home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: aus.culture.china
- Path: sparky!uunet!decwrl!csus.edu!umn.edu!math.fu-berlin.de!informatik.tu-muenchen.de!regent!monu1.cc.monash.edu.au!monu6!bruce.cs.monash.edu.au!munnari.oz.au!metro!usage!news
- From: xu@hydra.maths.unsw.oz.au ()
- Subject: CND-Global, January 22, 1993 - A Happy Chinese New Year
- Message-ID: <1993Jan22.064630.9198@usage.csd.unsw.OZ.AU>
- Sender: news@usage.csd.unsw.OZ.AU
- Nntp-Posting-Host: hydra.maths.unsw.edu.au
- Organization: school of Mathematics UNSW
- Distribution: aus
- Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1993 06:46:30 GMT
- Lines: 243
-
-
- * * * C h i n a N e w s D i g e s t * * *
-
- (News Global)
-
- Friday, January 22, 1993
-
- Happy Chinese New Year (1/23)
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- ============================================================================
- 1. News Brief (5 Items) ................................................. 35
- 2. Enter the Rooster -- Chinese Ready for Lunar New Year ................ 53
- 3. China Must Brace for Clinton White House, Official Says .............. 37
- 4. What's in Today's Hua Xia Wen Zhai #95 (cm9301d) ..................... 23
- ============================================================================
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- 1. News Brief (5 Items) ................................................. 35
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- [DPA, 1/21/1993] BEIJING -- China Thursday rejected as "irresponsible" and
- "entirely unjustifiable" United States criticism of the human rights situa-
- tion in the Asian country. The Xinhua news agency quoted a foreign ministry
- spokesman as saying Beijing was "firmly opposed to any interference in
- China's internal affairs under the pretext of human rights".
- (Forwarded by: Wenfeng)
- ___ ___ ___
-
- [DPA, 1/21/1993] BEIJING -- China Thursday extended congratulations to new
- U.S. President Bill Clinton and expressed the hope for better relations
- between the two countries. A foreign ministry spokesman, at his weekly press
- conference, said "we would like to extend our congratulations to Mr.
- Clinton." "The Chinese government has always attached importance to Sino-
- U.S. relations and is willing to make joint efforts with the new U.S. admi-
- nistration for the improvement and development of the bilateral ties".
- (Forwarded by: Wenfeng)
- ___ ___ ___
-
- [JAPAN ECONOMIC NEWSWIRE, 1/20/1993] BEIJING -- China's foreign trade volume
- rode a huge import and export wave last year to reach 165.63 billion dol-
- lars, a 22.1% increase over 1991, a Ministry of Foreign Economic Relations
- and Trade spokesman said Wednesday. Ministry figures reveal that manufac-
- tured goods accounted for the lion's share, around 79.9%, of China's record
- 85 billion dollars in exports, the spokesman said. Import volume jumped
- 26.4% to reach 80.63 billion dollars. (Forwarded by: Liu Jian)
- ___ ___ ___
-
- [DOW JONES INTERNATIONAL NEWS, 1/20/1993] TAIPEI -- The Board of Foreign
- Trade (BOFT) reported Thursday that Taiwan's indirect trade with China via
- Hong Kong gained 29% to 6.65 billion U.S. dlrs in the first 11 months of
- 1992 from a year earlier. In the same period, Taiwan's exports to China
- leaped 35% to 5.63 billion U.S. dlrs, while Taiwan's imports from China rose
- 1.7% to 1.13 billion U.S. dlrs. (Forwarded by: Liu Jian)
- ___ ___ ___
-
- [JAPAN ECONOMIC NEWSWIRE, 1/20/1993] TOKYO -- China has officially invited
- Taiwan to take part in September's all-China athletic meet in Beijing, ac-
- cording to a Xinhua News Agency report monitored in Tokyo. Sending the invi-
- tation by telegram, Li Menghua, president of the All-China Sports Federa-
- tion, said China will welcome the participation of Taiwan from the stand-
- point of enhancing the overall level of athletic standards of Chinese and
- Taiwanese people, according to the report monitored by Radio Press. The all-
- China athletic meet corresponds to Japan's national athletic meet held every
- year. (Forwarded by: Liu Jian)
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- 2. Enter the Rooster -- Chinese Ready for Lunar New Year ................ 53
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Forwarded by: A CND Reader
- Source: UPI, 1/20/1993
-
- BEIJING -- Chinese around the world are preparing to ring in the Year of the
- Rooster Friday with an annual burst of feasting, travel and deafening fire-
- works as they greet the lunar new year.
