Word: cai
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...students.Dialogues of Carmelites. Through Feb. 19. Presented by Dunster House Opera Society. Dunster House Dining Hall. Tickets available at Harvard Box Office, (617) 496-2222. $20 general; $8 students; $7 Dunster residents.Doublehung: Exhibitions I & II. Exhibition I through Feb. 11; Exhibition II through Feb. 24. Carpenter Center. Free.Quantum Grids: Cai Guo-Qiang, Yayoi Kusama, Sol LeWitt, and Fred Tomaselli. Through April 16. Carpenter Center. Free.“To Delight the Eye”: French Drawings and Paintings from the Collection of Charles E. Dunlap. Through Mar. 12. Fogg Museum.To Students of Art and Lovers of Beauty: Highlights from...
...over, before a Buddhist temple bell was struck by a life-size bronze cast of the artist's naked body. For whom the bell tolls ? These days in the world of contemporary art, it seems to be tolling for China - from established art stars like Zhang and gunpowder virtuoso Cai Guo-Qiang to the new generation of artists, spawned by the sprawling studio complexes of Beijing and Shanghai, who seem to show up at every international biennale these days. Curator Binghui Huangfu, director of Sydney's Asia-Australia Arts Centre, predicts that over the next 20 years the art world...
...SENTENCED. CAI XIAOHONG, former secretary-general of Beijing's liaison office in Hong Kong; to 15 years in prison for passing state secrets to British intelligence; in Guangzhou, China. Cai, who was arrested last year, is the highest-ranking Chinese official to be convicted of spying for a Western government. The South China Morning Post reported that he was paid more than $700,000 by the British Secret Service for sharing classified information, including the itinerary for former President Jiang Zemin's 2001 visit to Hong Kong...
David A. Martin ’07 will be studying at a summer school in Portugal, and said he came to the event to find travel mates; Julia Cai ’06, who is studying Spanish in Spain, said she came “to get some ideas”; Victoria C. Henderson ’05, who will be working for Merrill Lynch in London, said she was glad she came because she “saw and talked with many people who will also be in England...
...Like most Chinese athletes, the Ping-Pong squad must display a soldierly devotion to their sport. Lights-out is at 10:30 p.m. sharp, and minders are supposed to ensure that there's no bed hopping afterward. "Our players are not normal Chinese people," explains Cai. "They are like soldiers, who must maintain self-discipline in order to do well in competition." In Chinese Ping-Pong, there are no love matches...