I was looking for wrought iron art when I bumped into a store in one of Beijing's immense home decoration centers. This year, wrought iron is particularly fashionable.
When Yano Koji takes a stroll around Beijing, strangers often call out to him, either by name, or by saying: "Are you the Japanese invader (guizi) on TV?"
The country's cabbies drive me crazy - in a good way, that is. Surely, some of the zaniest people I've met in China were behind the wheels of cars for hire.
KUNMING: Yang Gancai and his wife, Wang Yi, spent seven years chronicling the "disappearing world" of a remote village, and it appears to have paid off.
I don't know whether I'm a typical user of MSN. I use my real name and accept anyone who asks to get on my "friends" list.
The defamation case filed by Nanjing massacre survivor Xia Shuqin against two Japanese authors and their publisher is the case that brought lawyer Tan Zhen both fame and pressure.
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