-
- From Beijing to Sydney to San Francisco, Chinese communities are readying
- for their most important annual holiday, with celebrants heading to wherever
- is home and those already in place organizing parties, seasonal foods and
- the traditional pyrotechnics.
-
- Across China, peasants are slaughtering their fattest pigs, cleaning house
- and paying off debts to say farewell to the Year of the Monkey and welcome
- the Year of the Rooster at midnight Friday for a four-day holiday known as
- the "Spring Festival."
-
- The rooster year is viewed as among the more auspicious on the 12-animal
- Chinese zodiac. Traditional belief also sees poor fortune on the "tail of
- the monkey" and many couples in China delayed marriages and pregnancies to
- have weddings and births this year under the sign of the cock.
-
- In Beijing, shopkeepers are cashing in on the festival by selling rooster
- toys, calendars and other trinkets. The official Xinhua news agency re-
- ported that even the city's Kentucky Fried Chicken outlets are expecting a
- bonanza.
-
- Around Asia, Chinese are traveling by planes, trains and automobiles and
- every other means of conveyance to make it home for the holiday. The lunar
- new year brings huge traffic jams in Taiwan, South Korea and other teeming
- nations.
-
- About 2.5 million people are expected to cross from Hong Kong into southern
- China during the new year period to visit relatives. Air, rail and boat
- links are booked solid, despite added flights and trains.
-
- Chinese transport agencies have added hundreds of extra flights, trains and
- buses to cope with the 910 million passengers expected nationwide as throngs
- of travelers head home.
-
- In China, most families will stay home and stay up late Friday night, many
- watching a six-hour variety extravaganza on state television or playing the
- tile gambling game mah-jongg into the wee hours. They spend succeeding days
- visiting friends and relatives.
-
- Most households will be filled with the smells of traditional foods like
- dumplings and most neighborhoods will resound with the traditional barrage
- of fireworks, which traditional legend sees as a means of driving off ghosts
- and evil spirits.
-
- Authorities across China have tried to crack down on illegal fireworks and
- reduce the related casualties, but early celebrants in Beijing are already
- blasting off new high-altitude rockets and a new firecracker that is more
- like a stick of dynamite.
-
- Fireworks are essentially banned in Hong Kong and Singapore, but Hong Kong
- puts on a huge official fireworks display over its picturesque Victoria
- Harbor and Singapore will organize a similar show Friday night.
-
- Singapore takes its private firecracker ban seriously. Offenders can be
- fined, jailed or even caned.
-
- The lunar new year is also a time for fortune telling. One seer in Taiwan is
- predicting coups in the developing world and turmoil in Asia this year.
-
- But a Hong Kong astrologer, Paul Lam, predicts the rooster will be a good
- year for the Hong Kong financial markets, although he warns European markets
- may be more volatile.
-
- And, Lam says, U.S. President Bill Clinton has a "good nose" in terms of
- ancient Chinese physiognomy, a good omen for his new presidency.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- 3. China Must Brace for Clinton White House, Official Says .............. 37
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Forwarded by: Liu Jian
- Source: JAPAN ECONOMIC NEWSWIRE, 1/20/1993
-
- BEIJING -- China should expect few favors from Bill Clinton's tenure in the
- White House, which may bring confrontation on a number of fronts, a State
- Council official has warned.
-
- Clinton's hard-nosed China policy will center on conflicting economic inter-
- ests, not ideological disputes, said Guo Zhenyuan, executive director of the
- International Studies Center, a State Council think tank.
