Our First 13 Days
If you ever move to a major city in Southwest China to study an obscure language at a Chinese university, perhaps the following insights from our first thirteen days will...
If you ever move to a major city in Southwest China to study an obscure language at a Chinese university, perhaps the following insights from our first thirteen days will...
...her husband’s. CIA pulled officers from Beijing after breach of federal personnel records (September 29, 2015, The Washington Post) The CIA pulled a number of officers from the U.S. Embassy...
...cultural informant, part memoir, and part cookbook. Cultural Informant In each book, Dunlop goes into delicious details on food as it relates to culture, both at the start of the...
...1978. In her thorough review for The China Journal,[2] Dr. Carol Lee Hamrin of the Global China Center describes the book as “a fairly comprehensive and readable account” of governance reform...
...as Victoria Harbor and the skyline of densely packed high-rises. […] But the neon of Hong Kong’s streets is dimming. A hazing ritual forced Chinese female flight attendants into overhead...
...for streaming in China. The University of Illinois has a huge number of Chinese students, and the activity has been getting the community more involved in campus culture. Government /...
...vast national database that compiles fiscal and government information, including minor traffic violations, and distils it into a single number ranking each citizen. The night time 'McRefugees' of Hong Kong...
...they would become enraged with them. After Bowman and Cryers sued, the Kleins posted all of their private information, including their names, address, phone number, and email on Facebook. As...
...the Test (October 30, 2015, Barron’s) Suffolk joins a tiny number of U.S. schools that allow gaokao scores in admission as Chinese demand for U.S. education surges – the number...
...appointment with the President, we drank more instant coffee and played “Risk” on a cell phone . . . for two hours. It was worth the wait. The president was...
...China’s growing church as well. The purpose of this book is to explore how Christians in China perceive the challenges posed by their new urban context and to examine their...
...to listen deeply to the vision God has given them and ask how we can serve with believers in China. The book suggests a number of ways in which to...