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Friday, 08 August 2008 |
As weeks of world-class sport are upon us, Pamela Yau covers Hong Kong Day at Ascot Racecourse and takes a look at the upcoming Olympic equestrian events to be held in Hong Kong. |
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Saturday, 02 August 2008 |
Oliver Pfeiffer tells the story of how a letter written by a young Chinese boy, John Ian Wing, saved the Olympic Games |
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Monday, 30 June 2008 |
As Jackie Chan and Jet Li meet together for the first time in the upcoming summer movie The Forbidden Kingdom, Glenn Watson chats to film critics Colin Odell and Michelle Le Blanc, authors of the The Pocket Essential Jackie Chan and asks - was it worth the wait? |
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Thursday, 19 June 2008 |
Susan S. Cheung reflects on soaring prices in the US and UK, and how people can save a
few pennies on their shopping bill. |
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Friday, 30 May 2008 |
Film star Jackie Chan spoke recently at Oxford University in aid of the Chinese earthquake relief. Glenn Watson was lucky enough to attend.
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Wednesday, 21 May 2008 |
China is officially mourning victims of the Sichuan China
earthquake, as Londoners do their part, donating £70,000 to help with quake relief
efforts. Pamela Yau reports.
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Wednesday, 14 May 2008 |
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Over 12,000 people are believed to be dead
after a massive magnitude-7.9 earthquake that struck the Sichuan province of China
on Monday, May 11th. Twenty-six thousand are still believed to be buried in the rubble
in the aftermath of what has been called the deadliest
earthquake in China in 30 years.
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Tuesday, 13 May 2008 |
There's
another chance to hear a revealing radio series - Chinese in Britain - on
BBC Radio 4 over the next two weeks, presented by Dimsum's very own Anna Chen. |
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Saturday, 03 May 2008 |
Stephen Pucci thinks China might be snookering itself in its pursuit of solo sporting success. |
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Wednesday, 30 April 2008 |
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To have, or not to have children: that is the question for many industrialized nations. Susan S. Cheung examines the baby boom in the United States and compares the statistics in the UK and Hong Kong. |
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Wednesday, 16 April 2008 |
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If history is anything to go by, the anti-China protests during the Olymipic torch relay serve to do nothing more than create a wider gulf between China and the rest of the world. Instead of persuading China to change its policy on a variety of subjects, it has just fuelled the nationalist bubble around China, turning the anti-China protests into an exercise in PR rather than politics. Leon Lau shares his perspective. |
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