Gorbachev far from evil to UCI crowd
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Alicia Robinson
They weren’t swords, but former weapons did make up the unusual award
received by former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev at UC Irvine
Tuesday.
The first-ever UC Irvine Citizen Peacebuilding Award, made by art
professor Gifford Myers from the barrels of guns, was given to
Gorbachev for his contributions to world peace and improving the
environment.
“It is a very important symbol,” Gorbachev said through an
interpreter. “Instead of swords, let’s have plowshares.”
Gorbachev also gave a speech peppered with applause, and he gave
lengthy, considered answers to audience questions about the conflict
in Chechnya, Russia’s political situation today, and the global
energy crisis.
One questioner charged that more than 100 million people had died
as a result of communism and added that Ronald Reagan once called the
USSR “the evil Soviet empire.”
Gorbachev’s response brought him warm and hearty applause.
“I started perestroika in order to rid my country of the Communist
model that existed there,” he said. He also allowed the countries
that splintered from the Soviet Union to make their own decisions
about what kind of government they wanted, he said.
Asked how he came to give up leadership voluntarily, Gorbachev
said, “I behaved, in fact, like a Democrat. I had some other options
available to me but I could not take that road, that very dangerous
road that could have resulted in strife and bloodshed.”
Feedback of a different color
If he’s been called worse, we haven’t heard it.
State Assemblyman John Campbell informed constituents in a
newsletter sent Friday that he was referred to as an “impotent,
dull-brained Republican” and compared with Osama bin Laden because of
a bill he proposed that would reduce from 14 to 12 the number of paid
holidays state employees get each year.
Campbell has said the bill would save the state more than $21
million a year. Since the assemblyman detailed the purpose of the
bill in a weekly newsletter to constituents, feedback has gone from
overwhelmingly negative to positive, Campbell spokesman Matt Back
said.
“Once the nonstate employees have been made aware of the bill,
they absolutely are supportive of the measure,” he said.
Campbell said last week he doesn’t expect the bill to pass, and
Back echoed that doubt Wednesday.
“Certainly we have an uphill battle because it is a
Democrat-controlled legislature that [is] supported by state employee
unions,” he said.
Back said this is the most feedback Campbell has received on any
bill. But some of it he probably could have lived without, like the
comment that “Your photo on your website appears to me as just
another white man in a suit with power and lust for money,” or the
person who asked, “What is next? Do you want the gold from my teeth?”
Paying the price for less ethanol
California’s federal legislators, including Rep. Chris Cox, backed
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s request that the Environmental
Protection Agency waive a Clean Air Act mandate requiring ethanol or
MTBE in the state’s gasoline.
California has banned MTBE, a gas additive, because it can pollute
ground and surface water. This requires heavier use of ethanol, which
critics say will jack up gas prices for consumers and make it harder
for the state to meet federal ozone standards.
A statement from Cox’s office late last week said 52 of the 53
members of California’s congressional delegation urged EPA
Administrator Michael Leavitt to grant the state a waiver for the
ethanol and MTBE requirements. State legislators have been fighting
the requirement for more than a decade, the statement said.
No jokes, Mr. Mayor
Wednesday morning at the Newport Beach Police Appreciation
Breakfast, Mayor Tod Ridgeway told one joke during his brief remarks,
which mainly conveyed the City Council’s support for the department.
The joke went something like: I got invited, I was told, because
I’m a warm person. And I thought, that’s a pretty nice thing to hear.
But then I looked up “warm” in the dictionary and it said, “not so
hot.”
Yes, yes, that joke isn’t going to score Ridgeway a hosting gig at
the Academy Awards. But it wasn’t the real point of his humor.
No, Ridgeway was tipping his hat to his performance at last
month’s annual Mayor’s Dinner. There he told a joke that, he said,
he’d been warned not to let see the light of day.
This time everyone at his table had checked his speech, and all of
them had said, “No jokes.”
But he had to tell just one.
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