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From the Web
Danwei Picks: Working two jobs, Yao can't keep upPosted by Joel Martinsen, February 27, 2008 5:46 PM
Danwei Picks is a daily digest of the "From the Web" links found on the Danwei homepage. A feed for the links as they are posted throughout the day is available at Feedsky (in China) or Feedburner (outside China). The tragedy of Yao’s left foot: Yao Ming will sit out the rest of the season and is at risk of underperforming at the Olympics. At Shanghai Scrap, Adam Minter blames overwork: several years of full NBA seasons plus duties for China's national team that Yao is required to perform as a patriotic athlete: The tragedy in this - for both China and the Houston Rockets - is that Yao’s laudable efforts to please both masters has resulted in an injury that will disappoint both. The Rockets are in the midst of their best run of Yao’s NBA career, and I think it unlikely that they’ll be able to repeat it. Likewise, China’s Olympic basketball team was not expected to win in Beijing, but it surely expected to place well, and Yao’s (presumably) superb play was the key. Now it’s not even clear that Yao will play in the Olympics. But if he does manage to appear, he’ll be doing it with all of the rust that accompanies rehab from a major injury, and his team and country will suffer for it.
The highway linking the town of Xinjie in Hekou County in southeastern Yunnan province with Lao Cai province in northern Vietnam was opened yesterday, marking completion of the first highway linking Yunnan with a neighboring country from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).
Like a lot of marriages, Mao and the Party were in a bit of a rut, the passion was gone, they were missing the ZazaZoom. Not completely sure how best to rekindle the spark, Mao fell into a pattern that any $150/hour marriage counselor would quickly identify as "passive-aggressive."
Six international and domestic airlines will begin operating in the terminal Friday, while others will switch over from the other two terminals in March. The new building was designed by Norman Foster. See also this opinion piece in The Independent: The Chinese get things done — at a cost.
When Lou Jiwei visited Switzerland one spring weekend in 1993, the Chinese government economist was so eager to see the inside of a Swiss bank that Credit Suisse Group opened its Zurich head office on a Sunday to show him around... The article contains plenty of numbers about CIC, the Chinese sovereign wealth fund, and biographical detail about Lou. |
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Xujun Eberlein's Apologies Forthcoming: Hong Kong's Blacksmith Books has published a short story collection by Xujun Eberlein.
Princess Der Ling: Two Years in the Forbidden City: Two years in the Forbidden City is largely a reminiscence of the minutiae of life for one of history's most powerful women, by one of her court attendants, a Manchu noble's daughter by the name of Der Ling.
Carl Crow's The Long Road Back to China: In 1939 Carl Crow - an American journalist, advertising executive and author who had lived in Shanghai for 25 years until forced out by the Japanese - travelled up the Burma Road from Rangoon to Chongqing on assignment for Liberty magazine - 'the most interesting assignment I have ever been given'.
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Comments on Danwei Picks: Working two jobs, Yao can't keep up
SO the groundwork of excuses for the Chinese basketball team doing poorly (should they actually do so) this summer is already being presented to the public?
Weak...
Nonsense. The Rockets have done fine without him in their lineup.