Government officials, publishers and library professionals in the US and China gathered on Monday in Seattle to launch a joint exhibit on Chinese braille publications.
70 metrobuses with images of six endangered animals of China: Giant Panda, Red Panda, Snub-Nosed Monkey, Tibetan Antelope, Crested Ibis and Red-Crown Crane, will travel around Northwest Washington and parts of Maryland and Virginia for five weeks since Monday.
Students enrolled in Nathan Gibbs-Bowling’s advanced-placement government and geography class likely know more about China than their peers at Lincoln High School.
China has fired up the interest of students at Lincoln High School in Tacoma, an industrial port city in the state of Washington, because of a Chinese leader’s upcoming visit.
Seattle is rarely the first US city that comes to Chinese minds. In fact, few people could probably tell Washington state from Washington DC.
Among the questions raised about President Xi Jinping's visit to the United States, the most puzzling could be related to his first stop, Seattle.
Coinciding with President Xi Jinping's visit to the US, Chinese book month is launched in Washington D.C. on Thursday and runs until October 16.
The drumming band of Chinese American students during the 25th Mid-Autumn Festival in San Francisco's Chinatown, US, on Sept 19, 2015.
China has since seen a steady flow of American students, increasing from 8,480 in 2004 to 24,203 in 2014.
The Wuhan culture delegation hosted a Wuhan promotion at Stanford University on Sept 18. The event sought to increase exchanges between Wuhan and the San Francisco Bay Area.