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USC U.S.-China Institute 留言于2016-01-28 23:41:36 |
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评论:UPDATE - From The Chinese American Professors and Professionals Network(2016 No.3) |
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What: One Child: The Story Of China's Most Radical Experiment Who: Mei Fong, Pulitzer winning author and former USC Annenberg professor When: Thursday, February 4, 4-5:30pm Where: ASC 207, Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism, USC Campus Cost: Free
What: Will Africa Feed China? Who: Deborah Bräutigam, Director of the China Africa Research Initiative at Johns Hopkins University's School of Advanced International Studies When: Thursday, February 18, 4-5:30pm Where: ASC 207, Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism, USC Campus Cost: Free. USC U.S.-China Institute | 213-821-4382 |
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Human Resources 留言于2016-01-28 01:16:59 |
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评论:UPDATE - From The Chinese American Professors and Professionals Network(2016 No.3) |
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Good Afternoon, please review the job announcements and forward them to anyone interested in applying. The current job vacancies with Barstow College are: Civic and College Events Manager Dean of Distance Education and Learning Support Services Dean of Student Success & Equity Director of CTE Grants, TAACCCT Database Analyst II Counselor EOPS (Tenure Track) Humanities Instructor (Tenure Track) Visit: http://www.barstow.edu/HR_Employement_Opportunities.html for an application. Thank You,
Barstow College 760/252-2411 EXT. 7232 twatkins@barstow.edu
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Xilin Association 留言于2016-01-28 00:54:13 |
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评论:UPDATE - From The Chinese American Professors and Professionals Network(2016 No.3) |
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Come celebrate with us at Fashion Outlets of Chicago! 5220 Fashion Outlets Way, Rosemont, IL 60018 Saturday, January 30th, 2016, Starting at 2:00pm at the Food Court The celebration kicks off Saturday, January 30 with special performances by the Huaxing Art Troupe, accompanied by the acclaimed "Crazy Violinist" Shaobo Zhang. Zhang is known for aweing audiences around the world with his unique and exciting performances. Shoppers are invited to visit the center's food court at 2 p.m. for this special performance, which will contain a few surprises. Additional entertainment will continue at 2:30 p.m. and include traditional dances, a Chinese fashion show and a Kung Fu presentation. Fashion Outlets of Chicago's guests can continue celebrating Chinese New Year through February 14th with exclusive offers from the center and its retailers. Shoppers can visit Concierge Services on level one of the center and receive a traditional red envelope including a signature Chinese New Year Green Savings Card, providing visitors with more than $800 in savings at several of the center's retailers. The envelope will also contain a VIP pass, granting access to a special lounge for shoppers to enjoy hot tea, fortune cookies and complimentary luggage and shopping bag hold. For more information, visit: http://www.fashionoutletsofchicago.com/Events/LNY16 |
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UCLA Center for Chinese Studies 留言于2016-01-27 07:44:15 |
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评论:UPDATE - From The Chinese American Professors and Professionals Network(2016 No.3) |
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Making a Yellow River Delta: An Environmental Drama in Northern Song China Thursday, January 28, 2016 4:00 PM - 5:30 PM Bunche Hall 10383 Talk by Ling Zhang, Boston College In summer 1048 the 700-kilometers-long lower reaches of the Yellow River shifted northward to penetrate the heart of the Hebei plain. In winter 1128, due to dyke breaching by the Northern Song military, the Yellow River burst toward the south. Its lower reaches surged through Henan and, for the next nine hundred years, it never returned to central Hebei again. The violent encounter between the river and the Hebei plain—two marginally connected environmental entities—inaugurated an eighty-year environmental drama, during which the river flooded nearly every other year, created at least three more courses, and caused death and displacement to several million in the region. While situating this environmental drama within north China’s environmental changes over two millennia, my study also investigates how a third environmental entity—the imperial state of the Northern Song—played active roles in envisaging, designing, and engineering the river’s course shift.
Ling Zhang is an assistant professor in the History Department of Boston College. Ling received her doctorate from Cambridge University. She was a Ziff Environmental Fellow at the Center for the Environment at Harvard University and a post-doctoral fellow in the Program of Agrarian Studies at Yale University. She studies the historical entanglement of environment, economy, and politics in middle-period China through the lenses of political economy, political ecology, and environmental politics and justice. Beside her first book Making a Yellow River Delta: An Environmental Drama in Northern Song China (Cambridge University Press, forthcoming in 2016), she works on two book projects: “North China during the Medieval Economic Revolution” and “China’s Sorrow or the Yellow River’s Sorrow: Environmental Biographies of a Water Regime."
UCLA Center for Chinese Studies Tel: (310) 825-8683 Fax: (310) 206-3555 |
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