Various Asian cultural organizations on campus organized events from Sept. 25 through Oct. 8 to celebrate the Mid-Autumn Festival, which took place on Sept. 29. These celebrations, which featured mooncake tastings, performances, and lantern paintings, aimed to foster community and promote cross-cultural interaction among students. The Mid-Autumn Festival, also known as the Moon Festival, is.
On Sunday night, hundreds of students poured into the Lincoln Hall Theater for “If You Are The One,” an annual dating show hosted by the University’s Chinese Students and Scholars Association. The event aimed to help Chinese international students find “the one” through a live series of activities in front of the audience. Support the.
Revealed: the Cambridge-China Pact
Journalism makes nothing happen. The general lack-of-response within Cambridge to the
TCSarticle ‘Stephen Toope: Blind to Tyranny’ would certainly warrant this conclusion. The piece, published in May 2020, revealed that on two separate occasions the Vice-Chancellor (who specialises in human-rights law) had used his position to promote the methods and objectives of the dictatorial Chinese government.
First, in a February 2019 Jesus College white paper funded by Huawei, Toope appeared to endorse China’s plans for a ‘new governance system’ worldwide; second, in a March 2019 speech at Peking University, Toope praised the faculty as ‘a formidable institution, which seeks an open world’. This encomium would be blandly unobjectionable were it not the case that, in the months before Toope’s speech, secret police abducted the Peking students Yue Xin, Zhang Shangye, and Qiu Zhanxuan for protesting about labour rights. After Peking’s Marx