Word: jiabaoã
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...Summers] recognized when high-profile visitors came to Harvard that it does take quite a bit of time and attention to do these things thoughtfully and carefully,” she said, citing Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao??s December appearance at the Business School. “The political circumstances need to be taken care...
Civil disobedience can be an effective way to promote a just cause or just an unecessary nuisance. Either way, it usually gets punished. Harvard’s latest case—that of Meghan C. Howard ’04, who interrupted Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao??s Dec. 11 speech at Harvard Business School—did promote a just cause. But since Howard faced the Ad Board yesterday, it seems she will still have to pay the price for her outcry...
Meghan C. Howard ’04, the student who interrupted Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao??s Dec. 11 speech to protest China’s occupation of Tibet, will likely face disciplinary action next week...
Although the immense security efforts surrounding Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao??s visit to campus on Dec. 10 (News, “China’s Wen Talks Trade, Reforms...
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao??s response to the Free Tibet protester during his speech highlights how Beijing always sidelines or ignores the welfare of Tibetans and other minorities (News, “China’s Wen Talks Trade, Reforms,” Dec. 11). As China rises as a global power, the U.S. gets more desperate to engage it. As a result, the survival of oppressed peoples such as Tibetans and Uighurs end up being treated as taboo subjects. From Burma to Palestine, from Tibet to East Turkistan, the weak live in fear while the strong smile...