-
- Writing in the latest edition of World Affairs magazine, Guo said Sino-U.S.
- relations faltered in 1992 over three separate issues -- market access dis-
- putes, the U.S. Hong Kong Policy Act which requires Congress to monitor de-
- mocracy in the territory, and the sale of 150 American F-16 fighter jets to
- Taiwan.
-
- "These three events effectively revealed a change in Sino-U.S. relations and
- a basic adjustment in U.S. policy toward China," Guo said.
-
- "First, the connotation of Sino-U.S. relations has rapidly widened with the
- U.S. emphasis switching to economic rather than security issues," he said.
-
- "Second, Sino-U.S. relations have clearly become far more complicated and
- although there is a place for cooperation, there is also room for opposition
- and even confrontation.
-
- "Third, the imbalance in Sino-U.S. relations has been heightened, meaning
- that the United States is far more likely than before to adopt a tough
- stance when dealing with bilateral problems," he said.
-
- Guo's comments reflect a growing awareness in Beijing that as president,
- Clinton may decide to turn the economic screws on China both to protect the
- American economy and also to squeeze concessions on human rights and
- democracy.
-
- China's worst nightmare was realized only last week when U.S. Secretary of
- State-designate Warren Christopher outlined four broad foreign policy goals
- which threaten to hit Beijing where it hurts the most.
-
- Christopher's promise to expand free trade, checks arms proliferation, safe-
- guard human rights and boost democracy included an extra caveat for China in
- the shape of Radio Free Asia which will beam pro-democracy broadcasts across
- its territory.
-
- Guo maintains that Clinton will base his China policy on economic considera-
- tions despite a threat to provoke peaceful evolution in China from communism
- to democracy.
-
- "In recent years, serious disputes have broken out between China and the
- U.S. over such issues as human rights, but in the long run, Clinton's China
- policy will be dictated by contradictions of economic interest, not ideo-
- logy," Guo said.
-
- "Boosting the U.S. economy is the central thread of Clinton's policy ration-
- ale and economic issues will not only effect domestic policy but also for-
- eign policy. This will gradually reveal itself in his policy toward China."
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- 4. What's in Today's Hua Xia Wen Zhai #95 (cm9301d) ..................... 23
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- From: CND Hua Xia Wen Zhai Editorial Board < cnd-cm@sdsc.edu >
-
- Hua Xia Wen Zhai
- (CND Chinese Magazine)
- Issue #95
- January 22, 1993
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Table of Contents (cm9301d)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- 1. Headline News of the Week..........................................Li Xin
- 2. Society: Pop Stars in Beijing....................................Shen Kan
- 3. InfoBase: HK Employment and Home Visit Regulations.................Xinhua
- 4. History: Why Mao Sent Us to the Countryside?.......................He Wen
- 5. CSS: On CSS Protection Act........................................Wu Yifu
- 6. Humour: Mao on How to Make Cats Eat Peppers?
- 7. "We" (Wo Men): Peking Opera Fans........................... Li Chuangtong
- 8. Song: Tonight Is Unforgettable..........................Qiao Yu/Wang Ming
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Executive Editor: Liu Dong < cnd-cm@sdsc.edu >
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Please send contributions to hxwz@sdsc.edu. Include your name and E-Mail
- address in the Hz, uuencoded GB or BIG5 file (indicate if you wish to be
- anonymous). Please send comments/suggestions to cnd-cm@sdsc.edu
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- +--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | Executive Editor: Sifeng Ma (U.S.A.) |
- +--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | China News Digest (CND) offers the following services: |
- | (1) Global News (Daily) (2) US Regional News |
- | (3) Canada Regional News (4) Europe & Pacific Regional News |
- | (5) Hua Xia Wen Zhai (Chinese Weekly Magazine) |
- | (6) Several Information Packages |
- | For subscription information, mail to: CND-INFO@LIBRARY.UTA.EDU |
- | Please send news contributions to: CND-EDITOR@SDSC.EDU |
- +--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
-
-