Citations:Chungli

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English citations of Chungli

In Taiwan

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1955 1958 1966 1977 1983 1990s 2000s 2010s 2020 2021 2022
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
財團法人中壢三教紫雲宮沿革
Evolution of Chungli Sanjiao Tzuyunkung Foundation
  • 1955 June 21, “Christian College to Open in Taipei”, in Gospel Herald[1], volume XLVIII, number 25, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 587, column 3:
    Preliminary to the formal opening of the Christian College later in the year, classes have been established with an enrollment of over 100 students. The college is located in a former army camp in Chungli, about 25 miles from Taipei.
  • 1958, Plant Industry Series[2], →ISSN, →OCLC, page 41:
    In Taiwan, most of the sickles for harvesting rice are manufactured in Chungli Township of Taoyuan Hsien; there are 30-odd such rice sickle shops along the highway of Chungli. It is a sort of home industry; members of the family all help to do the work.
  • 1966, China Post Trade Quarterly[3], →OCLC, page 25:
    Founded in 1955, Tay Feng Tire Co., Ltd. began operation in the fall of 1956, producing rubber belts for industrial use. It occupies an area of about 10 hectares in Chungli in north Taiwan.
  • 1977 December 5, “TAIWAN: The Chungli Incident”, in Newsweek[4], volume XC, number 23, →ISSN, →OCLC, Asia, page 35, columns 1, 2:
    The polls had just closed after a local election in the northern Taiwanese city of Chungli, and in front of the police station commandos with electric-shock “cattle prods” squared off against a hostile crowd of 10,000. []
    Government officials point to the cautious handling of the Chungli riots and the election of independents as signs that Taiwan is moving toward democracy, but they dismiss the idea of legalizing an opposition party. In light of the Chungli violence, however, the KMT may be forced to revise some of its attitudes.
  • 1983 August 14, “Westinghouse Sets Up ROC Subsidiary”, in Free China Weekly[5], volume XXIV, number 32, Taipei, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 2:
    Westinghouse Corp., has established a fully-owned subsidiary, Westinghouse Taiwan Corp. (WTC), in Chungli, about 40 kilometers southwest of Taipei, and plans to start manufacturing medium-and high voltage power circuit breakers early next year, according to a company spokesman.
  • 1994 July, Robert Storey, “North Taiwan”, in Taiwan - A Travel Survival Kit[6], 3rd edition, Lonely Planet, →ISBN, →OCLC, →OL, page 187, column 2:
    To get to Shihmen Reservoir, first take a bus or train to Chungli (zhōnglì), which is 36 km south-west of Taipei.
  • 1999, Shelley Rigger, “Political reform under Chiang Ching-kuo (1972-1988)”, in Politics in Taiwan: Voting for democracy[7], Routledge, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 115:
    Even more disturbing was a violent outburst in Taoyuan. When the ballots were opened on 19 November, Hsu Hsin-liang’s supporters at a polling station in Chungli City suspected fraud. As the crowd swelled to approximately a thousand, rioting erupted. One protester was killed and the Chungli police station was burned.
  • 2002, Huang Chin-shing, Business as a Vocation: The Autobiography of Wu Ho-Su[8], Harvard University Press, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 36:
    In one period of particularly fierce bombing, we escaped to my wife’s aunt’s house in the Chungli countryside, where we lived in a room in the rear courtyard for a while. Afterwards, I still had to return as usual to work in Taipei. Not long after this, Chungli also was bombed severely, so my wife had to flee to my old home in Tungshih, near Hsinchu.
  • 2005 August 8, “CIB arrests gang member in Chungli City”, in Ministry of the Interior, Republic of China (Taiwan)[9], archived from the original on 04 July 2022:
    The Criminal Investigation Bureau (CIB), acting on a tip, arrested a gang member yesterday in Chungli City, Taoyuan County, yesterday and seized a double barrel shotgun and a machine pistol from his residence.
  • 2008, Scott B. Freiberger, “甜點 [tiándiǎn, Desserts]”, in Taipei in a Day[10], →ISBN, →OCLC, page 68, column 2:
    With a motto of “pure, healthy and natural,” Guang An-Jie (廣安偕) wins the prize for unique in-store decoration and culinary creativity. Mrs. Huang and her hard-working hakka family from Taoyuan founded the first Guang-An Jie on that street name with the last character for street ( jie) in Chungli (中壢), Taoyuan.
