
Results for: cheap%20airline%20tickets%20to%20asuncion%20paraguay%20phone%20number%201-800-299-7264
Showing results for cheap airline tickets 20to ascension paraguay phone number 201 800 299 726 cheap airline tickets 20to ascension paraguay phone number 2019 02 26 201 800 299 726 2019-02-26 2019-02-26 tickets 20to number 201 800 299 tickets 20to number 2019 26 201 800 299 201 800 299 726 2019 02 26 201 800 299 726
ZGBriefs | April 23, 2015
<h3></h3> <p><strong>With an Influx of Newcomers, Little Chinatowns Dot a Changing Brooklyn</strong> (April 15, 2015, <em>The New York Times</em>)<br /> With Chinese immigrants now the second largest foreign-born group in the city and soon to overtake Dominicans for the top spot, they are reshaping neighborhoods far beyond their traditional enclaves. Nowhere is the rapid growth […]
May 1, 2014
[…] find to the local Bureau of Cultural Relics. Why some English words are controversial in China (April 30, 2014, BBC) Nowadays, if you eavesdrop on Chinese people's phone conversations, it is commonplace to hear English phrases popping up here and there, like "Okay", "Cool" and "Bye bye". In today's Chinese publications, English abbreviations and […]
The Vital Role of Chinese Women in Evangelism
[…] on managing the household. In the Ming (1368–1644) and Qing (1644–1912) dynasties, positive changes in female literacy rates and economic roles improved the status of a growing number of learned and influential women. But the most dramatic changes didn’t occur until the May Fourth Movement in the early 1920s. At that time, reformers rallied […]
A Prayer of Thanks before the Gaokao
[…] because I cannot be there with him. However, in order not to let my son feel my guilt, I deliberately spoke cheerfully to encourage him over the phone. We talked about some casual topics, and I tried not to mention the exam, because my son has always been sensitive and also very self-disciplined in […]
ZGBriefs | February 2, 2017
<p></p> <p>It's Lunar New Year, and China's Young People Are Sick and Tired of It (January 29, 2017, Global Voices)<br /> However, the traveling trend has shifted slightly in recent years, as more and more people decide to travel abroad during the holiday, in order to avoid seeing relatives altogether. Among the younger generation in particular, many […]
Book Reviews
Preparing Returnees to Go Home Well
A Review of the Returnee Handbook for Chinese Christians
[…] data on how many Chinese students return to China. But as this handbook points out, through the latest data from the Ministry of Education of China, the number of returned Chinese students consistently exceeded the number of Chinese overseas students, from 2020-2023. Previously, from 2008-2019, the number of overseas Chinese students outnumbered those who […]
ZGBriefs | October 31, 2024
[…] rebound to prepandemic levels with executives returning to the country, the world’s second-largest economy, in droves. But that hasn’t materialized. Over the last several months, many international airlines have suspended or reduced the frequency of flights in and out of China. For continental European and British carriers, the war in Ukraine has prevented non-Chinese […]
Why the Urban Church Needs to Care for Migrant Workers
[…] brought new challenges to the church, but also new opportunities. A Glance into Pastoring Urbanizing Churches By Rev. Hong Shuyong In China's vast countryside, there are a large number of people who live like "migratory birds." They are the main group of people involved in the annual transportation crunch around Chinese New Year. Before the end […]
A Tour of Three-Self Churches
Kunming—Trinity International Church
<p>In the summer of 2011 I spent about two months traversing China from Kunming in the south to Hegang near the Russian border in the north visiting registered churches and interviewing the pastors.</p>
January 24, 2013
<p>In China, Widening Discontent Among the Communist Party Faithful (January 19, 2013, The New York Times) </p> <p>For years, many China observers have asserted that the partys authoritarian system endures because ordinary Chinese buy into a grand bargain: the party guarantees economic growth, and in exchange the people do not question the way the party rules. […]