The Battalion EWORLD & NATION O Tuesday, July 18, 1989 5 ina criticizes ‘gross interference’ 7 nations in freedom protest issue ) China denounced the seven “China absolutely cannot accept this,” the The Foreien Ministry lodcred a separate ore s bom r-t 29 ive sd k repotti Si mill; 990. niocraiit Kdwardu l for ili f ■BEIJING (AP) — China denounced the seven donssiJleading industrialized nations Monday for their staling (|“gross interference” in calling on Chinese au- ? timeythorities to stop the crackdown on participants in and of i|pfo-democracy protests. ■ instead, the government made clear it plans to ect am; continue rounding up anyone involved in the s to thfj seven weeks of protests for freedom, democratic rpron; reform and cleaner government. A report in the Communist Party newspaper, the People's Daily, Hid those who surrender will get lenient treat- lagerfc meat. ontribyH “All hesitation is useless,” it said. “Surren- r. dering, thoroughly confessing (and) doing mer- H)rious work ... is the only way out for all crimi- H The strongly worded message to the Group of '^ftven echoed earlier Chinese reaction to sanc tions individually imposed by some of the seven, including the United States and France, after the Chinese army crushed the protests June 3-4. ■ The Foreign Ministry expressed “great regret” over the Paris summit’s statement, which it said “violates the most basic criterion of diplomatic re lations.” DI,”Gi d. it will win tli over fm ise Init and dt silos to “China absolutely cannot accept this,” the statement read on state TV said. A front-page editorial the People's Daily called on the Group of Seven to consider China’s “global strategic importance” and potential as a market. The Group of Seven statement, it said, made “groundless charges, which only represent gross interference in China’s internal affairs.” The seven nations — the United States, Great Britain, West Germany, Italy, France, Japan and Canada — included their comments on China in a communique issued at the end of their summit. “We urge the Chinese authorities to cease ac tion against those who have done no more than claim their legitimate rights to democracy and liberty,” it said. It also urged the World Bank to postpone examining new loans to China. More than 200 civilians were killed by official count in the army attack on protesters and sup porters. Western intelligence sources said up to 3,000 may have died. Thousands have been ar rested nationwide and at least 12 have been exe cuted. fa died ioinga < its cas rgume: ctraord; viet defa drama ‘nse st s far lii las failt [Team practices for launching of Columbia I CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — The launch team Monday legan a two-day practice count- fpown for next month’s launching what of space shuttle Columbia on a efense Department flight. The rehearsal concludes with he five mission astronauts board- ng the spacecraft for the final two hours. I The test covers the final 24 pours of an actual count, includ ing planned hold periods, and rovides training for both the as- ronauts and the launch team. NASA plans to launch Colum bia during the first week in Au gust, but shuttle managers won’t set a firm date until they com plete a flight readiness review on July 26. The astronauts checked their space suit fits Monday and were briefed on emergency proce dures at the launch pad. The all-military crew is com manded by Air Force Col. Brewster Shaw. GOP points to slow turnover, attacks 4 permanent Congress’ rimming WASHINGTON (AP) — Republi cans think they have a promising tar get in challenging what they call the permanent Congress — even though the numbers show a turnover rate that doesn’t match their description. Those records of changing House membership and high re-election rates indicate that Republican prob lems go deeper than the incumbent re-election advantages now under GOP fire. It is true that House incumbents have the advantage when they seek new terms, and that they almost al ways have. Those odds confront the GOP mi nority with a particular problem, but it is not new business. House incum bents usually have won, from the be ginning. The incumbent return rate was overwhelming 35 years ago, in the last elections that awarded the Republicans control of the House. “Today, incumbents stay in office for decades, amassing huge war chests to scare off strong challenges in election after election,” President Bush said in proposing legislation to overhaul campaign finance laws and curb free congressional mailing priv