Citations:Lianjiang

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English citations of Lianjiang

In Fujian, China[edit]

  • 1982, William G. Rosenberg, Marilyn B. Young, Transforming Russia and China[1], Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 293:
    In Lianjiang, for example, teams of women apparently used collective funds to organize "large-scale play companies" and buy "ancient-style opera costumes. They have even taken young people to study acting. Some teams, in order to maintain play companies, have even asked counter-revolutionaries to direct them. Others have hired play companies from distant places and have continually put on performances."
  • 2008, Sheldon X. Zhang, Chinese Human Smuggling Organizations[2], Stanford, California: Stanford University Press, →ISBN, page 210:
    A few years ago, this community leader’s wife had “divorced” him, “married” a U.S. citizen, and immigrated to the United States with their two children. He was the only member of his family still in Lianjiang.
  • 2020 May 13, Gary Sheftick, “MacArthur awardee proud of Asian-Pacific heritage”, in Army News Service[3], archived from the original on 21 May 2020[4]:
    Mei’s family lived in Lianjiang County, directly across from the island of Taiwan. Beginning in the late 1980s, the people of her county began a massive emigration to western nations like the United Kingdom and the U.S.
    As a young girl, Mei actually had dreams of someday joining the People’s Liberation Army in China. After beginning school, though, she was impressed with her instructors there and decided to aim her sights instead on becoming a teacher.
    She attended Lianjiang Shangde High School, which she said is one of the best schools in the area to prepare students for college.
    “It was very competitive,” she added.

County in Guangdong, China[edit]

  • 2017 March 2, Aizhu Chen, “Sinopec to start operating Zhanjiang commercial oil tanks; SPR site delayed -sources”, in Christian Schmollinger, editor, Reuters[5], archived from the original on 02 March 2017, Energy:
    The reserve project, located in Lianjiang county of Zhanjiang city is expected to start operating in early 2018, the sources said, nearly two years behind an earlier timeline estimated by market analysts.

River in Guangdong, China[edit]

  • 2003 February 24, Peter S. Goodman, “China Serves As Dump Site For Computers”, in The Washington Post[6], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 01 October 2023[7]:
    On a recent morning in Guiyu, in Guangdong province, hundreds of men squatted in concrete-block sheds, sifting through computers and printers and breaking them into scrap with their bare hands. Some inhaled black clouds of toner. A tractor carted a mass of wires to an alley, where women melted them in barrels to scavenge their copper before spilling the leftovers into the dead-black Lianjiang River.

In Taiwan[edit]

  • 1996, T. K. Tong, “Historical Relations”, in Winberg Chai, May-lee Chai, editors, 中國大陸與臺灣 [Chinese Mainland and Taiwan: A Study of Historical, Cultural, Economic and Political Relations with Documents]‎[8], Kendall Hunt Publishing Company, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, →OL, page 46:
    With the promulgation of the Statue[sic – meaning Statute] for the Security and Guidance of Quemoy, Matsu, and the Pratas and Spratly Areas on August 7, 1992, the villagers in Jinmen and Lianjiang (Lienchiang, i.e. Matsu) counties held their first elections in November 1993 respectively to have their county magistrates locally elected.
  • 2019 June 9, Han Cheung, “Taiwan in Time: The airwaves of ‘freedom’”, in Taipei Times[9], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on June 09, 2019, Features, page 8‎[10]:
    With programs such as Taiwan’s Advancements and Every Road Leads to Freedom, the Matsu Broadcasting Station (馬祖廣播電台) commenced its daily broadcasts toward the coast of China’s Fujian Province on June 15, 1959.
    At the ribbon-cutting ceremony, then-political warfare bureau chief Chiang Chien-jen (蔣堅忍) announced the station’s objectives: to provide entertainment to the soldiers stationed on the tiny island off the coast of China and to “broadcast the voice of justice and freedom to sway the hearts of our compatriots on the mainland.”
    According to the Chronicle of Lianjiang County (連江縣誌), that year the station broadcast 1,872 hours of propaganda, leading to 53 communist defections.
    Although Taiwan had been broadcasting propaganda to China since 1949, the station’s establishment was part of a nationwide effort in 1959 to ramp up its psychological warfare operations. In Matsu, this included upgrading the existing loudspeakers and setting up a facility to send balloons containing propaganda messages.