July 28, 1990 excerpt from the "Los Angeles Times" excerpt from "The Philadelphia Inquirer" (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) July 28, 2020 excerpt from the "Los Angeles Times" and the "South China Morning Post" link to the "Los Angeles Times" article in today's digital edition: https://enewspaper.latimes.com/desktop/latimes/default.aspx?edid=bec06619-15b7-42ba-bf12-159d7c0bdecd In the hot seat over China ties Hollywood is bowing to Beijing by placating its censors, Trump administration says as rhetoric heats up. MOVIEGOERS watch “Dolittle” last week in Beijing, where theaters have partially reopened. U.S. studios have long sought a greater box office share in China. (Mark Schiefelbein Associated Press) By Ryan Faughnder After a half year of uncertainty caused by the COVID-19 crisis, China’s beleaguered movie theaters reopened last week with films that ranged from local patriotic blockbuster “Wolf Warrior 2” to...
June 15, 1989 Excerpt from the "Los Angeles Times" from a Times Staff Writer "2 Chinese Diplomats in Bay Area Ask FBI's Help" A husband and wife who disappeared from the Chinese Consulate in San Francisco last week contacted the FBI for help Wednesday, apparently to decide whether they will seek political asylum, sources close to the couple said. The couple, identified by friends as Cheng Huiming and Feng Jie, are the second set of diplomats to leave the consulate in recent days over the Chinese government crackdown on student protesters June 3-4. They worked in the consulate's education section are said to be hiding with students in the Bay Area. FBI officials would neither confirm nor deny reports that the couple contacted them. But Michael Shien, city editor of the San Francisco-based newspaper, Young China Daily, said the couple definitely plans to defect because they do not want to sign student blacklists. The diplomats were scheduled to...
June 22, 1989 excerpts from the "Los Angeles Times" front page: "3 Shot in First Executions for China Protests" By David Holley, Times Staff Writer BEIJING - Shanghai executioners, carrying out the first in a growing wave of death sentences imposed on anti-government protesters, Wednesday {June 21, 1989] killed three men convicted of setting a train on fire. Xu Guoming, a brewery worker; Yan Xuerong, a radio factory employee, and Bian Hanwu, an unemployed worker, were shot before a crowd of observers, a Shanghai city government spokesman said. He gave no further details, but executions in China normally are carried out with a single shot to the head. The executions came despite pleas for clemency from the United States and several Western European nations. The three young men had been part of an angry mob that attacked the Beijing-Shanghai express on the night of June 6 after it plowed into a crowd of demonstrators and killed six people. Those blo...
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