondent for the Los Angeles Times based in Beijing, China. She was previously a stringer for the Associated Press in Amman. Su grew up between Hong Kong, Taiwan, Shanghai and California, studied at Princeton University and Peking University, and freelanced in the Middle East for five years before joining the Times. She won the 2014 Elizabeth Neuffer Memorial Prize from the United Nations Correspondents Association for her coverage of refugee crises in Jordan and Lebanon. She was a Livingston Award finalist in 2016 for her work on youth extremism in Jordan and Tunisia.

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