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- Ͻ posted on 03/17/2006
- fanghuzhai posted on 03/17/2006ѧӢ ѧϲעӢﵥʡעҲ toilet sitting room Ϸ꣬bedroom ֣bathroom ʿ룬study أhallway ιwindow öcurtain ̾table ߯chair nightstand ̾ closet ϲ Come ye to the toilet to undress ڿϷ Laughingly I listen to u in the parlor Է In the bedroom my back gets happiness 跿аʿ Alas! a bus entered my bathroom 鷿 The study is a place one dies for sur
- fanghuzhai posted on 03/17/2006
- Forgive me please for abusing this forum with the following advertisement. I just thought some of you who live in the States might be interested -- The China National Symphony Orchestra will tour U.S. from May 6 to 27 in 2006. It is their first visit to the U.S. since 1987. It will visit the following cities: San Diego, Los Angeles, New York City, Long Island, Washington, D.C., Worcester, Boston, Buffalo, Cleveland, Indianapolis, South Bend, Chicago, Dayton, Pittsburgh, Reading, Philadelphia and Trent
- KCzili posted on 03/10/2006
- ͼС posted on 03/13/2006
- xw posted on 03/15/2006
- xw posted on 03/15/2006The world premiere production of The First Emperor, a historical pageant of ancient China, will open on December 21, 2006. The new work, commissioned by The Met, will be composed and conducted by Tan Dun and staged by legendary film director Zhang Yimou, who made his operatic debut directing Turandot at the Forbidden City in 1998. Novelist Ha Jin co-wrote the libretto with Tan Dun. Plcido Domingo sings the title role of Chinas great leader who unifies the country, but sacrifices the happiness of his dau
- justimaginexw posted on 03/15/2006
- jingfanghuzhai posted on 03/10/2006
- fzaLinda posted on 03/13/2006
- һ posted on 03/12/2006
- ǷԵݽernie posted on 02/23/2006
- xwС posted on 03/12/2006
- Connie posted on 03/13/2006China's Environmental Watchdog Vows Tougher Enforcement of Rules By Shai Oster 13 March 2006 The Wall Street Journal BEIJING -- China's new top environmental watchdog warned that the country's pollution woes could worsen and vowed to try to get the problem under control with tougher enforcement of regulations. With a commitment to seriously enforce antipollution measures, "the government has given me a very powerful weapon; if I use this weapon properly, I will not end up resigning," Zhou
- Connie posted on 03/13/2006Low Costs, Plentiful Talent Make China a Global Magnet for R&D By Kathy Chen and Jason Dean 13 March 2006 The Wall Street Journal BEIJING -- Multinational companies, drawn by a huge and inexpensive talent pool, are pouring money into research and development in China -- a trend that promises to broaden the country's huge role in the global economy. The total number of foreign-invested R&D centers in the country has surged to about 750 from 200 four years ago, according to China's Ministry of
- wenzhaixw posted on 02/14/2006
- ߸ posted on 03/07/2006
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