SHANGHAI: "I see myself as half-Chinese, half-Australian. Therefore I wanted to be the link between the West and the East." A comment like this may seem rather ambitious for most people, yet from the mouth of Australian-born Chinese celebrity chef Kylie Kwong, it's not that farfetched.
SHANGHAI: Gary Locke, the first Chinese American governor in the United States, now enjoys the shift from the limelight to a private life, but he remains active in public affairs and participates in numerous Sino-American exchanges.
SHANGHAI: If charity makes you think of sleepy old women selling homemade cupcakes at a local bazaar, think again. Shanghai's expat community is a whole lot more inventive than that. The most recent example of reaching out in an "untraditional" way is the hunks at a local expatriate rugby club, who have just stripped off for a picture calendar - all in the name of charity.
Many expats first come to China to learn the language and discover the marvels of local culture. Time flies, and the next thing they know, decades pass, and the initial seeds of interest have grown into deep roots.
CHENGDU: One of the more impressive displays at the Sanxingdui Museum, in Guanghan of Southwest China's Sichuan Province, is a bronze statue of a barefoot man with anklets and clenched hands.
YANTAI: Autumn is the best time of year to explore the Yellow River Delta in East China's Shandong Province. Home to one of the best wetlands in the country, it is a paradise for bird watchers and nature lovers, who flock there every fall.
A group of more than 20 people lined up for a hike in the Summer Palace on Sunday morning, clutching poles that passers-by could easily have mistaken for skiing stocks.
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