Posts Tagged ‘China’
The Secret Hawaii of China: Sanya
By Ben Piscopo • Jul 8th, 2010 • Category: FeaturesWhat first comes to mind when you think of China? One image that probably doesn’t come to mind, or at least right away, includes beautiful beaches, palm trees, and baby blue water.
The Oily Chinese Food Debate… Healthy or Not?
By Ben Piscopo • Jul 8th, 2010 • Category: FeaturesAs tasty as the dishes may be, foreign guests have started deciding for themselves that Chinese food might just be “a little too oily to be healthy.”
Up To 80 Off And It’s No Joke
By Nix Ignacio-Shin • Jun 21st, 2010 • Category: NewsWhether shopping for business or therapy, smart shoppers know that the best place to get the job done is in Asia and particularly on this fabulous month of June.
Candied Strawberry Sticks, Shanghai
By Manuel Yulo Barandiaran • Mar 4th, 2010 • Category: PhotographyBite into these tart treats from the streets.
Reed Flute Cave, China
By Manuel Yulo Barandiaran • Mar 4th, 2010 • Category: PhotographyThe name of the place is taken from the weeds that grow around the cave. The cave is located about 5 miles north of Guilin City in Guangxi Province, China.
The Love Market
By Nix Ignacio-Shin • Mar 3rd, 2010 • Category: NewsYes, now you can shop for love! Officially known as the “I’m Looking for You†Supermarket, Beijing’s Supermarket of Love, which opened on Singles Day, last November 11, 2009 has since attracted over 1,000 clients and successfully matched over 50 couples.
Dire, Dire Docks
By Nix Ignacio-Shin • Mar 3rd, 2010 • Category: NewsAlthough the participation of random people in China’s wreck expedition project in far, far Africa is certainly unlikely, wreck diving is an interest very much open for anyone feeling like an archaeologist this summer, and the reefs of Coron, Subic and Batangas in the Philippines, Pattaya in Thailand, Bali in Indonesia and Tioman in Malaysia are some of the best wreck diving sites in the world!
A Heated Matter
By Nix Ignacio-Shin • Mar 3rd, 2010 • Category: NewsU.N. scientists have already expressed the urgency of global warming stating that any temperature rise above this could lead to disastrous sea-level rises, endangering islands, and the extinction of many species of plants and animals, as well as the alteration of the agricultural economies of many countries.

