The Fourth Generation
...in a very different way than would, say, lawyers. The number of university graduates in this new generation of leaders is much higher than in the previous three (rising from...
...in a very different way than would, say, lawyers. The number of university graduates in this new generation of leaders is much higher than in the previous three (rising from...
Ever since China reopened its door under the leadership of Deng Xiaoping, a great number of Mainland Chinese have come to the West for academic degrees, training, and research. Many...
...peoples of China. It is not the job of outsiders to do theology for them, though some wise and sensitive waiguoren may earn the right to do theology with them....
...Ting reportedly told them that full academic freedom prevailed but it was not “freedom to pervert the scriptures, spread rumors, oppose those fighting for right, or to uphold imperialism.”[6] In...
...as the world’s largest mobile phone company, Vodafone. The number of pagers in use and annual sales are the world’s highest. The number of Internet users is expected to more...
...implementation of wireless technology. The number of Internet users is growing rapidly. With 18 million users in 2000, the projected growth is 80 million users by 2003.[2] (In contrast, Japan currently...
During the 1980s, color televisions were targets of envy. A work unit PC had to be “heavily guarded”—no ordinary man was allowed to access it. A cell phone was the...
...Bill Dyrness caution us against relying too much on the tools of technology, along with the other products of modernity. There are a number of issues we must consider. Her...
...realizing this potential may be many years away. Optimistic estimates put the number of China’s Internet users by the end of 2001 at more than 40 million. However, most of...
...economy, and a significant rise in the number and variety of jobs available to outsiders in the Chinese marketplace can be expected. Since early 2000, the government has been strongly...
...roads, but now taxis, motorcycles and even private cars have joined them to create one massive and seemingly never-ending traffic jam. Various regulations have been enacted to reduce the number...
...as many cities and towns as possible. They measured success by the number of cities that sank in front of them. In 1958, the communists launched the “Great Leap Forward”...