155 A.D.
Repeated attempts to make pandas fight in the colosseum end in failure.
695 A.D.
Japanese Empress Jitō asks Chinese Empress Wu Zetian to send a panda for her garden. The Japanese are outraged the following year when an exhaustive list of tribute demands arrives written on a sheet of panda skin.
1925
Kermit and Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. earn the dubious distinction of being the first foreigners to shoot a panda… at the Bronx Zoo. The teenaged Chiang Chingkuo shoots a bison at Beijing Zoo in retaliation.
1964
The transfer of a panda from London zoo to Moscow provokes clashes along the Sino-Soviet border. Hostilities only cease when Chichi is smuggled back into West Berlin in the trunk of a black and white Trabant.
2005
China offers two pandas to Taiwan, but because pandas are called bearcats in China and catbears in Taiwan, customs turns them away on the grounds that the shipment’s contents do not match their description.
* May not correspond to historical reality.
1898
Jian Bozan, Chinese Muslim and Marxist historian, born in Taoyuan County, Hunan Province. Jian studied at the University of Calfornia in 1924-26, later writing the first Marxist interpretation of Chinese history. Jian joined the CCP in 1937 and was promoted to Dean of the Peking University Faculty of History. Criticized by Mao at the beginning of the Cultural Revolution, Jian committed suicide along with his wife in 1968 following a campaign of sustained persecution.
1981
China triumphs at the thirty sixth Table Tennis World Championships, winning all seven gold medals on offer.
1997
United Nations vetos Anti-Chinese Rights (fan huaren quan) legislation for the seventh time. “With the direction and support of America, Western nations have raised anti-Chinese motions at seven separate hearings of the United Nations Commission on Human Rights since 1990, out of so-called “concern for the human rights situation in China”. China united developing nations to defeat Western attempts to apply a double standard and use human rights as an excuse to meddle in China’s domestic affairs”.
在美国的操纵和支持下,一些西方国家从1990年起,以“关心中国人权状况”为名,在联合国人权会议上, 7次提出反华议案。中国团结广大发展中国家,共同挫败了西方国家在人权问题上搞双重标准、借人权问题干涉中国内政的企图
Original text here .
地三鲜 (di san xian)
A favorite in northeastern China, di san xian (lit. local three fresh), is a simple but delicious peasant dish made with seasonal vegetables, usually green peppers, eggplant, potatoes and lots of garlic (hence the translation, ratatouille). Disanxian is very quick to prepare and cook (needing 10 minutes total) and provides a substantial alternative to meat-based dishes.
Ingredients (for two)
Sunflower/vegetable oil for deep frying
2 potatoes (100g)
1 Japanese eggplant (long) (100g)
1 green sweet pepper (capsicum) (50g)
6 cloves garlic
1 spring onion (white part)
2 tablespoons soy sauce
½ teaspoon chicken salt
1 teaspoon cornstarch
Method
Peel and cut potatoes into half inch cubes
Cut eggplant in half down the middle and into 1 inch lengths
Cut peppers into 1 inch diamonds
Slice spring onion into thin strips, peel and cut garlic roughly
Heat 1 inch of oil in wok to medium heat
Add potatoes, cook till golden, remove
Add eggplant, cook till golden, remove
Add green pepper, cook briefly (10-20s), remove
Pour out oil, leaving some (about 2 tablespoons)
Add garlic and spring onion, cook till fragrant
Return potatoes, eggplant and peppers to wok
Add soy and chicken salt, turn in wok for a few seconds
Add cornstarch dissolved in about 3 tablespoons water
Mix until sauce thickens and serve
Serve with plain white rice.
When this dish is served it is common for there to be some oil present in the bottom of the dish. Drain vegetables on kitchen paper before returning to wok if this bothers you. To save time, do not remove each vegetable as it is cooked, but instead add potatoes, then after 1 minute add eggplant, then after 2 minutes add peppers and remove together when cooked.
Hong Kong Economic Times 2008/03/11
Qiu Shiwen
Employing a phased issuance of stock, the mainland offering of China Railway Construction Corp A-shares closed 28% higher than their initial public offering price on debut yesterday (March 10th), the lowest first day gain of any mainland stock issue in a year. Markets anticipate a 30% valuation gap between the mainland float and H-share release this Thursday in Hong Kong.
At the Shanghai Stock Exchange yesterday 1.96 billion China Railway Construction A-shares were traded, opening at 11RMB and closing at 11.64RMB, 28.19% higher than its initial public offering price of 9.08 RMB but still 30% below market forecasts. China Railway Construction is employing a phased float strategy that includes a 3.12 trillion RMB cap on A-share initial public offer purchases.
Securities Times analysts believe China Railway Construction A-shares underperformed consensus forecasts primarily due to a large drop in US stocks which caused a slide in the mainland share market. Low market volume and activity disproportionately suppressed China Railway Construction’s large-cap stock. On this ocasion, the rather high issue price also dampened investor enthusiasm.
HK Government Should Grasp Opportunity to Control Power Plant CO2 Emissions
Greenpeace HK press release
20/02/2008
On the occasion of the United Nations Global Climate Change Summit in Bali four Greenpeace representatives riding in two boats approached the CLP Coal Power Plant on Green Mountain (Qingshan), climbed to the top of a 30m high smoke stack and abseiled down, unfurling a 15m by 15m banner which read in giant characters “Climate Murder Ongoing Here”. They demanded that the Hong Kong government directly confront climate change at its source by controlling power station CO2 emissions.
