Two reports may help ease the growing concern among some American politicians toward Chinese foreign direct investment in the United States.
Last year, US commercial air carriers bumped 40,000 passengers, and that's not counting the ones who volunteered to give up their seats. United abruptly changed 3,765 travelers' plans with the involuntary bump, with 62,895 bailing out by choice, NBC Boston reports.
Infrastructure can make the "China Dream" the global dream.
Back in the '70s and '80s, boat racing enthusiasts from around the world gathered in Miami to watch powerboat events.
Forgetting history is a betrayal. Failing to remember the history of Asian Americans' battle for equality could result in a reoccurrence of discrimination and prosecution against Asian Americans.
US economists believe the focus by US President Donald Trump's administration on trade deficits with China and Chinese currency is the wrong approach.
The CEO of United Airlines apologized to customers on Monday after videos on social media showed an Asian passenger being dragged kicking, screaming and bleeding from his face through the aisle of an overbooked United flight at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport after refusing to give up his seat.
They spent millions on luxury houses and high-priced cars. And millions more for vacant lots. On one lot, signs in Chinese and English posted on a chain-link fence that surrounds it read: "retail shops for lease" and "partnerships welcome".
The April 4 chemical weapons attack in Syria that killed many civilians, including children, was an atrocity that shocked the world. Many United Nations members, China included, have called for an independent investigation into who the perpetrator was.
On Friday, while Xi and Trump were talking about the future of China-US relations, Houston leaders gathered at NCLC to review how local figures have impacted the development of the bilateral relationship since former US president George H. W. Bush was an envoy to China in 1974.
NEW YORK - A sound China-United States relationship featuring win-win cooperation serves as a "bedrock" and key element of global stability, a veteran US diplomat has said.
Boston-based International Data Group's founder, Patrick McGovern (1937-2014), once told his peers "the future is China, and so here we are", former IDG chairman Walter Boyd said.