ileges. “This is not democracy at all.” But Speaker Thomas S. Foley counters with records showing the shifting makeup of a House in which 55 percent of the seats are held by people elected since 1980. Only 19 percent of House members were in office 15 years ago. Besides, he adds with a smile, what’s wrong with incumbency and experience in Congress? After all, they’re valued in other lines of work. The re-election rate for incum bents is overwhelming, 98.3 percent in 1988, 98 percent in 1986. But it was 97 percent in the 1968 elections, and it has been over 90 percent in every election but one for the past 20 years, according to the Congressio nal Research Service of the Library of Congress. Nor has the number of incum bents seeking re-election changed markedly; it has ranged between 85 and 95 percent in most 20th century elections. “As long as we retain 99 percent re-election c/f inebmbents, we’re going to have scoundrels, because power does corrupt,” Rep. Newt Gingrich of Georgia, the Republican dertoii Marys ionct! conlac Former HUD secretary defends role in easing restrictions on company WASHINGTON (AP) — Former Housing Secretary wi^arla Hills on Monday defended her role in helping Rersuade a successor to ease restrictions on a client Don'- company that eventually would cost the government pi/War fn [||j ons 0 f dollars in bad loans. S fl/ll 1 d° n ’ 1 disagree that the company had misbehaved and was being spanked, . . . thrashed if you like, and ou feel that it should be strung up,” Hills said of DRG unding Corp., which hired her law firm in 1981 to represent it in housing matters. But Hills told a House subcommittee she was hired ecause of her housing expertise and not because of any influence she might still have at the Department of Housing and Urban Development. Currently the U.S. Rrade representative, Hills served as secretary at HUD ( during the Ford administration. I She said DRG paid $33,500 for her representation, ■nduding a one-hour meeting with then-Secretary Sam- nui s| Ue ] pi erce . is an 1 1,, was t i le latest in a string of well-connected Re- ra ? |tublicans to testify at congressional hearings into alle- W , Rations of mismanagement and influence peddling at ^ f,! PUE* during Pierce’s eight years as secretary in the °. pReagan administration. icatiaw a j so was thg latest to describe her ability to inter- sIcwRenc successfully with top-level HUD officials concern- i teslE i ing the spending of millions of dollars in housing ; funds. I Former Interior Secretary James Watt, for example, testified in connection with a consultant’s fee in excess o $300,000 he received to help a client win money defiifS rorn to develop a housing project. Unlike Hills, leSu h e dairned no special housing expertise or background, catiofi Since leavin g the department in 1977, she told the panel, her dealings with HUD have been “purely in my capacity as a lawyer, representing clients to the best of my ability on the merits of their cases.” The housing agency, after determining that DRG did not use sound financial practices in making loans, re quired the firm beginning in 1984 to seek advance ap proval for all loans made under the government pro gram. Hills said this imposed a “competitive burden” on “I I don’t disagree that the company had misbehaved and was being spanked,... thrashed if you like, and you feel that it should be strung up.” — Carla Hills, former HUD secretary DRG, which asked for her help in the matter. After pleading her case before two political appoin tees at HUD, both of whom turned down her requests to ease up on the restrictions, Hills arranged a meeting with Pierce. “During this meeting of about one hour, I presented DRG’s case in some detail, strictly on its merits,” Hills said. Pierce then lifted the restrictions, requiring that the department review each loan after it had been made in stead of in advance, and warning DRG in a nine-page letter that it was to follow the rules. whip, said in a speech on that GOP theme. “How many of you think the founding fathers intended for Con gress to be a lifetime event, unless you’re incredibly corrupt or stupid or you happen to die? Otherwise you’re just re-elected automatically,” he said. Some of those founding fathers were still around when the rate of return for House incumbents seek ing re-election hit its record high: 100 percent, in the elections of 1792. In the 1952 elections, the last time Republicans won control of the House, 91 percent of the members who sought re-election won new terms. When they lost it in 