In Hong Kong residents are experiencing an abnormally cold winter. Actually it is the second severest winter since records began; the first one people still remember as if it were only yesterday. Climate change is already influencing the lives of all people, but power stations, which may be regarded as Hong Kong’s largest emitter of claimte disrupting CO2 gases, are not subject to any controls. On the 20th of February the government will submit a draft to the Legislative Council preparing to amend the “Air Pollution Control Act” legislation which lays down limits, effective from 2010, on air polluting emissions of power stations. But will the government actually take this opportunity to regulate power station CO2 emissions?
The Special Regional government has always downplayed the dangers of climate change. Power station emissions account for 70% of Hong Kong’s CO2 and constitute the territory’s principle source of greenhouse gas. However, till now the government has shown no interest in curbing CO2 emissions. Only in October last year it issued a report which revealed that it had reached a profit control agreement with electric companies without taking the chance to formulate related policies or provisions.
五彩肚丝 (wucai tusi)
Shredded Tripe with Cilantro, Spring Onion, Wood Ear Mushroom and Carrot
by Huangdi @ www.abang.com
As the saying goes“In heaven they eat dragon, on earth we eat donkey” (in reference to its sublime flavour). Rich in nutrients, every 100g of donkey meat contains 18.6g of protein, carbohydrates, calcium, phosphates, iron and many kinds of amino acids essential to the body. Chinese medicine holds that eating donkey meat has two main benefits, namely, “invigorating vital energy and nourishing the blood” in addition to “nourishing the heart and settling the mind”. Possessing a fresh and smooth texture, one might call “five coloured shredded tripe” the pinnacle of (Chinese) cold dish cuisine.

Ingredients: 250g prepared donkey tripe, bunch cilantro, 2 spring onions, ½ cup dry wood ear mushroom, one carrot
Spices: 6 cloves garlic, 3 Tb mature vinegar, 1 Tb sugar, ½ tsp salt, ½ tsp chicken essence (or chicken salt), 2 tsp sesame oil
Method:
1. First soak wood ears until soft and rinse.
2. Cut donkey tripe into shreds.
3. Cut cilantro into small segments, then cut spring onion lengthways into fine threads, also cutting wood ears and carrot finely.
4. Peel and crush garlic into pulp and mix together with other ingredients.
5. Add salt, sugar, chicken essence, sesame oil and mature vinegar according to taste, or follow proportions suggested above.
麻辣土豆片 (mala tudou pianr)
Usually made with thin potato slices, this recipe can be used to liven up shoe string fries as well.
Ingredients
Sunflower/vegetable oil for deep frying
4 medium potatoes
1 tablespoon of dry chilli flakes (or to taste) (dried chilli loses much of its heat in frying)
1 teaspoon Sichuan (Szechuen) Pepper
1 spring onion
Salt to taste
Method
Peel and cut potatoes into slices (about 3mm thick) and rinse off starch
Heat oil to just above moderate (i.e. not smoking hot)
Fry potato until light yellow colour
Add Sichuan pepper and chilli flakes to frying potato (in the hot oil) and reduce heat to medium/low
Continue cooking potato slices until golden
Remove with slotted spoon and let drain (fragrant pepper and chilli should cover each slice)
Serve immediately. Garnish with chopped spring onion, add salt to taste.
This dish varies from restaurant to restaurant, so experiment!
Other popular additions include cilantro garnish, coarse black pepper, whole dried chillis, chilli powder and Szechuen peppercorns (花椒粒, Xanthoxylum seeds).
Note: The term mala translates roughly as “numbing and hot". The heat obviously derives from the chillis, but the “numbing” sensation is caused by the Szechuen pepper. English does not have a word for this sensation because no Western culture uses ma spices in its cooking. If you’re curious, corriander seeds give this sensation when eaten, but be careful, the “taste” is very intense!
HK Experts: Jiang Faction Promoting Power of Party “Princes”
New Tang Dynasty Television 08/03/2008
Liang Zhen in HK reporting
According to overseas shortwave news reports, Deng Xiaoping’s son, Deng Pufang and HuYaobang’s son, Hu Deping, may have been made vice-chairmen of the CCPPC (Chinese People’s Consultative Conference) in recent days. There is a long history of the offspring of CCP leaders being promoted to leadership positions at national assemblies. Though analysis suggests Hu Jintao feels indebted to party princes, Hong Kong specialists in Chinese affairs suggest that in fact the power of these princes is being promoted by the Jiang faction.
Following the central political role played by seventeen great party princes last year, many heavyweight princely figures reappeared at the two assemblies of the Political Consultative Conference held this year, including Mao Zedong’s two daughters, Li Min and Li Ne, Mao’s grandson, Mao Xinyu, Zhou Enlai’s niece, Zhou Bingjian, Li Peng’s daughter, Li Xiaolin and others, among whom Deng Xiaoping’s eldest son, Deng Pufang, and HuYaobang’s son, Hu Deping, were recently made assembly vice-chairs.
Though analysis by Reuters suggests the reason for this is Hu Jintao’s wish to repay the patronage of Deng Xiaoping and Hu Yaobang, Hong Kong Open Magazine’s executive editor Cai Yongmei who has made a deep study of the party prince problem suggests that this kind of Communist bloodline, of “old revolutionaries and their children”, has in fact been realized by assiduous maneuvering by the Jiang faction.
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