Archive for January 2nd, 2010

Chinese Conversation – lesson 674

Saturday, January 2nd, 2010

经  理:你喜欢这件衬衫吗?
马  丁:我喜欢。我喜欢蓝色。
经  理:你长着蓝眼睛。
马  丁:不是蓝的,是灰的。
经  理:看起来是蓝的。你胳膊长吗?
马  丁:不很长,也不短。咱们谈谈其他人吧。
经  理:当然可以。
马  丁:你看见那个穿绿裙子的妇女了吗?
经  理:看见了,她常在这儿买东西。
马  丁:她个儿不很高。还有,她也不胖。
经  理:她很好看。

MANAGER: Do you like this shirt?
MARTIN: Yes, I do. I like blue.
MANAGER: You have blue eyes.
MARTIN: They’re not blue. They’re gray.
MANAGER: They look blue. Are your arms long?
MARTIN: They’re not very long. They’re not short. Let’s talk about other people.
MANAGER: Of course.
MARTIN: Do you see that woman in the green dress?
MANAGER: Yes, she often shops here.
MARTIN: She’s not very tall. And she’s not fat.
MANAGER: She looks very nice.

(Source: wwenglish.com)

Cir – Lesson 556

Saturday, January 2nd, 2010

Macao’s oldest university, the University of Macao, is expecting a booming future as its new campus will be built in three years, said its rector Prof. Wei Zhao Tuesday.

The new campus will cover an area of 1.09 square km on Hengqin Island, which is about 200 meters away from Macao but under the administration of neighboring Zhuhai city of Guangdong Province.

The new campus will be isolated from the rest part of Hengqin Island. A tunnel will be built to connect the two campuses so that the students and faculty will not need to go through the border procedure between Macao and the mainland, Zhao said.

“It will settle the problem the university long had,” Zhao said. “The shortage of land had restrained it from further development.”

The university, now having nearly 6,600 students, only occupies about 0.05 square km of land in Macao.

Each student only takes up 8 square meters of land in average, far below the national standard of 67 square meters.

This June, China’s top legislature gave the Macao Special Administrative Region (SAR) jurisdiction over part of the land on Hengqin Island, assigned for the university’s new campus, under a lease for 40 years.

“It was a good example of flexibility and vitality of the policy of ‘one country, two systems,’” Zhao said.

With the new campus, the university will be able to hold 10,000 students.

“We will have more departments and programs. It will not only be a good opportunity for our university but also for Macao,” Zhao said.

“Macao considered the construction of the new campus as an opportunity to improve local higher education service,” said Edmund Ho Hau Wah, chief executive of Macao SAR in his report on the work of SAR government on Nov. 18.

In the past decade since Macao returned to the motherland, the region’s higher education has improved with the economic growth.

The region, with an area of less than 30 square km, now has ten universities and colleges, according to the Tertiary Education Services Office of Macao SAR.

Ten years ago, about 8,500 students studied in colleges in Macao and the figure rose to 32,000 this year, while the number of the faculty increased from 738 to 1,951.

More than 70 percent of the teachers in Macao’s public-funded universities has the doctor’s degree.

With more investment, the number of students covered by the government scholarship in the 2008-2009 academic year doubled from the 1999-2000 year, enabling more children in poor families to go to college.

“Higher education is no longer a privilege for the elite but gradually becomes the service to common people,” Zhao said.

(Source: xinhuanet.com)

Chinese Culture – Decoding Chinese Oil Painting(3)

Saturday, January 2nd, 2010

Oil painting during the Cultural Revolution (1966-1976)

As the Cultural Revolution swept the country, Chinese oil paintings and other arts came under an unprecedented attack. Oil painting became a kind of political mark.

During that time all kinds of Mao Zedong’s images as well as the praise of heroes became the main themes of each kind of artistic works.

However, even their authors could not think, after several years, those kinds of works became the main source for ” political pope picture” and stepped onto the international painting world.

Representative figures: Liu Chunhua, Tang Xiaohe, Tang Xiaoming and Chen Yifei.

Representative work: “Chairman Mao Goes to Anyuan” by Liu Chunhua in 1967

Stretching and Transition (1977-1984)

Coming out of the shadows of the Cultural Revolution, oil painting started to divorce itself from the fetters of politics and explored a new form of beauty.

It entered a new stage in the 1980s. Painting styles changed dramatically under the influence of the reform and opening policy. Vigorous young painters created some realist works such as “Father” and the group painting, “Tibetans.”

Representative figures: Chen Yifei, Cheng Conglin, Luo Zhongli, Chen Danqing,He Duoling, Ding Fang and Shang Yang.

Representative works: Luo Zhongli’s “Father,” a milestone of rural portrait .

Source: chinaculture.org