1954, the incumbent re-election rate was 93.1 percent. The advantages of incumbency have grown in the era of television, political action committees and ex ploding campaign costs. But the Li brary of Congress numbers show trends that have been fairly stable since World War II. The numbers do not dampen the rhetoric. “I think there’s a growing prairie fire out there where people are going to rise up and say ‘Hey, we’d like these elections back in our hands,’ ” said Rep. Guy Vander Jagt of Michigan, who heads the Republi can Congressional Campaign Com mittee. “We’d like a House of the people again instead of the house of incumbents which it has become.” “In 1989, you were 16 times more likely to be defeated if you were a provincial leader of the Communist Party in the Soviet Union than if you are an American congressman,” Gingrich said. Foley said the Republicans’ real concern stems less from a perma nent Congress than from frustration at their seemingly permanent mi nority status in the House. The lineup now stands at 257 Democrats, 175 Republicans, with special elections coming for three va cant seats that were held by Demo crats. The speaker said incumbent ad vantages can’t be the real reason be cause Democrats hold their own or better in contests for open seats, in which no incumbent is involved. In competition for open seats in the last four elections, there has been no net change in party strength, he noted. In special elec tions during that period, the Demo crats made a net gain of one seat. n, jnorn s AT A&M NEARLY EVERYBODY (36,000 active, affluent Aggies) Reads The Battalion $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 PAINFUL MUSCULAR INJURIES Individual with recent lower back or neck pain, sprain, strains, muscle spasms, or painful muscular sport injury to participate in a one week research study. $50 incentive for those chosen to participate. » $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $50 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 «£ ASTHMA STUDY $200 Wanted: Individuals ages 12-70 with asthma to partic- $200 $200 'P ate in a research study to evaluate asthma medica- Unn $200 tions. $200 incentive for those chosen to participate. 5200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 CALL PAULL RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL 776-0400 -SspNEPLEX ODEON 5V THEATRES S3 00 BARGAIN MATINPE DAILY ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6 00 PM r .F.I'..t() IHIAIHfS CHI C* SxnW'Vt! S »IITH iMWWMAJft 1. POST OAK THREE 1500 Harvey Hoad BATMAN (PG-13) No Pass 08/No Coupons VP Passes at Matinee Only Screen I 2:15 4:45 7:15 9:45 Screens II & III 2.'00 4:30 7:00 9:30 Same Day Advance Tickets Available CINEMA THREE 313 College Avc. RELD OF DREAMS (PG) 2nS 4:23 718 *28 INOANA JONES ANDTHE LAST CRUSADE (PC-13) No PwieVNo CouponVGoW C at Maina* Oty 200 4:3S 7:00 8:48 The Karrtt KM 3 (PC) 2:38 4:30 7:30 9:30 The Foreign Ministry lodged a separate pro test with France for having allowed Chinese stu dents in Paris to march in Friday’s parade for the bicentennial of the French Revolution. The stu dents carried a large banner reading, “We Carry On,” in implied support for their Beijing class mates. For years, China crafted its own foreign policy with a heavy ideological content, but in the past decade it has shifted to a more hard-nosed policy based on practical interests. Foreign investment and technology are now key to its modernization program. But the People’s Daily said foreign sanctions would only encourage a spirit of self-reliance. It also warned Hong Kong residents who try to help the mainland democracy movement that they should not “lift a rock only to crush their own feet.” The British colony reverts to Chinese rule in 1997. In other developments, the party’s Central Disciplinary Inspection Commission issued a strong warning against corruption by party members in state-run factories and businesses. SCHULMAN | «3 00 BARGAIN MATINEE ALL SEATS BEFORE 6PM THEATRES NO MATINEES ON MON.-FW. BEFORE 6 PM AT SCHULMAN SIX ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ 'ZZZZZZZ TUESDAY NITE Swimsuit Contest $100 1st Prize $500 Cash Scramble WEDNESDAY NITE Call Your Shot Night Cash Pool Tournament $1.00 Any Shot All Night SERVING TILL 1:00 AM EVERYNIGHT 2501 South Texas Avenue Winn Dixie Shopping Center 693-3343 Contact Lenses Only Quality Name Brands (Bausch & Lomb, Ciba, Barnes-Hinds-Hydrocurve) $ ygoo $99 00 $99 00 pr.*-STD. DAILY WEAR SOFT LENSES pr*-STD. 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