Wednesday, December 9, 2009

George H.W. Bush started Sino-American Economics

Pacific War Museum Expans Its Bush Gallery: "Express" 12.09.2009 on page 34

The National Museum of the Pacific War in Fredericksburg, Texas, has expanded its George H.W. Bush Gallery with new multimedia exhibits, testimonials and artifacts about the conflict in Asia during World War II. Such is worthy to be visited by readers of Sino-American economics.

I still remember WWII vividly as a student at St. John's University in Shanghai. Shanghai is the venue of Expo 2010 starting May 2010. That is worthy visiting as well.

In-depth exhibits include a look at the impact and destruction of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Among the artifacts on display is an HA-19, one of five Japanese two-man submarines that took part in the attack. Bush, who lives in Houston, was a WWII naval aviator who survived being shot down by the Japanese over the Pacific. Such was a blessing in history!

The $15.5 million museum expansion had been planned for about a decades as per AP.

Page 12: Paper is still relevant! National Academy of Sciences researchers turned plain loose-leaf paper into a battery by dipping it special ink, Greenbang.com reported. Yi Cui, a Stanford professor from China involved in the research, foresees clever uses for the technology - which might even double as wallpaper.

Francis Shieh a.k.a. Xie Shihao, a daily reader to share news with readers of Sino-American Economics. Wednesday,December 9, 2009 at 9.20 a.m.

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