Tuesday, August 23, 2005

Sunday, August 21, 2005

Thursday, August 18, 2005

Picture of the Day


Gas Thief Escapes on Tricycle: Speeding from the scene of the crime, a Chinese boy tows a floating plastic bag of stolen natural gas last week. Flouting a government ban, farmers around the central Chinese town of Pucheng frequently filch gas from the local oil field.

New Stamps

HK issues "4 great inventions" stamps: Hong Kong Postmaster General Allan Chiang said at the special stamps issuing ceremony that in this new set of stamps entitled " Four Great Inventions of Ancient China", Hongkong Post showcases four revolutionary Chinese technologies -- the compass, printing, gunpowder and papermaking of which every Chinese is proud.

You can find out more about buying these stamps here.


Wednesday, August 17, 2005

Women Entrepreneurs in China

Four women who shape Beijing: Women like Hung make up almost 20 percent of the country's entrepreneurs, according to the China Association of Women Entrepreneurs. They're attracted, experts say, by an atmosphere that measures them largely by results rather than gender, by the allure of calling the shots, and by the chance to put their stamp on everything from Beijing's skyline to discovering new artists.


News

China's Sex Ratio at Birth Expanding: It was reported from the 4th National Women and Children Working Conference that in recent years China's sex ratio at birth kept expanding and the problem of children's deficiency at birth is evident and the number of AIDS orphans is increasing.

World famous mathematician slams academic corruption in China: If academic corruption in China can not be curbed, scientific and technological development in the country will be delayed by 20 years, world-known mathematician Shing-Tung Yau warned recently.

China Seeks Cheaper Labor Within Its Borders: China's economic boom has benefited its coastal areas the most. The government is now trying to hasten economic development in the country's midwest, which has traditionally been an agricultural area. Hefei, a nondescript city of four million, is illustrative of the drive for development. [Audio feed from NPR]


Tuesday, August 16, 2005

Chinese Culture

Qixi—the Chinese Valentine's Day: If it rains heavily on Thursday night, some elderly Chinese will say it is because Zhinu, or the Weaving Maid, is crying on the day she met her husband Niulang, or the Cowherd, on the Milky Way.


Featured Blog

Be sure to check out Do They Have Salsa in China?, another great China-adoption weblog.

We're Rod (laid-back tuba-player from Texas) and Mary-Mia (excitable, artsy girl from California). We're working toward adopting a baby from China, and this is our adoption blog. You'll see plenty of comments from the grandparents-to-be, who will be making the trip to China with us! So pick up that mouse and add a few of your own--it's easy, and your comments always make us smile.

Construction in China

China's great cloud of construction dust: Chinese leaders have a tradition of ambitious schemes—Great Leaps, Great Walls, Long Marches and the like—but never before has the world seen a bricks-and-mortar transformation of the nation like the one now under way.


Monday, August 15, 2005

Picture of the Day


A mother and child, weighing a total of [126 lbs.] and with arms outstretched, sit on a huge lotus leaf which draws lots of visitors to the Xi'an Botanic Park in Northwest China's Shaanxi Province. The leaf of the mature King Lotus, from Paraguay, can hold considerable weight while floating on the water. (link)