A Danish prince haunted by his father's ghost. A delusional Spanish knight jousting with windmills. A Chinese beauty falling into an enchanted dream next to a Peony Pavilion.
It takes about 20 Chinese parents, 11 elementary schools throughout the Bay Area and a small army of volunteers to stage the series of celebrations planned for the upcoming Chinese New Year, or the Lunar New Year, which will fall on Jan 28.
With the growing passion for soccer in China, it's not surprising that attendance at the country's professional matches is climbing.
There are more things in heaven and earth, as Hamlet said, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.
Among the many ways to characterize the startup contest that was wrapped up on Jan 16 in Santa Clara, Luo Linquan, China's top diplomat in San Francisco, repeatedly emphasized one thing: This exchange in technology and innovation was a two-way communication that creates win-win cooperation between the worlds' two largest economies.
Bruce Lee died in 1973, but the image of the superbly conditioned martial artist unleashing lightning-fast kicks and backfists to whiplike sound effects is etched in martial arts lore.
One of the two American scientists receiving the prestigious International Science and Technology Cooperation Award - China's highest honor in science for foreigners - in Beijing last week says it caught him completely off guard.
First, they came in red, then in the shapes of zodiac animals and now they are using Mandarin characters and images of cultural heritage.
Air pollution is big news in China - and an opportunity for companies big and small that can help monitor the problem.
An editor and writer at China Daily USA in New York, William Hennelly is a print and digital media veteran. He previously was managing editor of TheStreet.com financial news website in New York, and has worked at daily newspapers in New Jersey. Hennelly is a journalism graduate of Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana.
General manager of China Daily USA's San Francisco bureau. Based in the Bay Area, she covers a wide range of topics including corporate news, Silicon Valley innovation, US-China cooperation in various forms and profiles of interesting personalities, as well as overseeing office operations.
Chen Weihua is the Chief Washington Correspondent of China Daily and Deputy Editor of China Daily USA. He is also a columnist, with a particular focus on US politics and US-China relations.
A copy editor and writer with China Daily USA in New York, Chris Davis is a graduate of the University of Virginia and served two years as a volunteer with the United States Peace Corps in Kenya.