  • 2013, Xuan Pan, Hsing Yun, “When You Stop By the Four Permanent Exhibits”, in Robert Smitheram, transl., Buddha Land in the Human World: The Making of the Buddha Memorial Center[11], 1st English edition, Buddha's Light Publishing, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 64:
    This was the time when Venerable Master Hsing Yun first arrived in Taiwan as a wandering monk and was refused lodgings. He was nearly reduced to begging on the street. Fortunately, the old Venerable Miaoguo of Yuanguang Temple in Chungli took him in.
  • 2014 May 29, “Taoyuan County readies for Neighbors’ Day”, in Taiwan Today[12], archived from the original on 11 April 2021:
    Taoyuan community and civic associations are also encouraged to stage celebrations with unique characteristics, according to a local government official.
    One example involves a community association in Chungli City organizing an event combining a fair, lucky draw and banquet of exotic overseas cuisines, the official added.
  • 2014, Lu Hsiu-lien, Ashley Esarey, My Fight for a New Taiwan[13], University of Washington Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, →OL, page 240:
    On the day of my inauguration, the director of the Nationalist Party county office ordered the Chungli mayor to stop trash collection. Because I could not command the Chungli sanitation department directly—it is administered at the local level—piles of garbage began to fester on the streets.
  • 2016 July 21, Lawrence Chung, “Grieving Liaoning families of bus blaze victims arrive in Taiwan”, in South China Morning Post[14], archived from the original on 25 July 2016, Society:
    They declined to speak to reporters before being taken to a funeral parlour in Chungli, near Taoyuan International Airport where the Tuesday’s tragedy occurred.
  • 2017 September 13, “Chungli Renhai Temple and Sacred Sign Pavilion”, in Taoyuan City Government[15], archived from the original on 21 November 2017:
    Chungli Renhai Temple was initially constructed in the 6th year of Daoguang Emperor of Qing Dynasty (1826) which was also known as Shin-jie Temple, and is the oldest temple in Chungli District.
  • 2017 November 19, “Today in History”, in Radio Taiwan International[16], archived from the original on 10 September 2022[17]:
    On this day in 1977, Taiwan witnessed a watershed moment in its march to democracy: the Chungli Incident. Violence broke out on the night of the largest-yet elections in the country’s history. Some 10,000 people took to the streets in protest following reports of election fraud on the part of the ruling Kuomintang.
  • 2018 February 24, Nina Ha, “Love and Life: Home: Where your feet may leave, but not your heart”, in The Bakersfield Californian[18], archived from the original on 04 July 2022:
    The first home I can remember was a large house in Chungli, Taiwan, built by my dad for our entire paternal family.
  • 2018 July 7, “Awards presented to students who overcame life challenges”, in Overseas Community Affairs Council, Republic of China (Taiwan)[19], archived from the original on 25 October 2022, English News‎[20]:
    During her speech, Tsai gave examples of students who overcame adversities including roller sports gold medalist Lin Chia-ching, who grew up in a single-parent family in Taoyuan's Chungli District.
  • 2019 March 17, Han Cheung, “Taiwan in Time: The Lost Army’s final retreat”, in Taipei Times[21], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 27 February 2021, Features, page 8:
    A 2007 exhibition in Taoyuan introducing the KMT’s “Lost Army.” Many soldiers and their families were resettled in Chungli after Chiang Kai-shek told them to come to Taiwan. []
    This first group, consisting of between 6,600 and 7,200 people, was largely resettled in Jhongjhen New Village (忠貞新村) in Chungli.
  • 2020 November 1, William Yen, “Filipino basketball league opening embraces LGBT community”, in Focus Taiwan[22], archived from the original on 01 November 2020:
    One of Taiwan's most renowned Filipino migrant worker basketball leagues opened Sunday, attracting hundreds of people to a park in Taoyuan City's Chungli District to watch the opening ceremony and the first six games.
  • 2021, A-chin Hsiau, Politics and Cultural Nativism in 1970s Taiwan: Youth, Narrative, Nationalism[23], Columbia University Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 85:
