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appearance art Baoding Beijing opera boarding china China Ju Li Group Chinese medicine communist party education exercise fate hebei university irony jianzi Kung fu Mao Parks Politics qi reform shuttlecock skin solar power stony brook university student students study study abroad superstition tai chi western medicine youthAbout this project
In June 2012, a group of seven students from Stony Brook University set out on a reportorial tour of China.
They visited two areas: first, Baoding, which is about 90 miles south of Beijing in Hebei Province; second, Guizhou Province, which is located in southwest China and is the poorest, most rural area in the country. The students’ goal was to capture modern China - from big city to countryside, warts and all - in word, picture and sound. Their effort is recorded here on this web site.
Lead by Associate Professor Charles Haddad and Study Abroad Advisor Yilin Wang, the June trip was part of the school’s annual study abroad program called Journalism Without Walls.
Tag Archives: fate
Chinese Beauty Is Hardly Skin Deep

One night while in Baoding, I was drawing a portrait of my Chinese friend Jing. Jing is a slim 19-years-old young woman with fair skin, long black hair and high cheekbones. To me she epitomized a beautiful Asian girl. I especially liked her high cheekbones and told her so. Continue reading
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Tagged appearance, Baoding, china, fate, skin, study abroad, superstition
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