    The elections at the end of 1977, which provoked the Chungli Incident (Zhongli shijian)—the suppression of protests in Chungli City against alleged KMT manipulation of the election, were crucial.
  • 2021 June 11, Helen Davidson, “Taiwan factory forces migrant workers back into dormitories amid Covid outbreak”, in The Guardian[24], archived from the original on 11 June 2021:
    ASE, a semiconductor manufacturer, told its workers in the Taoyuan district of Chungli, about 50km (30 miles) from capital Taipei, that those who live independently in private rentals, must “move back to their dormitories immediately”, or be given “a major demerit”. Three such demerits are punishable by dismissal, the notice says.
  • 2021 October 4, G. Chen, “桃園拆除工程外牆鷹架傾倒 緊急封路 [Partial Scaffolding Collapse in Taoyuan; Road Closure In Place]”, in Public Television Service[25], archived from the original on 15 October 2022[26]:
    Just days after a 40-year-old hotel in Hualien City toppled into the street during its demolition, a similar incident took place in Chungli District of Taoyuan, with scaffolding around the building collapsing due to strong wind. Luckily no one was hurt.
    There was a partial scaffolding collapse of a building that has been undergoing demolition work nearby a gas station on Longgang Road in Chungli District.
  • 2022, “Let the World See Taiwan”, in TECO[27], archived from the original on 04 July 2022:
    We create a favorable environment for the Company while symbolizing the core spirit of harmony and symbiosis with nature. For this, TECO Group develops the green/renewal energy related business more comprehensively (including setting up solar power facilities in Chungli in 2021, for which the Group have acquired the green power certificate for self-use power generation.
  • 2022 March 22, Chang Ai, Frances Huang, “MOF says four NT$10 million uniform invoice prizes remain unclaimed”, in Focus Taiwan[28], archived from the original on 22 March 2022, Business:
    Among the four unclaimed winners of the special NT$10 million prize, one was for a NT$29 purchase from food delivery service provider foodpanda, while another was for NT$59 spent in a 7-Eleven convenience store in Taoyuan's Chungli District, the MOF said.
  • 2022 April 21, Julian Ho, Willis Ke, “ASE to complete Chungli factory site expansion in 3Q24”, in DigiTimes[29], archived from the original on 21 April 2022, Chips + Components:
    ASE Technology is scheduled to complete constructing additional production lines and facilities at its manufacturing site in Chungli, northern Taiwan in the third quarter of 2024, and the new capacity is expected to contribute US$500 million in annual []
  • 2022 June 16, “Budd Sales to Represent Sherex in 4 States”, in Thomasnet[30], archived from the original on 16 June 2022:
    Sherex manufactures rivet nuts, clinch nuts, inserts for composite, stud and nut plates, and through the acquisition of Disc-Lock, wedge-locking washers and nuts. Sherex has two strategic production facilities: Sherex Taiwan, located in Chungli, Taiwan, is certified to IATF 16949:2016, ISO 14001 and has an ISO 17025 accredited lab, and Sherex Akron, located in Akron, Ohio, is certified to ISO 9001:2015 and AS 9100.
  • 2022 August 2, “Steaming ahead”, in Taiwan Today[31], archived from the original on 13 September 2022:
    Historic Taiwan Railways Administration steam locomotive CK124 commences a special service July 30 from Chungli Station as part of the Fugang Railway Art Festival underway in the northern city of Taoyuan.

Other

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  • 1947 May 4 [1947 April], Frank Yu, “Terrorism in Chungli”, in Think Weekly[32], number 51, Newark, NJ, page 1, column 3:
    It was a fine day in Chungli, a small town 30 miles northeast of Kalgan. The December weather was cold, about 20° below freezing, but the whole town was bathed in bright sunshine. The Catholic Cathedral, a magnificent building standing in the center of Chungli contrasted sharply with the small, low, earthen huts below it.
  • 1952 September, Richard Tregaskis, “One Little Man in China”, in Catholic Digest[33], volume 16, number 11, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 42, column 2:
    The Reds ordered physical work for Jong. He carried Japanese military supplies stored at Kalgan to Red headquarters in Chungli.